37.
In the same remote corner of Germany, bordering on the ocean
dwell the Cimbri, a now insignificant tribe, but of great renown. Of
their ancient glory widespread traces yet remain; on both sides of the Rhine are encampments of vast extent, and by their circuit
you may even now measure the warlike strength of the tribe, and find evidence
of that mighty emigration. Rome
was in her 640th year when we first heard of the Cimbrian invader in the
consulship of Cæcilius Metellus and Papirius Carbo, from which time to the
second consulship of the Emperor Trajan we have to reckon about 210 years. So
long have we been in conquering Germany.
In the space of this long epoch many losses have been sustained on both sides.
Neither Samnite nor Carthaginian, neither Spain
nor Gaul, not even the Parthians, have given
us more frequent warnings. German independence truly is fiercer than the
despotism of an Arsaces. What else, indeed, can the East taunt us with but the
slaughter of Crassus, when it has itself lost Pacorus, and been crushed under a
Ventidius? But Germans, by routing or making prisoners of Carbo, Cassius,
Scaurus Aurelius, Servilius Cæpio, and Marcus Manlius, deprived the Roman
people of five consular armies, and they robbed even a Cæsar of Varus and his
three legions. Not without loss to us were they discomfited by Marius in Italy, by the great Julius in Gaul,
and by Drusus, Nero, and Germanicus, on their own ground. Soon after, the
mighty menaces of Caius Cæsar were turned into a jest. Then came
a lull, until on the occasion of our discords and the civil war, they stormed
the winter camp of our legions, and even designed the conquest of Gaul. Again were they driven back; and in recent times we
have celebrated triumphs rather than won conquests over them.
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