The gathering of the armies of Caesar
and Pompey on the opposite shores of the Adriatic
Sea was one of the grandest preparations for conflict
that history has recorded, and the whole world gazed
upon the spectacle at the time with an intense and
eager interest, which was heightened by the awe and
terror which the danger inspired. During the year
while Caesar had been completing his work of subduing
and arranging all the western part of the empire,
Pompey had been gathering from the eastern division
every possible contribution to swell the military force
under his command, and had been concentrating all
these elements of power on the coasts of Macedon and
Greece, opposite to Brundusium, where he knew that
Caesar would attempt to cross the Adriatic Sea, His
camps, his detachments, his troops of archers and
slingers, and his squadrons of horse, filled the land,
while every port was guarded, and the line of the
coast was environed by batteries and castles on the
rocks, and fleets of galleys on the water. Caesar
advanced with his immense army to Brundusium, on the
opposite shore, in December, so that, in addition to
the formidable resistance prepared for him by his enemy
on the coast, he had to encounter the wild surges
of the Adriatic, rolling perpetually in the dark and
gloomy commotion always raised in such wide seas by
wintery storms.
Caesar had no ships, for Pompey had
cleared the seas of every thing which could aid him
in his intended passage. By great efforts, however,
he succeeded at length in getting together a sufficient
number of galleys to convey over a part of his army,
provided he took the men alone, and left all his military
stores and baggage behind. He gathered his army
together, therefore, and made them an address, representing
that they were now drawing toward the end of all their
dangers and toils. They were about to meet their
great enemy for a final conflict. It was not
necessary to take their servants, their baggage, and
their stores across the sea, for they were sure of
victory, and victory would furnish them with ample
supplies from those whom they were about to conquer.
The soldiers eagerly imbibed the spirit
of confidence and courage which Caesar himself expressed.
A large detachment embarked and put to sea, and, after
being tossed all night upon the cold and stormy waters,
they approached the shore at some distance to the
northward of the place where Pompey’s fleets
had expected them. It was at a point where the
mountains came down near to the sea, rendering the
coast rugged and dangerous with shelving rocks and
frowning promontories. Here Caesar succeeded
in effecting a landing of the first division of his
troops, and then sent back the fleet for the remainder.
The news of his passage spread rapidly
to all Pompey’s stations along the coast, and
the ships began to gather, and the armies to march
toward the point where Caesar had effected his landing.
The conflict and struggle commenced. One of Pompey’s
admirals intercepted the fleet of galleys on their
return, and seized and burned a large number of them,
with all who were on board. This, of course, only
renewed the determined desperation of the remainder.
Caesar advanced along the coast with the troops which
he had landed, driving Pompey’s troops before
him, and subduing town after town as he advanced.
The country was filled with terror and dismay.
The portion of the army which Caesar had left behind
could not now cross, partly on account of the stormy
condition of the seas, the diminished number of the
ships, and the redoubled vigilance with which Pompey’s
forces now guarded the shores, but mainly because
Caesar was now no longer with them to inspire them
with his reckless, though calm and quiet daring.
They remained, therefore, in anxiety and distress,
on the Italian shore. As Caesar, on the other
hand, advanced along the Macedonian shore, and drove
Pompey back into the interior, he cut off the communication
between Pompey’s ships and the land, so that
the fleet was soon reduced to great distress for want
of provisions and water. The men kept themselves
from perishing with thirst by collecting the dew which
fell upon the decks of their galleys. Caesar’s
army was also in distress, for Pompey’s fleets
cut off all supplies by water, and his troops hemmed
them in on the side of the land; and, lastly, Pompey
himself, with the immense army that was under his command,
began to be struck with alarm at the impending danger
with which they were threatened. Pompey little
realized, however, how dreadful a fate was soon to
overwhelm him.
The winter months rolled away, and
nothing effectual was done. The forces, alternating
and intermingled, as above described, kept each other
in a continued state of anxiety and suffering.
Caesar became impatient at the delay of that portion
of his army that he had left on the Italian shore.
The messages of encouragement and of urgency which
he sent across to them did not bring them over, and
at length, one dark and stormy night, when he thought
that the inclemency of the skies and the heavy surging
of the swell in the offing would drive his vigilant
enemies into places of shelter, and put them off their
guard, he determined to cross the sea himself and
bring his hesitating army over. He ordered a
galley to be prepared, and went on board of it disguised,
and with his head muffled in his mantle, intending
that not even the officers or crew of the ship which
was to convey him should know of his design.
The galley, in obedience to orders, put off from the
shore. The mariners endeavored in vain for some
time to make head against the violence of the wind
and the heavy concussions of the waves, and at length,
terrified at the imminence of the danger to which so
wild and tumultuous a sea on such a night exposed
them, refused to proceed, and the commander gave them
orders to return. Caesar then came forward, threw
off his mantle, and said to them, “Friends! you
have nothing to fear. You are carrying Caesar.”
The men were, of course, inspirited
anew by this disclosure, but all was in vain.
The obstacles to the passage proved insurmountable,
and the galley, to avoid certain destruction, was
compelled to return.
The army, however, on the Italian
side, hearing of Caesar’s attempt to return
to them, fruitless though it was, and stimulated by
the renewed urgency of the orders which he now sent
to them, made arrangements at last for an embarkation,
and, after encountering great dangers on the way,
succeeded in landing in safety. Caesar, thus strengthened,
began to plan more decided operations for the coming
spring.
There were some attempts at negotiation.
The armies were so exasperated against each other
on account of the privations and hardships which each
compelled the other to suffer, that they felt too strong
a mutual distrust to attempt any regular communication
by commissioners or ambassadors appointed for the
purpose. They came to a parley, however, in one
or two instances, though the interviews led to no result.
As the missiles used in those days were such as could
only be thrown to a very short distance, hostile bodies
of men could approach much nearer to each other then
than is possible now, when projectiles of the most
terribly destructive character can be thrown for miles.
In one instance, some of the ships of Pompey’s
fleet approached so near to the shore as to open a
conference with one or two of Caesar’s lieutenants
who were encamped there. In another case, two
bodies of troops from the respective armies were separated
only by a river, and the officers and soldiers came
down to the banks on either side, and held frequent
conversations, calling to each other in loud voices
across the water. In this way they succeeded
in so far coming to an agreement as to fix upon a time
and place for a more formal conference, to be held
by commissioners chosen on each side. This conference
was thus held, but each party came to it accompanied
by a considerable body of attendants, and these, as
might have been anticipated, came into open collision
while the discussion was pending; thus the meeting
consequently ended in violence and disorder, each party
accusing the other of violating the faith which both
had plighted.
This slow and undecided mode of warfare
between the two vast armies continued for many months
without any decisive results. There were skirmishes,
struggles, sieges, blockades, and many brief and partial
conflicts, but no general and decided battle.
Now the advantage seemed on one side, and now on the
other. Pompey so hemmed in Caesar’s troops
at one period, and so cut off his supplies, that the
men were reduced to extreme distress for food.
At length they found a kind of root which they dug
from the ground, and, after drying and pulverizing
it, they made a sort of bread of the powder, which
the soldiers were willing to eat rather than either
starve or give up the contest. They told Caesar,
in fact, that they would live on the bark of trees
rather than abandon his cause. Pompey’s
soldiers, at one time, coming near to the walls of
a town which they occupied, taunted and jeered them
on account of their wretched destitution of food.
Caesar’s soldiers threw loaves of this bread
at them in return, by way of symbol that they were
abundantly supplied.
After some time the tide of fortune
turned Caesar contrived, by a succession of adroit
maneuvers and movements, to escape from his toils,
and to circumvent and surround Pompey’s forces
so as soon to make them suffer destitution and distress
in their turn. He cut off all communication between
them and the country at large, and turned away the
brooks and streams from flowing through the ground
they occupied. An army of forty or fifty thousand
men, with the immense number of horses and beasts
of burden which accompany them, require very large
supplies of water, and any destitution or even scarcity
of water leads immediately to the most dreadful consequences.
Pompey’s troops dug wells, but they obtained
only very insufficient supplies. Great numbers
of beasts of burden died, and their decaying bodies
so tainted the air as to produce epidemic diseases,
which destroyed many of the troops, and depressed
and disheartened those whom they did not destroy.
During all these operations there
was no decisive general battle. Each one of the
great rivals knew very well that his defeat in one
general battle would be his utter and irretrievable
ruin. In a war between two independent nations,
a single victory, however complete, seldom terminates
the struggle, for the defeated party has the resources
of a whole realm to fall back upon, which are sometimes
called forth with renewed vigor after experiencing
such reverses; and then defeat in such cases, even
if it be final, does not necessarily involve the ruin
of the unsuccessful commander. He may negotiate
an honorable peace, and return to his own land in
safety; and, if his misfortunes are considered by his
countrymen as owing not to any dereliction from his
duty as a soldier, but to the influence of adverse
circumstances which no human skill or resolution could
have controlled, he may spend the remainder of his
days in prosperity and honor. The contest, however,
between Caesar and Pompey was not of this character.
One or the other of them was a traitor and a usurper an
enemy to his country. The result of a battle would
decide which of the two was to stand in this attitude.
Victory would legitimize and confirm the authority
of one, and make it supreme over the whole civilized
world. Defeat was to annihilate the power of the
other, and make him a fugitive and a vagabond, without
friends, without home, without country. It was
a desperate stake; and it is not at all surprising
that both parties lingered and hesitated, and postponed
the throwing of the die.
At length Pompey, rendered desperate
by the urgency of the destitution and distress into
which Caesar had shut him, made a series of rigorous
and successful attacks upon Caesar’s lines, by
which he broke away in his turn from his enemy’s
grasp, and the two armies moved slowly back into the
interior of the country, hovering in the vicinity of
each other, like birds of prey contending in the air,
each continually striking at the other, and moving
onward at the same time to gain some position of advantage,
or to circumvent the other in such a design. They
passed on in this manner over plains, and across rivers,
and through mountain passes, until at length they
reached the heart of Thessaly. Here at last the
armies came to a stand and fought the final battle.
The place was known then as the plain
of Pharsalia, and the greatness of the contest which
was decided there has immortalized its name. Pompey’s
forces were far more numerous than those of Caesar,
and the advantage in all the partial contests which
had taken place for some time had been on his side;
he felt, consequently, sure of victory. He drew
up his men in a line, one flank resting upon the bank
of a river, which protected them from attack on that
side. From this point, the long line of legions,
drawn up in battle array, extended out upon the plain,
and was terminated at the other extremity by strong
squadrons of horse, and bodies of slingers and archers,
so as to give the force of weapons and the activity
of men as great a range as possible there, in order
to prevent Caesar’s being able to outflank and
surround them There was, however, apparently very
little danger of this, for Caesar, according to his
own story, had but about half as strong a force as
Pompey. The army of the latter, he says, consisted
of nearly fifty thousand men, while his own number
was between twenty and thirty thousand. Generals,
however, are prone to magnify the military grandeur
of their exploits by overrating the strength with
which they had to contend, and under-estimating their
own. We are therefore to receive with some distrust
the statements made by Caesar and his partisans; and
as for Pompey’s story, the total and irreparable
ruin in which he himself and all who adhered to him
were entirely overwhelmed immediately after the battle,
prevented its being ever told.
In the rear of the plain where Pompey’s
lines were extended was the camp from which the army
had been drawn out to prepare for the battle.
The camp fires of the preceding night were moldering
away, for it was a warm summer morning; the intrenchments
were guarded, and the tents, now nearly empty, stood
extended in long rows within the inclosure. In
the midst of them was the magnificent pavilion of
the general, furnished with every imaginable article
of luxury and splendor. Attendants were busy
here and there, some rearranging what had been left
in disorder by the call to arms by which the troops
had been summoned from their places of rest, and others
providing refreshments-and food for their victorious
comrades when they should return from the battle.
In Pompey’s tent a magnificent entertainment
was preparing. The tables were spread with every
luxury, the sideboards were loaded with plate, and
the whole scene was resplendent with utensils and
decorations of silver and gold.
Pompey and all his generals were perfectly
certain of victory. In fact, the peace and harmony
of their councils in camp had been destroyed for many
days by their contentions and disputes about the disposal
of the high offices, and the places of profit and
power at Rome, which were to come into their hands
when Caesar should have been subdued. The subduing
of Caesar they considered only a question of time;
and, as a question of time, it was now reduced to
very narrow limits. A few days more, and they
were to be masters of the whole Roman empire, and,
impatient and greedy, they disputed in anticipation
about the division of the spoils.
To make assurance doubly sure, Pompey
gave orders that his troops should not advance to
meet the onset of Caesar’s troops on the middle
ground between the two armies, but that they should
wait calmly for the attack, and receive the enemy
at the posts where they had themselves been arrayed.
The hour at length arrived, the charge
was sounded by the trumpets, and Caesar’s troops
began to advance with loud shouts and great impetuosity
toward Pompey’s lines. There was a long
and terrible struggle, but the forces of Pompey began
finally to give way. Notwithstanding the precautions
which Pompey had taken to guard and protect the wing
of his army which was extended toward the land, Caesar
succeeded in turning his flank upon that side by driving
off the cavalry and destroying the archers and slingers,
and he was thus enabled to throw a strong force upon
Pompey’s rear. The flight then soon became
general, and a scene of dreadful confusion and slaughter
ensued. The soldiers of Caesar’s army,
maddened with the insane rage which the progress of
a battle never fails to awaken, and now excited to
phrensy by the exultation of success, pressed on after
the affrighted fugitives, who trampled one upon another,
or fell pierced with the weapons of their assailants,
filling the air with their cries of agony and their
shrieks of terror. The horrors of the scene,
far from allaying, only excited still more the ferocity
of their bloodthirsty foes, and they pressed steadily
and fiercely on, hour after hour, in their dreadful
work of destruction. It was one of those scenes
of horror and woe such as those who have not witnessed
them can not conceive of, and those who have witnessed
can never forget.
When Pompey perceived that all was
lost, he fled from the field in a state of the wildest
excitement and consternation. His troops were
flying in all directions, some toward the camp, vainly
hoping to find refuge there, and others in various
other quarters, wherever they saw the readiest hope
of escape from their merciless pursuers. Pompey
himself fled instinctively toward the camp. As
he passed the guards at the gate where he entered,
he commanded them, in his agitation and terror, to
defend the gate against the coming enemy, saying that
he was going to the other gates to attend to the defenses
there. He then hurried on, but a full sense of
the helplessness and hopelessness of his condition
soon overwhelmed him; he gave up all thought of defense,
and, passing with a sinking heart through the scene
of consternation and confusion which reigned every
where within the encampment, he sought his own tent,
and, rushing into it, sank down, amid the luxury and
splendor which had been arranged to do honor to his
anticipated victory, in a state of utter stupefaction
and despair.