Ab urbe condita 2.1
It is of a Rome henceforth free that I am to write the history-her
civil administration and the conduct of her wars, her annually elected
magistrates, the authority of her laws supreme over all her citizens.
The tyranny of the last king made this liberty all the more welcome,
for such had been the rule of the former kings that they might not
undeservedly be counted as founders of parts, at all events, of the
city; for the additions they made were required as abodes for the
increased population which they themselves had augmented. There is no
question that the Brutus who won such glory through the expulsion of
Superbus would have inflicted the gravest injury on the State had he
wrested the sovereignty from any of the former kings, through desire of
a liberty for which the people were not ripe. What would have been the
result if that horde of shepherds and immigrants, fugitives from their
own cities, who had secured liberty, or at all events impunity, in the
shelter of an inviolable sanctuary,-if, I say, they had been freed from
the restraining power of kings and, agitated by tribunician storms, had
begun to foment quarrels with the patricians in a City where they were
aliens before sufficient time had elapsed for either family ties or a
growing love for the very soil to effect a union of hearts? The infant
State would have been torn to pieces by internal dissension. As it was,
however, the moderate and tranquilising authority of the kings had so
fostered it that it was at last able to bring forth the fair fruits of
liberty in the maturity of its strength. But the origin of liberty may
be referred to this time rather because the consular authority was
limited to one year than because there was any weakening of the
authority which the kings had possessed. The first consuls retained all
the old jurisdiction and insignia of office, one only, however, had the
"fasces," to prevent the fear which might have been inspired by the
sight of both with those dread symbols. Through the concession of his
colleague, Brutus had them first, and he was not less zealous in
guarding the public liberty than he had been in achieving it. His first
act was to secure the people, who were now jealous of their
newly-recovered liberty, from being influenced by any entreaties or
bribes from the king. He therefore made them take an oath that they
would not suffer any man to reign in Rome. The senate had been thinned
by the murderous cruelty of Tarquin, and Brutus' next care was to
strengthen its influence by selecting some of the leading men of
equestrian rank to fill the vacancies; by this means he brought it up
to the old number of three hundred. The new members were known as
"conscripti," the old ones retained their designation of "patres." This
measure had a wonderful effect in promoting harmony in the State and
bringing the patricians and plebeians together.
Ab urbe condita 2.2
He next gave his attention to the affairs of religion. Certain public
functions had hitherto been executed by the kings in person; with the
view of supplying their place a "king for sacrifices" was created, and
lest he should become king in anything more than name, and so threaten
that liberty which was their first care, his office was made
subordinate to the Pontifex Maximus. I think that they went to
unreasonable lengths in devising safeguards for their liberty, in all,
even the smallest points. The second consul-L. Tarquinius
Collatinus-bore an unpopular name- this was his sole offence-and men
said that the Tarquins had been too long in power. They began with
Priscus; then Servius Tullius reigned, and Superbus Tarquinius, who
even after this interruption had not lost sight of the throne which
another filled, regained it by crime and violence as the hereditary
possession of his house. And now that he was expelled, their power was
being wielded by Collatinus; the Tarquins did not know how to live in a
private station, the very name was a danger to liberty. What were at
first whispered hints became the common talk of the City, and as the
people were becoming suspicious and alarmed, Brutus summoned an
assembly. He first of all rehearsed the people's oath, that they would
suffer no man to reign or to live in Rome by whom the public liberty
might be imperilled. This was to be guarded with the utmost care, no
means of doing so were to be neglected. Personal regard made him
reluctant to speak, nor would he have spoken had not his affection for
the commonwealth compelled him. The Roman people did consider that
their freedom was not yet fully won; the royal race, the royal name,
was still there, not only amongst the citizens but in the government;
in that fact lay an injury, an obstacle to full liberty. Turning to his
brother consul: "These apprehensions it is for you, L. Tarquinius, to
banish of your own free will. We have not forgotten, I assure you, that
you expelled the king's family, complete your good work, remove their
very name. Your fellow-citizens will, on my authority, not only hand
over your property, but if you need anything, they will add to it with
lavish generosity. Go, as our friend, relieve the commonwealth from a,
perhaps groundless, fear: men are persuaded that only with the family
will the tyranny of the Tarquins depart." At first the consul was
struck dumb with astonishment at this extraordinary request; then, when
he was beginning to speak, the foremost men in the commonwealth
gathered round him and repeatedly urged the same plea, but with little
success. It was not till Spurius Lucretius, his superior in age and
rank, and also his father-in-law, began to use every method of entreaty
and persuasion that he yielded to the universal wish. The consul,
fearing lest after his year of office had expired and he returned to
private life, the same demand should be made upon him, accompanied with
loss of property and the ignominy of banishment, formally laid down the
consulship, and after transferring all his effects to Lanuvium,
withdrew from the State. A decree of the senate empowered Brutus to
propose to the people a measure exiling all the members of the house of
Tarquin. He conducted the election of a new consul, and the centuries
elected as his colleague Publius Valerius, who had acted with him in
the expulsion of the royal family.
Ab urbe condita 2.3
Though no one doubted that war with the Tarquins was imminent, it did
not come as soon as was universally expected. What was not expected,
however, was that through intrigue and treachery the new-won liberty
was almost lost. There were some young men of high birth in Rome who
during the late reign had done pretty much what they pleased, and being
boon companions of the young Tarquins were accustomed to live in royal
fashion. Now that all were equal before the law, they missed their
former licence and complained that the liberty which others enjoyed had
become slavery for them; as long as there was a king, there was a
person from whom they could get what they wanted, whether lawful or
not, there was room for personal influence and kindness, he could show
severity or indulgence, could discriminate between his friends and his
enemies. But the law was a thing, deaf and inexorable, more favourable
to the weak than to the powerful, showing no indulgence or forgiveness
to those who transgressed; human nature being what it was, it was a
dangerous plan to trust solely to one's innocence. When they had worked
themselves into a state of disaffection, envoys from the royal family
arrived, bringing a demand for the restoration of their property
without any allusion to their possible return. An audience was granted
them by the senate, and the matter was discussed for some days; fears
were expressed that the non-surrender would be taken as a pretext for
war, while if surrendered it might provide the means of war. The
envoys, meantime, were engaged on another task: whilst ostensibly
seeking only the surrender of the property they were secretly hatching
schemes for regaining the crown. Whilst canvassing the young nobility
in favour of their apparent object, they sounded them as to their other
proposals, and meeting with a favourable reception, they brought
letters addressed to them by the Tarquins and discussed plans for
admitting them secretly at night into the City.
Ab urbe condita 2.4
The project was at first entrusted to the brothers Vitellii and
Aquilii. The sister of the Vitellii was married to the consul Brutus,
and there were grown-up children from this marriage-Titus and Tiberius.
Their uncles took them into the conspiracy, there were others besides,
whose names have been lost. In the meantime the opinion that the
property ought to be restored was adopted by the majority of the
senate, and this enabled the envoys to prolong their stay, as the
consuls required time to provide vehicles for conveying the goods. They
employed their time in consultations with the conspirators and they
insisted on getting a letter which they were to give to the Tarquins,
for without such a guarantee, they argued, how could they be sure that
their envoys had not brought back empty promises in a matter of such
vast importance? A letter was accordingly given as a pledge of good
faith, and this it was that led to the discovery of the plot. The day
previous to the departure of the envoys they happened to be dining at
the house of the Vitellii. After all who were not in the secret had
left, the conspirators discussed many details respecting their
projected treason, which were overheard by one of the slaves who had
previously suspected that something was afoot, but was waiting for the
moment when the letter should be given, as its seizure would be a
complete proof of the plot. When he found that it had been given, he
disclosed the affair to the consuls.
They at once proceeded to arrest
the envoys and the conspirators, and crushed the whole plot without
exciting any alarm. Their first care was to secure the letter before it
was destroyed. The traitors were forthwith thrown into prison; there
was some hesitation in dealing with the envoys, and although they had
evidently been guilty of a hostile act, the rights of international law
were accorded them.
Ab urbe condita 2.5
The question of the restoration of the property was referred anew to
the senate, who yielding to their feelings of resentment prohibited its
restoration, and forbade its being brought into the treasury; it was
given as plunder to the plebs, that their share in this spoliation
might destroy for ever any prospect of peaceable relations with the
Tarquins. The land of the Tarquins, which lay between the City and the
Tiber, was henceforth sacred to Mars and known as the Campus Martius.
There happened, it is said, to be a crop of corn there which was ripe
for the harvest, and as it would have been sacrilege to consume what
was growing on the Campus, a large body of men were sent to cut it.
They carried it, straw and all, in baskets to the Tiber and threw it
into the river. It was the height of the summer and the stream was low,
consequently the corn stuck in the shallows, and heaps of it were
covered with mud; gradually as the debris which the river brought down
collected there, an island was formed. I believe that it was
subsequently raised and strengthened so that the surface might be high
enough above the water and firm enough to carry temples and colonnades.
After the royal property had been disposed of, the traitors were
sentenced and executed. Their punishment created a great sensation
owing to the fact that the consular office imposed upon a father the
duty of inflicting punishment on his own children; he who ought not to
have witnessed it was destined to be the one to see it duly carried
out. Youths belonging to the noblest families were standing tied to the
post, but all eyes were turned to the consul's children, the others
were unnoticed. Men did not grieve more for their punishment than for
the crime which had incurred it-that they should have conceived the
idea, in that year above all, of betraying to one, who had been a
ruthless tyrant and was now an exile and an enemy, a newly liberated
country, their father who had liberated it, the consulship which had
originated in the Junian house, the senate, the plebs, all that Rome
possessed of human or divine. The consuls took their seats, the lictors
were told off to inflict the penalty; they scourged their bared backs
with rods and then beheaded them. During the whole time, the father's
countenance betrayed his feelings, but the father's stern resolution
was still more apparent as he superintended the public execution. After
the guilty had paid the penalty, a notable example of a different
nature was provided to act as a deterrent of crime,the informer was
assigned a sum of money from the treasury and he was given his liberty
and the rights of citizenship. He is said to have been the first to be
made free by the "vindicta." Some suppose this designation to have been
derived from him, his name being Vindicius. After him it was the rule
that those who were made free in this way were considered to be
admitted to the citizenship.
Ab urbe condita 2.6
A detailed report of these matters reached Tarquin. He was not only
furious at the failure of plans from which he had hoped so much, but he
was filled with rage at finding the way blocked against secret
intrigues; and consequently determined upon open war. He visited the
cities of Etruria and appealed for help; in particular, he implored the
people of Veii and Tarquinii not to allow one to perish before their
eyes who was of the same blood with them, and from being a powerful
monarch was now, with his children, homeless and destitute. Others, he
said, had been invited from abroad to reign in Rome; he, the king,
whilst extending the rule of Rome by a successful war, had been driven
out by the infamous conspiracy of his nearest kinsmen. They had no
single person amongst them deemed worthy to reign, so they had
distributed the kingly authority amongst themselves, and had given his
property as plunder to the people, that all might be involved in the
crime. He wanted to recover his country and his throne and punish his
ungrateful subjects. The Veientines must help him and furnish him with
resources, they must set about avenging their own wrongs also, their
legions so often cut to pieces, their territory torn from them. This
appeal decided the Veientines, they one and all loudly demanded that
their former humiliations should be wiped out and their losses made
good, now that they had a Roman to lead them. The people of Tarquinii
were won over by the name and nationality of the exile; they were proud
of having a countryman as king in Rome. So two armies from these cities
followed Tarquin to recover his crown and chastise the Romans. When
they had entered the Roman territory the consuls advanced against them;
Valerius with the infantry in phalanx formation, Brutus reconnoitring
in advance with the cavalry. Similarly the enemy's cavalry was in front
of his main body, Arruns Tarquin, the king's son, in command; the king
himself followed with the legionaries. Whilst still at a distance
Arruns distinguished the consul by his escort of lictors; as they drew
nearer he clearly recognised Brutus by his features, and in a transport
of rage exclaimed, "That is the man who drove us from our country; see
him proudly advancing, adorned with our insignia! Ye gods, avengers of
kings, aid me!" With these words, he dug spurs into his horse and rode
straight at the consul. Brutus saw that he was making for him. It was a
point of honour in those days for the leaders to engage in single
combat, so he eagerly accepted the challenge, and they charged with
such fury, neither of them thinking of protecting himself, if only he
could wound his foe, that each drove his spear at the same moment
through the other's shield, and they fell dying from their horses, with
the spears sticking in them. The rest of the cavalry at once engaged,
and not long after the infantry came up. The battle raged with varying
fortune, the two armies being fairly matched; the right wing of each
was victorious, the left defeated. The Veientes, accustomed to defeat
at the hands of the Romans, were scattered in flight, but the
Tarquinians, a new foe, not only held their ground, but forced the
Romans to give way.
Ab urbe condita 2.7
After the battle had gone in this way, so great a panic seized Tarquin
and the Etruscans that the two armies of Veii and Tarquinii, on the
approach of night, despairing of success, left the field and departed
for their homes. The story of the battle was enriched by marvels. In
the silence of the next night a great voice is said to have come from
the forest of Arsia, believed to be the voice of Silvanus, which spoke
thus: "The fallen of the Tusci are one more than those of their foe;
the Roman is conqueror." At all events the Romans left the field as
victors; the Etruscans regarded themselves as vanquished, for when
daylight appeared not a single enemy was in sight. P. Valerius, the
consul, collected the spoils and returned in triumph to Rome. He
celebrated his colleague's obsequies with all the pomp possible in
those days, but far greater honour was done to the dead by the
universal mourning, which was rendered specially noteworthy by the fact
that the matrons were a whole year in mourning for him, because he had
been such a determined avenger of violated chastity. After this the
surviving consul, who had been in such favour with the multitude, found
himself-such is its fickleness-not only unpopular but an object of
suspicion, and that of a very grave character. It was rumoured that he
was aiming at monarchy, for he had held no election to fill Brutus'
place, and he was building a house on the top of the Velia, an
impregnable fortress was being constructed on that high and strong
position. The consul felt hurt at finding these rumours so widely
believed, and summoned the people to an assembly. As he entered the
"fasces" were lowered, to the great delight of the multitude, who
understood that it was to them that they were lowered as an open avowal
that the dignity and might of the people were greater than those of the
consul. Then, after securing silence, he began to eulogise the good
fortune of his colleague who had met his death, as a liberator of his
country, possessing the highest honour it could bestow, fighting for
the commonwealth, whilst his glory was as yet undimmed by jealousy and
distrust. Whereas he himself had outlived his glory and fallen on days
of suspicion and opprobrium; from being a liberator of his country he
had sunk to the level of the Aquilii and Vitellii. "Will you," he
cried, "never deem any man's merit so assured that it cannot be tainted
by suspicion? Am I, the most determined foe to kings to dread the
suspicion of desiring to be one myself? Even if I were dwelling in the
Citadel on the Capitol, am I to believe it possible that I should be
feared by my fellow-citizens? Does my reputation amongst you hang on so
slight a thread? Does your confidence rest upon such a weak foundation
that it is of greater moment where I am than who I am? The house of
Publius Valerius shall be no check upon your freedom, your Velia shall
be safe. I will not only move my house to level ground, but I will move
it to the bottom of the hill that you may dwell above the citizen whom
you suspect. Let those dwell on the Velia who are regarded as truer
friends of liberty than Publius Valerius." All the materials were
forthwith carried below the Velia and his house was built at the very
bottom of the hill where now stands the temple of Vica Pota.
Ab urbe condita 2.8
Laws were passed which not only cleared the consul from suspicion but
produced such a reaction that he won the people's affections, hence his
soubriquet of Publicola.
The most popular of these laws were those
which granted a right of appeal from the magistrate to the people
and
devoted to the gods the person and property of any one who entertained
projects of becoming king. Valerius secured the passing of these laws
while still sole consul, that the people might feel grateful solely to
him; afterwards he held the elections for the appointment of a
colleague. The consul elected was Sp. Lucretius. But he had not, owing
to his great age, strength enough to discharge the duties of his
office, and within a few days he died. M. Horatius Pulvillus was
elected in his place. In some ancient authors I find no mention of
Lucretius, Horatius being named immediately after Brutus; as he did
nothing of any note during his office, I suppose, his memory has
perished. The temple of Jupiter on the Capitol had not yet been
dedicated, and the consuls drew lots to decide which should dedicate
it. The lot fell to Horatius. Publicola set out for the Veientine war.
His friends showed unseemly annoyance at the dedication of so
illustrious a fane being assigned to Horatius, and tried every means of
preventing it. When all else failed, they tried to alarm the consul,
whilst he was actually holding the door-post during the dedicatory
prayer, by a wicked message that his son was dead, and he could not
dedicate a temple while death was in his house. As to whether he
disbelieved the message, or whether his conduct simply showed
extraordinary self-control, there is no definite tradition, and it is
not easy to decide from the records. He only allowed the message to
interrupt him so far that he gave orders for the body to be burnt;
then, with his hand still on the door-post, he finished the prayer and
dedicated the temple. These were the principal incidents at home and in
the field during the first year after the expulsion of the royal
family. The consuls elected for the next year were P. Valerius, for the
second time, and T. Lucretius.
Ab urbe condita 2.9
The Tarquins had now taken refuge with Porsena, the king of Clusium,
whom they sought to influence by entreaty mixed with warnings. At one
time they entreated him not to allow men of Etruscan race, of the same
blood as himself, to wander as penniless exiles; at another they would
warn him not to let the new fashion of expelling kings go unpunished.
Liberty, they urged, possessed fascination enough in itself; unless
kings defend their authority with as much energy as their subjects show
in quest of liberty, all things come to a dead level, there will be no
one thing pre-eminent or superior to all else in the State; there will
soon be an end of kingly power, which is the most beautiful thing,
whether amongst gods or amongst mortal men. Porsena considered that the
presence of an Etruscan upon the Roman throne would be an honour to his
nation; accordingly he advanced with an army against Rome. Never before
had the senate been in such a state of alarm, so great at that time was
the power of Clusium and the reputation of Porsena. They feared not
only the enemy but even their own fellow-citizens, lest the plebs,
overcome by their fears, should admit the Tarquins into the City, and
accept peace even though it meant slavery. Many concessions were made
at that time to the plebs by the senate. Their first care was to lay in
a stock of corn, and commissioners were despatched to Vulsi and Cumae
to collect supplies. The sale of salt, hitherto in the hands of private
individuals who had raised the price to a high figure, was now wholly
transferred to the State. The plebs were exempted from the payment of
harbour-dues and the war-tax, so that they might fall on the rich, who
could bear the burden; the poor were held to pay sufficient to the
State if they brought up their children. This generous action of the
senate maintained the harmony of the commonwealth through the
subsequent stress of siege and famine so completely that the name of
king was not more abhorrent to the highest than it was to the lowest,
nor did any demagogue ever succeed in becoming so popular in after
times as the senate was then by its beneficent legislation.
Ab urbe condita 2.10
On the appearance of the enemy the country people fled into the City as
best they could. The weak places in the defences were occupied by
military posts; elsewhere the walls and the Tiber were deemed
sufficient protection. The enemy would have forced their way over the
Sublician bridge had it not been for one man, Horatius Cocles. The good
fortune of Rome provided him as her bulwark on that memorable day. He
happened to be on guard at the bridge when he saw the Janiculum taken
by a sudden assault and the enemy rushing down from it to the river,
whilst his own men, a panic-struck mob, were deserting their posts and
throwing away their arms. He reproached them one after another for
their cowardice, tried to stop them, appealed to them in heaven's name
to stand, declared that it was in vain for them to seek safety in
flight whilst leaving the bridge open behind them, there would very
soon be more of the enemy on the Palatine and the Capitol than there
were on the Janiculum. So he shouted to them to break down the bridge
by sword or fire, or by whatever means they could, he would meet the
enemies' attack so far as one man could keep them at bay. He advanced
to the head of the bridge. Amongst the fugitives, whose backs alone
were visible to the enemy, he was conspicuous as he fronted them armed
for fight at close quarters. The enemy were astounded at his
preternatural courage. Two men were kept by a sense of shame from
deserting him-Sp. Lartius and T. Herminius-both of them men of high
birth and renowned courage. With them he sustained the first
tempestuous shock and wild confused onset, for a brief interval. Then,
whilst only a small portion of the bridge remained and those who were
cutting it down called upon them to retire, he insisted upon these,
too, retreating. Looking round with eyes dark with menace upon the
Etruscan chiefs, he challenged them to single combat, and reproached
them all with being the slaves of tyrant kings, and whilst unmindful of
their own liberty coming to attack that of others. For some time they
hesitated, each looking round upon the others to begin. At length shame
roused them to action, and raising a shout they hurled their javelins
from all sides on their solitary foe. He caught them on his
outstretched shield, and with unshaken resolution kept his place on the
bridge with firmly planted foot. They were just attempting to dislodge
him by a charge when the crash of the broken bridge and the shout which
the Romans raised at seeing the work completed stayed the attack by
filling them with sudden panic. Then Cocles said, "Tiberinus, holy
father, I pray thee to receive into thy propitious stream these arms
and this thy warrior." So, fully armed, he leaped into the Tiber, and
though many missiles fell over him he swam across in safety to his
friends: an act of daring more famous than credible with posterity. The
State showed its gratitude for such courage; his statue was set up in
the Comitium, and as much land given to him as he could drive the
plough round in one day. Besides this public honour, the citizens
individually showed their feeling; for, in spite of the great scarcity,
each, in proportion to his means, sacrificed what he could from his own
store as a gift to Cocles.
Ab urbe condita 2.11
Repulsed in his first attempt, Porsena changed his plans from assault
to blockade. After placing a detachment to hold the Janiculum he fixed
his camp on the plain between that hill and the Tiber, and sent
everywhere for boats, partly to intercept any attempt to get corn into
Rome and partly to carry his troops across to different spots for
plunder, as opportunity might serve. In a short time he made the whole
of the district round Rome so insecure that not only were all the crops
removed from the fields but even the cattle were all driven into the
City, nor did any one venture to take them outside the gates. The
impunity with which the Etruscans committed their depredations was due
to strategy on the part of the Romans more than to fear. For the consul
Valerius, determined to get an opportunity of attacking them when they
were scattered in large numbers over the fields, allowed small forages
to pass unnoticed, whilst he was reserving himself for vengeance on a
larger scale. So to draw on the pillagers, he gave orders to a
considerable body of his men to drive cattle out of the Esquiline gate,
which was the furthest from the enemy, in the expectation that they
would gain intelligence of it through the slaves who were deserting,
owing to the scarcity produced by the blockade. The information was
duly conveyed, and in consequence they crossed the river in larger
numbers than usual in the hope of securing the whole lot. P. Valerius
ordered T. Herminius with a small body of troops to take up a concealed
position at a distance of two miles on the Gabian road, whilst Sp.
Lartius with some light-armed infantry was to post himself at the
Colline gate until the enemy had passed him and then to intercept their
retreat to the river. The other consul, T. Lucretius, with a few
maniples made a sortie from the Naevian gate; Valerius himself led some
picked cohorts from the Caelian hill, and these were the first to
attract the enemy's notice. When Herminius became aware that fighting
was begun, he rose from ambush and took the enemy who were engaged with
Valerius in rear. Answering cheers arose right and left, from the
Colline and the Naevian gates and the pillagers, hemmed in, unequal to
the fight, and with every way of escape blocked, were cut to pieces.
That put an end to these irregular and scattered excursions on the part
of the Etruscans.
Ab urbe condita 2.12
The blockade, however, continued, and with it a growing scarcity of
corn at famine prices. Porsena still cherished hopes of capturing the
City by keeping up the investment. There was a young noble, C. Mucius,
who regarded it as a disgrace that whilst Rome in the days of servitude
under her kings had never been blockaded in any war or by any foe, she
should now, in the day of her freedom, be besieged by those very
Etruscans whose armies she had often routed. Thinking that this
disgrace ought to be avenged by some great deed of daring, he
determined in the first instance to penetrate into the enemy's camp on
his own responsibility. On second thoughts, however, he became
apprehensive that if he went without orders from the consuls, or
unknown to any one, and happened to be arrested by the Roman outposts,
he might be brought back as a deserter, a charge which the condition of
the City at the time would make only too probable. So he went to the
senate. "I wish," he said, "Fathers, to swim the Tiber, and, if I can,
enter the enemy's camp, not as a pillager nor to inflict retaliation
for their pillagings. I am purposing, with heaven's help, a greater
deed." The senate gave their approval. Concealing a sword in his robe,
he started. When he reached the camp he took his stand in the densest
part of the crowd near the royal tribunal. It happened to be the
soldiers' pay-day, and a secretary, sitting by the king and dressed
almost exactly like him, was busily engaged, as the soldiers kept
coming to him incessantly. Afraid to ask which of the two was the king,
lest his ignorance should betray him, Mucius struck as fortune directed
the blow and killed the secretary instead of the king. He tried to
force his way back with his blood-stained dagger through the dismayed
crowd, but the shouting caused a rush to be made to the spot; he was
seized and dragged back by the king's bodyguard to the royal tribunal.
Here, alone and helpless, and in the utmost peril, he was still able to
inspire more fear than he felt. "I am a citizen of Rome," he said, "men
call me C. Mucius. As an enemy I wished to kill an enemy, and I have as
much courage to meet death as I had to inflict it. It is the Roman
nature to act bravely and to suffer bravely. I am not alone in having
made this resolve against you, behind me there is a long list of those
who aspire to the same distinction. If then it is your pleasure, make
up your mind for a struggle in which you will every hour have to fight
for your life and find an armed foe on the threshold of your royal
tent. This is the war which we the youth of Rome, declare against you.
You have no serried ranks, no pitched battle to fear, the matter will
be settled between you alone and each one of us singly." The king,
furious with anger, and at the same time terrified at the unknown
danger, threatened that if he did not promptly explain the nature of
the plot which he was darkly hinting at he should be roasted alive.
"Look," Mucius cried, "and learn how lightly those regard their bodies
who have some great glory in view." Then he plunged his right hand into
a fire burning on the altar. Whilst he kept it roasting there as if he
were devoid of all sensation, the king, astounded at his preternatural
conduct, sprang from his seat and ordered the youth to be removed from
the altar. "Go," he said, "you have been a worse enemy to yourself than
to me. I would invoke blessings on your courage if it were displayed on
behalf of my country; as it is, I send you away exempt from all rights
of war, unhurt, and safe." Then Mucius, reciprocating, as it were, this
generous treatment, said, "Since you honour courage, know that what you
could not gain by threats you have obtained by kindness. Three hundred
of us, the foremost amongst the Roman youth, have sworn to attack you
in this way. The lot fell to me first, the rest, in the order of their
lot, will come each in his turn, till fortune shall give us a
favourable chance against you."
Ab urbe condita 2.13
Mucius was accordingly dismissed; afterwards he received the soubriquet
of Scaevola, from the loss of his right hand. Envoys from Porsena
followed him to Rome. The king's narrow escape from the first of many
attempts; which was owing solely to the mistake of his assailant, and
the prospect of having to meet as many attacks as there were
conspirators, so unnerved him that he made proposals of peace to Rome.
One for the restoration of the Tarquins was put forward, more because
he could not well refuse their request than because he had any hope of
its being granted. The demand for the restitution of their territory to
the Veientines, and that for the surrender of hostages as a condition
of the withdrawal of the detachment from the Janiculum, were felt by
the Romans to be inevitable, and on their being accepted and peace
concluded, Porsena moved his troops from the Janiculum and evacuated
the Roman territory. As a recognition of his courage the senate gave C.
Mucius a piece of land across the river, which was afterwards known as
the Mucian Meadows. The honour thus paid to courage incited even women
to do glorious things for the State. The Etruscan camp was situated not
far from the river, and the maiden Cloelia, one of the hostages,
escaped, unobserved, through the guards and at the head of her sister
hostages swam across the river amidst a shower of javelins and restored
them all safe to their relatives. When the news of this incident
reached him, the king was at first exceedingly angry and sent to demand
the surrender of Cloelia; the others he did not care about. Afterwards
his feelings changed to admiration; he said that the exploit surpassed
those of Cocles and Mucius, and announced that whilst on the one hand
he should consider the treaty broken if she were not surrendered, he
would on the other hand, if she were surrendered, send her back to her
people unhurt. Both sides behaved honourably; the Romans surrendered
her as a pledge of loyalty to the terms of the treaty; the Etruscan
king showed that with him courage was not only safe but honoured, and
after eulogising the girl's conduct, told her that he would make her a
present of half the remaining hostages, she was to choose whom she
would. It is said that after all had been brought before her, she chose
the boys of tender age; a choice in keeping with maidenly modesty, and
one approved by the hostages themselves, since they felt that the age
which was most liable to ill-treatment should have the preference in
being rescued from hostile hands. After peace was thus re-established,
the Romans rewarded the unprecedented courage shown by a woman by an
unprecedented honour, namely an equestrian statue. On the highest part
of the Sacred Way a statue was erected representing the maiden sitting
on horseback.
Ab urbe condita 2.14
Quite inconsistent with this peaceful withdrawal from the City on the
part of the Etruscan king is the custom which, with other formalities,
has been handed down from antiquity to our own age of "selling the
goods of King Porsena." This custom must either have been introduced
during the war and kept up after peace was made, or else it must have a
less bellicose origin than would be implied by the description of the
goods sold as "taken from the enemy." The most probable tradition is
that Porsena, knowing the City to be without food owing to the long
investment, made the Romans a present of his richly-stored camp, in
which provisions had been collected from the neighbouring fertile
fields of Etruria. Then, to prevent the people seizing them
indiscriminately as spoils of war, they were regularly sold, under the
description of "the goods of Porsena," a description indicating rather
the gratitude of the people than an auction of the king's personal
property, which had never been at the disposal of the Romans. To
prevent his expedition from appearing entirely fruitless, Porsena,
after bringing the war with Rome to a close, sent his son Aruns with a
part of his force to attack Aricia. At first the Aricians were dismayed
by the unexpected movement, but the succours which in response to their
request were sent from the Latin towns and from Cumae so far encouraged
them that they ventured to offer battle. At the commencement of the
action the Etruscans attacked with such vigour that they routed the
Aricians at the first charge. The Cuman cohorts made a strategical
flank movement, and when the enemy had pressed forward in disordered
pursuit, they wheeled round and attacked them in the rear. Thus the
Etruscans, now all but victorious, were hemmed in and cut to pieces. A
very small remnant, after losing their general, made for Rome, as there
was no nearer place of safety. Without arms, and in the guise of
suppliants, they were kindly received and distributed amongst different
houses. After recovering from their wounds, some left for their homes,
to tell of the kind hospitality they had received; many remained behind
out of affection for their hosts and the City. A district was assigned
to them to dwell in, which subsequently bore the designation of "the
Tuscan quarter."
Ab urbe condita 2.15
The new consuls were Sp. Lartius and T. Herminius. This year Porsena
made the last attempt to effect the restoration of the Tarquins. The
ambassadors whom he had despatched to Rome with this object were
informed that the senate were going to send an embassy to the king, and
the most honourable of the senators were forthwith despatched. They
stated that the reason why a select number of senators had been sent to
him in preference to a reply being given to his ambassadors at Rome was
not that they had been unable to give the brief answer that kings would
never be allowed in Rome, but simply that all mention of the matter
might be for ever dropped, that after the interchange of so many kindly
acts there might be no cause of irritation, for he, Porsena, was asking
for what would be against the liberty of Rome. The Romans, if they did
not wish to hasten their own ruin, would have to refuse the request of
one to whom they wished to refuse nothing. Rome was not a monarchy, but
a free City, and they had made up their minds to open their gates even
to an enemy sooner than to a king. It was the universal wish that
whatever put an end to liberty in the City should put an end to the
City itself. They begged him, if he wished Rome to be safe, to allow it
to be free. Touched with a feeling of sympathy and respect, the king
replied, "Since this is your fixed and unalterable determination, I
will not harass you by fruitless proposals, nor will I deceive the
Tarquins by holding out hopes of an assistance which I am powerless to
render. Whether they insist on war or are prepared to live quietly, in
either case they must seek another place of exile than this, to prevent
any interruption of the peace between you and me." He followed up his
words by still stronger practical proofs of friendship, for he returned
the remainder of the hostages and restored the Veientine territory
which had been taken away under the treaty. As all hope of restoration
was cut off, Tarquin went to his son-in-law Mamilius Octavius at
Tusculum. So the peace between Rome and Porsena remained unbroken.
Ab urbe condita 2.16
The new consuls were M. Valerius and P. Postumius. This year a
successful action was fought with the Sabines; the consuls celebrated a
triumph. Then the Sabines made preparations for war on a larger scale.
To oppose them and also at the same time to guard against danger in the
direction of Tusculum, from which place war, though not openly
declared, was still apprehended, the consuls elected were P. Valerius
for the fourth time and T. Lucretius for the second. A conflict which
broke out amongst the Sabines between the peace party and the war party
brought an accession of strength to the Romans. Attius Clausus, who was
afterwards known in Rome as Appius Claudius, was an advocate for peace,
but, unable to maintain his ground against the opposing faction, who
were stirring up war, he fled to Rome with a large body of clients.
They were admitted to the citizenship and received a grant of land
lying beyond the Anio. They were called the Old Claudian tribe, and
their numbers were added to by fresh tribesmen from that district.
After his election into the senate it was not long before Appius gained
a prominent position in that body. The consuls marched into the Sabine
territory, and by their devastation of the country and the defeats
which they inflicted so weakened the enemy that no renewal of the war
was to be feared for a long time. The Romans returned home in triumph.
The following year, in the consulship of Agrippa Menenius and P.
Postumius, P. Valerius died. He was universally admitted to be first in
the conduct of war and the arts of peace, but though he enjoyed such an
immense reputation, his private fortune was so scanty that it could not
defray the expenses of his funeral. They were met by the State. The
matrons mourned for him as a second Brutus. In the same year two Latin
colonies, Pometia and Cora, revolted to the Auruncans. War commenced,
and after the defeat of an immense army which had sought to oppose the
advance of the consuls into their territory, the whole war was centered
round Pometia. There was no respite from bloodshed after the battle any
more than during the fighting, many more were killed than were taken
prisoners; the prisoners were everywhere butchered; even the hostages,
three hundred of whom they had in their hands, fell a victim to the
enemy's bloodthirsty rage. This year also there was a triumph in Rome.
Ab urbe condita 2.17
The consuls who succeeded, Opiter Verginius and Sp. Cassius, tried at
first to take Pometia by storm, then they had recourse to regular
siege-works. Actuated more by a spirit of mortal hatred than by any
hope or chance of success, the Auruncans made a sortie. The greater
number were armed with blazing torches, and they carried flames and
death everywhere. The "vineae" were burnt, great numbers of the
besiegers were killed and wounded, they nearly killed one of the
consuls-the authorities do not give his name- after he had fallen from
his horse severely wounded. After this disaster the Romans returned
home, with a large number of wounded, amongst them the consul, whose
condition was critical. After an interval, long enough for the recovery
of the wounded and the filling up of the ranks, operations were resumed
at Pometia in stronger force and in a more angry temper. The vineae
were repaired and the other vast works were made good, and when
everything was ready for the soldiers to mount the walls, the place
surrendered. The Auruncans, however, were treated with no less rigour
after they had surrendered the city than if it had been taken by
assault; the principal men were beheaded, the rest of the townsfolk
sold as slaves. The town was razed, the land put up for sale. The
consuls celebrated a triumph more because of the terrible vengeance
they had inflicted than on account of the importance of the war now
terminated.
Ab urbe condita 2.18
The following year had as consuls Postumius Cominius and T. Lartius.
During this year an incident occurred which, though small in itself,
threatened to lead to the renewal of a war more formidable than the
Latin war which was dreaded. During the games at Rome some courtesans
were carried off by Sabine youths in sheer wantonness. A crowd
gathered, and a quarrel arose which became almost a pitched battle. The
alarm was increased by the authentic report that at the instigation of
Octavius Mamilius the thirty Latin towns had formed a league. The
apprehensions felt by the State at such a serious crisis led to
suggestions being made for the first time for the appointment of a
dictator. It is not, however, clearly ascertained in what year this
office was created, or who the consuls were who had forfeited the
confidence of the people owing to their being adherents of the
Tarquins-for this, too, is part of the tradition-or who was the first
dictator. In the most ancient authorities I find that it was T.
Lartius, and that Sp. Cassius was his master of the horse. Only men of
consular rank were eligible under the law governing the appointment.
This makes me more inclined to believe that Lartius, who was of
consular rank, was set over the consuls to restrain and direct them
rather than Manlius Valerius, the son of Marcus and grandson of
Volesus. Besides, if they wanted the dictator to be chosen from that
family especially, they would have much sooner chosen the father, M.
Valerius, a man of proved worth and also of consular rank. When, for
the first time, a Dictator was created in Rome, a great fear fell on
the people, after they saw the axes borne before him, and consequently
they were more careful to obey his orders. For there was not, as in the
case of the consuls, each of whom possessed the same authority, any
chance of securing the aid of one against the other, nor was there any
right of appeal, nor in short was there any safety anywhere except in
punctilious obedience. The Sabines were even more alarmed at the
appointment of a Dictator than the Romans, because they were convinced
that it was in their account that he had been created. Accordingly
envoys were sent with proposals for peace. They begged the Dictator and
the senate to pardon what was a youthful escapade, but were told in
reply that young men could be pardoned, but not old men, who were
continually stirring up fresh wars. However, the negotiations continued
and peace would have been secured if the Sabines could have made up
their minds to comply with the demand to make good the expenses of the
war. War was proclaimed; an informal truce kept the year undisturbed.
Ab urbe condita 2.19
The next consuls were Ser. Sulpicius and Manlius Tullius. Nothing worth
recording took place. The consuls of the following year were T.
Aebutius and C. Vetusius. During their consulship Fidenae was besieged;
Crustumeria captured; Praeneste revolted from the Latins to Rome. The
Latin war which had been threatening for some years now at last broke
out. A. Postumius, the Dictator, and T. Aebutius, Master of the Horse,
advanced with a large force of infantry and cavalry to the Lake
Regillus in the district of Tusculum and came upon the main army of the
enemy. On hearing that the Tarquins were in the army of the Latins, the
passions of the Romans were so roused that they determined to engage at
once. The battle that followed was more obstinately and desperately
fought than any previous ones had been. For the commanders not only
took their part in directing the action, they fought personally against
each other, and hardly one of the leaders in either army, with the
exception of the Roman Dictator, left the field unwounded. Tarquinius
Superbus, though now enfeebled by age, spurred his horse against
Postumius, who in the front of the line was addressing and forming his
men. He was struck in the side and carried off by a body of his
followers into a place of safety. Similarly on the other wing Aebutius,
Master of the Horse, directed his attack against Octavius Mamilius; the
Tusculan leader saw him coming and rode at him full speed. So terrific
was the shock that Aebutius' arm was pierced, Mamilius was speared in
the breast, and led off by the Latins into their second line. Aebutius,
unable to hold a weapon with his wounded arm, retired from the
fighting. The Latin leader, in no way deterred by his wound, infused
fresh energy into the combat, for, seeing that his own men were
wavering, he called up the cohort of Roman exiles, who were led by
Lucius Tarquinius. The loss of country and fortune made them fight all
the more desperately; for a short time they restored the battle, and
the Romans who were opposed to them began to give ground.
Ab urbe condita 2.20
M. Valerius, the brother of Publicola, catching sight of the fiery
young Tarquin conspicuous in the front line, dug spurs into his horse
and made for him with levelled lance, eager to enhance the pride of his
house, that the family who boasted of having expelled the Tarquins
might have the glory of killing them. Tarquin evaded his foe by
retiring behind his men. Valerius, riding headlong into the ranks of
the exiles, was run through by a spear from behind. This did not check
the horse's speed, and the Roman sank dying to the ground, his arms
falling upon him. When the Dictator Postumius saw that one of his
principal officers had fallen, and that the exiles were rushing on
furiously in a compact mass whilst his men were shaken and giving
ground, he ordered his own cohort -a picked force who formed his
bodyguard-to treat any of their own side whom they saw in flight as
enemy. Threatened in front and rear the Romans turned and faced the
foe, and closed their ranks. The Dictator's cohort, fresh in mind and
body, now came into action and attacked the exhausted exiles with great
slaughter. Another single combat between the leaders took place; the
Latin commander saw the cohort of exiles almost hemmed in by the Roman
Dictator, and hurried to the front with some maniples of the reserves.
T. Herminius saw them coming, and recognised Mamilius by his dress and
arms. He attacked the enemies' commander much more fiercely than the
Master of the Horse had previously done, so much so, in fact, that he
killed him by a single spear-thrust through his side. Whilst despoiling
the body he himself was struck by a javelin, and after being carried
back to the camp, expired whilst his wound was being dressed. Then the
Dictator hurried up to the cavalry and appealed to them to relieve the
infantry, who were worn out with the struggle, by dismounting and
fighting on foot. They obeyed, leaped from their horses, and protecting
themselves with their targes, fought in front of the standards. The
infantry recovered their courage at once when they saw the flower of
the nobility fighting on equal terms and sharing the same dangers with
themselves. At last the Latins were forced back, wavered, and finally
broke their ranks. The cavalry had their horses brought up that they
might commence the pursuit, the infantry followed. It is said that the Dictator, omitting nothing that could secure divine or human aid,
vowed, during the battle, a temple to Castor and promised rewards to
those who should be the first and second to enter the enemies' camp.
Such was the ardour which the Romans displayed that in the same charge
which routed the enemy they carried their camp. Thus was the battle
fought at Lake Regillus. The Dictator and the Master of the Horse
returned in triumph to the City.
Ab urbe condita 2.21
For the next three years there was neither settled peace nor open war.
The consuls were Q. Cloelius and T. Larcius. They were succeeded by A.
Sempronius and M. Minucius. During their consulship a temple was
dedicated to Saturn and the festival of the Saturnalia instituted. The
next consuls were A. Postumius and T. Verginius. I find in some authors
this year given as the date of the battle at Lake Regillus, and that A.
Postumius laid down his consulship because the fidelity of his
colleague was suspected, on which a Dictator was appointed. So many
errors as to dates occur, owing to the order in which the consuls
succeeded being variously given, that the remoteness in time of both
the events and the authorities make it impossible to determine either
which consuls succeeded which, or in what year any particular event
occurred. Ap. Claudius and P. Servilius were the next consuls. This
year is memorable for the news of Tarquin's death. His death took place
at Cuma, whither he had retired, to seek the protection of the tyrant
Aristodemus after the power of the Latins was broken. The news was
received with delight by both senate and plebs. But the elation of the
patricians was carried to excess. Up to that time they had treated the
commons with the utmost deference, now their leaders began to practice
injustice upon them. The same year a fresh batch of colonists was sent
to complete the number at Signia, a colony founded by King Tarquin. The
number of tribes at Rome was increased to twenty-one. The temple of
Mercury was dedicated on May 15.
Ab urbe condita 2.22
The relations with the Volscians during the Latin war were neither
friendly nor openly hostile. The Volscians had collected a force which
they were intending to send to the aid of the Latins had not the
Dictator forestalled them by the rapidity of his movements, a rapidity
due to his anxiety to avoid a battle with the combined armies. To
punish them the consuls led the legions into the Volscian country. This
unexpected movement paralysed the Volscians, who were not expecting
retribution for what had been only an intention. Unable to offer
resistance, they gave as hostages three hundred children belonging to
their nobility, drawn from Cora and Pometia. The legions, accordingly,
were marched back without fighting. Relieved from the immediate danger,
the Volscians soon fell back on their old policy, and after forming an
armed alliance with the Hernicans, made secret preparations for war.
They also despatched envoys through the length and breadth of Latium to
induce that nation to join them. But after their defeat at Lake
Regillus the Latins were so incensed against every one who advocated a
resumption of hostilities that they did not even spare the Volscian
envoys, who were arrested and conducted to Rome. There they were handed
over to the consuls and evidence was produced showing that the
Volscians and Hernicans were preparing for war with Rome. When the
matter was brought before the senate, they were so gratified by the
action of the Latins that they sent back six thousand prisoners who had
been sold into slavery, and also referred to the new magistrates the
question of a treaty which they had hitherto persistently refused to
consider. The Latins congratulated themselves upon the course they had
adopted, and the advocates of peace were in high honour. They sent a
golden crown as a gift to the Capitoline Jupiter. The deputation who
brought the gift were accompanied by a large number of the released
prisoners, who visited the houses where they had worked as slaves to
thank their former masters for the kindness and consideration shown
them in their misfortunes, and to form ties of hospitality with them.
At no previous period had the Latin nation been on more friendly terms
both politically and personally with the Roman government.
Ab urbe condita 2.23
But a war with the Volscians was imminent, and the State was torn with
internal dissensions; the patricians and the plebeians were bitterly
hostile to one another, owing mainly to the desperate condition of the
debtors. They loudly complained that whilst fighting in the field for
liberty and empire they were oppressed and enslaved by their
fellow-citizens at home;
their freedom was more secure in war than in
peace, safer amongst the enemy than amongst their own people. The
discontent, which was becoming of itself continually more embittered,
was still further inflamed by the signal misfortunes of one individual.
An old man, bearing visible proofs of all the evils he had suffered,
suddenly appeared in the Forum. His clothing was covered with filth,
his personal appearance was made still more loathsome by a corpse-like
pallor and emaciation, his unkempt beard and hair made him look like a
savage. In spite of this disfigurement he was recognised by the pitying
bystanders; they said that he had been a centurion, and mentioned other
military distinctions he possessed. He bared his breast and showed the
scars which witnessed to many fights in which he had borne an
honourable part. The crowd had now almost grown to the dimensions of an
Assembly of the people. He was asked, "Whence came that garb, whence
that disfigurement?" He stated that whilst serving in the Sabine war he
had not only lost the produce of his land through the depredations of
the enemy, but his farm had been burnt, all his property plundered, his
cattle driven away, the war-tax demanded when he was least able to pay
it, and he had got into debt. This debt had been vastly increased
through usury and had stripped him first of his father's and
grandfather's farm, then of his other property, and at last like a
pestilence had reached his person. He had been carried off by his
creditor, not into slavery only, but into an underground workshop, a
living death. Then he showed his back scored with recent marks of the
lash.
On seeing and hearing all this a great outcry arose; the excitement was
not confined to the Forum, it spread everywhere throughout the City.
Men who were in bondage for debt and those who had been released rushed
from all sides into the public streets and invoked "the protection of
the Quirites." Every one was eager to join the malcontents, numerous
bodies ran shouting through all the streets to the Forum. Those of the
senators who happened to be in the Forum and fell in with the mob were
in great danger of their lives. Open violence would have been resorted
to, had not the consuls, P. Servilius and Ap. Claudius, promptly
intervened to quell the outbreak. The crowd surged round them, showed
their chains and other marks of degradation. These, they said, were
their rewards for having served their country; they tauntingly reminded
the consuls of the various campaigns in which they had fought, and
peremptorily demanded rather than petitioned that the senate should be
called together. Then they closed round the Senate-house, determined to
be themselves the arbiters and directors of public policy. A very small
number of senators, who happened to be available, were got together by
the consuls, the rest were afraid to go even to the Forum, much more to
the Senate-house. No business could be transacted owing to the
requisite number not being present. The people began to think that they
were being played with and put off, that the absent senators were not
kept away by accident or by fear, but in order to prevent any redress
of their grievances, and that the consuls themselves were shuffling and
laughing at their misery. Matters were reaching the point at which not
even the majesty of the consuls could keep the enraged people in check,
when the absentees, uncertain whether they ran the greater risk by
staying away or coming, at last entered the Senate-house. The House was
now full, and a division of opinion showed itself not only amongst the
senators but even between the two consuls.
Appius, a man of passionate
temperament, was of opinion that the matter ought to be settled by a
display of authority on the part of the consuls; if one or two were
brought up for trial, the rest would calm down.
Servilius, more
inclined to gentle measures, thought that when men's passions are
aroused it was safer and easier to bend them than to break them.
Ab urbe condita 2.24
In the middle of these disturbances, fresh alarm was created by some
Latin horsemen who galloped in with the disquieting tidings that a
Volscian army was on the march to attack the City. This intelligence
affected the patricians and the plebeians very differently; to such an
extent had civic discord rent the State in twain.
The plebeians were
exultant, they said that the gods were preparing to avenge the tyranny
of the patricians; they encouraged each other to evade enrolment, for
it was better for all to die together than to perish one by one. "Let
the patricians take up arms, let the patricians serve as common
soldiers, that those who get the spoils of war may share its perils."
The senate, on the other hand, filled with gloomy apprehensions by the
twofold danger from their own fellow-citizens and from their enemy,
implored the consul Servilius, who was more sympathetic towards the
people, to extricate the State from the perils that beset it on all
sides. He dismissed the senate and went into the Assembly of the plebs.
There he pointed out how anxious the senate were to consult the
interests of the plebs, but their deliberations respecting what was
certainly the largest part, though still only a part, of the State had
been cut short by fears for the safety of the State as a whole. The
enemy were almost at their gates, nothing could be allowed to take
precedence of the war, but even if the attack were postponed, it would
not be honourable on the part of the plebeians to refuse to take up
arms for their country till they had been paid for doing so, nor would
it be compatible with the self-respect of the senate to be actuated by
fear rather than by good-will in devising measures for the relief of
their distressed fellow-citizens. He convinced the Assembly of his
sincerity by issuing an edict that none should keep a Roman citizen in
chains or duress whereby he would be prevented from enrolling for
military service, none should distrain or sell the goods of a soldier
as long as he was in camp, or detain his children or grandchildren. On
the promulgation of this edict those debtors who were present at once
gave in their names for enrolment, and crowds of persons running in all
quarters of the City from the houses where they were confined, as their
creditors had no longer the right to detain them, gathered together in
the Forum to take the military oath. These formed a considerable force,
and none were more conspicuous for courage and activity in the Volscian
war. The consul led his troops against the enemy and encamped a short
distance from them.
Ab urbe condita 2.25
The very next night the Volscians, trusting to the dissensions amongst
the Romans, made an attempt on the camp, on the chance of desertions
taking place, or the camp being betrayed, in the darkness. The outposts
perceived them, the army was aroused, and on the alarm being sounded
they rushed to arms, so the Volscian attempt was foiled; for the rest
of the night both sides kept quiet. The following day, at dawn, the
Volscians filled up the trenches and attacked the rampart. This was
already being torn down on all sides while the consul, in spite of the
shouts of the whole army-of the debtors most of all- demanding the
signal for action, delayed for a few minutes, in order to test the
temper of his men. When he was quite satisfied as to their ardour and
determination, he gave the signal to charge and launched his soldiery,
eager to engage, upon the foe. They were routed at the very first
onset, the fugitives were cut down as far as the infantry could pursue
them, then the cavalry drove them in confusion to their camp. They
evacuated it in their panic, the legions soon came up, surrounded it,
captured and plundered it. The following day the legions marched to
Suessa Pometia, whither the enemy had fled, and in a few days it was
captured and given up to the soldiers to pillage. This to some extent
relieved the poverty of the soldiers. The consul, covered with glory,
led his victorious army back to Rome. Whilst on the march he was
visited by envoys from the Volscians of Ecetra, who were concerned for
their own safety after the capture of Pometia. By a decree of the
senate, peace was granted to them, some territory was taken from them.
Ab urbe condita 2.26
Immediately afterwards a fresh alarm was created at Rome by the
Sabines, but it was more a sudden raid than a regular war. News was
brought during the night that a Sabine army had advanced as far as the
Anio on a predatory expedition, and that the farms in that
neighbourhood were being harried and burnt. A. Postumius, who had been
the Dictator in the Latin war, was at once sent there with the whole of
the cavalry force; the consul Servilius followed with a picked body of
infantry. Most of the enemy were surrounded by the cavalry while
scattered in the fields; the Sabine legion offered no resistance to the
advance of the infantry. Tired out with their march and the nocturnal
plundering-a large proportion of them were in the farms full of food
and wine-they had hardly sufficient strength to flee. The Sabine war
was announced and concluded in one night, and strong hopes were
entertained that peace had now been secured everywhere. The next day,
however, envoys from the Auruncans came with a demand for the
evacuation of the Volscian territory, otherwise they were to proclaim
war. The army of the Auruncans had begun their advance when the envoys
left home, and the report of its having been seen not far from Aricia
created so much excitement and confusion amongst the Romans that it was
impossible either for the senate to take the matter into formal
consideration, or for a favourable reply to be given to those who were
commencing hostilities, since they were themselves taking up arms to
repel them. They marched to Aricia; not far from there they engaged the
Auruncans and in one battle finished the war.
Ab urbe condita 2.27
After the defeat of the Auruncans, the Romans, who had, within a few
days, fought so many successful wars, were expecting the fulfilment of
the promises which the consul had made on the authority of the senate.
Appius, partly from his innate love of tyranny and partly to undermine
the confidence felt in his colleague, gave the harshest sentences he
could when debtors were brought before him. One after another those who
had before pledged their persons as security were now handed over to
their creditors,
and others were compelled to give such security. A
soldier to whom this happened appealed to the colleague of Appius. A
crowd gathered round Servilius, they reminded him of his promises,
upbraided him with their services in war and the scars they had
received, and demanded that he should either get an ordinance passed by
the senate, or, as consul, protect his people; as commander, his
soldiers. The consul sympathised with them, but under the circumstances
he was compelled to temporise; the opposite policy was so recklessly
insisted on not only by his colleague but by the entire party of the
nobility. By taking a middle course he did not escape the odium of the
plebs nor did he win the favour of the patricians. These regarded him
as a weak popularity-hunting consul, the plebeians considered him
false, and it soon became apparent that he was as much detested as
Appius.
A dispute had arisen between the consuls as to which of them should
dedicate the temple of Mercury. The senate referred the question to the
people, and issued orders that the one to whom the dedication was
assigned by the people should preside over the corn-market and form a
guild of merchants and discharge functions in the presence of the
Pontifex Maximus. The people assigned the dedication of the temple to
M. Laetorius, the first centurion of the legion, a choice obviously
made not so much to honour the man, by conferring upon him an office so
far above his station, as to bring discredit on the consuls. One of
them, at all events, was excessively angry, as were the senate, but the
courage of the plebs had risen, and they went to work in a very
different method from that which they had adopted at first. For as any
prospect of help from the consuls or the senate was hopeless, they took
matters into their own hands, and whenever they saw a debtor brought
before the court, they rushed there from all sides, and by their shouts
and uproar prevented the consul's sentence from being heard, and when
it was pronounced no one obeyed it. They resorted to violence, and all
the fear and danger to personal liberty was transferred from the
debtors to the creditors, who were roughly handled before the eyes of
the consul. In addition to all this there were growing apprehensions of
a Sabine war. A levy was decreed, but no one gave in his name. Appius
was furious; he accused his colleague of courting the favour of the
people, denounced him as a traitor to the commonwealth because he
refused to give sentence where debtors were brought before him, and
moreover he refused to raise troops after the senate had ordered a
levy. Still, he declared, the ship of State was not entirely deserted
nor the consular authority thrown to the winds; he, single-handed,
would vindicate his own dignity and that of the senate. Whilst the
usual daily crowd were standing round him, growing ever bolder in
licence, he ordered one conspicuous leader of the agitation to be
arrested. As he was being dragged away by the lictors, he appealed.
There was no doubt as to what judgment the people would give, and he
would not have allowed the appeal had not his obstinacy been with great
difficulty overcome more by the prudence and authority of the senate
than by the clamour of the people, so determined was he to brave the
popular odium. From that time the mischief became more serious every
day, not only through open clamour but, what was far more dangerous,
through secession and secret meetings. At length the consuls, detested
as they were by the plebs, went out of office-Servilius equally hated
by both orders, Appius in wonderful favour with the patricians.
Ab urbe condita 2.28
Then A. Verginius and T. Vetusius took office. As the plebeians were
doubtful as to what sort of consuls they would have, and were anxious
to avoid any precipitate and ill-considered action which might result
from hastily adopted resolutions in the Forum, they began to hold
meetings at night, some on the Esquiline and others on the Aventine.
The consuls considered this state of things to be fraught with danger,
as it really was, and made a formal report to the senate. But any
orderly discussion of their report was out of the question, owing to
the excitement and clamour with which the senators received it, and the
indignation they felt at the consuls throwing upon them the odium of
measures which they ought to have carried on their own authority as
consuls. "Surely," it was said, "if there were really magistrates in
the State, there would have been no meetings in Rome beyond the public
Assembly; now the State was broken up into a thousand senates and
assemblies, since some councils were being held on the Esquiline and
others on the Aventine. Why, one man like Appius Claudius, who was
worth more than a consul, would have dispersed these gatherings in a
moment." When the consuls, after being thus censured, asked what they
wished them to do, as they were prepared to act with all the energy and
determination that the senate desired, a decree was passed that the
levy should be raised as speedily as possible, for the plebs was waxing
wanton through idleness. After dismissing the senate, the consuls
ascended the tribunal and called out the names of those liable to
active service. Not a single man answered to his name. The people,
standing round as though in formal assembly, declared that the plebs
could no longer be imposed upon, the consuls should not get a single
soldier until the promise made in the name of the State was fulfilled.
Before arms were put into their hands, every man's liberty must be
restored to him, that they might fight for their country and their
fellow-citizens and not for tyrannical masters. The consuls were quite
aware of the instructions they had received from the senate, but they
were also aware that none of those who had spoken so bravely within the
walls of the Senate-house were now present to share the odium which
they were incurring. A desperate conflict with the plebs seemed
inevitable. Before proceeding to extremities they decided to consult
the senate again. Thereupon all the younger senators rushed from their
seats, and crowding round the chairs of the consuls, ordered them to
resign their office and lay down an authority which they had not the
courage to maintain.
Ab urbe condita 2.29
Having had quite enough of trying to coerce the plebs on the one hand
and persuading the senate to adopt a milder course on the other, the
consuls at last said: "Senators, that you may not say you have not been
forewarned, we tell you that a very serious disturbance is at hand. We
demand that those who are the loudest in charging us with cowardice
shall support us whilst we conduct the levy. We will act as the most
resolute may wish, since such is your pleasure." They returned to the
tribunal and purposely ordered one of those who were in view to be
called up by name. As he stood silent, and a number of men had closed
round him to prevent his being seized, the consuls sent a lictor to
him. The lictor was pushed away, and those senators who were with the
consuls exclaimed that it was an outrageous insult and rushed down from
the tribunal to assist the lictor. The hostility of the crowd was
diverted from the lictor, who had simply been prevented from making the
arrest, to the senators. The interposition of the consuls finally
allayed the conflict. There had, however, been no stones thrown or
weapons used, it had resulted in more noise and angry words than
personal injury. The senate was summoned and assembled in disorder; its
proceedings were still more disorderly. Those who had been roughly
handled demanded an inquiry, and all the more violent members supported
the demand by shouting and uproar quite as much as by their votes. When
at last the excitement had subsided, the consuls censured them for
showing as little calm judgment in the senate as there was in the
Forum. Then the debate proceeded in order. Three different policies
were advocated. P. Valerius did not think the general question ought to
be raised; he thought they ought only to consider the case of those
who, in reliance on the promise of the consul P. Servilius, had served
in the Volscian, Auruncan, and Sabine wars. Titus Larcius considered
that the time had passed for rewarding only men who had served, the
whole plebs was overwhelmed with debt, the evil could not be arrested
unless there was a measure for universal relief. Any attempt to
differentiate between the various classes would only kindle fresh
discord instead of allaying it.
Appius Claudius, harsh by nature, and
now maddened by the hatred of the plebs on the one hand and the praises
of the senate on the other, asserted that these riotous gatherings were
not the result of misery but of licence, the plebeians were actuated by
wantonness more than by anger. This was the mischief which had sprung
from the right of appeal, for the consuls could only threaten without
the power to execute their threats as long as a criminal was allowed to
appeal to his fellow-criminals
. "Come," said he, "let us create a
Dictator from whom there is no appeal, then this madness which is
setting everything on fire will soon die down. Let me see any one
strike a lictor then, when he knows that his back and even his life are
in the sole power of the man whose authority he attacks."
Ab urbe condita 2.30
To many the sentiments which Appius uttered seemed cruel and monstrous,
as they really were. On the other hand, the proposals of Verginius and
Larcius would set a dangerous precedent, that of Larcius at all events,
as it would destroy all credit. The advice given by Verginius was
regarded as the most moderate, being a middle course between the other
two. But through the strength of his party, and the consideration of
personal interests which always have injured and always will injure
public policy, Appius won the day. He was very nearly being himself
appointed Dictator, an appointment which would more than anything have
alienated the plebs, and that too at a most critical time when the
Volscians, the Aequi, and the Sabines were all in arms together. The
consuls and the older patricians, however, took care that a magistracy
clothed with such tremendous powers should be entrusted to a man of
moderate temper.
They created M. Valerius, the son of Volesus,
Dictator. Though the plebeians recognised that it was against them that
a Dictator had been created, still, as they held their right of appeal
under a law which his brother had passed
, they did not fear any harsh
or tyrannical treatment from that family.
Their hopes were confirmed by
an edict issued by the Dictator, very similar to the one made by
Servilius. That edict had been ineffective, but they thought that more
confidence could be placed in the person and power of the Dictator, so,
dropping all opposition, they gave in their names for enrolment. Ten
legions, were formed, a larger army than had ever before been
assembled. Three of them were assigned to each of the consuls, the
Dictator took command of four.
The war could no longer be delayed. The Aequi had invaded the Latin
territory. Envoys sent by the Latins asked the senate either to send
help or allow them to arm for the purpose of defending their frontier.
It was thought safer to defend the unarmed Latins than to allow them to
re-arm themselves. The consul Vetusius was despatched, and that was the
end of the raids. The Aequi withdrew from the plains, and trusting more
to the nature of the country than to their arms, sought safety on the
mountain ridges. The other consul advanced against the Volscians, and
to avoid loss of time, he devastated their fields with the object of
forcing them to move their camp nearer to his and so bringing on an
engagement. The two armies stood facing each other, in front of their
respective lines, on the level space between the camps. The Volscians
had considerably the advantage in numbers, and accordingly showed their
contempt for their foe by coming on in disorder. The Roman consul kept
his army motionless, forbade their raising an answering shout, and
ordered them to stand with their spears fixed in the ground, and when
the enemy came to close quarters, to spring forward and make all
possible use of their swords. The Volscians, wearied with their running
and shouting, threw themselves upon the Romans as upon men benumbed
with fear, but when they felt the strength of the counter-attack and
saw the swords flashing before them, they retreated in confusion just
as if they had been caught in an ambush, and owing to the speed at
which they had come into action, they had not even strength to flee.
The Romans, on the other hand, who at the beginning of the battle had
remained quietly standing, were fresh and vigorous, and easily overtook
the exhausted Volscians, rushed their camp, drove them out, and pursued
them as far as Velitrae, victors and vanquished bursting pell-mell into
the city. A greater slaughter of all ranks took place there than in the
actual battle; a few who threw down their arms and surrendered received
quarter.
Ab urbe condita 2.31
Whilst these events were occurring amongst the Volscians, the Dictator,
after entering the Sabine territory, where the most serious part of the
war lay, defeated and routed the enemy and chased them out of their
camp. A cavalry charge had broken the enemy's centre which, owing to
the excessive lengthening of the wings, was weakened by an insufficient
depth of files, and while thus disordered the infantry charged them. In
the same charge the camp was captured and the war brought to a close.
Since the battle at Lake Regillus no more brilliant action had been
fought in those years. The Dictator rode in triumph into the City. In
addition to the customary distinctions, a place was assigned in the
Circus Maximus to him and to his posterity, from which to view the
Games, and the sella curulis was placed there. After the subjugation of
the Volscians, the territory of Velitrae was annexed and a body of
Roman citizens was sent out to colonise it. Some time later, an
engagement took place with the Aequi. The consul was reluctant to fight
as he would have to attack on unfavourable ground, but his soldiers
forced him into action. They accused him of protracting the war in
order that the Dictator's term of office might expire before they
returned home, in which case his promises would fall to the ground, as
those of the consul had previously done. They compelled him to march
his army up the mountain at all hazards; but owing to the cowardice of
the enemy this unwise step resulted in success. They were so astounded
at the daring of the Romans that before they came within range of their
weapons they abandoned their camp, which was in a very strong position,
and dashed down into the valley in the rear. So the victors gained a
bloodless victory and ample spoil.
Whilst these three wars were thus brought to a successful issue, the
course which domestic affairs were taking continued to be a source of
anxiety to both the patricians and the plebeians. The money-lenders
possessed such influence and had taken such skilful precautions that
they rendered the commons and even the Dictator himself powerless.
After the consul Vetusius had returned, Valerius introduced, as the
very first business of the senate, the treatment of the men who had
been marching to victory, and moved a resolution as to what decision
they ought to come to with regard to the debtors. His motion was
negatived, on which he said, "I am not acceptable as an advocate of
concord. Depend upon it, you will very soon wish that the Roman plebs
had champions like me. As far as I am concerned, I will no longer
encourage my fellow-citizens in vain hopes nor will I be Dictator in
vain. Internal dissensions and foreign wars have made this office
necessary to the commonwealth; peace has now been secured abroad, at
home it is made impossible. I would rather be involved in the
revolution as a private citizen than as Dictator." So saying, he left
the House and resigned his dictatorship. The reason was quite clear to
the plebs; he had resigned office because he was indignant at the way
they were treated. The non-fulfilment of his pledge was not due to him,
they considered that he had practically kept his word, and on his way
home they followed him with approving cheers.
Ab urbe condita 2.32
The senate now began to feel apprehensive lest on the disbandment of
the army there should be a recurrence of the secret conclaves and
conspiracies. Although the Dictator had actually conducted the
enrolment, the soldiers had sworn obedience to the consuls. Regarding
them as still bound by their oath, the senate ordered the legions to be
marched out of the City on the pretext that war had been recommenced by
the Aequi. This step brought the revolution to a head. It is said that
the first idea was to put the consuls to death that the men might be
discharged from their oath; then, on learning that no religious
obligation could be dissolved by a crime, they decided, at the
instigation of a certain Sicinius, to ignore the consuls and withdraw
to the Sacred Mount, which lay on the other side of the Anio, three
miles from the City. This is a more generally accepted tradition than
the one adopted by Piso that the secession was made to the Aventine.
There, without any commander in a regularly entrenched camp, taking
nothing with them but the necessaries of life, they quietly maintained
themselves for some days, neither receiving nor giving any provocation.
A great panic seized the City, mutual distrust led to a state of
universal suspense. Those plebeians who had been left by their comrades
in the City feared violence from the patricians; the patricians feared
the plebeians who still remained in the City, and could not make up
their minds whether they would rather have them go or stay. "How long,"
it was asked, "would the multitude who had seceded remain quiet? What
would happen if a foreign war broke out in the meantime?" They felt
that all their hopes rested on concord amongst the citizens, and that
this must be restored at any cost.
The senate decided, therefore, to send as their spokesman Menenius
Agrippa, an eloquent man, and acceptable to the plebs as being himself
of plebeian origin. He was admitted into the camp, and it is reported
that he simply told them the following fable in primitive and uncouth
fashion.
"In the days when all the parts of the human body were not as
now agreeing together, but each member took its own course and spoke
its own speech, the other members, indignant at seeing that everything
acquired by their care and labour and ministry went to the belly,
whilst it, undisturbed in the middle of them all, did nothing but enjoy
the pleasures provided for it, entered into a conspiracy; the hands
were not to bring food to the mouth, the mouth was not to accept it
when offered, the teeth were not to masticate it. Whilst, in their
resentment, they were anxious to coerce the belly by starving it, the
members themselves wasted away, and the whole body was reduced to the
last stage of exhaustion. Then it became evident that the belly
rendered no idle service, and the nourishment it received was no
greater than that which it bestowed by returning to all parts of the
body this blood by which we live and are strong, equally distributed
into the veins, after being matured by the digestion of the food." By
using this comparison, and showing how the internal disaffection
amongst the parts of the body resembled the animosity of the plebeians
against the patricians, he succeeded in winning over his audience.
Ab urbe condita 2.33
Negotiations were then entered upon for a reconciliation. An agreement
was arrived at, the terms being that the plebs should have its own
magistrates, whose persons were to be inviolable, and who should have
the right of affording protection against the consuls. And further, no
patrician should be allowed to hold that office. Two "tribunes of the
plebs" were elected, C. Licinius and L. Albinus. These chose three
colleagues. It is generally agreed that Sicinius, the instigator of the
secession, was amongst them, but who the other two were is not settled.
Some say that only two tribunes were created on the Sacred Hill and
that it was there that the lex sacrata was passed. During the secession
of the plebs Sp. Cassius and Postumius Cominius entered on their
consulship. In their year of office a treaty was concluded with the
Latin towns, and one of the consuls remained in Rome for the purpose.
The other was sent to the Volscian war. He routed a force of Volscians
from Antium, and pursued them to Longula, which he gained possession
of. Then he advanced to Polusca, also belonging to the Volscians, which
he captured, after which he attacked Corioli in great force.
Amongst the most distinguished of the young soldiers in the camp at
that time was Cnaeus Marcius, a young man prompt in counsel and action,
who afterwards received the epithet of Coriolanus. During the progress
of the siege, while the Roman army was devoting its whole attention to
the townspeople whom it had shut up within their walls, and not in the
least apprehending any danger from hostile movements without, it was
suddenly attacked by Volscian legions who had marched from Antium. At
the same moment a sortie was made from the town. Marcius happened to be
on guard, and with a picked body of men not only repelled the sortie
but made a bold dash through the open gate, and after cutting down many
in the part of the city nearest to him, seized some fire and hurled it
on the buildings which abutted on the walls. The shouts of the townsmen
mingled with the shrieks of the terrified women and children encouraged
the Romans and dismayed the Volscians, who thought that the city which
they had come to assist was already captured. So the troops from Antium
were routed and Corioli taken. The renown which Marcius won so
completely eclipsed that of the consul, that, had not the treaty with
the Latins-which owing to his colleague's absence had been concluded by
Sp. Cassius alone-been inscribed on a brazen column, and so permanently
recorded, all memory of Postumius Cominius having carried on a war with
the Volscians would have perished. In the same year Agrippa Menenius
died, a man who all through his life was equally beloved by the
patricians and the plebeians, and made himself still more endeared to
the plebeians after their secession. Yet he, the negotiator and
arbitrator of the reconciliation, who acted as the ambassador of the
patricians to the plebs, and brought them back to the City, did not
possess money enough to defray the cost of his funeral. He was interred
by the plebeians, each man contributing a sextans towards the expense.
Ab urbe condita 2.34
The new consuls were T. Geganius and P. Minucius. In this year, whilst
all abroad was undisturbed by war and the civic dissensions at home
were healed, the commonwealth was attacked by another much more serious
evil: first, dearness of food, owing to the fields remaining
uncultivated during the secession, and following on this a famine such
as visits a besieged city. It would have led to the perishing of the
slaves in any case, and probably the plebeians would have died, had not
the consuls provided for the emergency by sending men in various
directions to buy corn. They penetrated not only along the coast to the
right of Ostia into Etruria, but also along the sea to the left past
the Volscian country as far as Cumae. Their search extended even as far
as Sicily; to such an extent did the hostility of their neighbours
compel them to seek distant help. When corn had been bought at Cumae,
the ships were detained by the tyrant Aristodemus, in lieu of the
property of Tarquin, to whom he was heir. Amongst the Volscians and in
the Pomptine district it was even impossible to purchase corn, the corn
merchants were in danger of being attacked by the population. Some corn
came from Etruria up the Tiber; this served for the support of the
plebeians. They would have been harassed by a war, doubly unwelcome
when provisions were so scarce, if the Volscians, who were already on
the march, had not been attacked by a frightful pestilence. This
disaster cowed the enemy so effectually that even when it had abated
its violence they remained to some extent in a state of terror; the
Romans increased the number of colonists at Velitrae and sent a new
colony to Norba, up in the mountains, to serve as a stronghold in the
Pomptine district.
During the consulship of M. Minucius and A. Sempronius, a large
quantity of corn was brought from Sicily, and the question was
discussed in the senate at what price it should be given to the plebs.
Many were of opinion that the moment had come for putting pressure on
the plebeians, and recovering the rights which had been wrested from
the senate through the secession and the violence which accompanied it.
Foremost among these was Marcius Coriolanus, a determined foe to the
tribunitian power. "If," he argued, "they want their corn at the old
price, let them restore to the senate its old powers. Why, then, do I,
after being sent under the yoke, ransomed as it were from brigands, see
plebeian magistrates, why do I see a Sicinius in power? Am I to endure
these indignities a moment longer than I can help? Am I, who could not
put up with a Tarquin as king, to put up with a Sicinius? Let him
secede now! let him call out his plebeians, the way lies open to the
Sacred Hill and to other hills. Let them carry off the corn from our
fields as they did two years ago; let them enjoy the scarcity which in
their madness they have produced! I will venture to say that after they
have been tamed by these sufferings, they will rather work as labourers
themselves in the fields than prevent their being cultivated by an
armed secession." It is not so easy to say whether they ought to have
done this as it is to express one's belief that it could have been
done, and the senators might have made it a condition of lowering the
price of the corn that they should abrogate the tribunitian power and
all the legal restrictions imposed upon them against their will.
Ab urbe condita 2.35
The senate considered these sentiments too bitter, the plebeians in
their exasperation almost flew to arms. Famine, they said, was being
used as a weapon against them, as though they were enemies; they were
being cheated out of food and sustenance; the foreign corn, which
fortune had unexpectedly given them as their sole means of support, was
to be snatched from their mouths unless their tribunes were given up in
chains to Cn. Marcius, unless he could work his will on the backs of
the Roman plebeians. In him a new executioner had sprung up, who
ordered them either to die or live as slaves. He would have been
attacked on leaving the Senate-house had not the tribunes most
opportunely fixed a day for his impeachment. This allayed the
excitement, every man saw himself a judge with the power of life and
death over his enemy. At first Marcius treated the threats of the
tribunes with contempt; they had the right of protecting not of
punishing, they were the tribunes of the plebs not of the patricians.
But the anger of the plebeians was so thoroughly roused that the
patricians could only save themselves by the punishment of one of their
order. They resisted, however, in spite of the odium: they incurred,
and exercised all the powers they possessed both collectively and
individually. At first they attempted to thwart proceedings by posting
pickets of their clients to deter individuals from frequenting meetings
and conclaves. Then they proceeded in a body-you might suppose that
every patrician was impeached-and implored the plebeians, if they
refused to acquit a man who was innocent, at least to give up to them,
as guilty, one citizen, one senator. As he did not put in an appearance
on the day of trial, their resentment remained unabated, and he was
condemned in his absence. He went into exile amongst the Volscians,
uttering threats against his country, and even then entertaining
hostile designs against it. The Volscians welcomed his arrival, and he
became more popular as his resentment against his countrymen became
more bitter, and his complaints and threats were more frequently heard.
He enjoyed the hospitality of Attius Tullius, who was by far the most
important man at that time amongst the Volscians and a life-long enemy
of the Romans. Impelled each by similar motives, the one by
old-standing hatred, the other by newly-provoked resentment, they
formed joint plans for war with Rome. They were under the impression
that the people could not easily be induced, after so many defeats, to
take up arms again, and that after their losses in their numerous wars
and recently through the pestilence, their spirits were broken. The
hostility had now had time to die down; it was necessary, therefore, to
adopt some artifice by which fresh irritation might be produced.
Ab urbe condita 2.36
It so happened that preparations were being made for a repetition of
the "Great Games." The reason for their repetition was that early in
the morning, prior to the commencement of the Games, a householder
after flogging his slave had driven him through the middle of the
Circus Maximus. Then the Games commenced, as though the incident had no
religious significance. Not long afterwards, Titus Latinius, a member
of the plebs, had a dream. Jupiter appeared to him and said that the
dancer who commenced the Games was displeasing to him, adding that
unless those Games were repeated with due magnificence, disaster would
overtake the City, and he was to go and report this to the consuls.
Though he was by no means free from religious scruples, still his fears
gave way before his awe of the magistrates, lest he should become an
object of public ridicule. This hesitation cost him dear, for within a
few days he lost his son. That he might have no doubt as to the cause
of this sudden calamity, the same form again appeared to the distressed
father in his sleep, and demanded of him whether he had been
sufficiently repaid for his neglect of the divine will, for a more
terrible recompense was impending if he did not speedily go and inform
the consuls. Though the matter was becoming more urgent, he still
delayed, and while thus procrastinating he was attacked by a serious
illness in the form of sudden paralysis. Now the divine wrath
thoroughly alarmed him, and wearied out by his past misfortune and the
one from which he was suffering he called his relations together and
explained what he had seen and heard, the repeated appearance of
Jupiter in his sleep, the threatening wrath of heaven brought home to
him by his calamities. On the strong advice of all present he was
carried in a litter to the consuls in the Forum, and from there by the
consuls' order into the Senate-house. After repeating the same story to
the senators, to the intense surprise of all, another marvel occurred.
The tradition runs that he who had been carried into the Senate-house
paralysed in every limb, returned home, after performing his duty, on
his own feet.
Ab urbe condita 2.37
The senate decreed that the Games should be celebrated on the most
splendid scale. At the suggestion of Attius Tullius, a large number of
Volscians came to them. In accordance with a previous arrangement with
Marcius, Tullius came to the consuls, before the proceedings commenced,
and said that there were certain matters touching the State which he
wished to discuss privately with them. When all the bystanders had been
removed, he began: "It is with great reluctance that I say anything to
the disparagement of my people. I do not come, however, to charge them
with having actually committed any offence, but to take precautions
against their committing one. The character of our citizens is more
fickle than I should wish; we have experienced this in many defeats,
for we owe our present security not to our own deserts but to your
forbearance. Here at this moment are a great multitude of Volscians,
the Games are going on, the whole City will be intent on the spectacle.
I remember what an outrage was committed by the young Sabines on a
similar occasion, I shudder lest any ill-advised and reckless incident
should occur. For our sakes, and yours, consuls, I thought it right to
give you this warning. As far as I am concerned, it is my intention to
start at once for home, lest, if I stay, I should be involved in some
mischief either of speech or act." With these words he departed. These
vague hints, uttered apparently on good authority, were laid by the
consuls before the senate. As generally happens, the authority rather
than the facts of the case induced them to take even excessive
precautions. A decree was passed that the Volscians should leave the
City, criers were sent round ordering them all to depart before
nightfall. Their first feeling was one of panic as they ran off to
their respective lodgings to take away their effects, but when they had
started a feeling of indignation arose at their being driven away from
the Games, from a festival which was in a manner a meeting of gods and
men, as though they were under the curse of heaven and unfit for human
society.
Ab urbe condita 2.38
As they were going along in an almost continuous stream, Tullius, who
had gone on in advance, waited for them at the Ferentine Fountain.
Accosting their chief men as they came up in tones of complaint and
indignation, he led them, eagerly listening to words which accorded
with their own angry feelings, and through them the multitude, down to
the plain which stretched below the road. There he began a speech:
"Even though you should forget the wrongs that Rome has inflicted and
the defeats which the Volscian nation has suffered, though you should
forget everything else, with what temper, I should like to know, do you
brook this insult of yesterday, when they commenced their Games by
treating us with ignominy? Have you not felt that they have won a
triumph over you to-day, that as you departed you were a spectacle to
the townsfolk, to the strangers, to all those neighbouring populations;
that your wives, your children, were paraded as a gazing-stock before
men's eyes? What do you suppose were the thoughts of those who heard
the voice of the criers, those who watched us depart, those who met
this ignominious cavalcade? What could they have thought but that there
was some awful guilt cleaving to us, so that if we had been present at
the Games we should have profaned them and made an expiation necessary,
and that this was the reason why we were driven away from the abodes of
these good and religious people and from all intercourse and
association with them? Does it not occur to you that we owe our lives
to the haste with which we departed, if we may call it a departure and
not a flight? And do you count this City as anything else than the City
of your enemies, where, had you lingered a single day, you would all
have been put to death? War has been declared against you-to the great
misery of those who have declared it, if you are really men." So they
dispersed to their homes, with their feelings of resentment embittered
by this harangue. They so worked upon the feelings of their
fellow-countrymen, each in his own city, that the whole Volscian nation
revolted.
Ab urbe condita 2.39
By the unanimous vote of the states, the conduct of the war was
entrusted to Attius Tullius and Cn. Marcius, the Roman exile, on whom
their hopes chiefly rested. He fully justified their expectations, so
that it became quite evident that the strength of Rome lay in her
generals rather than in her army. He first marched against Cerceii,
expelled the Roman colony and handed it over to the Volscians as a free
city. Then he took Satricum, Longula, Polusca, and Corioli, towns which
the Romans had recently acquired. Marching across country into the
Latin road, he recovered Lavinium, and then, in succession, Corbio,
Vetellia, Trebium Labici, and Pedum. Finally, he advanced from Pedum
against the City. He entrenched his camp at the Cluilian Dykes, about
five miles distant, and from there he ravaged the Roman territory. The
raiding parties were accompanied by men whose business it was to see
that the lands of the patricians were not touched; a measure due either
to his rage being especially directed against the plebeians, or to his
hope that dissensions might arise between them and the patricians.
These certainly would have arisen- to such a pitch were the tribunes
exciting the plebs by their attacks on the chief men of the State-had
not the fear of the enemy outside-the strongest bond of union-brought
men together in spite of their mutual suspicions and aversion. On one
point they disagreed; the senate and the consuls placed their hopes
solely in arms, the plebeians preferred anything to war. Sp. Nautius
and Sex. Furius were now consuls. Whilst they were reviewing the
legions and manning the walls and stationing troops m various places,
an enormous crowd gathered together. At first they alarmed the consuls
by seditious shouts, and at last they compelled them to convene the
senate and submit a motion for sending ambassadors to Cn. Marcius. As
the courage of the plebeians was evidently giving way, the senate
accepted the motion, and a deputation was sent to Marcius with
proposals for peace. They brought back the stern reply: If the
territory were restored to the Volscians, the question of peace could
be discussed; but if they wished to enjoy the spoils of war at their
ease, he had not forgotten the wrongs inflicted by his countrymen nor
the kindness shown by those who were now his hosts, and would strive to
make it clear that his spirit had been roused, not broken, by his
exile. The same envoys were sent on a second mission, but were not
admitted into the camp. According to the tradition, the priests also in
their robes went as suppliants to the enemies' camp, but they had no
more influence with him than the previous deputation.
Ab urbe condita 2.40
Then the matrons went in a body to Veturia, the mother of Coriolanus,
and Volumnia his wife. Whether this was in consequence of a decree of
the senate, or simply the prompting of womanly fear, I am unable to
ascertain, but at all events they succeeded in inducing the aged
Veturia to go with Volumnia and her two little sons to the enemies'
camp. As men were powerless to protect the City by their arms, the
women sought to do so by their tears and prayers. On their arrival at
the camp a message was sent to Coriolanus that a large body of women
were present. He had remained unmoved by the majesty of the State in
the persons of its ambassadors, and by the appeal made to his eyes and
mind in the persons of its priests; he was still more obdurate to the
tears of the women. Then one of his friends, who had recognised
Veturia, standing between her daughter-in-law and her grandsons, and
conspicuous amongst them all in the greatness of her grief, said to
him, "Unless my eyes deceive me, your mother and wife and children are
here." Coriolanus, almost like one demented, sprung from his seat to
embrace his mother. She, changing her tone from entreaty to anger,
said, "Before I admit your embrace suffer me to know whether it is to
an enemy or a son that I have come, whether it is as your prisoner or
as your mother that I am in your camp. Has a long life and an unhappy
old age brought me to this, that I have to see you an exile and from
that an enemy? Had you the heart to ravage this land, which has borne
and nourished you? However hostile and menacing the spirit in which you
came, did not your anger subside as you entered its borders? Did you
not say to yourself when your eye rested on Rome, 'Within those walls
are my home, my household gods, my mother, my wife, my children?' Must
it then be that, had I remained childless, no attack would have been
made on Rome; had I never had a son, I should have ended my days a free
woman in a free country? But there is nothing which I can suffer now
that will not bring more disgrace to you than wretchedness to me;
whatever unhappiness awaits me it will not be for long. Look to these,
whom, if you persist in your present course, an untimely death awaits,
or a long life of bondage." When she ceased, his wife and children
embraced him, and all the women wept and bewailed their own and their
country's fate. At last his resolution gave way. He embraced his family
and dismissed them, and moved his camp away from the City. After
withdrawing his legions from the Roman territory, he is said to have
fallen a victim to the resentment which his action aroused, but as to
the time and circumstances of his death the traditions vary. I find in
Fabius, who is by far the oldest authority, that he lived to be an old
man; he relates a saying of his, which he often uttered in his later
years, that it is not till a man is old that he feels the full misery
of exile. The Roman husbands did not grudge their wives the glory they
had won, so completely were their lives free from the spirit of
detraction and envy. A temple was built and dedicated to Fortuna
Muliebris, to serve as a memorial of their deed. Subsequently the
combined forces of the Volscians and Aequi re-entered the Roman
territory. The Aequi, however, refused any longer to accept the
generalship of Attius Tullius, a quarrel arose as to which nation
should furnish the commander of the combined army, and this resulted in
a bloody battle. Here the good fortune of Rome destroyed the two armies
of her enemies in a conflict no less ruinous than obstinate. The new
consuls were T. Sicinius and C. Aquilius. To Sicinius was assigned the
campaign against the Volscians, to Aquilius that against the Hernici,
for they also were in arms. In that year the Hernici were subjugated,
the campaign against the Volscians ended indecisively.
Ab urbe condita 2.41
For the next year Sp. Cassius and Proculus Verginius were elected
consuls. A treaty was concluded with the Hernici, two-thirds of their
territory was taken from them. Of this Cassius intended to give half to
the Latins and half to the Roman plebs. He contemplated adding to this
a quantity of land which, he alleged, though State land, was occupied
by private individuals. This alarmed many of the patricians, the actual
occupiers, as endangering, the security of their property. On public
grounds, too, they felt anxious, as they considered that by this
largess the consul was building up a power dangerous to liberty. Then
for the first time an Agrarian Law was proposed, and never, from that
day to the times within our own memory, has one been mooted without the
most tremendous commotions. The other consul resisted the proposed
grant. In this he was supported by the senate, whilst the plebs was far
from unanimous in its favour. They were beginning to look askance at a
boon so cheap as to be shared between citizens and allies, and they
often heard the consul Verginius in his public speeches predicting that
his colleague's gift was fraught with mischief, the land in question
would bring slavery on those who took it, the way was being prepared
for a throne. Why were the allies, he asked, and the Latin league
included? What necessity was there for a third part of the territory of
the Hernici, so lately our foes, being restored to them, unless it was
that these nations might have Cassius as their leader in place of
Coriolanus?' The opponent of the Agrarian Law began to be popular. Then
both consuls tried who could go furthest in humouring the plebs.
Verginius said that he would consent to the assignment of the lands
provided they were assigned to none but: Roman citizens. Cassius had
courted popularity amongst the allies by including them in the
distribution and had thereby sunk in the estimation of his
fellow-citizens. To recover their favour he gave orders for the money
which had been received for the corn from Sicily to be refunded to the
people. This offer the plebeians treated with scorn as nothing else
than the price of a throne. Owing to their innate suspicion that he was
aiming at monarchy, his gifts were rejected as completely as if they
had abundance of everything. It is generally asserted that immediately
upon his vacating office he was condemned and put to death. Some assert
that his own father was the author of his punishment, that he tried him
privately at home, and after scourging him put him to death and devoted
his private property to Ceres. From the proceeds a statue of her was
made with an inscription, "Given from the Cassian family." I find in
some authors a much more probable account, viz., that he was arraigned
by the quaestors Caeso Fabius and L. Valerius before the people and
convicted of treason, and his house ordered to be demolished. It stood
on the open space in front of the temple of Tellus. In any case,
whether the trial was a public or a private one, his condemnation took
place in the consulship of Servius Cornelius and Q. Fabius.
Ab urbe condita 2.42
The popular anger against Cassius did not last long. The attractiveness
of the Agrarian Law, though its author was removed, was in itself
sufficient to make the plebeians desire it, and their eagerness for it
was intensified by the unscrupulousness of the senate, who cheated the
soldiers out of their share of the spoil which they had won that year
from the Volscians and Aequi. Everything taken from the enemy was sold
by the consul Fabius and the amount realised paid into the treasury. In
spite of the hatred which this produced in the plebs against the whole
Fabian house, the patricians succeeded in getting Caeso Fabius elected
with L. Aemilius as consuls for the next year. This still further
embittered the plebeians, and domestic disturbances brought on a
foreign war. For the time civic quarrels were suspended, patricians and
plebeians were of one mind in resisting the Aequi and Volscians, and a
victorious action was fought under Aemilius. The enemy lost more in the
retreat than in the battle, so hotly did the cavalry pursue their
routed foe. In the same year the temple of Castor was dedicated on the
15th of July. It had been vowed by the Dictator Postumius in the Latin
war; his son was appointed "duumvir" for its dedication. In this year,
too, the minds of the plebeians were much exercised by the attractions
which the Agrarian Law held out for them, and the tribunes made their
office more popular by constantly dwelling on this popular measure. The
patricians, believing that there was enough and more than enough
madness in the multitude as it was, viewed with horror these bribes and
incentives to recklessness. The consuls led the way in offering a most
determined resistance, and the senate won the day. Nor was the victory
only a momentary one, for they elected as consuls for the following
year M. Fabius, the brother of Caeso, and L. Valerius, who was an
object of special hatred on the part of the plebs through his
prosecution of Sp. Cassius. The contest with the tribunes went on
through the year; the Law remained a dead letter, and the tribunes,
with their fruitless promises, turned out to be idle boasters. The
Fabian house gained an immense reputation through the three successive
consulships of its members, all of whom had been uniformly successful
in their resistance to the tribunes. The office remained like a safe
investment, for some time in the family. War now began with Veii, and
the Volscians rose again. The people possessed more than sufficient
strength for their foreign wars, but they wasted it in domestic strife.
The universal anxiety was aggravated by supernatural portents, menacing
almost daily City and country alike. The soothsayers, who were
consulted by the State and by private persons, declared that the divine
wrath was due to nothing else but the profanation of sacred functions.
These alarms resulted in the punishment of Oppia, a Vestal virgin who
was convicted of unchastity.
Ab urbe condita 2.43
The next consuls were Q. Fabius and C. Julius. During this year the
civic dissensions were as lively as ever, and the war assumed a more
serious form. The Aequi took up arms, and the Veientines made
depredations on Roman territory. Amidst the growing anxiety about these
wars Caeso Fabius and Sp. Furius were made consuls. The Aequi were
attacking Ortona, a Latin city; the Veientines, laden with plunder,
were now threatening to attack Rome itself. This alarming condition of
affairs ought to have restrained, whereas it actually increased, the
hostility of the plebs, and they resumed the old method of refusing
military service. This was not spontaneous on their part; Sp. Licinius,
one of their tribunes, thinking that it was a good time for forcing the
Agrarian Law upon the senate through sheer necessity, had taken upon
him the obstruction of the levy. All the odium, however, aroused by
this misuse of the tribunitian power recoiled upon the author, his own
colleagues were as much opposed to him as the consuls; through their
assistance the consuls completed the enrolment. An army was raised for
two wars at the same time, one against the Veientines under Fabius, the
other against the Aequi under Furius. In this latter campaign nothing
happened worth recording. Fabius, however, had considerably more
trouble with his own men than with the enemy. He, the consul,
single-handed, sustained the commonwealth, while his army through their
hatred of the consul were doing their best to betray it. For, besides
all the other instances of his skill as a commander, which he had so
abundantly furnished in his preparation for the war and his conduct of
it, he had so disposed his troops that he routed the enemy by sending
only his cavalry against them. The infantry refused to take up the
pursuit; not only were they deaf to the appeals of their hated general,
but even the public disgrace and infamy which they were bringing upon
themselves at the moment, and the danger which would come if the enemy
were to rally were powerless to make them quicken their pace, or,
failing that, even to keep their formation. Against orders they
retired, and with gloomy looks-you would suppose that they had been
defeated-they returned to camp, cursing now their commander, now the
work which the cavalry had done. Against this example of demoralisation
the general was unable to devise any remedy; to such an extent may men
of commanding ability be more deficient in the art of managing their
own people than in that of conquering the enemy. The consul returned to
Rome, but he had not enhanced his military reputation so much as he had
aggravated and embittered the hatred of his soldiers towards him. The
senate, however, succeeded in keeping the consulship in the family of
the Fabii; they made M. Fabius consul, Gnaeus Manlius was elected as
his colleague.
Ab urbe condita 2.44
This year also found a tribune advocating the Agrarian Law. It was
Tiberius Pontificius. He adopted the same course as Sp. Licinius and
for a short time stopped the enrolment. The senate were again
perturbed, but Appius Claudius told them that the power of the tribunes
had been overcome in the previous year, it was actually so at the
present moment, and the precedent thus set would govern the future,
since it had been discovered that its very strength was breaking it
down. For there would never be wanting a tribune who would be glad to
triumph over his colleague and secure the favour of the better party
for the good of the State. If more were needed, more were ready to come
to the assistance of the consuls, even one was sufficient, against the
rest. The consuls and leaders of the senate had only to take the
trouble to secure, if not all, at least some of the tribunes on the
side of the commonwealth and the senate. The senators followed this
advice, and whilst, as a body, they treated the tribunes with courtesy
and kindness, the men of consular rank, in each private suit which they
instituted, succeeded, partly by personal influence, partly by the
authority their rank gave them. in getting the tribunes to exert their
power for the welfare of the State. Four of the tribunes were opposed
to the one who was a hindrance to the public good; by their aid the
consuls raised the levy.
Then they set out for the campaign against Veii. Succours had reached
this city from all parts of Etruria, not so much out of regard for the
Veientines as because hopes were entertained of the possible
dissolution of the Roman State through intestine discord. In the public
assemblies throughout the cities of Etruria the chiefs were loudly
proclaiming that the Roman power would be eternal unless its citizens
fell into the madness of mutual strife. This, they said, had proved to
be the one poison, the one bane in powerful states which made great
empires mortal. That mischief had been for a long time checked, partly
by the wise policy of the senate, partly by the forbearance of the
plebs, but now things had reached extremities. The one State had been
severed into two, each with its own magistrates and its own laws. At
first the enrolments were the cause of the quarrel, but when actually
on service the men obeyed their generals. As long as military
discipline was maintained the evil could be arrested, whatever the
state of affairs in the City, but now the fashion of disobedience to
the magistrates was following the Roman soldier even into the camp.
During the last war, in the battle itself, at the crisis of the
engagement, the victory was by the common action of the whole army
transferred to the vanquished Aequi, the standards were abandoned, the
commander left alone on the field, the troops returned against orders
into camp. In fact, if matters were pressed, Rome could be vanquished
through her own soldiers, nothing else was needful than a declaration
of war, a show of military activity, the Fates and the gods would do
the rest.
Ab urbe condita 2.45
Anticipations like these had given the Etruscans fresh energy after
their many vicissitudes of defeat and victory. The Roman consuls, too,
dreaded nothing but their own strength and their own arms. The
recollection of the fatal precedent set in the last war deterred them
from any action whereby they would have to fear a simultaneous attack
from two armies. They confined themselves to their camp, and in face of
the double danger avoided an engagement, hoping that time and
circumstances might perhaps calm the angry passions and bring about a
more healthy state of mind. The Veientines and Etruscans were all the
more energetic in forcing an engagement; they rode up to the camp and
challenged the Romans to fight. At last, as they produced no effect by
the taunts and insults levelled at the army and consuls alike, they
declared that the consuls were using the pretext of internal
dissensions to veil the cowardice of their men, they distrusted their
courage more than they doubted their loyalty. Silence and inactivity
amongst men in arms was a novel kind of sedition. They also made
reflections, true as well as false, on the upstart quality of their
nationality and descent. They shouted all this out close up to the
ramparts and gates of the camp. The consuls took it with composure, but
the simple soldiery were filled with indignation and shame, and their
thoughts were diverted from their domestic troubles. They were
unwilling that the enemy should go on with impunity, they were equally
unwilling that the patricians and the consuls should win the day,
hatred against the enemy and hatred against their fellow-countrymen
struggled in their minds for the mastery. At length the former
prevailed, so contemptuous and insolent did the mockery of the enemy
become. They gathered in crowds round the generals' quarters, they
insisted upon fighting, they demanded the signal for action. The
consuls put their heads together as though deliberating, and remained
for some time in conference. They were anxious to fight, but their
anxiety had to be repressed and concealed in order that the eagerness
of the soldiers, once roused, might be intensified by opposition and
delay. They replied that matters were not ripe, the time for battle had
not come, they must remain within their camp. They then issued an order
that there must be no fighting, any one fighting against orders would
be treated as an enemy. The soldiers, dismissed with this reply, became
the more eager for battle the less they thought the consuls wished for
it. The enemy became much more exasperating when it was known that the
consuls had determined not to fight, they imagined that they could now
insult with impunity, that the soldiers were not entrusted with arms,
matters would reach the stage of mutiny, and the dominion of Rome had
come to an end. In this confidence they ran up to the gates, flung
opprobrious epithets and hardly stopped short of storming the camp.
Naturally the Romans could brook these insults no longer, they ran from
all parts of the camp to the consuls, they did not now prefer their
demand quietly through the first centurions as before, they shouted
them in all directions. Matters were ripe, still the consuls hung back.
At last Cn. Manlius, fearing lest the increasing disturbance might lead
to open mutiny, gave way, and Fabius, after ordering the trumpets to
command silence, addressed his colleague thus: "I know, Cn. Manlius,
that these men can conquer; it is their own fault that I did not know
whether they wished to do so. It has, therefore, been resolved and
determined not to give the signal for battle unless they swear that
they will come out of this battle victorious. A Roman consul was once
deceived by his soldiers, they cannot deceive the gods." Amongst the
centurions of the first rank who had demanded to be led to battle was
M. Flavoleius. "M. Fabius," he said, "I will come back from the battle
victorious." He invoked the wrath of Father Jupiter and Mars Gradivus
and other deities if he broke his oath. The whole army took the oath,
man by man, after him. When they had sworn, the signal was given, they
seized their weapons, and went into action, furious with rage and
confident of victory. They told the Etruscans to continue their
insults, and begged the enemy so ready with the tongue to stand up to
them now they were armed. All, patricians and plebeians alike, showed
conspicuous courage on that day, the Fabian house especially covered
itself with glory. They determined in that battle to win back the
affection of the plebs, which had been alienated through many political
contests.
Ab urbe condita 2.46
The battle-line was formed; neither the Veientines nor the legions of
Etruria declined the contest. They were almost certain that the Romans
would no more fight with them than they fought with the Aequi, and they
did not despair of something still more serious happening, considering
the state of irritation they were in and the double opportunity which
now presented itself. Things took a very different course, for in no
previous war had the Romans gone into action with more grim
determination, so exasperated were they by the insults of the enemy and
the procrastination of the consuls. The Etruscans had scarcely time to
form their ranks when, after the javelins had in the first confusion
been flung at random rather than thrown regularly, the combatants came
to a hand-to-hand encounter with swords, the most desperate kind of
fighting. Amongst the foremost were the Fabii, who set a splendid
example for their countrymen to behold. Quintus Fabius-the one who had
been consul two years previously-charged, regardless of danger, the
massed Veientines, and whilst he was engaged with vast numbers of the
enemy, a Tuscan of vast strength and splendidly armed plunged his sword
into his breast, and as he drew it out Fabius fell forward on the
wound. Both armies felt the fall of this one man, and the Romans were
beginning to give ground, when M. Fabius, the consul, sprang over the
body as it lay, and holding up his buckler, shouted, "Is this what you
swore, soldiers, that you would go back to camp as fugitives? Are you
more afraid of this cowardly foe than of Jupiter and Mars, by whom you
swore? I, who did not swear, will either go back victorious, or will
fall fighting by you, Quintus Fabius." Then Caeso Fabius, the consul of
the previous year, said to the consul, "Is it by words like these, my
brother, that you think you will make them fight? The gods, by whom
they swore, will do that; our duty as chiefs, if we are to be worthy of
the Fabian name, is to kindle our soldiers' courage by fighting rather
than haranguing." So the two Fabii dashed forward with levelled spears,
and carried the whole line with them.
Ab urbe condita 2.47
Whilst the battle was restored in one direction, the consul Cn. Manlius
was showing no less energy on the other wing, where the fortunes of the
day took a similar turn. For, like Q. Fabius on the other wing, the
consul Manlius was here driving the enemy before him and his soldiers
were following up with great vigour, when he was seriously wounded and
retired from the front. Thinking that he was killed, they fell back,
and would have abandoned their ground had not the other consul ridden
up at full gallop with some troops of cavalry, and, crying out that his
colleague was alive and that he had himself routed the other wing of
the enemy, succeeded in checking the retreat. Manlius also showed
himself amongst them, to rally his men. The well-known voices of the
two consuls gave the soldiers fresh courage. At the same time the
enemies' line was now weakened, for, trusting to their superiority in
numbers, they had detached their reserves and sent them to storm the
camp. These met with but slight resistance, and whilst they were
wasting time by thinking more about plundering than about fighting, the
Roman triarii, who had been unable to withstand the first assault,
despatched messengers to the consul to tell him the position of
affairs, and then, retiring in close order to the headquarters tent,
renewed the fighting without waiting for orders. The consul Manlius had
ridden back to the camp and posted troops at all the gates to block the
enemies' escape. The desperate situation roused the Tuscans to madness
rather than courage; they rushed in every direction where there seemed
any hope of escape, and for some time their efforts were fruitless.
At last a compact body of young soldiers made an attack on the consul
himself, conspicuous from his arms. The first weapons were intercepted
by those who stood round him, but the violence of the onset could not
long be withstood. The consul fell mortally wounded and all around him
were scattered. The Tuscans were encouraged, the Romans fled in panic
through the length of the camp, and matters would have come to
extremities had not the members of the consul's staff hurriedly taken
up his body and opened a way for the enemy through one gate. They burst
through it, and in a confused mass fell in with the other consul who
had won the battle; here they were again cut to pieces and scattered in
all directions. A glorious victory was won, though saddened by the
death of two illustrious men. The senate decreed a triumph, but the
consul replied that if the army could celebrate a triumph without its
commander, he would gladly allow them to do so in return for their
splendid service in the war. But as his family were in mourning for his
brother, Quintus Fabius, and the State had suffered partial bereavement
through the loss of one of its consuls, he could not accept laurels for
himself which were blighted by public and private grief. The triumph he
declined was more brilliant than any actually celebrated, so much does
glory laid by for the moment return sometimes with added splendour.
Afterwards he conducted the obsequies of his colleague and his brother,
and pronounced the funeral oration over each. The greatest share of the
praise which he conceded to them rested upon himself. He had not lost
sight of the object which he set before him at the beginning of his
consulship, the conciliation of the plebs. To further this, he
distributed amongst the patricians the care of the wounded. The Fabii
took charge of a large number, and nowhere was greater care showed
them. From this time they began to be popular; their popularity was won
by no methods which were inconsistent with the welfare of the State.
Ab urbe condita 2.48
Consequently the election of Caeso Fabius as consul, together with
Titus Verginius, was welcomed by the plebs as much as by the
patricians. Now that there was a favourable prospect of concord, he
subordinated all military projects to the task of bringing the
patricians and the plebs into union at the earliest possible moment. At
the beginning of his year of office he proposed that before any tribune
came forward to advocate the Agrarian Law, the senate should anticipate
him by themselves undertaking what was their own work and distributing
the territory taken in war to the plebeians as fairly as possible. It
was only right that those should have it by whose sweat and blood it
had been won. The patricians treated the proposal with scorn, some even
complained that the once energetic mind of Caeso was becoming wanton
and enfeebled through the excess of glory which he had won. There were
no party struggles in the City. The Latins were being harassed by the
inroads of the Aequi. Caeso was despatched thither with an army, and
crossed over into the territory of the Aequi to ravage it. The Aequi
withdrew into their towns and remained behind their walls. No battle of
any importance took place. But the rashness of the other consul
incurred a defeat at the hands of the Veientines, and it was only the
arrival of Caeso Fabius with reinforcements that saved the army from
destruction. From that time there was neither peace nor war with the
Veientines, whose methods closely resembled those of brigands. They
retired before the Roman legions into their city; then when they found
that they were withdrawn they made inroads on the fields, evading war
by keeping quiet, and then making quiet impossible by war. So the
business could neither be dropped nor completed. Wars were threatening
in other quarters also; some seemed imminent as in the case of the
Aequi and Volscians, who were only keeping quiet till the effect of
their recent defeat should pass away, whilst it was evident that the
Sabines, perpetual enemies of Rome, and the whole of Etruria would soon
be in motion. But the Veientines, a persistent rather than a formidable
foe, created more irritation than alarm because it was never safe to
neglect them or to turn the attention elsewhere. Under these
circumstances the Fabii came to the senate, and the consul, on behalf
of his house, spoke as follows: "As you are aware, senators, the
Veientine war does not require a large force so much as one constantly
in the field. Let the other wars be your care, leave the Fabii to deal
with the Veientines. We will guarantee that the majesty of Rome shall
be safe in that quarter. We propose to carry on that war as a private
war of our own at our own cost. Let the State be spared money and men
there. "A very hearty vote of thanks was passed; the consul left the
House and returned home accompanied by the Fabii, who had been standing
in the vestibule awaiting the senate's decision. After receiving
instructions to meet on the morrow, fully armed, before the consul's
house, they separated for their homes.
Ab urbe condita 2.49
News of what had happened spread through the whole City, the Fabii were
praised up to the skies; people said, "One family had taken up the
burden of the State, the Veientine war had become a private concern, a
private quarrel. If there were two houses of the same strength in the
City, and the one claimed the Volscians for themselves, the other the
Aequi, then all the neighbouring states could be subjugated while Rome
itself remained in profound tranquillity." The next day the Fabii took
their arms and assembled at the appointed place. The consul, wearing
his "paludamentum," went out into the vestibule and saw the whole of
his house drawn up in order of march. Taking his place in the centre,
he gave the word of advance. Never has an army marched through the City
smaller in numbers or with a more brilliant reputation or more
universally admired. Three hundred and six soldiers, all patricians,
all members of one house, not a single man of whom the senate even in
its palmiest days would deem unfitted for high command, went forth,
threatening ruin to the Veientines through the strength of a single
family. They were followed by a crowd; made up partly of their own
relatives and friends, whose minds were not occupied with ordinary hope
and anxiety, but filled with the loftiest anticipations; partly of
those who shared the public anxiety, and could not find words to
express their affection and admiration. "Go on," they cried, "you
gallant band, go on, and may you be fortunate; bring back results equal
to this beginning, then look to us for consulships and triumphs and
every possible reward." As they passed the Citadel and the Capitol and
other temples, their friends prayed to each deity, whose statue or
whose shrine they saw, that they would send that band with all
favourable omens to success, and in a short time restore them safe to
their country and their kindred. In vain were those prayers sent up!
They proceeded on their ill-starred way by the right postern of the
Carmental gate, and reached the banks of the Cremera. This seemed to
them a suitable position for a fortified post. L. Aemilius and C.
Servilius were the next consuls. As long as it was only a question of
forays and raids, the Fabii were quite strong enough not only to
protect their own fortified post, but, by patrolling both sides of the
border-line between the Roman and Tuscan territories, to make the whole
district safe for themselves and dangerous for the enemy. There was a
brief interruption to these raids, when the Veientines, after summoning
an army from Etruria, assaulted the fortified post at the Cremera. The
Roman legions were brought up by the consul L. Aemilius and fought a
regular engagement with the Etruscan troops. The Veientines, however,
had not time to complete their formation, and during the confusion,
whilst the men were getting into line and the reserves were being
stationed, a squadron of Roman cavalry suddenly made a flank attack,
and gave them no chance of commencing a battle or even of standing
their ground. They were driven back to their camp at the Saxa Rubra,
and sued for peace. They obtained it, but their natural inconstancy
made them regret it before the Roman garrison was recalled from the
Cremera.
Ab urbe condita 2.50
The conflicts between the Fabii and the State of Veii were resumed
without any more extensive military preparations than before. There
were not only forays into each other's territories and surprise attacks
upon the forayers, but sometimes they fought regular engagements, and
this single Roman house often won the victory over what was at that
time the most powerful city in Etruria. This was a bitter mortification
to the Veientines, and they were led by circumstances to adopt the plan
of trapping their daring enemy in an ambuscade; they were even glad
that the numerous successes of the Fabii had increased their
confidence. Accordingly they drove herds of cattle, as if by accident,
in the way of the foraying parties, the fields were abandoned by the
peasants, and the bodies of troops sent to repel the raiders fled in a
panic more often assumed than genuine. By this time the Fabii had
conceived such a contempt for their foe as to be convinced that under
no circumstances of either time or place could their invincible arms be
resisted. This presumption carried them so far that at the sight of
some distant cattle on the other side of the wide plain stretching from
the camp they ran down to secure them, although but few of the enemy
were visible. Suspecting no danger and keeping no order they passed the
ambuscade which was set on each side of the road, and whilst they were
scattered in trying to catch the cattle, which in their fright were
rushing wildly about, the enemy suddenly rose from their concealment
and attacked them on all sides. At first they were startled by the
shouts round them, then javelins fell on them from every direction. As
the Etruscans closed round them, they were hemmed by a continuous ring
of men, and the more the enemy pressed upon them, the less the space in
which they were forced to form their ever-narrowing square. This
brought out strongly the contrast between their scanty numbers and the
host of Etruscans, whose ranks were multiplied through being narrowed.
After a time they abandoned their plan of presenting a front on all
sides; facing in one direction they formed themselves into a wedge and
by the utmost exertion of sword and muscle forced a passage through.
The road led up to gentle eminence, and here they halted. When the
higher ground gave them room to breathe freely and to recover from the
feeling of despair, they repelled those who mounted to the attack, and
through the advantage of position the little band were beginning to win
the day, when some Veientines who had been sent round the hill emerged
on the summit. So the enemy again had the advantage. The Fabii were all
cut down to a man, and their fort taken. It is generally agreed that
three hundred and six men perished, and that one only, an immature
youth, was left as a stock for the Fabian house to be Rome's greatest
helper in her hour of danger both at home and in the field.
Ab urbe condita 2.51
When this disaster occurred, C. Horatius and T. Menenius were consuls.
Menenius was at once sent against the Tuscans, flushed with their
recent victory. Another unsuccessful action was fought, and the enemy
took possession of the Janiculum. The City, which was suffering from
scarcity as well as from the war, would have been invested-for the
Etruscans had crossed the Tiber-had not the consul Horatius been
recalled from the Volsci. The fighting approached so near the walls
that the first battle, an indecisive one, took place near the temple of
Spes, and the second at the Colline gate. In the latter, although the
Romans gained only a slight advantage, the soldiers recovered something
of their old courage and were better prepared for future campaigns. The
next consuls were A. Verginius and Sp. Servilius. After their defeat in
the last battle, the Veientines declined an engagement. There were
forays. From the Janiculum as from a citadel they made raids in all
directions on the Roman territory; nowhere were the cattle or the
country-folk safe. They were ultimately caught by the same stratagem by
which they had caught the Fabii. Some cattle were purposely driven in
different directions as a decoy; they followed them and fell into an
ambuscade; and as their numbers were greater, the slaughter was
greater. Their rage at this defeat was the cause and commencement of a
more serious one. They crossed the Tiber by night and marched up to an
attack on Servilius' camp, but were routed with great loss, and with
great difficulty reached the Janiculum. The consul himself forthwith
crossed the Tiber and entrenched himself at the foot of the Janiculum.
The confidence inspired by his victory of the previous day, but still
more the scarcity of corn, made him decide upon an immediate but
precipitate move. He led his army at daybreak up the side of the
Janiculum to the enemies' camp; but he met with a more disastrous
repulse than the one he had inflicted the day before. It was only by
the intervention of his colleague that he and his army were saved. The
Etruscans, caught between the two armies, and retreating from each
alternately, were annihilated. So the Veientine war was brought to a
sudden close by an act of happy rashness.
Ab urbe condita 2.52
Together with peace, food came more freely into the City. Corn was
brought from Campania, and as the fear of future scarcity had
disappeared, each individual brought out what he had hoarded. The
result of ease and plenty was fresh restlessness, and as the old evils
no longer existed abroad, men began to look for them at home. The
tribunes began to poison the minds of the plebeians with the Agrarian
Law and inflamed them against the senators who resisted it, not only
against the whole body, but individual members. Q. Considius and T.
Genucius, who were advocating the Law, appointed a day for the trial of
T. Menenius. Popular feeling was roused against him by the loss of the
fort at the Cremera, since, as consul, he had his standing camp not far
from it. This crushed him, though the senators exerted themselves for
him no less than they had done for Coriolanus, and the popularity of
his father Agrippa had not died away. The tribunes contented themselves
with a fine, though they had arraigned him on a capital charge; the
amount was fixed at 2000 "ases." This proved to be a death-sentence,
for they say that he was unable to endure the disgrace and grief, and
was carried off by a fatal malady. Sp. Servilius was the next to be
impeached. His prosecution, conducted by the tribunes L. Caedicius and
T. Statius, took place immediately after his year had expired, at the
commencement of the consulship of C. Nautius and P. Valerius. When the
day of trial came, he did not, like Menenius, meet the attacks of the
tribunes by appeals for mercy, whether his own or those of the
senators, he relied absolutely on his innocence and personal influence.
The charge against him was his conduct in the battle with the Tuscans
on the Janiculum; but the same courage which he then displayed, when
the State was in danger, he now displayed when his own life was in
danger. Meeting charge by counter-charge, he boldly laid upon the
tribunes and the whole of the plebs the guilt of the condemnation and
death of T. Menenius; the son, he reminded them, of the man through
whose efforts the plebeians had been restored to their position in the
State, and were enjoying those very magistracies and laws which now
allowed them to be cruel and vindictive. By his boldness he dispelled
the danger, and his colleague Verginius, who came forward as a witness,
assisted him by crediting him with some of his own services to the
State. The thing that helped him more, however, was the sentence passed
on Menenius, so completely had the popular sentiment changed.
Ab urbe condita 2.53
The domestic conflicts came to an end; war began again with the
Veientines, with whom the Sabines had formed an armed league. The Latin
and Hernican auxiliaries were summoned, and the consul P. Valerius was
sent with an army to Veii. He at once attacked the Sabine camp, which
was situated in front of the walls of their allies, and created such
confusion that while small bodies of the defenders were making sorties
in various directions to repel the attack, the gate against which the
assault had been first made was forced, and once inside the rampart it
became a massacre rather than a battle. The noise in the camp
penetrated even to the city, and the Veientines flew to arms, in a
state of as great alarm as if Veii itself was taken. Some went to the
help of the Sabines, others attacked the Romans, who were wholly
occupied with their assault on the camp. For a few moments they were
checked and thrown into confusion; then, forming front in both
directions, they offered a steady resistance while the cavalry whom the
consul had ordered to charge routed the Tuscans and put them to flight.
In the same hour, two armies, the two most powerful of the neighbouring
states, were overcome. Whilst this was going on at Veii, the Volscians
and Aequi had encamped in the Latin territory and were ravaging their
borders. The Latins, in conjunction with the Hernici, drove them out of
their camp without either a Roman general or Roman troops. They
recovered their own property and obtained immense booty in addition.
Nevertheless, the consul C. Nautius was sent from Rome against the
Volscians. They did not approve, I think, of the custom of allies
carrying on war in their own strength and on their own methods, without
any Roman general or army. There was no kind of injury or insult that
was not practiced against the Volscians; they could not, however, be
driven to fight a regular battle.
Ab urbe condita 2.54
L. Furius and C. Manlius were the next consuls. The Veientines fell to
Manlius as his province. There was no war, however; a forty years'
truce was granted on their request; they were ordered to furnish corn
and pay for the troops. Peace abroad was at once followed by discord at
home. The tribunes employed the Agrarian Law to goad the plebs into a
state of dangerous excitement. The consuls, nowise intimidated by the
condemnation of Menenius or the danger in which Servilius had stood,
resisted them with the utmost violence. On their vacating office the
tribune Genucius impeached them. They were succeeded by L. Aemilius and
Opiter Verginius. I find in some annals Vopiscus Julius instead of
Verginius. Whoever the consuls were, it was in this year that Furius
and Manlius, who were to be tried before the people, went about in
mourning garb amongst the younger members of the senate quite as much
as amongst the plebs. They urged them to keep clear of the high offices
of State and the administration of affairs, and to regard the consular
"fasces," the "praetexta," and the curule chair as nothing but the pomp
of death, for when invested with these insignia they were like victims
adorned for sacrifice. If the consulship possessed such attractions for
them, they must clearly understand that this office had been captured
and crushed by the tribunician power; the consul had to do everything
at the beck and call of the tribune just as if he were his apparitor.
If he took an active line, if he showed any regard for the patricians,
if he thought that anything besides the plebs formed part of the
commonwealth, he should keep before his eyes the banishment of Cn.
Marcius, the condemnation and death of Menenius. Fired by these appeals
the senators held meetings not in the Senate-house but in private, only
a few being invited. As the one point on which they were agreed was
that the two who were impeached were to be rescued, by lawful or
unlawful means, the most desperate plan was the most acceptable, and
men were found who advocated the most daring crime. Accordingly, on the
day of the trial, whilst the plebs were standing in the Forum on the
tiptoe of expectation, they were surprised that the tribune did not
come down to them. Further delay made them suspicious; they believed
that he had been intimidated by the leaders of the senate, and they
complained that the cause of the people had been abandoned and
betrayed. At last some who had been waiting in the vestibule of the
tribune's house sent word that he had been found dead in his house. As
this news spread throughout the assembly, they at once dispersed in all
directions, like a routed army that has lost its general. The tribunes
especially were alarmed, for they were warned by their colleague's
death how absolutely ineffective the Sacred Laws were for their
protection. The patricians, on the other hand, showed extravagant
delight; so far was any one of them from regretting the crime, that
even those who had taken no part in it were anxious to appear as though
they had, and it was openly asserted that the tribunitian power must be
chastised into submission.
Ab urbe condita 2.55
Whilst the impression produced by this frightful instance of triumphant
crime was still fresh, orders were issued for a levy, and as the
tribunes were thoroughly intimidated, the consuls carried it out
without any interruption from them. But now the plebeians were more
angry at the silence of the tribunes than at the exercise of authority
on the part of the consuls. They said that it was all over with their
liberty, they had gone back to the old state of things, the tribunitian
power was dead and buried with Genucius. Some other method must be
thought out and adopted by which they could resist the patricians, and
the only possible course was for the commons to defend themselves, as
they had no other help. Four-and-twenty lictors attended on the
consuls, and these very men were drawn from the plebs. Nothing was more
contemptible and feeble than they were, if there were any that would
treat them with contempt, but every one imagined them to be great and
awful things. After they had excited one another by these speeches,
Volero Publilius, a plebeian, said that he ought not to be made a
common soldier after serving as a centurion. The consuls sent a lictor
to him. Volero appealed to the tribunes. None came to his assistance,
so the consuls ordered him to be stripped and the rods got ready. "I
appeal to the people," he said, "since the tribunes would rather see a
Roman citizen scourged before their eyes than be murdered in their beds
by you." The more excitedly he called out, the more violently did the
lictor tear off his toga, to strip him. Then Volero, himself a man of
unusual strength, and helped by those to whom he called, drove the
lictor off, and amidst the indignant remonstrances of his supporters,
retreated into the thickest part of the crowd, crying out, "I appeal to
the plebs for protection. Help, fellow-citizens! help, fellow-soldiers!
You have nothing to expect from the tribunes; they themselves need your
aid." The men, greatly excited, got ready as if for battle, and a most
critical struggle was evidently impending, where no one would show the
slightest respect for either public or private rights. The consuls
tried to check the fury of the storm, but they soon found that there is
little safety for authority without strength. The lictors were mobbed,
the fasces broken, and the consuls driven from the Forum into the
Senate-house, uncertain how far Volero would push his victory. As the
tumult was subsiding they ordered the senate to be convened, and when
it was assembled they complained of the outrage done to them, the
violence of the plebeians, the audacious insolence of Volero. After
many violent speeches had been made, the opinion of the older senators
prevailed; they disapproved of the intemperance of the plebs being met
by angry resentment on the part of the patricians.
Ab urbe condita 2.56
Volero was now in high favour with the plebs, and they made him a
tribune at the next election. Lucius Pinarius and P. Furius were the
consuls for that year. Everybody supposed that Volero would use all the
power of his tribuneship to harass the consuls of the preceding year.
On the contrary, he subordinated his private grievances to the
interests of the State, and without uttering a single word which could
reflect on the consuls, he proposed to the people a measure providing
that the magistrates of the plebs should be elected by the Assembly of
the Tribes. At first sight this measure appeared to be of a very
harmless description, but it would deprive the patricians of all power
of electing through their clients' votes those whom they wanted as
tribunes. It was most welcome to the plebeians, but the patricians
resisted it to the utmost. They were unable to secure the one effectual
means of resistance, namely, inducing one of the tribunes, through the
influence of the consuls or the leading patricians, to interpose his
veto. The weight and importance of the question led to protracted
controversy throughout the year. The plebs re-elected Volero. The
patricians, feeling that the question was rapidly approaching a crisis,
appointed Appius Claudius, the son of Appius, who, ever since his
father's contests with them, had been hated by them and cordially hated
them in return. From the very commencement of the year the Law took
precedence of all other matters. Volero had been the first to bring it
forward, but his colleague, Laetorius, though a later, was a still more
energetic supporter of it. He had won an immense reputation in war, for
no man was a better fighter, and this made him a stronger opponent.
Volero in his speeches confined himself strictly to discussing the Law
and abstained from all abuse of the consuls. But Laetorius began by
accusing Appius and his family of tyranny and cruelty towards the
plebs; he said it was not a consul who had been elected, but an
executioner, to harass and torture the plebeians. The untrained tongue
of the soldier was unable to express the freedom of his sentiments; as
words failed him, he said, "I cannot speak so easily as I can prove the
truth of what I have said; come here tomorrow, I will either perish
before your eyes or carry the Law."
Next day the tribunes took their places on the "templum," the consuls
and the nobility stood about in the Assembly to prevent the passage of
the Law. Laetorius gave orders for all, except actual voters, to
withdraw. The young patricians kept their places and paid no attention
to the tribune's officer, whereupon Laetorius ordered some of them to
be arrested. Appius insisted that the tribunes had no jurisdiction over
any but plebeians, they were not magistrates of the whole people, but
only of the plebs; even he himself could not, according to the usage of
their ancestors, remove any man by virtue of his authority, for the
formula ran, "If it seems good to you, Quirites, depart! "By making
contemptuous remarks about his jurisdiction, he was easily able to
disconcert Laetorius. The tribune, in a burning rage, sent his officer
to the consul, the consul sent a lictor to the tribune, exclaiming that
he was a private citizen without any magisterial authority. The tribune
would have been treated with indignity had not the whole Assembly risen
angrily to defend the tribune against the consul, whilst people rushed
from all parts of the City in excited crowds to the Forum. Appius
braved the storm with inflexible determination, and the conflict would
have ended in bloodshed had not the other consul, Quinctius, entrusted
the consulars with the duty of removing, by force if necessary, his
colleague from the Forum. He entreated the furious plebeians to be
calm, and implored the tribunes to dismiss the Assembly; they should
give their passions time to cool, delay would not deprive them of their
power, but would add prudence to their strength; the senate would
submit to the authority of the people, and the consuls to that of the
senate.
Ab urbe condita 2.57
With difficulty Quinctius succeeded in quieting the plebeians; the
senators had much greater difficulty in pacifying Appius. At length the
Assembly was dismissed and the consuls held a meeting of the senate.
Very divergent opinions were expressed according as the emotions of
fear or anger predominated, but the longer the interval during which
they were called away from impulsive action to calm deliberation, the
more averse did they become to a prolongation of the conflict; so much
so, indeed, that they passed a vote of thanks to Quinctius for having
through his exertions allayed the disturbance. Appius was called upon
to consent to the consular authority being so far limited as to be
compatible with a harmonious commonwealth. It was urged that whilst the
tribunes and the consuls each tried to bring everything under their
respective authority, there was no basis for common action; the State
was torn in two, and the one thing aimed at was, who should be its
rulers, not how could its security be preserved. Appius, on the other
hand, called gods and men to witness that the State was being betrayed
and abandoned through fear; it was not the consul who was failing the
senate, the senate was failing the consul; worse conditions were being
submitted to than those which had been accepted on the Sacred Hill.
However, he was overborne by the unanimous feeling of the senate and
became quiet. The Law was passed in silence. Then for the first time
the tribunes were elected by the Assembly of the Tribes. According to
Piso three were added, as though there had only been two before. He
gives their names as Cn. Siccius, L. Numitorius, M. Duellius, Sp.
Icilius, and L. Mecilius.
Ab urbe condita 2.58
During the disturbances in Rome, the war with the Volscians and Aequi
broke out afresh. They had laid waste the fields, in order that if
there were a secession of the plebs they might find refuge with them.
When quiet had been restored they moved their camp further away. Appius
Claudius was sent against the Volscians, the Aequi were left for
Quinctius to deal with. Appius displayed the same savage temper in the
field that he had shown at home, only it was more unrestrained because
he was not now fettered by the tribunes. He hated the commons with a
more intense hatred than his father had felt, for they had got the
better of him and had carried their Law though he had been elected
consul as being the one man who could thwart the tribunitian power-a
Law, too, which former consuls, from whom the senate expected less than
from him, had obstructed with less trouble. Anger and indignation at
all this goaded his imperious nature into harassing his army by
ruthless discipline. No violent measures, however, could subdue them,
such was the spirit of opposition with which they were filled. They did
everything in a perfunctory, leisurely, careless, defiant way; no
feeling of shame or fear restrained them. If he wished the column to
move more quickly they deliberately marched more slowly, if he came up
to urge them on in their work they all relaxed the energy they had been
previously exerting of their own accord; in his presence they cast
their eyes down to the ground, when he passed by they silently cursed
him, so that the courage which had not quailed before the hatred of the
plebs was sometimes shaken. After vainly employing harsh measures of
every kind, he abstained from any further intercourse with his
soldiers, said that the army had been corrupted by the centurions, and
sometimes called them, in jeering tones, tribunes of the plebs, and
Voleros.
Ab urbe condita 2.59
None of this escaped the notice of the Veientines, and they pressed on
more vigorously in the hope that the Roman army would show the same
spirit of disaffection towards Appius which it had shown towards
Fabius. But it was much more violent towards Appius than it had been
towards Fabius, for the soldiers not only refused to conquer, like the
army of Fabius, but they wished to be conquered. When led into action
they broke into a disgraceful flight and made for their camp, and
offered no resistance till they saw the Volscians actually attacking
their entrenchments and doing frightful execution in their rear. Then
they were compelled to fight, in order that the victorious enemy might
be dislodged from their rampart; it was, however, quite evident that
the Roman soldiers only fought to prevent the capture of the camp;
otherwise they rejoiced in their ignominious defeat. Appius'
determination was in no way weakened by this, but when he was
meditating more severe measures and ordering an assembly of his troops,
the officers of his staff and the military tribunes gathered round him
and warned him on no account to try how far he could stretch his
authority, for its force wholly depended upon the free consent of those
who obeyed it. They said that the soldiers as a body refused to come to
the assembly, and demands were heard on all sides for the camp to be
removed from the Volscian territory; only a short time before the
victorious enemy had all but forced his way into the camp. There were
not only suspicions of a serious mutiny, the evidence was before their
eyes.
Appius yielded at last to their remonstrances. He knew that they would
gain nothing but a delay of punishment, and consented to forego the
assembly. Orders were issued for an advance on the morrow, and the
trumpet gave the signal for starting at dawn. When the army had got
clear of the camp and was forming in marching order, the Volscians,
aroused, apparently, by the same signal, fell upon the rear. The
confusion thus created extended to the leading ranks, and set up such a
panic in the whole army that it was impossible for either orders to be
heard or a fighting line to be formed. No one thought of anything but
flight. They made their way over heaps of bodies and arms in such wild
haste that the enemy gave up the pursuit before the Romans abandoned
their flight. At last, after the consul had vainly endeavoured to
follow up and rally his men, the scattered troops were gradually got
together again, and he fixed his camp on territory undisturbed by war.
He called up the men for an assembly, and after inveighing, with
perfect justice, against an army which had been false to military
discipline and had deserted its standards, he asked them individually
where the standards were, where their arms were. The soldiers who had
thrown away their arms, the standard-bearers who had lost their
standards, and in addition to these the centurions and duplicarii who
had deserted their ranks, he ordered to be scourged and beheaded. Of
the rank and file every tenth man was drawn by lot for punishment.
Ab urbe condita 2.60
Just the opposite state of things prevailed in the army campaigning
amongst the Aequi, where the consul and his soldiers vied with each
other in acts of kindness and comradeship. Quinctius was naturally
milder, and the unfortunate severity of his colleague made him all the
more inclined to follow the bent of his gentle disposition. The Aequi
did not venture to meet an army where such harmony prevailed between
the general and his men, and they allowed their enemy to ravage their
territory in all directions. In no previous war had plunder been
gathered from a wider area. The whole of it was given to the soldiers,
and with it those words of praise which, no less than material rewards,
delight the soldier's heart. The army returned home on better terms
with their general, and through him with the patricians; they said that
whilst the senate had given them a father it had given the other army a
tyrant. The year, which had been passed in varying fortunes of war and
furious dissensions both at home and abroad, was chiefly memorable for
the Assembly of Tribes, which were important rather for the victory won
in a prolonged contest than for any real advantage gained. For through
the withdrawal of the patricians from their council the Assembly lost
more in dignity than either the plebs gained, or the patricians lost,
in strength.
Ab urbe condita 2.61
L. Valerius and T. Aemilius were consuls for the next year, which was a
still stormier one, owing, in the first place to the struggle between
the two orders over the Agrarian Law, and secondly to the prosecution
of Appius Claudius. He was impeached by the tribunes, M. Duellius and
Cn. Siccius, on the ground of his determined opposition to the Law, and
also because he defended the cause of the occupiers of the public land,
as if he were a third consul. Never before had any one been brought to
trial before the people whom the plebs so thoroughly detested, both on
his own and his father's account. For hardly any one had the patricians
exerted themselves more than for him whom they regarded as the champion
of the senate and the vindicator of its authority, the stout bulwark
against disturbances of tribunes or plebs, and now saw exposed to the
rage of the plebeians simply for having gone too far in the struggle.
Appius Claudius himself, alone of all the patricians, looked upon the
tribunes, the plebs, and his own trial as of no account. Neither the
threats of the plebeians nor the entreaties of the senate could induce
him-I will not say to change his attire and accost men as a suppliant,
but-even to soften and subdue to some extent his wonted asperity of
language when he had to make his defence before the people. There was
the same expression, the same defiant look, the same proud tones of
speech, so that a large number of the plebeians were no less afraid of
Appius on his trial than they had been when he was consul. He only
spoke in his defence once, but in the same aggressive tone that he
always adopted, and his firmness so dumbfounded the tribunes and the
plebs, that they adjourned the case of their own accord, and then
allowed it to drag on. There was not a very long interval, however.
Before the date of the adjourned trial arrived he was carried off by
illness. The tribunes tried to prevent any funeral oration being
pronounced over him, but the plebeians would not allow the obsequies of
so great a man to be robbed of the customary honours. They listened to
the panegyric of the dead as attentively as they had listened to the
indictment of the living, and vast crowds followed him to the tomb.
Ab urbe condita 2.62
In the same year the consul Valerius advanced with an army against the
Aequi, but failing to draw the enemy into an engagement he commenced an
attack on their camp. A terrible storm, sent down from heaven, of
thunder and hail prevented him from continuing the attack. The surprise
was heightened when, after the retreat had been sounded, calm and
bright weather returned. He felt that it would be an act of impiety to
attack a second time a camp defended by some divine power. His warlike
energies were turned to the devastation of the country. The other
consul, Aemilius, conducted a campaign amongst the Sabines. There, too,
as the enemy kept behind their walls, their fields were laid waste. The
burning not only of scattered homesteads but also of villages with
numerous populations roused the Sabines to action. They met the
depredators, an indecisive action was fought, after which they moved
their camp into a safer locality. The consul thought this a sufficient
reason for leaving the enemy as though defeated, and coming away
without finishing the war.
Ab urbe condita 2.63
T. Numicius Priscus and A. Verginius were the new consuls. The domestic
disturbance continued through these wars, and the plebeians were
evidently not going to tolerate any further delay with regard to the
Agrarian Law, and were preparing for extreme measures, when the smoke
of burning farms and the flight of the country folk announced the
approach of the Volscians. This checked the revolution which was now
ripe and on the point of breaking out. The senate was hastily summoned,
and the consuls led the men liable for active service out to the war,
thereby making the rest of the plebs more peaceably disposed. The enemy
retired precipitately, having effected nothing beyond filling the
Romans with groundless fears. Numicius advanced against the Volscians
to Antium, Verginius against the Aequi. Here he was ambushed and
narrowly escaped a serious defeat; the valour of the soldiers restored
the fortunes of the day, which the consul's negligence had imperilled.
More skilful generalship was shown against the Volscians; the enemy
were routed in the first engagement and driven in flight to Antium,
which was, for those days, a very wealthy city. The consul did not
venture to attack it, but he took Caeno from the Antiates, not by any
means so wealthy a place. Whilst the Aequi and Volscians were keeping
the Roman armies engaged, the Sabines extended their ravages up to the
gates of the City. In a few days the consuls invaded their territory,
and, attacked fiercely by both armies, they suffered heavier losses
than they had inflicted.
Ab urbe condita 2.64
Towards the close of the year there was a short interval of peace, but,
as usual, it was marred by the struggle between the patricians and the
plebeians. The plebs, in their exasperation, refused to take any part
in the election of consuls; T. Quinctius and Q. Servilius were elected
consuls by the patricians and their clients. They had a year similar to
the previous one: agitation during the first part, then the calming of
this by foreign war. The Sabines hurriedly traversed the plains of
Crustumerium, and carried fire and sword into the district watered by
the Anio, but were repulsed when almost close to the Colline gate and
the walls of the City. They succeeded, however, in carrying off immense
spoil both in men and cattle. The consul Servilius followed them up
with an army bent on revenge, and though unable to come up with their
main body in the open country, he carried on his ravages on such an
extensive scale that he left no part unmolested by war, and returned
with spoil many times greater than that of the enemy. Amongst the
Volscians also the cause of Rome was splendidly upheld by the exertions
of general and soldiers alike. To begin with, they met on level ground
and a pitched battle was fought with immense losses on both sides in
killed and wounded. The Romans, whose paucity of numbers made them more
sensible of their loss, would have retreated had not the consul called
out that the enemy on the other wing were in flight, and by this
well-timed falsehood roused the army to fresh effort. They made a
charge and converted a supposed victory into a real one. The consul,
fearing lest by pressing the attack too far he might force a renewal of
the combat, gave the signal for retiring. For the next few days both
sides kept quiet, as though there were a tacit understanding. During
this interval, an immense body of men from all the Volscian and Aequian
cities came into camp, fully expecting that when the Romans heard of
their arrival they would make a nocturnal retreat. Accordingly, about
the third watch they moved out to attack the camp. After allaying the
confusion caused by the sudden alarm, Quinctius ordered the soldiers to
remain quietly in their quarters, marched out a cohort of Hernicans to
the outposts, mounted the buglers and trumpeters on horseback, and
ordered them to sound their calls and keep the enemy on the alert till
dawn. For the remainder of the night all was so quiet in the camp that
the Romans even enjoyed ample sleep. The sight of the armed infantry
whom the Volscians took to be Romans and more numerous than they really
were, the noise and neighing of the horses, restless under their
inexperienced riders and excited by the sound of the trumpets, kept the
enemy in constant apprehension of an attack.
Ab urbe condita 2.65
At daybreak the Romans, fresh from their undisturbed sleep, were led
into action, and at the first charge broke the Volscians, worn out as
they were with standing and want of sleep. It was, however, a retreat
rather than a rout, for in their rear there were hills to which all
behind the front ranks safely retired. When they reached the rising
ground, the consul halted his army. The soldiers were with difficulty
restrained, they clamoured to be allowed to follow up the beaten foe.
The cavalry were much more insistent, they crowded round the general
and loudly declared that they would go on in advance of the infantry.
While the consul, sure of the courage of his men, but not reassured as
to the nature of the ground, was still hesitating, they shouted that
they would go on, and followed up their shouts by making an advance.
Fixing their spears in the ground that they might be more lightly
equipped for the ascent, they went up at a run. The Volscians hurled
their javelins at the first onset, and then flung the stones lying at
their feet upon the enemy as they came up. Many were hit, and through
the disorder thus created they were forced back from the higher ground.
In this way the Roman left wing was nearly overwhelmed, but through the
reproaches which the consul cast upon his retreating men for their
rashness as well as their cowardice, he made their fear give way to the
sense of shame. At first they stood and offered a firm resistance, then
when by holding their ground they had recovered their energies they
ventured upon an advance. With a renewed shout the whole line went
forward, and pressing on in a second charge they surmounted the
difficulties of the ascent, and were just on the point of reaching the
summit when the enemy turned and fled. With a wild rush, pursuers and
fugitives almost in one mass dashed into the camp, which was taken.
Those of the Volscians who succeeded in escaping made for Antium;
thither the Roman army was led. After a few days' investment the place
was surrendered, not owing to any unusual efforts on the part of the
besiegers, but simply because after the unsuccessful battle and the
loss of their camp the enemy had lost heart.
End of Book 2
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