elephants were left behind, in addition to the fleet
stationed there; the chief command and the government
of Spain were entrusted to Hannibal’s younger
brother Hasdrubal. The immediate territory of
Carthage was comparatively weakly garrisoned, because
the capital afforded in case of need sufficient resources;
in like manner a moderate number of infantry sufficed
for the present in Spain, where new levies could be
procured with ease, whereas a comparatively large
proportion of the arms specially African—horses
and elephants—was retained there.
The chief care was bestowed in securing the communications
between Spain and Africa: with that view the fleet
remained in Spain, and western Africa was guarded by
a very strong body of troops. The fidelity of
the troops was secured not only by hostages collected
from the Spanish communities and detained in the stronghold
of Saguntum, but by the removal of the soldiers from
the districts where they were raised to other quarters:
the east African militia were moved chiefly to Spain,
the Spanish to Western Africa, the West African to
Carthage. Adequate provision was thus made for
defence. As to offensive measures, a squadron
of 20 quinqueremes with 1000 soldiers on board was
to sail from Carthage for the west coast of Italy
and to pillage it, and a second of 25 sail was, if
possible, to re-establish itself at Lilybaeum; Hannibal
believed that he might count upon the government making
this moderate amount of exertion. With the main
army he determined in person to invade Italy; as was
beyond doubt part of the original plan of Hamilcar.
A decisive attack on Rome was only possible in Italy,
as a similar attack on Carthage was only possible
in Libya; as certainly as Rome meant to begin her
next campaign with the latter, so certainly ought Carthage
not to confine herself at the outset either to any
secondary object of operations, such as Sicily, or
to mere defence—defeat would in any case
involve equal destruction, but victory would not yield
equal fruit.
Method of Attack
But how could Italy be attacked? He might succeed
in reaching the peninsula by sea or by land; but if
the project was to be no mere desperate adventure,
but a military expedition with a strategic aim, a
nearer basis for its operations was requisite than
Spain or Africa. Hannibal could not rely for
support on a fleet and a fortified harbour, for Rome
was now mistress of the sea. As little did the
territory of the Italian confederacy present any tenable
basis. If in very different times, and in spite
of Hellenic sympathies, it had withstood the shock
of Pyrrhus, it was not to be expected that it would
now fall to pieces on the appearance of the Phoenician
general; an invading army would without doubt be crushed
between the network of Roman fortresses and the firmly-consolidated
confederacy. The land of the Ligurians and Celts
alone could be to Hannibal, what Poland was to Napoleon
in his very similar Russian campaigns. These