Marcellus
(legendary, died 208 B.C.E.)
By
Plutarch
Translated
by John Dryden
They say that Marcus Claudius, who was five times consul of
the Romans, was the son of Marcus; and that he was the first of his family
called Marcellus; that is, martial, as Posidonius affirms. He was, indeed, by
long experience, skilful in the art of war, of a strong body, valiant of hand,
and by natural inclinations addicted to war. This high temper and heat he
showed conspicuously in battle; in other respects he was modest and obliging,
and so far studious of Greek learning and discipline, as to honour and admire
those that excelled in it, though he did not himself attain a proficiency in
them equal to his desire, by reason of his employments. For if ever there were
any men whom, as Homer says, Heaven
"From their first youth unto their utmost age
Appointed the laborious wars to wage,"
certainly they were the chief Romans of that time; who in
their youth had war with the Carthaginians in Sicily, in their middle age with the
Gauls in the defence of Italy itself; and at last, when now grown old,
struggled again with Hannibal and the Carthaginians, and wanted in their latest
years what is granted to most men, exemption from military toils;
their rank and their great qualities still making them be called upon to
undertake the command.
Marcellus, ignorant or unskillful of no kind of fighting, in
single combat surpassed himself; he never declined a challenge, and never
accepted without killing his challenger. In Sicily, he protected and saved his
brother Otacilius when surrounded in battle, and slew the enemies that pressed
upon him; for which act he was by the generals, while he was yet but young,
presented with crowns and other honourable rewards; and, his good qualities more
and more displaying themselves, he was created Curule Aedile by the people and
by the high priests Augur; which is that priesthood to which chiefly the law
assigns the observation of auguries. In his Aedileship, a certain mischance
brought him to the necessity of bringing an impeachment into the senate. He had
a son named Marcus, of great beauty, in the flower of his age, and no less
admired for the goodness of his character. This youth, Capitolinus, a bold and
ill-mannered man, Marcellus's colleague, sought to abuse. The boy at first
himself repelled him; but when the other again persecuted him, told his father.
Marcellus, highly indignant, accused the man in the senate: where he, having
appealed to the tribunes of the people, endeavoured by various shifts and
exceptions to elude the impeachment; and, when the tribunes refused their
protection, by flat denial rejected the charge. As there was no witness of the
fact, the senate thought fit to call the youth himself before them: on
witnessing whose blushes and tears, and shame mixed with the highest
indignation, seeking no further evidence of the crime, they condemned
Capitolinus, and set a fine upon him; of the money of which Marcellus caused
silver vessels for libation to be made, which he dedicated to the gods.
After the end of the first Punic war, which lasted
one-and-twenty years, the seed of Gallic tumults sprang up, and began again to
trouble Rome.
The Insubrians, a people inhabiting the subalpine region of Italy, strong
in their own forces, raised from among the other Gauls
aids of mercenary soldiers, called Gaesatae. And it was a sort of miracle, and
special good fortune for Rome, that the Gallic war was not coincident with the
Punic, but that the Gauls had with fidelity stood quiet as spectators, while
the Punic war continued, as though they had been under engagement to await and
attack the victors, and now only were at liberty to come forward. Still the
position itself, and the ancient renown of the Gauls, struck no little fear
into the minds of the Romans, who were about to undertake a war so near home
and upon their own borders; and regarded the Gauls, because they had once taken
their city, with more apprehension than any people, as is apparent from the
enactment which from that time forth provided, that the high priests should
enjoy an exemption from all military duty, except only in Gallic insurrections.
The great preparations, also, made by the Romans for war
(for it is not reported that the people of Rome ever had at one time so many
legions in arms, either before or since), and their extraordinary sacrifices,
were plain arguments of their fear. For though they were most averse to
barbarous and cruel rites, and entertained more than any nation the same pious
and reverent sentiments of the gods with the Greeks; yet, when this war was
coming upon them, they then, from some prophecies in the Sibyls' books, put
alive underground a pair of Greeks, one male, the other female; and likewise
two Gauls, one of each sex, in the market called the beast market: continuing
even to this day to offer to these Greeks and Gauls certain ceremonial
observances in the month of November.
In the beginning of this war, in which the Romans sometimes
obtained remarkable victories, sometimes were shamefully beaten, nothing was
done toward the determination of the contest until Flaminius and Furius, being
consuls, led large forces against the Insubrians. At the time of their
departure, the river that runs through the country of Picenum was seen flowing
with blood; there was a report that three moons had once been seen at Ariminum;
and, in the consular assembly, the augurs declared that the consuls had been
unduly and inauspiciously created. The senate, therefore, immediately sent
letters to the camp, recalling the consuls to Rome with all possible speed, and commanding
them to forbear from acting against the enemies, and to abdicate the consulship
on the first opportunity. These letters being brought to Flaminius, he deferred
to open them till, having defeated and put to flight the enemy's forces, he
wasted and ravaged their borders. The people, therefore, did not go forth to
meet him when he returned with huge spoils; nay, because he had not instantly
obeyed the command in the letters, by which he was recalled, but slighted and contemned
them, they were very near denying him the honour of a triumph. Nor was the
triumph sooner passed than they deposed him, with his colleague, from the
magistracy, and reduced them to the state of private citizens. So much were all
things at Rome
made to depend upon religion; they would not allow any contempt of the omens
and the ancient rites, even though attended with the highest success: thinking
it to be of more importance to the public safety that the magistrates should
reverence the gods, than that they should overcome their enemies. Thus Tiberius
Sempronius, whom for his probity and virtue the citizens highly esteemed,
created Scipio Nasica and Caius Marcius consuls to succeed him; and when they
were gone into their provinces, lit upon books concerning the religious
observances, where he found something he had not known before; which was this.
When the consul took his auspices, he sat without the city in a house, or tent,
hired for that occasion; but, if it happened that he, for any urgent cause,
returned into the city, without having yet seen any certain signs, he was
obliged to leave that first building, or tent, and to seek another to repeat
the survey from. Tiberius, it appears, in ignorance of this, had twice used the
same building before announcing the new consuls. Now, understanding his error,
he referred the matter to the senate: nor did the senate neglect this minute
fault, but soon wrote expressly of it to Scipio Nasica and Caius Marcius; who,
leaving their provinces and without delay returning to Rome, laid down their magistracy. This
happened at a later period. About the same time, too, the priesthood was taken
away from two men of very great honour, Cornelius Cethegus and Quintus
Sulpicius: from the former, because he had not rightly held out the entrails of
a beast slain for sacrifice; from the latter, because, while he was immolating,
the tufted cap which the Flamens wear had fallen from his head. Minucius, the
dictator, who had already named Caius Flaminius master of the horse, they deposed
from his command, because the squeak of a mouse was heard, and put others into
their places. And yet, notwithstanding, by observing so anxiously these little
niceties they did not run into any superstition, because they never varied from
nor exceeded the observances of their ancestors.
So soon as Flaminius with his
colleague had resigned the consulate, Marcellus was declared consul by the
presiding officers called Interrexes; and, entering into the magistracy, chose
Cnaeus Cornelius his colleague. There was a report that, the Gauls proposing a
pacification, and the senate also inclining to peace, Marcellus inflamed the
people to war; but a peace appears to have been agreed upon, which the Gaesatae
broke; who, passing the Alps, stirred up the Insubrians (they being thirty
thousand in number, and the Insubrians more numerous by far); and proud of
their strength, marched directly to Acerrae, a city seated on the north of the
river Po. From thence Britomartus, king of the Gaesatae, taking with him ten thousand
soldiers, harassed the country round about. News of which being brought to
Marcellus, leaving his colleague at Acerrae with the foot and all the heavy
arms and a third part of the horse, and carrying with him the rest of the horse
and six hundred light-armed foot, marching night and day without remission, he
stayed not till he came up to these ten thousand near a Gaulish village called
Clastidium, which not long before had been reduced under the Roman
jurisdiction. Nor had he time to refresh his soldiers or to give them rest. For
the barbarians, that were then present, immediately
observed his approach, and contemned him, because he had very few foot with
him. The Gauls were singularly skilful in horsemanship, and thought to excel in
it; and as at present they also exceeded Marcellus in number, they made no
account of him. They, therefore, with their king at their head, instantly
charged upon him, as if they would trample him under their horses' feet,
threatening all kinds of cruelties. Marcellus, because his men were few, that
they might not be encompassed and charged on all sides by the enemy, extended
his wings of horse, and, riding about, drew out his wings of foot in length,
till he came near to the enemy. Just as he was in the act of turning round to
face the enemy, it so happened that his horse, startled with their fierce look
and their cries, gave back, and carried him forcibly aside. Fearing lest this
accident, if converted into an omen, might discourage his soldiers, he quickly
brought his horse round to confront the enemy, and made a gesture of adoration
to the sun, as if he had wheeled about not by chance, but for a purpose of
devotion. For it was customary to the Romans, when they offered worship to the
gods, to turn round; and in this moment of meeting the enemy, he is said to
have vowed the best of the arms to Jupiter Feretrius.
The king of the Gauls beholding Marcellus, and from the
badges of his authority conjecturing him to be the general, advanced some way
before his embattled army, and with a loud voice challenged him, and,
brandishing his lance, fiercely ran in full career at him; exceeding the rest
of the Gauls in stature, and with his armour, that was adorned with gold and
silver and various colours, shining like lightning. These arms seeming to
Marcellus, while he viewed the enemy's army drawn up in battalia, to be the
best and fairest, and thinking them to be those he had vowed to Jupiter, he
instantly ran upon the king, and pierced through his breastplate with his
lance; then pressing upon him with the weight of his horse, threw him to the
ground, and with two or three strokes more slew him. Immediately he leapt from
his horse, laid his hand upon the dead king's arm and, looking up towards
Heaven, thus spoke: "O Jupiter Feretrius, arbiter of the exploits of
captains, and of the acts of commanders in war and battles, be thou witness
that I, a general, have slain a general: I, a consul, have slain a king with my
own hand, third of all the Romans; and that to thee I consecrate these first
and most excellent of the spoils. Grant to us to despatch the relics of the war
with the same course of fortune." Then the Roman horse joining battle not
only with the enemy's horse, but also with the foot who attacked them, obtained
a singular and unheard-of victory. For never before or since have so few horse defeated such numerous forces of horse and foot
together. The enemies being to a great number slain, and the spoils collected,
he returned to his colleague, who was conducting the war, with ill-success,
against the enemies near the greatest and most populous of the Gallic cities, Milan. This was their
capital, and, therefore, fighting valiantly in defence of it, they were not so
much besieged by Cornelius, as they besieged him. But Marcellus having returned, and the Gaesatae retiring as soon as they were
certified of the death of the king and the defeat of his army, Milan was taken. The rest of their towns, and
all they had, the Gauls delivered up of their own accord to the Romans, and had
peace upon equitable conditions granted to them.
Marcellus alone, by a decree of the senate, triumphed. The
triumph was in magnificence, opulence, spoils, and the gigantic bodies of the
captives most remarkable. But the most grateful and most rare spectacle of all
was the general himself, carrying the arms of the barbarian king to the god to
whom he had vowed them. He had taken a tall and straight stock of an oak, and
had lopped and formed it to a trophy. Upon this he fastened and hung about the
arms of the king, arranging all the pieces in their suitable places. The
procession advancing solemnly, he, carrying this trophy, ascended the chariot;
and thus, himself the fairest and most glorious
triumphant image, was conveyed into the city. The army adorned with shining
armour followed in order, and with verses composed for the occasion, and with
songs of victory celebrated the praises of Jupiter and of their general. Then
entering the temple
of Jupiter Feretrius, he
dedicated his gift; the third, and to our memory the last, that ever did so.
The first was Romulus,
after having slain Acron, king of the Caeninenses: the second, Cornelius
Cossus, who slew Tolumnius the Etruscan: after them Marcellus, having killed
Britomartus, king of the Gauls; after Marcellus, no man. The god to whom these
spoils were consecrated is called Jupiter Feretrius, from the trophy carried on
the feretrum, one of the Greek words which at that time still existed in great
numbers in Latin: or, as others say, it is the surname of the Thundering Jupiter
derived from ferire, to strike. Others there are who would have the name to be
deduced from the strokes that are given in fight; since even now in battles,
when they press upon their enemies, they constantly call out to each other,
strike, in Latin feri. Spoils in general they call Spolia, and these in
particular Opima; though, indeed, they say that Numa Pompilius, in his
commentaries, makes mention of first, second, and third Spolia Opima; and that
he prescribes that the first taken be consecrated to Jupiter Feretrius, the
second to Mars, the third to Quirinus; as also that the reward of the first be
three hundred asses; of the second, two hundred; of the third, one hundred. The
general account, however, prevails, that those spoils only are Opima which the
general first takes in set battle, and takes from the enemy's chief captain
whom he has slain with his own hand. But of this enough.
The victory and the ending of the war was so welcome to the people of Rome,
that they sent to Apollo of Delphi, in testimony of their gratitude, a present
of a golden cup of an hundred pound weight, and gave a great part of the spoil
to their associate cities, and took care that many presents should be sent also
to Hiero, King of the Syracusans, their friend and ally.
When Hannibal invaded Italy, Marcellus was despatched with a fleet to Sicily. And when the
army had been defeated at Cannae, and many thousands of them perished, and a
few had saved themselves by flying to Canusium, and all feared lest Hannibal,
who had destroyed the strength of the Roman army, should advance at once with
his victorious troops to Rome, Marcellus first sent for the protection of the
city fifteen hundred soldiers from the fleet. Then, by decree of the senate,
going to Canusium, having heard that many of the soldiers had come together in
that place, he led them out of the fortifications to prevent the enemy from
ravaging the country. The chief Roman commanders had most of them fallen in
battles; and the citizens complained that the extreme caution of Fabius
Maximus, whose integrity and wisdom gave him the highest authority, verged upon
timidity and inaction. They confided in him to keep them out of danger, but
could not expect that he would enable them to retaliate. Fixing, therefore,
their thoughts upon Marcellus, and hoping to combine his boldness, confidence,
and promptitude with Fabius's caution and prudence,
and to temper the one by the other, they sent, sometimes both with consular
command, sometimes one as consul, the other as proconsul, against the enemy.
Posidonius writes, that Fabius was called the buckler, Marcellus the sword of Rome. Certainly, Hannibal
himself confessed that he feared Fabius as a schoolmaster, Marcellus as an
adversary: the former, lest he should be hindered from doing mischief; the
latter, lest he should receive harm himself.
And first, when among Hannibal's
soldiers, proud of their victory, carelessness and boldness had grown to a
great height, Marcellus, attacking all their stragglers and plundering parties,
cut them off, and by little and little diminished their forces. Then carrying
aid to the Neopolitans and Nolans, he confirmed the minds of the former, who,
indeed, were of their own accord faithful enough to the Romans; but in Nola he
found a state of discord, the senate not being able to rule and keep in the
common people, who were generally favourers of Hannibal. There was in the town
one Bantius, a man renowned for his high birth and courage. This man, after he
had fought most fiercely at Cannae, and had killed many of the enemies, at last
was found lying in a heap of dead bodies, covered with darts, and was brought
to Hannibal, who so honoured him, that he not only dismissed him without
ransom, but also contracted friendship with him, and made him his guest. In gratitude
for this great favour, he became one of the strongest partisans of Hannibal, and urged the
people to revolt. Marcellus could not be induced to put to death a man of such
eminence, and who had endured such dangers in fighting on the Roman side; but,
knowing himself able, by the general kindliness of his disposition, and in
particular by the attractiveness of his address, to gain over a character whose
passion was for honour, one day when Bantius saluted him, he asked him who he
was; not that he knew him not before, but seeking an occasion of further
conference. When Bantius had told who he was, Marcellus,
seeming surprised with joy and wonder, replied: "Are you that Bantius whom
the Romans commend above the rest that fought at Cannae,
and praise as the one man that not only did not forsake the consul Paulus
Aemilius, but received in his own body many darts thrown at him?"
Bantius owning himself to be that very man, and showing his scars: "Why,
then," said Marcellus, "did not you, having such proofs to show of
your affection to us, come to me at my first arrival here? Do you think that we
are unwilling to requite with favour those who have well deserved, and who are
honoured even by our enemies?" He followed up his courtesies by a present
of a war-horse and five hundred drachmas in money. From that time Bantius
became the most faithful assistant and ally of Marcellus, and a most keen
discoverer of those that attempted innovation and sedition.
These were many, and had entered into a conspiracy to
plunder the baggage of the Romans, when they should make an irruption against
the enemy. Marcellus, therefore, having marshalled his army within the city,
placed the baggage near to the gates, and, by an edict, forbade the Nolans to
go to the walls. Thus, outside the city, no arms could be seen; by which
prudent device he allured Hannibal
to move with his army in some disorder to the city, thinking that things were
in a tumult there. Then Marcellus, the nearest gate being, as he had commanded,
thrown open, issuing forth with the flower of his horse in front, charged the
enemy. By and by the foot, sallying out of another gate, with a loud shout
joined in the battle. And while Hannibal opposes part of his forces to these,
the third gate also is opened, out of which the rest break forth, and on all
quarters fall upon the enemies, who were dismayed at this unexpected encounter,
and did but feebly resist those with whom they had been first engaged, because
of their attack by these others who sallied out later. Here Hannibal's soldiers, with much bloodshed and
many wounds, were beaten back to their camp, and for the first time turned
their backs to the Romans. There fell in this action, as it is related, more
than five thousand of them; of the Romans, not above five hundred. Livy does
not affirm that either the victory or the slaughter of the enemy was so great;
but certain it is that the adventure brought great glory to Marcellus, and to
the Romans, after their calamities, a great revival of confidence, as they
began now to entertain a hope that the enemy with whom they contended was not
invincible, but liable like themselves to defeats.
Therefore, the other consul being deceased, the people
recalled Marcellus, that they might put him into his place; and, in spite of
the magistrates, succeeded in postponing the election till his arrival, when he
was by all the suffrages created consul. But because it happened to thunder,
the augurs accounting that he was not legitimately created, and yet not daring,
for fear of the people, to declare their sentence openly, Marcellus voluntarily
resigned the consulate, retaining however his command. Being created proconsul,
and returning to the camp at Nola, he proceeded to harass those that followed
the party of the Carthaginians; on whose coming with speed to succour them,
Marcellus declined a challenge to a set battle, but when Hannibal had sent out
a party to plunder, and now expected no fight, he broke out upon him with his
army. He had distributed to the foot long lances, such as are commonly used in
naval fights; and instructed them to throw them with great force at convenient
distances against the enemies, who were inexperienced in that way of darting,
and used to fight with short darts hand to hand. This seems to have been the
cause of the total rout and open flight of all the Carthaginians who were then
engaged; there fell of them five thousand; four elephants were killed, and two
taken; but what was of the greatest moment, on the third day after, more than
three hundred horse, Spaniards and Numidians mixed, deserted to him, a disaster
that had never to that day happened to Hannibal, who had kept together in
harmony an army of barbarians, collected out of many various and discordant
nations. Marcellus and his successors in all this war made good use of the
faithful service of these horsemen.
He now was a third time created consul, and sailed over into
Sicily. For the success of Hannibal had
excited the Carthaginians to lay claim to that whole island; chiefly because,
after the murder of the tyrant Hieronymus, all things had been in tumult and
confusion at Syracuse.
For which reason the Romans also had sent before to that city
a force under the conduct of Appius, as praetor. While Marcellus was
receiving that army, a number of Roman soldiers cast themselves at his feet,
upon occasion of the following calamity. Of those that survived the battle at Cannae, some had escaped by flight, and some were taken
alive by the enemy; so great a multitude, that it was
thought there were not remaining Romans enough to defend the wall of the city.
And yet the magnanimity and constancy of the city was such, that it would not
redeem the captives from Hannibal, though it might have done so for a small
ransom; a decree of the senate forbade it, and chose rather to leave them to be
killed by the enemy, or sold out of Italy; and commanded that all who had saved
themselves by flight should be transported into Sicily, and not permitted to
return into Italy, until the war with Hannibal should be ended. These, therefore,
when Marcellus was arrived in Sicily,
addressed themselves to him in great numbers; and casting themselves at his
feet, with much lamentation and tears humbly besought him to admit them to
honourable service; and promised to make it appear by their future fidelity and
exertions that that defeat had been received rather by misfortune than by
cowardice. Marcellus, pitying them, petitioned the senate by letters, that he
might have leave at all times to recruit his legions out of them. After much
debate about the thing, the senate decreed they were of opinion that the
commonwealth did not require the service of cowardly soldiers; if Marcellus
perhaps thought otherwise, he might make use of them,
provided no one of them be honoured on any occasion with a crown or military
gift, as a reward of his virtue or courage. This decree stung Marcellus; and on
his return to Rome, after the Sicilian war was ended, he upbraided the senate
that they had denied to him, who had so highly deserved of the republic,
liberty to relieve so great a number of citizens in great calamity.
At this time Marcellus, first incensed by injuries done him
by Hippocrates, commander of the Syracusans (who, to give proof of his good
affection to the Carthaginians, and to acquire the tyranny to himself, had
killed a number of Romans at Leontini), besieged and took by force the city of
Leontini; yet violated none of the townsmen; only deserters, as many as he
took, he subjected to the punishment of the rods and axe. But Hippocrates,
sending a report to Syracuse, that Marcellus had put all the adult population
to the sword, and then coming upon the Syracusans, who had risen in tumult upon
that false report, made himself master of the city. Upon this Marcellus moved
with his whole army to Syracuse,
and encamping near the wall, sent ambassadors into the city to relate to the
Syracusans the truth of what had been done in Leontini. When these could not
prevail by treaty, the whole power being now in the hands of Hippocrates, he
proceeded to attack the city both by land and by sea. The land forces were
conducted by Appius: Marcellus, with sixty galleys, each with five rows of
oars, furnished with all sorts of arms and missiles, and a huge bridge of
planks laid upon eight ships chained together, upon which was carried the
engine to cast stones and darts, assaulted the walls, relying on the abundance
and magnificence of his preparations, and on his own previous glory; all which,
however, were, it would seem, but trifles for Archimedes and his machines.
These machines he had designed and contrived, not as matters
of any importance, but as mere amusements in geometry; in compliance with King
Hiero's desire and request, some little time before, that he should reduce to
practice some part of his admirable speculation in science, and by
accommodating the theoretic truth to sensation and ordinary use, bring it more
within the appreciation of the people in general. Eudoxus and Archytas had been
the first originators of this far-famed and highly-prized art of mechanics,
which they employed as an elegant illustration of geometrical truths, and as
means of sustaining experimentally, to the satisfaction of the senses,
conclusions too intricate for proof by words and diagrams. As, for example, to
solve the problem, so often required in constructing geometrical figures, given
the two extremes, to find the two mean lines of a proportion, both these
mathematicians had recourse to the aid of instruments, adapting to their
purpose certain curves and sections of lines. But what with Plato's indignation
at it, and his invectives against it as the mere corruption and annihilation of
the one good of geometry, which was thus shamefully turning its back upon the
unembodied objects of pure intelligence to recur to sensation, and to ask help
(not to be obtained without base supervisions and depravation) from matter; so
it was that mechanics came to be separated from geometry, and, repudiated and
neglected by philosophers, took its place as a military art. Archimedes,
however, in writing to King Hiero, whose friend and near relation he was, had
stated that given the force, any given weight might be moved, and even boasted,
we are told, relying on the strength of demonstration, that if there were
another earth, by going into it he could remove this. Hiero being struck with
amazement at this, and entreating him to make good this problem by actual
experiment, and show some great weight moved by a small engine, he fixed
accordingly upon a ship of burden out of the king's arsenal, which could not be
drawn out of the dock without great labour and many men; and, loading her with
many passengers and a full freight, sitting himself the while far off, with no
great endeavour, but only holding the head of the pulley in his hand and
drawing the cords by degrees, he drew the ship in a straight line, as smoothly
and evenly as if she had been in the sea. The king, astonished at this, and
convinced of the power of the art, prevailed upon Archimedes to make him
engines accommodated to all the purposes, offensive and defensive, of a siege. These the king himself never made use of, because he spent
almost all his life in a profound quiet and the highest affluence. But the
apparatus was, in most opportune time, ready at hand for the Syracusans, and
with it also the engineer himself.
When, therefore, the Romans assaulted the walls in two
places at once, fear and consternation stupefied the Syracusans, believing that
nothing was able to resist that violence and those forces. But when Archimedes
began to ply his engines, he at once shot against the land forces all sorts of
missile weapons, and immense masses of stone that came down with incredible
noise and violence; against which no man could stand; for they knocked down
those upon whom they fell in heaps, breaking all their ranks and files. In the
meantime huge poles thrust out from the walls over the ships sunk some by the
great weights which they let down from on high upon them; others they lifted up
into the air by an iron hand or beak like a crane's beak and, when they had
drawn them up by the prow, and set them on end upon the poop, they plunged them
to the bottom of the sea; or else the ships, drawn by engines within, and
whirled about, were dashed against steep rocks that stood jutting out under the
walls, with great destruction of the soldiers that were aboard them. A ship was
frequently lifted up to a great height in the air (a dreadful thing to behold),
and was rolled to and fro, and kept swinging, until the mariners were all
thrown out, when at length it was dashed against the rocks, or let fall. At the
engine that Marcellus brought upon the bridge of ships, which was called
Sambuca, from some resemblance it had to an instrument of music, while it was
as yet approaching the wall, there was discharged a piece of rock of ten
talents weight, then a second and a third, which, striking upon it with immense
force and a noise like thunder, broke all its foundation to pieces, shook out
all its fastenings, and completely dislodged it from the bridge. So Marcellus, doubtful what counsel to pursue, drew off his ships
to a safer distance, and sounded a retreat to his forces on land. They
then took a resolution of coming up under the walls, if it were possible, in
the night; thinking that as Archimedes used ropes stretched at length in
playing his engines, the soldiers would now be under the shot, and the darts
would, for want of sufficient distance to throw them, fly over their heads
without effect. But he, it appeared, had long before framed for such occasions
engines accommodated to any distance, and shorter weapons; and had made
numerous small openings in the walls, through which, with engines of a shorter
range, unexpected blows were inflicted on the assailants. Thus, when they who
thought to deceive the defenders came close up to the walls, instantly a shower
of darts and other missile weapons was again cast upon them. And when stones came tumbling down perpendicularly upon their heads, and, as
it were, the whole wall shot out arrows at them, they retired. And now, again,
as they were going off, arrows and darts of a longer range inflicted a great
slaughter among them, and their ships were driven one against another; while
they themselves were not able to retaliate in any way. For Archimedes had
provided and fixed most of his engines immediately under the wall; whence the
Romans, seeing that indefinite mischief overwhelmed them from no visible means,
began to think they were fighting with the gods.
Yet Marcellus escaped unhurt, and deriding his own
artificers and engineers, "What," said he, "must we give up
fighting with this geometrical Briareus, who plays pitch-and-toss with our
ships, and, with the multitude of darts which he showers at a single moment
upon us, really outdoes the hundred-handed giants of mythology?" And,
doubtless, the rest of the Syracusans were but the body of Archimedes's
designs, one soul moving and governing all; for, laying aside all other arms,
with this alone they infested the Romans and protected themselves.
In fine, when such terror had seized upon the Romans, that, if they did but see
a little rope or a piece of wood from the wall, instantly crying out, that
there it was again, Archimedes was about to let fly some engine at them, they
turned their backs and fled, Marcellus desisted from conflicts and assaults,
putting all his hope in a long siege. Yet Archimedes possessed so high a
spirit, so profound a soul, and such treasures of scientific knowledge, that
though these inventions had now obtained him the renown of more than human
sagacity, he yet would not deign to leave behind him any commentary or writing
on such subjects; but, repudiating as sordid and ignoble the whole trade of
engineering, and every sort of art that lends itself to mere use and profit, he
placed his whole affection and ambition in those purer speculations where there
can be no reference to the vulgar needs of life; studies, the superiority of
which to all others is unquestioned, and in which the only doubt can be whether
the beauty and grandeur of the subjects examined, of the precision and cogency
of the methods and means of proof, most deserve our admiration. It is not
possible to find in all geometry more difficult and intricate questions, or
more simple and lucid explanations. Some ascribe this to his natural genius; while
others think that incredible effort and toil produced these, to all
appearances, easy and unlaboured results. No amount of investigation of yours
would succeed in attaining the proof, and yet, once seen, you immediately
believe you would have discovered it; by so smooth and so rapid a path he leads
you to the conclusion required. And thus it ceases to be incredible that (as is
commonly told of him) the charm of his familiar and domestic Siren made him
forget his food and neglect his person, to that degree that when he was
occasionally carried by absolute violence to bathe or have his body anointed,
he used to trace geometrical figures in the ashes of the fire, and diagrams in
the oil on his body, being in a state of entire preoccupation, and, in the truest
sense, divine possession with his love and delight in science. His discoveries
were numerous and admirable; but he is said to have requested his friends and
relations that, when he was dead, they would place over his tomb a sphere
containing a cylinder, inscribing it with the ratio which the containing solid
bears to the contained.
Such was Archimedes, who now showed himself, and so far as lay in him the city also, invincible. While the
siege continued, Marcellus took Megara, one of
the earliest founded of the Greek cities in Sicily, and capturing also the camp of
Hippocrates at Acilae, killed above eight thousand men, having attacked them
whilst they were engaged in forming their fortifications. He overran a great
part of Sicily;
gained over many towns from the Carthaginians, and overcame all that dared to
encounter him. As the siege went on, one Damippus, a Lacedaemonian, putting to
sea in a ship from Syracuse,
was taken. When the Syracusans much desired to redeem this man, and there were
many meetings and treaties about the matter betwixt them and Marcellus, he had
opportunity to notice a tower into which a body of men might be secretly
introduced, as the wall near to it was not difficult to surmount, and it was
itself carelessly guarded. Coming often thither, and entertaining conferences
about the release of Damippus, he had pretty well calculated the height of the
tower, and got ladders prepared. The Syracusans celebrated a feast to Diana;
this juncture of time, when they were given up entirely to wine and sport,
Marcellus laid hold of, and before the citizens perceived it, not only
possessed himself of the tower, but, before the break
of day, filled the wall around with soldiers, and made his way into the
Hexapylum. The Syracusans now beginning to stir, and to be alarmed at the
tumult, he ordered the trumpets everywhere to sound, and thus frightened them
all into flight, as if all parts of the city were already won, though the most
fortified, and the fairest, and most ample quarter was
still ungained. It is called Acradina, and was divided by a wall from the outer
city, one part of which they call Neapolis, the other Tycha. Possessing himself
of these, Marcellus, about break of day, entered through the Hexapylum, all his
officers congratulating him. But looking down from the higher places upon the
beautiful and spacious city below, he is said to have wept much, commiserating
the calamity that hung over it, when his thoughts represented to him how dismal
and foul the face of the city would be in a few hours, when plundered and
sacked by the soldiers. For among the officers of his army there was not one
man that durst deny the plunder of the city to the soldiers' demands; nay, many
were instant that it should be set on fire and laid level to the ground: but this
Marcellus would not listen to. Yet he granted, but with great unwillingness and
reluctance, that the money and slaves should be made prey; giving orders, at
the same time, that none should violate any free person, nor kill, misuse, or
make a slave of any of the Syracusans. Though he had used this moderation, he
still esteemed the condition of that city to be pitiable, and, even amidst the
congratulations and joy, showed his strong feelings of sympathy and
commiseration at seeing all the riches accumulated during a long felicity now
dissipated in an hour. For it is related that no less prey
and plunder was taken here than afterward in Carthage. For not long after they
obtained also the plunder of the other parts of the city, which were taken by
treachery; leaving nothing untouched but the king's money, which was brought
into the public treasury. But nothing afflicted Marcellus so much as the death
of Archimedes, who was then, as fate would have it, intent upon working out
some problem by a diagram, and having fixed his mind alike and his eyes upon
the subject of his speculation, he never noticed the incursion of the Romans,
nor that the city was taken. In this transport of study and contemplation, a
soldier, unexpectedly coming up to him, commanded him to follow to Marcellus;
which he declining to do before he had worked out his problem to a
demonstration, the soldier, enraged, drew his sword and ran him through. Others
write that a Roman soldier, running upon him with a drawn sword, offered to
kill him; and that Archimedes, looking back, earnestly besought him to hold his
hand a little while, that he might not leave what he was then at work upon
inconclusive and imperfect; but the soldier, nothing moved by his entreaty,
instantly killed him. Others again relate that, as Archimedes was carrying to
Marcellus mathematical instruments, dials, spheres, and angles, by which the
magnitude of the sun might be measured to the sight, some soldiers seeing him,
and thinking that he carried gold in a vessel, slew him. Certain it is that his
death was very afflicting to Marcellus; and that Marcellus ever after regarded
him that killed him as a murderer; and that he sought for his kindred and
honoured them with signal favours.
Indeed, foreign nations had held the Romans to be excellent
soldiers and formidable in battle; but they had hitherto given no memorable
example of gentleness, or humanity, or civil virtue; and Marcellus seems first
to have shown to the Greeks that his countrymen were most illustrious for their
justice. For such was his moderation to all with whom he had anything to do,
and such his benignity also to many cities and private men, that, if anything
hard or severe was decreed concerning the people of Enna, Megara, or Syracuse,
the blame was thought to belong rather to those upon whom the storm fell, than
to those who brought it upon them. One example of many I will commemorate. In Sicily there is a town
called Engyum, not indeed great, but very ancient and ennobled by the presence
of the goddesses, called the Mothers. The temple, they say, was built by the
Cretans; and they show some spears and brazen helmets, inscribed with the names
of Meriones, and (with the same spelling as in Latin) of Ulysses, who
consecrated them to the goddesses. This city highly favouring the party of the
Carthaginians, Nicias, the most eminent of the citizens, counselled them to go
over to the Romans; to that end acting freely and openly in harangues to their
assemblies, arguing the imprudence and madness of the opposite course. They,
fearing his power and authority, resolved to deliver him in bonds to the
Carthaginians. Nicias, detecting the design, and seeing that his person was
secretly kept in watch, proceeded to speak irreligiously to the vulgar of the
Mothers, and showed many signs of disrespect, as if he denied and contemned the
received opinion of the presence of those goddesses; his enemies the while
rejoicing that he, of his own accord, sought the destruction hanging over his
head. When they were just now about to lay hands upon him, an assembly was
held, and here Nicias, making a speech to the people concerning some affair
then under deliberation, in the midst of his address, cast himself upon the
ground; and soon after, while amazement (as usually happens on such surprising occasions)
held the assembly immovable, raising and turning his head round, he began in a
trembling and deep tone, but by degrees raised and sharpened his voice. When he
saw the whole theatre struck with horror and silence, throwing off his mantle
and rending his tunic he leaps up half naked, and runs towards the door, crying
out aloud that he was driven by the wrath of the Mothers. When no man durst,
out of religious fear, lay hands upon him or stop him, but all gave way before
him, he ran out of the gate, not omitting any shriek or gesture of men
possessed and mad. His wife, conscious of his counterfeiting, and privy to his
design, taking her children with her, first cast herself as a suppliant before
the temple of the goddesses; then, pretending to seek her wandering husband, no
man hindering her, went out of the town in safety; and by this means they all
escaped to Marcellus at Syracuse. After many other such affronts offered him by
the men of Engyum, Marcellus, having taken them all prisoners and cast them
into bonds, was preparing to inflict upon them the last punishment; when
Nicias, with tears in his eyes, addressed himself to him. In fine, casting
himself at Marcellus's feet, and deprecating for his citizens, he begged most
earnestly their lives, chiefly those of his enemies. Marcellus, relenting, set
them all at liberty, and rewarded Nicias with ample lands and rich presents.
This history is recorded by Posidonius the philosopher.
Marcellus, at length recalled by the people of Rome to the immediate war at home, to
illustrate his triumph, and adorn the city, carried away with him a
great number of the most beautiful ornaments of Syracuse. For, before that, Rome neither had, nor had seen, any of those
fine and exquisite rarities; nor was any pleasure taken in graceful and elegant
pieces of workmanship. Stuffed with barbarous arms and spoils stained with
blood, and everywhere crowned with triumphal memorials and trophies, she was no
pleasant or delightful spectacle for the eyes of peaceful or refined spectators;
but, as Epaminondas named the fields of Boeotia the stage of Mars; and Xenophon
called Ephesus the workhouse of war; so, in my judgment, may you call Rome, at
that time (to use the words of Pindar), "the precinct of the peaceless
Mars." Whence Marcellus was more popular with the people in general,
because he had adorned the city with beautiful objects that had all the charms
of Grecian grace and symmetry; but Fabius Maximus, who neither touched nor
brought away anything of this kind from Tarentum, when he had taken it, was
more approved of by the elder men. He carried off the money and valuables, but
forbade the statues to be moved; adding, as it is commonly related, "Let
us leave to the Tarentines these offended gods." They blamed Marcellus,
first for placing the city in an invidious position, as it seemed now to
celebrate victories and lead processions of triumph, not only over men, but
also over the gods as captives; then, that he had diverted to idleness, and
vain talk about curious arts and artificers, the common people, which, bred up
in wars and agriculture, had never tasted of luxury and sloth, and, as
Euripides said of Hercules, had been-
"Rude, unrefined, only for great things good," so
that now they misspent much of their time in examining and criticizing trifles.
And yet, notwithstanding this reprimand, Marcellus made it his glory to the
Greeks themselves, that he had taught his ignorant countrymen to esteem and
admire the elegant and wonderful productions of Greece.
But when the envious opposed his being brought triumphant
into the city, because there were some relics of the war in Sicily, and a third triumph would be looked
upon with jealousy, he gave way. He triumphed upon the Alban mount, and thence
entered the city in ovation, as it is called in Latin, in Greek eua; but in
this ovation he was neither carried in a chariot, nor crowned with laurel, nor
ushered by trumpets sounding; but went afoot with shoes on, many flutes or
pipes sounding in concert, while he passed along, wearing a garland of myrtle,
in a peaceable aspect, exciting rather love and respect than fear. Whence I am,
by conjecture, led to think that, originally, the difference observed betwixt
ovation and triumph did not depend upon the greatness of the achievements, but
the manner of performing them. For they who, having fought a set battle, and
slain the enemy, returned victors, led that martial, terrible triumph, and, as
the ordinary custom then was in lustrating the army, adorned the arms and the
soldiers with a great deal of laurel. But they who without force, by colloquy,
persuasion, and reasoning, had done the business, to these captains custom gave
the honour of the unmilitary and festive ovation. For the
pipe is the badge of peace, and myrtle the plant of Venus, who more than the
rest of the gods and goddesses abhors force and war. It is called
ovation, not as most think, from the Greek euasmus, because they act it with
shouting and cries of Eua: for so do they also the proper triumphs. The Greeks
have wrested the word to their own language, thinking that this honour, also,
must have some connection with Bacchus, who in Greek has the titles of Euius
and Thriambus. But the thing is otherwise. For it was the custom for
commanders, in their triumph, to immolate an ox, but in their ovation, a sheep:
hence they named it Ovation, from the Latin ovis. It is worth observing, how
exactly opposite the sacrifices appointed by the Spartan legislator are to
those of the Romans. For at Lacedaemon, a captain, who had performed the work
he had undertook by cunning, or courteous treaty, on laying down his command,
immolated an ox; he that did the business by battle, offered a cock; the
Lacedaemonians, though most warlike, thinking exploit performed by reason and
wisdom to be more excellent and more congruous to man, than one effected by
mere force and courage. Which of the two is to be preferred I leave to the
determination of others.
Marcellus being the fourth time consul, his enemies suborned
the Syracusans to come to Rome
to accuse him, and to complain that they had suffered indignities and wrongs,
contrary to the conditions granted them. It happened that Marcellus was in the
capitol offering sacrifice when the Syracusans petitioned the senate, yet
sitting, that they might have leave to accuse him and present their grievances.
Marcellus's colleague, eager to protect him in his absence, put them out of the
court. But Marcellus himself came as soon as he heard of it. And first, in his
curule chair as consul, he referred to the senate the cognizance of other
matters: but when these were transacted, rising from his seat, he passed as a
private man into the place where the accused were wont to make their defence,
and gave free liberty to the Syracusans to impeach him. But they, struck with consternation
by his majesty and confidence, stood astonished; and the power of his presence
now, in his robe of state, appeared far more terrible and severe than it had
done when he was arrayed in armour. Yet, reanimated at length by Marcellus's
rivals, they began their impeachment, and made an oration in which pleas of
justice mingled with lamentation and complaint; the sum of which was, that
being allies and friends of the people of Rome, they had, notwithstanding,
suffered things which other commanders had abstained from inflicting upon
enemies. To this Marcellus answered that they had committed many acts of
hostility against the people of Rome, and had suffered nothing but what enemies
conquered and captured in war cannot possibly be protected from suffering: that
it was their own fault they had been made captives, because they refused to
give ear to his frequent attempts to persuade them by gentle means: neither
were they forced into war by the power of tyrants, but had rather chosen the
tyrants themselves for the express object that they might make war. The
orations ended, and the Syracusans, according to the custom, having retired,
Marcellus left his colleague to ask the sentences, and, withdrawing with the
Syracusans, stayed expecting at the doors of the senate-house; not in the least
discomposed in spirit, either with alarm at the accusation, or by anger against
the Syracusans; but with perfect calmness and serenity attending the issue of
the cause. The sentences at length being all asked, and a decree of the senate
made in vindication of Marcellus, the Syracusans, with tears flowing from their
eyes, cast themselves at his knees, beseeching him to forgive themselves there
present, and to be moved by the misery of the rest of their city, which would
ever be mindful of, and grateful for, his benefits. Thus Marcellus, softened by
their tears and distress, was not only reconciled to the deputies, but ever
afterwards continued to find opportunity of doing kindness to the Syracusans.
The liberty which he had restored to them, and their rights, laws, and goods
that were left, the senate confirmed. Upon which account the Syracusans,
besides other signal honours, made a law, that if Marcellus should at any time
come into Sicily,
or any of his posterity, the Syracusans should wear garlands and offer public
sacrifice to the gods.
After this he moved against Hannibal. And whereas the other consuls and
commanders, since the defeat received at Cannae, had all made use of the same
policy against Hannibal, namely, to decline coming to a battle with him; and
none had had the courage to encounter him in the field and put themselves to
the decision by the sword; Marcellus entered upon the opposite course, thinking
that Italy would be destroyed by the very delay by which they looked to wear
out Hannibal; and that Fabius, who, adhering to his cautious policy, waited to
see the war extinguished, while Rome itself meantime wasted away (like timid
physicians, who, dreading to administer remedies, stay waiting, and believe
that what is the decay of the patient's strength is the decline of the
disease), was not taking a right course to heal the sickness of his country.
And first, the great cities of the Samnites, which had revolted, came into his
power; in which he found a large quantity of corn and money, and three thousand
of Hannibal's
soldiers, that were left for the defence. After this, the proconsul Cnaeus
Fulvius with eleven tribunes of the soldiers being slain in Apulia, and the
greatest part of the army also at the same time cut off, he despatched letters
to Rome, and bade the people be of good courage, for that he was now upon the
march against Hannibal, to turn his triumph into sadness. On these letters
being read, Livy writes that the people were not only not encouraged, but more
discouraged than before. For danger, they thought, was but the greater in
proportion as Marcellus was of more value than Fulvius. He, as he had written,
advancing into the territories of the Lucanians, came up to him at Numistro,
and, the enemy keeping himself upon the hills, pitched his camp in a level
plain, and the next day drew forth his army in order for fight. Nor did Hannibal refuse the
challenge. They fought long and obstinately on both sides, victory yet seeming
undecided, when, after three hours' conflict, night hardly parted them. The
next day, as soon as the sun was risen, Marcellus
again brought forth his troops, and ranged them among the dead bodies of the
slain, challenging Hannibal
to solve the question by another trial. When he dislodged and drew off,
Marcellus, gathering up the spoils of the enemies, and burying the bodies of
his slain soldiers, closely followed him. And though Hannibal often used stratagems, and laid
ambushes to entrap Marcellus, yet he never could circumvent him. By skirmishes,
meantime, in all of which he was superior, Marcellus gained himself such high
repute, that, when the time of the Comitia at Rome was near at hand, the senate
thought fit rather to recall the other consul from Sicily than to withdraw
Marcellus from his conflict with Hannibal; and on his arrival they bid him name
Quintus Fulvius dictator. For the dictator is created neither by the people nor
by the senate, but the consul of the praetor, before the popular assembly,
pronounces him to be dictator whom he himself chooses. Hence he is called
dictator, dicere meaning to name. Others say that he is named dictator because
his word is a law, and he orders what he pleases, without submitting it to the
vote. For the Romans call the orders of magistrates Edicts.
And now because Marcellus's colleague, who was recalled from
Sicily, had a mind to name another man dictator, and would not be forced to
change his opinion, he sailed away by night back to Sicily. So the common
people made an order that Quintus Fulvius should be chosen dictator: and the
senate, by an express, commanded Marcellus to nominate him. He obeying
proclaimed him dictator according to the order of the people; but the office of
proconsul was continued to himself for a year. And having arranged with Fabius
Maximus that, while he besieged Tarentum, he would, by following Hannibal and drawing him up and down, detain him from
coming to the relief of the Tarentines, he overtook him at Canusium: and as Hannibal often shifted
his camp, and still declined the combat, he everywhere sought to engage him. At
last, pressing upon him while encamping, by light skirmishes he provoked him to
a battle; but night again divided them in the very heat of the conflict. The
next day Marcellus again showed himself in arms, and
brought up his forces in array. Hannibal,
in extreme grief, called his Carthaginians together to an
harangue: and vehemently prayed them to fight to-day worthily of all their
former success; "For you see," said he, "how, after such great
victories, we have not liberty to respire, nor to repose ourselves, though
victors; unless we drive this man back." Then the two armies, joining
battle, fought fiercely; when the event of an untimely movement showed
Marcellus to have been guilty of an error. The right wing being hard pressed upon, he commanded one of the legions to be brought up to
the front. This change disturbing the array and posture of the legions gave the
victory to the enemies; and there fell two thousand seven hundred Romans.
Marcellus, after he had retreated into his camp, called his soldiers together.
"I see," said he, "many Roman arms and bodies, but I see not so
much as one Roman." To their entreaties for his pardon, he returned a
refusal while they remained beaten, but promised to give it so
soon as they should overcome; and he resolved to bring them into the field
again the next day, that the fame of their victory might arrive at Rome before that of their
flight. Dismissing the assembly, he commanded barley instead of wheat to be
given to those companies that had turned their backs. These rebukes were so
bitter to the soldiers, that though a great number of them were grievously
wounded, yet they relate there was not one to whom the general's oration was
not more painful and smarting than his wounds.
The day breaking, a scarlet toga, the sign of instant
battle, was displayed. The companies marked with ignominy begged they might be
posted in the foremost place, and obtained their request. Then the tribunes
bring forth the rest of the forces, and draw them up. On news of which, "O
strange!" said Hannibal,
"what will you do with this man, who can bear neither good nor bad
fortune? He is the only man who neither suffers us to rest when he is victor,
nor rests himself when he is overcome. We shall have, it seems, perpetually to
fight with him; as in good success his confidence, and in ill success his
shame, still urges him to some further enterprise." Then the armies
engaged. When the fight was doubtful, Hannibal
commanded the elephants to be brought into the first battalion, and to be
driven upon the van of the Romans. When the beasts, trampling upon many, soon
caused disorder, Flavius, a tribune of soldiers, snatching an ensign, meets
them, and wounding the first elephant with the spike at the bottom of the
ensign staff, puts him to flight. The beast turned around upon the next, and
drove back both him and the rest that followed. Marcellus, seeing this, pours
in his horse with great force upon the elephants, and upon the enemy disordered
by their flight. The horse, making a fierce impression, pursued the
Carthaginians home to their camp, while the elephants, wounded and running upon
their own party, caused a considerable slaughter. It is said more than eight
thousand were slain; of the Roman army three thousand, and almost all wounded.
This gave Hannibal opportunity to retire in the
silence of the night, and to remove to greater distance from Marcellus; who was
kept from pursuing by the number of his wounded men, and removed, by gentle
marches, into Campania,
and spent the summer at Sinuessa, engaged in restoring them.
But as Hannibal, having
disentangled himself from Marcellus, ranged with his army round about the
country, and wasted Italy
free from all fear, at Rome Marcellus was evil spoken of. His detractors
induced Publicius Bibulus, tribune of the people, an eloquent and violent man,
to undertake his accusation. He, by assiduous harangues, prevailed upon the
people to withdraw from Marcellus the command of the army; "Seeing that
Marcellus," said he, "after brief exercise in the war, has withdrawn
as it might be from the wrestling ground to the warm baths to refresh
himself." Marcellus, on hearing this, appointed lieutenants over his camp
and hasted to Rome
to refute the charges against him: and there found ready drawn up an
impeachment consisting of these calumnies. At the day prefixed, in the
Flaminian circus, into which place the people had assembled themselves,
Bibulus rose and accused him. Marcellus himself answered, briefly and simply,
but the first and most approved men of the city spoke largely and in high
terms, very freely advising the people not to show themselves worse judges than
the enemy, condemning Marcellus of timidity, from whom alone of all their
captains the enemy fled, and as perpetually endeavoured to avoid fighting with
him as to fight with others. When they made an end of speaking, the accuser's
hope to obtain judgment so far deceived him, that
Marcellus was not only absolved, but the fifth time created consul.
No sooner had he entered upon this consulate, but he
suppressed a great commotion in Etruria,
that had proceeded near to revolt, and visited and quieted the cities. Then,
when the dedication of the temple, which he had vowed out of his Sicilian
spoils to Honour and Virtue, was objected to by the priests, because they
denied that one temple could be lawfully dedicated to two gods, he began to
adjoin another to it, resenting the priests' opposition, and almost converting
the thing into an omen. And, truly, many other prodigies also affrighted him;
some temples had been struck with lightning, and in Jupiter's temple mice had
gnawed the gold: it was reported, also, that an ox had spoken, and that a boy
had been born with a head like an elephant's. All which prodigies had indeed
been attended to, but due reconciliation had not been obtained from the gods.
The aruspices therefore detained him at Rome,
glowing and burning with desire to return to the war. For no
man was ever inflamed with so great desire of anything as was he to fight a
battle with Hannibal.
It was the subject of his dreams in the night, the
topic of all his consultations with his friends and familiars, nor did he
present to the gods any other wish, but that he might meet Hannibal in the field. And I think that he would
most gladly have set upon him, with both armies environed within a single camp.
Had he not been even loaded with honours, and had he not given proofs in many
ways of his maturity of judgment and of prudence equal to that of any
commander, you might have said that he was agitated by a youthful ambition,
above what became a man of that age, for he had passed the sixtieth year of his
life when he began his fifth consulship.
The sacrifices having been offered, and all that belonged to
the propitiation of the gods performed, according to the prescription of the
diviners, he at last with his colleague went forth to carry on the war. He
tried all possible means to provoke Hannibal, who at that time had a standing
camp betwixt Bantia and Venusia. Hannibal declined
an engagement, but having obtained intelligence that some troops were on their
way to the town of Locri Epizephyrii,
placing an ambush under the little hill of Petelia, he slew two thousand five
hundred soldiers. This incensed Marcellus to revenge; and he therefore moved
nearer Hannibal.
Betwixt the two camps was a little hill, a tolerably secure post, covered with
wood; it had steep descents on either side, and there were springs of water
seen trickling down. This place was so fit and advantageous that the Romans
wondered that Hannibal, who had come thither before them, had not seized upon
it, but had left it to the enemies. But to him the place had seemed commodious
indeed for a camp, but yet more commodious for an ambuscade; and to that use he
chose to put it. So in the wood and the hollows he hid a number of archers and
spearmen, confident that the commodiousness of the place would allure the
Romans. Nor was he deceived in his expectation. For presently in the Roman camp
they talked and disputed, as if they had all been captains, how the place ought
to be seized, and what great advantage they should thereby gain upon the
enemies, chiefly if they transferred their camp thither, at any rate, if they
strengthened the place with a fort. Marcellus resolved to go, with a few horse,
to view it. Having called a diviner he proceeded to sacrifice. In the first
victim the aruspex showed him the liver without a head; in the second the head
appeared of unusual size, and all the other indications highly promising. When
these seemed sufficient to free them from the dread of the former, the diviners
declared that they were all the more terrified by the latter; because entrails
too fair and promising, when they appear after others that are maimed and
monstrous, render the change doubtful and suspicious. But-
"Nor fire nor brazen wall can keep out fate;" as
Pindar observes. Marcellus, therefore, taking with him his colleague Crispinus,
and his son, a tribune of soldiers, with two hundred and twenty horse at most
(among whom there was not one Roman, but all were Etruscans, except forty
Fregellans, of whose courage and fidelity he had on all occasions received full
proof), goes to view the place. The hill was covered with woods all over; on
the top of it sat a scout concealed from the sight of the enemy, but having the
Roman camp exposed to his view. Upon signs received from him, the men that were
placed in ambush stirred not till Marcellus came near; and then all starting up
in an instant, and encompassing him from all sides, attacked him with darts,
struck about and wounded the backs of those that fled, and pressed upon those
who resisted. These were the forty Fregellans. For though the Etruscans fled in
the very beginning of the fight, the Fregellans formed themselves into a ring,
bravely defending the consuls, till Crispinus, struck with two darts, turned
his horse to fly away; and Marcellus's side was run through with a lance with a
broad head. Then the Fregellans, also, the few that remained alive, leaving the
fallen consul, and rescuing young Marcellus, who also was wounded, got into the
camp by flight. There were slain not much above forty; five lictors and
eighteen horsemen came alive into the enemy's hands. Crispinus also died of his
wounds a few days after. Such a disaster as the loss of both consuls in a
single engagement was one that had never before befallen the Romans.
Hannibal, little valuing the other events, as soon as he was
told of Marcellus's death, immediately hasted to the hill. Viewing the body,
and continuing for some time to observe its strength and shape, he allowed not
a word to fall from him expressive of the least pride or arrogancy, nor did he
show in his countenance any sign of gladness, as another perhaps would have
done, when his fierce and troublesome enemy had been taken away; but amazed by
so sudden and unexpected an end, taking off nothing but his ring, gave order to
have the body properly clad and adorned and honourably burned. The relics put
into a silver urn, with a crown of gold to cover it, he sent back to his son.
But some of the Numidians, setting upon these that were carrying the urn, took
it from them by force, and cast away the bones; which being told to Hannibal, "It is
impossible, it seems then," he said, "to do anything against the will
of God!" He punished the Numidians; but took no further care of sending or
re-collecting the bones; conceiving that Marcellus so fell, and so lay
unburied, by a certain fate. So Cornelius Nepos and Vaerius Maximus have left
upon record: but Livy and Augustus Caesar affirm that the urn was brought to
his son, and honoured with a magnificent funeral. Besides the monuments raised
for him at Rome, there was dedicated to his memory at Catana, in Sicily, an
ample wrestling place called after him; statues and pictures, out of those he
took from Syracuse, were set up in Samothrace, in the temple of the gods, named
Cabiri, and in that of Minerva at Lindus, where also there was a statue of him,
says Posidonius, with the following inscription:-
"This was, O stranger, once Rome's star divine,
Claudius Marcellus of an ancient line;
To fight her wars seven times her consul made,
Low in the dust her enemies he laid."
The writer of the inscription has added to Marcellus's five
consulates his two proconsulates. His progeny continued in high honour even
down to Marcellus, son of Octavia, sister of Augustus, whom she bore to her
husband Caius Marcellus; and who died a bridegroom, in the year of his
Aedileship, having not long before married Caesar's daughter. His mother,
Octavia, dedicated the library to his honour and memory, and Caesar the theatre
which bears his name.
THE END