[5] Immediately after this prayer a victim was slain and Scipio threw the organs raw into the sea, as is customary,2 and by a trumpet gave the signal to sail. A favouring wind sufficiently strong quickly carried them out of sight of land. [6] And after mid-day they encountered a fog, so that with difficulty could they avoid collisions between the ships. In the open sea the wind was gentler. [7] Through the following night the same fog held; and when the sun was up, it was dispersed and the wind increased in force. Already they were in sight of land. Not very long afterwards the pilot told Scipio that Africa was not more than five miles away; that they sighted the Promontory of Mercury;3 if he should order him to steer for that, the entire fleet would soon be in port. [8] Scipio, now that the land was visible, after a prayer to the gods that [9??] his sight of Africa might be a [p. 315]blessing to the state and to himself, gave orders to4 make sail and to seek another landing-place for the ships farther down.5 [10] They were running before the same wind; but at about the same time as on the preceding day a fog appeared cutting off the sight of land, and under the weight of fog the wind dropped. [11] Then night added to all their uncertainties; so they cast anchor, that the ships might not collide or drift onto the shore. When day dawned the same wind sprang up and by dispelling the fog revealed the whole African coast. [12] Scipio inquired what the nearest promontory was, and upon being told it was called Cape of the Fair God,6 he said “A welcome omen! steer your ships this way!” There the fleet came into port and all the troops were disembarked.7
[13] That the passage was successful and free from alarm and disorder I have accepted on the authority of many Greek and Latin writers. Coelius8 alone describes all the terrors of weather and waves —everything short of saying that the ships were overwhelmed by the seas. [14] He relates that finally the fleet was swept by the storm away from Africa to the island of Aegimurus9 and that from there the proper [p. 317]course was regained with difficulty; [15] and that as the10 ships were all but sinking the soldiers, without waiting for an order from the general, made their way to the shore in small boats, as though they had been shipwrecked, with no arms and in the greatest disorder.11