land route through Gaul or by sea, the men of the
three legions still remaining from the levies of 699,(11)
as well as the Italian levy sworn to allegiance in
702,(12) could be recalled from their furlough.
Including these, the number of troops standing at the
disposal of Pompeius on the whole, without reckoning
the seven legions in Spain and those scattered in
other provinces, amounted in Italy alone to ten legions(13)
or about 60,000 men, so that it was no exaggeration
at all, when Pompeius asserted that he had only to
stamp with his foot to cover the ground with armed
men. It is true that it required some interval—though
but short—to render these soldiers available;
but the arrangements for this purpose as well as for
the carrying out of the new levies ordered by the senate
in consequence of the outbreak of the civil war were
already everywhere in progress. Immediately
after the decisive decree of the senate (7 Jan. 705),
in the very depth of winter the most eminent men of
the aristocracy set out to the different districts,
to hasten the calling up of recruits and the preparation
of arms. The want of cavalry was much felt, as
for this arm they had been accustomed to rely wholly
on the provinces and especially on the Celtic contingents;
to make at least a beginning, three hundred gladiators
belonging to Caesar were taken from the fencing-schools
of Capua and mounted—a step which however
met with so general disapproval, that Pompeius again
broke up this troop and levied in room of it 300 horsemen
from the mounted slave-herdmen of Apulia.
The state-treasury was at a low ebb as usual; they
busied themselves in supplementing the inadequate
amount of cash out of the local treasuries and even
from the temple-treasures of the -municipia-.
Caesar Takes the Offensive
Under these circumstances the war opened at the beginning
of January 705. Of troops capable of marching
Caesar had not more than a legion—5000
infantry and 300 cavalry—at Ravenna, which
was by the highway some 240 miles distant from Rome;
Pompeius had two weak legions—7000 infantry
and a small squadron of cavalry— under
the orders of Appius Claudius at Luceria, from which,
likewise by the highway, the distance was just about
as great to the capital. The other troops of
Caesar, leaving out of account the raw divisions of
recruits still in course of formation, were stationed,
one half on the Saone and Loire, the other half in
Belgica, while Pompeius’ Italian reserves were
already arriving from all sides at their rendezvous;
long before even the first of the Transalpine divisions
of Caesar could arrive in Italy, a far superior army
could not but be ready to receive it there. It
seemed folly, with a band of the strength of that of
Catilina and for the moment without any effective
reserve, to assume the aggressive against a superior
and hourly-increasing army under an able general;
but it was a folly in the spirit of Hannibal.
If the beginning of the struggle were postponed till