comes into our eyes and faces; our ears ring with
the cries of our weeping allies, imploring us to assist
them oftener than the gods, while we here are leading
our troops, like a herd of cattle, through shady forests
and lonely paths, enveloped in clouds and woods.
If Marcus Furius had resolved to recover the city
from the Gauls, by thus traversing the tops of mountains
and forests, in the same manner as this modern Camillus
goes about to recover Italy from Hannibal, who has
been sought out for our dictator in our distress,
on account of his unparalleled talents, Rome would
be the possession of the Gauls; and I fear lest, if
we are thus dilatory, our ancestors will so often
have preserved it only for the Carthaginians and Hannibal;
but that man and true Roman, on the very day on which
intelligence was brought him to Veii, that he was
appointed dictator, on the authority of the fathers
and the nomination of the people, came down into the
plain, though the Janiculum was high enough to admit
of his sitting down there, and viewing the enemy at
a distance, and on that very day defeated the Gallic
legions in the middle of the city, in the place where
the Gallic piles are now, and on the following day
on the Roman side of Gabii. What many years after
this, when we were sent under the yoke at the Caudine
forks by the Samnite foe, did Lucius Papirius Cursor
take the yoke from the Roman neck and place it upon
the proud Samnites, by traversing the heights of Samnium?
or was it by pressing and besieging Luceria, and challenging
the victorious enemy? A short time ago, what was
it that gave victory to Caius Lutatius but expedition?
for on the day after he caught sight of the enemy
he surprised and overpowered the fleet, loaded with
provisions, and encumbered of itself by its own implements
and apparatus. It is folly to suppose that the
war can be brought to a conclusion by sitting still,
or by prayers, the troops must be armed and led down
into the plain, that you may engage man to man.
The Roman power has grown to its present height by
courage and activity, and not by such dilatory measures
as these, which the cowardly only designate as cautious.”
A crowd of Roman tribunes and knights poured round
Minucius, while thus, as it were, haranguing, his presumptuous
expressions reached the ears of the common soldiers,
and had the question been submitted to the votes of
the soldiers, they showed evidently that they would
have preferred Minucius to Fabius for their general.
15. Fabius, keeping his attention fixed no less upon his own troops than on the enemy, first shows that his resolution was unconquered by the former. Though he well knew that his procrastination was disapproved, not only in his own camp, but by this time even at Rome, yet, inflexibly adhering to the same line of policy, he delayed through the remainder of the summer, in order that Hannibal, devoid of all hope of a battle, which he so earnestly desired, might now look out for a place for winter quarters, because that district


