Gaius Suetonius Paulinus
Gaius Suetonius Paulinus
Mark Ford
Gaius Suetonius Paulinus
at that time
controlled Britain. According
to rumor, which loves to pit
one man against another, he had grown deeply envious
of Corbulo, and yearned to equal
his rival's recovery of Armenia
by himself gloriously putting to the sword
some foreign adversary. Therefore, fixing
on the isle of Anglesey, where many refugees
had sought safety, he had constructed an armada
of flat-bottomed boats, and these conveyed
his foot soldiers across the treacherous(奸诈的), shallow
sound. His cavalry(骑兵,装甲兵) had to ford
the cold waters on their mounts, and even,
in the deeper parts, to swim beside their horses.
Along the shore, near
the tideline, men
waited, bristling with(充满,密集) weapons, and weaving
between them, women in funereal black
like Furies, hair
hanging down, brandishing torches. And Druids, everywhere
Druids, shrieking, hands lifted
to the heavens, stunning the invaders with their harrowing
curses ... dismayed
and paralyzed, even the battle-hardened quailed, seemed
almost to offer up their bodies for slaughter; until,
roused by their general, and urging
themselves not to be daunted by a band
of fanatical(狂热的) women, they advanced
and attacked, decimating
all they encountered, slashing and burning, setting
alight the foe with the flames
of their own torches ... Victory
accomplished, a garrison(要塞,卫戍部队)
was established and the island's
sacred groves razed: for those savages would drown
their altars in human blood and consult their gods by probing
the entrails of butchered prisoners. It was,
however, while he was busy
accomplishing all this, that Suetonius learned of a sudden
rebellion, of unspeakable
mayhem(故意伤害罪), of terror engulfing the skeleton
army he'd left to defend
the colony's main province.