24.44
The
following was the distribution of the provinces and the armies. The
operations against Hannibal were entrusted to the two consuls, and
Sempronius was to retain the army he had been commanding. Fabius was to
take over his father's army. Each consisted of two legions. M. Aemilius, the
praetor, who had the jurisdiction over aliens, was to have Luceria for his
province and the two legions which Q. Fabius, the newly elected consul, had
been commanding as praetor; P. Sempronius Tuditanus received Ariminum
as his province and Cn. Fulvius, Suessula, each likewise with two legions,
Fulvius being in command of the City legions and Tuditanus taking over
those from Manius Pomponius. The commands were extended in the
following cases: M. Claudius was to retain that part of Sicily which had
constituted Hiero's kingdom, Lentulus as propraetor was to administer the
old province; Titus Otacilius was to continue in command of the fleet, no
fresh troops being supplied him, and M. Valerius was to operate in Greece
and Macedonia with the legion and ships which he had; Q. Mucius was to
continue in command of his old army of two legions in Sardinia, and C.
Terentius was to keep his one legion at Picenum. Orders were given for two
legions to be raised in the City and 20,000 men to be furnished by the allies.
These were the generals and the troops that were to be the bulwark
of Rome against the many wars, some actually going on, some anticipated,
that were threatening the existence of her dominion. After raising the City
contingent, and recruiting fresh drafts for other legions, the two consuls
before they left the City set about the expiation of certain portents which had
been announced. Part of the City wall and some of the gates had been struck
by lightning, as had also the temple of Jupiter at Aricia. Other things which
people imagined they had seen or heard were believed to be true; warships
were supposed to have been seen in the river at Tarracina, whilst there were
none there; a clashing of arms was heard in the temple of Jupiter Vicilinus in
the neighbourhood of Compsa, and the river at Amiternum was said to have
run with blood. When these portents had been expiated in accordance with
the directions of the pontiffs, the consuls left for the front; Sempronius for
Lucania, Fabius for Apulia. Old Fabius came into his son's camp at Suessula
as his lieutenant. The son went out to meet him with the twelve lictors
preceding him in single file. The old man rode past eleven of them, all of
whom out of respect for him remained silent, whereupon the consul ordered
the remaining lictor who was immediately in front of him to do his duty. The
man thereupon called to Fabius to dismount, and he springing from his horse
said to his son, "I wanted to find out, my son, whether you sufficiently
realised that you are consul."