<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0090" id="link2HCH0090"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXXIV——OBSERVATION ON THE MEANS TO CARRY ON A WAR ACCORDING TO JULIUS CAESAR </h2>
<p>'Tis related of many great leaders that they have had certain books in
particular esteem, as Alexander the Great, Homer; Scipio Africanus,
Xenophon; Marcus Brutus, Polybius; Charles V., Philip'de Comines; and 'tis
said that, in our times, Machiavelli is elsewhere still in repute; but the
late Marshal Strozzi, who had taken Caesar for his man, doubtless made the
best choice, seeing that it indeed ought to be the breviary of every
soldier, as being the true and sovereign pattern of the military art. And,
moreover, God knows with that grace and beauty he has embellished that
rich matter, with so pure, delicate, and perfect expression, that, in my
opinion, there are no writings in the world comparable to his, as to that
business.</p>
<p>I will set down some rare and particular passages of his wars that remain
in my memory.</p>
<p>His army, being in some consternation upon the rumour that was spread of
the great forces that king Juba was leading against him, instead of
abating the apprehension which his soldiers had conceived at the news and
of lessening to them the forces of the enemy, having called them all
together to encourage and reassure them, he took a quite contrary way to
what we are used to do, for he told them that they need no more trouble
themselves with inquiring after the enemy's forces, for that he was
certainly informed thereof, and then told them of a number much surpassing
both the truth and the report that was current in his army; following the
advice of Cyrus in Xenophon, forasmuch as the deception is not of so great
importance to find an enemy weaker than we expected, than to find him
really very strong, after having been made to believe that he was weak.</p>
<p>It was always his use to accustom his soldiers simply to obey, without
taking upon them to control, or so much as to speak of their captain's
designs, which he never communicated to them but upon the point of
execution; and he took a delight, if they discovered anything of what he
intended, immediately to change his orders to deceive them; and to that
purpose, would often, when he had assigned his quarters in a place, pass
forward and lengthen his day's march, especially if it was foul and rainy
weather.</p>
<p>The Swiss, in the beginning of his wars in Gaul, having sent to him to
demand a free passage over the Roman territories, though resolved to
hinder them by force, he nevertheless spoke kindly to the messengers, and
took some respite to return an answer, to make use of that time for the
calling his army together. These silly people did not know how good a
husband he was of his time: for he often repeats that it is the best part
of a captain to know how to make use of occasions, and his diligence in
his exploits is, in truth, unheard of and incredible.</p>
<p>If he was not very conscientious in taking advantage of an enemy under
colour of a treaty of agreement, he was as little so in this, that he
required no other virtue in a soldier but valour only, and seldom punished
any other faults but mutiny and disobedience. He would often after his
victories turn them loose to all sorts of licence, dispensing them for
some time from the rules of military discipline, saying withal that he had
soldiers so well trained up that, powdered and perfumed, they would run
furiously to the fight. In truth, he loved to have them richly armed, and
made them wear engraved, gilded, and damasked armour, to the end that the
care of saving it might engage them to a more obstinate defence. Speaking
to them, he called them by the name of fellow-soldiers, which we yet use;
which his successor, Augustus, reformed, supposing he had only done it
upon necessity, and to cajole those who merely followed him as volunteers:</p>
<p>"Rheni mihi Caesar in undis<br/>
Dux erat; hic socius; facinus quos inquinat, aequat:"<br/>
<br/>
["In the waters of the Rhine Caesar was my general; here at Rome he<br/>
is my fellow. Crime levels those whom it polluted."<br/>
—Lucan, v. 289.]<br/></p>
<p>but that this carriage was too mean and low for the dignity of an emperor
and general of an army, and therefore brought up the custom of calling
them soldiers only.</p>
<p>With this courtesy Caesar mixed great severity to keep them in awe; the
ninth legion having mutinied near Placentia, he ignominiously cashiered
them, though Pompey was then yet on foot, and received them not again to
grace till after many supplications; he quieted them more by authority and
boldness than by gentle ways.</p>
<p>In that place where he speaks of his, passage over the Rhine to Germany,
he says that, thinking it unworthy of the honour of the Roman people to
waft over his army in vessels, he built a bridge that they might pass over
dry-foot. There it was that he built that wonderful bridge of which he
gives so particular a description; for he nowhere so willingly dwells upon
his actions as in representing to us the subtlety of his inventions in
such kind of handiwork.</p>
<p>I have also observed this, that he set a great value upon his exhortations
to the soldiers before the fight; for where he would show that he was
either surprised or reduced to a necessity of fighting, he always brings
in this, that he had not so much as leisure to harangue his army. Before
that great battle with those of Tournay, "Caesar," says he, "having given
order for everything else, presently ran where fortune carried him to
encourage his people, and meeting with the tenth legion, had no more time
to say anything to them but this, that they should remember their wonted
valour; not to be astonished, but bravely sustain the enemy's encounter;
and seeing the enemy had already approached within a dart's cast, he gave
the signal for battle; and going suddenly thence elsewhere, to encourage
others, he found that they were already engaged." Here is what he tells us
in that place. His tongue, indeed, did him notable service upon several
occasions, and his military eloquence was, in his own time, so highly
reputed, that many of his army wrote down his harangues as he spoke them,
by which means there were volumes of them collected that existed a long
time after him. He had so particular a grace in speaking, that his
intimates, and Augustus amongst others, hearing those orations read, could
distinguish even to the phrases and words that were not his.</p>
<p>The first time that he went out of Rome with any public command, he
arrived in eight days at the river Rhone, having with him in his coach a
secretary or two before him who were continually writing, and him who
carried his sword behind him. And certainly, though a man did nothing but
go on, he could hardly attain that promptitude with which, having been
everywhere victorious in Gaul, he left it, and, following Pompey to
Brundusium, in eighteen days' time he subdued all Italy; returned from
Brundusium to Rome; from Rome went into the very heart of Spain, where he
surmounted extreme difficulties in the war against Afranius and Petreius,
and in the long siege of Marseilles; thence he returned into Macedonia,
beat the Roman army at Pharsalia, passed thence in pursuit of Pompey into
Egypt, which he also subdued; from Egypt he went into Syria and the
territories of Pontus, where he fought Pharnaces; thence into Africa,
where he defeated Scipio and Juba; again returned through Italy, where he
defeated Pompey's sons:</p>
<p>"Ocyor et coeli fiammis, et tigride foeta."<br/>
<br/>
["Swifter than lightning, or the cub-bearing tigress."<br/>
—Lucan, v. 405]<br/>
<br/>
"Ac veluti montis saxum de, vertice praeceps<br/>
Cum ruit avulsum vento, seu turbidus imber<br/>
Proluit, aut annis solvit sublapsa vetustas,<br/>
Fertur in abruptum magno mons improbus actu,<br/>
Exultatque solo, silvas, armenta, virosque,<br/>
Involvens secum."<br/>
<br/>
["And as a stone torn from the mountain's top by the wind or rain<br/>
torrents, or loosened by age, falls massive with mighty force,<br/>
bounds here and there, in its course sweeps from the earth with it<br/>
woods, herds, and men."—AEneid, xii. 684.]<br/></p>
<p>Speaking of the siege of Avaricum, he says, that it, was his custom to be
night and day with the pioneers.—[Engineers. D.W.]—In all
enterprises of consequence he always reconnoitred in person, and never
brought his army into quarters till he had first viewed the place, and, if
we may believe Suetonius, when he resolved to pass over into England, he
was the first man that sounded the passage.</p>
<p>He was wont to say that he more valued a victory obtained by counsel than
by force, and in the war against Petreius and Afranius, fortune presenting
him with an occasion of manifest advantage, he declined it, saying, that
he hoped, with a little more time, but less hazard, to overthrow his
enemies. He there also played a notable part in commanding his whole army
to pass the river by swimming, without any manner of necessity:</p>
<p>"Rapuitque ruens in praelia miles,<br/>
Quod fugiens timuisset, iter; mox uda receptis<br/>
Membra fovent armis, gelidosque a gurgite, cursu<br/>
Restituunt artus."<br/>
<br/>
["The soldier rushing through a way to fight which he would have<br/>
been afraid to have taken in flight: then with their armour they<br/>
cover wet limbs, and by running restore warmth to their numbed<br/>
joints."—Lucan, iv. 151.]<br/></p>
<p>I find him a little more temperate and considerate in his enterprises than
Alexander, for this man seems to seek and run headlong upon dangers like
an impetuous torrent which attacks and rushes against everything it meets,
without choice or discretion;</p>
<p>"Sic tauriformis volvitur Aufidus;<br/>
Qui regna Dauni perfluit Appuli,<br/>
Dum saevit, horrendamque cultis<br/>
Diluviem meditatur agris;"<br/>
<br/>
["So the biforked Aufidus, which flows through the realm of the<br/>
Apulian Daunus, when raging, threatens a fearful deluge to the<br/>
tilled ground."—Horat., Od., iv. 14, 25.]<br/></p>
<p>and, indeed, he was a general in the flower and first heat of his youth,
whereas Caesar took up the trade at a ripe and well advanced age; to which
may be added that Alexander was of a more sanguine, hot, and choleric
constitution, which he also inflamed with wine, from which Caesar was very
abstinent.</p>
<p>But where necessary occasion required, never did any man venture his
person more than he: so much so, that for my part, methinks I read in many
of his exploits a determinate resolution to throw himself away to avoid
the shame of being overcome. In his great battle with those of Tournay, he
charged up to the head of the enemies without his shield, just as he was
seeing the van of his own army beginning to give ground'; which also
several other times befell him. Hearing that his people were besieged, he
passed through the enemy's army in disguise to go and encourage them with
his presence. Having crossed over to Dyrrachium with very slender forces,
and seeing the remainder of his army which he had left to Antony's conduct
slow in following him, he undertook alone to repass the sea in a very
great storms and privately stole away to fetch the rest of his forces, the
ports on the other side being seized by Pompey, and the whole sea being in
his possession. And as to what he performed by force of hand, there are
many exploits that in hazard exceed all the rules of war; for with how
small means did he undertake to subdue the kingdom of Egypt, and
afterwards to attack the forces of Scipio and Juba, ten times greater than
his own? These people had, I know not what, more than human confidence in
their fortune; and he was wont to say that men must embark, and not
deliberate, upon high enterprises. After the battle of Pharsalia, when he
had sent his army away before him into Asia, and was passing in one single
vessel the strait of the Hellespont, he met Lucius Cassius at sea with ten
tall men-of-war, when he had the courage not only to stay his coming, but
to sail up to him and summon him to yield, which he did.</p>
<p>Having undertaken that furious siege of Alexia, where there were fourscore
thousand men in garrison, all Gaul being in arms to raise the siege and
having set an army on foot of a hundred and nine thousand horse, and of
two hundred and forty thousand foot, what a boldness and vehement
confidence was it in him that he would not give over his attempt, but
resolved upon two so great difficulties—which nevertheless he
overcame; and, after having won that great battle against those without,
soon reduced those within to his mercy. The same happened to Lucullus at
the siege of Tigranocerta against King Tigranes, but the condition of the
enemy was not the same, considering the effeminacy of those with whom
Lucullus had to deal. I will here set down two rare and extraordinary
events concerning this siege of Alexia; one, that the Gauls having drawn
their powers together to encounter Caesar, after they had made a general
muster of all their forces, resolved in their council of war to dismiss a
good part of this great multitude, that they might not fall into
confusion. This example of fearing to be too many is new; but, to take it
right, it stands to reason that the body of an army should be of a
moderate greatness, and regulated to certain bounds, both out of respect
to the difficulty of providing for them, and the difficulty of governing
and keeping them in order. At least it is very easy to make it appear by
example that armies monstrous in number have seldom done anything to
purpose. According to the saying of Cyrus in Xenophon, "'Tis not the
number of men, but the number of good men, that gives the advantage": the
remainder serving rather to trouble than assist. And Bajazet principally
grounded his resolution of giving Tamerlane battle, contrary to the
opinion of all his captains, upon this, that his enemies numberless number
of men gave him assured hopes of confusion. Scanderbeg, a very good and
expert judge in such matters, was wont to say that ten or twelve thousand
reliable fighting men were sufficient to a good leader to secure his
regulation in all sorts of military occasions. The other thing I will here
record, which seems to be contrary both to the custom and rules of war,
is, that Vercingetorix, who was made general of all the parts of the
revolted Gaul, should go shut up himself in Alexia: for he who has the
command of a whole country ought never to shut himself up but in case of
such last extremity that the only place he has left is in concern, and
that the only hope he has left is in the defence of that city; otherwise
he ought to keep himself always at liberty, that he may have the means to
provide, in general, for all parts of his government.</p>
<p>To return to Caesar. He grew, in time, more slow and more considerate, as
his friend Oppius witnesses: conceiving that he ought not lightly to
hazard the glory of so many victories, which one blow of fortune might
deprive him of. 'Tis what the Italians say, when they would reproach the
rashness and foolhardiness of young people, calling them Bisognosi
d'onore, "necessitous of honour," and that being in so great a want and
dearth of reputation, they have reason to seek it at what price soever,
which they ought not to do who have acquired enough already. There may
reasonably be some moderation, some satiety, in this thirst and appetite
of glory, as well as in other things: and there are enough people who
practise it.</p>
<p>He was far remote from the religious scruples of the ancient Romans, who
would never prevail in their wars but by dint of pure and simple valour;
and yet he was more conscientious than we should be in these days, and did
not approve all sorts of means to obtain a victory. In the war against
Ariovistus, whilst he was parleying with him, there happened some
commotion between the horsemen, which was occasioned by the fault of
Ariovistus' light horse, wherein, though Caesar saw he had a very great
advantage of the enemy, he would make no use on't, lest he should have
been reproached with a treacherous proceeding.</p>
<p>He was always wont to wear rich garments, and of a shining colour in
battle, that he might be the more remarkable and better observed.</p>
<p>He always carried a stricter and tighter hand over his soldiers when near
an enemy. When the ancient Greeks would accuse any one of extreme
insufficiency, they would say, in common proverb, that he could neither
read nor swim; he was of the same opinion, that swimming was of great use
in war, and himself found it so; for when he had to use diligence, he
commonly swam over the rivers in his way; for he loved to march on foot,
as also did Alexander the Great. Being in Egypt forced, to save himself,
to go into a little boat, and so many people leaping in with him that it
was in danger of sinking, he chose rather to commit himself to the sea,
and swam to his fleet, which lay two hundred paces off, holding in his
left hand his tablets, and drawing his coatarmour in his teeth, that it
might not fall into the enemy's hand, and at this time he was of a pretty
advanced age.</p>
<p>Never had any general so much credit with his soldiers: in the beginning
of the civil wars, his centurions offered him to find every one a
man-at-arms at his own charge, and the foot soldiers to serve him at their
own expense; those who were most at their ease, moreover, undertaking to
defray the more necessitous. The late Admiral Chastillon</p>
<p>[Gaspard de Coligny, assassinated in the St. Bartholomew<br/>
massacre, 24th August 1572.]<br/></p>
<p>showed us the like example in our civil wars; for the French of his army
provided money out of their own purses to pay the foreigners that were
with him. There are but rarely found examples of so ardent and so ready an
affection amongst the soldiers of elder times, who kept themselves
strictly to their rules of war: passion has a more absolute command over
us than reason; and yet it happened in the war against Hannibal, that by
the example of the people of Rome in the city, the soldiers and captains
refused their pay in the army, and in Marcellus' camp those were branded
with the name of Mercenaries who would receive any. Having got the worst
of it near Dyrrachium, his soldiers came and offered themselves to be
chastised and punished, so that there was more need to comfort than
reprove them. One single cohort of his withstood four of Pompey's legions
above four hours together, till they were almost all killed with arrows,
so that there were a hundred and thirty thousand shafts found in the
trenches. A soldier called Scaeva, who commanded at one of the avenues,
invincibly maintained his ground, having lost an eye, with one shoulder
and one thigh shot through, and his shield hit in two hundred and thirty
places. It happened that many of his soldiers being taken prisoners,
rather chose to die than promise to join the contrary side. Granius
Petronius was taken by Scipio in Africa: Scipio having put the rest to
death, sent him word that he gave him his life, for he was a man of
quality and quaestor, to whom Petronius sent answer back, that Caesar's
soldiers were wont to give others their life, and not to receive it; and
immediately with his own hand killed himself.</p>
<p>Of their fidelity there are infinite examples amongst them, that which was
done by those who were besieged in Salona, a city that stood for Caesar
against Pompey, is not, for the rarity of an accident that there happened,
to be forgotten. Marcus Octavius kept them close besieged; they within
being reduced to the extremest necessity of all things, so that to supply
the want of men, most of them being either slain or wounded, they had
manumitted all their slaves, and had been constrained to cut off all the
women's hair to make ropes for their war engines, besides a wonderful
dearth of victuals, and yet continuing resolute never to yield. After
having drawn the siege to a great length, by which Octavius was grown more
negligent and less attentive to his enterprise, they made choice of one
day about noon, and having first placed the women and children upon the
walls to make a show, sallied upon the besiegers with such fury, that
having routed the first, second, and third body, and afterwards the
fourth, and the rest, and beaten them all out of their trenches, they
pursued them even to their ships, and Octavius himself was fain to fly to
Dyrrachium, where Pompey lay. I do not at present remember that I have met
with any other example where the besieged ever gave the besieger a total
defeat and won the field, nor that a sortie ever achieved the result of a
pure and entire victory.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />