Dio's Rome, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dio's Rome, Volume 2.

Dio's Rome, Volume 2 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Dio's Rome, Volume 2.
and accompany him.  In spite of the large force that Domitius had and the hopes he reposed in it—­for he had courted the favor of the soldiers in every way and had won some of them by promises of land (having belonged to Sulla’s veterans he had acquired a large amount in that reign)—­he nevertheless obeyed orders.  Meanwhile Pompey proceeded with his preparations to evacuate the country in safety:  his associates learning this shrank from the journey abroad, because it seemed to them a flight, and attached themselves to Caesar.  So these joined the invader’s army:  but Domitius and the other senators after being censured by Caesar for arraying themselves in opposition, were released and came to Pompey.

[-12-]Caesar now was anxious to join issue with him before he sailed away, to fight it out with him in Italy, and to overtake him while he was still at Brundusium; for since there were not sufficient boats for them, Pompey had sent forward the consuls and others, fearing that they might begin some rebellion if they stayed on the spot.  Caesar, seeing the difficulty of capturing the place, urged his opponent to accede to some agreement, assuring him that he should obtain both peace and friendship again.  When Pompey made no further response than that he would communicate to the consuls what Caesar said, the latter, inasmuch as they had decided to receive no citizen in arms for a conference, assaulted the city.  Pompey repelled him for some days until the boats came back.  Having meanwhile barricaded and obstructed with fortifications the roads leading to the harbor so that no one should attack him while sailing off, he then set sail by night.  Thus he crossed over to Macedonia in safety and Brundusium was captured as well as two boats full of men.

[-13-] Pompey accordingly deserted in this way his country and the rest of Italy, choosing and carrying out quite the opposite of his former course, when he sailed back to it from Asia; wherefore he obtained the reverse fortune and the reverse reputation.  Formerly he broke up his legions at Brundusium, in order not to cause the citizens any solicitude, but now he was leading away through the town to fight against them other forces gathered from Italy.  Whereas he had brought the wealth of the barbarians to Rome, he had now conveyed away from it all that he possibly could to other places.  And of all those at home he was in despair, but purposed to use against his country foreigners and the allies once enslaved by him, and he put far more hope in them both of safety and of power than in those who had been benefited.  Instead of the brilliance, therefore, which, acquired in those wars, had marked his arrival, he set out with humiliation as his portion in return for his fear of Caesar:  and instead of fame which he had had for exalting his country, he became most infamous for his desertion of her.

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Dio's Rome, Volume 2 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.