FirstSixBooksofCsarsCommentariesontheGallicWar 10132766
FirstSixBooksofCsarsCommentariesontheGallicWar 10132766
FirstSixBooksofCsarsCommentariesontheGallicWar 10132766
By R EV .
j A M E S B . F I NCH , M A
. .
, D . D .
F ro m th e P re fa c e — h av e
d es i gn ed thi s b oo k as an
I
ai d to th re e cl ass e s o fl e arn ers , an d i t i s my con fi d en t b e l i e f th at
t/z ey w i ll fi n d i t i n p rac ti c e to b e o fre all y i n v al u abl e s erv i ce —firs t,
teac/z ers , b o th th o s e rus ty i n L ati n w ho n e v erth e l ess fi n d th em
s e lv e s c all e d u po n to t e ac h Caes ar w i th o u t m uch ti me f or re ara
p p
ti on ; an d al s o th os e w ho are u
p i n C a e s ar b ut s ti ll m ay b e ne
u n d e r w i s e gui d an ce . A g ai n i t i s n o t w h o ll y u n l i k el y th at the
e xp eri e n c ed t eac h er o f L ati n w i ll p ri z e th i s bo o k — n o t b ecau s e
o fany n ee d f or as s i s t an ce , b u t b e c au s e o fthe ad v an t ag e o f c o m
i
T he L at i n t e xt i n t he o r g i n al o rd e r o f t he w o rd s ju s t as Caes ar
i
w ro t e t he m , w i t h t he e xac t l te ral E ng lz s i z e q u i v ale n t o f eac h L at i n
w o rd d i rec tly u n d er i t an d w i t h a s e con d e leg an t t ran s ,
T O BE F O LL OW ED SH O RT L Y ( CON S TR U CT E D ON T HE SAM E P LA N) BY
”
w i ll re ad the Clas s i cs e z the r m the o rzg z n al o r m a t ran s lat z o n .
Caes ar G al l i W a T h 7 B l
s c r . e oo es .
C a ar C l W a
es
'
s E r i p i d A l t i a d E l t ra
IV l r
. u es
'
ces s, n ec .
Cat l lu us . E ri p i d B a h a t H F u es
'
cc n e s, e rc . u re ns .
Ci r Br t E ri p i d H b a a d A d ma h
' '
ce o s u us . u es ecu n n ro c e .
Ci r D f i
,
ce o s
'
fR E r i p i d Ip hig I A h T a ri
e e nc e o os c u s u es
'
n u s, i n u s
B k V I a d V“
. . .
C ec e to D O ff i i i e E ri p i d M d a
c s . u es
'
e e .
C i r O O ld Ag a d F ri d h i p
ce o n H r d t e n en s . e o o us, oo s n .
C lc e ro O O ra t r y n H r d t o B k V lll . e o o us oo .
C -
ce o r O T h N at r ft h G d n H m r I l i a d th
e u e ot S ix B k e o s . o e
'
s
,
, e 1 s oo s.
C i r S t O rat i
ce o s
'
H m r
e'ec O dy y t B k o ns . o e
'
s ss e , [ s 12 oo s .
C lc e ro s S l t L tt r ’
l
e ec a Pa eg y ri i p p e s . s oc r es
'
ne c. n re
Ci r T l a D i p tat i
.
ce o s L
uscu i a S l t D i al g
n s ls u o ns . uc n s
'
e ec o ue s , 2 vo .
C r li N p
o ne mp l t us Ly i ae O rat i
os , co e e. s s
'
o ns .
E t m P lat A p l g y G ri t a d P h a d ’
u ro us . o s o o , o, n e o.
H ra
o ce mp l t . co Pl at G rg i ae e. o s
'
o s.
Juve n a l S at i r mp l t
'
s P la t La h
e s , co ( p ap l e e. o s
’
c es er .
Li y B k I a d II Pl at Pr tag ra E t hy p h r ’
v ,
oo s n . o s o o s, u on .
l y B ,
k X X I a d XX I Ioo sP lat R p b l i n . o s
'
e u c.
L u c re t p p a at l us S p h l CE d i p T y ra
zn
'
re r E '
z on o oc e s
'
us nn u s , le c
Mar t i al E p i g a m ( p p t a a d A t ig
.
s) r s a er r , n n o ne .
S p h l (E d p C l
.
O i d M ta m r p h
v
'
s l m e o os e s . 2 v o u in es . o oc e s
'
i us o o n e us ,
Pha dr F ab l p p a at i
'
e us es . re r on
P la t C a p t i i a d M t la i a T h y d i d B k l—lV
.
'
u us v , n os e r . uc e s, oo s .
Pla t P d l ; M l G l
u us
'
T h y d i d B k V—V lll
se u o us ues o rlo s u s . uc e s, oo s .
Pla t T i mm a d M a h m i
u us
'
X ph
r nu A ab a i i 4 B k
us , n e n ec e no on s
'
n s s, [ S oo s .
Pl y
un S l t L tt r
'
s l m e ec X ph e Ce p a d a
e s. l m 2 vo u es . e no on s
'
e i . 2 vo u es
Q mt i l a B k X a d X I H ll m a S y m p i m
'
u l n, X ph
oo s n ' . e ro . on s e e c , os u .
R m a L f i Lat P r a d V r X ph M m ra b i l i a mp l t
'
o n i e n os e n e se . e no on s e o , co e e .
Sal l t Cat l a d J g t h W a
us : l l ne , n u ur . r .
S a O B f it F r yta g Di J r al i t '
e ne c n e ne s . e s e ou n s e n.
Ta t
c n us A a l t S ix B k '
nnG th Eg m t
s, I s oo s oe e s
’
on .
Fa t
.
T a i t G r ma y a d Ag r i la
c us
'
e G th n n co . oe e s
’
us .
Ta t c r us O O rat r y n G th I p h i g i a I T a ri
o . oe e s
'
en n u s .
T r A d a A d l p h i P h mi G th H r ma a d D r th a
'
e e nc e : n n e , or o . oe e s e nn n o o e .
E mi l i a G al tt i
,
T r
e e n ce : H a t t m m L e mg u on l o ru e no s . e ss
'
s o .
V g l /E
ur t
‘
d th s t5 xB k L
ne ! i g Mi a
, e 1 s B a h lm 1 oo s. e ss n
'
s nn vo n rn e .
V i rg i l E l g
'
s a d G g c o L mgue s N at h a t h W i
n e o r lc s . e ss
’
s n e se .
V i r i R ma o e. S h ll B a lla d c l e rs
’
s.
S h i l l r Maid f O r l a c e
'
s o e ns .
lE sc hi A g ai t C t i p h
ne s S h i l l r Mari a St art
ns es on . c e
'
s u .
E sc hyl P r m th B d ad us
'
S hi ll r Th N ph w a U l
o e e us ou n , n c e
’
s e e e s nc e .
S Ag a i t T h b
e ve n S h i l l r W al l t i D at h
ns e es . c e
'
s e ns e n s
'
e .
[E hy l
sc Ag a m us ’ S h i l l r W i l l i am T l l
ne no n . c e
'
s e .
Ar i t p h a
s o B i rd a d F r g ne s C r ill L G d
'
s, n o s. o ne e s
'
e l .
Ari t p h a
s o Cl d ne s F
'
i l l t R ma P Y g Ma
ou s . eu e
'
s o nc e oo r ou n n .
D m th
e os O Th Cr w e ne s Ra i A t h al i
n e o n . c ne s
’
e .
F O R I N T E R LI N E A R A N T U T O R A TR A N S A T I ON S S O T H E R P A G E S ,
D I L L EE
i trn
ne al; fi tters ] g rati s latto ns ,
ON T HE
G A LL C W A R
LI T E R AL LY T R A N SLA T E D
W IT H E X P L A NA T O R Y NO T E S
H I ND S NO B L E , P ub li shers
—
4 5
—6—1 2— 1 —1
3 4 CO O P E R I N ST I T U T E , NE W Y O R K CI T Y
W AR I N GA U L .
B OOK I .
TH E AR GU M E NT
—
.
2 Descri pti on
. Gaul and i ts di visi ons
of I I IV The amb i tious -
.
designs of the H elvetii un der Orgetor i x, and the sus p ici o us deat h
of the latt er —
V V I The Helvetii still p roc eed to carry out
— —
. .
X IV Ca —
p o li ti c ans wer
.
’
—
—
to su e f or p eace esar s X V An
. . .
—XX
‘ . .
worsted , of fer a s rren der, b u t some clan destin ely return home
u
.
XX V I II I XX X
The n u mb ers ofthe se veral H elvetian f orces b ef
—XXX
. . ore
—XXX
.
XXX X
—
b old ans wer ofthe latter X X X V IL I A p ani c in the R 0 -
—
. .
LI I LV I-
X
Conferen ce b e t ween Ce sar an d Ari ovi s tus
—
. . .
the G ermans an d their dight f rom Gaul —LI V Caesar, having sent
-
. .
his army i nto win ter quarte rs amon gst t he Sequani, p roceeds to
-
CR AP . I .
—All
G aul i s di vi ded i n to three p arts on e m .
whi ch the B elg ae i nhab i t the Aqui tani ano the r, tho s e who i n
,
the ir own lan guag e are called Ce lts i n o urs G aul s, the thi rd , .
All the s e dif fe r fro m e ach o the r i n lan guage , cus to ms and
laws The ri ve r G aro nn e s ep arate s the G auls f
. ro m the
Aqui tani ; the M arn e an d the S e in e s ep arat e the m f ro m
the B elga e Of all thes e , the B elgae are the b rave s t, b e
.
cau s e they are farthe s t fro m the ci vi liz ati on an d refin e men t
of our P rovin ce , and me rchants le a equ ently resort to
o
l l st f r
2 cn s aa s
’
c on n a m anms .
( s oon x
he m and i mp rt t
o hos e thin gs whi ch t end to efi eminate '
t ,
the min d ; an d they are the n e are st to the G erman s who dwell ,
gians, and ( 3 ) Aqui tanians , not yet redu ced b y con qu es t to the state ofp ro
vincials of R ome, a s the A llob rog es i n the S E had b een b y Q F abi us . . .
M axi mu s A llob rog i cus , who was cons ul in c 1 21, ( the year ofthe famous B . .
y ear This F ab ius, who thence d eri ved his surname, def
. eated them and
tri umphed over their ally B i tui tus, ki ng ofthe Averm, [A u verg neJ who was
'
b irth this was the P rovi ncta ( or Gallia Narb onensis t el E n ecate )
'
The .
This p art of the ocean is the B ay ofB iscay , where i t washes the
north coa s t ofS ai n
p .
‘
HThe cons ulshi p ofM V aleri us M essala Niger and M P up ius P iso, was
. . .
in B c
. .the year i n whi ch Clodi us p rof an ed the ri tes of the B one Dee
, .
and in whi ch P om ey the G reat t riu mp hed at R ome tor hi s vi ctori es over
the P i rates, and the ki ngs T ig rane s , and M i tlz rid ales .
m ”
( cont c
. ui tu e c p as Gallorum
t a i B ook i 3 L] . .
um . m] was su mo was ; 3
.
,
had bee n s tyled fri end by the s e nate ofthe R o man p eople
”
,
, , ,
man lake to Lake ofConstance i s hardly more than 40 geograp hical miles .
[noox 1
’
an d o ath to one ano ther and hop e that when they have , ,
g , ,
p erf
o w ul an d v ali an t nati o ns be en abled to ob ta i n p o ss e ss i o n
,
y , , .
Orgetori x dre w toge ther fro m all quarte rs to the court all hi s .
f orth from their terri tori es W hen they thought that they .
f ,
, , ,
hours to adop t the same plan and after h1u n ing dow
“
n t he i r
'
, ,
v e ry few mi ght ea sily i nte rce pt the m the o ther, thro ugh our
P rovince , much e asi er an d freer f ro m ob stac le s be caus e the ,
s o me
places c ros sed by a ford The furthe st town of the
.
Allob roges , an d the n e ares t to the terri tori e s of the H e lve tii ,
They tho ught that they should e i the r p e rs uade the Allob roge s ,
CR AP V II
. W he n i t was rep orted to Caesar that they
.
,
I n the modem B ohemia and B avaria, whi ch b oth deri ve their names
rom t he B oi i
f .
Noreia seemsto nave b een the old cap ital ofNori cum .
insurgents ) .
march through the P rovi nce wi thout do i n g any harm bec ause ,
that a p e ri od mi ght i nte rve n e until the s oldi ers who m he had ,
wan ted anythi n g they mi ght re turn on the day before the i de s :
,
E ngli sh] mile s a wall t o the hei ght of s ixte en fee t § and a , ,
V i d chap xii
. . .
T he i des ofAp ril b eing April 1 3 th, and the i des of every month the
1 3 th, save M arch, M ay, J u ly , an d, Octob er, during which four months
the ides fell on the 1 5th ofeach, t wo day s lat er t han us ual .
of the ri ve r wa s le as t s o me ti me s by day b u t mo re f
, requ en tly ,
, , ,
an d o utrag e
CR AP X —I t is again told Cae s ar that the H elv etn i n
.
. . .
,
ZEdui i nto the t erri tori e s of the S an ton es whi ch are n ot far
‘
t
i That is, as a p ent eon -
.
8 casi as
’
m m ami ss
co
-
.
[noo n r.
il e t a c t of
p p , p p on r
co untry F or the s e reas o ns he app o i nted Ti tus Lab i enus hi s
.
,
eo
p p l e ar e t he fi rs t beyo n d the P rovi n ce on the o
pp o si t e s i de of
the R hon e i
"*
Making ”
Iocis p atentib us directly dependent on fi ni li mos , which “
see ms the tru e ( though overlooked) cons tructi on, and is p erhap s the
si mp lest .
1
’
A di stri ct m Vene ti a, whi ch not i n ancient only, b ut i n more moder n
times and the mi ddle ages , held the k ey ofI taly on the north-east side .
”
Con tend it i re Li terally, haste n
. s to go .
The Centrones in the G raian Alps, Caturf ges (south ofthen ) i n the
‘
[I Ocelu m, the chi eftown of G rai oceli , just on the f ronti ers Of Transal
p ine Gaul : the p resent Us se au i n P iedmon t .
The first i n dep endent p eop le north of the R oman P rovince ( new
CR AP . xn .
] am: Gi mme wan; 9
to ward f
of the i l
v o en ce of the e ne my fro m the ir towns
the Allob l oges li k e wi s e who had vi llag s an d p o ss e s s i o ns , 0
e
. .
,
ei os s i n
g by raf ts an d bo ats jo i n ed t ge the r W he n Ca e sar
o .
was i nfo rme d by s p i e s that the H elxetii had alre ady co n veyed J
fi om th e ca m p w i th th r ee le gi o n s d ri
u n g the th i r d avat c h fi an
d
came u w i t h th a t d i vi s i on whi ch had n ot y et c1 es s ed the ri ve r
p
Attackin g the m e n cumbered wi th b agg age an d n ot e xp ectin g
, ,
woo ds That can to n {whi ch was cut down] was c alled the
.
Ti guri ni had s lai n L uci us P is o the li eute nan t [of Cas si us] the ,
hours each ; the thi rd b eg mn g at mi dni ght, and the whole fo ur lasting
’
” H
nee . orat l E p i st
-
. .
3 Th i s h as b .
Consul in B .
m an s commun i sm [ K
’
. BOO 1
.
. .
,
foun d that he had e f fec ted i n on e day what they the ms elve s ,
, ,
[ofsu ch an event to
CHAP X I V —T o the s e word s Caes ar thus repli ed —
. that .
be
1 T urning the Latin from the orati o obli qua to the orati o r
sin hello p ersequi p erseveras , remi ni s ci tor
e to, i t ould
c
vi rtutis
w
”
H elveti orum, Arm ; and lower down ( 1 ) na commi tteret would b e “
V i d W ood s Translati on of Madvig s Lat. Gramm.
” ’ ’
na commis eri s . .
5404, 5, p 3 54 . .
s oox 1 ,
L
p eve nt the e n e my f
r ro m rap i n e fo r ge an d dep redati o n
a , , .
re ar an d our van .
CH AP X V I
E d ui f
.
or the co rn wh
.
-
m
M e anwhile Caesar k ept daily i p ortuni n g the
,
was be i ng W he n .
the ZE dui s tyle the V ergob retus an d who i s elected ann ually an d , ,
s ee ch di s clo
p p
“there are s o me who s e infl u en ce wi th the eo le i s very
, .
p p
great who though p ri vate men h ave mo re p o wer than the
, , ,
lan guage are de te rri n g the p o p ulace fro m contri b u tin g the
com whi ch they o u ght t o su pp ly [b y t elli ng the m] that
if they cann o t any lo n ge r t etai n the s up re macy of G aul ,
Romans sho uld overp o we r the H elve ti i the y would wre st the ir ,
can . xvm ] . ran s u mo was . 13
free dom f rom the j E dui t og ethe r wi th the re mai nde r of G aul .
whe n he bi d s n o on e dares t o b i d ag ai n s t hi m
, B y t he s e .
own acco un t b ecaus e by the i r arri val his p owe r was weak
.
. eu s , ,
p o s i ti on of i n flu e n ce an d di g n i ty : th at 1 f any th i n g s h ould ,
has Caesar d scm e1 ed too 011 i nqui i i n g i nto the uns ucce ssf
i -
ul
14 cass an s co
’
m mm m ms .
[ BOO K 1
c avalry e ngage ment whi ch had tak en place a few days befo re ,
’
cus s
v e ry hi gh regard f or the R eman p eople hi s gre at af fecti o n
,
t he p ro vin ce of G a ul a n i n ti mate f
, ri e n d of hi s i n who m he ,
u .
s tat e to do s o
CHAP XX —
.
Di vi ti a emb ra c i n g Ca r begins to i m
'
. cus
. es a
, ,
circums tan ce i t would aris e , that the affecti ons of the whole
”
of G aul would be e s tran ged f ro m hi m As he was wi th .
he co mmuni cate s
—
. .
F or the vig i li ce, or wat ches ofthe night, vi d note on b ook . i 12. chap . .
l et “
0
81 rom 6
was f to 9
There b eing t hus four
“m
1 13
of three hours each
9 1 m to midni ght
.
was
a .
e
mi dni ght to 3 A M . .
3 to 6 A M
night duty
. .
.
”
t Leg atu m p ro pratorc The legati accomp anied the gen erals into the
.
b
fi eld, or the p rocensul [or p rze tor] to the p rovinces T hey were n omi .
.
n ated ( leg ati ) b y the Consu l, P rinter, or D i ctator, u n derwhom they served,
hast ens to the m by the same ro ute by whi ch the en emy had
gon e , an d s ends on all the cavalry b efore hi m P ubli us Cons i .
o
s c uts
XXI I —
.
p t a t t ,
.
, , ,
only two days space [to the ti me] wh en he mus t s erve out the
’
consultu m
. rom the a
I fthe consul w i s ab se nt f rmy, or a p roco sul len
n z
his p rovin ce, the leg ati or o ne of them, held the ab sent magi s trate 8
’
.
p ower and i nsigni a, in whi ch case he was st y led Legatus p ro P raetors , (or
V i cegeren t .
”
1 Li t 1 500 p aces T he p assus ad 5 d = = 4 E n i sh
‘
gr u s p e es
‘
g
'
. . =
feet, inches .
”
3 Li terally, At the i rval at whi chhe had b en used ( to tb llow, 8m )
nt e .
can . xxv ] . rm; su mo was . 17
l
py of corn ; and d ive rte d hi s march fro m the H elve tii and ,
advan ced rapi dly to B ib racte Thi s circums tan ce i s rep o r ted t o .
the e n e my by s o m e de s e rte rs f r m L u i us E mi li us
o c a ca p tai n
*
, ,
ro m t he m the mo re so as the da
f , y befo re though they had , ,
.
, f ,
his fo rce s to the n ext hill an d s ent the cav alry to su s tain the ,
the mi ddle of the hill a tri ple li n e of hi s f our veteran legi ons
i n s u ch a mann er that he p laced above hi m on the ve ry
,
Czesar s time (the legi on then was 5000 foot) was 3 00, i e 1 0 harms of 3 0
’
.
according to V egeti us .
1: All the forei gn socii w ere ob li ged to send subsidi es in troo ps when R ome
.
demanded them these di d nb t, however, lik e those of the socii I tali ci,
serve i n the li n e, bu t were used a s light armed soldi ers, and were called -
au rili a
Sarcma (lit c es .
“p a k a
is used of each soldi er s own b aggage
g
’
.
which he car ies for himself; b u t imp ediments is the army s b aggag e
’
G
1 8 ea
cr s e s co mmnrm ms [ s oon r
of all eq ual
do away wi th the h0p e of fl igh t after en
, and ,
p h al anx T h at b e i
. n g d i s
p e rs e d t hey m a de a ch arge on t he m
,
B c 4 00 ( af
. . ter the s oldi ers b e gan to recei ve p ay) .
T he shaf t was 4 5f t long an d of the same length was the b arb ed ( three
.
.
w Th
o
s quar ) i h d w hi h x t d d h al f a d w t h ha fl i t h 1 ck
a n e y o n e s s
s
-
e on e ,
r c e e .
Circum m f b l
i a t
“
re e r e o venerc
ven re se e s p .
R emani con versa sign a b i p artito i ntulerun t, are the words Si gns
i nfert e,
” “ ”
to b ear t he standards on, m eans t o attack ; and signs con
“ .
v ert ere ,
” ”
t o tur n t he st an ards rou nd , means t o face abou t d The R o
—
.
that ami d s o t a
, s t a mul ti tu de oftho s e who had surre nde re d
H o o rde red the H elve tii the T uli ngi , an d the Latob ri gi to
’
, ,
he comman ded the Allob roges to let them have a plenti ful . .
to ri e s a
, s the s e we re known to be of di s ti n gui shed vel our to ,
who m t hey gave lan ds and who m they afte rwards admi tted to,
the B oii,
” —
the u t collocarenl is governed b y com
cu s p . xx ] 11 1 3 GA m W AR . 2]
p , .
t he t o tal was
Ofthe Latobri g i
1 1 t , 000
—
.
cluded ambas sadors from almo s t all parts of Gaul the chi efs
, ,
, ,
P rob ab ly, only an ordinary revi ew for the sake of a pretty accurate .
esti mate
Helvetaorum—injurns —p op uli R omani, ( use of the doub le geniti ve,
.
whi ch they di d ( act ) impli es the wrong3 ofthe R oman p eo p le, —i e whi ch
. .
. . .
m m ”
t hey m fie e (p ass ) [So sup
d i di S b i i i in B ook
'
p et ere, or exp etere”, or rep etere, cap ere or sumere, hab ere or p erse qui . to
“ take s atisfacti on b y deali ng p un is hme nt or veng ean ce . P e na, m ili tary
punishment [or tortures] .
CE S AR s com xi Aars s [ s oon I.
'
2 .
p
the re we re t wo p arti es i n the wh ole of G aul : th at th E du i e
T h at abo ut of the m
[i e of the G e rmans
] had at . .
men had b eco me cnamou re l of the lan ds an d the refi n eme nt '
e n g ge e
a m n ts an d ca l ami ti es a l tho u gh they had formerly be en
,
up on a xe d day fi .
Oudend orp has s ecrete i n occu lto, b ut more recent texts, and among
them B entley , regard i n ocm ho as a class .
CR AP . TH E G AL LI C W AR : 23
”
mus t the lan d ofG aul be co mp ared wi th the lan d ofthe G er
mans n or mus t the hab i t of li vi n g ofthe latte r be p ut on a
,
level with that oft he fo rme r M o reo ve r [as for] Ari o vi s tus , n o ,
24 asaa s
er co .
B A.
q u e i a , u t s a .
t han that of the re s t on thi s acco unt , bec aus e they alon e
.
. . ,
ki n dn e s s an d hi s p o we r wo uld p ut an en d to his o pp re ss i o n
.
‘i
( 2) Ieasl,
"
Thi s elli p ti cal u se of lu men . ( 1) "
n e ve rtheleS s .
y et at
(3) c o mp are d that o fthe p m;
Greek 5
"
b u t after all . w ar: b e W i th
t nar . xxxm ] rm: s u mo was . 25
“b re th re n “k i nsme n
b ee n] ep e atedly by the s e n at e
r and
were held in the thraldom an d do mi ni o n of the G e rmans ,
The Cimb ri , say s Ni eb u hr, were n ot real Gauls b u t Cymri ( Celts i n fact)
o fthe same s tock t o whi ch b elon th eW e lsh — B a s b ret on s — early Cu mb ri ans ,
g
and inhab i tan ts ofthe western coas t ofE nglan d [T he l i ete ofS cotlan d and
’
.
nes or ( T entoni ) were G ermans I t is t hought that J ut lan d an d the regi ons .
whence came the Anglo S axons were the origin al s eats ofthese Ci mb ri , who
-
w re dri ven from the m b y the p rogress of the S armati ans and migrate d
e
.
l llyri cum, where, n ear Norcia ( in the mode rn Cari ntln a) , they de f eat ed the
c onsul Cn P a i ri u s Carb o
p .
,
B
c 1 1 3 , who had b een s ent wit h a large army . .
D au phinc: and Savoy the cou ntry o f t he A llob roges ) was n ow a R oman
’
”
p rovin c e, p rov ncia n ostra an d the cons u l, M J u ni u s S ilanu s , was s en t
i , .
t o p rote ct i t H e wa defeate d i n 1 09
.
s
c b y the Ci mb ri \ ve have seen B . . .
M Aureli us S cau rus, then consu lar legat e i n G au l was tak en p ris oner
.
,
Caep i o, an d the con su l ( n M anli us M axi mus , sus tai ne d a dreadful defeat,
,
‘
.
t urned to S ain, whi ch f or two or three y e ars they ravage d as rut hle ss ly as
p
t he had rava ed G aul T hey the n long e xp ecte d , m oved i nto I taly and
y g . ,
-
.
mingle d agai n wi th the T eu t ones T he i n vaders advan ced i n two colu mns .
p in sufi er a
ab le
XXXI V —H e
.
CHA P . . e d amb as
the re f
ore determi n ed to s n
Tentoni [and Amb rones] p enetrated i nto I taly b y M oe, roun d the coast of
the Sinus Li gusti cus ( or Gu lfof Genoa) T he f amous C M ari us, in his
. .
b rate d) Sulla for hi s li eu tenant had gone agai ns t the Ci mb ri and had tak en
up a s tron g p osi ti on n ear the sources ofthe Athesi s ( A dig e, ) was much less
sp ri ng o f1 01 B c .Cat ulus t his year was p ro con sul and Marius, now con
.
-
sul f or the fi f th time , started f rom R ome, ( where he had decli ned a triu mp h
w C m ri were yet in I ta y,) t o j oin his late colleague
l
for h si v i c t ory hile th e i b .
honour ofthe decisi ve vi ctory whi ch crown ed it, b elonged t o Catulus , who
wi th men had occupi ed the centre : M ari us wi th the remain der,
b ei ng p ost ed on the wi ngs, had ( on account of a p rodigi ous b lin di ng dus t
whi ch arose ) qui te mi sse d the enemy y et at R ome the whole meri t was ,
gi ven to him .
[J uven al S at viii . T he Tiguri ni, who had b ee
.
s tati oned at the passes ofthe T yrol, fl e d an d dis p ersed , when they heart
of the overt hrow and d es tructi on of t heir alli es the T e ut ones am —
Ci mb ri .
” ”
.
) .
p 3 57
”
. .
1
'
Si q u id i lle
( C aesa r) s e ( A ri o vi tu m) velit, where so is th
“
s
wro n gs of the E d ui .
ofwar was that they who had co n qu e red s ho uld gove rn tho e
,
s
n o ugh t
“ As t o Ca
. e sars thre ate ni n g hi m that he would ’
t ee n yefus fhad n ot bee n ben e ath a roo f co uld achi eve by the i r
‘
,
”
v elou r
XXXV I I —At the s ame ti me that thi s me ss age
.
CHAP . .
H arfi des who had lately been b rou ght ove r i n to G aul we re
, ,
1
'
I n ter a n uos X I V m ea ns th is i n tm ann oe X I V would b e withi n
”
[in less than] fourt een y ears ,
c m . mm ] m G ALLI C was . 29
to cro ss
i t ; th at the b ro the rs Nas uas an d Ci n rb cri us he aded . .
ourn ey f ro m hi s t e rr
i t o ri e s Cae s ar tho u ght t hat he o u ght
j .
to t ak e g ethe
a t e st
r
p re cau t i o ns le s t th is s ho uld ha
p p e n for ,
ro un d s t he who le to wn as th ou gh i t we re trac ed ro un d i t wi th
,
n p ai r of c o mp as s e s
. A mo u n tai n of gre at hei ght sh uts i n
.
s t at i o ns a g arr i s o n t he re
CH AP XXX IX —W hils t he i s tarryi n g a few d ay s at V e
.
.
.
ed b l
i n cr i e a o rv l a n d ra c t i c e i n arm s th at o f tti me s they
u p , ,
M odernB es an pon .
ofthe s oldi ers the prefects and the res t who havi ng follo wed
, , ,
va s tn e s s ofthe f ore sts whi ch lay be tween the m an d Ari ovis tus ,
i n co ns equ en ce of thei r fe ar .
object That Ari ovi s tus during hi s [Caes ar s ] cons uls hi p had
.
,
’
eo
p p l e ; wh y s hould an
y on e j u dge tha t he w o uld s o ra s hly
W i th Caesar s ’
vu ltnm hugers conf
. «
h mpa / cg 7
er m, Thuc vi.
17 54 .
g 58 a Dem
. 1 122 1 2, 20
. . .
i e . . that his men should d ecamp from that p lace and march forward .
”
I Li t . wou ld n ot b ear the s tandards .
G AL L” W 53 3
1
3 1- " FI R E 31
'
can .
av ou r
f B ut i f, dri ve n on by rage and madness , he s ho uld
even
mak e war up o n the m what after all were they afrai d of or
,
-
ri me they had gro undles s ly dre aded whe n un armed they had ,
war wi th the H e lve tii T hat he wou ld there fore i ns tan tly
.
n o mi s gi vi n gs an d i t s h ould be hi s p ra
, et ori a .
. .
,
ardo ur an d e age rn e s s f or
p ro s e cu ti n g the war we re e n ge n »
“
, ,
[ he fo un d ] th at b y a c i rc ui t o us ro u te ofmore th an fif ty mi le s
he mi ght le ad his army through op n p arts he then s et out e
. .
-
esar s arri val
Ari ovi s tus s e n ds amb as s ad ors t o him [ ayin g] that wh at he had , s
p e rm i ss i o n w e nt t ak e p la ce s i nce he
, [C aes a r had approached
] ,
neare r an d he co ns i de re d th at he mi gh t n ow do i t wi tho ut
,
,
p p s
“
,
[ y ]
sa i n g t ha t he w a s afi ai d of be
'
i n g e nsnared by hi m thro ugh
di s tance from both camps Thi ther, as had been app o i nted,
.
“
,
him [Ari ovi st us ] i n that he had bee n s tyled kin g, in that [ho
,
had be n s tyled] f
e ri e d , by
n e the ln s n ate — that ve ry on i der
c s
36 con n rs ru u ns .
hi m to b mo s t meri to ri ous e
'
s ufi er a an don di d he alli s , n or
de em th at G aul b elon ge d t o A ri ovi s tu s than to the rather
R o man p e op le ; that the Ar ve rn i an d the B uté ni i had b een
s ub due d i n war b
y Q u i n tu s F ab i u s M axi mus J an d th at the
R o man p eo ple had p ardon ed the m an d had n ot re du ce d them
i nto a p rovi nc e or i mp os e d a tri b ut e u o n th em A n d if
p .
the mos t an ci en t
p eri o d w a s to b e r eg ard ed — the u was the ,
“
. .
M odern Le R ofi ery u e
1 .
nnd in S trab o, li b i v . .
CR AP . xnv m .
] u m G ALt rc was . 37
e
r s trai n ed from casti ng weapo ns at our men H e thought he .
b o th on ac co un t of hi s fi deli ty an d on accou nt of hi s kn o w
ledge ofthe G alli c lan guage wh i ch Ari ovi s tus by lo n g practi ce
, , ,
had to s ay an d t o rep o rt to hi m
,
B ut whe n Ariovi s tus s aw
.
hi s army ,
W hy we re they come to hi m ?was i t for the p ur
”
p o s e o f a c ti n g as sp i e s ? H e s to pp ed the m w he n atte mp tin g
t o s p e ak an d cas t the m i nt o chai n s
CR AP XL V I I I —The s ame day he moved hi s c amp forward
.
,
. .
p g that he ,
hors e s electe d out of the whole armv for hi s own prote cti on .
Classi cal wri ters b ear continual testi mony to the sanctity ofthis relat i on
I t ap p ears from Au l G ellius ( 1 — 1 3 ) to have rank ed n ext to that of
.
p arents and clients A league of the same nature an d b eari ng the same
. ,
Cap ua, up on the di sc overy that from all their engagements the legi ons t e
t urn ed vi ctoriou s, whi le the cavalry were wors ted, they adop ted the p lan of
mou nting b ehind each horse s oldi er a man armed with a small shi eld and
-
. .
se ven darts, who, u p on a gi ven signal, ali ghted and charged the e nemy .
t ermingled the Veli tes wi th the cavalry Caesar ap pears to have resorted to
.
1'
Th e care w i th w h i ch th e R om an s for tifi ed their camp is a remarkable
feature in their mili tary di scip line They n ever encamp ed even for a single
.
ni ght, wi thout f ortif y i ng themse lves wi th a ramp art and a di tch The en .
camp ment ofa f ew hour s p res ented the systemati c and comp lete orderofa _
sta ti on.
m ay . me sa m e w as . 39
. .
, ,
p r o n o un c e f
ro m lo ts an d di vi n ati o n whe the r i t we re e x e di e n t
p ,
fi ci ent as a guard f or bo th c am s
p [an d the n ] dre w u
p all the
auxili ari e s i n s i ght of the e n e my be f ore the less er camp , ,
cap viii
. Among the R omans, di vination b y
. sortes was usu ally p er
formed by means ofc oun ters ( les s en s ) , most ly made ofwood, thrown into
an urn ( s i tella) T o this, among other instan ces , P laut us allu des in hi s
.
the c ou nters were tak en out of the urn There are many interesti ng .
” ”
records of the use of sorte s in later t mes
i T e sortes V irgili anae,
h .
whi ch are among these, deri ve their n ame from the cus tom ofp lacing vers e
ofthe p oet V irgi l in an urn, or ofOp eni ng his wri ti ngs at chan ce, and di scern
ing the events i nqui re d into b y the order in whi ch the verses app eared i n
ormer, or the p a g e on whi ch the eye fi rst rested m the latter
.
the f ssa
method T o this St Au gusti ne allu des in the 4th b ook of his Con fessmns
. . .
The M ahom etans us ed the Koran, an d the Christi ans the B ib le, for the same
u
p pr ose T. his latte rw a s for b idde n b y s om e ofthe early E c c e i as i cal Council
l s t s .
Taci tus says that the Germ ans were mu ch gi ven t o di vmati on (aus p i cm
sortesqu e, ut qui max i me ob servan t, G er P lu tarch relates that the e
.
s
rom the moti on of the water In
.
as t hey went forward to battle , not to deli ver them i nto sla very
CHAP L I L .
—C e
ed over e ach legi on a li e utenant
asar app i nt o
and a qu e stor that e ve ry on e mi ght have th em as wi tne s s e s of
,
the e n emy so suddenly an d rap i dly rus hed f orward that there ,
[ t he re fo re
] the i r j aveli n s they f o u ght wi th s wo rds hand to ,
T here were f oun d very many of our soldi ers who le aped upon
the phalanx and wi th thei r han ds tore away the shi elds an d
, ,
s ent ,
sle w a ll the re s t ofthe m Ari ovi s tus had two wi ve s one a Sueven
.
,
—48
,
a Di on Cami us, 38
. , narrates this war b etween Ca
esar and Ariovistut
m p . mm] m su mo was . 4]
in dee d af forde d Cmsar n o les s pleas ure than the vi ctory i ts elf;
b ecaus e he s aw a man of the fi rs t ran k i n the p rovin ce of
G aul hi s in ti mat e acqu ai ntan ce an d f
, ri e n d re s cu e d from the ,
to hi m [Caesar] :
Cm L IV —Thi s battle h avi n g bee n reporte d beyond
. .
P erhap s three was wi th the G ermans, as wi th some other nati ons ofe u
ti qui ty , a sacred or my s ti cal numb er.
The U b ii were situated on the west side of the R hine . Cologne is
sup p osed to occup y t he si te oftheir cap i tal .
stri ki ng characteri s ti cs ofthe warf are ofanti qui ty They were fortified wi th
.
as toni shing s trength, and, b esi des b ei ng c onstru cted wi th due reg ard t o the
re la ti v e di g n i ty of th e s ev e ral ra nk s i n th e R o m an a r m y,
w e re fu r ni sh e d, n o
less than the ci vili z ed towns ofthe p eri od, wi th every accommodati on. They
c overed a gre at S p ace of groun d T o R oman enCM p ments man
. y to ns w
owe their or igi n I n our country ( where this p orti on of mi li tary di s c1p n e
.
h
was b y no means remissly ob served) , those p laces in the names ofw i ch h
t
cas e r o r ch e s te r a pp e ar , b es p ea k th e ir h a vi n g exi s te d th ere N or i s i t on .
h m l w h t h t i rta i ly from
the a t u h o ri ty of t e n a e a on e ( e re ca s e r or c e a e r s ce n
( as tra, and n ot f
‘
rom a S axon word) that this a sserti on is made I n those .
l a t i la l ha R m an i m le m en ts of w a r an d o th er vestiges of
p a , p r e p
o
ce s r c u y, v
v
o er the wi nte r q uarters , and
-
s et out in pe rson or hi t ner G aul
f
to hold the as siz es .
”
The word c on ve ntu s the original, ref
in ers to those courts whi ch
y
the p o li c of the R omans estab li s hed i n countri es whi ch the had con y
q uered . These may b e rep rese n te d b y the exp ressi on, p rovi nci al as si z es .
T j
heir b us i ness was to admi ni ster us ti ce , to hear p eti ti ons, p res crib e
v
regulations as to taxes and le i es, and afli x seals to docume nts whi ch
q
re u i red t hat p rocess to render t hem legal v
O er these i t was the of
. fi ce of
y
t he p roconsu l t o p resi de, as sis ted, us uall , b y twent p ersons , selected, f y or
t he mos t p art, f rom the R omans res iden t i n that p arti c ular p orti on b f the
ro ivnc e as h i s a “
s s es s ores
” “
or con ci li u m,
”
or b od of ad i sers T hey v
p , .
p ro ce e d i k v
ngs oft hese co urt s, li e all those ofthe go ernors ofp ro i nces , were v
c ondu cted i n Lati n ( V al Maxi mus , ii 2 )
. . . . H
en ce the roconsul was on t hese
p
o ccasi ons att e nde d b y an i nterp re ter T o thi s allusi on i s made, amongs t
.
v
I t wi ll p ro e i nteresti ng t o comp are the Commentari es of Ca e sar, as
G aul was gen erally s ei z ed upon by the more p owerful p ers ons
m d by thos e who had the means of h iri ng t roop s and th ey
fect thi s obj e ct un der our dom
,
. .
esar ,
These all uni formly rep ort ed that tr00ps we re be in g rais e d and ,
an d in ab out fifteen days arr i ves at the t erri tori es oft he B elgzc .
any on e anti ci p ated the R emi who are the n eares t ofthe B elga
, , e
th e m .
a
rt ofthe B elg a e were sp run g from t he G erman s an d that ,
f rom e nte rin g th eir te rri tori es ; the ef fect of whi ch was that , ,
e ach s tate had in the g en era ] coun cil ofthe B elga e p romi se d
for th at war That the B ellov aci were the most p owerful
.
‘
man of all Gaul had b ee n ki ng ; who had h eld the gov ern
,
the Caléti ”
,
y
1 Amb iani The territor ofthese p eop le lay along the B ri tish Channel.
.
CR AP . V .
—Ca ar h avin g
es , c
en oura e g d the B erni , and ad .
, .
perc ei ved that all the forces of the B elgae whi ch had b een ,
and were b ounded on the east b y the I sere ; on the south, b y the S eine ;
o n the west, b y the regi ons of the Caleti, and on the north, b y those ofthe
B e llovl ci .
1 V eromandui , The V eromandui lay b etween the Nervn and the S ues
si ones T heir cap i tal, Aug usta V eroman du orum, is the modern S t Q uen ti n
. . . .
v
Meuse ; modern Condrolz deri es i ts name from thei r terri tories E b urones .
k
( in some Gree authors , E ub urones) the greater p ar of whos e terri tori es , t
. v 11 .
] rs s G ALLI C .
b rav ei gh t mi les dis tan t from thi s c amp Thi s the B elgae on
,
*
.
was wi th dif i culty s us tai ned for that day The G auls mode
'
f .
all s i des and the wall has b een s trip t of i ts defe n d ers [th en]
, , ,
man d ofthe town one oft he lle mi a man ofthe hi gh est rank
’
, ,
111 6 in f
. luenc e amongs t his p eople an d on e of t h os e who had ,
.
, ,
u s i n g as
gui d es the s ame p ers ons who had c ome to hi m as
mess en g ers from I cci us s en ds s ome N umi d ian and Cre tan
,
foun ded wi th B i b racte, one o fthe largest an d ri ches t t owns ofthe E dui .
y
A b od of s oldi ers , i n formi ng a t estu do, held thei r shi elds f irml t o y
v
g ethe r o er thei r heads, an d were thu s p rote cte d from su ch mi ssi les as
v
might b e thrown from ab o e, whi le those of the ou ter fi les held t he1 r
s hi elds s IO p i ng i n s uch a manner as to p rote ct the fl an s of the e n ti re k
hod r . y
T he thus p resentet an ap p earance not unli e the b ack ofa torto ise,
. k
t estu do ;
”
from lch circ ums tan ce the name was deri 1 ed
. B y the te s .
v
t u do 11 as also meant a pe nthou se mo i ng on wheels, u n de r c o er of which v
k
t he b es iegers wor e d the b atteri ng ram T he name i n t his case was readi lv
-
.
su
gges ted b y the rese mb lan ce whi ch the ram p resen ted to a t ort oise thrust
i ng i ts head f orward f rom i ts shell an d drawi ng i t b ac agai n k .
q
F re u ent menti on is made b y anci ent wri ters ofthe u mi dians an d Cre N
tans as archers , an d of the B alearians as s li ngem These las t t oo their . k
name f rom thre e islan ds i n t he M e di t erran ean ; t wo o f which, f rom their
v
dis ti ncti e ti tles of M aj or an d M i nor, are called Ill ajorca and Al i n orcu
the thi rd Yvi e d . P y v
lin ascri b es the i n enti on o fthe s li ng to thes e p eop le .
Diodorus Sicu lus tells u s that they cou ld b rea a target or helmet, or, i n k c
deed, any p iece ofarmour, with their n ational weap on Nor will that an .
en s u e con urm as rs s
“
48 r
‘
.
[s oon i f]
pe ople by whose arri val b oth a desi re to res i st to gether
s- ,
i nto the R emi and for the s ame reas on the h op e of gai ni ng
, , ,
s hort ti me b ef
ore the to wn an d layi n g was te the coun t ry ,
forces to the camp of Cae sar and en camp ed wi thi n less than ,
two miles of i t ; an d t hei r camp s i n di cated by
[ ] as w a ,
b readth
VIII —Caes ar at fi rs t d etermined to d ecli ne a battle
.
CHAP . .
,
was p ltched ris in g gradually from the plai n exte n ded forward
, ,
les t af, ter he had ma1s halled hi s army the en emy si nce , ,
. .
p earwon derful ifwe recei e the ass ertion ofSuidas , that the v
would eat y
a stone ofa p oun d weight T hei r us ual missiles , howe er, we re s mall st ones
. v
and leaden b u lle ts T he i n hab itants ofthese islands are rep orted t o excel i n
.
led back hi s force s i nto the camp The ene my i mmedi ately .
foragin g
CHAP X —Czs s a1 b eing app ri s ed ofthi s by Ti turius leads
.
. , ,
men advan ce to a more di s advan t age ous plac e for the p urp os e
o ffi ghtin g and when p rovi s i on s b egan to f
, ail the m hav in g ,
E
50 casxs s
’
com m u ne s .
O
B O K 11
[ .
d
out of thei r camp the s ec on d wat chat wi th g rea t n oi s e
n d s mco
a
n ,
and h te e
as n d to r a e c h h om e they m a de the i r d ep ar e a
t t pi s
u r
,
break the i ntelli gence havin g been confi rmed by the s couts b e
,
,
s ent forward his cava lry to harass th eir rear; and gave the corn .
b roke th eir ranks and to a man res ted their safety in fli ght
, , ,
.
c ould recover from their terror and flight Caesar led hi s army ,
i nto the terri tori e s of the Suess i on es whi ch are n ext to tho ,
{
of s ufii ci ent
j defenders he was not able to carry i t by as s ault
, ,
t he modern N
euvy or Neufi y , ab out twent miles west from evers
'
y N .
52 c m ’
n s co m m u nes .
[ sees 11.
Cm . XV .
—C
d that on account of his re sp ect for
zesar sai
Divi tiac us an d the E duans he would recei ve them in t o hi s ,
he went from that p lace in to the terri tori es of the Amb i éni ‘
s i ons . Upon thei r terri tori es bordered the N ervii con cerni ng ,
th eir terri tori es he di s c overed from some pri son ers that the
, ,
their n ei ghbours were there awai ting the arri val ofthe Romans ;
,
for they had persuaded both thes e nati ons to try the same
fortun e of war [a s the ms elve s : that the forces of the Adua
]
t ii ci were a ls o expected by them and were on their ,
that they had p ut their women and thos e who through age ,
of th es e as was af
, terwa rds le arnt from the p ris oners havi ng ,
acc urately obs erve d during thos e days the army s method
’
, ,
hujus , ”
a —é fi intulissent
u ss ent the notee
“
re se e
”
on the oratio ob liqua and
"
m ti o recta hook i p p . . . 20 .
cmr . xrx ] . ru e G ALLI C was . 53
wei ght al so to the advi ce of thos e who rep ort ed that ci rcum
s tan ce, that the N ervii , from early t i mes b ecaus e they were ,
i n ord er that th ey mi ght the more eas ily ob s truct the cav al ry
of thei r n ei ghb ours if th ey came up on t h em f or the p urp os e .
. .
had chosen for the camp was thi s : A b ill d eclinin g ev enly ,
from the top , exten ded to the ri ve r Sambre, whi ch we hav e men
t i oned ab ov e : from thi s ri ver there aros e a [s econ d] hi ll ofli ke
as c ent on the oth er s i de and opp osi te to the former an d
, ,
i nto the i nt eri or W i thi n thes e woods the en emy k ept them
.
.
, ,
v
I ha e here adop ted Anthon s readi ng and interp retation ’
ren . P
v
de ille retai ns enati s i n the te xt , p un ctuates di f
feren tl , and translates as y
follows : Hv
a i ng half out y
o ung trees an d t wi ste d their t hi c b ranches k
i n a lateral directi on, and b ri ars an d thorns growi ng up an d b e i ng di s persed
b etween them ( the trees) , caused that these hedges could f orm a b a rrier
like a wall
54 c s s nn s
’
co m nxraars s '
[s o on
s ix legi ons unencumb ered by b aggage ; b ehi n d th em he had
placed the b aggage trai ns of the whole army ; then the two
-
legi ons whi ch had b een las t rais ed clos ed the rear, an d were a .
guard for the baggage trai n Our hors e wi th the sli n gers an d
-
.
,
thems elves i nto the woods to thei r compani ons an d agai n made ,
b egan t o forti fy the camp W hen the first part ofthe baggage .
trai n of our army was s een by those who lay hi d in the woods ,
CR AP . XX —Caesar
had ev erythi n g t o do at on e
the s tan dard t o b e di sp lay ed whi ch was the s i gn when ,
m
the t ru p et ; the soldi ers to b e called of f from the works ;
thos e who had proceeded s ome di stan ce for the purp ose of
s eeki n g materi a ls f or the ramp art t o b e summon ed ; the ,
g
Li terall,
“
y all thi
w ere to b e d onngs
e b y Caesar at on e ti me
”
.
1 W hen a general, after having c onsulted the aus p i ces, had determined
t o lead f orth hi s troop s against the enem
,
a red flag was di sp la ed (vec i llu m y y
v el s i n u m
g p ay ucap rop oneb atu r, ) on a sp ear f rom the t op ofthe a
re tori P
um, Car s de B ell G a
. ll i i 20, Li v xxii 4 5, which was the signal to p re
. . . . .
‘
ers, who usuall showed their a ypp rob ation b y shouts , b y rai si ng their right
han ds ( Lu can i or b y b e ating on their shi elds wi th their s ear s
.
p .
T he address was sometimes made in the o en fi eld from a tri b u nal raised
p
Of turf e tri b u nali ces i ti lz o au t vi rid e ces i le exs tm c to
(
’
) acit Ann i T
p p
—
, . . .
s
prop er
CHAI X X L —Caesar having gi ven the nece ssary orders
.
'
.
, ,
worn b y the R oman soldi ers —p rob ab l i t here ref ers es p eci all to the de y y
v i ces up on the helmets T he fi cti tious emp lo ment " of i n s ig ni a
.
to y “
v
decei e and mi slead an enem was among the s tratag e ms of war ( P ans y . .
i v 28
. V irg ZE n ii 3 8 9 .
S mi th s Di cti on ofG ree and R o man
. .
’
. k
Anti q .
I t was the p ractice of the R oman soldi ers when on the march not to
,
wear their helmets , b ut to carr them s lun o er their b ac s or chests
g ,
y v k .
I As the shi elds of the s oldi ers, e en at that p eri od, were emb ellished v
wi th curiou s and exp ensi e ornaments, the v
ep t them, when ei ther i n cam
p yk
o r on the ma v
rch, co ered wi th leather, as a def ence a ainst the dust orrain
g .
56 on san s connnx ms s
‘
ra . 8 004 11
the nat ure ofthe groun d and the d ecli vi ty of the hill an d the
exi g ency of the ti me than as the method an d order ofmi li tar, y
mat ters requi red ; whi ls t the legi on s i n the di f feren t places
were wi ths tand ing the en emy s ome i n one quarter some in , ,
mother and the vi ew was obs tructed by the very thi ck hedges
,
CHAP X X IIL—The soldi ers ofthe ninth and tenth legi ons
.
. ,
, ,
p ded ( therei n)
e They thems elves di d not hesitate to pass the
.
whom they had e ngag ed were fi ghti n g from the hi ghe r groun d ,
CHAP XXIV —
p .
were b etakin g thems elv es i nto the cu p met the ene my f ace ,
th e c amp followe rs -
o
“who fr m the D ecuman
G a te ’
r an d from ,
and whe n th
, ey s aw our c amp fi lled wi th a larg e n umb er of
the enemy the legi ons hard p res s ed and almost held s ur
,
legi on to the ri ght win g ; where he p erc ei ved that hi s men were
,
hard p re ssed and that in c ons equ en ce of the s tan dards of the
,
be arer killed the standd i ts elf lost almos t all the c enturi ons
, ,
valiant man who was so exhaus ted by many and s evere woun ds
, ,
These y
i t i s generall sup p osed, were sla es F rom conti nual
calones , v .
whereas T aci tus uses i t in conj un ction wi th li me, as ifthe two words imp li ed
the same class ofp ersons T he li t es , howe er, were u te di s tinct from the
.
i
v q
y
The were freemen, and followed the arm for the p urp ose of y
calones
trade li xa
.
“
e, qui exe rci tum se que an b t , q a estus caus e
”
F est us Thus
“
u r u . .
”
H irtius , de B ello Af ri c 7 5, cla sses th em wi.th m e rc ato res e lixarum
”
mercatorumque qui p lau stris merces p ortab an t
“
.
enem y “ t D u man a,
"
op p osite to that, and thus f a th est from them
“ p or s ec r
” ”
p orts p ri nci p ali s deatra, an d p orla p ri n cip ali s si ni s tra .
3 B esi des the aqui la, ors tandard ofthe legi on, there were the sub ordi nate
standards ofthe cohorts an d the man ip u li .
6 The p ri mop i lus was the fi rst centurion of the first mani ple of the
58
. c s san s
’
co mmun iti e s .
[ s oon 11
battle and avoi ding the weap ons ; the the en emy [on the other .
both flanks ; he also percei ved that the affair was at a cri sis ,
advan c ed to the front ofthe lin e and addressin g the c en turi ons ,
them to carry forward the s tan dards and exten d the comp ani es , ,
arri val as hope was brought to the s oldi ers an d the i r courage
,
. .
,
great dis tin cti on in a legi on He had authori t o er the other centuri ons ;
. y v
k
ran ed next t o the tri b u n i mi li tam, and had a p lace in the coun cil ofwar .
To him was commi tted the charge of the p ri ncip a l standard of the legi on,
whence he is, amongst other i nstances ref erred to b y Tacitus, Ann i 3 9, , . .
The tri b unes ofthe s oldiers I n each legion there were i n the ti me of
.
P yol b i us, six tri b u m mi li tam, who c omman de d under the consul, us uall
'
y
i n t urns of a month each During that p eriod the trihuue s authori t ex
.
’
y
v
t en ded o er the whole legion U p to the ear B a . these of fi cers y . .
y
were chosen, during the monarch , b y the i ngs ; up on t he i ns ti tuti on ofthe k
c ons ulate, b
y the consuls : and under the di ctatorship , b y the di ctator That .
y ear the p eop le claime d the right of electing ei ther the whole or the
,
greater part ofthem F rom that p eri od down to B C 207, the c ontinued
. . . y
t o elect them i n this mann er Sub se u entl , several changes too p lace i n
. q y k
t he ap p ointment of these of fi cers I n b attle, a mili tar trib un e had com
. y
mand of men whence their name in Gree is x thca x
p og or k ’
xthi apxng The ofli ce was for man ears the reward of merit and lon
. yy
v
ser i ce This rule was afterwards fatall i olated The later emp erors, in
. yv
order to ob li e as man
g y
of their fi i ends as p ossi b le, fi e quently conf erred
-
ti on an d na me b ei ng almost reduce d to an
of the X ervn
nihilati on t h eir old men whom tog eth er wi th t he b oy s and
, ,
fenny plac es an d mars hes on thi s battle having b een rep ort ed ,
th eir own t erri tori es and towns and comman ded their nei gh ,
. .
,
. .
made frequ ent salli es from the town and conte nded wi th our ,
th y kept the ms e v
e l es wi thi n the town W he n, vi nez havi ng
’
.
han d s
”
or
,
“ wi th what s tren gth di d th ey es p eci ally [as th ey ,
cc
a ust ome d s i ght they s ent amb as sad ors to Caesar [t o treat]
“
,
whi ch th ey had h eard offrom oth ers he s hould res olv e that the ,
k k k v
o fp lan s and wi c erwor , co ered over wi th raw hi des or wet cloth,) ab ou t
y y
us uall so light that the men mi ght carr i t, the vi nece was, in ext aordinary
r
cases , made so st rong a s to b e too hea vy
for that mode ofadvan cmg i t, and
v
was then mo ed b y wheels at tached to the p osts F re uentl , as perha ps . q y
v v
in the ab o e case, se eral ofthes e were j oined together; the b esi egers b ei ng
defen ded agains t the darts, stones and fi re of the town b y the vi nea e, con
c om m u n es .
[
s oon x
x
gat es to be shu t and the s oldi ers t o go out ofthe town lest
, ,
cov ere d ov er wi th s ki n s
(as the shortn es s ofti me requi red) in
,
the thi rd watch s u dd enly mad e a s ally from the t own wi th all
,
has reli ef
- s on the c olumn of T ra j an at R ome p rese nt a p ortrai ture ot this
war engi ne in i ts s i mp ler f orm hom e and imp e lled t hat i s, b y human
force alon e . I n i ts more ef fi ci ent form, iron ri ngs were p laced aroun d the
b eam ofthe ram, b y whi ch i t was sus p en ded b y means ofrop es , or chai ns, to
y v V y q y
o
were thus greatl in crease dy T he head was made of i ron or some hard
.
metal, and forme d to represent the head ofa goat e n ce , as well a rom
s f . H
i ts a li cati on i t was c alled b y th e R o m ans aria s Th e R omans b orrowed
pp ,
.
cati ons s eemed the leas t diffi cult The s i gnal havin g b e en .
men d ed a rus h was made thi ther [i e by the R oman s oldi ers ]
, . .
from the n eares t fort ; an d the b attle was fought by the enemy
as vi g orous ly as i t ought to b e fought by b rav e men in the las t ,
were force d b ack i nto the town The day after Ca esar after .
, ,
fen d and s en din g in our s oldi ers s old the whole s poil of
, ,
Ven eti fi the U n elli the Os is mi i the Curi osoli tae the S esuvii
" "
?
, , , .
,
, , ,
Veneti , &c These were nati ons of Gallia Celti ca The eneti
. . V
were si t uated i n the wes t The U nelli p ossessed a te rri tor l i ng on the
. y y
north west of what i s n ow calle d
-
orman d 01?their coas t lay the N y .
y
The Osis mi i occu p i ed a terri t or afterwards forming a p art of the p ro in ce v
of B retag ne, an d n ow called F i n i s te rre The Curi oso li tse also occupied a .
This ( s upp li catio or s up p li ci um) w as a great relig ous solemn it decreed '
y
b y the senate, up on an extra ordi nar vi ct or y
t was desi gned as an act y .
84 class e s co m m a
.
[
BO OK n .
solemn i t y
was called Iectis tem i u m The value of the i ctor was sup
. v y
posed t o determi n e the p eri od of the duration of this sacred festi val
T houg h someti mes decreed for one day, i ts usual p eriod was three or fi ve
y
da s . P
omp e y
had a s upp li cati o often da s decreed upon the con clusi on y
ofthe war wi th Mi thri dates Cm , m we read 1n the text, ob tain ed one of
.
fif teen da s yThi s, he tells us, was the fi rst occasi on on whi ch a R oman
.
of the Catali na consp irac , an honour whi ch he too fi-e u ant opp er .
k q
v v
tu nity ofob ser ing had ne er b efore been grante d to manf ul achi e ements v .
v
howe er, was er difl erent f v y rom that alread
’
sp o en of In times of y k .
Literall y
happened to none.
B OOK I II .
T HE AR G U M E N T .
I .
- Cm ar, at the c lose of the rate Servnzs Galha i nt o t he
ca mp aign, sent
. .
v
whi ch, as well as i n se eral o ther e ngag eme nts , G alb a is su ccess fu l .
V II V
I I I A n unexp e cted war i n Gaul the occasi on ofi t The en eti V
are the p rin ci p al i ns tigators —
. . .
V X
en eti c ships ac commodated to that p os iti on — X I V
.
V Ca esar sur . .
- XV .
v
mounts these disad an tages an d i n a naval engagement ob tains
a vi ctor — X V I y . W
hi ch t erm inated the war wi th the
. e neti V
XV II X IX.
-
Ti turius S ab in us is sen t i nto the terri tori e
. s of tho
U n s lli Co ndu ct of their i ng, V iri dorix S ab i nu s is c omp elled tok
—XX
. .
q
e nters A ui tani a, an d is attac e d b y the So ti ates , who a k
re sig nall y
worsted — I I The XX Soluurii ”—
.
“
I II Crassus p roc w ds i nto . XX .
en em y
dec line ” I H e then attac s their encamp ment, . k
v
and is i ct ori ous I II Ca . XXV
esar ad an ces a ainst the M orin i an d
g . v
v
Menap ii his moti es for thi s the en em ma e a su dden assault on y k
the R oman f o rces , an d are r e pe lle d w i th great loss — I Caesar s
’
XX X .
v
p ro i si on against su ch attac s k
his Ope rati ons i nterru p te d b y the in
y
clemen c of the seaso n : the arm is led i nto wi nter uart ers y q .
T he Nan tu ates were an Alp ine race , on the sou th of the lak e or
v
Gene a ; the V eragri , a trib e of the R oman p ro ince. also sou th ofthat v
k
la e, whose chi ef to wn, Octodu rus , is t he mod ern M and the
y
a peo p le l ing b et ween the eas t coast of it and the R hon e w hos e cap i tal, .
[soon In co m mm m .
extend from the t erri to ri es of the Allob roges and the lak
e ,
CH AD .
of fin the n i ght from th at p art of the town whi ch he had gi ven
up to the G auls an d that the mou n t ai n s whi ch h un g ov er i t
,
It had happ en ed for s ev eral reas ons that the G auls s uddenly
formed the d es i gn of ren ewin g the war an d cuttin g off that
leg ion F irs t b ecaus e they d es pi s ed a s i n gle legi on on accoun t
.
, ,
pons upon us T o thi s was add ed that they were i ndi gn ant
. ,
weap ons were faili n g our men and the en emy were p res sing or: ,
more ri gorously and had b egun to d emolis h the ramp art and
,
the cen turi ons he qui ckly gi v es orders to the s oldi ers to dis
,
flun g [at them] an d recrui t thems elves after th eir fati gue
, ,
a su dd en s ally from all the gates [ofthe camp ] leav e the en emy ,
opp osed or hin d ered his march he brou ht the legi on safe i nto
g ,
. .
,
qui lli ty the B ei ge bein g ove rc ome the G erman s expelle d the
, , ,
wi n te r s et ou t for I llyri cu m as he wi sh e d to
, ,
tary tri bune s amongs t the n ei ghb ourin g s tates for the p urp ose ,
[thus ] exc el the res t i n their kn owledge and exp eri enc e of
n auti c al af fai rs ; an d as only a few p orts li e s catt ered alon g
t hat stormy an d op en s ea of whi ch th ey are i n p os s es s i on
, ,
t hey h old as tri b utari es almos t all th ose who are accus tomed
to traf fi c i n that sea Wi th th em aros e the b egin ni ng [ofthe
.
e xc ept by gen era l cons ent and abi d e ;he s ame i ss ue of for
,
~
.
. .
,
s us sin ce he wa
, s so f ar di s tan t hi ms elf ord ers shi p s of war to ,
, ,
p orti on to the greatn ess of th eir dan ger an d esp eci ally to ,
to t h ems elv es as alli es f or that war the Osi s mii the L exovii , , ,
the Nan n é tes 1 the Amb ili ati the M ori m the D i ab li ntes §
, , ,
. .
F re q
u ent mention is made ofthe sacre d and hol y character of a m ~
ha
ss ad ors b y R oman wri ters
y “far diff r nt
.
f Li terall ,
e e in a narrow sea an d i n the va t
s and op en
”
mean .
terwards Nann étes , is the m od ern Nan tes , whi ch p reser es the
d i vi cnum, af v
anci ent name wi th a slight modi fi cati on .
name ofwhi ch was chang ed f rom Neodf num to Di ab lintes, is the modem
r
can . m ] m s am e was .
ti oned above , incarry ing on the war b ut many thi ngs neve r
es ar to that war —the op en i ns ult offe red to
, ,
theless urg ed Ca
,
the s tat e i n the d eten ti on of the R oman kni g hts the reb elli on ,
rai s ed after s urren d eri ng the rev olt afte r hos tag es were i v
g en , ,
duct of] this p art was ov erlooked the other nati ons sh ould th in k ,
an d eas ily and qui ckly exci ted to war ; th at all men li k ewi s e ,
. . .
, ,
th eir shi p s H e ord ers P Cras sus to p rocee d i nto A qui tani a
. .
CHAP XII . The s i t es ofth eir t own s were gen erally s uch
.
-
ti de had rus h ed in from the mai n ocean whi ch always happ ens ,
“ wi c e i n the s p ace of twelve h ours ; n or by s hi p s b ecaus e , ,
Li t . rom among,
to ass emb le f &c
.
”
l Lit
‘ '
. small tongues .
72 czs s as s co m mm ss .
[ B cox m .
thi s the more eas ily duri n g a great p art ofthe s ummer b e ,
p
s ecured fas t by i ron chai n i ns tead of cables an d for sails s ,
i . e . v
t ne relati e charact er ofthe t wo was ,
1 F or nei ther could, &c
”
A similar remar i s made i n the next
. k
chap ter And y et the ros trum ( more comm onl ros trf
.
z , G ree Ep fiok og or y k ,
v y
Ep fiok ov ) su p p li e d 3 er formi dab le i ns trument ofen ment na al warf are I t v .
was a b eam spri nging fi om apart j us t b elow the p row, and topped wi th sharp
an . u m] u m su mo su n. 73
thei r height was a we ap on eas ily cas t up to the m ; and for the
sa me re as on they we re less re adily locked in by rocks To . .
ran before the wi n d they b oth could we ather the s torm more
,
CR AP X I V
. Caes ar after takin g many of thei r towns
F
-
, ,
fi rs t s een by the e n e my ab out 220 ofth eir shi ps fully equi pped
, ,
forth from the harb our an d dre w up Opp osi te to ours ; nor di d i t
,
, ,
de cks] yet the hei ght of the s te ms of the b arb ari an shi p s
,
the auls fell the more forci bly upon us On e thi n g pro .
”
Sharp hoo s k
(fa k es p re sen ts ) , The fak es here sp o en of were,
. k
y
p rob ab l , those arms whi ch were mu ch used under that name The fals .
was a large dagger with a coulter, or b ill, proj ecti ng f rom one si de S u ch .
v
On e ser i ce ofthem was to loosen the stones ofthe walls To thi s p racti ce .
1 Li terally ga e thev
m sel es to h
t e wi nd.
” v
34 Cas an s com
‘
mu nes. [
BOOK m
Cm . .
-
, ,
b ein g b rou ght d own alth ough two an d [in s ome cas es] three ,
shi p s of t h eirs
] s urroun d ed e ach on e
] e s old i ers
[ [of ours th ,
an d after the b arb ari ans ob s erv ed thi s takin g place as a great
, ,
bus in ess ; for our men gave chase an d took th em one by one so .
that v ery few out of all the n umb er [an d thos e] by the i n ter ,
CHAP XVI By thi s b at tle the war wi th the Ven eti and ’
. .
the whole ofthe s ea coas t was fini sh ed ; f or b oth all the y outh ,
i nfli cte d the more s ev erely i n ord er that f or the fu ture the ,
ri ghts of amb as sad ors mi ght b e more carefully res pec ted b
y
b arb arians : havi n g therefore p ut t o d eath all thei r s enate
, , ,
’
.
i “
L t was Plaw in ab out ten in the mornin ”
l Li b q
‘ '
g
. . .
“
( m an s [
’
COMME NTAR I ES B OOK i n
76 . .
posi tive [p
ass r ion et
reten d e d
] d es erte r ; wan t o f ro
of the p
vis i ons for a s upply ofwhi ch th ey had n ot taken the requi s i te
,
p recauti ons ; the hop e s pri ng in g from the Ven eti c war ; and
als o] b ecaus e i n mos t cas es men willi ngly b eli eve wh at
[
th ey wi s h I nfl uenc ed b y thes e thi n gs they do not di s
.
,
cha rge V i ri dovi x an d the oth er lead ers from the coun cil ,
the camp
CHAP X I X —The s i tuati on of the camp was a ri s i ng
.
ord ers a s a lly to he s u dd enly mad e from two gates [ofthe camp ] .
and the fati gue of t he e nemy by the v alour of our s oldi ers , ,
and their ex p eri en ce in former battles that they c ould not s tand ,
t i me S ab i an was i nf
, orme d of the nava s l b attle and Caesar of
v i ctory ga i ned by Sab in as and a ll the s tates i mmedi at ely °
calami t i es
a
i r
. .
.
, ,
t e nant had b een killed and hi s army rou te d and from whi ch L , ,
from Tolos a Carcas o and N arb o whi ch are the states of the
, , ,
.
,
formi n g min es [ to our ramp art an d vin eae (at whi ch the
’
Aqui tan i are e min en tly s kill ed bec aus e in many p laces
am
,
vii 22 ; whe re Ca
. rom the ci il wor
esar sp ea s also ofs ill deri ed f k
kings of k v v
mi nes ap p li ed to mili tary p urp oses .
c asi n s cormaru nrrs m
’
78 .
[ 500 5
s us and entreat h
, i m to admi t them to a surrend er H avi ng .
obta i ned i t they b ein g ord ered to deli ver up the i r arm s
, , ,
comp ly
soldurii ,(th*
e c
they enj oy a ll the conv eni ences of life wi th th ose to wh os e
fri ends hi p th ey hav e d ev oted themselv es : if anythi n g calami
tous happ en to th em ei ther th ey en dure the sam e d es ti ny ,
battle had b een fou ght th ere was dri ven b ack i nto the ,
.
.
,
Soldu m Thi s seems a Celtic word T hat the solduru were p ersons
. .
y
l i ng un der feu dal ob li gati ons t o the p e rsons whom the attended in b attle, y
and are to b e regarded in the same light as the p erso n s ( amb acti cli en tes
q u e) s p o en k
of in b oo vi 1 5,
,
rs at le as t dkou b tful lu
.tar
ch s p ea s . P k
y
ofp ersons am ong the E g p tians de oti ng themsel es t o the ser i ce ofothers v v v
for life an d death ( ov v awoOv fioxov reg) I t is p rob ab le that the soldurii .
y
acted onl on sacred p ri ncip les in this selfd evoti on, and were thus an i sp ag
1 6x
“
09 .
”
1 Lit. b v hand.
"
cz ar . mm] m m
sa e was . 79
t hat acc oun t corn an d p rovi s i on could n ot v ery con v eni en tly
,
cov ered that all th ought the s ame thi n g he app oin te d the next ,
app rov e d ofby the lead ers an d the forces of the R omans drawn
out the en emy s ti ll k ept th ems elv es i n th ei r c amp Cra
, [ ] s s us .
ardi ce ari s in g th en ce] had ren d ered our soldi ers m ore eager
'
. .
, ,
d efen d ers from the ramp art an d fortifi cati ons and the auxili a ,
ri es on whom Cra
, s s us di d n ot mu ch rely m the battle by sup ,
p ying stone s and weap ons [to the soldi ers ] and by c onveyi ng
r ,
fi t “ al
l a rn tly wis g t
h i n i ” . e es
‘
.
80 mm rAmEs [BOOK m
‘
on sAB s '
co .
t hey had be en comma n d ed having b rou ght ou t the four coh orts .
,
W hi ch a
, s they had b een left as a gua rd f
or the camp were not ,
what longer way les t they could be s een from the camp ofthe
,
quarter our men th eir s trength havi ng b een recrui ted (whi ch1
, , ,
t
. .
,
the Cocos ates A few [and thos e] most remote nati ons , relying
.
on the time of the yea r becaus e win ter wa s at hand n egle cted , ,
to do thi s
—
.
Li terall , y
n ot i nefi ecti vely
'
.
”
Literall , y
which generall is y accus tomed to happ en .
peace sp eedily led his army thi ther thi nki ng that that war
, ,
t hey s udde nly rushed out from a ll p arts of the forest and ,
CR AP XXIX
. D urin g the remai ni ng days aft e r thi s Ce sar
. ,
rains , the soldi ers could n ot any lon g er remain i n th eir ten ts .
Therefore , havin g lai d was te all th eir c oun try [and] havi ng ,
burnt thei r villages and hous e s Ce sar led b ack his army and
,
B OOK I V
THE AR GU ME N T .
from G erman y
i nto Gau l the nati onal character ofthe S ue i IV . .
—
. . . .
XV
I I Cwsar s b ridge o er the R hin e
’
. I I I , X I X Caesa v
r leads . . .
y
his arm i nto G erman ; p uni s hes the S igamb ri f y
rees the Ub ii from
t he t rann ofthe S u e i, an d retu rns into Gaul —
y y v
I I His XX XX
—XX
-
. . .
XXV
I I Carri es i t i nto efi et ; the defeat an d surrender of the B ri
.
'
‘
t ons — II I , I XXV XX X v v k
The R oman essels o erta en b y a s torm
—XXX
. . . . .
k
X X X The B ritons thi n to ta e ad antage ofthi s k v I Caesar
—XXX
. .
k
tac i ng a R oman legi on I II Their mode of fighting wi th
—XXX V —XXX V
. .
chariots I y v
T he ad an ce to the R oman camp
—XXXV —XXXV XXXV
. . . .
k
T he M orini attac two legi ons whi ch had just returned from B ri tain
an d suf v q
fer a se ere loss ; Caesar goes into wi nter u arters among the
k v y y
B elgae ; a than sgi ing of twent da s decreed b y the senate for the
su ccesses ofthis camp a i gn .
Cn P omp ey an d
. M Cras sus were thos e G erman ?
.
w i th a g,reat ,
”
0Lt ar from the sea, where the R hine Bows int o it
i
. not f .
CE SAR S cOMMENrABms. [
’
84 ' ’
Boer
s I v
freque ntly le ap from the i r hors e s and fight on f oot ; and tra in
their hors es to stand still i n the v ery spot on whi ch they leave
the m to whi ch th ey re treat wi th great acti vi ty when there i s
,
Acc ordingly , they hav e the c ourag e though they be the ms elves ,
wh os e s tat e was large and flouri shi n g c ons i d eri n g the con ,
thos e ofthe s ame race and the rest [ofthe G ermans ] and that ,
many p arts ofG ermany , came to the R hi ne, to di s tri cts whi ch
Cyrop aed b ook i The accoun t ofthe cattle ofthe G ermans gi en b y Taci tus,
. . v
G ermania, ch v agrees wi th that gi en here b y Ca e sar H e describ es their v
“
. . .
v . v
Li y, li b xxx ch xi say s, that the N umi dian horse di d not use
. . .
hri dles .
v
1 S o we ha e thought fi t to translate b u mi liores, ”
the li teral meaning
ofwhich is m ore lowly .
c mr . vr .
] ms e m rc was . 85
the fi ckle di sp osi ti on of the G auls who are eas ily p rompt ed to
,
1 Than y
b y dela he would .
86 oms an s ’
connanr m ms . B oox v
[ x
had sus p ect ed would occ ur had take n place ; th at embas si es had ,
tori es ofthe E b u rtin es and the Con drusi who are un d er the r o
p ,
te cti on* ofthe T revi ri After s ummonin g the chi efs of G aul
.
,
“
,
for that thi s was the cus tom of the G erman s han d ed d own
to th em from th ei r forefath ers to re s i s t whatsoev er p eople ,
-
qui red by thei r arms ; that they are i nferior to the Suevi alon e ,
”
Q ui sunt Trevi rorum cli en tes .
1 i e in
. . their allegi ance t o the R oman p eop le .
”
I D ep reca”ri .
”
1 E xi tus Conclusion, i e sub stance
. . .
c m . x] . ms su mo W AR . 87
comp lain ing of the aggres si ons of the S u evi and requ es ti n g ,
the s e thi ngs to t heir countrymen ; and after havi ng deli berated ,
CR AP X Jr . .
,
arap i d curren t f
. or a lon g di s t an ce t hrou gh the te rri tori e s of
Trevii i and when i t app roach es the oce an di vi des i nto s ev eral
, ,
3: V osegus,
is a b ran ch ofmoun t J um .
The M edi omatri ci, or -rices, were a p eople of Gallia B elgi ca Till .
t
na i ons ( of w o h m there are s ome who are supp os ed to li ve on
fi s h an d the eggs of s ea fowl) fl ows i n to the oce an by s evera
-
, l
mou ths .
*
t en ded to the s elf s ame p oin t [as th eir oth er p rop osal] ; nam ely1
[
-
arm
G mpi XII —B ut the e nemy as s oon as th ey saw our hors e
. .
, ,
our men had n o app reh ens i ons b ecau e th eir amb a s s ad ors had s
,
gon e away from Caes ar a li t tle b efore and that day had b ee n ,
from th eir hors es to their feet and s tabbin g our hors es in the ,
Ca ar h
es mp l y ap t t ig ify n t th
ere e o s c ur of the river b ut the
u o s n , o e so ce ,
rd so mu ch a larme d th t
e
r st to fli ght an d drove them f orwa
, a
they di d n ot desi st from th ei r retre at till they had c ome m
s i ght of our a rmy In th at e n counte r s even ty f .
our of our -
fi ght obs e rv ed i t f
,
rom a di s tan ce he sp urred on hi s hors e , ,
. . ,
F r m th ity q a t r ( q w t r
o e c rb an i ) wh ffi e was n arly
u es o s u s o es u , ose o c e
coe val with th b ildi ng fR me oth r fu ti ari fth t at fr m the
e u o o , e nc on es o e s e, o
co rr p n di g hara t r fth ir d ti
es o n c d i v d th ir nam
c e o wi th th dis
e u es, er e e e, e
ti n ti v ti tle fM ili tar
e e r P ovin i al
o Th d ti f th f rm r w r
es, o r c es . e u es o e o e e e,
p ri ip ally t tak
nc harg, fth tr a ry whi h wa k p t in th t mp l 01
o e c e o e e su ,
c s e e e e
S at rn t re iv and xp nd th p b li m n y ( fwhi h th y w r r
u o ce e e e e u c o e o c e e e ea
qui d to r nd r an a nt ) xa t th fi
re e e i mp d b y th
ccou tat an d e c e n es os e e s e
v v
p ro i n ces ; see that p ro i si on an d p ay were there furni she d t o the army ;
k
ta e charge of the mon e d ep osi ted b y the soldi ers y
raise the tax es an d -
.
trib utes d the state ; ha e charge of the money and sell the s poils takm
‘
v
Ts oox IV
’
90 en s an s COMME NTAR I ES .
they as s erted for the purp os e of acqui tti n g the ms elves for
,
drew all hi s forc es out ofthe c amp an d c omman d ed the cav alry , ,
t o follow i n the re a r .
CR AP XIV
. H avmg marshalled his army i n three lin e s
.
-
,
for con certin g meas ures nor for s eiz i n g their arms are p er ,
.
they had left their c oun try an d c ross ed the R hin e wi th all th ei r
fami li es ) b egan to fly in all directi ons ; in p ursui t of wh om
Ca es ar s ent the c av alry
CR AP XV —The G ermans wh en up on he ari ng an oi s e b ehi n d
.
. .
,
P
lutarch, i n hi s life ofCa
es ar, records , on the au thori t ofthis p assage y
thi s act ofp erfi dy on the p art of the G ermans ; b ut f arther intimates that,
when a p u b li c than sgi ing f k v
or this Vi ctor was
p rop osed in the sen ate, y
Cato ( not altogether a fri end ofCe s ar’ s ) was so disp leased wi th the R oman
gen eral s con du ct i n attac i ng the G ermans whi le their amb a
’
k s sadors were
in his cam p , as to declare that he ought to ha e b een deli ered up to the v v
enem y
as on e who had i olated a treat v y .
1 '
q
R eli ue multitude the rest of that large b od ofpeople ; Lev y
the Germans .
92 cz sAn s
’
con su m es .
[ noon x
v .
be s uf
fi ci ent for their present assi stan ce at d their hope for
the future ; that so great was the name an d the reputati on of
his army even amon g the mos t remote nati ons ofthe G ermans
, ,
i ng from the defeat ofAri ovi s tus and this las t battle whi ch
was fought that th ey mi ght be safe un der the f
, ame and
fri en dshi p of the R oma n pe ople T hey promi s ed a large .
CR AP XVII
. Caesar f or thos e rea
.
~
s ons whi ch I
- *
have ,
led over He devi s ed this plan ofa bri dge H e j oin ed together
. .
at the dis tan ce oftwo feet two p ile s e ach a foot an d aha lf thi ck
, , ,
were k ept firmly ap art by be ams two feet thi ck ( the Sp ace
whi ch the b in di ng of the p iles occupi ed) lai d i n at thei r ,
s i d es the one opp osi te to the othe r so gre at wa s the stren gth ,
, ,
Commem ra i v ” H
re as in h 27 Ca
o . s ar
e ontrary to his p ra ti
e ,
c .
, , c c ce,
v
I ha e here adop ted Clar ke s explanat on
’
i , whi ch 13 sup ported b y the
authori ty ofLipsius .
c m . m ] m ca m c was . 93
ti on to hi s , t
p iles were dri ven i nto the wate r obli quely at the ,
H
C A P XVIII . W i thi n t en days after the tim b er b egan
.
of the bri dg e has tens i nto the t erri tori es of the Si gamb ri
, .
In the mean time amb as s ad ors from s ev eral nati ons c ome to ,
hi m whom on th ei r s ui n g f
, ,
or pe ace an d a lli an c e he ans wers ,
b egun to be b uilt made prep arati ons for a fli ght ( by the adi i ce
,
.
.
,
a ll the s e thi ngs on acc oun t of whi ch he had res olved to lead
his army ov er namely to s tri k e fear i nto the G ermans take
, . ,
CR AP X X . .
—D
g the short p art of summer whi ch re
urin
towards the north the wi nte rs are e arly n everth eles s re solve d
, ,
the ir localiti es harb ours and landin g plac es all whi ch were for
, ,
-
,
hi m the merchan ts from all p arts he could learn nei th erwhat was ,
lowed nor what cus toms th ey us ed nor what harb ours were
, ,
he i n perso h d k a de
n s o ul m a e s ce n t fin to the i slan d as he was
’
.
,
pa rts of the n e i ghb ouri ng c oun tr i e s and the fl eet whi ch the ,
/
k
Oub erlin remar s in his note on thi s p assage, that Di on Cassi us
amerts that Cas ar s exp edi ti on agai nst B ri tain t ende d to the ad antage
’
v
neither of the general nor of R ome, b ey on d the mere extensi on of the
emp ire ; an d adds , that P
lutarch assente d to that Op ini on He f arther .
rom whom he V
b oast ed his desc ent a b re ast- p lat e formed, as he wished i t to b e b eli e ed ,
. v
ofB ri tish p earls .
The earli est accredi ted account of the anci en t B ri tons i s that gi en in v
thes e Commentari es Tacitus, in his Agri cola, c 10, in entering on his
“
. .
[ p
shi
s
] of war besi de s to the quae stor his li eute
as he had ,
o
nants and of ,
fi ce rs ofcav alry Th ere were in addi ti on to these .
. .
,
the day and th ere saw the forces of the en emy drawn up i n
,
arms on a ll the hills The nature of the place was thi s : the
.
, ,
lev el shore
CR AP XXIV —
.
trai ned in thi s mode of b attle our men di d n ot all exert the ,
.
,
stran ge t o the b arb ari ans and the moti on more ready f or s er
great servi c e t o our men ; fo r the b arb ari ans b ein g s tartle d
by the form of our shi p s an d the moti on s of our cars an d the
n ature of our e n gi n es whi ch was s tran ge to th em s topp ed , , ,
hes i t ati n g [wh ethe r they s h ould adv an c e to the sh ore] chi efly ,
ofthe ten th legi on af ter suppli cati n g the god s th at the matt er
,
. .
a
ranks nor get firm footi ng nor follow the ir s tandards and as
, , ,
H
98 m an m s oon x
'
OA SA R S co .
[n v .
many s urroun d ed a few oth ers threw their w eapons upon our ,
t he h ors e had not b een able to main ta i n their cours e at sea and
‘
“
tomed su cc es s 3
"
.
,
was fou ght they sent hi m b ack an d in suin g for pe ace cas t the
, ,
blame ofthat act u pon the common pe ople and e ntreate d that ,
“H
oe unum ad p ris tinam f ortunam def uit wher
e ad pris. Caesari “
f
ort
”
h
.as the id ea ofcom i n u
g p to the ma rk, or s tanda rd, of hi s c hi n , or
. .
,
the gre ate s t en ergy he efl ected that after the los s of twelv e
‘
, ,
-
that s ome new ent erp ri s e was un dertak en by the b arb arians ,
W h en he had advan ced s ome li ttle way from the camp he saw ,
that hi s men were ov erp owere d by the en emy an d s carc ely able
to s tan d th eir groun d an d that the legi on b ein g c rowded to
, ,
gether weap ons were b ein g cas t on them from all si des F or
,
.
t hat had con c eale d thems elv es in the woo ds duri ng the ni ght
,
.
H omin u m . Thi s
to the R o mans, b ut the B ri tons ; cons
ref
ers, not
trary to the p rob ab le meani ng of the t ext and t he testi mon of commen y
t at ors some translators , howe er, an d amongst them v
uncan, ha e m D v
{ erred it to the former .
reap in g they killed a s mall n umb er threw the res t i nto con
, ,
char i ote ers i n the mean ti me wi thdraw s ome li ttle di s tan ce from
the b attle an d so plac e t h ems elv es wi th the chari ots that, if
,
. . .
gaged the res t ofthe B ri tons who were i n the fi elds d ep arte d
, , ,
all parts an d rep orted to their p eople the s mall numb er ofour
,
v
fi ghting wi th chari ots seems to ha e b e en con fi ned t o t he B ri tons i n E u rop e .
v y
T his ser es the earl hist orian, G eo firy of M onmouth, as an argume nt in
‘
v
his attemp t to pro e that the B ri tons were of Troj an origin .
CE SAR S connns ramr [ K
’
1 02 s . BOO i v.
c
mad e had b rough t ov er wi th hi m [from Gaul] he drew up the
ommen ce d
,
he s et sai l a li ttle after mi dni ght and all hi s fleet arri v ed saf e ,
coul d n ot make the same port whi ch the othe r shi p s did a
. nd ,
Caesar s en t all the cav alry in the c amp as a reli ef t o his men
I n the mean ti m e our sold i ers s us tai ned the attack of the
en emy an d f ou ght mos t v a
, li antly for more than four hou rs ,
an d re cei vi ng b u t f
, ew wou n d s th emselv es s lew s everal ofth em , .
B OOK V .
T HE AR GU ME N T .
G aul ; marches against the Tre viri II I Induti omarus and Cin .
g eto rix -
V Ce sar goes to port Iti us ; hi s p oli c rn ta ing certain y k
—
. .
v
ha e b ee n in that numb er, b y craf t and i olence, esca p es attending v
Caesar, b ut rs slain V I I Ca —
esar p rocee ds on hi s second exp edi tion
.
—
.
Ca v
esar gi es orders to Lab ienus to b uild more shi ps Cass i vellaunus
— X II - X I V —
D escrip ti on of B ri tain and i ts inhab i tants — II XV
—XV
. . .
The B ri tons again p rep are for war, an d recei e a signal defeat I II v .
Ca esa v
r ad an ce aras the Thames ,
s into the terri t ri es ofCassivellaun us as f
o -
an engagement wi th that p rince X IX The stratagem of Cassivel
—XX
.
lanus The Trin ob an tes send amb assad ors to Ce sar resp ecting
.
latter in du ces four p rin ces ofCanti um to attac the R omans, b y whom k
y
t he are def eate d II I Ca —XX
esar recei es hostages, an d lea ds b ac his v k
— X V
.
-
Disp ute b etween Ti turius an d Gotta II The alour and v
—XXXV
.
c on du ct of Cotta II I LII X
The uarters of Cicero q
—X V
-
H .
k
attac ed b y the E b uron es ; he sen ds intelligen ce to Ca esar LI
T he n ob le c ondu ct of P ulfi o and V aren us — L I I I LII Ca esar X V
—
. .
ti omarus is thereb y
d eterred from attac i ng the camp of Lab ienus k .
V
LV I L I II R ei nforced, I ndutio marus attac s Lab i enus ; his forces
-
. k
are rou te d, an d he rs slain ; Gaul b ec omes more t ran uil q .
CR AP I . .
—L u ci us D omi ti us a
nd Appi us Clau di us be ing
Italy as he had b een accus tomed to do yearly comman ds the
, ,
th em e b road er th an th os e whi ch we w e i n ot h er s ea
] a li ttl s
arri v ed th ere he lev i es s oldi ers upon the s tat es an d ord ers th em
, ,
been rep orted [to th em] the P i rus tae sen d amb ass ad ors to hi m
,
appoin ts arbi trators b etween the s tates who sh ould es ti mate the ,
. .
,
J umentorum H
orses se em here to b e esp eci ally meal t q
— y
'
1 E ui .
t ali a j um e1 ta
”
r Li v
. .
pressi on .
1 06 cn sa ra . B OOK v
from whi ch p ort he had learned that the p as s age i nto B ri tai n
was sh ortes t [b ein g only] ab out thirty miles from the con
,
becam e they n ei ther came to the gen eral di e ts [of G aul] nor ,
collect cavalry and i nfan try an d make p rep arati ons f or war ,
the chi ef p ersons of the s tate b oth i nflu enc ed by th ei r fri end ,
comi n g to him§ on thi s accoun t that he mi ght the more eas ily ,
p l t ly q p p d wi th all n
e e e ui ary
e aval ap p intm t th ir arma or ecess n o en s, e
a mam n ta
r e .
P rt I tin
o m tak thi t b Wm a t ; th r B l gne
s, so e e s o e
‘
n o e s, ou o .
Thi i th p r n
s s am d i n Ci
e O ati n fr F nt i us
e so so n e cero s
’
r o o o e .
Li t .b tw n th m lv ”
e ee e se es .
1 08 c COM ME NTAR I E B.
[ Boo v.
Cm .
—
V L There was togethe r wi th the othe rs , Dum
n orix, the E duan of wh om we hav e made p rev i ous men ti on
, .
the G auls T o thi s was added that Dumn orix had before
.
,
” ygement in any
r
R eligioni b ns s n ot, p rob ab l , in ref
erence to enga
gian ce [an d] neve rth eles s learn all hi s meas ures : havin g
at le n gth met wi th fav ourable weath er he orders the foot ,
.
,
was goi n g on i n G aul and take m eas ures acc ordin g to the .
[ th ou gh f or a ti me
] b orn e forward by a g en tl e Sou th we st
.
-
the cars that he mi ght make that p art of the i slan d i n whi ch
he had di s cov ered the p rec e di n g summer that th ere was the ,
M ili tes .
”
A R oman arm y was mp osed p rincip ally of inf
co antry .
1
”
Mann z wi th acti e and d etermi ned res istance v c
The Al duan state had not b een reduced into the form ofp rovinm.
10 cassan s co
’
mm u n es . BOOK v.
ship s ,
eached B ri tai n n e arly at mi d day ; nor was there seen
r -
bled there yet b ein g alarmed by the great numb er ofour ships
, ,
more than ei ght hun dred of whi ch in clu di ng the shi p s of the ,
had qui tted the c oas t an d con ce aled thems elves amon g the
hi gher p oin ts
—
.
B ein g rep uls ed by our cav alry they c on ceal ed thems elves in ,
from enterin g their fortifi cati ons B ut the s oldi ers of the .
”
Cum annotinis Some copi es have an nonam p r i i on hi p from
. s, ov s -
s s,
annona The correct readi ng seems to b e that ofOudendorp an d others, as
.
1:96 ai rovg
“
.
H
1:
j “
ere and there : rari, in w all detached parti es
Imagine. The comparati ve degree has otten this
”
.
1 12 [
'
CE SAR S COMME NTAR IE S . Boos v:
c oun tless and th eir buildi n gs exceedin gly nume rous for the
, ,
mi dlan d regi ons ; in the mari tim e i ron ; b ut the quan ti ty ofi t
/
,
They do not regard i t lawful }: to eat the hare and the cock , ,
exc ept that by acc urate measure men ts wi th water ' dwe
'
, p e r ,
1 Tacitus
in , his life ofAgri cola, menti ons sil er and gold as the p roduc v
ti ons ofB ri tain .
t The n efas, or imp i ety ofeating those animals does not ap pear, how
.
v
e er, to arise f rom their ha i ng b een i cti ms of
fered in sacrifi ce v v .
”
fl Mona, the isle of M an Tacitus ap p li es this name to Anglese . y .
Annal xi v 29. . .
1 The ins trument used for this purp ose was called olep q dra. Vegetius
cR AP . xv ] . ms su mo was . 113
mi les i n circumferen ce
—
.
, .
colour, and th ereby hav e a more terri ble app earan ce in fi ght .
They wear their hai r long an d have ev ery p art of th eir body ,
have wi ves common to th em, and p arti cularly broth ers among
broth ers , and p arents amon g their children ; b ut if th ere b e
any i s su e by th es e wi v es th ey are repu ted to b e the chi ldren
,
they p urs ued too eag erly an d los t s ome of th eir men B ut
, .
1
, ,
y
t ells us that the were commonl us ed in the arm y
he were also used y . T y
at the b ar to measure the time allowed to the se eral ad ocates for v v
k
s p ea i ng Sand -g asses ( W ll lCl) res emb le them i n form) were once used
.
‘
1 P omp oni us Mela and Pliny have related the same thi ng .
114 o msaas
’
oou m mams [
aooxv.
Q L ab eri us D urus a tri bun e of the s oldi ers was slain The
. , , .
rep uls ed
X VI —
.
s tand er were li ttle sui ted to thi s kin d of enemy ; that the
h ors e also fou ght wi th great dan ger be caus e they [the Bri tons] ,
of four men a short di s tan c e from the le gi ons leaped f rom the i r ,
thos e who retreat and thos e who purs u e T o thi s was added .
,
hills a di s tan ce from our c amp and p res ented thems elve s i n
, ,
or ha lti n g or leap in g f
, rom the i r chari ots I mm ediately after .
t h is re trea t the auxili ari es who had as s embled from all si des
, ,
dep arted ; nor after that time di d the en emy ever engage wi th
us i n ve ry large numb ers
XVIII —Caesar dis coveri n g their de si gn leads his
.
Cm . .
, ,
CHAP X X I .
R oman arms, i t need scarcel he remar ed, owe much to the militar y k y
v irtues of Agri cola, as dis p la ed here ; b ut Ca y
esar did, what no one h ad
done b efore him, he le i ed a tri b ute up on the B ritons, and e f v fect uall y
v
p a ed the way for all that R ome sub se uentl accomp lished in this q y
islan d .
y
i t sufl er an thi ng at the hands of Calig ula, who merel p ro osed, b ut did
'
p y
not attemp t t o exe cute, a design up on it
a
Legi ons and u xi li aries were ia
t rodu ced b y Clau dius , who, afl er ab surdl arrogating to hi mselfthe honours
.
y
v y
of i ctor , sent thi ther, fi rs t Aulius lautus, and af terwards Ostori us, as P
p rop rsetor or go ern or v
This latter o erthrew Caractacus, and led hi m in v
—
.
the senators p ronoun ced to b e no less glori ous than when S cip io ex P .
v
was n ext go erned b y V eranus, a man ofa stem and, i t would seem, b oast
f ul temper He di ed af.ter holdi ng his of fi ce ab out one ear Under the y .
P etronius T urp i hanus was ap p ointed to succeed him His s wa was ver . y y
y
mild M an , also, were the indulgences of the B ri tons under his successor,
.
Treb e llius Maximus Nor had the any reason to comp lai n ofthe severi ty
. y
oftheir nex t governor, se ti naB olanus V
P etili us Cazreali s, who succeeded .
y
nim, sought to remed the e ils whi ch the lu lty of the last three had is
'
v
can . n u ] ma GALLI O wan . 11 7
learns that the cap i tal town ofCass ivellaunus was not f ar from
that place an d was d efen ded by woods an d moras s es an d a
, ,
found there and many of the enemy were taken and slain i n
,
th ei r fl ight
—
.
dis tri cts four s everal ki n gs rei gned, Cin getorix, Carvili us ,
T axi magii lus and S egenax, and c omman ds them to collect all
thei r forces , an d un exp ect edly as s ail an d s torm the naval
ca mp W h en they had c ome to the camp our men, after makin g
.
,
an d p re s c ri bes what tri bute B ri tai n s h ould pay e ach y ear to the
Roman p eople ; he forb i ds and c omman ds Cas s i vellaun us that
he wage n ot war agai nst Mandub ratius or the Tri nob antes .
d uced ; and under him the B rigantes were sub du ed B ri tain was n ext go .
c ola ofwhom it ha
. s b een sa i d that he was as f ortu nate i n man b attles y
agai nst the B ri tone, s s he was u nhap p i n his reward y
for D omi tian, ha ing v
b ecome en i ous of his f vame, recalled him f rom his p rop ra etorship , and. as
is reporte d, afterwards p rocured his death b y p oison .
1 18 ca s an s
’
cop mnnramns .
[Boos v
.
s hi p s i n so ma
, n y v oyages n ei th er i n thi s n or i n the p rev i ou s ,
s oldi ers the more clos ely an d a v ery great c alm c omi ng on
, , ,
shi p s i n s afety
t er quart ers di f
-
feren tly from the former y ears an d t o di s tri but e
, ,
be able to come t o the reli ef ofan other legion that G auls could ,
p i ta li ty
, t o co n s ul t for h i s an d i s
p erc ei v ed i t to lead offt heir s oldi ers when drawn out ofwi n ter
,
about fi fty miles dis tant f rom the m the oth er rather more ;
,
am . m ] m cu t e i was . 1 21
. .
c ulei us an d s ev eral t r
, i b un es ofthe s oldi ers an d the cen turi ons
ofthe fi rs t rank were ofopin i on . t hat n othi ng sh ould b e d one
s til
y an d th a t th ey s h ould n ot d ep art from the camp wi th
“
,
“
.
cei v ed i n the nei ghb ourin g win t e r q uart ers ; that the O ortu
pp
-
set forth i nto I taly as the Cam u tes would n or otherwi s e h ave
,
tak en the meas ure ofs layi n g T as geti us nor would the E b uron es , ,
ifhe had b een p res ent have come to the camp wi th s o great de«
.
havi n g recei ved so many defeats she was reduced under the
1 22 en sl a s chu
’
m s.
( 3 001,
n ot to b e dread ed
ye t certa i nly,fami n e by a p rotrac ted s i e g e , ,
was
—
.
CHAP X X X .
Thi s di s cus si on having b een h eld on the W 0
s i d es wh en opp os i ti on was of
, fered s trenuous ly by Gotta an d
the p r i n ci p al ofii cers , P rev ai l, s ai d Sabin us if s o you ,
”
s on amon g
you , he s ai d , who i s most p owerq y alarme d by
the d an ger ofdeath ; th es e will be aware ofi t, and th en , ifan
y
thing di sas trous shall h ave oc curre d, they wi ll d emand a
reckon i n g at your han ds t h es e who, if i t were p ermi tte d b ,
y
you, uni ted three days h ence wi th the n eares t win ter quarters , -
may en c oun ter the comm on con di ti on ofwar wi th the res t, and
not as if forc ed away a
, n d s ep a rat ed f
ar from the rest, p eri sh
ei th er by the s word or by fami n e
—
.
p re ser ed v
their li es. v
1 24 cas an s
‘
the c as e that the s oldi ers for the most p art qui tte d th eir eu
,
. .
b ari an s ; for their lead ers ord ered [the offi cers ] to p roclai m
through the ran ks that n o man should qui t his plac e ; th at
the b ooty was th ei rs an d f or th em wa ,s res e rv ed wh at ev er the
R o mans should leav e ; th erefore let th em c ons i d er th at all
”
thin gs d ep en d ed on th eir vi ctory Our m en were equal .
~
. .
fully ob eyed wh en any c ohort had qui tte d the circle an d mad
, e
that p a rt ofthe R oman army ofn ecessi ty was left unp rote cted , , ,
be in g s p ent thou gh they fought from day b reak till the ei ghth
,
-
”
i‘
P osi ta, &c
.
, lit lay i n,
. &c .
om . m m] m cA m o W AR . 1 25
been chi ef centuri on ”abrave man and one ofgreat auth ori ty is
, ,
the cohorts and com pani es is woun ded full in the mouth by a ,
CR AP X xxvl . .
—M
h troubled by thes e events Q Ti tu uc , .
“
. ,
p
re li e d If he wi shed to confer wi th him i t was p ermi tted ;
, ,
that he hop ed what pe rtai ned to the safety ofthe s oldi ers could
b e ob tai ned from the p eople ; that to hi m howev er c ertainly no
i nj ury would be d on e an d that he pledged his fai th to that ,
”
'
wh et her i t would app ear ri ght to reti re from b att le and confer ,
wi th Amb i orix; h t he h p d be b
a y g]
i t a t
E
a l t
n o e o e o s ue
XXXV II —
severes .
and a longer deb ate than nec es sary is d esi gnedly entered
.
”
Th en they accordin g to th eir cus to m shout out Vi ctory and ,
rais e their war cry and maki n g an attac k on our men break
-
, , ,
with the greate r part ofthe soldi ers ; the res t be tak e thems elv es
to the camp from whi ch th ed , marched forth and on e ofth em , ,
by the great numb er of the ene my threw the eagle wi thi n the ,
b ook iii ch v . . .
”
com mu L eex v
’ '
1 26 on saa s n es s .
af ter wan d eri ng at ran dom through the woods and i n form ,
hi m ofth es e events
GH AP X X X V I I L—E lat ed by this vi ctory Amb i orix march es
.
.
,
i mmedi at ely wi th his c avalry t o the Aduat uci who b ord ere d ,
i nfan try t o follow him clos ely H aving related the exploi t .
an d rous ed the Aduatuci the n ext day he arri ved amon g the
Ner«
,
ii an d en treats
, that they sh ould n ot throw away the 0p
rtuni ty of li be rati n g th ems elves f v a d f p n i shi n g
p o o r e er n o u
the R omans f or th os e wron gs whi ch th ey had rec ei v e d from
“
them [he t ells th em] that two li eutenants have b een slai n ,
and that a larg e p orti on ofthe army has p eri sh ed ; that i t Was
.
. .
,
with des p atched to the Gentron es the G ru dii the L evaci the , , ,
P
leumoxii and the G ei duni all of whom are un d er th ei r go
, ,
un exp ecte dly t o the wi n t er qua rters ofCi cero the rep ort ofthe -
,
,
fi n to the
woods f or the p u rp os e of p roc uri n g t i mb er an d th erewi th con
d ep en dants b egi n to attack the legi on : our men qui ckly run
,
their hope i n desp atch an d felt as s ured that ifthey obtai ned , ,
who were s ent are i nterc ept ed D uri n g the n i ght as many as .
k
b oo ii ch xx iii
. F or a signal def
. v
eat of the Aduatuci, see
. xxxi ii . ot
the sam e b o o k ,
[noon
’
1 28 os su s COMMENT AR IES. v
CR AP mi ll —
D i sapp oin ted i n this hope the Nervu s ur ,
whi ch are requi s i te for thi s servi c e they were forc ed to cut the ,
them
Cm XLIII —
.
hot b alls made of b urnt or hard ened clay and h eated j aveli ns , ,
that their baggage and their p oss essi ons were burni ng not ,
day was by f ar the mos t calami tous to our men ; i t had thi s
res ult however that on that day the largest numb er of
, ,
the en emy was woun ded and slai n since they had crowded ,
f rom the place i n whi ch they were standi n g and drew of f all ,
their men : they began to call on the e nemy by ges tures and
W words to enter ifthey wished ; b ut ncne of them dared to
,
can . xmv ] . rm : G ALLI C was .
129
a dvan ce The n stones havin g been cas t from eve ry quart er the
.
,
. .
men ce n turi ons who were n ow app roachi n g the first ran ks T
, , , .
thi ckes t Nor d oes V aren us remain wi thi n the ram p art b ut
.
,
r esp ecting the hi gh Op ini on of all foll ows clos e after T hen , .
,
.
, , , ,
T he D elp hin annotator here remar s, that, from the circ umsta nc e of k
v
this P ulfi o s ha i ng b een a strenu ous p art isan of
’
omp e , i n t he ci vi l war, P y
e i t her Ca esa r had not leis ure t o read o er hi s Commentari es and b lot out v
this i nci dent, so f a ou rab le to P nlflo v
or that ha i ng p u b lishe d them b e v
P
fore that p erson s es p ou sal of omp e s cause , he c ou ld not re tra ct i t ; or,
’
y ‘
mat he was too n ob le min ded to withhold such a well des er ed tri b ute of
-
v
p r a i se , e en from v
o ne w h o h ad b e come his O
pp on ent T h e a nn otato r how . .
v
e er, does not f v
a our this third sup p osi tion .
”
1 In locum dej ectus in f eri orem c on cidi t .
1 30 CE SAR S
’
mi ni mu m [
s oon v.
g t
a rea n u m b er retre at i nto the forti fi cati on s ami ds t the hi ghest
,
. .
. .
. .
twenty miles that day H e app oi nts Cras sus over Samar
. a
the b aggage of the army the h ostages ofthe states the publi , ,
:
f
132 cn sas s
’
co m m a .
[
noon v
Then the smoke ofthe fires was seen in the distance a circum ,
s tan c e whi ch b ani shed a ll d oub t of the arri val of the legi ons
CR AP X LlX —The G auls havi n g di s covered the matte r
.
. .
,
F or the p res ent th eref ore i na, s much a s he knew that Ci cero ,
Augusni s vi era m .
”
The spaces b etween the dif ferent di is i ons of the v
oman camp w ll d Of these, b esides several snb ordi nate ones,
°
ere ca e vi ce .
CR AP L . .
—Tha day
ght skirmi sh es ofcavalry havi ng take n
t , sli
place n ear the ri ver b oth armi es k ept i n their own p osi ti ons
,
ifhe could not accompli sh thi s that havi n g in qui red ab out the , ,
. .
, ,
b egan to p ull d own the ramp art wi th th eir h an ds oth ers to fill ,
u t he tren ch es
p The n Caes ar m ak i.n g a s ally from ll
a th e g a te
,
s ,
and s endi n g out the cav alry s oon p uts the en emy to fli ght s o , ,
t h eir arms
CHAP LI L—Caesar feari n g to p ursu e th em v ery far b ecaus e
.
, ,
surp r i s e the t owers man tlets an d oth er] fmt ificati ons belon g
[ , ,
.
134 ce saa s c o .
[BOOK v
soldi ers ; he suggest s that the dis as ter, whi ch had been cc
,
~
Cm . .
about si xty miles di s tant from the wi n terq uarter ofCi c ero an d ,
Ce s ar had arri ved there after the ni n th hour before mi dni ght ,
to the T reviri In duti omérus who had res olve d to attack the
, ,
wi nter wi th the army hi mself F or the di sas ter res pecting the .
all the state s of Gaul were deli berati n g about wa sen ding
r ,
mes s engers and emb assi es i nto all quarters m qui ring w ,
further meas ure they should take and holdin g coun cils by ,
.
,
thi rte enth legi on that large forces of those states of the
,
Gauls whi ch are call ed the Armori ce had assembled for the
, ,
( 3 0 03 v
. . o
t he other s i d e the N ervii an d the Adu atuci were p rep ari n g war
agai n s t the R oman s an d that forces ofv olun teers would not b e ,
“
wan ti n g to hi m if he b egan to adv an ce f rom hi s own terri
t ori es he p roclai ms an arme d coun cil ( this ac cordi ng to f
, i t
s tates ofG aul was ab out to march thi th er th rough the terri
,
desi res to b e d on e .
thi n a camp s tron gly fortifi ed by the nature ofthe ground '
s p eech of I n duti oma rus whi ch he had d eli v ered i n the c ounc il
‘
.
,
he sen d s mes s en gers to the nei ghb ouri ng s tates and s ummons
hors e from all quart ers : he app oin ts to th em a fi xed day f or
wan . 1 37
, .
th e r es t H e o
.ffers great rewa r ds for th os e who s h ould ki ll
I n duti oma rus i s slai n havi n g b een ov ertak en at the v ery ford
,
ofG aul.
Comp rob at fortune One sen se ofcomp robo, is, to make g ood
.
”
t Liter lly , Ca
a esar held Gau more ranq uil
l t .
1 38 m
c san s com
’
m u tes .
[ BOOK vr .
BOOK V I .
T HE AR GU M E NT .
Ca
esar, ap prehendi ng co mmoti ons i n Gaul, levi es addi tional f
orces .
V II , II I
. V
Lab i enu s defeats the Treviri
. IX Caesar again . .
The Drui ds, the se con d order or ni ghts, the thi r d order or common k
s hy , an d the m tholog of the G anls —X X I y y I I I The G er .
-
XXV .
mans ; thei r cus toms ; accou n t of s ome remar ab le ani mals fou nd It k
the H ercini an f orest — I I Ca XX X XXX
esar returns to G aul ; Am
—XXX
. .
attac k
the R oman camp ; some extraordi n ar in ci dents co nne ct et y
t her ewi th Caesar arri es and res t ores confi dence — LIII ,
. v LI X . . X V
Ca e v
s ar holds an in esti gati on resp ecting the consp irac of the Sen ones y
A cco sufl ers cap ital p uni shm ent ; the ap p oin tment or winter
’
CHAP ,. I —Ca ar e xp
. g for m any e ons a greats
r ases
’ ecti n
q y
conse u entl raised one legi on in Cis a lp ine G aul hile, howe er, up on the . W v
ex ira ti on of h is consulate, he was p rep a ring to p roceed i nto the p rovi nce
p
whi ch the senate had decree d him, an op posi ti on was su ccees fully made tn the
realiz ati on ofhi s hop es b y some ofthe t ri b un es ofthe commons , and P etrei us
and Af rani us were sent into S pain in hi s stead omp e remai n ed at R o me, . P y
and sought t o di min ish the un p leasan t nature ofhis p osi tion b y gi ing out that v
y
he remained i n the cit for the p u rp ose ofp rocuri ng corn Caesar re ua ted . q
that he woul d send him that legi on whichhe had raised 111 6 12111 W 115 this .
1 40 en su e co m s raa ms [ BOOK vr
. .
,
wi nt er quart ers -
H avi ng p roclai med a coun cil ofG aul i n the
.
b egi nni n g of the s pri ng as he had b een accus tomed [to do]
, ,
comm en e ment ofwa c r an d rev olt that he mi ght app ear t o con
,
t he p res en t p lot H avi n g p roclai med this from the tri bu nal ,
he adv an ces the s ame day towards t he S enones wi th his legi ons
an d arri v es amon g th em by lon g marche s
CHA P IV —Acco who had b een the author of that e n ter
,
.
,
ofR ome Ca esar readily gran ts them p ard on and recei ves th ei r
.
—
.
CR AP V L Ca . es ar havi n g di vi d e d hi s forc es wi th C F ab i u s
,
. .
hi s lie u te nan t, and M Cras sus hi s qu estor, and havi n g has tily
.
,
con structed some b ri dges en ters their coun try in three di xi s i ons
,
.
”
The te rri tori es , &c , i n M enap zos abderet, the prep osi ti on here
’
. .
u n c ertai n ty hi s own and the army s fortun es and the n ext day
’
,
” “
C todi s l us Zd t b r at ri
oco.
p et lat ris H l mam
es , o se v o s, s u o . o o
On app i nt d t
“
e b o v and r p rt p r
e di ngs
o o ser e e o ocee .
‘
l Q
"
ua m p op li R mani fa n u t d
u
”
n t than th
o
p e o e di i li n f rt co s
.
e u oz o sc
the R oman army allowed, b ut, than was customary wi th. or amally at
1 44 M I S co nn nxranms [
‘
CE S . noon V t.
army .The plan havi n g b een known an d lai d down the work ,
in
g th e ms elv es t o as s ure hi m th a t, n e i t her had aux i li ari es
b een s ent to the T revi ri from th eir s tate nor had thev i olated V
“
,
cas e Ca
, es ar fi n d s th at the aux ili ari es had b een s en t by the
S uevi ; he accept s the ap ology ofthe Ubii an d mak es mi nute ,
. .
,
Ubii to dri v e off th eir cattle an d c arry away all thei r p oss es
s rons from the coun try p a rt s i n to the town s hop in g that t h ey , ,
Th ey execute the ord ers and a few days havin g int ervened , , ,
rep ort th at all the S u evi after certain i nt elli gence con cerni ng ,
the army of the R omans had come retre ated wi th all their ,
The Germans .
CR AP . xu ] . m e m rc was . 1 45
own forces and those ofthei r alli e s whi ch they had ass embled .
.
s tretche s a
gre at way i nto the i nte ri or an d be in g opp osed as .
,
t hat at the e ntrance ofthat fore st the Suevi had determi ned to
awai t the c omi ng up ofthe R omans
CR AP X L—Si nc e we have c ome to thi s p lace i t d oes not
.
.
,
the s e nati ons dif fer from e ac h other In G aul the re are fac .
tions not only i n all the state s and i n all the can tons an d ,
[acti ons th os e are the leaders who are c onsi de red acc ordi n g
t o thei rj udgment t o p os s e ss the gre ate s t in fl uence up on wh ose ,
p arty This s ame p oli cy xis ts throughout the whole ofG aul ;
.
e
. .
,
the le aders ofone facti on the S equani ofthe other Sin ce the
,
‘
.
denci es were gre at they had uni ted to th ems elve s the G e rmans
,
s u cc e ss ful b attles and sla i n all the nob ili ty of the E dui they ,
( rate f or the p ur ose of e ntre ati n g as si sta nce and had returnod
, p ,
[
'
1 46 crss as s COMMENT AR IPS . noon vi .
wi thout a .
S equa
‘
ni lest the s ov erei gnty The R emi su cceeded to .
caref ully p rote cte d them Thus they p os s ess ed both a new
.
. .
poss ess over them the s ame ri ghts wi thout e xc epti on as mas ter s
D rui d s the oth er that ofthe kni ghts The former are engaged
, .
they d ete rmi ne re s p ectin g almos t all con trov ers i es pub li c ,
has b een commi t ted if there b e any dis p ute ab out an i nh eri t
,
v
1 As far as we can dis co er from remai ning testimoni es , the c ondi tion of
vassalage, or the state ofthe f eu dal retai ner, amon
g the anci ent G auls was
not so hard a s that ofa corres p ondi ng relati on among some more polished
people .
nx mns
’
cs s an s corr
sr ra [s oon
'
. vi .
pas s after death from one b ody to another and they thi nk that ,
men by thi s t enet are i n a great degree exci ted to valour the ,
i mp art t o the youth many thin gs res p ec ting the s tars an d thei r
moti on resp ecti n g the ext ent of the world an d of our earth
, ,
resp ecti ng the n atu re of thi n gs res ec ti n g the p ower and the
p ,
. . ,
arri val was f or the mos t p art wont t o happ en ev ery y ear a s ,
o fS a d My t ri
cre i t ha b n th ught that h d iv d hi M t mp y
s e es , s ee o e er e s e e s
l i f
c z os s r m th D o id B t th ugh th r i in an th r wri ter th addi
e ru s . u ,
o e e s o e e '
this di f
ference, that the latter maintai ned the migrati on of the soul into
i rrati onal ani mals, while the former restri cted the dow n to the p assage of
the soul f rom man to man .
” ” ”
R oman orders, p atri ci i , equ i tes , and p le be, an d e ui tes there
is co mm onl rendered y nig h ts ,
”
we ha e though t fi k
t ( though th at vans”
v
lati on is not free f rom ob j ecti ons) to call this second order among the 6 459
In that name.
can . me o m rc was . 1 49
CR AP X V I . .
—Th e nati on
extre mely deof all the G auls is
vo te d to supers ti ti ous ri tes ; an d on that amount they who ar
t rou bled wi th unus ua lly s ev ere di s e as e s n d they who are a
thi n k that unle s s the lif e of a man be offered for the life of a _
p i t i o us an d they
, h a v e s acri fi ce s of that ld n d o rdai ne d f
or n a ~
on fi re the men ,
p eri s h env elop e d i n t he fl ame s They con .
to e n gage i n b attle th ey co mmo nly vow thos e thi ngs whi ch they
,
whatever cap tured ani mals may hav e s urvi ve d the confii ct § ,
f
act .
1 ‘
Th e st u d en t m ust n ot i m ag ine th
at Caesar f ound the n ames M ercu ri us ,
Ap ollo, &c , exis ti ng among the G auls , as those oftheir de i tie s here sp ok e n
.
of. W hether the names as s igned b y commen tators ( as Wod a, M erc ury ,
B alen u s, Ap ollo, were, or were not, the Galli c, must remain a qu es .
”
t Cep eri n l, not, as so me cop i es, cep eru nt, as the vow necess arily
requires t he f ormer readi ng The Greek p arap hras t accordi ngly has rd
.
hapOnoéy z v a
h
A enaus
t r em ark s th a t
.
s ancti ty ofthe c a se
* dare s e i the r to s e cre te i n hi s hous e thi n gs
,
. .
an o rder that the day f ollo ws the ni ght Amon g the o the r .
. .
the p ro fi ts are lai d b y whi cheve r ofthe m s hall have survi ved
the o the r] to that on e the p o rti o n of both reve rts toge the r
[ ,
the ci rcums tan ces of hi s de ath are susp i ci ous hold an i n ve sti ,
i nto the fire all thi n gs i n cludi n g li vin g cre at ures whi ch they , ,
be o e
f r th i s p e od
ri s lave s an d dep e dants who fwere as cer
n ,
‘
,
a
Neglectareligione :
there are thin g eneral senses of the word re ~
mysteri es 3 Sup erstiti on And, 4 The san cti ty ofany p art icular matter,
. . . .
or reveren tial feeli ngs entertai ned wi th regard to a certai n case This las t, .
not rehg on 111 i ts general accep tati on, is the sense ofthe word m this pam ge.
casaa s com [soon
’
1 52 vras r
ns . vs
whe re
*
.
s ed u c ed by lo ng co n t i n u
-
ed c us t o m they m ay e xch,an ge thei r
ardo ur i n the wagin g ofwar f or a gei cult ure ; le s t they may be
anx i o us t o acquire ext ensi ve e s tates and the more p o werf , ul
dri ve the weak er from their p oss essi ons ; le st they con s truct
the ir ho us e s wi th too gre at a de s ire t o avoi d cold an d he at ; le s t
the de sire ofwe a lth sp rin g up f rom whi ch caus e di vi s i ons an d
, ,
lis cords ari s e ; an d that they may k eep the co mmon p eople in
a c on t e n ted stat e of mi nd
. when e ach s ees hi s own me ans
,
c ed o n a eq y h ho s e of the mo s t o e
p la n ua li t w i t [t ] p w rful
CR AP X X II I —I t is the gre ate s t glory to the s eve ral
'
. .
fro nti ers hav ing been lai d was t e They co ns i der thi s the re al
.
B ju s rei .
No T aci tus, s p eaki ng ofthem in his Germani a, more
n ati on, says
free ly exerci ses entertainment an d hos i tali t
p y To dri ve my one whomso .
The V oi ce were a large and p owerful nati on in the south wes t ofGe n], -
and were di vi ded i nto two great trib es Fi rst, the V olcaaArecomi ci, who .
inhab ited the eastern part of the P rovi nce, whom chi efci ty was Ni mausus,
Nismes . Second, the V olc a T ectosages, who inhab i ted the v asta n part
ofthe P rovince, whose chi efci ty was Narb o, Narb onne I t is hi ghly p ro .
The Hercyni an f est is sup posed to have deri ved i ts name f ro m the
“
or
German word, hartx resin ”
Trace s of the name are still preserved in
.
di ed 1 94 n 0. .
5Gallic meaning such ofthe V ole. Tectoss gee as had not migrated mi c
Germany .
the f ollowing are such as di ffer prin cip ally from o ther ani mals ,
From the top of thi s b ran che s lik e p alms s tre tch out a com
, , ,
i s the same ; the app e aranc e an d the si z e ofthe ho rns i s the s ame
CR AP XXVI I —
.
tak e thei r re st ; when the hunts men have di s covered f rom the
foo ts t eps ofthe s e an imals whi ther they are accusto med to be tak e
the ms elve s they e i the r un de rmin e all t he tree s at the roo ts or
, ,
cut i nto the m s o f ar that the up p er p art ofthe tree s may app e ar
to be le t tan d g
f s i n
!
W he n they have le ant up on them accord ,
. .
,
b ull . The ir s tre n gth an d s p ee d are extrao rdi n ary ; they spars
n e i ther man n or wild be a s t whi ch they have e s i ed
p T he s e t he .
s elv e s i n thi s kin d of hunti n g and tho s e who have sla i n the ,
p ar ed , h
and t at hi s arri al was v se n e by the p eo ple b efore the
( as are gen erally the d we“lli n gs of the G auls who for the , ,
p urpo s e of avoi din g h eat mos tly s eek the n ei ghbo urhood of ,
we re fi ghti n g on e of hi s f ,
ollo we rs moun t ed him on a horse :
the woods s helt e red him as he fl e d T hus f ortun e ten ded much" .
. .
p r eve n t ed by th
’
e s u dde n arr i v o f o u r ho rs e w he n h e su
p ,
p s th e r s t of t h e a r w as l s l f w in g s ,
to endure the f ati gue ei the r of war or {li ght havi ng curs ed
n
An ab i orix wi th eve ry i mprecati o n as the perso n who had b een ,
the co ntri ver ofth at meas ure des troyed hi ms elfwi th the j ui ce ,
of the
y ew tree of w h i c
,h the r e i s a g re at a b u n dan ce i n G aul
p a rt s
, he s e nt the b aggage of a ll the legi ons t o Aduatu ca .
quarte red for the p urp o s e ofwi nt erin g Thi s place b e s elect ed .
as well on o ther acco unts as bec aus e the f ortifi cati ons of the
r ev i o us year remain ed i n o rde r th at he mi ght reli eve the
p , ,
p la ce Q T
CR AP X X X II L—H avi ng di vi ded the army he o rde rs T
s . .
.
,
.
. ,
whi ch is supp orted by the authori ty ofthe Greek p araphrase The common .
cauti ons could be tak en by vi gilan ce such p rec auti ons were
tak e n ; s o that s o me Opp o rtuni ti e s of i nj uring the en emy were
n eglec ted th ough the mi n ds of all we re b urnin g to tak e re
,
the life of the G auls mi ght be haz arded i n the woods rather
than the legi o nary s oldi ers ; at the same ti me i n o rder that a ,
large force bei n g drawn aro un d the m the race and name of ,
,
y s
drawin g near by whi ch day Ca
, e sar had p urp os ed to return to
the b aggage an d the legi on H e re i t mi ght be learned how
.
much fortun e achi eves in war and how great cas ualti e s she p ro
,
for the purp o s e off oraging Many soldi ers ofthe legi ons had .
been left i n vali ded i n the camp of who m thos e who had ,
follow the m .
whi ch they had advan ce d atte mpt to f orce the cam at the D ecu
p ,
t he way on t at si d , for t h
e hey e e j e be e h g
w r ust r ac i n the camp :
so mu c h e h
s o, t at the s u tl rs who had t he b o h
ir o t s un d r the e
ram art had n ot an o pp ortuni ty ofre tre ati n wi thi n the c am
p g p .
af fai r and the coho rt on the o utp os t s carcely sus tai ns the
,
culty def en d the gates ; the very p osi ti on ofi ts elfan d the forti o
c omman der in chi ef are come thi ther as con qu erors ; most fo rm
- -
,
t hei r eye s the catas tro phe ofCo tta an d Ti turi us who had f allen ,
in the s ame fort All bein g gre atly di scon certe d by th i s alarm
.
,
. .
.
,
p ri n ci a
p l ce n tury un der Ca es ar of who m we hav e made men
(
ti on i n p revi o us e n gageme n ts ) had b ee n le f t an in vali d i n the
,
fro m thos e e e and stati ons hi ms elfat the gate The cen
n ar st , .
f e nde rs
CR AP XX XI X —The foraging havi n g in the me anti me
.
s on e rs h e moved he e ed f e d
'
p ri a d r fa t
r r ofi ha d r t ur n ; a t rwar s , ,
at all s i de s
CH AP X L —The camp foll owe rs run f
.
. . orward to the
-
thro ugh s i n ce the camp was s o n ear; an d ifany p art sho uld be
,
we s tated to have set out toge ther [wi th the o thers] un der
a s tan dard do n ot ap rove ofthi s T here f o re e n cou ragin g e ach
p, .
o ther un der the con du ct of Cai us T reb oni us a R o man kni ght
, , ,
who had b een app ointed over the m they b re ak throu gh the ,
.
,
Cuueo f ”
acto The ce ns us , in lts stri ct and proper sense.
m m m ms
.
the mi n ds ofall th at t he i r re as on be i ng a
, , lmo s t e s t ranged , the y
s ai d t hat a ll the o the r fo rce s havi n g b ee n cut of f, the c avalry
alon e had arri ved the re by fl igh t an d ass erted that if the , .
cas u alti e s ofwar co mplai ned ofon e thi ng [o nly] name ly that
, , ,
g re ate r i n that she had turned the b arb ari an s away fro m the
,
ado p t ed it only u n der p arti c u lar c i rcu mstances T hey someti mes recei ved .
majoram U pon whi ch he i nqu ire d what kin d ofp unis hment that was and
.
,
was told i t con s is tcd i n t he cri minal b ei ng strip p ed nak ed and lashed to
d eath, wi th his ne ck fas tened within a cross b ar -
The qu esti on,
ho wever, m ay ari se , ho w c ou ld Nero require s u ch i nformati on 2
e i nterdicti o,
I gnis e t aqu a the p enalty here s p ok en of, as i t app li ed
to a R oman citi z en, i nvolved the n ecessi ty of seek i ng an ab ode b ey ond
I taly . W e may su p p ose the sentence was severely felt by these revolu
ti onary S enones at leas t f or a time.
1
' “
Agcndi cmn : S ens.
mm . L ] m ca me wan . 1 65
B OOK VII .
T HE AR G U M E NT .
L-m Ma
ny ofthe G alli c nati ons
. consp i re t o assert their f
reedo m—I V .
X IV A n d Novi odun um
. X V X I X T he auls b urn all the towns
. .
o
. v
o fthe B i turi ges excep t A vari cum, i nt o whi ch they t hrow a s trong
—
,
XX
'
ab ly d ef en de d , V I II . XXX
I B ut i s at length tak en b y s torm
-
. .
. -
. .
carrying on the war the re, disturb ances b reak out a s ec on d time among
t he E dui —X
LV I The R omans tak e p oss essi on of three dif ferent
camp s b elonging t o the enemy ,— LV I I LI I
.
B ut attacking the X .
-
.
X
L I I I LX V A ll the G au ls , with very few e xcep ti ons , follow the
—X
. .
m and of V ercinget orix, they attack Caesar while marchi ng i nto the
c ou ntry o f the S equani , and are comp letely def eated L V III . X .
V L VI . XX - XXX .
CR AP I . .
—G aul being tran q he had de termin ed uil , Caesar, as ,
rece ve
i s i ntelli ge n ce of the de ath of C lodi us ;
*
and be in g ,
tool i n the han ds of P omp ey an d others, who b eheld, in the eloq uence of
Cicero, the greatest b ulwark ofthe consti tu ti on. He succeeded in
p elli n
g
1 66 en saa s
’
c om ma .
[ o B oxm
i nformed of the de cree of the s enate [to the e f fect] that all ,
opp ortuni ty they who alre ady p revi ous ly to thi s o ccurre n ce
, , ,
.
.
,
the father of his country , who was , h oweve r, sp eedily recalled Clodi us .
met a death worthy ofhi s li fe, b eing slain b y a gladi ator hi the se rvi ce of
Milo, one ofhi s most hated p oli ti cal Op p onen ts I t was on the occas i on .
of Milo s ’
or the death
tri al f Clodi us that Ci cero p ron oun ced his famous
of
”
orati on , P ro M ilon e, whi ch has attracted the admi rati on of all ages for
the eloqu en ce ofthe language an d b eau ty ofthe di cti on .
P lu tarch well remarks , that had V ercinge torix wai ted a htt le longer
u ntil Cmsar had actu ally e ngag e d i n the civil war, the ri si ng of t he Gnuls
would have app eare d as formi dab le to the R omans as the inroad of the
Ci mb ri and T eutones .
1 68 c iasi ns co mm a
.
[ B OO K vn .
oftroo ps he b ri ng s o v e r to hi s s e nt im e n ts s u ch of hi s f
, e llow
ci ti z e n s as he has acces s to : he e xhorts the m to tak e up arms
in beh alf of the ge n e ral f reedom an d havi n g ass emb le d great ,
the i r p uni sh m e n t
CH A P V —H avi n g qui ckly collec te d an army by the i r
.
. .
.
,
havin g bee n s ent in to the coun try of the R uteni gains ove r ,
that s tate to the Arve rni H avi n g adv anced in to the coun try
.
n ati o ns and a
, s s e mblin g a nume ro us f
, orce marche s to mak e a ,
whe n thi s circums tan ce was ann oun ced to him tho u ght that ,
t
. .
,
”
Li terally , he was af fected W i th great diffi culty .
1 Caesar calls them the R ut eni of the p rovince, to disti ngui sh them
rom the R uteni ofA qui tani a
f .
3: M ou nt C e venna, or Ce b enna,
the Cev enn es, a lofty chai n ofmo untams
whi ch sep arat ed Aqui tania from G allia Narb onensis , and joins Mount J are.
1 70 on san s
’
co m mm s .
[
B OO K mt.
s eve e e o
r st s as n of t he ye
ar ; yet a i n h v g cle ared away the s now
to the p de h
t of s ix f t, and ee
a in h v g Op ened the ro ads he ,
Aro un d hi m all the Arve rni cro wd i n alarm and s ole mnly eu ,
un de r
p re te n ce of rai s in g rec rui ts an d cav alry : he place s
B rutus a yo un g man i n co mman d of t he s e forc s ; he gi ve s
, ,
e
for the defence ofthat to wn Cmsar arri ved here i n two days
.
came forth s ilently from the ci ty before midni ght, and b e gan
to cros s the ri ver W hen thi s circums tan ce was announ ced by
.
~
s couts Ca
, esar, havi ng s et fire t o the gate s , se n ds in the legi ons
whi ch he had orde re d to be ready an d ob tai ns p o s s e ssi on of ,
the soldi ers then leads hi s army ove r the L o i re , and marches
,
CR A P X II
. Vercingetorix, when he asc ertai ned the arri val
.
Genab um, a town of the Aureliani, si tuated on the Loire, whi ch ran
through i t I t was sub sequ en tly called b y the inhabi tants Aureli anum,
which b y a sli ght change b ecame the modem Orleans .
: R AP . xrv ] . ms su mo was . 1 73
c
the amp , an d co mmen ces a cavalry ac ti on H i s men bei ng now .
th ey tho u ght that the mob had been rou s e d an d b ro u ght the m ,
to wn he would redu ce b en e a
,
th his do mi ni on the s tate of the
B i turi ges
—Verci g
.
CR AP X I V . n etorix, af e
t r s us tai n i n g su ch a s e ri e s of
lo ss e s at V ellaunodun u m G enab um , an d Novi odun urn , su mmons
,
B e s i de s that the i ntere s ts ofpri vate p rop erty mus t be n egle cted
for the s ak e ofthe gen e ral saf ety , that the villages an d hous e s
ou ght to be fi red over su ch an exte nt ofcou n try in ev ery di rec
,
v v
pellati on cm the ri er A ara, the Buss, one of the southern b ranches d
.
1 74 mum ’
s m
co s rAa ms [ B oos vu .
lost, they co uld not carry on the war B es i de s that the towns .
,
quarter ; and alth ough all b ore this wi th gre at re gre t yet they ,
debate con ce rn i n g Av ari cu m i n the gen e ral cou n cil whe ther ,
B i turi ges threw the ms elve s at the fee t of all the G auls and ,
, ,
”
i t had o nly one entran ce an d that very n arro w . P e rmissi on .
. .
, ,
“
ways .
1 76 c ms an s
’
co m manms .
[
BOOK vrt
They havi ng qui ckly learn ed the arri val of Caesar b y s couts,
hi d the ir c ars an d baggage i n the thi ck e s t p arts of the woo ds,
an d dre w up all the ir f o rce s in a lo fty and o pen space : whi ch
ci rcumstance bein g ann ounced Caes ar immediat ely ordered the ,
havi ng b roken down the bri dge s p ost ed the ms elv es on this ,
tri bes acco rdi n g t o the ir re sp e cti v e s tates held all the f ords ,
that if the R o mans sho uld atte mpt to f orce the marsh , they
would overp owe r them f ro m the hi ghe r gro un d whi le sti ckin
g
in i t , s o that whoeve r saw the n e arne s s of the p o si ti on , wo uld
i magin e that the t wo armi e s were prepared to fi ght on almo st
equal t e rms ; b ut whoeve r s ho uld vi ew accurate ly the di s ad
va n ta e of o si ti on , would di s cover that they were showi n g
g p
of f an empty af fectati o n of courage Caesar cle arly points .
bear the si ght of them at the di s tan ce ofso short a space and ,
gre at los s an d the de ath of how many gallan t men the vi cto ry
would n ece s s ari ly be p urchas ed : an d whe n he saw the m so de
te rmi nad to de cli n e n o dan ger f or hi s re n o wn that he o ught to ,
ca mp and dete rmi ned to prepare the o ther thi ngs whi ch were
,
. .
the multi tude to haz ard an e ngage ment to whi ch he p ercei ved ,
that a ll were in clin ed owing to thei rwant ofen e rgy becaus e they
, ,
were unab le to e n dure f ati gue any longe r T hat ifthe R o mans .
,
t o s ee di s tinc tly f rom the hi gher gro und the smalln ess ofthe
number of thei r e n emy and de spis e the co urage ofthos e who
, ,
s ur ed sa
,
i d
"
he tha t, I s
p e ak the s e w o rd s wi th tr u th li s te n
bein g previ ous ly i ns tru cted i n what ans we rs they should mak e
when examin ed say T hat they we re le gi onary s oldi ers that
, , , ,
b ear the labo ur of the work ; and the ref ore that the gen eral
was determi ned if he made no p rogre ss i n the si ege to draw
, ,
” ”
03 hi s a rmy in t hree days T he s e b enefi ts says V ercinge
.
,
that they had no doubt ofhis hon our ; that the war could not
b e con ducted wi th greater prudence T hey de te rmi ne that .
that the glory of the vi ctory mus t res t wi th the B i turi ges i f ,
. .
,
devi ces of every s ort were oppos ed by the Gauls ; s inc e they
are a nati on ofcons ummate i ngenui ty an d mos t ski lf ul i n imi ,
or they turned a
f s i de the hooks wi th noos es, an d when ’
one ;
they had caught hold of the m fi rmly drew the m on by me a ns,
ofe ngin es , and un de rmi ned the moun d the more skilf ully on
thi s accormt, because there are in their t e rri to ri es e xte ns i v e
i ro n min es, and cons equ ently eve ry desc ri p ti on ofmi ni ng op e
rati o ns is known and prac tis ed by the m They had f urni s hed .
.
day and ni ght, they atte mp ted ei ther to s et fire to the mound,
or atta ck our soldi ers when e ngaged i n the works ; an d, more
o ver by spli cing the upri ght ti mbers oftheir own towers , they
,
equa lled the hei ght ofo urs , as f ast as the mound had daily rai s e d
t he m and co un t e rmi ned our mi ne s an d i mp eded the wo rki ngr
, ,
p i t ch , and s to n es of ve ry gre at we i gh t, a nd
p reve n t ed the m
f rom ap pro achi n g the walls .
f eet dis tant from each o ther at equal i nt ervals , are place d
toge ther on the groun d ; these are morti s e d on the ins i de and ,
walls to tear out the stones , the G auls standing on the top caught them b y
a s ort of snares and p revented their b lows, and drew them over the walls
h to the town. They also undermined the emb ankments of the R omans
and rendered them useless .
1 80 cs s m '
s oo m nm ms .
[
noo n vu .
vi ct r
o y always aro s e befo re the en emy : the more so on this se
count becaus e they saw the coveri n gs ofour towers burnt away ,
weary wi th fre sh men and consi dered that all the saf , e ty of
G aul res t ed on thi s cri s i s ; the re happ e n ed in my own vi e w a .
charge d the s ame ofi ce : when the s econ d man was slain m the
s ame mann e r by a wo un d f ro m a cro s s how a t hi rd su cceeded ,
' '
. .
,
cam
p o f Ve r c i n ge t o ri x was n ot f
a r di s tan t fro m the t o wn an d ,
n ature an d
phys i cal p o wers p re vented the m f ro m takin g to
fl i ght .W he n they saw that they ( as fear doe s n ot gen e
rally ad mi t of mercy i n e xtre me da n ge r
) pers is t ed i n thei r
res o luti on they b ega
, n to sho ut alo u d an d gi ve in te lli gen ce of ,
Thes e b alls were p ass ed from han d t o h an d until they came to him,
and he was in the act ofthrowin them i nto the fire when he m a b ack by
g
t he m ow from the cross-b ot
um . u m] T HE GALLIC W AR . 1 81
,
hi ch he had dete rmi n ed to rais e
b ei ng arrange d a vi olent s torm ari si n g thou ght thi s n o b ad
, ,
arran ged on the walls a li ttle t oo n egli gen tly an d the re f ore ,
s u dde nly fl ew out f rom all qu art ers an d qui ckly fille d t he wall .
t o we rs an d drew up in f
,
o rm of a we dge in the mark e t place
, ,
-
hop e offli ght should be cut off they cas t away th eir arms an d “ , ,
A p art was then slain b y the infan try whe n they we re cro wd ~
cavalry : nor was there on e who was anxi o us for the p lun der .
ro mthe beginni n g
,
. .
ollowing words
i n the f That they sho uld n ot be too mu ch
depre s s ed i n sp iri t, n or alarmed at their lo ss that the
R o man s di d n ot co n qu e r by v alo ur n or i n the fi eld , b ut by
a ki n d of art and skill i n as s ault , wi th whi ch they the ms e lve s
were unacquai n ted that whoeve r e xp ected eve ry eve nt i n
the war t o be f avourable , e rred ; that i t n ever was hi s opini o n
that Avari curn s ho uld be def en de d, ofthe truth ofwhi ch state
m e n t he had thems e lve s as wi tn e ss e s , b ut that i t was o wi n g
t o the i mpru de n ce of the B i turi ges an d the t oo re ady com ,
a gen e ral un ani mi ty thro u gho ut the who le of G aul, the uni o n
o fwhi ch n ot eve n the whole eart h could wi ths tan d , an d that he
gen e ral s afety t o begi n to fort ify their camp , i n order that they
,
migh t the more e as ily su stai n the s udden attacks ofthe en emy
CR A P X X X — Thi s sp ee ch was n ot di sagree able to the
.
CR AP XXXI
. . Nor di d Ve rcin ge to ri x us e less e f forts than
he had p romi s ed , t o gai n over t he o ther stat e s and [in con s e ,
q u en c e] e n deavo ur ed t o e n ti ce th ei r le ad e rs by gif ts an d p ro
he hi ms elf had
s ho ul d have recours e to vi ole nce a nd a rms an d that the art
p y ,
s tate had ass embled the re and he was i nfo rmed that one
,
the p ri ests acco rdi n g to the us age ofthe s tate d i n the p res e n c e
,
. .
I have here adop ted t he readi ng, i ntromissi s magi sh atib us, whi ch i s
” '
”
termiss is mag is trati b us, whi ch may b e re ndered . when the ma mary was m
”
m eant .
E laver the Alii er, a ri ver of Gaul, whi ch rises at the foot of muta
,
nt
Lm rg mm i th a d afi a f t two languag f
fl
y
i
n ea r no r n er course o seven -
f , ,
1 85
ove rthe ri ver and began to march on the otherb ank ofthe Alli er
CH AP XXXV —W hen e ach army was i n s i ght ofthe o ther
.
. . ,
Having qui ckly finis hed the work an d led hi s legi ons acro ss ,
secu re a su ly of rov i i o n B u t Ve i n ge to i
r x h a vi n g
pp p s s rc . ,
p i t ched h i s ca m p on t he m o u n ta i n n ea r th e to w n p lac ed th e ,
ho e c v y c o h che
an y day to pass wi t ut t s tin g i n a a alr a ti n t e ar rs ,
ve y oo h o an d p r i p i t us on
o g y o ed
r f t oft at m u ntai n , s tr n l f rtifi ec o
eve ry s i de (whi ch ifour men could gain they s ee med hk ely to ,
attac k ofthe e n e my
Whilst thes e em
.
the magi s tracy was adj u dged by Ca esar bein g b ri bed by the ,
of a mo st n oble f ami ly H e s ha
. re s the b r i be wi th the m and ,
exho rts the m to reme mber that they we re free an d born for
empire ; that the s tat e of the ZEdui was the only one whi ch
re tarded the mo s t ce rt a i n vi cto ry of the G auls ; t hat the rest
were held in check by i ts au tho ri ty and i fi t was b ro ught over
.
, ,
eve r as g a
, i ni ng a mo st j us t cau s e by his de ci s i o n ; b ut that b e
as s i gned more we i gh t to the gen eral f reedom ; f or wh should
y ,
,
1 88
’
c s s an s co m ur m ms .
L 3 00! vn .
as the i r re lati on s co uld not n e gle c t the ir saf e ty , nor the s tate
regard i t as a mat te r ofsli ght i mp o rtan ce .
four li ght armed legi o ns and all the c avalry : nor had b e ti me
~
the ramp art ; that man y had bee n wo un ded by the i mme ns e
num ber of arrows and all kin ds of mis sile s ; that the engin es
were of gre at s ervi c e in wi ths tan di ng th em ; that F ab i us at ,
camp before sunris e o wing to the very gre at z eal ofhis s oldi e rs
Cm XL II —W hils t thes e thi n gs are go ing on at G ergovia
.
ing them on the i r march they st ri p the m ofall the i r bag gage
they be si ege day and ni gh t thos e that re si s t ed ; when man y
were slai n on both s i de s they exci te a gre ate r num ber to arms
CHAP XL I I I —I 1 the me an ti me whe n i ntelli ge n ce was
,
. . .
,
brought that all their s oldi ers were in Caesar s power t hey ’
. .
s tan ce s e n ds s eve ra
, l troops of hors e to the place i mmed i ate ly
afte r mi dni gh t ; he o rders the m to ran ge i n eve ry quarte r wi th
more t umult than usual At dawn he o rders a large q uan ti ty
.
.
,
bravery coul d
o mplis h i t ; n or di d they put an en d to
n ot acc
the purs ui t un til they d re w ni gh to the wall ofthe t o wn and
,
c as t thei r clo the s and s ilver ove r the wall and b e ndi n g over ,
had s ai d that day amon g hi s fellow soldi e rs that he was e xci ted
by the plun der of Avari cum an d would n ot allo w any one to ,
to the wall
XL V I II —I n
.
n umbers an d ,
de s pairi n g of his s afety h avi n g alre ady re
, ,
at te mp t ed t o ai d hi m I n v ai n he s ay s you e n de a o ur to
"
, , ,
v
. .
,
shou ld le ave their ri ght s hould ers b are i n ord er t hat the R oman soldi er: .
0
1 94
’
en sAas con m raa sm . s oox v u.
[
G auls i n the ir eag e r p urs ui t I t was supp orted by the coho rts of
.
the thi rtee nth legi o n , whi ch bei n g led fro m the small e r cam
,
p ,
had un der the comman d ofTi tus S extius , occ upi ed the hi ghe r
,
halted and faced the en e my Ve rci ngeto rix led back his men
.
fro m the p art of the hill wi thi n the fo rtifi cati o ns On that
“
.
, ,
g p
by the tri bun es of the s oldi ers an d the li eutenan ts ; an d
s tate d , wh at the d isadvan tage of t he groun d could e f fect ,
what Op i ni o n he hi ms elf had e nte rtai n ed at Avari cu m , w
hen
hav ing s urpri s ed the e n e my wi thout ei ther ge n eral or cavalry ,
he had gi ve n up a certain vi ctory , le st even atri fii n g los s sho uld
oc cur in the co nte s t o wi n g to the di s advantage of pos iti on .
he requi red i n hi s s oldi ers forb e aran ce and s elfco mmand , not -
”
le ss t han v alour an d magnani mi ty
CR A P L I I I —H avi n g held thi s asse mbly , an d havi n g
.
. .
the cams When he had d on e thi s the n ext day, thi nki n g
. ,
P re ndevi lle well remarks that we might n aturally i nfer from the n um
b er ofof fi ce rs that p erished a mu ch g reater loss among t he so ldiers ; how
ever, i t i s b y no means i mp ro b ab le t hat , as the ras hness of the centuri ons
contri b u ted largely t o the d efe at o fthe t r“O p s, so they e n deavoured, b y the
the c irc ums tan ce that the Lo i re had swo lle n to su ch a degree
fro m the me ltin g of the s n o ws t hat i t di d n ot s ee m ca able of
p ,
b e i ng forded at all
CH AP L V l —Ca ar on be i n g in formed ofthe s e move me nts
.
. . s
S e n on e s
CH A D
LvIl —W h ilst t hese thi ngs are be i ng do ne by
.
mar . LIL ] ras GALLI C wan . 1 97
as we have j us t b e f ore ob s e rv e d of L ut e t i a H av i ng s e i z e d .
u on ab out fi f ty h i a n d q i kl y j i d t he m t o e tli ei ,
p s p s u c o n e g
and havi n g lace d s o ldi ers 1 n the m b e i nti m i dat ed by hi s u n
p ,
c on ce1 1 n n
g t h ,
p a ll ed by th e wa nt of co rn , h ad m ar ched h a s t ily t o t he p r ov i n c e .
This, accordi ng to Achai ntre, is the p art of P aris k nown b y the name
ofLe M urals
f Literally,
’
fl owed i nto .
198 cn sas s conn nxra
’
mrs .
[
noon vn .
. . , ,
'
. ,
ari n we re s u rpr
se , i s ed by ou r s oldi e rs : the i nf antry and
c avalry are qll lclt l) t ran s p orte d un de r the s up e ri nten de n ce of
t he R o man k n i gh ts who m h had appo i nt ed to th at o f
, fi ce e
He ref
ers to t e
h garrison which he left at Agendi cnm to guard the
200 ( menu s ’
oo mmvramm .
[ B OO K vn .
g p
o t o ss e s si o n ofthe ho s tage s who m Ca es ar had de p o s i ted wi th
e ve r af
, te r e ng agin g i n the war t hey do not d are to pursue ,
. .
bro ther of E p oredi rix and o rde rs himto wage war again s t
,
. .
to re tire wi thi n the i r to wns an d f o rti fi cati ons The Allob roges .
,
.
,
c ei ved t hat t he e n e m
y we re s up eri o r i n cavalry an d he h i ms e lf ,
. ,
ram ed i n th ree c am s a bo t t n m i le f
r o m t he R o man s :
p p u e s ,
202 on saa s co a vn
mars hal all their forces befo re the c amp an d i n timi date the ,
bati on , an d all bein g fo rced to tak e the o ath , on the n ext day
the cav a lry were di vi ded in to three p arts and two oft he s e ,
gain ed the top of the hill di slo dge the en e my fro m the i r
,
guar sd
—
.
by their n umbers , and as only the narro wer gat es we re left Open,
are c ro wded toge the r i n the m ; then the G ermans p urs u e th em
wi th vi go ur e ven to the f ortifi cati on s A gre at slaughte r e n s ue s ;
.
u
p i n f ro nt ofthe ramp art to advan ce a li ttle Th e G auls who
.
,
m Lx
’
c . q I THE s u .
all hi s o the r works at a d i s tan ce off o ur hun dred fee t fro m that
di tch ; [he di d] that wi th this i nten ti o n les t (s in ce he n e cessari ly ,
s ta s ho rns
p roj ec ti n g f rom the j un c ti on of the p arap e t an d
’
g ,
.
na n g sunk i nto thi s tre n ch an d f
i ast e n ed fi rmly at the botto m
, ,
. .
,
the gua rd s of the f ortifi cati ons could n ot be s urroun ded even
by i mmens e n umbers ifsuch a ci rcums tance sho uld tak e place
, .
dete rmi n e that all who c ould bear arms sho uld not b e called
out whi ch was the op ini o n of Ve rci n ge to rix b ut that a fixed
, ,
dis tin guish their men n or h ave the means of supplyi n g the m
,
Aulerci B rann ovi ces ; an equal numbe r from the Arve rni i n con
j uncti on wi th t Fllm te fi Cadurei Gab ali and V elauni who
he i . . ,
08
2 ( mamas ’
co m mu tes .
[Bog]; V II.
each s tate by who s e advi ce the war s ho uld be cond ucted All
, .
a
p y n o atte n t i o n to t he o i ni o n of tho s e who ca
p ll a m o st
c ome at the app oin ted day W t the n Do you s upp os e t hat
h a 2 ?
,
CR AP LXXVI II W hen di f
. fe ren t opini ons were ex
re s s ed , they de te rmi n ed that tho s e who owi ng to age or
p ,
21 0 cr
es s co s vn.
t he m t o be ad mi tt e d .
our f ortifi cati o ns The followin g day, havi ng led fo rth th eir
.
cavalry fro m the camp they fill all that plai n whi ch we have , , ,
T he bes i eged run toge the r when the s e auxili ari e s we re see n
mu tu al con grat ulati o ns ensu e , an d the min ds of all are e late d
wi th J oy A cco rdi n gly, drawi n g out their t roo ps , t hey e ncamp
.
CR AP LXXX . .
—C o ed hi s army on bo th
ees ar, havin g s tati n
oft heir co untry men before they dre w nigh to the fo rti fi cati ons .
ai th g reat lo ss con sult what they sho uld do : they avail the m
,
, .
the i r scouts s elec t f ro m the e n tire army s ixty tho u sand men
, .
H e havi n g i s s ued f
, rom the camp at the firs t wat ch an d h avi n g ,
ti me the c avalr
, y beg an to app ro ach th e fo rtifi cati o ns i n the
on t ofthe cam
p
—
.
mural hooks an d o ther thin gs whi ch he had prep ared for the
, , ,
u r os
p p e of maki n g a sally They e n gage on all s i des at on ce .
,
date our men b ecause they p erc ei ved that their danger res ted
,
c a n Lxxx n
.v ‘
. THE GALLI C was . 21 3
t hey sho uld s u cceed i n f orcin g the li n e s : the R omans exp ecti ng
an en d to all the ir labo urs if th ey s ho uld gai n the day T he .
.
,
i re c a s ti n g mi s s ile s o the rs f
, ormi ng a test udo advance to the
, ,
R o man s had con ce aled i n the gro und Our men h ave no lo n ge r .
.
.
, ,
the m to d raw of
. f the coho rts an d mak e a sally ; b ut n ot to do
this e xce p t thro ugh n ece ssi ty H e hi ms elf goe s to the re s t
. .
c ati ons i n the plai n s on accoun t of the gre atnes s of the wo rks ,
hooks
CHA P L X XXV I I —Ca3 sar sen ds at firs t youn g B rutus
.
. . ,
coho rts from the nearest re d oub t and o rders part ofthe cavalry ,
21 4 es s aa s
’
co m mu nes .
[
B OO K vu .
. . rom the
c olo ur ofhi s robe * a n d the t ro op s of c av a
, lry an d the cohorts ,
denly s een i n the re ar ofthe Gauls : the o ther coho rts advan ce
rap i dly ; the e n e my tu rn the i r b acks ; the c av alry i nte rce t
p
the m i n the i r fl i gh t an d a gre at slau ght e r ensu e s S eduli us t he
, .
at ely af ter mi dni ght the c av alry are s ent out an d overtak e the
,
i v n h im alt ho u h a whi te or
g p urp le rob e wa s us ually gi ve n to the
g e .
fi ”
enerals going f h
orth to t e l
e d ofb attle
g .
o ms
Co m p lete, w i thEn g li sh equ iv alen ts A lp ha .
fo r se ri al m em o ri z i n
g .a‘ a'
. J J J
E A CH — P ri c e 25 c e nt s — P AP E R
BY J O A C H I M C . M U E LL E R
P R OF . OF L A T IN , CA L V IN CO LL EGE ,
C L EVE L AND ,
O H IO
T he p am p hle t s c o e r,
t wo v
re s p e c t i e l , t he v y
G A L L I C W A R , an d t he 4 O R A T IO N S w CA T I L I NE ; an d .
b e s i d e s t he Lat i n i d i o m s d o n e i n t o c o rre c t E n g li s h,
e ac h p a m p le tha l s o c o n t ai n s a n E n g li s L a t i n h -
i n de x to h
e lp t he p u p i l p u t E n g li s h i d i o m s i n t o
c las s i c al Lat i n .
T h e s e h an d y b o o k s are p u b li s h e d i n t he b e li e f
th at n o t hi n g i n t he s t u d y o f t he L at i n i s h ard e r fo r
t he av e rag e b e g i n n e r t han t o re n d e r t he i d i o m s
acc u rat e ly an d w e ll .
T he s u g g e s t i o n o f fe re d b y t he c o m p i le r o f t h e s e
e xce e d i n g ly c o n v e n i e n t li s t s i s t h at t he t e ac h e r
,
as s i g n s ay t e n i d i o m s fo r e ac h re c i t at i o n , an d t h at
t he p u p i ls m e m o ri z e t h e m an d als o fo rm s e n t e n c e s
i llu s t rat i n g t he i d i o m s — d e v e lo p i n g a s u rp ri s i n g
fac i li t y i n s e n s i n g t he d ri ft o f t he t e xt .
re p arat i o n i m i lar li s t s o f t h e i d i o ms o f o th e r
p s
c las s i c L at i n w ri t e rs .
H IND S 85 NO B LE , P ub li s hers of
Co mp le t e ly P ars e d Cae s ar , BOO K 1 ,
S ho rt e s t R o ad t o Cae s ar F o r b e i nn e rs
.
7 5 c en ts .
—
5 6 12—
4— 13 14 C00 pe r Ins ti tu te,
- -
New Y ork City
p u dlz s k ers
'
S ck ooléoo/es of a ll a t o n e s t or e
P r i n c ip al o f York Colleg i a te I ns t i t u te , Yor k , P a .
Cae s ar n o r e xc e lle n c e T he s t u d e n t i s h e re s h o w n ho w
.
”
he m ay re ac h Ca e s ar i t i n e re m ag n o .
T he v o lu m e c o n s i s t s o ft w o p arts : T he fi rs t a b e g i n ,
t he s e c o n d b o o k o fCa e s ar s G alli c W ar
’
.
(2) A s m all n u m b e r o fw o rd s i s us ed ,
onl y ab o u t t h re e
h u n d re d .
(3 ) T he w o rd s are w i t h fe w e xc e p t i o n s , t h o s e fo u n d
,
in t he fi rs t s i x ch ap t e rs o f t he s e c o n d b o o k o fCa
e s ar .
(5) O n ly t he le ad i n g ru le s o f s y n t ax are re q u i re d o r
i llu s t rat e d .
. s g i v e n t o e ac h L at i n w o rd .
( 1 ) I n g e n e ral a s av i n g o f t i m e w i t h o u t lo s s o f
,
t h o ro u g h n e s s o f p re p arat i o n fo r re ad i n g .
(2) T he s t u d e n t i s n o t c o n fu s e d b y fi n d i n g i n the
g ram m ar a p arad i g m o r a fo rm o f ru le d if fe re n t fro m
w h at he le arn e d i n hi s b e g i n n e r s b o o k
’
.
(3 ) H e le arn s n o w o rd fo r w h i ch he d o e s n o t fi n d u s e
i n hi s fi rs t at t e m p t s at re ad i n g .
(4) B y fre q u e n t u s e o f t he s am e s e t o f w o rd s an d
i d i o m s , he fo rm s t he h ab i t o f g i v i n g i n s t an t ly t he E n g
li s h e q u i v ale n t o fa Lat i n w o rd o r p h ras e .
i s t rai n e d i n m o d i fy i n g t he g i v e n m e an i n g t o ad ap t i t t o
n e w c o n n e ct i o n s .
Cae s ar s G alli c W ar
’
T he S e v en B ooks. .
Caes ar s Ci v i l W ar
’
.
Catu llu s .
Ci c e ro s B ru t u s
’
.
Ci c e ro s D e fe n c e o fR os c i u s
’
.
Ci c e ro D e O fli c i i s .
Ci c e ro O n O ld A g e an d F ri e n d s hi p .
Ci c e ro O n O rat o ry .
Ci c e ro O n T he N at u re o ft he G o d s .
Ci c e ro s O rat 1 o n s F o u r v s Cat i lz n e; an d
’
. . o the rs . E n larg e d e d i ti on .
Ci c e ro s S e le c t L e t t e rs
’
.
Ci c e ro s T u s c u lan D i s p u tat i o n s
’
.
E u t ro p i u s .
H o rac e comp le te .
J u v e n al s S at i re s , comp lete .
L i v y , B oo k s I an d II .
L i v y , B o o k s X X I an d II XX .
L u c re t i u s , i n p rep arati on .
M art i al s E p i g ram s (p ap e r )
’
.
P hae d ru s F ab le s
’
.
P lau t u s P s e u d o lu s , an d M 1 le s G lo ri o s u s
’
.
P lau t u s T ri n u mm u s an d M e n ae c hm i
’
, .
P li n y s S ele c t L e t t e rs c o mp le te i n 2 v o lu m e s
’
, .
Q u i n t i li an , B o o k s X an d X II .
R o man L i f e i n L at i n P ro s e an d V e rs e .
S allu s t s Ca t i li n e , an d T he J u g u rt hi n e W ar
’
.
S e n e ca O n B en e ts fi .
T ac i t u s A n nals T he 1 s t S i x B ook s
’
. .
T ac i t u s G e rm an y an d A g ri co la
’
.
T ac i tu s O n O rat o ry .
T e re n c e : A n d ri a, A d e lp hi , an d Pho rm i o
T e re n c e : H e au t o n t i m o ru m e n o s .
V i rg i l s ZE n e i d , th e 1 s t S i x B ook s
’
.
V i rg il s E c log u e s an d G eo rg i c s
’
.
V i ri R o mae .
[E s c hi n es A g ai ns t Ct es i p ho n .
lE s c hy lu s P ro m e the u s B o u n d ; S ev e n Ag ai n s t T heb es
’
.
[E s c hy lu s A g am e m n o n
’
.
A ri s t op han e s Clo u d s
’
.
A ri s t o p han e s B i rd s , an d F rog s
’
.
D e m o s t he n es O n T he Cro w n .
D e m o s t he n e s O ly n t hi acs an d P hili p p i c s
’
.
E u ri p i d es A lces t i s , an d E le c t ra
’
.
E u ri p i d e s H ec u b a, an d A n d ro m ac he
’
.
E u ri p i d e s i p hi g e n i a In A u li s , In T au ri s
’
.
E u ri p i d es M e d e a
’
.
H e ro d o t u s , B o o k s V I an d V I I .
H e rod o t u s B o o k V III
, .
H o m e r s I li ad , the 1 s t S i x B ooks
’
.
L y 51 as O rat i o n s
’
T he o n ly T ran s lati on ext an t
. .
F ars s ? I N T R O D U CT I O N p m cn
’
E E s NE W B O OK ,
By I . F . F R I SB EE , P H . D .
( N ew Y or k U n i v ers i ty ) .
T he g re at fe atu re o ft h i s b o o k i s t he s u cc es s fu l ap p li ca
t i o n O f t he p ri n c i p le s o fP e d ag o gy t o t he p re p arati o n f or
re adi n g X e n op ho n ’
s A n ab as i s . T he le s so n s are arran g e d
fo r m ak i n g rap i d p ro g re s s . O v er one h u n dre d s cho o ls
I n t ro d u ct i o n p ri c e ,
A ND T H E R E S U LT S S E CU R E D F R O M I T S U S E
W e hav e i nt ro d u ce d
T he B eg i nn er s G re ek B oo k
’
b ecau se w e t ho u g ht i t t he b e s t b o o k o n t he s u b je c t P r z n
'
. .
M as s .
at J at
’ ”
T he B e g i nn e r s G reek B o o k i n o u r c las s es i s v e ry
I t s av es t he p u p i l s t i m e t hat O t he rw i s e
’
s at i s fac t o ry .
B y i t s p re s e n t at i o n O fi n fl ec t i o n s my p u p i ls d o m ore t hi n k
i n g t han t he y w ou ld d o i n le arn i n g c o m p let e p arad i g m s .
I t i s a d eci d e d i mp ro v e m e n t ov e r an y t hi n g o f t he s o rt t hat
I hav e u s e d e i t her as a p u p i l o r a t eac he r A li c e M . .
R i cha r d , H ig h S chool, G a rd i n er , M e .
rft he fu n d ame n t al p ri n c i p le s o f G re e k i t s u rp as s e s an y
b oo k I hav e y e t u s ed o r s e e n P ri n W S B r ow n , H i g h . . . .
S chool, D ext e r , M e .
I t has b e e n i n he re t w e n t y s i x w ee k s an d i s ad m i t
use - .
ab ly ad ap t e d t o o u r n ee d s I t s arran g e m en t s av e s t he
.
. . .
d oc k S chool, W i n che n d e n , M as s .
wa s:
T he d u lle s t c an w i t h c o m p arat i v e e as e c o m p re he n d t he
j
s u b e c t as s t at e d i n i t s p ag e s , w hile t he b ri g ht e s t
’
p up il s
i n t e re s t i s c o n t i n u ally s t i m u lat e d T he b o o k ho w e v e r, .
,
d o es n o t m ak e t he ac q u i re m e n t O fG ree k eas y b y o m 1 t t i n g
fi
t he d i f cu lt i e s ; b u t i t d oe s b y s c i e n t i c t re at m e n t an d fi
hap p y arran g e me n t o f mat eri al ai d t he s t u d e n t w o n d e r
fu lly i n ac qu i ri n g t ho s e p ro b le m s m os t d i f c u lt t o t he fi
le arn er P r of S j Cas e, N e w H a mp t o n L i t er ary I n s t i
. . . .
t u t e , Ne w H a mp t o n , N H . .
3 3 0713 [ne 57 14 0 8 711 20 1 “ n av ca n] In T CG G I 5
cw Tes tament m the G reek
0
B rook s Clas s i cs
’
rs t . .
S A Y S D_R S H E LT O N M A CK E N Z IE
. It i s the m os t
b e aut i fu l e d 1 t i o n o f V i rg i l s lE n e i d y e t p ub li s hed As an
’
.
”
i llus t rate d s c hoo l b o ok i t has n ev e r b e en e v en ap p roache d .
Ovi d ’
s M etamorp hos es , wi th L exi con I llus trate d an d R e .
W ith E n gli sh Note s , H i stori cal; M ythologi cal and Cri ti ca‘
and Q u e sti on s for E xami n ati on s P ri ce re d uce d t o .
s as. .
M an y b o o k s o n t he T h e o ry o f E lo c u t i o n h av e
g ood
b e e n p u b li s h e d—c h o i c e s e le c t i o n s are p le n t i fu l, b u t v e ry
fe w au t h o rs h av e c o m b i n e d w i t h t he E s s e n t i als o f E lo cu
,
t i o n , a g o o d v ari e t y o f p ro p e r e xe rc i s e s fo r p rac t i ce In .
P art I , t he au t h o r has b ri e fl y o u t li n e d t he b e s t w ay t o t e ac h
a b e g i n n e r t o re ad P art I I co n t ai n s a fu ll d i s c u s s i o n o f
.
D i c t i o n ary W o rk , t he v alu e o f w h i c h c an n o t b e o v e r
e s t i m at e d .P art I I I c o n t ai n s h e lp fu l s u g g e s t i o n s t o
T e ac h e rs o f E lo c u t i o n P art IV (t he larg e s t an d m o s t
.
i m p o rt an t p art) c o n t ai n s a t h o ro u g h d i s c u s s i o n o f the
E le m e n t s o f E lo c u t i o n , e ac h p ri n ci p le b e i n g c are fu lly
c o n s i d e re d P art V c o m p ri s e s a s p le n d i d c o lle c t i o n o f
.
T he ch ap t e rs d e v o te d t o E lo c u t i o n h av e b e e n s o
di v i d e d t h at t h e y c an b e e as i ly c o m p le t e d b y a c las s i n
t e n w e e k s t i m e as fo llo w s
’
W eek
Ist . Ou tli ne ofElocuti on
2d W eek . an d Breath
3 rd W eek .
4th W eek .
8th W eek .
t e s t t he w o rk t h at i s d o n e b y t he c las s fro m w e e k t o w e e k .
n am e o f s o me g o d o r g o d d e s s i n t he d ai ly p ap e r o r , ,
i n a p o e m , n ot to kn ow ? O r p e rh ap s o n e j u s t fai ls t o
e n jo y p erf ectly a b e au t i f u l p ai n t i n g o r e n g rav i n g o r
p i e c e o fs t at u ary b e c au s e i g n o ran t o ft he my th i m p li e d
, .
A n d ho w o n e s m e m o ry i s p i qu ed w h e n o n e c an t
' ’
re c all t he s t o ry t h o u g h o n c e fami li ar !
, H o w t he
”
matt e r s t i c k s i n t he m i n d p e s te ri n g u s u n t i l i t all,
co m e s b ac k t o u s ; an d t /z en w e re an n o y e d t o th i n k
’
we c o u ld n t re c all t he c o n n e c t i o n o n t he i n s tan t , an d
’
we w i s h t h e re w e re s o m e w ay t o b e s av e d all t he
p o th e r .
W e ll, t h e re i s a w ay
J u s t h a v e a t h an d a c o n v e n i e n t li t t le b o o k t h at
g i v e s t he n am e o f e v e ry g o d an d g o dd e s s , o r h e ro
w h o s e n am e i s e v e r li k e ly t o b e b ro ach e d No t a .
tom e , w i t h e n cy c lo p a e di c f u lln e s s o fd e s c ri p t i o n No
B u t j u s t an alp h ab e t i c al li s t as i t w e re , fo r re ad y ,
re f e re n c e , e n ab li n g o n e t o fi n d an d lo c at e the p e rs o n
ag e i n s tan ter ; an d q u i t e e n o u g h d e s c ri p t i o n t o e n ab le
o n e t o c o n n e c t w i t h t he s tory —j u s t e n o u g h t o re s c u e
one f ro m s e e m i n g s o d i s t re s s i n g ly ig n oran t as i f o n e ,
m m e s o f M i n e rv a ?
fou r d i f fe re n t b ut
q u i t e fa i li ar n a
u s t s n clz a b o o k i s p u b li s h e d b y t he u n d e rs i g n e d
j .
T he t i t le o fi t i s
1 00 0 M YT H O LO G ICA L C H A R A CT ERS
B R IE F LY D E S C R IB E D
It i s n e at ly b o u n d i n c lo t h ; i s s m alli s h , an d o f
A n d t i s n o t s o v e ry h i g h p ri ce d
’
co n v e n i e n t s hap e .
-
o n ly
S E V E N T Y - F IV E C E NT S P O S T P A ID
P ro s an d Co n s . Co m p le t e D e b at e s B o th S i d e s . .
P i ec e s fo r P ri z e S p eak i n g Co nt e s t s
—
.
4 56
- 12
- 13 —
14 C -
oop er Insti tute New Y ork City
S enooloooles f
o a ll p n oli s lz ers at on e s tore
I n t he s e d ay s i t c e rt ai n ly i s v e ry t ry
u p - t o - d at e
i n g t o t h e w i d e aw ak e b o y o r g i rl t o h av e t o h an g
-
t h e h e ad an d co n fe s s i g n o ran c e w he n t h e i n q u i r
i n g p are n t i n n o c e n t ly as k s s o m e s i m p le q u e s t i o n
ab o u t e le ct ri ci ty O r m ay b e y o u are an am b i t i o u s
-
b o y — y o u r p re s e n t am b i t i o n t o ap p e ar w e ll i n t he
e y e s o f t he n e w y o u n g t e ac h e r—an d s he h as j u s t
b e s t o w e d u p o n y o u a s m i le o f m i ld s u rp ri s e w i t h ,
a t i n g e o f d i s ap p o i n t m e n t i n i t , b e c au s e
y e s , y ou
c o u ld n o t e xp l ai n h o w t h e c u rre n t fro m t he s t o rag e
b at t e ry o f t h at au t o m o b i le m an ag e s t o s e t t he
m o t o r re v o lv i n g H as n t s h e a ri g ht t o s u p p o s e
.
’
t h at an y b o y n o w a d ay s o u g ht t o k n o w at le as t
- -
t h at m u c h S u p p o s e , t ho u g h , t h at y o u are a g i rl .
D o e s y o u r b ro t h e r m ak e y o u t i re d , fo re v e r t e lli n g
w i t h h i s s u p e ri o r ai r w h at he k n o w s ab o u t at t rae
t i o n , re p u ls i o n , re s i s t an c e , p u ls at i o n s ; s p ark s ,
s e n d i n g m e s s ag e s ; b ru s h e s , s w i t c h e s , c o i ls
O ri s i t u p to y ou d e ar p are n t , o r k i n d t e ac h e r?
Can y o u e xp l ai n e v e n t h e s i m p l e p he n o m e n a ab o u t
w h i c h t h e e v e ry d ay li fe o f Y o u n g A m e ri c a le ad s
-
h i m t o as k y o u q u e s t i o n s ? W o u ld y o u li he t o b e
ab le t o an s w e r s u c h q u e s t i o n s — t h at i s , d o y o u h at e
t o ap p e ar q u i t e i g n o ran t o f t he v e ry s i m p le s t fac t s
re g ard i n g t he t e le p ho n e t he t e le g rap h , t he e le c t ri c
,
l i g h t t he d y n am o ? A n y o f u s , all o f u s c an i n
. ,
an ho u r le arn at le as t e n o u g h ab o u t t he s e t h i n g s t o
‘
b e ab le t o an s w e r an y s i m p le q u e s t i o n No n e e d to.
s t u d y o r c o m m i t t o m e m o ry J u s t re ad t hro u g h
.
w i t h re as o n ab le at t e n t i v e n e s s t he li t t le b o o k t h at
s t at e s t h e fac t s i n c le ar w o rd s d e v o i d o f t e c h n i c al
i t i e s , an d i n e n t e rt ai n i n g s t y le — an d g i v e the
n t rs the s am e chan ce T h l i t t l b k i
y o u g s e e . e o o s
T he Si m p le A B C of Electri ci ty
P ri ce 50 ce n ts , p ostp ai d
H IN DS N O BLE, P u b li shers
4 5 6 12 13 —
- - -
14 Cooper Insti tute
-
New Y ork Ci ty
S c hoolb ook s o f a ll p u hli s he rs a t o n e s tor e
I d le n e s s ! I d le n e s s !
I s the fath e r of —w e ll , w e all k n o w t he lo ng c at e g o ry of
T i s a mu ch ab u s e d s ay i n g — at le as t i n re g ard t o y ou n g
’
b oy s an d y ou n g g i rls
. T h at i s to s ay the i d le b o y an d
.
,
n o th i n g ab ou t i t an d s i mp ly w as h o ur h an d s o fthe who le
,
af fai r wh e n a b oy g e ts i n t o m i s ch i e f o r t ro u b le th ro ug h
”
id le n e s s . O h w e s ay what e ls e i s t o b e exp e c t e d
, ,
u s u al re s u lt
P s h aw n o t o n e b o y n o r o n e g i rl i n a t h o u s an d i s re ally
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laz y ! W e c an t heep hi m i d le o n c e g e t hi m i n t e re s te d
-
’
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s omeo n e i s t o b lam e f o r n o t d i s co v e ri n g t he t h i n g wh i ch
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. b oy w i ll w o rk li k e
,
z
o n c e hi s i n t ere s t i s e n li s te d .
B e i ng a c omm e rc i al p e o p le w e are b o rn w i th b re ad
wi n n i ng i n g rai n e d i n t he b o n e an d lat e n t i n t he b loo d .
Nec e s s i ty c o mp e ls i t an y w ay b u t w e t ak e an i n tere t i n ,
s
”
mo n ey m aki n g ap art f ro m t he n e ce s s i ty s i m ly as a
, p ,
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—
wh at yo u w i ll an d y ou c u re hi s
“ la i n e s s d i s p e l i dlen e s s z , ,
fo e t
r s al l m i s ch i e f o r t ro u b le a n d — w h o k n o w s — as s u re
hi m a p lace i n t he w o rld T he g i rl t oo ! S om e y o u ng ,
G i v e the m an i n t re s t e an d they wi ll su cc ee d .
s ho u ld w e t h i n k
, p ro v e a b oo n t o ev ery t e ach er an d e v e ry
,
so me th i n g t o c all o n e s o w n T he n am e o f th i s b oo k i s
’
.
W H AT S HAL L I DO ?
T he
H i n ds do A ohle N e w Yor h
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.
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the hooh I w i ll p ay y o u
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B egi nner s Greek B ook I P Fri sb ee , B ate s Co ll L at S ch
’
. . . . . . 1 . 25.
Di ct i onari es : T he Clas s i c S eri es H alfmoro c c o , . e ach .
F ren ch E ng li s h an d E n g li s h- F re n c h D i c t i o n ary , 1 1 22 p a es
-
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- -
.
.
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-
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-
P ri c e .
S p an i s h- E n g li s h an d E n g li s h- S p an i s h, 474 p ag e s ,
New -T es t ame n t L e xi c o n E n ti rely n ew , an d up to- aate W i th a.
-
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.
“
. . .
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Ci c ero s Id i oms Ci c e ro s O rati on s 2 5 ce nts
’
’
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o r e ac h, e ac h.
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Co v e ri n g s u c i e n t g ro u n d t o e n ab le the s t u d en t t o
re ad t he N e w T e s t ame n t i n t he G reek P ri e 50 ct s . c .
3 g at ed an d ad ap t ed fo r mi xed c las s es . W i t h Q u es ti on s .
Hi nd s No l s H b rew Grammar,
’
be e
S on gs of All t he Colleges . Illumi nate d clot h c ov e r .
$1 .
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s W ho i n M yt hology ? 1 000 mytho lo gi cal c haracte r:
b ri efl y d es c ri b e d . 75 ce nt s .
S ongs ofAll the Colleges . I llumi nated c loth c over $1 50 . . .
”
Commencement P art s . Ef
fo rts or all o cc as i o n s
f O rati o ns .
,
ad d res s e s , v ale d i ct o ri es . s alu tat o ri es , c las s p o e ms , class mo ttoe s ,
af te r- d i n n e r s p e e ches . f lag d ay s n at i o n al .
ev e ry p o s s i b le o c c as i o n i n hi g h s cho o l an d -
t u rn c ame , d i d s ay I
ep i s o d e s fro m p op u lar au t ho rs li k e S t e v en
s on , Craw fo rd , M ark T w ai n , D i c k e n s ,
S c o tt , i n t he fo rm o f s i mp le p lay s , w i t h
ev e ry d e t ai l exp lai n e d as t o d re s s , m ak e ~
u p , u t e n s i ls f o r s cho o l- ro o m
u rn i tu re , e t c , f
, .
o r p arlor .
Colle ge M e n ’
M i nute Declamati ons
‘
s 3
-
.
- -
o
U p t o d ate s ele c t i o n s fr m li v e men li k e Chau n cey D ep ew , H ew i tt,
G lad s to n e , Cle v e lan d , P res i d e nt E li o t ( H arv ard ) an d Carter
( W i lli am s ) an d o the rs N ew mat eri al w i th v i tali t y i n i t fo r p ri z e
.
s p e ak i n g V ery p op u lar
. .
Colle ge M ai ds ’
3 M i nute R ead i ngs
-
. U p to d ate - -
e
r ci tati o n s
fro m li v i n g m en an d w o me n O n t he p lan o f t he p o p ular Colleg e .
M e n s D ec lamat i o ns , an d o n t he s am e hi g h p lan e
’
.
20 c t s ; I n t e rme d i at e 20 c t s ; A d v an c e d 20 c t s
.
, A ll threefor 50 e rg
.
, . .
c i d e d hi t T hi s i s an o t he r b o o k i n v alu ab le n o t
.
o n ly t o hi g h s c hoo l an d c o lle g e s t u d e n t s , b u t
-
als o t o e v e ry o t he r p e rs o n w ho as p i res t o c o n
v e rs e e n g ag i n g ly o n t he t o p i c s o ft he d ay O ur .
i rag e , p e nny
p os t ag e , t ran s p o rt at i o n , t ru s ts , d e p art m e nt
s to res , m u n i c i p al o w n e rs hi p o f fran chi s e s ,
g o v e rn men t c o n t ro l o ft e leg rap h B o th s i d es o f .
t he s e an d m any o the r qu e s t i o n s c o mp le t e ly d e
b at e d D i re c t i o n s fo r org an i z i ng an d c o n
.
i ng a d eb at i n g s oc i et y , w i t h by -laws an d p ar
lz am e n t ary r u les .
H . C D av i s
. mp i ler o f
, co
P art s . 75 ce nt s N e arly R . e ady .
T en W ee k s Cours e i n E lo cuti on . W i th
nu mero u s s e le ct i o n s o r i llu s t rat i o n an d p rac t i c e
f .
F enno ’
s S c i e nc e and Art of E locut i on .
T hi s o ld fam i li ar tu n e w i th N E W W O R D S an d man y o ther O L D ,
F A V O R IT E S w i t h n ew w ord s , i n o u r n e w b o ok S O N G S O F A LL T H E ,
catchy , u p to d at e -
B es i d e s the old fami li ar t u n e s w i th the n ew
w ord s , there are, he arty c o l l e g e
i n t hi s lates t o f s on g i s t he s ort
s on g b oo k s , man o f s on g wi th
o ld f av o ri t e s w i t w h i c h e v ery on e
the o l d fam i li ar e v e ry w h e re is
w o rd 5 jus t as m os t fami li ar,
e v e ry o n e lo v e s t o an d w hi ch on e
s i n g t he m T hen lov es to s i n g an d
,
t h e b o ok t e e ms t o he ar, whe n ev er
with NE W S O N G S, t w o o r t hree w ho
man y 0 f t h e m lov e a s on g are
n ow f o r t he fi rs t m et t og ether
t i m e p u b li s hed , whether at co l
b e s i d e s s on g s le e , a t h o m e ,
p op ular i n thei r a oat , or afi e ld .
r e s p e c t i v e c ol A n d i n to t hi s
leg es — we s t eas t ,
, n ew b ook are
s o u t h, n o rt h g at h e r e d , t h e
an d o ft en t yp i cal co mp i lers ho p e,
o fA L M A M A T E R . t he v e ry s on g s
T he who le s o u led ,-
t hat w i ll b e s u ng .
H INDS Gt NO B LE , P li s he rs , NE W Y O R K CIT Y
ub .
6 7 8 5.
d ay
co lle g e s of lo ng a go .
go ld
end ay s , o ld co l le g e c hu m .
U —P I —D E E .
- -
d
I n an u p t o d at es t tai lor m a e g own , U p i -d e- i -d a t
- -
.
T he b oys are W l ld , an d p re x i s , to o ,
Y ou ne ve r s aw s u ch a hu lla b a loo - -
.
CH O R U S U p i d e e i d e e i d a1 e tc
.
- - - - - -
.
H e r v o i c e is c le ar as a s oari n g lark s, ’
dd
Wh e n c ro s s a m u y s tre e t s he fl ltS ,
’
T he b o y s all hav e co n n i p t i on fi ts
T he tu rn o f he r e h ad
tu rn s all ou rs , too ,
e t o s i t i n he r p e w ;
‘
T he re s alw ay s a s t ri f
”
I ls e n ou g h t o m ak e a p ars o n ru n k ,
‘
d
T o he ar he r s i ng o ld co c a c he lu n k l - - -
T he ab o v e , an d three o the r N E W v e rs es t o U P i D E E , - -
an d N E W W O R D S c at c hy , up t o at e , t o m an y - -
d
,
Copyri ght P r i ce ,
,
.