added on the Roman side the reserve of two legions
in the capital, the garrisons placed in all the seaports—Tarentum
and Brundisium having been reinforced by a legion
on account of the Macedonian landing apprehended there—and
lastly the strong fleet which had undisputed command
of the sea. If we add to these the Roman armies
in Sicily, Sardinia, and Spain, the whole number of
the Roman forces, even apart from the garrison service
in the fortresses of Lower Italy which was provided
for by the colonists occupying them, may be estimated
at not less than 200,000 men, of whom one-third were
newly enrolled for this year, and about one-half were
Roman citizens. It may be assumed that all the
men capable of service from the 17th to the 46th year
were under arms, and that the fields, where the war
permitted them to be tilled at all, were cultivated
by the slaves and the old men, women, and children.
As may well be conceived, under such circumstances
the finances were in the most grievous embarrassment;
the land-tax, the main source of revenue, came in but
very irregularly. Yet notwithstanding these difficulties
as to men and money the Romans were able—slowly
indeed and by exerting all their energies, but still
surely—to recover what they had so rapidly
lost; to increase their armies yearly, while those
of the Phoenicians were diminishing; to gain ground
year by year on the Italian allies of Hannibal, the
Campanians, Apulians, Samnites, and Bruttians, who
neither sufficed, like the Roman fortresses in Lower
Italy, for their own protection nor could be adequately
protected by the weak army of Hannibal; and finally,
by means of the method of warfare instituted by Marcus
Marcellus, to develop the talent of their officers
and to bring into full play the superiority of the
Roman infantry. Hannibal might doubtless still
hope for victories, but no longer such victories as
those on the Trasimene lake and on the Aufidus; the
times of the citizen-generals were gone by.
No course was left to him but to wait till either
Philip should execute his long-promised descent or
his own brothers should join him from Spain, and meanwhile
to keep himself, his army, and his clients as far
as possible free from harm and in good humour.
We hardly recognize in the obstinate defensive system
which he now began the same general who had carried
on the offensive with almost unequalled impetuosity
and boldness; it is marvellous in a psychological
as well as in a military point of view, that the same
man should have accomplished the two tasks set to him—tasks
so diametrically opposite in their character—with
equal completeness.
Conflicts in the South of Italy