military superiority, instead of pausing to besiege
the remains of the defeated army, Sulla left the towns
where they took shelter to be invested, and advanced
along the Appian highway against Teanum, where Scipio
was posted. To him also, before beginning battle,
he made fresh proposals for peace; apparently in good
earnest. Scipio, weak as he was, entered into
them; an armistice was concluded; between Cales and
Teanum the two generals, both members of the same
noble -gens-, both men of culture and refinement and
for many years colleagues in the senate, met in personal
conference; they entered upon the several questions;
they had already made such progress, that Scipio despatched
a messenger to Capua to procure the opinion of his
colleague. Meanwhile the soldiers of the two
camps mingled; the Sullans, copiously furnished with
money by their general, had no great difficulty in
persuading the recruits—not too eager for
warfare—over their cups that it was better
to have them as comrades than as foes; in vain Sertorius
warned the general to put a stop to this dangerous
intercourse. The agreement, which had seemed
so near, was not effected; it was Scipio who denounced
the armistice. But Sulla maintained that it
was too late and that the agreement had been already
concluded; whereupon Scipio’s soldiers, under
the pretext that their general had wrongfully denounced
the armistice, passed over en masse to the ranks of
the enemy. The scene closed with an universal
embracing, at which the commanding officers of the
revolutionary army had to look on. Sulla gave
orders that the consul should be summoned to resign
his office—which he did—and should
along with his staff be escorted by his cavalry to
whatever point they desired; but Scipio was hardly
set at liberty when he resumed the insignia of his
dignity and began afresh to collect troops, without
however executing anything further of moment.
Sulla and Metellus took up winter-quarters in Campania
and, after the failure of a second attempt to come
to terms with Norbanus, maintained the blockade of
Capua during the winter.
Preparations on Either Side
The results of the first campaign in favour of Sulla
were the submission of Apulia, Picenum, and Campania,
the dissolution of the one, and the vanquishing and
blockading of the other, consular army. The
Italian communities, compelled severally to choose
between their twofold oppressors, already in numerous
instances entered into negotiations with him, and
caused the political rights, which had been won from
the opposition party, to be guaranteed to them by
formal separate treaties on the part of the general
of the oligarchy. Sulla cherished the distinct
expectation, and intentionally made boast of it, that
he would overthrow the revolutionary government in
the next campaign and again march into Rome.