18 Such was the state of Britain,
and such were the vicissitudes of the war, which Agricola found on his crossing
over about midsummer. Our soldiers made it a pretext for carelessness, as if
all fighting was over, and the enemy were biding their time. The Ordovices,
shortly before Agricola’s arrival, had destroyed nearly the whole of a squadron
of allied cavalry quartered in their territory. Such a beginning raised the
hopes of the country, and all who wished for war approved the precedent, and
anxiously watched the temper of the new governor. Meanwhile Agricola, though
summer was past and the detachments were scattered throughout the province,
though the soldiers’ confident anticipation of inaction for that year would be a
source of delay and difficulty in beginning a campaign, and most advisers
thought it best simply to watch all weak points, resolved to face the peril. He
collected a force of veterans and a small body of auxiliaries; then as the
Ordovices would not venture to descend into the plain, he put himself in front
of the ranks to inspire all with the same courage against a common danger, and
led his troops up a hill. The tribe was all but exterminated. Well aware that
he must follow up the prestige of his arms, and that in proportion to his first
success would be the terror of the other tribes, he formed the design of
subjugating the island of Mona, from the occupation of which Paulinus had been
recalled, as I have already related, by the rebellion of the entire province.
But, as his plans were not matured, he had no fleet. The skill and resolution
of the general accomplished the passage. With some picked men of the
auxiliaries, disencumbered of all baggage, who knew the shallows and had that
national experience in swimming which enables the Britons to take care not only
of themselves but of their arms and horses, he delivered so unexpected an
attack that the astonished enemy who were looking for a fleet, a naval
armament, and an assault by sea, thought that to such assailants nothing could
be formidable or invincible. And so, peace having been sued for and the island
given up, Agricola became great and famous as one who, when entering on his
province, a time which others spend in vain display and a round of ceremonies,
chose rather toil and danger. Nor did he use his success for
self-glorification, or apply the name of campaigns and victories to the
repression of a conquered people. He did not even describe his achievements in
a laurelled letter. Yet by thus disguising his renown he really increased it,
for men inferred the grandeur of his aspirations from his silence about
services so great.
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