legions, accustomed to war, already forming a correct
estimate of the enemy from the want of precision in
their mode of array and their ill-closed ranks, compelled—while
yet the entrenching was going forward on that side,
and before even the general gave the signal—
a trumpeter to sound for the attack, and advanced along
the whole line headed by Caesar himself, who, when
he saw his men advance without waiting for his orders,
galloped forward to lead them against the enemy.
The right wing, in advance of the other divisions,
frightened the line of elephants opposed to it—this
was the last great battle in which these animals were
employed— by throwing bullets and arrows,
so that they wheeled round on their own ranks.
The covering force was cut down, the left wing of
the enemy was broken, and the whole line was overthrown.
The defeat was the more destructive, as the new camp
of the beaten army was not yet ready, and the old
one was at a considerable distance; both were successively
captured almost without resistance. The mass
of the defeated army threw away their arms and sued
for quarter; but Caesar’s soldiers were no longer
the same who had readily refrained from battle before
Ilerda and honourably spared the defenceless at Pharsalus.
The habit of civil war and the rancour left behind
by the mutiny asserted their power in a terrible manner
on the battlefield of Thapsus. If the hydra with
which they fought always put forth new energies, if
the army was hurried from Italy to Spain, from Spain
to Macedonia, from Macedonia to Africa, and if the
repose ever more eagerly longed for never came, the
soldier sought, and not wholly without cause, the
reason of this state of things in the unseasonable
clemency of Caesar. He had sworn to retrieve
the general’s neglect, and remained deaf to the
entreaties of his disarmed fellow-citizens as well
as to the commands of Caesar and the superior officers.
The fifty thousand corpses that covered the battle-field
of Thapsus, among whom were several Caesarian officers
known as secret opponents of the new monarchy, and
therefore cut down on this occasion by their own men,
showed how the soldier procures for himself repose.
The victorious army on the other hand numbered no
more than fifty dead (6 April 708).
Cato in Utica
His Death
There was as little a continuance of the struggle
in Africa after the battle of Thapsus, as there had
been a year and a half before in the east after the
defeat of Pharsalus. Cato as commandant of Utica
convoked the senate, set forth how the means of defence
stood, and submitted it to the decision of those assembled
whether they would yield or defend themselves to the
last man— only adjuring them to resolve
and to act not each one for himself, but all in unison.
The more courageous view found several supporters;
it was proposed to manumit on behalf of the state the
slaves capable of arms, which however Cato rejected
as an illegal encroachment on private property, and