Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 2.44 | Liv. 2.45 (Latin) | >>Liv. 2.46 |
ch. 452.45Anticipations like these had given the Etruscans fresh
energy after their many vicissitudes of defeat and victory.
The Roman consuls, too, dreaded nothing but their own
strength and their own arms. The recollection of the fatal
precedent set in the last war deterred them from any action
whereby they would have to fear a simultaneous attack from
two armies. They
confined themselves to their camp, and in face of the
double danger avoided an engagement, hoping that time and
circumstances might perhaps calm the angry passions and bring
about a more healthy state of mind. The Veientines and
Etruscans were all the more energetic in forcing an
engagement; they rode up to the camp and challenged the
Romans to fight. At last, as
they produced no effect by the taunts and insults levelled at
the army and consuls alike, they declared that the consuls
were using the pretext of internal dissensions to veil the
cowardice of their men, they distrusted their courage more
than they doubted their loyalty. Silence and inactivity
amongst men in arms was a novel kind of sedition. They also
made reflections, true as well as false, on the upstart
quality of their nationality and descent. They shouted all
this out close up to the ramparts and gates of the camp. The
consuls took it with composure, but the simple soldiery were
filled with indignation and shame, and their thoughts were
diverted from their domestic troubles. They were unwilling
that the enemy should go on with impunity, they were equally
unwilling that the patricians and the consuls should win
the day, hatred against the enemy and hatred against their
fellow-countrymen struggled in their minds for the mastery.
At length the former prevailed, so contemptuous and insolent
did the mockery of the enemy become. They gathered in crowds
round the generals' quarters, they insisted upon fighting,
they demanded the signal for action. The consuls put their
heads together as though deliberating, and remained for some
time in conference. They were anxious to fight, but their
anxiety had to be repressed and concealed in order that the
eagerness of the soldiers, once roused, might be intensified
by opposition and delay. They replied that matters were not
ripe, the time for battle had not come, they must remain
within their camp. They then issued an order that there must
be no fighting, any one fighting against orders would be
treated as an enemy. The soldiers, dismissed with this reply,
became the more eager for battle the less they thought the
consuls wished for it. The enemy became much more
exasperating when it was known that the consuls had
determined not to fight, they imagined that they could now
insult with impunity, that the soldiers were not entrusted
with arms, matters would reach the stage of mutiny, and the
dominion of
Amongst the centurions of the first rank who had demanded to
be led to battle was M. Flavoleius. M. Fabius, he said, I
will come back from the battle victorious. He invoked the
wrath of Father
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 2.44 | Liv. 2.45 (Latin) | >>Liv. 2.46 |