been guilty of capital crimes or were in prison on
judgment for debt, those who would serve as soldiers
with him, he would order to be released from their
liability to punishment and their debts. These
six thousand he armed with the Gallic spoils which
were carried in the procession at the triumph of Caius
Flaminius. Thus he marched from the city at the
head of twenty-five thousand men. Hannibal, after
gaining Capua, made a second fruitless attempt upon
the minds of the Neapolitans, partly by fear and partly
by hope: and then marched his troops across into
the territory of Nola: not immediately in a hostile
attitude, for he did not despair of a voluntary surrender,
yet intending to omit nothing which they could suffer
or fear, if they delayed the completion of his hopes.
The senate, and especially the principal members of
it, persevered faithfully in keeping up the alliance
with the Romans; the commons, as usual, were all inclined
to a change in the government and to espouse the cause
of Hannibal, placing before their minds the fear lest
their fields should be devastated, and the many hardships
and indignities which must be endured in a siege;
nor were there wanting persons who advised a revolt.
In this state of things, when a fear took possession
of the senate, that it would be impossible to resist
the excited multitude if they went openly to work,
devised a delay of the evil by secret simulation.
They pretended that they were agreeable to the revolt
to Hannibal; but that it was not settled on what terms
they should enter into the new alliance and friendship.
Thus having gained time, they promptly sent ambassadors
to the Roman praetor, Marcellus Claudius, who was
at Casilinum with his army, and informed him what a
critical situation Nola was in; that the fields were
already in the possession of Hannibal and the Carthaginians,
and that the city soon would be, unless succour were
sent; that the senate, by conceding to the commons
that they would revolt when they pleased, had caused
them not to hasten too much to revolt. Marcellus,
after bestowing high commendations on the Nolans,
urged them to protract the business till his arrival
by means of the same pretences; in the mean time, to
conceal what had passed between them, as well as all
hope of succour from the Romans. He himself marched
from Casilinum to Calatia, and thence crossing the
Vulturnus, and passing through the territories of
Saticula and Trebula, pursuing his course along the
mountains above Suessula, he arrived at Nola.
15. On the approach of the Roman praetor, the Carthaginians retired from the territory of Nola and marched down to the sea close upon Naples, eager to get possession of a maritime town to which there would be a safe course for ships from Africa. But hearing that Naples was held by a Roman prefect, Marcus Junius Silanus, who had been invited thither by the Neapolitans themselves, he left Naples as he had left Nola, and directed his course to Nuceria, which he at length


