The Roman senate and the Roman military system were
excellently organized for a purely Italian policy.
The wars which such a policy provoked were purely
continental wars, and always rested on the capital
situated in the middle of the peninsula as the ultimate
basis of operations, and proximately on the chain of
Roman fortresses. The problems to be solved were
mainly tactical, not strategical; marches and operations
occupied but a subordinate, battles held the first,
place; fortress warfare was in its infancy; the sea
and naval war hardly crossed men’s thoughts
even incidentally. We can easily understand—especially
if we bear in mind that in the battles of that period,
where the naked weapon predominated, it was really
the hand-to-hand encounter that proved decisive—how
a deliberative assembly might direct such operations,
and how any one who just was burgomaster might command
the troops. All this was changed in a moment.
The field of battle stretched away to an incalculable
distance, to the unknown regions of another continent,
and beyond a broad expanse of sea; every wave was
a highway for the enemy; from any harbour he might
be expected to issue for his onward march. The
siege of strong places, particularly maritime fortresses,
in which the first tacticians of Greece had failed,
had now for the first time to be attempted by the
Romans. A land army and the system of a civic
militia no longer sufficed. It was essential
to create a fleet, and, what was more difficult, to
employ it; it was essential to find out the true points
of attack and defence, to combine and to direct masses,
to calculate expeditions extending over long periods
and great distances, and to adjust their co-operation;
if these things were not attended to, even an enemy
far weaker in the tactics of the field might easily
vanquish a stronger opponent. Is there any wonder
that the reins of government in such an exigency slipped
from the hands of a deliberative assembly and of commanding
burgomasters?
It was plain, that at the beginning of the war the
Romans did not know what they were undertaking; it
was only during the course of the struggle that the
inadequacies of their system, one after another, forced
themselves on their notice—the want of a
naval power, the lack of fixed military leadership,
the insufficiency of their generals, the total uselessness
of their admirals. In part these evils were
remedied by energy and good fortune; as was the case
with the want of a fleet. That mighty creation,
however, was but a grand makeshift, and always remained
so. A Roman fleet was formed, but it was rendered
national only in name, and was always treated with
the affection of a stepmother; the naval service continued
to be little esteemed in comparison with the high
honour of serving in the legions; the naval officers
were in great part Italian Greeks; the crews were
composed of subjects or even of slaves and outcasts.
The Italian farmer was at all times distrustful of