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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Caesar by Plutarch


measures of the same sort, but not many. For within eleven days he
resigned his dictatorship, and having declared himself consul, with
Servilius Isauricus, hastened again to the war.

He marched so fast that he left all his army behind him, except six
hundred chosen horse and five legions, with which he put to sea in
the very middle of winter, about the beginning of the month of
January (which corresponds pretty nearly with the Athenian
month Posideon), and having passed the Ionian Sea, took Oricum
and Apollonia, and then sent back the ships to Brundusium, to
bring over the soldiers who were left behind in the march. They,
while yet on the march, their bodies now no longer in the full
vigour, and they themselves weary with such a multitude of wars,
could not but exclaim against Caesar, “When at last, and where,
will this Caesar let us be quiet? He carries us from place to place,
and uses us as if we were not to be worn out, and had no sense of
labour. Even our iron itself is spent by blows, and we ought to
have some pity on our bucklers, and breastplates, which have been
used so long. Our wounds, if nothing else, should make him see
that we are mortal men whom he commands, subject to the same
pains and sufferings as other human beings. The very gods
themselves cannot force the winter season, or hinder the storms in
their time; yet he pushes forward, as if he were not pursuing, but
flying from an enemy.” So they talked as they marched leisurely
towards Brundusium. But when they came thither, and found
Caesar gone off before them, their feelings changed, and they
blamed themselves as traitors to their general. They now railed at
their officers for marching so slowly, and placing themselves on
the heights overlooking the sea towards Epirus, they kept watch to
see if they could espy the vessels which were to transport them to
Caesar.

He in the meantime was posted in Apollonia, but had not an army
with him able to fight the enemy, the forces from Brundusium
being so long in coming, which put him to great suspense and
embarrassment what to do. At last he resolved upon a most
hazardous experiment, and embarked, without any one’s
knowledge, in a boat of twelve oars, to cross over to Brundusium,
though the sea was at that time covered with a vast fleet of the
enemies. He got on board in the night-time, in the dress of a slave,
and throwing himself down like a person of no consequence lay
along at the bottom of the vessel. The river Anius was to carry
them down to sea, and there used to blow a gentle gale every
morning from the land, which made it calm at the mouth of the
river, by driving the waves forward; but this night there had blown
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