and also hostile to his rival in the government, discovered
the affair to Hannibal. Both parties were summoned,
and while Hannibal was transacting some business on
his tribunal, intending presently to take cognizance
of the case of Blasius, and the accuser and the accused
were standing apart from the crowd, which was put
back, Blasius solicited Dasius on the subject of surrendering
the city; when he exclaimed, as if the case were now
clearly proved, that he was being treated with about
the betrayal of the city, even before the eyes of
Hannibal. The more audacious the proceeding was,
the less probable did it appear to Hannibal and those
who were present. They considered that the charge
was undoubtedly a matter of rivalry and animosity,
and that it had been brought because it was of such
a nature that, not admitting of being proved by witnesses,
it could the more easily be fabricated. Accordingly
the parties were dismissed. But Blasius, notwithstanding,
desisted not from his bold undertaking, till by continually
harping upon the same subject, and proving how conducive
such a measure would be to themselves and their country,
he carried his point that the Punic garrison, consisting
of five hundred Numidians, and Salapia, should be
delivered up to Marcellus. Nor could it be betrayed
without much bloodshed, consisting of the bravest
of the cavalry in the whole Punic army. Accordingly,
though the event was unexpected, and their horses
were of no use to them in the city, yet hastily taking
arms, during the confusion, they endeavoured to force
their way out; and not being able to escape, they
fell fighting to the last, not more than fifty of
them falling into the hands of the enemy alive.
The loss of this body of cavalry was considerably
more detrimental to Hannibal than that of Salapia,
for the Carthaginian was never afterwards superior
in cavalry, in which he had before been most effective.
39. During this time the scarcity of provisions
in the citadel of Tarentum was almost intolerable;
the Roman garrison there, and Marcus Livius, the praefect
of the garrison and the citadel, placing all their
dependence in the supplies sent from Sicily; that these
might safely pass along the coast of Italy, a fleet
of about twenty ships was stationed at Rhegium.
Decius Quinctius, a man of obscure birth, but who
had acquired great renown as a soldier, on account
of many acts of bravery, had charge of the fleet and
the convoys. At first he had five ships, the
largest of which were two triremes, given to him by
Marcellus, but afterwards, in consequence of his spirited
conduct on many occasions, three quinqueremes were
added to his number, at last, by exacting from the
allied states of Rhegium, Velia, and Paestum, the
ships they were bound to furnish according to treaty,
he made up a fleet of twenty ships, as was before
stated. This fleet setting out from Rhegium,
was met at Sacriportus, about fifteen miles from the
city by Democrates, with an equal number of Tarentine