as many as two thousand fell. Hannibal, slipping
off during the confusion, with a few horsemen came
to Adrumetum, not quitting the field till he had tried
every expedient both in the battle and before the
engagement; having, according to the admission of Scipio,
and every one skilled in military science, acquired
the fame of having marshalled his troops on that day
with singular judgment. He placed his elephants
in the front, in order that their desultory attack,
and insupportable violence, might prevent the Romans
from following their standards, and preserving their
ranks, on which they placed their principal dependence.
Then he posted his auxiliaries before the line of
Carthaginians, in order that men who were made up of
the refuse of all nations and who were not bound by
honour but by gain, might not have any retreat open
to them in case they fled; at the same time that the
first ardour and impetuosity might be exhausted upon
them, and, if they could render no other service,
that the weapons of the enemy might be blunted in
wounding them. Next he placed the Carthaginian
and African soldiers, on whom he placed all his hopes,
in order that, being equal to the enemy in every other
respect, they might have the advantage of them, inasmuch
as, being fresh and unimpaired in strength themselves,
they would fight with those who were fatigued and wounded.
The Italians he removed into the rear, separating them
also by an intervening space, as he knew not, with
certainty, whether they were friends or enemies.
Hannibal, after performing this as it were his last
work of valour, fled to Adrumetum, whence, having been
summoned to Carthage, he returned thither in the six
and thirtieth year after he had left it when a boy;
and confessed in the senate-house that he was defeated,
not only in the battle, but in the war, and that there
was no hope of safety in any thing but in obtaining
peace.
36. Immediately after the battle, Scipio, having
taken and plundered the enemy’s camp, returned
to the sea and his ships, with an immense booty, news
having reached him that Publius Lentulus had arrived
at Utica with fifty men of war, and a hundred transports
laden with every kind of stores. Concluding that
he ought to bring before Carthage every thing which
could increase the consternation already existing
there, after sending Laelius to Rome to report his
victory, he ordered Cneius Octavius to conduct the
legions thither by land; and, setting out himself
from Utica with the fresh fleet of Lentulus, added
to his former one, made for the harbour of Carthage.
When he had arrived within a short distance, he was
met by a Carthaginian ship decked with fillets and
branches of olive. There were ten deputies, the
leading men in the state, sent at the instance of
Hannibal to solicit peace; to whom, when they had
come up to the stern of the general’s ship,
holding out the badges of suppliants, entreating and
imploring the protection and compassion of Scipio,
the only answer given was, that they must come to