that the very men absent from the camp could not be
recalled and were cut off by the enemy; otherwise
the immediate danger was not great, as there was no
lack of provisions, and the assault, which the Eburones
attempted, recoiled powerless from the Roman intrenchments.
But king Ambiorix informed the Roman commander that
all the Roman camps in Gaul were similarly assailed
on the same day, and that the Romans would undoubtedly
be lost if the several corps did not quickly set out
and effect a junction; that Sabinus had the more reason
to make haste, as the Germans too from beyond the
Rhine were already advancing against him; that he
himself out of friendship for the Romans would promise
them a free retreat as far as the nearest Roman camp,
only two days’ march distant. Some things
in these statements seemed no fiction; that the little
canton of the Eburones specially favoured by the Romans(44)
should have undertaken the attack of its own accord
was in reality incredible, and, owing to the difficulty
of effecting a communication with the other far-distant
camps, the danger of being attacked by the whole mass
of the insurgents and destroyed in detail was by no
means to be esteemed slight; nevertheless it could
not admit of the smallest doubt that both honour and
prudence required them to reject the capitulation
offered by the enemy and to maintain the post entrusted
to them. Yet, although in the council of war
numerous voices and especially the weighty voice of
Lucius Aurunculeius Cotta supported this view, the
commandant determined to accept the proposal of Ambiorix.
The Roman troops accordingly marched off next morning;
but when they had arrived at a narrow valley about
two miles from the camp they found themselves surrounded
by the Eburones and every outlet blocked. They
attempted to open a way for themselves by force of
arms; but the Eburones would not enter into any close
combat, and contented themselves with discharging
their missiles from their unassailable positions into
the dense mass of the Romans. Bewildered, as
if seeking deliverance from treachery at the hands
of the traitor, Sabinus requested a conference with
Ambiorix; it was granted, and he and the officers
accompanying him were first disarmed and then slain.
After the fall of the commander the Eburones threw
themselves from all sides at once on the exhausted
and despairing Romans, and broke their ranks; most
of them, including Cotta who had already been wounded,
met their death in this attack; a small portion, who
had succeeded in regaining the abandoned camp, flung
themselves on their own swords during the following
night. The whole corps was annihilated.
Cicero Attacked