All was perplexity; consequently a great council of
war was held in Teanum Sidicinum (23 Jan.), at which
Pompeius, Labienus, and both consuls were present.
First of all proposals of accommodation from Caesar
were again submitted; even now he declared himself
ready at once to dismiss his army, to hand over his
provinces to the successors nominated, and to become
a candidate in the regular way for the consulship,
provided that Pompeius were to depart for Spain, and
Italy were to be disarmed. The answer was, that
if Caesar would immediately return to his province,
they would bind themselves to procure the disarming
of Italy and the departure of Pompeius by a decree
of the senate to be passed in due form in the capital;
perhaps this reply was intended not as a bare artifice
to deceive, but as an acceptance of the proposal of
compromise; it was, however, in reality the opposite.
The personal conference which Caesar desired with Pompeius
the latter declined, and could not but decline, that
he might not by the semblance of a new coalition with
Caesar provoke still more the distrust already felt
by the constitutional party. Concerning the
management of the war it was agreed in Teanum, that
Pompeius should take the command of the troops stationed
at Luceria, on which notwithstanding their untrustworthiness
all hope depended; that he should advance with these
into his own and Labienus’ native country, Picenum;
that he should personally call the general levy there
to arms, as he had done some thirty-five years ago,(16)
and should attempt at the head of the faithful Picentine
cohorts and the veterans formerly under Caesar to
set a limit to the advance of the enemy.
Conflicts in Picenum
Everything depended on whether Picenum would hold
out until Pompeius should come up to its defence.
Already Caesar with his reunited army had penetrated
into it along the coast road by way of Ancona.
Here too the preparations were in full course; in
the very northernmost Picenian town Auximum a considerable
band of recruits was collected under Publius Attius
Varus; but at the entreaty of the municipality Varus
evacuated the town even before Caesar appeared, and
a handful of Caesar’s soldiers which overtook
the troop not far from Auximum totally dispersed it
after a brief conflict— the first in this
war. In like manner soon afterwards Gaius Lucilius
Hirrus with 3000 men evacuated Camerinum, and Publius
Lentulus Spinther with 5000 Asculum. The men,
thoroughly devoted to Pompeius, willingly for the most
part abandoned their houses and farms, and followed
their leaders over the frontier; but the district
itself was already lost, when the officer sent by
Pompeius for the temporary conduct of the defence,
Lucius Vibullius Rufus—no genteel senator,
but a soldier experienced in war—arrived
there; he had to content himself with taking the six
or seven thousand recruits who were saved away from
the incapable recruiting officers, and conducting them
for the time to the nearest rendezvous.