to invest a man who had hitherto filled no civil office
with one of the most important ordinary provincial
governorships, under circumstances in which the observance
of the legal term of a year was not to be thought of.
The oligarchy had thus, even apart from the respect
due to their general Metellus, good reason to oppose
with all earnestness this new attempt of the ambitious
youth to perpetuate his exceptional position.
But this was not easy. In the first place, they
had not a single man fitted for the difficult post
of general in Spain. Neither of the consuls of
the year showed any desire to measure himself against
Sertorius; and what Lucius Philippus said in a full
meeting of the senate had to be admitted as too true—that,
among all the senators of note, not one was able and
willing to command in a serious war. Yet they
might, perhaps, have got over this, and after the
manner of oligarchs, when they had no capable candidate,
have filled the place with some sort of makeshift,
if Pompeius had merely desired the command and had
not demanded it at the head of an army. He had
already lent a deaf ear to the injunctions of Catulus
that he should dismiss the army; it was at least doubtful
whether those of the senate would find a better reception,
and the consequences of a breach no one could calculate—
the scale of aristocracy might very easily mount up,
if the sword of a well-known general were thrown into
the opposite scale. So the majority resolved
on concession. Not from the people, which constitutionally
ought to have been consulted in a case where a private
man was to be invested with the supreme magisterial
power, but from the senate, Pompeius received proconsular
authority and the chief command in Hither Spain; and,
forty days after he had received it, crossed the Alps
in the summer of 677.
Pompeius in Gaul
First of all the new general found employment in Gaul,
where no formal insurrection had broken out, but serious
disturbances of the peace had occurred at several
places; in consequence of which Pompeius deprived
the cantons of the Volcae-Arecomici and the Helvii
of their independence, and placed them under Massilia.
He also laid out a new road over the Cottian Alps (Mont
Genevre,(21)), and so established a shorter communication
between the valley of the Po and Gaul. Amidst
this work the best season of the year passed away;
it was not till late in autumn that Pompeius crossed
the Pyrenees.
Appearance of Pompeius in Spain
Sertorius had meanwhile not been idle. He had
despatched Hirtuleius into the Further province to
keep Metellus in check, and had himself endeavoured
to follow up his complete victory in the Hither province,
and to prepare for the reception of Pompeius.
The isolated Celtiberian towns there, which still adhered
to Rome, were attacked and reduced one after another;
at last, in the very middle of winter, the strong
Contrebia (south-east of Saragossa) had fallen.