was left behind in Lissus; all possibility of bringing
up fresh reinforcements to Caesar by sea from Brundisium
was thus lost. The numerous Pompeian cavalry,
now released from their confinement, poured themselves
over the adjacent country and threatened to render
the provisioning of Caesar’s army, which had
always been difficult, utterly impossible. Caesar’s
daring enterprise of carrying on offensive operations
without ships against an enemy in command of the sea
and resting on his fleet had totally failed.
On what had hitherto been the theatre of war he found
himself in presence of an impregnable defensive position,
and unable to strike a serious blow either against
Dyrrhachium or against the hostile army; on the other
hand it depended now solely on Pompeius whether he
should proceed to attack under the most favourable
circumstances an antagonist already in grave danger
as to his means of subsistence. The war had
arrived at a crisis. Hitherto Pompeius had, to
all appearance, played the game of war without special
plan, and only adjusted his defence according to the
exigencies of each attack; and this was not to be
censured, for the protraction of the war gave him opportunity
of making his recruits capable of fighting, of bringing
up his reserves, and of bringing more fully into play
the superiority of his fleet in the Adriatic.
Caesar was beaten not merely in tactics but also
in strategy. This defeat had not, it is true,
that effect which Pompeius not without reason expected;
the eminent soldierly energy of Caesar’s veterans
did not allow matters to come to an immediate and
total breaking up of the army by hunger and mutiny.
But yet it seemed as if it depended solely on his
opponent by judiciously following up his victory to
reap its full fruits.
War Prospects of Pompeius
Scipio and Calvinus
It was for Pompeius to assume the aggressive; and
he was resolved to do so. Three different ways
of rendering his victory fruitful presented themselves
to him. The first and simplest was not to desist
from assailing the vanquished army, and, if it departed,
to pursue it. Secondly, Pompeius might leave
Caesar himself and his best troops in Greece, and
might cross in person, as he had long been making
preparations for doing, with the main army to Italy,
where the feeling was decidedly antimonarchical and
the forces of Caesar, after the despatch of the best
troops and their brave and trustworthy commandant
to the Greek army, would not be of very much moment.
Lastly, the victor might turn inland, effect a junction
with the legions of Metellus Scipio, and attempt to
capture the troops of Caesar stationed in the interior.
The latter forsooth had, immediately after the arrival
of the second freight from Italy, on the one hand
despatched strong detachments to Aetolia and Thessaly
to procure means of subsistence for his army, and
on the other had ordered a corps of two legions under
Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus to advance on the Egnatian