to turn or, if not, to share the fate of the legions.
These, in order the better to follow up the victory
over the advanced infantry of the enemy, had changed
their front disposition into a column of attack, which,
in the shape of a wedge, penetrated the enemy’s
centre. In this position they were warmly assailed
on both sides by the Libyan infantry wheeling inward
upon them right and left, and a portion of them were
compelled to halt in order to defend themselves against
the flank attack; by this means their advance was
checked, and the mass of infantry, which was already
too closely crowded, now had no longer room to develop
itself at all. Meanwhile Hasdrubal, after having
completed the defeat of the wing of Paullus, had collected
and arranged his cavalry anew and led them behind the
enemy’s centre against the wing of Varro.
His Italian cavalry, already sufficiently occupied
with the Numidians, was rapidly scattered before the
double attack, and Hasdrubal, leaving the pursuit
of the fugitives to the Numidians, arranged his squadrons
for the third time, to lead them against the rear of
the Roman infantry. This last charge proved
decisive. Flight was not possible, and quarter
was not given. Never, perhaps, was an army of
such size annihilated on the field of battle so completely,
and with so little loss to its antagonist, as was
the Roman army at Cannae. Hannibal had lost
not quite 6000 men, and two-thirds of that loss fell
upon the Celts, who sustained the first shock of the
legions. On the other hand, of the 76,000 Romans
who had taken their places in the line of battle 70,000
covered the field, amongst whom were the consul Lucius
Paullus, the proconsul Gnaeus Servilius, two-thirds
of the staff-officers, and eighty men of senatorial
rank. The consul Gaius Varro was saved solely
by his quick resolution and his good steed, reached
Venusia, and was not ashamed to survive. The
garrison also of the Roman camp, 10,000 strong, were
for the most part made prisoners of war; only a few
thousand men, partly of these troops, partly of the
line, escaped to Canusium. Nay, as if in this
year an end was to be made with Rome altogether, before
its close the legion sent to Gaul fell into an ambush,
and was, with its general Lucius Postumius who was
nominated as consul for the next year, totally destroyed
by the Gauls.
Consequences of the Battle of Cannae
Prevention of Reinforcements from Spain
This unexampled success appeared at length to mature the great political combination, for the sake of which Hannibal had come to Italy. He had, no doubt, based his plan primarily upon his army; but with accurate knowledge of the power opposed to him he designed that army to be merely the vanguard, in support of which the powers of the west and east were gradually to unite their forces, so as to prepare destruction for the proud city. That support however, which seemed the most secure, namely the sending of reinforcements