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Aulus Hirtius
Commentary on the Alexandrian War
30
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30
Caesar
, upon this
success
,
judging
that his
sudden
approach
must
strike
great
terror
into the
Alexandrians
,
advanced
toward their
camp
with his
victorious
army
. But
finding
it well
intrenched
,
strongly
fortified
by
nature
, and the
ramparts
covered
with
armed
soldiers
, he did not
think
proper
that his
troops
, who were very much
fatigued
both by their
march
and the
late
battle
, should
attack
it; and therefore
encamped
at a
small
distance
from the
enemy
. Next
day
he
attacked
a
fort
, in a
village
not
far
off, which the
king
had
fortified
and
joined
to his
camp
by a
line
of
communication
, with a
view
to
keep
possession
of the
village
. He
attacked
it with his whole
army
, and
took
it by
storm
; not because it would have been
difficult
to
carry
it with a few
forces
; but with the
design
of
falling
immediately
upon the
enemy
's
camp
, during the
alarm
which the
loss
of this
fort
must
give
them.
Accordingly
, the
Romans
, in
continuing
the
pursuit
of those that
fled
from the
fort
,
arrived
at last before the
Alexandrian
camp
, and
commenced
a most
furious
action
at a
distance
. There were
two
approaches
by which it might be
attacked
; one by the
plain
, of which we have
spoken
before, the other by a
narrow
pass
, between their
camp
and the
Nile
. The first, which was much the
easiest
, was
defended
by a
numerous
body
of their
best
troops
; and the
access
on the
side
of the
Nile
gave
the
enemy
great
advantage
in
distressing
and
wounding
our
men
; for they were
exposed
to a
double
shower
of
darts
: in
front
from the
rampart
, behind from the
river
; where the
enemy
had
stationed
a
great
number
of
ships
,
furnished
with
archers
and
slingers
, that
kept
up a
continual
discharge
.
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