Book 6: The Reconciliation of the Orders (389 - 366 B.C.)
[6.1]The history of the Romans from the
foundation of the City to its capture, first under kings, then under consuls,
dictators, decemvirs, and consular tribunes, the record of foreign wars
and domestic dissensions, has been set forth in the five preceding books.
The subject matter is enveloped in obscurity; partly from its great antiquity,
like remote objects which are hardly discernible through the vastness of
the distance; partly owing to the fact that written records, which form
the only trustworthy memorials of events, were in those times few and scanty,
and even what did exist in the pontifical commentaries and public and private
archives nearly all perished in the conflagration of the City. Starting
from the second beginnings of the City, which, like a plant cut down to
its roots, sprang up in greater beauty and fruitfulness, the details of
its history both civil and military will now be exhibited in their proper
order, with greater clearness and certainty. At first the State was supported
by the same prop by which it had been raised from the ground, M. Furius,
its chief, and he was not allowed to resign office until a year had elapsed.
It was decided that the consular tribunes, during whose rule the capture
of the City had taken place, should not hold the elections for the ensuing
year; matters reverted to an interregnum. The citizens were taken up with
the pressing and laborious task of rebuilding their City, and it was during
this interval that Q. Fabius, immediately on laying down his office, was
indicted by Cn. Marcius, a tribune of the plebs, on the ground that after
being sent as an envoy to the Gauls to speak on behalf of the Clusians,
he had, contrary to the law of nations, fought against them. He was saved
from the threatened proceedings by death; a death so opportune that many
people believed it to be a voluntary one. The interregnum began with P.
Cornelius Scipio as the first interrex; he was followed by M. Furius Camillus,
under whom the election of military tribunes was conducted. Those elected
were L. Valerius Publicola, for the second time, L. Verginius, P. Cornelius,
A. Manlius, L. Aemilius, and L. Postumius.
They entered upon their office immediately, and their very first case
was to submit to the senate measures affecting religion. Orders were made
that in the first place search should be made for the treaties and laws
- these latter including those of the Twelve Tables and some belonging
to the time of the kings - as far as they were still extant. Some were
made accessible to the public, but those which dealt with divine worship
were kept secret by the pontiffs, mainly in order that the people might
remain dependent on them for religious guidance. Then they entered upon
a discussion of the "days of prohibition." The 18th of July was
marked by a double disaster, for on that day the Fabii were annihilated
at the Cremera, and in after years the battle at the Alia which involved
the ruin of the City was lost on the same day. From the latter disaster
the day was called "the day of the Alia," and was observed by
a religious abstinence from all public and private business. The consular
tribune Sulpicius had not offered acceptable sacrifices on July 16 (the
day after the Ides), and without having secured the good will of the gods
the Roman army was exposed to the enemy two days later. Some think that
it was for this reason that on the day after the Ides in each month all
religious functions were ordered to be suspended, and hence it became the
custom to observe the second and the middle days of the month in the same
way.
[6.2]They were not, however, long left undisturbed
whilst thus considering the best means of restoring the commonwealth after
its grievous fall. On the one side, the Volscians, their ancient foes,
had taken up arms in the determination to wipe out the name of Rome; on
the other side, traders were bringing in reports of an assembly at the
fane of Voltumna, where the leading men from all the Etruscan cantons were
forming a hostile league. Still further alarm was created by the defection
of the Latins and Hernicans. After the battle of Lake Regillus these nations
had never wavered for 100 years in their loyal friendship with Rome. As
so many dangers were threatening on all sides and it became evident the
name of Rome was not only held in hatred by her foes, but regarded with
contempt by her allies, the senate decided that the State should be defended
under the auspices of the man by whom it had been recovered, and that M.
Furius Camillus should be nominated Dictator. He nominated as his Master
of the Horse, C. Servilius Ahala, and after closing the law courts and
suspending all business he proceeded to enrol all the men of military age.
Those of the "seniors" who still possessed some vigour were placed
in separate centuries after they had taken the military oath. When he had
completed the enrolment and equipment of the army he formed it into three
divisions. One he stationed in the Veientine territory fronting Etruria.
The second was ordered to form an entrenched camp to cover the City; A.
Manlius, as military tribune, was in command of this division, whilst L.
Aemilius in a similar capacity directed the movement against the Etruscans.
The third division he led in person against the Volscians and advanced
to attack their encampment at a place called Ad Mecium, not far from Lanuvium.
They had gone to war in a feeling of contempt for their enemy as they believed
that almost all the Roman fighting men had been annihilated by the Gauls,
but when they heard that Camillus was in command they were filled with
such alarm that they raised a rampart round them and barricaded the rampart
with trees piled up round it to prevent the enemy from penetrating their
lines at any point. As soon as he became aware of this Camillus ordered
fire to be thrown on the barricade. The wind happened to be blowing strongly
towards the enemy, and so it not only opened up a way through the fire,
but by driving the flames into the camp it produced such consternation
amongst the defenders, with the steam and smoke and crackling of the green
wood as it burnt, that the Roman soldiers found less difficulty in surmounting
the rampart and forcing the camp than in crossing the burnt barricade.
The enemy were routed and cut to pieces. After the capture of the camp
the Dictator gave the booty to the soldiers; an act all the more welcome
to them as they did not expect it from a general by no means given to generosity.
In the pursuit he ravaged the length and breadth of the Volscian territory,
and at last after seventy years of war forced them to surrender. From his
conquest of the Volscians he marched across to the Aequi who were also
preparing for war, surprised their army at Bolae, and in the first assault
captured not only their camp but their city.
[6.3]While these successes were occurring
in the field of operations where Camillus was the life and soul of the
Roman cause, in another direction a terrible danger was threatening. Nearly
the whole of Etruria was in arms and was besieging Sutrium, a city in alliance
with Rome. Their envoys approached the senate with a request for help in
their desperate condition, and the senate passed a decree that the Dictator
should render assistance to the Sutrines as soon as he possibly could.
Their hopes were deferred, and as the circumstances of the besieged were
such as to admit of no longer delay - their scanty numbers being worn out
with toil, want of sleep, and fighting, which always fell upon the same
persons - they made a conditional surrender of their city. As the mournful
procession set forth, leaving their hearths and homes, without arms and
with only one garment apiece, Camillus and his army happened just at that
moment to appear on the scene. The grief-stricken crowd flung themselves
at his feet; the appeals of their leaders, wrung from them by dire necessity,
were drowned by the weeping of the women and children who were being dragged
along as companions in exile. Camillus bade the Sutrines spare their laments,
it was to the Etruscans that he was bringing grief and tears. He then gave
orders for the baggage to be deposited, and the Sutrines to remain where
they were, and leaving a small detachment on guard ordered his men to follow
him with only their arms. With his disencumbered army he marched to Sutrium,
and found, as he expected, everything in disorder, as usual after a success,
the gates open and unguarded, and the victorious enemy dispersed through
the streets carrying plunder away from the houses. Sutrium was captured
accordingly twice in the same day; the lately victorious Etruscans were
everywhere massacred by their new enemies; no time was allowed them either
to concentrate their strength or seize their weapons. As they tried each
to make their way to the gates on the chance of escaping to the open country
they found them closed; this was the first thing the Dictator ordered to
be done. Then some got possession of their arms, others who happened to
be armed when the tumult surprised them called their comrades together
to make a stand. The despair of the enemy would have led to a fierce struggle
had not criers been despatched throughout the city to order all to lay
down their arms and those without arms to be spared; none were to be injured
unless found in arms. Those who had determined in their extremity to fight
to the end, now that hopes of life were offered them threw away their arms
in all directions, and, since Fortune had made this the safer course, gave
themselves as unarmed men to the enemy. Owing to their great number, they
were distributed in various places for safe keeping. Before nightfall the
town was given back to the Sutrines uninjured and untouched by all the
ruin of war, since it had not been taken by storm but surrendered on conditions.
[6.4]Camillus returned in triumphal procession
to the City, after having been victorious in three simultaneous wars. By
far the greatest number of the prisoners who were led before his chariot
belonged to the Etruscans. They were publicly sold, and so much was realised
that after the matrons had been repaid for their gold, three golden bowls
were made from what was left. These were inscribed with the name of Camillus,
and it is generally believed that previous to the fire in the Capitol they
were deposited in the chapel of Jupiter before the feet of Juno. During
the year, those of the inhabitants of Veii, Capenae, and Fidenae who had
gone over to the Romans whilst these wars were going on, were admitted
into full citizenship and received an allotment of land. The senate passed
a resolution recalling those who had repaired to Veii and taken possession
of the empty houses there to avoid the labour of rebuilding. At first they
protested and took no notice of the order; then a day was fixed, and those
who had not returned by that date were threatened with outlawry. This step
made each man fear for himself, and from being united in defiance they
now showed individual obedience. Rome was growing in population, and buildings
were rising up in every part of it. The State gave financial assistance;
the aediles urged on the work as though it were a State undertaking; the
individual citizens were in a hurry to complete their task through need
of accommodation. Within the year the new City was built.
At the close of the year elections of consular tribunes were held. Those
elected were T. Quinctius Cincinnatus, Q. Servilius Fidenas (for the fifth
time), L. Julius Julus, L. Aquilius Corvus, L. Lucretius Tricipitinus,
and Ser. Sulpicius Rufus. One army was led against the Aequi - not to war,
for they acknowledged that they were conquered, but - to ravage their territories
so that no strength might be left them for future aggression. The other
advanced into the district of Tarquinii. There, Cortuosa and Contenebra,
towns belonging to the Etruscans, were taken by assault. At Cortuosa there
was no fighting, the garrison were surprised and the place was carried
at the very first assault. Contenebra stood a siege for a few days, but
the incessant toil without any remission day or night proved too much for
them. The Roman army was formed into six divisions, each of which took
its part in the fighting in turn every six hours. The small number of the
defenders necessitated the same men continually coming into action against
a fresh enemy; at last they gave up, and an opening was afforded the Romans
for entering the city. The tribunes decided that the booty should be sold
on behalf of the State, but they were slower in announcing their decision
than in forming it; whilst they were hesitating, the soldiery had already
appropriated it, and it could not be taken from them without creating bitter
resentment. The growth of the City was not confined to private buildings.
A substructure of squared stones was built beneath the Capitol during this
year, which, even amidst the present magnificence of the City, is a conspicuous
object.
[6.5]Whilst the citizens were taken up with
their building, the tribunes of the plebs tried to make the meetings of
the Assembly more attractive by bringing forward agrarian proposals. They
held out the prospect of acquiring the Pomptine territory, which, now that
the Volscians had been reduced by Camillus, had become the indisputable
possession of Rome. This territory, they alleged, was in much greater danger
from the nobles than it had been from the Volscians, for the latter only
made raids into it as long as they had strength and weapons, but the nobles
were putting themselves in possession of the public domain, and unless
it was allotted before they appropriated everything there would be no room
for plebeians there. They did not produce much impression on the plebeians,
who were busy with their building and only attended the Assembly in small
numbers, and as their expenses had exhausted their means, they felt no
interest in land which they were unable to develop owing to want of capital.
In a community devoted to religious observances, the recent disaster had
filled the leading men with superstitious fears; in order, therefore, that
the auspices might be taken afresh they fell back upon an interregnum.
There were three interreges in succession - M. Manlius Capitolinus, Ser.
Sulpicius Camerinus, and L. Valerius Potitus. The last of these conducted
the election of consular tribunes. Those elected were: L. Papirius, C.
Cornelius, C. Sergius, L. Aemilius (for the second time), L. Menenius,
and L. Valerius Publicola (for the third time). They immediately entered
office. In this year the temple of Mars, which had been vowed in the Gaulish
war, was dedicated by T. Quinctius, one of the two custodians of the Sibylline
Books. The new citizens were formed into four additional tribes - the Stellatine,
the Tromentine, the Sabatine, and the Arnian. These brought up the number
of the tribes to twenty-five.
[6.6]The question of the Pomptine territory
was again raised by L. Sicinius, a tribune of the plebs, and the people
attended the Assembly in greater numbers and showed a more eager desire
for land than they had done. In the senate the subject of the Latin and
Hernican wars was mentioned, but owing to the concern felt about a more
serious war, it was adjourned. Etruria was in arms. They again fell back
on Camillus. He was made consular tribune, and five colleagues were assigned
to him: Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis, Q. Servilius Fidenas (for the sixth
time), L. Quinctius Cincinnatus, L. Horatius Pulvillus, and P. Valerius.
At the beginning of the year public anxiety was diverted from the Etruscan
war by the arrival in the City of a body of fugitives from the Pomptine
territory, who reported that the Antiates were in arms, and that the Latin
cantons had sent their fighting men to assist them. The latter explained
in their defence that it was not in consequence of a formal act of their
government; all they had done was to decline prohibiting any one from serving
where he chose as a volunteer. It was no longer the fashion to think lightly
of any wars. The senate thanked heaven that Camillus was in office, for
certainly had he been a private citizen he must have been nominated Dictator.
His colleagues admitted that when any alarm arose of threatened war the
supreme direction of everything must be in one man's hands, and they had
made up their minds to subordinate their powers to Camillus, feeling assured
that to enhance his authority in no way derogated from their own. This
action of the consular tribunes met with the hearty approval of the senate,
and Camillus, in modest confusion, returned thanks to them. He went on
to say that a tremendous burden had been laid upon him by the people of
Rome in making him practically Dictator for the fourth time; a heavy responsibility
had been put upon him by the senate, who had passed such a flattering judgment
upon him; heaviest of all by his colleagues in the honour they had done
him. If it were possible for him to show still greater activity and vigilance,
he would strive so to surpass himself that he might make the lofty estimation,
which his fellow-citizens had with such striking unanimity formed of him,
a lasting one. As far as war with the Antiates was concerned, the outlook
was threatening rather than dangerous; at the same time he advised them,
whilst fearing nothing, to treat nothing with indifference. Rome was beset
by the ill-will and hatred of its neighbours, and the interests of the
State therefore required several generals and several armies.
He proceeded: "You, P. Valerius, I wish to associate with myself
in counsel and command, and you will lead the legions in concert with me
against the Antiates. You, Q. Servilius, will keep a second army ready
for instant service encamped by the City, prepared for any movement, such
as recently took place, on the part of Etruria or on the side of the Latins
and Hernicans who are causing us this fresh trouble. I am quite certain
that you will conduct the campaign in a manner worthy of your father, your
grandfather, yourself, and your six tribuneships. A third army must be
raised by L. Quinctius from the seniors, and those excused from service
on grounds of health, to garrison the defences of the City. L. Horatius
is to provide armour, weapons, corn, and everything else required in a
time of war. You, Ser. Cornelius, are appointed by us your colleagues as
president of this Council of State, and guardian of everything pertaining
to religion, of the Assembly, the laws, and all matters touching the City."
All gladly promised to devote themselves to the various duties assigned
them; Valerius, associated in the chief command, added that he should look
upon M. Furius as Dictator and regard himself as his Master of the Horse,
and the estimation in which they held their sole commander should be the
measure of the hopes they entertained as to the issue of the war. The senators,
in high delight, exclaimed that they at all events were full of hope with
regard to war and peace and all that concerned the republic; there would
never be any need for a Dictator when they had such men in office, with
such perfect harmony of feeling, prepared equally to obey or command, conferring
glory on their country instead of appropriating their country's glory to
themselves.
[6.7]After proclaiming a suspension of all
public business and completing the enrolment of troops, Furius and Valerius
proceeded to Satricum. Here the Antiates had massed not only Volscian troops
drawn from a new generation but also an immense body of Latins and Hernicans,
nations whose strength had been growing through long years of peace. This
coalition of new enemies with old ones daunted the spirits of the Roman
soldiers. Camillus was already drawing up his men for battle when the centurions
brought reports to him of the discouragement of his troops, the want of
alacrity in arming themselves, and the hesitation and unwillingness with
which they were marching out of camp. Men were even heard saying that "they
were going to fight one against a hundred, and that such a multitude could
hardly be withstood even if unarmed, much less now that they were in arms."
He at once sprang on his horse, faced the line and, riding along the front,
addressed his men: "What is this gloom, soldiers, this extraordinary
hesitation? Are you strangers to the enemy, or to me, or to yourselves?
As for the enemy - what is he but the means through which you always prove
your courage and win renown? And as for you - not to mention the capture
of Falerii and Veii and the slaughter of the Gaulish legions inside your
captured City - have you not, under my leadership, enjoyed a triple triumph
for a threefold victory over these very Volscians, as well as over the
Aequi and over Etruria? Or is it that you do not recognise me as your general
because I have given the battle signal not as Dictator but as a consular
tribune? I feel no craving for the highest authority over you, nor ought
you to see in me anything beyond what I am in myself; the Dictatorship
has never increased my spirits and energy, nor did my exile diminish them.
We are all of us, then, the same that we have ever been, and since we are
bringing just the same qualities into this war that we have displayed in
all former wars, let us look forward to the same result. As soon as you
meet your foe, every one will do what he has been trained and accustomed
to do; you will conquer, they will fly."
[6.8]Then, after sounding the charge, he
sprang from his horse and, catching hold of the nearest standard-bearer,
he hurried with him against the enemy, exclaiming at the same time: "On,
soldier, with the standard!" When they saw Camillus, weakened as he
was by age, charging in person against the enemy, they all raised the battle-cry
and rushed forward, shouting in all directions, "Follow the General!"
It is stated that by Camillus' orders the standard was flung into the enemy's
lines in order to incite the men of the front rank to recover it. It was
in this quarter that the Antiates were first repulsed, and the panic spread
through the front ranks as far as the reserves. This was due not only to
the efforts of the troops, stimulated as they were by the presence of Camillus,
but also to the terror which his actual appearance inspired in the Volscians,
to whom he was a special object of dread. Thus, wherever he advanced he
carried certain victory with him. This was especially evident in the Roman
left, which was on the point of giving way, when, after flinging himself
on his horse and armed with an infantry shield, he rode up to it and by
simply showing himself and pointing to the rest of the line who were winning
the day, restored the battle. The action was now decided, but owing to
the crowding together of the enemy their flight was impeded and the victorious
soldiers grew weary of the prolonged slaughter of such an enormous number
of fugitives. A sudden storm of rain and wind put an end to what had become
a decisive victory more than a battle. The signal was given to retire,
and the night that followed brought the war to a close without any further
exertions on the part of the Romans, for the Latins and Hernicans left
the Volscians to their fate and started for home, after obtaining a result
correspondent to their evil counsels. When the Volscians found themselves
deserted by the men whom they had relied upon when they renewed hostilities,
they abandoned their camp and shut themselves up in Satricum. At first
Camillus invested them with the usual siege works; but when he found that
no sorties were made to impede his operations, he considered that the enemy
did not possess sufficient courage to justify him in waiting for a victory
of which there was only a distant prospect. After encouraging his soldiers
by telling them not to wear themselves by protracted toil, as though they
were attacking another Veii, for victory was already within their grasp,
he planted scaling ladders all round the walls and took the place by storm.
The Volscians flung away their arms and surrendered.
[6.9]The general, however, had a more important
object in view - Antium, the capital of the Volscians and the starting
point of the last war. Owing to its strength, the capture of that city
could only be effected by a considerable quantity of siege apparatus, artillery,
and war machines. Camillus therefore left his colleague in command and
went to Rome to urge upon the senate the necessity of destroying Antium.
In the middle of his speech - I think it was the will of heaven that Antium
should remain some time longer - envoys arrived from Nepete and Sutrium
begging for help against the Etruscans and pointing out that the chance
of rendering assistance would soon be lost. Fortune diverted Camillus'
energies from Antium to that quarter, for those places, fronting Etruria,
served as gates and barriers on that side, and the Etruscans were anxious
to secure them whenever they were meditating hostilities, whilst the Romans
were equally anxious to recover and hold them. The senate accordingly decided
to arrange with Camillus that he should let Antium go and undertake the
war with Etruria. They assigned to him the legions in the City which Quinctius
was commanding, and though he would have preferred the army which was acting
against the Volsci, of which he had had experience and which was accustomed
to his command, he raised no objection; all he asked for was that Valerius
should share the command with him. Quinctius and Horatius were sent against
the Volscian in succession to Valerius. When they reached Sutrium, Furius
and Valerius found a part of the city in the hands of the Etruscans; in
the rest of the place the inhabitants were with difficulty keeping the
enemy at bay behind barricades which they had erected in the streets. The
approach of succours from Rome and the name of Camillus, famous amongst
allies and enemies alike, relieved the situation for the moment and allowed
time to render assistance. Camillus accordingly formed his army into two
divisions and ordered his colleague to take one round to the side which
the enemy were holding and commence an attack on the walls. This was done
not so much in the hope that the attack would succeed as that the enemy's
attention might be distracted so as to afford a respite to the wearied
defenders and an opportunity for him to effect an entrance into the town
without fighting. The Etruscans, finding themselves attacked on both sides,
the walls being assaulted from without and the townsmen fighting within,
flung themselves in one panic-stricken mass through the only gate which
happened to be clear of the enemy. A great slaughter of the fugitives took
place both in the city and in the fields outside. Furius' men accounted
for many inside the walls, whilst Valerius' troops were more lightly equipped
for pursuit, and they did not put an end to the carnage till nightfall
prevented their seeing any longer. After the recapture of Sutrium and its
restoration to our allies, the army marched to Nepete, which had surrendered
to the Etruscans and of which they were in complete possession.
[6.10]It looked as if the capture of that
city would give more trouble, not only because the whole of it was in the
hands of the enemy, but also because the surrender had been effected through
the treachery of some of the townsfolk. Camillus, however, determined to
send a message to their leaders requesting them to withdraw from the Etruscans
and give a practical proof of that loyalty to allies which they had implored
the Romans to observe towards them. Their reply was that they were powerless;
the Etruscans were holding the walls and guarding the gates. At first it
was sought to intimidate the townsmen by harrying their territory. As,
however, they persisted in adhering more faithfully to the terms of surrender
than to their alliance with Rome, fascines of brushwood were collected
from the surrounding country to fill up the fosse, the army advanced to
the attack, the scaling ladders were placed against the walls, and at the
very first attempt the town was captured. Proclamation was then made that
the Nepesines were to lay down their arms, and all who did so were ordered
to be spared. The Etruscans, whether armed or not, were killed, and the
Nepesines who had been the agents of the surrender were beheaded; the population
who had no share in it received their property back, and the town was left
with a garrison. After thus recovering two cities in alliance with Rome
from the enemy, the consular tribunes led their victorious army, covered
with glory, home. During this year satisfaction was demanded from the Latins
and Hernici; they were asked why they had not for these last few years
furnished a contingent in accordance with the treaty. A full representative
assembly of each nation was held to discuss the terms of the reply. This
was to the effect that it was through no fault or public act of the State
that some of their men had fought in the Volscian ranks; these had paid
the penalty of their folly, not a single one had returned. The reason why
they had supplied no troops was their incessant fear of the Volscians;
this thorn in their side they had not, even after such a long succession
of wars, been able to get rid of. The senate regarded this reply as affording
a justifiable ground for war, but the present time was deemed inopportune.
[6.11]The consular tribunes who succeeded
were A. Manlius, P. Cornelius, T. and L. Quinctius Capitolinus, L. Papirius
Cursor (for the second time), and C. Sergius (for the second time). In
this year a serious war broke out, and a still more serious disturbance
at home. The war was begun by the Volscians, aided by the revolted Latins
and Hernici. The domestic trouble arose in a quarter where it was least
to be apprehended, from a man of patrician birth and brilliant reputation
- M. Manlius Capitolinus. Full of pride and presumption, he looked down
upon the foremost men with scorn; one in particular he regarded with envious
eyes, a man conspicuous for his distinctions and his merits - M. Furius
Camillus. He bitterly resented this man's unique position amongst the magistrates
and in the affections of the army, and declared that he was now such a
superior person that he treated those who had been appointed under the
same auspices as himself, not as his colleagues, but as his servants, and
yet if any one would form a just judgment he would see that M. Furius could
not possibly have rescued his country. When it was beleaguered by the enemy
had not he, Manlius, saved the Capitol and the Citadel? Camillus attacked
the Gauls while they were off their guard, their minds pre-occupied with
obtaining the gold and securing peace; he, on the other hand, had driven
them off when they were armed for battle and actually capturing the Citadel.
Camillus' glory was shared by every man who conquered with him, whereas
no mortal man could obviously claim any part in his victory.
With his head full of these notions and being unfortunately a man of
headstrong and passionate nature, he found that his influence was not so
powerful with the patricians as he thought it ought to be, so he went over
to the plebs - the first patrician to do so - and adopted the political
methods of their magistrates. He abused the senate and courted the populace
and, impelled by the breeze of popular favour more than by conviction or
judgment, preferred notoriety to respectability. Not content with the agrarian
laws which had hitherto always served the tribunes of the plebs as the
material for their agitation, he began to undermine the whole system of
credit, for he saw that the laws of debt caused more irritation than the
others; they not only threatened poverty and disgrace, but they terrified
the freeman with the prospect of fetters and imprisonment. And, as a matter
of fact, a vast amount of debt had been contracted owing to the expense
of building, an expense most ruinous even to the rich. It became, therefore,
a question of arming the government with stronger powers, and the Volscian
war, serious in itself but made much more so by the defection of the Latins
and Hernici, was put forward as the ostensible reason. It was, however,
the revolutionary designs of Manlius that mainly decided the senate to
nominate a Dictator. A. Cornelius Cossus was nominated, and he named T.
Quinctius Capitolinus as his Master of the Horse.
[6.12]Although the Dictator recognised
that a more difficult contest lay before him at home than abroad, he enrolled
his troops and proceeded to the Pomptine territory, which, he heard, had
been invaded by the Volscians. Either he considered it necessary to take
prompt military measures or he hoped to strengthen his hands as Dictator
by a victory and a triumph. I have no doubt that my readers will be tired
of such a long record of incessant wars with the Volscians, but they will
also be struck with the same difficulty which I have myself felt whilst
examining the authorities who lived nearer to the period, namely, from
what source did the Volscians obtain sufficient soldiers after so many
defeats? Since this point has been passed over by the ancient writers,
what can I do more than express an opinion such as any one may form from
his own inferences? Probably, in the interval between one war and another,
they trained each fresh generation against the renewal of hostilities,
as is now done in the enlistment of Roman troops, or their armies were
not always drawn from the same districts, though it was always the same
nation that carried on the war, or there must have been an innumerable
free population in those districts which are barely now kept from desolation
by the scanty tillage of Roman slaves, with hardly so much as a miserably
small recruiting ground for soldiers left. At all events, the authorities
are unanimous in asserting that the Volscians had an immense army in spite
of their having been so lately crippled by the successes of Camillus. Their
numbers were increased by the Latins and Hernici, as well as by a body
of Circeians, and even by a contingent from Velitrae, where there was a
Roman colony.
On the day he arrived the Dictator formed his camp. On the morrow, after
taking the auspices and supplicating the favour of the gods by sacrifice
and prayer, he advanced in high spirits to the soldiers who were already
in the early dawn arming themselves according to orders against the moment
when the signal for battle should be given. "Ours, soldiers,"
he exclaimed, "is the victory, if the gods and their interpreters
see at all into the future. Let us then, as becomes men filled with sure
hopes, who are going to engage an enemy who is no match for us, lay our
javelins at our feet and arm ourselves only with our swords. I would not
even have any running forward from the line; stand firm and receive the
enemy's charge without stirring a foot. When they have hurled their ineffective
missiles and their disordered ranks fling themselves upon you, then let
your swords flash and let every man remember that it is the gods who are
helping the Romans, it is the gods who have sent you into battle with favourable
omens. You, T. Quinctius, keep your cavalry in hand and wait till the fight
has begun, but when you see the lines locked together, foot to foot, then
strike with the terror of your cavalry those who are already overtaken
with other terrors. Charge and scatter their ranks while they are in the
thick of the fight." Cavalry and infantry alike fought in accordance
with their instructions. The commander did not disappoint his soldiers,
nor did Fortune disappoint the commander.
[6.13]The vast host of the enemy, relying
solely on their numbers and measuring the strength of each army merely
by their eyes, went recklessly into the battle and as recklessly abandoned
it. Courageous enough in the battle shout, in discharging their weapons,
in making the first charge, they were unable to stand the foot to foot
fighting and the looks of their opponents, glowing with the ardour of battle.
Their front was driven in and the demoralisation extended to the supports;
the charge of the cavalry produced fresh panic; the ranks were broken in
many places, the whole army was in commotion and resembled a retreating
wave. When each of them saw that as those in front fell he would be the
next to be cut down, they turned and fled. The Romans pressed hard upon
them, and as long as the enemy defended themselves whilst retreating, it
was the infantry to whom the task of pursuit fell. When they were seen
to be throwing away their arms in all directions and dispersing over the
fields, the signal was given for the squadrons of cavalry to be launched
against them, and these were instructed not to lose time by cutting down
individual fugitives and to give the main body a chance of escaping. It
would be enough to check them by hurling missiles and galloping across
their front, and generally terrifying them until the infantry could come
up and regularly dispatch the enemy. The flight and pursuit did not end
till nightfall. The Volscian camp was taken and plundered on the same day,
and all the booty, with the exception of the prisoners, was bestowed on
the soldiers. The majority of the captives belonged to the Hernici and
Latins, not men of the plebeian class, who might have been regarded as
only mercenaries, they were found to include some of the principal men
of their fighting force, a clear proof that those States had formally assisted
the enemy. Some were also recognised as belonging to Circeii and to the
colony at Velitrae. They were all sent to Rome and examined by the leaders
of the senate; they gave them the same replies which they had made to the
Dictator, and disclosed without any attempt at evasion the defection of
their respective nations.
[6.14]The Dictator kept his army permanently
encamped, fully expecting that the senate would declare war against those
peoples. A much greater trouble at home, however, necessitated his recall.
The sedition which, owing to its ringleader's work, was exceptionally alarming,
was gaining strength from day to day. For to any one who looked at his
motives, not only the speeches, but still more the conduct of M. Manlius,
though ostensibly in the interest of the people, would have appeared revolutionary
and dangerous. When he saw a centurion, a distinguished soldier, led away
as an adjudged debtor, he ran into the middle of the Forum with his crowd
of supporters and laid his hand on him. After declaiming against the tyranny
of patricians and the brutality of usurers and the wretched condition of
the plebs he said: " It was then in vain that I with this right hand
saved the Capitol and Citadel if I have to see a fellow-citizen and a comrade
in arms carried off to chains and slavery just as though he had been captured
by the victorious Gauls." Then, before all the people, he paid the
sum due to the creditors, and after thus freeing the man by "copper
and scales," sent him home. The released debtor appealed to gods and
men to reward Manlius, his deliverer and the beneficial protector of the
Roman plebs. A noisy crowd immediately surrounded him, and he increased
the excitement by displaying the scars left by wounds he had received in
the wars against Veii and the Gauls and in recent campaigns. "Whilst,"
he cried, "I was serving in the field and whilst I was trying to restore
my desolated home, I paid in interest an amount equal to many times the
principal, but as the fresh interest always exceeded my capital, I was
buried beneath the load of debt. It is owing to M. Manlius that I can now
look upon the light of day, the Forum, the faces of my fellow-citizens;
from him I have received all the kindness which a parent can show to a
child; to him I devote all that remains of my bodily powers, my blood,
my life. In that one man is centered everything that binds me to my home,
my country, and my country's gods."
The plebs, wrought upon by this language, had now completely espoused
this one man's cause, when another circumstance occurred, still more calculated
to create universal confusion. Manlius brought under the auctioneer's hammer
an estate in the Veientine territory which comprised the principal part
of his patrimony - "In order," he said, "that as long as
any of my property remains, I may prevent any of you Quirites from being
delivered up to your creditors as judgment debtors." This roused them
to such a pitch that it was quite clear that they would follow the champion
of their liberties through anything, right or wrong. To add to the mischief,
he delivered speeches in his own house, as though he were haranguing the
Assembly, full of calumnious abuse of the senate. Indifferent to the truth
or falsehood of what he said, he declared, among other things, that the
stores of gold collected for the Gauls were being hidden away by the patricians;
they were no longer content with appropriating the public lands unless
they could also embezzle the public funds; if that affair were brought
to light, the debts of the plebs could be wiped off. With this hope held
out to them they thought it a most shameful proceeding that whilst the
gold got together to ransom the City from the Gauls had been raised by
general taxation, this very gold when recovered from the enemy had become
the plunder of a few. They insisted therefore, on finding out where this
vast stolen booty was concealed, and as Manlius kept putting them off and
announcing that he would choose his own time for the disclosure, the universal
interest became absorbed in this question to the exclusion of everything
else. There would clearly be no limit to their gratitude if his information
proved correct, or to their displeasure if it turned out to be false.
[6.15]Whilst matters were in this state
of suspense the Dictator had been summoned from the army and arrived in
the City. After satisfying himself as to the state of public feeling he
called a meeting of the senate for the following day and ordered them to
remain in constant attendance upon him. He then ordered his chair of office
to be placed on the tribunal in the Comitium and, surrounded by the senators
as a bodyguard, sent his officer to M. Manlius. On receiving the Dictator's
summons Manlius gave his party a signal that a conflict was imminent and
appeared before the tribunal with an immense crowd round him. On the one
side the senate, on the other side the plebs, each with their eyes fixed
on their respective leaders, stood facing one another as though drawn up
for battle. After silence was obtained, the Dictator said: "I wish
the senate and myself could come to an understanding with the plebs on
all other matters as easily as, I am convinced, we shall about you and
the subject on which I am about to examine you. I see that you have led
your fellow-citizens to expect that all debts can be paid without any loss
to the creditors out of the treasure recovered from the Gauls, which you
say the leading patricians are secreting. I am so far from wishing to hinder
this project that, on the contrary, I challenge you, M. Manlius, to take
off from their hidden hordes those who, like sitting hens, are brooding
over treasures which belong to the State. If you fail to do this, either
because you yourself have your part in the spoils or because your charge
is unfounded, I shall order you to be thrown into prison and will not suffer
the people to be excited by the false hopes which you have raised.
Manlius said in reply that he had not been mistaken in his suspicions;
it was not against the Volscians who were treated as enemies whenever it
was in the interest of the patricians so to treat them, nor against the
Latins and Hernici whom they were driving to arms by false charges, that
a Dictator had been appointed, but against him and the Roman plebs. They
had dropped their pretended war and were now attacking him; the Dictator
was openly declaring himself the protector of the usurers against the plebeians;
the gratitude and affection which the people were showing towards himself
were being made the ground for charges against him which would ruin him.
He proceeded: "The crowd which I have round me is an offence in your
eyes, A. Cornelius, and in yours, senators. Then why do you not each of
you withdraw it from me by acts of kindness, by offering security, by releasing
your fellow-citizens from the stocks, by preventing them from being adjudged
to their creditors, by supporting others in their necessity out of the
superabundance of your own wealth? But why should I urge you to spend your
own money? Be content with a moderate capital, deduct from the principal
what has already been paid in interest, then the crowd round me will be
no more noticeable than that round any one else. But do I alone show this
anxiety for my fellow-citizens? I can only answer that question as I should
answer another - Why did I alone save the Capitol and the Citadel? Then
I did what I could to save the body of citizens as a whole, now I am doing
what I can to help individuals. As to the gold of the Gauls, your question
throws difficulties round a thing which is simple enough in itself. For
why do you ask me about a matter which is within your own knowledge? Why
do you order what is in your purse to be shaken out from it rather than
surrender it voluntarily, unless there is some dishonesty at bottom? The
more you order your conjuring tricks to be detected, the more, I fear,
will you hoodwink those who are watching you. It is not I who ought to
be compelled to discover your plunder for you, it is you who ought to be
compelled to publicly produce it."
The Dictator ordered him to drop all subterfuge, and insisted upon his
either adducing trustworthy evidence or admitting that he had been guilty
of concocting false accusations against the senate and exposing them to
odium on a baseless charge of theft. He refused, and said he would not
speak at the bidding of his enemies, whereupon the Dictator ordered him
to be taken to prison. When apprehended by the officer he exclaimed: "Jupiter
Optimus Maximus, Queen Juno, Minerva, all ye gods and goddesses who dwell
in the Capitol, do ye suffer your soldier and defender to be thus persecuted
by his enemies? Shall this right hand with which I drove the Gauls from
your shrines be manacled and fettered?" None could endure to see or
hear the indignity offered him, but the State, in its absolute submission
to lawful authority, had imposed upon itself limits which could not be
passed; neither the tribunes of the plebs nor the plebeians themselves
ventured to cast an angry look or breathe a syllable against the action
of the Dictator. It seems pretty certain that after Manlius was thrown
into prison, a great number of plebeians went into mourning; many let their
hair grow, and the vestibule of the prison was beset by a depressed and
sorrowful crowd. The Dictator celebrated his triumph over the Volscians,
but his triumph increased his unpopularity; men complained that the victory
was won at home, not in the field, over a citizen, not over an enemy. One
thing alone was lacking in the pageant of tyranny, Manlius was not led
in procession before the victor's chariot. Matters were rapidly drifting
towards sedition, and the senate took the initiative in endeavouring to
calm the prevailing unrest. Before any demand had been put forward they
ordered that 2000 Roman citizens should be settled as colonists at Satricum,
and each receive two and a half jugera of land. This was regarded as too
small a grant, distributed amongst too small a number; it was looked upon,
in fact, as a bribe for the betrayal of Manlius, and the proposed remedy
only inflamed the disease. By this time the crowd of Manlian sympathisers
had become conspicuous for their dirty garments and dejected looks. It
was not till the Dictator laid down his office after his triumph and so
removed the terror which he inspired that the tongues and spirits of men
were once more free.
[6.17]Men were heard openly reproaching
the populace for always encouraging their defenders till they led them
to the brink of the precipice and deserting them when the moment of danger
actually came. It was in this way, they said, that Sp. Cassius, while seeking
to get the plebs on to the land, and Sp. Maelius, whilst staving off famine
at his own cost from the mouths of his fellow-citizens, had both been crushed;
it was in this way that M. Manlius was betrayed to his foes, whilst rescuing
a part of the community who were overwhelmed and submerged by usurious
extortion and bringing them back to light and liberty. The plebs fattened
up their own defenders for slaughter. Was it not to be permitted that a
man of consular rank should refuse to answer at the beck and call of a
Dictator ? Assuming that he had previously been speaking falsely, and had
therefore no reply ready at the time, was there ever a slave who had been
thrown into prison as a punishment for lying? Had they forgotten that night
which was all but a final and eternal night for Rome? Could they not recall
the sight of the troop of Gauls climbing up over the Tarpeian rock, or
that of Manlius himself as they had actually seen him, covered with blood
and sweat, after rescuing, one might almost say, Jupiter himself from the
hands of the enemy. Had they discharged their obligation to the saviour
of their country by giving him half a pound of corn each? Was the man whom
they almost regarded as a god, whom they at all events placed on a level
with Jupiter of the Capitol by giving him the epithet of Capitolinus -
was that man to be allowed to drag out his life in chains and darkness
at the mercy of the executioner? Had the help of one man sufficed to save
all, and was there amongst them all no help to be found for that one man?
By this time the crowd refused to leave the spot even at night, and were
threatening to break open the prison when the senate conceded what they
were going to extort by violence, and passed a resolution that Manlius
should be released. This did not put an end to the seditious agitation,
it simply provided it with a leader. During this time the Latins and Hernici,
together with the colonists from Circeii and Velitrae, sent to Rome to
clear themselves from the charge of being concerned in the Volscian war
and to ask for the surrender of their countrymen who had been made prisoners,
that they might proceed against them under their own laws. An unfavourable
reply was given to the Latins and Hernici, a still more unfavourable one
to the colonists, because they had entertained the impious project of attacking
their mother country. Not only was the surrender of the prisoners refused,
but they received a stern warning from the senate, which was withheld from
the Latins and Hernici, to make their way speedily from the City out of
the sight of the Roman people; otherwise they would be no longer protected
by the rights of ambassadors, rights which were established for foreigners,
not for citizens.
[6.18]At the close of the year, amidst
the growing agitation headed by Manlius, the elections were held. The new
consular tribunes were: Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis and P. Valerius Potitus
(each for the second time), M. Furius Camillus (for the fifth time), Ser.
Sulpicius Rufus (for the second time), C. Papirius Crassus and T. Quinctius
Cincinnatus (for the second time). The year opened in peace, which was
most opportune for both patricians and plebeians - for the plebs, because
as they were not called away to serve in the ranks, they hoped to secure
relief from the burden of debt, especially now that they had such a strong
leader; for the patricians, as no external alarms would distract their
minds from dealing with their domestic troubles. As each side was more
prepared for the struggle it could not long be delayed. Manlius, too, was
inviting the plebeians to his house and discussing night and day revolutionary
plans with their leaders in a much more aggressive and resentful spirit
than formerly. His resentment was kindled by the recent humiliation inflicted
on a spirit unaccustomed to disgrace; his aggressiveness was encouraged
by his belief that the Dictator had not ventured to treat him as Quinctius
Cincinnatus had treated Sp. Maelius, for not only had the Dictator avoided
the odium created by his imprisonment through resignation, but even the
senate had not been able to face it.
Emboldened and embittered by these considerations, he roused the passions
of the plebs, who were already incensed enough, to a higher pitch by his
harangues. "How long, pray," he asked, " are you going to
remain in ignorance of your strength, an ignorance which nature forbids
even to beasts? Do at least reckon up your numbers and those of your opponents.
Even if you were going to attack them on equal terms, man for man, I believe
that you would fight more desperately for freedom than they for power.
But you are much more numerous, for all you who have been in attendance
on your patrons as clients will now confront them as adversaries. You have
only to make a show of war and you will have peace. Let them see you are
prepared to use force, they will abate their claims. You must dare something
as a body or you will have to suffer everything as individuals. How long
will you look to me? I certainly shall not fail you, see to it that Fortune
does not fail me. I, your avenger, when your enemies thought fit was suddenly
reduced to nothing, and you watched the man carried off to prison who had
warded off imprisonment from so many of you. What have I to hope for, if
my enemies dare to do more to me? Am I to look for the fate of Cassius
and Maelius? It is all very well to cry in horror, ' The gods will prevent
that,' but they will never come down from heaven on my account. You must
prevent it; they must give you the courage to do so, as they gave me courage
to defend you as a soldier from the barbarian enemy and as a civilian from
your tyrannical fellow-citizens. Is the spirit of this great nation so
small that you will always remain contented with the aid which your tribunes
now afford you against your enemies, and never know any subject of dispute
with the patricians, except as to how far you allow them to lord it over
you ? This is not your natural instinct, you are the slaves of habit. For
why is it that you display such spirit towards foreign nations as to think
it fair and just that you should rule over them? Because with them you
have been wont to contend for dominion, while against these domestic enemies
it has been a contest for liberty, which you have mostly attempted rather
than maintained. Still, whatever leaders you have had, whatever qualities
you yourselves have shown, you have so far, either by your strength or
your good fortune, achieved every object, however great, on which you have
set your hearts. Now it is time to attempt greater things. If you will
only put your own good fortune to the test, if you will only put me to
the test, who have already been tested fortunately, I hope, for you, you
will have less trouble in setting up some one to lord it over the patricians
than you have had in setting up men to resist their lording it over you.
Dictatorships and consulships must be levelled to the ground in order that
the Roman plebs may lift up its head. Take your places, then, in the Forum;
prevent any judgment for debt from being pronounced. I profess myself the
Patron of the plebs, a title with which my care and fidelity have invested
me; if you prefer to designate your leader by any other title of honour
or command, you will find in him a more powerful instrument for attaining
the objects you desire." It is said that this was the first step in
his attempt to secure kingly power, but there is no clear tradition as
to his fellow-conspirators or the extent to which his plans were developed
[6.19]On the other side, however, the senate
were discussing this secession of the plebs to a private house, which happened
to be situated on the Capitol, and the great danger with which liberty
was menaced. A great many exclaimed that what was wanted was a Servilius
Ahala, who would not simply irritate an enemy to the State by ordering
him to be sent to prison, but would put an end to the intestine war by
the sacrifice of a single citizen. They finally took refuge in a resolution
which was milder in its terms but possessed equal force, viz., that "the
magistrates should see to it that the republic received no hurt from the
mischievous designs of M. Manlius." Thereupon the consular tribunes
and the tribunes of the plebs - for these latter recognised that the end
of liberty would also be the end of their power, and had, therefore, placed
themselves under the authority of the senate - all consulted together as
to what were the necessary steps to take. As no one could suggest anything
but the employment of force and its inevitable bloodshed, while this would
obviously lead to a frightful struggle, M. Menenius and Q. Publilius, tribunes
of the plebs, spoke as follows: "Why are we making that which ought
to be a contest between the State and one pestilent citizen into a conflict
between patricians and plebeians? Why do we attack the plebs through him
when it is so much safer to attack him through the plebs, so that he may
sink into ruin under the weight of his own strength? It is our intention
to fix a day for his trial. Nothing is less desired by the people than
kingly power. As soon as that body of plebeians become aware that the quarrel
is not with them, and find that from being his supporters they have become
his judges; as soon as they see a patrician on his trial, and learn that
the charge before them is one of aiming at monarchy, they will not show
favour to any man more than to their own liberty."
[6.20]Amidst universal approval they fixed
a day for the trial of Manlius. There was at first much perturbation amongst
the plebs, especially when they saw him going about in mourning garb without
a single patrician, or any of his relatives or connections and, strangest
of all, neither of his brothers, Aulus and Titus Manlius, being similarly
attired. For up to that day such a thing had never been known, that at
such a crisis in a man's fate even those nearest to him did not put on
mourning. They remembered that when Appius Claudius was thrown into prison,
his personal enemy, Caius Claudius, and the whole house of the Claudii,
wore mourning. They regarded it as a conspiracy to crush a popular hero,
because he was the first man to go over from the patricians to the plebs.
What evidence strictly bearing out the charge of treason was adduced by
the prosecution at the actual trial, beyond the gatherings at his house,
his seditious utterances, and his false statement about the gold, I do
not find stated by any authority. But I have no doubt that it was anything
but slight, for the hesitation shown by the people in finding him guilty
was not due to the merits of the case, but to the locality where the trial
took place. This is a thing to be noted in order that men may see how great
and glorious deeds are not only deprived of all merit, but made positively
hateful by a loathesome hankering after kingly power.
He is said to have produced nearly four hundred people to whom he had
advanced money without interest, whom he had prevented from being sold
up and having their persons adjudged to their creditors. It is stated that
besides this he not only enumerated his military distinctions, but brought
them forward for inspection; the spoils of as many as thirty enemies whom
he had slain, gifts from commanders-in-chief to the number of forty, amongst
them two mural crowns and eight civil ones. In addition to these, he produced
citizens whom he had rescued from the enemy, and named C. Servilius, Master
of the Horse, who was not present, as one of them. After he had recalled
his warlike achievements in a great speech corresponding to the loftiness
of his theme, his language rising to the level of his exploits, he bared
his breast, ennobled by the scars of battle, and looking towards the Capitol
repeatedly invoked Jupiter and the other deities to come to the aid of
his shattered fortunes. He prayed that they would, in this crisis of his
fate, inspire the Roman people with the same feeling with which they inspired
him when he was protecting the Citadel and the Capitol and so saving Rome.
Then turning to his judges, he implored them one and all to judge his cause
with their eyes fixed on the Capitol, looking towards the immortal gods.
As it was in the Campus Martius that the people were to vote in their
centuries, and the defendant, stretching forth his hands towards the Capitol,
had turned from men to the gods in his prayers, it became evident to the
tribunes that unless they could release men's spell-bound eyes from the
visible reminder of his glorious deed, their minds, wholly possessed with
the sense of the service he had done them, would find no place for charges
against him, however true. So the proceedings were adjourned to another
day, and the people were summoned to an Assembly in the Peteline Grove
outside the Flumentan Gate, from which the Capitol was not visible. Here
the charge was established, and with hearts steeled against his appeals,
they passed a dreadful sentence, abhorrent even to the judges. Some authorities
assert that he was sentenced by the duumvirs, who were appointed to try
cases of treason. The tribunes hurled him from the Tarpeian rock, and the
place which was the monument of his exceptional glory became also the scene
of his final punishment. After his death two stigmas were affixed to his
memory. One by the State. His house stood where now the temple and mint
of Juno Moneta stand, a measure was consequently brought before the people
that no patrician should occupy a dwelling within the Citadel or on the
Capitoline. The other by the members of his house, who made a decree forbidding
any one henceforth to assume the names of Marcus Manlius. Such was the
end of a man who, had he not been born in a free State, would have attained
distinction. When danger was no longer to be feared from him the people,
remembering only his virtues, soon began to regret his loss. A pestilence
which followed shortly after and inflicted great mortality, for which no
cause could be assigned, was thought by a great many people to be due to
the execution of Manlius. They imagined that the Capitol had been polluted
by the blood of its deliverer, and that the gods had been displeased at
a punishment having been inflicted almost before their eyes on the man
by whom their temples had been wrested from an enemy's hands.
[6.21]The pestilence was followed by scarcity,
and the widespread rumour of these two troubles was followed the next year
by a number of wars. The consular tribunes were: L. Valerius (for the fourth
time), A. Manlius, Ser. Sulpicius, L. Lucretius, and L. Aemilius (all for
the third time), and M. Trebonius. In addition to the Volscians, who seemed
destined by some fate to keep the Roman soldiery in perpetual training;
in addition to the colonies of Circeii and Velitrae, who had long been
meditating revolt; in addition to Latium, which was an object of suspicion,
a new enemy suddenly appeared at Lanuvium, which had hitherto been a most
loyal city. The senate thought this was due to a feeling of contempt because
the revolt of their countrymen at Velitrae had remained so long unpunished.
They accordingly passed a decree that the people should be asked as soon
as possible to consent to a declaration of war against them. To make the
plebs more ready to enter on this campaign, five commissioners were appointed
to distribute the Pomptine territory and three to settle a colony at Nepete.
Then the proposal was submitted to the people, and in spite of the protests
of the tribunes the tribes unanimously declared for war. Preparations for
war continued throughout the year, but, owing to the pestilence, the army
was not led out. This delay allowed the colonists time for propitiating
the senate, and there was a considerable party amongst them in favour of
sending a deputation to Rome to ask for pardon. But, as usual, the interest
of the State was bound up with the interests of individuals, and the authors
of the revolt, fearing that they alone would be held responsible and surrendered,
in consequence, to appease the resentment of the Romans, turned the colonists
from all thoughts of peace. Nor did they confine themselves to persuading
their senate to veto the proposed embassy; they stirred up a large number
of the plebs to make a predatory incursion on Roman territory. This fresh
outrage destroyed all hopes of peace. This year, for the first time, there
arose a rumour of a revolt at Praeneste, but when the people of Tusculum,
Gabinii, and Labici, whose territories had been invaded, laid a formal
complaint, the senate took it so calmly that it was evident they did believe
the charge because they did not wish it to be true.
[6.22]Sp. and L. Papirius, the new consular
tribunes, marched with the legions to Velitrae. Their four colleagues,
Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis, Q. Servilius, C. Sulpicius, and L. Aemilius
were left to defend the City and to meet any fresh movement in Etruria,
for danger was suspected everywhere on that side. At Velitrae, where the
auxiliaries from Praeneste were almost more numerous than the colonists
themselves, an engagement took place in which the Romans soon won the day,
for as the city was so near, the enemy took to flight early in the battle
and made for the city as their one refuge. The tribunes abstained from
storming the place, for they were doubtful of success and did not think
it right to reduce the colony to ruin. The dispatches to the senate announcing
the victory were more severe on the Praenestines than on the Veliternians.
Accordingly, by a decree of the senate confirmed by the people, war was
declared against Praeneste. The Praenestines joined forces with the Volscians
and in the following year took by storm the Roman colony of Satricum, after
an obstinate defence, and made a brutal use of their victory. This incident
exasperated the Romans. They elected M. Furius Camillus as consular tribune
for the sixth time, and gave him four colleagues, A. and L. Postumius Regillensis,
L. Furius, L. Lucretius, and M. Fabius Ambustus. By a special decree of
the senate the war with the Volscians was entrusted to M. Furius Camillus;
the tribune chosen by lot as his coadjutor was L. Furius, not so much,
as it turned out, in the interest of the State, as in the interest of his
colleague, for whom he served as the means of gaining fresh renown. He
gained it on public grounds by restoring the fortunes of the State which
had been brought low by the other's rashness, and on private grounds, because
he was more anxious to win the other's gratitude after retrieving his error
than to win glory for himself. Camillus was now advanced in age, and after
being elected was prepared to make the usual affidavit declining office
on the grounds of health, but the people refused to allow him. His vigorous
breast was still animated by an energy unweakened by age, his senses were
unimpaired, and his interest in political affairs was lost in the prospect
of war. Four legions were enrolled, each consisting of 4000 men. The army
was ordered to muster the next day at the Esquiline Gate and at once marched
for Satricum. Here the captors of the colony awaited him, their decided
superiority of numbers inspiring them with complete confidence. When they
found that the Romans were approaching they advanced at once to battle,
anxious to bring matters to a decisive issue as soon as possible. They
imagined that this would prevent the inferiority in numbers of their opponents
from being in any way aided by the skill of their commander, which they
looked upon as the sole ground of confidence for the Romans.
[6.23]The same eagerness for battle was
felt by the Roman army and by Camillus' colleague. Nothing stood in the
way of their hazarding an immediate engagement except the prudence and
authority of one man, who was seeking an opportunity, by protracting the
war, for aiding the strength of his force by strategy. This made the enemy
more insistent; they not only deployed their lines in front of their camp,
but even marched forward in the middle of the plain and showed their supercilious
confidence in their numbers by advancing their standards close to the Roman
entrenchments. This made the Romans indignant, still more so L. Furius.
Young and naturally high-tempered, he was now infected with the hopefulness
of the rank and file whose spirits were rising with very little to justify
their confidence. He increased their excitement by belittling the authority
of his colleague on the score of his age, the only possible reason he had
for doing so; he declared that wars were the province of the younger men,
for courage grows and decays in correspondence with the bodily powers.
"Camillus," he said, "once a most active warrior, had now
become a laggard; he, whose habit it had been, immediately on arriving
at camps or cities, to take them at the first assault, was now wasting
time and stagnating inside his lines. What accession to his own strength
or diminution of the enemy's strength was he hoping for? What favourable
chance, what opportune moment, what ground on which to employ his strategy?
The old man's plans had lost all fire and life. Camillus had had his share
of life as well as glory. What was gained by letting the strength of a
State which ought to be immortal share in the senile decay of one mortal
frame?"
By speeches of this kind he had brought over the whole camp to his view
and in many quarters they were demanding to be led to immediate battle.
Addressing Camillus, he said: "M. Furius, we cannot resist the impetuosity
of the soldiers, and the enemy to whom we have given fresh courage by our
hesitation are now showing intolerable contempt for us. You are one against
all; yield to the universal desire and allow yourself to be overcome in
argument that you may the sooner overcome in battle." In his reply,
Camillus said that in all the wars he had waged down to that day, as sole
commander, neither he nor the Roman people had had any reason to complain
of either his generalship or his good fortune. Now he was aware that he
had as a colleague one who was his equal in authority and rank, his superior
in physical strength and activity. As for the army, he had been accustomed
to direct and not to be directed, but as for his colleague, he could not
hamper his authority. Let him do with the help of heaven whatever he considered
best for the State. He begged that owing to his years he might be excused
from being in the front line; whatever duties an old man could discharge
in battle, in these he would not show himself lacking. He prayed to the
immortal gods that no mischance might make them feel that his plan after
all was the best. His salutory advice was not listened to by men, nor was
his patriotic prayer heard by the gods. His colleague who had determined
on battle drew up the front line, Camillus formed a powerful reserve and
posted a strong force in front of the camp. He himself took his station
on some rising ground and anxiously awaited the result of tactics so different
from his own.
[6.24]No sooner had their arms clashed
together at the first onset than the enemy began to retire, not through
fear but for tactical reasons. Behind them the ground rose gently up to
their camp, and owing to their preponderance in numbers they had been able
to leave several cohorts armed and drawn up for action in their camp. After
the battle had begun these were to make a sortie as soon as the enemy were
near their entrenchments. In pursuing the retiring enemy the Romans had
been drawn on to the rising ground and were in some disorder. Seizing their
opportunity the enemy made their charge from the camp. It was the victors'
turn now to be alarmed, and this new danger and the uphill fighting made
the Roman line give ground. Whilst the Volscians who had charged from the
camp pressed home their attack, the others who had made the pretended flight
renewed the contest. At last the Romans no longer retired in order; forgetting
their recent battle-ardour and their old renown they began to flee in all
directions, and in wild disorder were making for their camp. Camillus,
after being assisted to mount by those around, hastily brought up the reserves
and blocked their flight. "Is this, soldiers," he cried, "the
battle which you were clamouring for? Who is the man, who is the god that
you can throw the blame upon? Then you were foolhardy; now you are cowards.
You have been following another captain, now follow Camillus and conquer,
as you are accustomed to do, under my leadership. Why are you looking at
the rampart and the camp? Not a man of you shall enter there unless you
are victorious." A feeling of shame at first arrested their disorderly
flight, then, when they saw the standards brought round and the line turning
to face the enemy, and their leader, illustrious through a hundred triumphs
and now venerable through age, showing himself amongst the foremost ranks,
where the risk and toil were greatest, mutual reproaches mingled with words
of encouragement were heard through the whole field till finally they burst
into a ringing cheer.
The other tribune did not show himself wanting to the occasion. Whilst
his colleague was rallying the infantry he was sent to the cavalry. He
did not venture to censure them - his share in their fault left him too
little authority for that - but dropping all tone of command he implored
them one and all to clear him from the guilt of that day's misfortunes.
"In spite," he said, "of the refusal and opposition of my
colleague I preferred to associate myself with the rashness of all rather
than with the prudence of one. Whatever your fortunes may be, Camillus
sees his own glory reflected in them; I, unless the day is won, shall have
the utter wretchedness of sharing the fortunes of all but bearing the infamy
alone." As the infantry were wavering it seemed best for the cavalry,
after dismounting and leaving their horses to be held, to attack the enemy
on foot. Conspicuous for their arms and dashing courage they went wherever
they saw the infantry force pressed. Officers and men emulated each other
in fighting with a determination and courage which never slackened. The
effect of such strenuous bravery was shown in the result; the Volscians
who a short time before had given ground in simulated fear were now scattered
in real panic. A large number were killed in the actual battle and the
subsequent flight, others in the camp, which was carried in the same charge;
there were more prisoners, however, than slain.
[6.25]On examining the prisoners, it was
discovered that some were from Tusculum; these were brought separately
before the tribunes and on being questioned admitted that their State authorised
their taking up arms. Alarmed at the prospect of a war so close to the
City, Camillus said that he would at once conduct the prisoners to Rome
so that the senate might not remain in ignorance of the fact that the Tusculans
had abandoned the alliance with Rome. His colleague might, if he thought
good, remain in command of the army in camp. One day's experience had taught
him not to prefer his own counsels to wiser ones, but even so, neither
he nor any one in the army supposed that Camillus would calmly pass over
that blunder of his by which the republic had been exposed to headlong
disaster. Both in the army and at Rome it was universally remarked that
in the chequered fortune which had attended the Volscian campaign, the
blame for the unsuccessful battle and flight would be visited on L. Furius,
the glory of the successful one would rest with M. Furius Camillus. After
the examination of the prisoners the senate resolved upon war with Tusculum,
and entrusted the conduct of it to Camillus. He requested that he might
have one coadjutor, and on receiving permission to choose whom he would,
he selected, to every one's surprise, L. Furius. By this act of generosity
he removed the stigma attaching to his colleague and won great glory for
himself.
But there was no war with the Tusculans. Unable to resist the attack
of Rome by force of arms they turned it aside by a firm and lasting peace.
When the Romans entered their territory, there was no flight of the inhabitants
from the places near their line of march, the cultivation of the fields
was not interrupted, the gates of the city stood open, and the townsmen
in civic attire came in crowds to meet the commanders, whilst provisions
for the camp were brought ungrudgingly from town and country. Camillus
fixed his camp in front of the gates and decided to ascertain for himself
whether the peaceful aspect which things wore in the country prevailed
within the walls as well. Inside the city he found the doors of the houses
standing open and all kinds of things exposed for sale in the stalls; the
workmen all busy at their respective tasks and the schools humming with
the voices of the children learning to read; the streets filled with crowds,
including women and children going in all directions about their business
and wearing an expression free not only from fear but even from surprise.
He looked everywhere in vain for some signs of war; there was not the slightest
trace of anything having been removed or brought forward just for the moment;
all things looked so calm and peaceful that it seemed hardly possible that
the bruit of war could have reached them.
[6.26]Disarmed by the submissive demeanour
of the enemy he gave orders for the senate to be summoned. He then addressed
them in the following terms: "Men of Tusculum, you are the only people
who have discovered the true weapons, the true strength, with which to
protect yourselves from the wrath of Rome. Go to the senate at Rome; they
will decide aright whether your past offence deserves punishment most or
your present submission, pardon. I will not anticipate the grace and favour
which the State may show you; you shall receive from me the permission
to plead for forgiveness; the senate will vouchsafe to your supplication
the answer which shall seem good to them." After the arrival of the
Tusculan senators in Rome, when the mournful countenances of those who
a few weeks before had been staunch allies were seen in the vestibule of
the Senate-house, the Roman senate were touched with pity and at once ordered
them to be called in as guest-friends rather than as enemies. The Dictator
of Tusculum was the spokesman. "Senators," he said, "we
against whom you have declared and commenced hostilities, went out to meet
your generals and your legions armed and equipped just as you see us now
standing in the vestibule of your House. This civilian dress has always
been the dress of our order and of our plebs and ever will be, unless at
any time we receive from you arms for your defence. We are grateful to
your generals and to your armies because they trusted their eyes rather
than their ears, and did not make enemies where none existed. We ask of
you the peace which we have ourselves observed, and pray you to turn the
tide of war where a state of war exists; if we are to learn by painful
experience the power which your arms can exert against us, we will learn
it without using arms ourselves. This is our determination - may the gods
make it as fortunate as it is dutiful! As for the accusations which induced
you to declare war, although it is unnecessary to refute in words what
has been disproved by facts, still, even supposing them to be true, we
believe that it would have been safe to admit them, since we should have
given such evident proofs of repentance. Let us acknowledge that we have
wronged you, if only you are worthy to receive such satisfaction."
This was practically what the Tusculans said. They obtained peace at the
time and not long after full citizenship. The legions were marched back
from Tusculum.
[6.27]After thus distinguishing himself
by his skill and courage in the Volscian war and bringing the expedition
against Tusculum to such a happy termination, and on both occasions treating
his colleague with singular consideration and forbearance, Camillus went
out of office. The consular tribunes for the next year were: Lucius Valerius
(for the fifth time) and Publius (for the third time), C. Sergius (also
for the third time), L. Menenius (for the second time), P. Papirius, and
Ser. Cornelius Maluginensis. This year it was found necessary to appoint
censors, mainly owing to the vague rumours which were afloat about the
burden of debt. The plebeian tribunes, in order to stir up ill-feeling
exaggerated the amount, while it was underestimated by those whose interest
it was to represent the difficulty as due to the unwillingness rather than
the inability of the debtor to pay. The censors appointed were C. Sulpicius
Camerinius and Sp. Postumius Regillensis. They commenced a fresh assessment,
but the work was interrupted by the death of Postumius, because it was
doubtful whether the co-optation of a colleague, in the case of the censors,
was permissible. Sulpicius accordingly resigned, and fresh magistrates
were appointed, but owing to some flaw in their election did not act. Religious
fears deterred them from proceeding to a third election; it seemed as though
the gods would not allow a censorship for that year. The tribunes declared
that such mockery was intolerable. "The senate," according to
them, "dreaded the publication of the assessment lists, which supplied
information as to every man's property, because they did not wish the amount
of the debtor to be brought to light, for it would show how one half of
the community was being ruined by the other half, while the debt-burdened
plebs were all the time being exposed to one enemy after another. Excuses
for war were being sought indiscriminately in every direction; the legions
were marched from Antium to Satricum, from Satricum to Velitrae, from there
to Tusculum. And now the Latins, the Hernici, and the Praenestines were
being threatened with hostilities in order that the patricians might wreak
their vengeance on their fellow-citizens more even than upon the enemy.
They were wearing out the plebs by keeping them under arms and not allowing
them any breathing time in the City or any leisure for thoughts of liberty,
or any possibility for taking their place in the Assembly, where they might
listen to the voice of a tribune urging the reduction of interest and the
redress of other grievances. Why, if the plebs had spirit enough to recall
to mind the liberties which their fathers won, they would never suffer
a Roman citizen to be made over to his creditors, nor would they permit
an army to be raised until an account was taken of the existing debt and
some method of reducing it discovered, so that each man might know what
he actually owed, and what was left for himself -whether his person was
free or whether that, too, was due to the stocks." The premium thus
put upon sedition made it at once more active. Many cases were occurring
of men being made over to their creditors, and in view of a war with Praeneste,
the senate had resolved that fresh legions should be enrolled, but both
these proceedings were arrested by the intervention of the tribunes, supported
by the whole body of the plebs. The tribunes refused to allow the judgment
debtors to be carried off; the men whose names were called for enrolment
refused to answer. The senate was less concerned to insist upon the rights
of creditors than to carry out the enlistment, for information had been
received that the enemy had advanced from Praeneste and were encamped in
the district of Gabii. This intelligence, however, instead of deterring
the plebeian tribunes from opposition, only made them more determined,
and nothing availed to quiet the agitation in the City but the approach
of war to its very walls.
[6.28]A report had reached Praeneste that
no army had been raised in Rome and no commander-in-chief selected, and
that the patricians and plebeians had turned against one another. Seizing
the opportunity, their generals had led their army by rapid marches through
fields which they had utterly laid waste and appeared before the Colline
Gate. There was wide-spread alarm in the City. A general cry arose, "To
arms!" and men hurried to the walls and gates. At last, abandoning
sedition for war, they nominated T. Quinctius Cincinnatus as Dictator.
He named A. Sempronius Atratinus as his Master of the Horse. No sooner
did they hear of this - so great was the terror which a Dictatorship inspired
- than the enemy retired from the walls, and the men liable for active
service assembled without any hesitation at the Dictator's orders. Whilst
the army was being mobilised in Rome, the camp of the enemy had been fixed
not far from the Alia. From this point they spread devastation far and
wide, and congratulated themselves that they had chosen a position of fatal
import for the City of Rome; they expected that there would be the same
panic and flight as in the Gaulish war. For, they argued, if the Romans
regarded with horror even the day which took its name from that spot and
was under a curse, how much more would they dread the Alia itself, the
memorial of that great disaster. They would most assuredly have the appalling
sight of the Gauls before their eyes and the sound of their voices in their
ears. Indulging in these idle dreams, they placed all their hopes in the
fortune of the place. The Romans, on the other hand, knew perfectly well
that wherever he was, the Latin enemy was the same as the one who had been
conquered at Lake Regillus and kept in peaceable subjection for a hundred
years. The fact that the place was associated with the memories of their
great defeat would sooner stimulate them to wipe out the recollection of
that disgrace than make them feel that any place on earth could be of ill
omen for their success. Even if the Gauls themselves were to appear there,
they would fight just as they fought when they recovered their City, just
as they fought the next day at Gabii, when they did not leave a single
enemy who had entered Rome to carry the news of their defeat and the Roman
victory to their countrymen.
[6.29]In these different moods, each side
reached the banks of the Alia. When the enemy came into view in battle
formation ready for action, the Dictator turned to A. Sempronius: "Do
you see," he said, "how they have taken their station on the
Alia, relying on the fortune of the place? May heaven have given them nothing
more certain to trust to, or stronger to help them! You, however, placing
your confidence in arms and valour, will charge their center at full gallop,
while I with the legions will attack them whilst in disorder. Ye deities
who watch over treaties, assist us, and exact the penalties due from those
who have sinned against you and deceived us by appealing to your divinity!"
Neither the cavalry charge nor the infantry attack was sustained by the
Praenestines. At the first onset and battle shout their ranks were broken,
and when no portion of the line any longer kept its formation they turned
and fled in confusion. In their panic they were carried past their camp,
and did not stop their headlong flight until they were within sight of
Praeneste. There the fugitives rallied and seized a position which they
hastily fortified; they were afraid of retiring within the walls of their
city lest their territory should be wasted with fire and, after everything
had been devastated, the city should be invested. The Romans, however,
after spoiling the camp at the Alia, came up; this position, therefore,
was also abandoned. They shut themselves in Praeneste, feeling hardly safe
even behind its walls. There were eight towns under the jurisdiction of
Praeneste. These were successively attacked and reduced without much fighting.
Then the army advanced against Velitrae, which was successfully stormed.
Finally, they arrived at Praeneste, the origin and center of the war. It
was captured, not by assault, but after surrender. After being thus victorious
in battle and capturing two camps and nine towns belonging to the enemy
and receiving the surrender of Praeneste, Titus Quinctius returned to Rome.
In his triumphal procession he carried up to the Capitol the image of Jupiter
Imperator, which had been brought from Praeneste. It was set up in a recess
between the shrines of Jupiter and Minerva, and a tablet was affixed to
the pedestal recording the Dictator's successes. The inscription ran something
like this: "Jupiter and all the gods have granted this boon to Titus
Quinctius the Dictator, that he should capture nine towns." On the
twentieth day after his appointment he laid down the Dictatorship.
[6.30]When the election of consular tribunes
took place, an equal number were elected from each order. The patricians
were: P. and C. Manlius, together with L. Julius; the plebeians were: C.
Sextilius, M. Albinius, and L. Anstitius. As the two Manlii took precedence
of the plebeians by birth and were more popular than Julius, they had the
Volscians assigned to them by special resolution, without casting lots
or any understanding with the other consular tribunes; a step which they
themselves and the senate who made the arrangement had cause to regret.
They sent out some cohorts to forage without previously reconnoitring.
On receiving a false message that these were cut off, they started off
in great haste to their support, without detaining the messenger, who was
a hostile Latin and had passed himself off as a Roman soldier. Consequently,
they fell straight into an ambuscade. It was only the sheer courage of
the men that enabled them to make a stand on unfavourable ground and offer
a desperate resistance. At the same time, their camp, which lay on the
plain in another direction, was attacked. In both incidents the generals
had imperilled everything by their rashness and ignorance; if by the good
fortune of Rome anything was saved it was due to the steadiness and courage
of the soldiers who had no one to direct operations. On the report of these
occurrences reaching Rome, it was at first decided that a Dictator should
be nominated, but on subsequent information being received that all was
quiet amongst the Volscians, who evidently did not know how to make use
of their victory, the armies were recalled from that quarter. On the side
of the Volscians peace prevailed; the only trouble that marked the close
of the year was the renewal of hostilities by the Praenestines, who had
stirred up the Latin cantons. The colonists of Setia complained of the
fewness of their number, so a fresh body of colonists was sent to join
them. The misfortunes of the war were compensated by the quiet which prevailed
at home owing to the influence and authority which the consular tribunes
from the plebeians possessed with their party.
[6.31]The new consular tribunes were: Sp.
Furius, Q. Servilius (for the second time), L. Menenius (for the third
time), P. Cloelius, M. Horatius, and L. Geganius. No sooner had their year
begun than the flames of a violent disturbance broke out, for which the
distress caused by the debts supplied both cause and motive. Sp. Servilius
Priscus and Q. Cloelius Siculus were appointed censors to go into the matter,
but they were prevented from doing so by the outbreak of war. The Volscian
legions invaded the Roman territory and were committing ravages in all
directions. The first intimation came through panic-stricken messengers
followed by a general flight from the country districts. So far was the
alarm thus created from repressing the domestic dissensions that the tribunes
showed all the greater determination to obstruct the enrolment of troops.
They succeeded at last in imposing two conditions on the patricians: that
none should pay the war-tax until the war was over, and that no suits for
debt should be brought into court. After the plebs had obtained this relief
there was no longer any delay in the enrolment. When the fresh troops had
been raised they were formed into two armies, both of which were marched
into the Volscian territory. Sp. Furius and M. Horatius turned to the right
in the direction of Antium and the coast; Q. Servilius and L. Geganius
proceeded to the left towards Ecetra and the mountain district. In neither
direction did the enemy meet them. So they commenced to ravage the country
in a very different method from that which the Volscians had practiced.
These, emboldened by the dissensions but afraid of the courage of their
enemy, had made hasty depredations like freebooters dreading a surprise,
but the Romans acting as a regular army wreaked their just anger in ravages
which were all the more destructive because they were continuous. The Volscians,
fearing lest an army might come from Rome, confined their ravages to the
extreme frontier; the Romans, on the other hand, lingered in the enemy's
country to provoke him to battle. After burning all the scattered houses
and several of the villages and leaving not a single fruit tree or any
hope of harvest for the year, and carrying off as booty all the men and
cattle that remained outside the walled towns, the two armies returned
to Rome.
[6.32]A short breathing space had been
allowed to the debtors, but as soon as hostilities ceased and quiet was
restored large numbers of them were again being adjudged to their creditors,
and so completely had all hopes of lightening the old load of debt vanished
that new debts were being contracted to meet a tax imposed for the construction
of a stone wall for which the censors had made a contract. The plebs were
compelled to submit to this burden because there was no enrolment which
their tribunes could obstruct. They were even forced by the influence of
the nobility to elect only patricians as consular tribunes; their names
were: L. Aemilius, P. Valerius (for the fourth time), C. Veturius, Ser.
Sulpicius, L. and C. Quinctius Cincinnatus. The patricians were also strong
enough to effect the enrolment of three armies to act against the Latins
and Volscians, who had united their forces and were encamped at Satricum.
All those who were liable for active service were made to take the military
oath; none ventured to obstruct. One of these armies was to protect the
City; another was to be in readiness to be despatched wherever any sudden
hostile movement might be attempted; the third, and by far the strongest,
was led by P. Valerius and L. Aemilius to Satricum. Here they found the
enemy drawn up for battle on favourable ground and immediately engaged
him. The action, though so far not decisive, was going in favour of the
Romans when it was stopped by violent storms of wind and rain. The next
day it was resumed and was kept up for some time on the part of the enemy
with a courage and success equal to that of the Romans, mainly by the Latin
legions who through their long alliance were familiar with Roman tactics.
A cavalry charge disordered their ranks, and before they could recover,
the infantry made a fresh attack and the further they pressed forward the
more decided the retreat of the enemy became, and once the battle turned,
the Roman attack became irresistible. The rout of the enemy was complete,
and as they did not make for their camp but tried to reach Satricum, which
was two miles distant, they were mostly cut down by the cavalry. The camp
was taken and plundered. The following night they evacuated Satricum, and
in a march which was much more like a flight made their way to Antium,
and though the Romans followed almost on their heels, the state of panic
they were in enabled them to outstrip their pursuers. The enemy entered
the city before the Romans could delay or harass their rear. Some days
were spent in harrying the country as the Romans were not sufficiently
provided with military engines for attacking the walls, nor were the enemy
disposed to run the risk of a battle.
[6.33]A quarrel now arose between the Antiates
and the Latins. The Antiates, crushed by their misfortunes and exhausted
by a state of war which had lasted all their lives, were contemplating
peace; the newly revolted Latins, who had enjoyed a long peace and whose
spirits were yet unbroken, were all the more determined to keep up hostilities.
When each side had convinced the other that it was perfectly free to act
as it thought best, there was an end of the quarrel. The Latins took their
departure and so cleared themselves from all association with a peace which
they considered dishonourable; the Antiates, when once the inconvenient
critics of their salutary counsels were out of the way, surrendered their
city and territory to the Romans. The exasperation and rage of the Latins
at finding themselves unable to injure the Romans in war or to induce the
Volscians to keep up hostilities rose to such a pitch that they set fire
to Satricum, which had been their first shelter after their defeat. They
flung firebrands on sacred and profane buildings alike, and not a single
roof of that city escaped except the temple of Mother Matuta. It is stated
that it was not any religious scruple or fear of the gods that restrained
them, but an awful Voice which sounded from the temple threatening them
with terrible punishment if they did not keep their accursed firebrands
far from the shrine. Whilst in this state of frenzy, they next attacked
Tusculum, in revenge for its having deserted the national council of the
Latins and not only becoming an ally of Rome but even accepting her citizenship.
The attack was unexpected and they burst in through the open gates. The
town was taken at the first alarm with the exception of the citadel. Thither
the townsmen fled for refuge with their wives and children, after sending
messengers to Rome to inform the senate of their plight. With the promptitude
which the honour of the Roman people demanded an army was marched to Tusculum
under the command of the consular tribunes, L. Quinctius and Ser. Sulpicius.
They found the gates of Tusculum closed and the Latins, with the feelings
of men who are at once besieging and being besieged, were in one direction
defending the walls and in the other attacking the citadel, inspiring terror
and feeling it at the same time. The arrival of the Romans produced a change
in the temper of both sides; it turned the gloomy forebodings of the Tusculans
into the utmost cheerfulness, whilst the confidence which the Latins had
felt in a speedy capture of the citadel, as they were already in possession
of the town, sank into a faint and feeble hope of even their own safety.
The Tusculans in the citadel gave a cheer, it was answered by a much louder
one from the Roman army. The Latins were hard pressed on both sides; they
could not withstand the attack of the Tusculans charging from the higher
ground, nor could they repel the Romans who were mounting the walls and
forcing the gates. The walls were first taken by escalade, then the bars
of the gates were burst. The double attack in front and rear left the Latins
no strength to fight and no room for escape; between the two they were
killed to a man.
[6.34]The greater the tranquillity which
prevailed everywhere abroad after these successful operations so much the
greater became the violence of the patricians and the miseries of the plebeians,
since the ability to pay their debts was frustrated by the very fact that
payment had become necessary. They had no means left on which to draw,
and after judgment had been given against them they satisfied their creditors
by surrendering their good name and their personal liberty; punishment
took the place of payment. To such a state of depression had not only the
humbler classes but even the leading men amongst the plebeians been reduced,
that there was no energetic or enterprising individual amongst them who
had the spirit to take up or become a candidate even for the plebeian magistracies,
still less to win a place amongst the patricians as consular tribune, an
honour which they had previously done their utmost to secure. It seemed
as though the patricians had for all time won back from the plebs the sole
enjoyment of a dignity which for the last few years had been shared with
them. As a check to any undue exaltation on the part of the patricians,
an incident occurred which was slight in itself, but, as is often the case,
led to important results. M. Fabius Ambustus, a patrician, possessed great
influence amongst the men of his own order and also with the plebeians,
because they felt that he did not in any way look down on them. His two
daughters were married, the elder one to Ser. Sulpicius, the younger to
C. Licinius Stolo, a distinguished man, but a plebeian. The fact that Fabius
did not regard this alliance as beneath him had made him very popular with
the masses. The two sisters happened to be one day at Ser. Sulpicius' house,
passing the time in conversation, when on his return from the Forum the
tribune's apparitor gave the customary knocks on the door with his rod.
The younger Fabia was startled at what was to her an unfamiliar custom,
and her sister laughed at her and expressed surprise that she was ignorant
of it. That laugh, however, left its sting in the mind of a woman easily
excited by trifles. I think, too, that the crowd of attendants coming to
ask for orders awoke in her that spirit of jealousy which makes every one
anxious to be surpassed as little as possible by one's neighbours. It made
her regard her sister's marriage as a fortunate one and her own as a mistake.
Her father happened to see her whilst she was still upset by this mortifying
incident and asked her if she was well. She tried to conceal the real reason,
as showing but little affection for her sister and not much respect for
her own husband. He kindly but firmly insisted upon finding out, and she
confessed the real cause of her distress; she was united to one who was
her inferior in birth, married into a house where neither honour nor political
influence could enter. Ambustus consoled his daughter and bade her keep
up her spirits; she would very soon see in her own house the same honours
which she saw at her sister's. From that time he began to concert plans
with his son-in-law; they took into their counsels L. Sextius, a pushing
young man who regarded nothing as beyond his ambition except patrician
blood.
[6.35]A favourable opportunity for making
innovations presented itself in the terrible pressure of debt, a burden
from which the plebs did not hope for any alleviation until they had raised
men of their own order to the highest authority in the State. This, they
thought, was the aim which they must devote their utmost efforts to reach,
and they believed that they had already, by dint of effort, secured a foothold
from which, if they pushed forward, they could secure the highest positions,
and so become the equals of the patricians in dignity as they now were
in courage. For the time being, C. Licinius and L. Sextius decided to become
tribunes of the plebs; once in this office they could clear for themselves
the way to all the other distinctions. All the measures which they brought
forward after they were elected were directed against the power and influence
of the patricians and calculated to promote the interests of the plebs.
One dealt with the debts, and provided that the amount paid in interest
should be deducted from the principal and the balance repaid in three equal
yearly instalments. The second restricted the occupation of land and prohibited
any one from holding more than five hundred jugera. The third provided
that there should be no more consular tribunes elected, and that one consul
should be elected from each order. They were all questions of immense importance,
which could not be settled without a tremendous struggle.
The prospect of a fight over those things which excite the keenest desires
of men - land, money, honours - produced consternation among the patricians.
After excited discussions in the senate and in private houses, they found
no better remedy than the one they had adopted in previous contests, namely,
the tribunitian veto. So they won over some of the tribunes to interpose
their veto against these proposals. When they saw the tribes summoned by
Licinius and Sextius to give their votes, these men, surrounded by a bodyguard
of patricians, refused to allow either the reading of the bills or any
other procedure which the plebs usually adopted when they came to vote.
For many weeks the Assembly was regularly summoned without any business
being done, and the bills were looked upon as dead. "Very good,"
said Sextius, "since it is your pleasure that the veto shall possess
so much power, we will use this same weapon for the protection of the plebs.
Come then, patricians, give notice of an Assembly for the election of consular
tribunes, I will take care that the word which our colleagues are now uttering
in concert to your great delight, the word 'I FORBID,' shall not give you
much pleasure." These were not idle threats. No elections were held
beyond those of the tribunes and aediles of the plebs. Licinius and Sextius,
when re-elected, would not allow any curule magistrates to be appointed,
and as the plebs constantly re-elected them, and as they constantly stopped
the election of consular tribunes, this dearth of magistrates lasted in
the City for five years.
[6.36]Fortunately, with one exception,
there was a respite from foreign war. The colonists of Velitrae, becoming
wanton in a time of peace and in the absence of any Roman army, made various
incursions into Roman territory and began an attack on Tusculum. The citizens,
allies of old, and now citizens, implored help, and their situation moved
not only the senate, but the plebs as well, with a sense of shame. The
tribunes of the plebs gave way and the elections were conducted by an interrex.
The consular tribunes elected were: L. Furius, A. Manlius, Ser. Sulpicius,
Ser. Cornelius, P. and C. Valerius. They did not find the plebeians nearly
so amenable in the enlistment as they had been in the elections; it was
only after a very great struggle that an army was raised. They not only
dislodged the enemy from before Tusculum, but forced him to take refuge
behind his walls. The siege of Velitrae was carried on with far greater
vigour than that of Tusculum had been. Those commanders who had commenced
the investment did not, however, effect its capture. The new consular tribunes
were: Q. Servilius, C. Veturius, A. and M. Cornelius, Q. Quinctius, and
M. Fabius. Even under these tribunes nothing worth mention took place at
Velitrae. At home affairs were becoming more critical. Sextius and Licinius,
the original proposers of the laws, who had been re-elected tribunes of
the plebs for the eighth time, were now supported by Fabius Ambustus, Licinius
Stolo's father-in-law. He came forward as the decided advocate of the measures
which he had initiated, and whereas there had at first been eight members
of the college of tribunes who had vetoed the proposals, there were now
only five. These five, as usually happens with men who desert their party,
were embarrassed and dismayed, and defended their opposition by borrowed
arguments privately suggested to them by the patricians. They urged that
as a large number of plebeians were in the army at Velitrae the Assembly
ought to be adjourned till the return of the soldiers, to allow of the
entire body of the plebs voting on matters affecting their interests. Sextius
and Licinius, experts after so many years' practice in the art of handling
the plebs, in conjunction with some of their colleagues and the consular
tribune, Fabius Ambustus, brought forward the leaders of the patrician
party and worried them with questions on each of the measures they were
referring to the people. "Have you," they asked, "the audacity
to demand that whilst two jugera are allotted to each plebeian, you yourselves
should each occupy more than five hundred jugera, so that while a single
patrician can occupy the land of nearly three hundred citizens, the holding
of a plebeian is hardly extensive enough for the roof he needs to shelter
him, or the place where he is to be buried? Is it your pleasure that the
plebeians, crushed by debt, should surrender their persons to fetters and
punishments sooner than that they should discharge their debts by repaying
the principal? That they should be led off in crowds from the Forum as
the property of their creditors? That the houses of the nobility should
be filled with prisoners, and wherever a patrician lives there should be
a private dungeon?"
[6.37]They were denouncing these indignities
in the ears of men, apprehensive for their own safety, who listened to
them with stronger indignation than the men who were speaking felt. They
went on to assert that after all there would be no limit to the seizure
of land by the patricians or the murder of the plebs by the deadly usury
until the plebs elected one of the consuls from their own ranks as a guardian
of their liberties. The tribunes of the plebs were now objects of contempt
since their power was shattering itself by their own veto. There could
be no fair or just administration as long as the executive power was in
the hands of the other party, while they had only the right of protesting
by their veto; nor would the plebs ever have an equal share in the government
till the executive authority was thrown open to them; nor would it be enough,
as some people might suppose, to allow plebeians to be voted for at the
election of consuls. Unless it was made obligatory for one consul at least
to be chosen from the plebs, no plebeian would ever become consul. Had
they forgotten that after they had decided that consular tribunes should
be elected in preference to consuls in order that the highest office might
be open to plebeians, not a single plebeian was elected consular tribune
for four-and-forty years? What did they suppose? Did they imagine that
the men who had been accustomed to fill all the eight places when consular
tribunes were elected would of their own free will consent to share two
places with the plebs, or that they would allow the path to the consulship
to be opened when they had so long blocked the one to the consular tribuneship?
The people would have to secure by law what they could not gain by favour,
and one of the two consulships would have to be placed beyond dispute as
open to the plebs alone, for if it were open to a contest it would always
be the prey of the stronger party. The old, oft-repeated taunt could no
longer be made now that there were no men amongst the plebs suitable for
curule magistracies. Was the government carried on with less spirit and
energy after the consulship of P. Licinius Calvus, who was the first plebeian
to be elected to that post, than during the years when only patricians
held the office? Nay, on the contrary, there had been some cases of patricians
being impeached after their year of office, but none of plebeians. The
quaestors also, like the consular tribunes, had a few years previously
begun to be elected from the plebs; in no single instance had the Roman
people had any cause to regret those appointments. The one thing that was
left for the plebs to strive for was the consulship. That was the pillar,
the stronghold of their liberties. If they arrived at that, the Roman people
would realise that monarchy had been completely banished from the City,
and that their freedom was securely established, for in that day everything
in which the patricians were pre-eminent would come to the plebs - power,
dignity, military glory, the stamp of nobility; great things for themselves
to enjoy, but greater still as legacies to their children. When they saw
that speeches of this kind were listened to with approval, they brought
forward a fresh proposal, viz. that instead of the duumviri (the two keepers
of the Sacred Books) a College of Ten should be formed, half of them plebeians
and half patricians. The meeting of the Assembly, which was to pass these
measures, was adjourned till the return of the army which was besieging
Velitrae.
[6.38]The year passed away before the legions
were brought back. Thus the new measures were hung up and left for the
new consular tribunes to deal with. They were T. Quinctius, Ser. Cornelius,
Ser. Sulpicius, Sp. Servilius, L. Papirius, and L. Veturius. The plebs
re-elected their tribunes, at all events the same two who had brought forward
the new measures. At the very beginning of the year the final stage in
the struggle was reached. When the tribes were summoned and the proposers
refused to be thwarted by the veto of their colleagues, the patricians,
now thoroughly alarmed, took refuge in their last line of defence - supreme
power, and a supreme citizen to wield it. They resolved upon the nomination
of a Dictator, and M. Furius Camillus was nominated; he chose L. Aemilius
as his Master of the Horse. Against such formidable preparations on the
part of their opponents, the proposers on their side prepared to defend
the cause of the plebs with the weapons of courage and resolution. They
gave notice of a meeting of the Assembly and summoned the tribes to vote.
Full of anger and menace, the Dictator, surrounded by a compact body of
patricians, took his seat, and the proceedings commenced as usual with
a struggle between those who were bringing in the bills and those who were
interposing their veto against them. The latter were in the stronger position
legally, but they were overborne by the popularity of the measures and
the men who were proposing them. The first tribes were already voting "Aye,"
when Camillus said, "Since, Quirites, it is not the authority of your
tribunes but their defiance of authority that you are ruled by now, and
their right of veto, which was once secured by the secession of the plebs,
is now being rendered nugatory by the same violent conduct by which you
obtained it, I, as Dictator, acting in your own interests quite as much
as in that of the State, shall support the right of veto and protect by
my authority the safeguard which you are destroying. If, therefore, C.
Licinius and L. Sextius give way before the opposition of their colleagues,
I will not intrude the powers of a patrician magistrate into the councils
of the plebs; if, however, in spite of that opposition they are bent on
imposing their measures on the State, as though it had been subjugated
in war, I will not allow the tribunitian power to work its own destruction."
The tribunes of the plebs treated this pronouncement with contempt,
and persisted in their course with unshaken resolution. Thereupon Camillus,
excessively angry, sent lictors to disperse the plebeians and threatened,
if they went on, to bind the fighting men by their military oath and march
them out of the City. The plebs were greatly alarmed, but their leaders
were exasperated rather than intimidated by his opposition. But while the
contest was still undecided he resigned office, either owing to some irregularity
in his nomination, as certain writers maintain, or because the tribunes
proposed a resolution, which the plebs adopted, to the effect that if Camillus
took any action as Dictator a fine of 500,000 ases should be imposed upon
him. That his resignation was due to some defect in the auspices rather
than to the effect of such an unprecedented proposal I am led to believe
by the following considerations: the well-known character of the man himself;
the fact that P. Manlius immediately succeeded him as Dictator - for what
influence could he have exerted in a contest in which Camillus had been
worsted? the further fact that Camillus was again Dictator the following
year, for surely he would have been ashamed to reassume an authority which
had been successfully defied the year before. Besides, at the time when,
according to the tradition, the resolution imposing a fine on him was passed,
either he had as Dictator the power to negative a measure which he saw
was meant to circumscribe his authority, or else he was powerless to resist
even those other measures on account of which this one was carried. But
amidst all the conflicts in which tribunes and consuls have been engaged,
the Dictator's powers have always been above controversy.
[6.39]Between Camillus' resignation of
office and Manlius' entrance on his Dictatorship, the tribunes held a council
of the plebs as though an interregnum had occurred. Here it was evident
which of the proposed measures were preferred by the plebs and which their
tribunes were most eager about. The measures dealing with usury and the
allotment of State land were being adopted, that providing that one consul
should always be a plebeian was rejected; both the former would probably
have been carried into law if the tribunes had not said that they were
putting them en bloc. P. Manlius, on his nomination as Dictator, strengthened
the cause of the plebs by appointing a plebeian, C. Licinius, who had been
a consular tribune, as his Master of the Horse. I gather that the patricians
were much annoyed; the Dictator generally defended his action on the ground
of relationship; he pointed out also that the authority of a Master of
the Horse was no greater than that of a consular tribune. When notice was
given for the election of tribunes of the plebs, Licinius and Sextius declared
their unwillingness to be re-elected, but they put it in a way which made
the plebeians all the more eager to secure the end which they secretly
had in view. For nine years, they said, they had been standing in battle
array, as it were, against the patricians, at the greatest risk to themselves
and with no advantage to the people. The measures they had brought forward
and the whole power of the tribunes had, like themselves, become enfeebled
by age. Their proposed legislation had been frustrated first by the veto
of their colleagues, then by the withdrawal of their fighting men to the
district of Velitrae, and last of all the Dictator had launched his thunders
at them. At the present time there was no obstacle either from their colleagues
or from war or from the Dictator, for he had given them an earnest of the
future election of plebeian consuls by appointing a plebeian as Master
of the Horse. It was the plebs who stood in the way of their tribunes and
their own interests. If they chose they could have a City and a Forum free
from creditors, and fields rescued from their unlawful occupiers. When
were they ever going to show sufficient gratitude for these boons, if while
accepting these beneficial measures they cut off from those who proposed
them all hope of attaining the highest honours? It was not consistent with
the self-respect of the Roman people for them to demand to be relieved
of the burden of usury and placed on the land which is now wrongfully held
by the magnates, and then to leave the tribunes, through whom they won
these reforms, without honourable distinction in their old age or any hope
of attaining it. They must first make up their minds as to what they really
wanted and then declare their will by their votes at the election. If they
wanted the proposed measures carried as a whole, there was some reason
for their re-electing the same tribunes, because they would carry their
own measures through; if, however, they only wished that to be passed which
each man happened to want for himself, there was no need for them to incur
odium by prolonging their term of office; they would not have the tribuneship
themselves, nor would the people obtain the proposed reforms.
[6.40]This determined language from the
tribunes filled the patricians with speechless indignation and amazement.
It is stated that Appius Claudius, a grandson of the old decemvir, moved
by feelings of anger and hatred more than by any hope of turning them from
their purpose, came forward and spoke to the following effect: "It
would be nothing new or surprising to me, Quirites, to hear once more the
reproach that has always been levelled against our family by revolutionary
tribunes, namely, that from the very beginning we have never regarded anything
in the State as more important than the honour and dignity of the patricians,
and that we have always been inimical to the interests of the plebs. The
former of these charges I do not deny. I acknowledge that from the day
when we were admitted into the State and into the senate we have laboured
most assiduously in order that the greatness of those houses amongst which
it was your will that we should be numbered might be said in all truth
to have been enhanced rather than impaired. In reply to the second charge,
I would go so far as to assert, on my own behalf and on that of my ancestors,
that neither as individuals nor in our capacity as magistrates have we
ever done anything knowingly which was against the interests of the plebs,
unless any one should suppose that what is done on behalf of the State
as a whole is necessarily injurious to the plebs as though they were living
in another city; nor can any act or word of ours be truthfully brought
up as opposed to your real welfare, though some may have been opposed to
your wishes. Even if I did not belong to the Claudian house and had no
patrician blood in my veins, but more simply one of the Quirites, knowing
only that I was sprung from free-born parents and was living in a free
State - even then, could I keep silence when I see that this L. Sextius,
this C. Licinius, tribunes for life - good heavens! - have reached such
a pitch of impudence during the nine years of their reign that they are
refusing to allow you to vote as you please in the elections and in the
enacting of laws?
"'On one condition,' they say, 'you shall reappoint us tribunes
for the tenth time.' What is this but saying, 'What others seek we so thoroughly
despise that we will not accept it without a heavy premium'? But what premium
have we to pay that we may always have you as tribunes of the plebs? 'That
you adopt all our measures en bloc, whether you agree with them or not,
whether they are useful or the reverse.' Now I ask you - you Tarquinian
tribunes of the plebs - to listen to me. Suppose that I, as a citizen,
call out from the middle of the Assembly, 'Allow us, with your kind permission,
to choose out of these proposed measures what we think beneficial for us
and reject the others.' 'No,' he says, 'you will not be allowed to do so.
You would pass the measure about usury and the one about the distribution
of land, for these concern you all; but you would not allow the City of
Rome to witness the portentous sight of L. Sextius and C. Licinius as consuls,
a prospect you regard with detestation and loathing. Either accept all,
or I propose none.' Just as if a man were to place poison together with
food before some one famished with hunger and bid him either abstain from
what would support his life or mix with it what would bring death. If this
were a free State, would not hundreds of voices have exclaimed, 'Begone,
with your tribuneships and proposals!' What? If you do not bring in reforms
which it is to the people's advantage to adopt, is there no one else who
will? If any patrician, if even a Claudius - whom they detest still more
-were to say, 'Either accept all, or I propose none,' which of you, Quirites,
would tolerate it? Will you never have more regard for measures than for
men? Will you always listen with approving ears to everything which your
magistrate says and with hostile ears to whatever is said by any of us?
"His language is utterly unbecoming a citizen of a free republic.
Well, and what sort of a proposal is it, in heaven's name, that they are
indignant with you for having rejected? One, Quirites, which quite matches
his language. 'I am proposing,' he says, 'that you shall not be allowed
to appoint whom you please as consuls.' What else does his proposal mean?
He is laying down the law that one consul at least shall be elected from
the plebs, and is depriving you of the power of electing two patricians.
If there were to-day a war with Etruria such as when Porsena encamped on
the Janiculum, or such as that in recent times with the Gauls, when everything
round us except the Capitol and the Citadel were in the enemy's hands,
and, in the press of such a war, L. Sextius were standing for the consulship
with M. Furius Camillus and some other patrician, could you tolerate Sextius
being quite certain of election and Camillus in danger of defeat? Is this
what you call an equal distribution of honours, when it is lawful for two
plebeians to be made consuls, but not for two patricians; when one must
necessarily be taken from the plebs, while it is open to reject every patrician?
What is this comradeship, this equality of yours? Do you count it little
to come into a share of what you have had no share in hitherto, unless
whilst you are seeking to obtain the half you can carry off the whole?
He says, 'I am afraid if it is left open for two patricians to be elected,
you will never elect a plebeian.' What is this but saying, 'Because you
would not of your own will elect unworthy persons, I will impose upon you
the necessity of electing them against your will'? What follows? That if
only one plebeian is standing with two patricians he has not to thank the
people for his election; he may say he was appointed by the law not by
their vote.
[6.41]"Their aim is not to sue for
honours but to extort them from you, and they will get the greatest favours
from you without showing the gratitude due even for the smallest. They
prefer seeking posts of honour by trusting to accident rather than by personal
merit. There is many a man, too proud to submit his merits and claims to
inspection and examination, who would think it quite fair that he alone
among his competitors should be quite certain of attaining a post of honour,
who would withdraw himself from your judgment and transfer your free votes
into compulsory and servile ones. Not to mention Licinius and Sextius,
whose years of uninterrupted power you number up as though they were kings
in the Capitol, who is there in the State to-day in such humble circumstances
as not to find the path to the consulship made easier by the opportunities
offered in that measure for him than it is for us and our children? Even
when you sometimes wish to elect us you will not have the power; those
people you will be compelled to elect, even if you do not wish to do so.
Enough has been said about the indignity of the thing. Questions of dignity,
however, only concern men; what shall I say about the duties of religion
and the auspices, the contempt and profanation of which specially concern
the gods? Who is there who knows not that it was under auspices that this
City was founded, that only after auspices have been taken is anything
done in war or peace, at home or in the field? Who have the right to take
the auspices in accordance with the usage of our fathers? The patricians,
surely, for not a single plebeian magistrate is elected under auspices.
So exclusively do the auspices belong to us that not only do the people
when electing patrician magistrates elect them only when the auspices are
favourable, but even we, when, independently of the people, we are choosing
an interrex, only do so after the auspices have been taken: we as private
citizens have the auspices which your order does not possess even as magistrates.
What else is the man doing who by the creation of plebeian consuls takes
away the auspices from the patricians who alone can possess them - what
else, I ask, is he doing but depriving the State of the auspices? Now,
men are at liberty to mock at our religious fears. 'What does it matter
if the sacred chickens do not feed, if they hesitate to come out of their
coop, if a bird has shrieked ominously?' These are small matters, but it
was by not despising these small matters that our ancestors have achieved
the supreme greatness of this State. Now, as though there were no need
of securing peace with the gods, we are polluting all ceremonial acts.
Are pontiffs, augurs, kings for sacrifice to be appointed indiscriminately?
Are we to place the mitre of the Flamen of Jupiter upon any one's head
provided only he be a man? Are we to hand over the sacred shields, the
shrines, the gods, and the care of their worship to men to whom it would
be impious to entrust them? Are laws no longer to be passed, or magistrates
elected in accordance with the auspices? Are the senate no longer to authorise
the Assembly of centuries, or the Assembly of curies? Are Sextius and Licinius
to reign in this City of Rome as though they were a second Romulus, a second
Tatius, because they give away other people's money and other people's
lands? So great a charm is felt in preying upon other people's fortunes,
that it has not occurred to them that by expelling the occupiers from their
lands under the one law vast solitudes will be created, whilst by the action
of the other all credit will be destroyed and with it all human society
abolished. For every reason I consider that these proposals ought to be
rejected, and may heaven guide you to a right decision!"
[6.42]The speech of Appius only availed
to effect the postponement of the voting. Sextius and Licinius were re-elected
for the tenth time. They carried a law providing that of the ten keepers
of the Sibylline Books, five should be chosen from the patricians and five
from the plebeians. This was regarded as a further step towards opening
the path to the consulship. The plebs, satisfied with their victory, made
the concession to the patricians that for the present all mention of consuls
should be dropped. Consular tribunes were accordingly elected. Their names
were A. and M. Cornelius (each for the second time), M. Geganius, P. Manlius,
L. Veturius, and P. Valerius (for the sixth time). With the exception of
the siege of Velitrae, in which the result was delayed rather than doubtful,
Rome was quiet so far as foreign affairs went. Suddenly the City was startled
by rumours of the hostile advance of the Gauls. M. Furius Camillus was
nominated Dictator for the fifth time. He named as his Master of the Horse
T. Quinctius Poenus. Claudius is our authority for the statement that a
battle was fought at the Anio with the Gauls this year, and that it was
then that the famous fight took place on the bridge in which T. Manlius
killed a Gaul who had challenged him and then despoiled him of his golden
collar in the sight of both armies. I am more inclined, with the majority
of authors, to believe that these occurrences took place ten years later.
There was, however, a pitched battle fought this year by the Dictator,
M. F. Camillus, against the Gauls in the Alban territory. Although, bearing
in mind their former defeat, the Romans felt a great dread of the Gauls,
their victory was neither doubtful nor difficult. Many thousands of the
barbarians were slain in the battle, many more in the capture of their
camp. Many others, making chiefly in the direction of Apulia, escaped,
some by distant flight, and others who had become widely scattered and
in their panic had lost their way.
By the joint consent of the senate and plebs a triumph was decreed to
the Dictator. He had hardly disposed of that war before a more alarming
commotion awaited him at home. After tremendous conflicts, the Dictator
and the senate were worsted; consequently the proposals of the tribunes
were carried, and in spite of the opposition of the nobility the elections
were held for consuls. L. Sextius was the first consul to be elected out
of the plebs. Even that was not the end of the conflict. The patricians
refused to confirm the appointment, and matters were approaching a secession
of the plebs and other threatening signs of appalling civic struggles.
The Dictator, however, quieted the disturbances by arranging a compromise;
the nobility made a concession in the matter of a plebeian consul, the
plebs gave way to the nobility on the appointment of a praetor to administer
justice in the City who was to be a patrician. Thus after their long estrangement
the two orders of the State were at length brought into harmony. The senate
decided that this event deserved to be commemorated - and if ever the immortal
gods merited men's gratitude, they merited it then - by the celebration
of the Great Games, and a fourth day was added to the three hitherto devoted
to them. The plebeian aediles refused to superintend them, whereupon the
younger patricians were unanimous in declaring that they would gladly allow
themselves to be appointed aediles for the honour of the immortal gods.
They were universally thanked, and the senate made a decree that the Dictator
should ask the people to elect two aediles from amongst the patricians,
and that the senate should confirm all the elections of that year.
End of Book 6
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