and that further covering of the road was superfluous,
marched by a side movement to the same heights.
Along the road thus left free Hannibal then retreated
with the bulk of his army, without encountering the
enemy; next morning he without difficulty, but with
severe loss to the Romans, disengaged and recalled
his light troops. Hannibal then continued his
march unopposed in a north-easterly direction; and
by a widely-circuitous route, after traversing and
laying under contribution the lands of the Hirpinians,
Campanians, Samnites, Paelignians, and Frentanians
without resistance, he arrived with rich booty and
a full chest once more in the region of Luceria, just
as the harvest there was about to begin. Nowhere
in his extensive march had he met with active opposition,
but nowhere had he found allies. Clearly perceiving
that no course remained for him but to take up winter
quarters in the open field, he began the difficult
operation of collecting the winter supplies requisite
for the army, by means of its own agency, from the
fields of the enemy. For this purpose he had
selected the broad and mostly flat district of northern
Apulia, which furnished grain and grass in abundance,
and which could be completely commanded by his excellent
cavalry. An entrenched camp was constructed
at Gerunium, twenty-five miles to the north of Luceria.
Two-thirds of the army were daily despatched from
it to bring in the stores, while Hannibal with the
remainder took up a position to protect the camp and
the detachments sent out.
Fabius and Minucius
The master of the horse, Marcus Minucius, who held
temporary command in the Roman camp during the absence
of the dictator, deemed this a suitable opportunity
for approaching the enemy more closely, and formed
a camp in the territory of the Larinates; where on
the one hand by his mere presence he checked the sending
out of detachments and thereby hindered the provisioning
of the enemy’s army, and on the other hand,
in a series of successful conflicts in which his troops
encountered isolated Phoenician divisions and even
Hannibal himself, drove the enemy from their advanced
positions and compelled them to concentrate themselves
at Gerunium. On the news of these successes,
which of course lost nothing in the telling, the storm
broke, forth in the capital against Quintus Fabius.
It was not altogether unwarranted. Prudent
as it was on the part of Rome to abide by the defensive
and to expect success mainly from the cutting off of
the enemy’s means of subsistence, there was
yet something strange in a system of defence and of
starving out, under which the enemy had laid waste
all central Italy without opposition beneath the eyes
of a Roman army of equal numbers, and had provisioned
themselves sufficiently for the winter by an organized
method of foraging on the greatest scale. Publius
Scipio, when he commanded on the Po, had not adopted
this view of a defensive attitude, and the attempt
of his successor to imitate him at Casilinum had failed