His remarkable military and statesmanly talent had
found opportunity of shining by contrast, more particularly
in the revolutionary war which the democrats so wretchedly
and stupidly mismanaged; he was confessedly the only
democratic officer who knew how to prepare and to
conduct war, and the only democratic statesman who
opposed the insensate and furious doings of his party
with statesmanlike energy. His Spanish soldiers
called him the new Hannibal, and not merely because
he had, like that hero, lost an eye in war.
He in reality reminds us of the great Phoenician by
his equally cunning and courageous strategy, by his
rare talent of organizing war by means of war, by
his adroitness in attracting foreign nations to his
interest and making them serviceable to his ends,
by his prudence in success and misfortune, by the quickness
of his ingenuity in turning to good account his victories
and averting the consequences of his defeats.
It may be doubted whether any Roman statesman of
the earlier period, or of the present, can be compared
in point of versatile talent to Sertorius. After
Sulla’s generals had compelled him to quit Spain,(15)
he had led a restless life of adventure along the Spanish
and African coasts, sometimes in league, sometimes
at war, with the Cilician pirates who haunted these
seas, and with the chieftains of the roving tribes
of Libya. The victorious Roman restoration had
pursued him even thither: when he was besieging
Tingis (Tangiers), a corps under Pacciaecus from Roman
Africa had come to the help of the prince of the town;
but Pacciaecus was totally defeated, and Tingis was
taken by Sertorius. On the report of such achievements
by the Roman refugee spreading abroad, the Lusitanians,
who, notwithstanding their pretended submission to
the Roman supremacy, practically maintained their
independence, and annually fought with the governors
of Further Spain, sent envoys to Sertorius in Africa,
to invite him to join them, and to commit to him the
command of their militia.
Renewed Outbreak of the Spanish Insurrection
Metellus Sent to Spain
Sertorius, who twenty years before had served under
Titus Didius in Spain and knew the resources of the
land, resolved to comply with the invitation, and,
leaving behind a small detachment on the Mauretanian
coast, embarked for Spain (about 674). The straits
separating Spain and Africa were occupied by a Roman
squadron commanded by Cotta; to steal through it was
impossible; so Sertorius fought his way through and
succeeded in reaching the Lusitanians. There
were not more than twenty Lusitanian communities that
placed themselves under his orders; and even of “Romans”
he mustered only 2600 men, a considerable part of
whom were deserters from the army of Pacciaecus or
Africans armed after the Roman style. Sertorius
saw that everything depended on his associating with
the loose guerilla-bands a strong nucleus of troops
possessing Roman organization and discipline: