25.26
The
capture of Euryalus and its occupation by a Roman garrison relieved
Marcellus of one cause of anxiety; he had no longer to dread an attack from
the rear which might have created confusion amongst his men, shut in and
hampered as they were by walls. His next move was against Achradina. He
established three separate camps in suitable positions and sat down before
the place, hoping to reduce it by famine. For some days the outposts were
undisturbed, when the sudden arrival of Hippocrates and Himilco led to a
general attack upon the Roman lines. Hippocrates had formed an entrenched
camp at the Great Harbour, and after giving a signal to the troops in
Achradina he made an attack on the old camp of the Romans which
Crispinus commanded. Epicydes made a sortie against Marcellus and the
Carthaginian fleet which lay between the city and the Roman camp was
brought ashore and so prevented Crispinus from sending any help to
Marcellus. The excitement which the enemy caused was, however, much
more alarming than the fighting, for Crispinus not only drove Hippocrates
back from his entrenchments, but actually went in pursuit as he fled hurriedly
away, whilst Marcellus drove Epicydes back into the city. And now,
apparently, ample provision was made against danger arising from any
sudden attacks in the future.
To add to their troubles both sides were visited by pestilence, a
calamity almost heavy enough to turn them from all thoughts of war. It was
the time of autumn and the locality was naturally unhealthy, more so,
however, outside the city than within it, and the insupportable heat affected
the constitutions of almost all who were in the two camps. In the beginning
people fell ill and died through the effects of the season and the unhealthy
locality; later, the nursing of the sick and contact with them spread the
disease, so that either those who had caught it died neglected and
abandoned, or else they carried off with them those who were waiting on
them and nursing them, and who had thus become infected. Deaths and
funerals were a daily spectacle; on all sides, day and night, were heard the
wailings for the dead. At last familiarity with misery so brutalised men that
not only would they not follow the dead with tears and the lamentations
which custom demanded, but they actually refused to carry them out for
burial, and the lifeless bodies were left lying about before the eyes of those
who were awaiting a similar death. So what with fear and the foul and
deadly miasma arising from the bodies, the dead proved fatal to the sick and
the sick equally fatal to those in health. Men preferred to die by the sword;
some, single-handed, attacked the enemies' outposts. The epidemic was
much more prevalent in the Carthaginian camp than in that of the Romans,
for their long investment of Syracuse had made them more accustomed to
the climate and to the water. The Sicilians who were in the hostile ranks
deserted as soon as they saw that the disease was spreading through the
unhealthiness of the place, and went off to their own cities. The
Carthaginians, who had nowhere to go to, perished to a man together with
their generals, Hippocrates and Himilco. When the disease assumed such
serious proportions Marcellus transferred his men to the city, and those who
had been weakened by sickness were restored by shade and shelter. Still,
many of the Roman soldiers, too, were carried off by that pestilence.