第 20 节
作者:向前      更新:2021-04-30 17:16      字数:9322
  and now that Valens was coming up; fearful that all the distinctions
  of the campaign would centre in that general; he made a hasty
  attempt to retrieve his credit; but with more impetuosity than
  prudence。 Twelve miles from Cremona (at a place called the Castors) he
  posted some of the bravest of his auxiliaries; concealed in the
  woods that there overhang the road。 The cavalry were ordered to move
  forward; and; after provoking a battle; voluntarily to retreat; and
  draw on the enemy in hasty pursuit; till the ambuscade could make a
  simultaneous attack。 The scheme was betrayed to the Othonianist
  generals; and Paullinus assumed the command of the infantry; Celsus of
  the cavalry。 The veterans of the 13th legion; four cohorts of
  auxiliaries; and 500 cavalry; were drawn up on the left side of the
  road; the raised causeway was occupied by three Praetorian cohorts;
  ranged in deep columns; on the right front stood the first legion with
  two cohorts of auxiliaries and 500 cavalry。 Besides these; a
  thousand cavalry; belonging to the Praetorian guard and to the
  auxiliaries; were brought up to complete a victory or to retrieve a
  repulse。
  Before the hostile lines engaged; the Vitellianists began to
  retreat; but Celsus; aware of the stratagem; kept his men back。 The
  Vitellianists rashly left their position; and seeing Celsus
  gradually give way; followed too far in pursuit; and themselves fell
  into an ambuscade。 The auxiliaries assailed them on either flank;
  the legions were opposed to them in front; and the cavalry; by a
  sudden movement; had surrounded their rear。 Suetonius Paullinus did
  not at once give the infantry the signal to engage。 He was a man
  naturally tardy in action; and one who preferred a cautious and
  scientific plan of operations to any success which was the result of
  accident。 He ordered the trenches to be filled up; the plain to be
  cleared; and the line to be extended; holding that it would be time
  enough to begin his victory when he had provided against being
  vanquished。 This delay gave the Vitellianists time to retreat into
  some vineyards; which were obstructed by the interlacing layers of the
  vines; and close to which was a small wood。 From this place they again
  ventured to emerge; slaughtering the foremost of the Praetorian
  cavalry。 King Epiphanes was wounded; while he was zealously cheering
  on the troops for Otho。
  Then the Othonianist infantry charged。 The enemy's line was
  completely crushed; and the reinforcements who were coming up to their
  aid were also put to flight。 Caecina indeed had not brought up his
  cohorts in a body; but one by one; as this was done during the battle;
  it increased the general confusion; because the troops who were thus
  divided; not being strong at any one point; were borne away by the
  panic of the fugitives。 Besides this; a mutiny broke out in the camp
  because the whole army was not led into action。 Julius Gratus; prefect
  of the camp; was put in irons; on a suspicion of a treacherous
  understanding with his brother who was serving with Otho's army; at
  the very time that the Othonianists had done the same thing and on the
  same grounds to that brother Julius Fronto; a tribune。 In fact such
  was the panic everywhere; among the fugitives and among the troops
  coming up; in the lines and in front of the entrenchments; that it was
  very commonly said on both sides; that Caecina and his whole army
  might have been destroyed; had not Suetonius Paullinus given the
  signal of recall。 Paullinus alleged that he feared the effects of so
  much additional toil and so long a march; apprehending that the
  Vitellianists might issue fresh from their camp; and attack his
  wearied troops; who; once thrown into confusion; would have no
  reserves to fall back upon。 A few approved the general's policy; but
  it was unfavourably canvassed by the army at large。
  The effect of this disaster on the Vitellianists was not so much
  to drive them to fear as to draw them to obedience。 Nor was this the
  case only among the troops of Caecina; who indeed laid all the blame
  upon his soldiers; more ready; as he said; for mutiny than for battle。
  The forces also of Fabius Valens; who had now reached Ticinum; laid
  aside their contempt for the enemy; and anxious to retrieve their
  credit began to yield a more respectful and uniform obedience to their
  general。 A serious mutiny; however; had raged among them; of which; as
  it was not convenient to interrupt the orderly narrative of
  Caecina's operations; I shall take up the history at an earlier
  period。 I have already described how the Batavian cohorts who
  separated from the 14th legion during the Neronian war; hearing on
  their way to Britain of the rising of Vitellius; joined Fabius
  Valens in the country of the Lingones。 They behaved themselves
  insolently; boasting; as they visited the quarters of the several
  legions; that they had mastered the men of the 14th; that they had
  taken Italy from Nero; that the whole destiny of the war lay in
  their hands。 Such language was insulting to the soldiers; and
  offensive to the general。 The discipline of the army was relaxed by
  the brawls and quarrels which ensued。 At last Valens began to
  suspect that insolence would end in actual treachery。
  When; therefore; intelligence reached him that the cavalry of the
  Treveri and the Tungrian infantry had been defeated by Otho's fleet;
  and that Gallia Narbonensis was blockaded; anxious at once to
  protect a friendly population; and; like a skilful soldier; to
  separate cohorts so turbulent and; while they remained united; so
  inconveniently strong; he directed a detachment of the Batavians to
  proceed to the relief of the province。 This having been heard and
  become generally known; the allies were discontented and the legions
  murmured。 〃We are being deprived;〃 they said; 〃of the help of our
  bravest men。 Those veteran troops victorious in so many campaigns; now
  that the enemy is in sight; are withdrawn; so to speak; from the
  very field of battle。 If indeed a province be of more importance
  than the capital and the safety of the Empire; let us all follow
  them thither; but if the reality; the support; the mainstay of
  success; centre in Italy; you must not tear; as it were; from a body
  its very strongest limbs。〃
  In the midst of these fierce exclamations; Valens; sending his
  lictors into the crowd; attempted to quell the mutiny。 On this they
  attacked the general himself; hurled stones at him; and; when he fled;
  pursued him。 Crying out that he was concealing the spoil of Gaul;
  the gold of the men of Vienna; the hire of their own toils; they
  ransacked his baggage; and probed with javelins and lances the walls
  of the general's tent and the very ground beneath。 Valens; disguised
  in the garb of a slave; found concealment with a subaltern officer
  of cavalry。 After this; Alfenius Varus; prefect of the camp; seeing
  that the mutiny was gradually subsiding; promoted the reaction by
  the following device。 He forbade the centurions to visit the
  sentinels; and discontinued the trumpet calls by which the troops
  are summoned to their usual military duties。 Thereupon all stood
  paralysed; and gazed at each other in amazement; panic…stricken by the
  very fact that there was no one to direct them。 By their silence; by
  their submission; finally by their tears and entreaties; they craved
  forgiveness。 But when Valens; thus unexpectedly preserved; came
  forward in sad plight; shedding tears; they were moved to joy; to
  pity; even to affection。 Their revulsion to delight was just that of a
  mob; always extreme in either emotion。 They greeted him with praises
  and congratulations; and surrounding him with the eagles and
  standards; carried him to the tribunal。 With a politic prudence he
  refrained from demanding capital punishment in any case; yet;
  fearing that he might lay himself more open to suspicion by
  concealment of his feelings; he censured a few persons; well aware
  that in civil wars the soldiers have more license than the generals。
  While they were fortifying a camp at Ticinum; the news of
  Caecina's defeat reached them; and the mutiny nearly broke out
  afresh from an impression that underhand dealing and delay on the part
  of Valens had kept them away from the battle。 They refused all rest;
  they would not wait for their general; they advanced in front of the
  standards; and hurried on the standard…bearers。 After a rapid march
  they joined Caecina。 The character of Valens did not stand well with
  Caecina's army。 They complained that; though so much weaker in
  numbers; they had been exposed to the whole force of the enemy; thus
  at once excusing themselves; and extolling; in the implied flattery;
  the strength of the new arriv