[The following relates the efforts of the Roman general and consul Marcus Claudius Marcellus to use the roughly 10,000 surviving legionaries from the disastrous Battle of Cannae. The Roman Senate decreed that they should be garrisoned in Sicily and that such ‘cowardly soldiers’ should not be utilized by Rome, and initially forbade him to utilize them in his further campaigns in Italy, fighting against the brilliant Carthaginian general, Hannibal Barca.]
Of those that survived the battle at Cannae, some had escaped by flight, and some were taken alive by the enemy; so great a multitude, that it was thought there were not remaining Romans enough to defend the wall of the city. And yet the magnanimity and constancy of the city was such, that it would not redeem the captives from Hannibal, though it might have done so for a small ransom; a decree of the senate forbade it, and chose rather to leave them to be killed by the enemy, or sold out of Italy; and commanded that all who had saved themselves by flight should be transported into Sicily, and not permitted to return into Italy, until the war with Hannibal should be ended.
These, therefore, when Marcellus was arrived in Sicily, addressed themselves to him in great numbers, and besought him to admit them to honourable service; and promised to make it appear by their future fidelity and exertions that the defeat had been received rather by misfortune than by cowardice.
Marcellus, pitying them, petitioned the senate by letter that he might have leave at all times to recruit his legions out of them. After much debate about the thing, the senate decreed they were of opinion that the commonwealth did not require the service of cowardly soldiers; if Marcellus perhaps thought otherwise, he might make use of them, provided no one of them be honoured on any occasion with a crown or military gift, as a reward of his virtue or courage.
This decree stung Marcellus; and on his return to Rome, after the Sicilian war was ended, he upbraided the senate that they had denied to him, who had so highly deserved of the republic, liberty to relieve so great a number of citizens in great calamity.
Source:
Plutarch, John Dryden, and Arthur Hugh Clough. "Marcellus." Plutarch's Lives. New York: Modern Library, 2001. 416-17. Print.
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