now, seeing that Sertorius had retired before Metellus,
and had encamped near the hill, they despised him
as being beaten, on which Sertorius, whether in passion
or not wishing to appear to be flying from the enemy,
at daybreak rode up to the place and examined it.
But he found the mountain unassailable on all sides;
and while he was perplexing himself to no purpose
and uttering idle threats, he saw a great quantity
of dust from this light earth carried by the wind against
the barbarians; for the caves are turned, as I have
said, to the north, and the wind which blows from
that quarter (some call it “caecias”)
prevails most, and is the strongest of all the winds
in those parts, being generated in wet plains and
snow-covered mountains; and at that time particularly,
it being the height of summer, it was strong, and
maintained by the melting of the ice in the sub-arctic
regions, and it blew most pleasantly both on the barbarians
and their flocks, and refreshed them. Now, Sertorius,
thinking on all these things, and also getting information
from the country people, ordered his soldiers to take
up some of the light ashy earth, and bringing it right
opposite to the hill to make a heap of it there; which
the barbarians thought to be intended as a mound for
the purpose of getting at them, and they mocked him.
Sertorius kept his soldiers thus employed till nightfall,
when he led them away. At daybreak a gentle breeze
at first began to blow, which stirred up the lightest
part of the earth that had been heaped together, and
scattered it about like chaff; but when the caecias
began to blow strong, as the sun got higher, and the
hills were all covered with dust, the soldiers got
on the heap of earth and stirred it up to the bottom,
and broke the clods; and some also rode their horses
up and down through the earth, kicking up the light
particles and raising them so as to be caught by the
wind, which receiving all the earth that was broken
and stirred up, drove it against the dwellings of
the barbarians, whose doors were open to the caecias.
The barbarians, having only the single opening to breathe
through, upon which the wind fell, had their vision
quickly obscured, and they were speedily overpowered
by a suffocating difficulty of breathing, by reason
of respiring a thick atmosphere filled with dust.
Accordingly, after holding out with difficulty for
two days, they surrendered on the third, and thus
added not so much to the power as to the reputation
of Sertorius, who had taken by stratagem a place that
was impregnable to arms.
XVIII. Now, as long as Sertorius had to oppose Metellus, he was generally considered to owe his success to the old age and natural tardiness of Metellus, who was no match for a daring man, at the head of a force more like a band of robbers than a regular army. But when Pompeius had crossed the Pyrenees, and Sertorius had met him in the field, and he and Pompeius had mutually offered one another every opportunity for a display of generalship, and Sertorius had the