course would have been to send to him adequate support
from home; and the Carthaginian state, which had remained
almost untouched by the war and had been brought from
deep decline so near to complete victory by a small
band of resolute patriots acting of their own accord
and at their own risk, could beyond doubt have done
this. That it would have been possible for a
Phoenician fleet of any desired strength to effect
a landing at Locri or Croton, especially as long as
the port of Syracuse remained open to the Carthaginians
and the fleet at Brundisium was kept in check by Macedonia,
is shown by the unopposed disembarkation at Locri of
4000 Africans, whom Bomilcar about this time brought
over from Carthage to Hannibal, and still more by
Hannibal’s undisturbed embarkation, when all
had been already lost. But after the first impression
of the victory of Cannae had died away, the peace
party in Carthage, which was at all times ready to
purchase the downfall of its political opponents at
the expense of its country, and which found faithful
allies in the shortsightedness and indolence of the
citizens, refused the entreaties of the general for
more decided support with the half-simple, half-malicious
reply, that he in fact needed no help inasmuch as
he was really victor; and thus contributed not much
less than the Roman senate to save Rome. Hannibal,
reared in the camp and a stranger to the machinery
of civic factions, found no popular leader on whose
support he could rely, such as his father had found
in Hasdrubal; and he was obliged to seek abroad the
means of saving his native country—means
which itself possessed in rich abundance at home.
For this purpose he might, at least with more prospect
of success, reckon on the leaders of the Spanish patriot
army, on the connections which he had formed in Syracuse,
and on the intervention of Philip. Everything
depended on bringing new forces into the Italian field
of war against Rome from Spain, Syracuse, or Macedonia;
and for the attainment or for the prevention of this
object wars were carried on in Spain, Sicily, and
Greece. All of these were but means to an end,
and historians have often erred in accounting them
of greater importance. So far as the Romans
were concerned, they were essentially defensive wars,
the proper objects of which were to hold the passes
of the Pyrenees, to detain the Macedonian army in Greece,
to defend Messana and to bar the communication between
Italy and Sicily. Of course this defensive warfare
was, wherever it was possible, waged by offensive
methods; and, should circumstances be favourable,
it might develop into the dislodging of the Phoenicians
from Spain and Sicily, and into the dissolution of
Hannibal’s alliances with Syracuse and with
Philip. The Italian war in itself fell for the
time being into the shade, and resolved itself into
conflicts about fortresses and razzias, which had no
decisive effect on the main issue. Nevertheless,
so long as the Phoenicians retained the offensive
at all, Italy always remained the central aim of operations;
and all efforts were directed towards, as all interest
centred in, the doing away, or perpetuating, of Hannibal’s
isolation in southern Italy.