as proconsul, the two others as consuls—the
command of the three Roman armies which were destined
to surround Capua and Hannibal; Marcellus resting
on Nola and Suessula, Maximus taking a position on
the right bank of the Volturnus near Cales, and Gracchus
on the coast near Liternum, covering Neapolis and
Cumae. The Campanians, who marched to Hamae
three miles from Cumae with a view to surprise the
Cumaeans, were thoroughly defeated by Gracchus; Hannibal,
who had appeared before Cumae to wipe out the stain,
was himself worsted in a combat, and when the pitched
battle offered by him was declined, retreated in ill
humour to Capua. While the Romans in Campania
thus not only maintained what they possessed, but
also recovered Compulteria and other smaller places,
loud complaints were heard from the eastern allies
of Hannibal. A Roman army under the praetor Marcus
Valerius had taken position at Luceria, partly that
it might, in connection with the Roman fleet, watch
the east coast and the movements of the Macedonians;
partly that it might, in connection with the army of
Nola, levy contributions on the revolted Samnites,
Lucanians, and Hirpini. To give relief to these,
Hannibal turned first against his most active opponent,
Marcus Marcellus; but the latter achieved under the
walls of Nola no inconsiderable victory over the Phoenician
army, and it was obliged to depart, without having
cleared off the stain, from Campania for Arpi, in
order at length to check the progress of the enemy’s
army in Apulia. Tiberius Gracchus followed it
with his corps, while the two other Roman armies in
Campania made arrangements to proceed next spring
to the attack of Capua.
Hannibal Reduced to the Defensive
His Prospects as to Reinforcements
The clear vision of Hannibal had not been dazzled
by his victories. It became every day more evident
that he was not thus gaining his object Those rapid
marches, that adventurous shifting of the war to and
fro, to which Hannibal was mainly indebted for his
successes, were at an end; the enemy had become wiser;
further enterprises were rendered almost impossible
by the inevitable necessity of defending what had
been gained. The offensive was not to be thought
of; the defensive was difficult, and threatened every
year to become more so. He could not conceal
from himself that the second half of his great task,
the subjugation of the Latins and the conquest of Rome,
could not be accomplished with his own forces and
those of his Italian allies alone. Its accomplishment
depended on the council at Carthage, on the head-quarters
at Cartagena, on the courts of Pella and of Syracuse.
If all the energies of Africa, Spain, Sicily, and
Macedonia should now be exerted in common against
the common enemy; if Lower Italy should become the
great rendezvous for the armies and fleets of the
west, south, and east; he might hope successfully to
finish what the vanguard under his leadership had
so brilliantly begun. The most natural and easy