the ranks of the Clusines they took part in a skirmish,
and in the course of it one of them stabbed and dismounted
a Gallic officer. The barbarians acted in this
case with moderation and prudence. They sent
in the first instance to the Roman community to demand
the surrender of those who had outraged the law of
nations, and the senate was ready to comply with the
reasonable request. But with the multitude compassion
for their countrymen outweighed justice towards the
foreigners; satisfaction was refused by the burgesses;
and according to some accounts they even nominated
the brave champions of their fatherland as consular
tribunes for the year 364,(9) which was to be so fatal
in the Roman annals. Then the Brennus or, in
other words, the “king of the army” of
the Gauls broke up the siege of Clusium, and the whole
Celtic host—the numbers of which are stated
at 70,000 men—turned against Rome.
Such expeditions into unknown land distant regions
were not unusual for the Gauls, who marched as bands
of armed emigrants, troubling themselves little as
to the means of cover or of retreat; but it was evident
that none in Rome anticipated the dangers involved
in so sudden and so mighty an invasion. It was
not till the Gauls were marching upon Rome that a
Roman military force crossed the Tiber and sought to
bar their way. Not twelve miles from the gates,
opposite to the confluence of the rivulet Allia with
the Tiber, the armies met, and a battle took place
on the 18th July, 364. Even now they went into
battle—not as against an army, but as against
freebooters—with arrogance and foolhardiness
and under inexperienced leaders, Camillus having in
consequence of the dissensions of the orders withdrawn
from taking part in affairs. Those against whom
they were to fight were but barbarians; what need
was there of a camp, or of securing a retreat?
These barbarians, however, were men whose courage
despised death, and their mode of fighting was to
the Italians as novel as it was terrible; sword in
hand the Celts precipitated themselves with furious
onset on the Roman phalanx, and shattered it at the
first shock. The overthrow was complete; of
the Romans, who had fought with the river in their
rear, a large portion met their death in the attempt
to cross it; such as escaped threw themselves by a
flank movement into the neighbouring Veii. The
victorious Celts stood between the remnant of the beaten
army and the capital. The latter was irretrievably
abandoned to the enemy; the small force that was left
behind, or that had fled thither, was not sufficient
to garrison the walls, and three days after the battle
the victors marched through the open gates into Rome.
Had they done so at first, as they might have done,
not only the city, but the state also must have been
lost; the brief interval gave opportunity to carry
away or to bury the sacred objects, and, what was more
important, to occupy the citadel and to furnish it
with provisions for the exigency. No one was