less numerous, than the Carthaginian, the former constituting
about a tenth, the latter an eighth, of the whole
number of troops taking the field. None of the
states affected by the war had any fleet corresponding
to the Roman fleet of 220 quinqueremes, which had
just returned from the Adriatic to the western sea.
The natural and proper application of this crushing
superiority of force was self-evident. It had
been long settled that the war ought to be opened
with a landing in Africa. The subsequent turn
taken by events had compelled the Romans to embrace
in their scheme of the war a simultaneous landing
in Spain, chiefly to prevent the Spanish army from
appearing before the walls of Carthage. In accordance
with this plan they ought above all, when the war had
been practically opened by Hannibal’s attack
on Saguntum in the beginning of 535, to have thrown
a Roman army into Spain before the town fell; but
they neglected the dictates of interest no less than
of honour. For eight months Saguntum held out
in vain: when the town passed into other hands,
Rome had not even equipped her armament for landing
in Spain. The country, however, between the
Ebro and the Pyrenees was still free, and its tribes
were not only the natural allies of the Romans, but
had also, like the Saguntines, received from Roman
emissaries promises of speedy assistance. Catalonia
may be reached by sea from Italy in not much longer
time than from Cartagena by and: had the Romans
started, like the Phoenicians, in April, after the
formal declaration of war that had taken place in
the interval, Hannibal might have encountered the
Roman legions on the line of the Ebro.
Hannibal on the Ebro
At length, certainly, the greater part of the army
and of the fleet was got ready for the expedition
to Africa, and the second consul Publius Cornelius
Scipio was ordered to the Ebro; but he took time,
and when an insurrection broke out on the Po, he allowed
the army that was ready for embarkation to be employed
there, and formed new legions for the Spanish expedition.
So although Hannibal encountered on the Ebro very
vehement resistance, it proceeded only from the natives;
and, as under existing circumstances time was still
more precious to him than the blood of his men, he
surmounted the opposition after some months with the
loss of a fourth part of his army, and reached the
line of the Pyrenees. That the Spanish allies
of Rome would be sacrificed a second time by that
delay might have been as certainly foreseen, as the
delay itself might have been easily avoided; but probably
even the expedition to Italy itself, which in the spring
of 536 must not have been anticipated in Rome, would
have been averted by the timely appearance of the
Romans in Spain. Hannibal had by no means the
intention of sacrificing his Spanish “kingdom,”
and throwing himself like a desperado on Italy.
The time which he had spent in the siege of Saguntum
and in the reduction of Catalonia, and the considerable