READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF ROME. THE WAR FOR SUPREMACY IN THE WESTCHAPTER VIII.GENERAL REMARKS ON THE HANNIBALIAN WAR AND THE CORRESPONDING PERIOD.
The second Punic or Hannibalian war has always justly attracted the special
attention of historians. Apart from the thrilling events, the grand military
operations and efforts both of the Romans and of the Carthaginians, and of the
surprising vicissitudes of this great war—apart from the personal sympathy
which Hannibal’s deeds and sufferings inspire, and the dramatic interest which
is thus imparted to the narrative, we cannot fail to see that this struggle has
been of the greatest importance in the history of human civilization, and
therefore deserves the most careful study. Not only did this war, the second of
the three waged between Rome and Carthage, bring about the irrevocable decision,
but by this decision the question was settled whether the states of the ancient
world were to continue to exist separately, in continual rivalry, in local
independence and jealousy, or whether they should be welded into one great
empire, and whether this empire should be founded by the Graeco-Italic or by
the Semitic-Oriental race. It cannot be doubted that, if Rome instead of
Carthage had been completely humiliated, the Punic empire and Punic
civilization would have spread to Sicily, to Sardinia, and probably even to
Italy, and that for centuries it would have determined the history of Europe.
What would have been the
result of this consummation, whether the development of the human race would
have been impeded or advanced, we cannot attempt to decide. Our imperfect
knowledge of the national mind and character of the Carthaginians prevents us
from giving an opinion. Historians are generally satisfied with the supposition
that the victory of Rome was equivalent to the deliverance of the Graeco-Italic
mind from Oriental stagnation and intellectual oppression, and this conviction,
which at any rate is consoling, may make our sympathy with a great and glorious
nation less painful; but it can in no way diminish the importance which we
justly ascribe to the Hannibalian war. We must
pronounce Livy right in his opinion, that, of all wars that had ever been
waged, this was the most noteworthy; and, as Heeren justly remarks, the nineteen centuries that have passed since Livy wrote have
not deprived it of its interest.
This interest is owing in
great part to the fortunate circumstance that for the Hannibalian war the continuous narrative of Livy and the valuable fragments of Polybius
enable us, more than hitherto in Roman history, to examine the inner working of
the powers which this war put in motion. Having parted with Livy before the
close of the third Samnite war, at the end of his tenth book, we have missed
his not always trustworthy, but still useful, guidance during the war with
Pyrrhus, and also during the first Punic and the Gallic and Illyrian wars,
where we found a most valuable substitute in the short sketches of Polybius.
Then with the siege of Saguntum, we take up again the
narrative of Livy in the twenty-first book of his voluminous work, ten books of
which relate the events of every year to the conclusion of peace, sometimes with
unnecessary breadth and with rhetorical verbosity, and not without omissions
and errors, but still with conscientious use of such historical evidence as he
had at his command, and in language the beauty of which is unsurpassed in the
historical literature of Rome. For the first two years of the war we have, in
addition to Livy’s narrative, that of Polybius, which leaves hardly anything to he desired as regards clearness, credibility, and
sound judgment, but of which, unfortunately, for the remainder of the war, only
a few detached fragments are preserved. There are also many particulars to be
gleaned from the fragments of Dion Cassius and the abridgment of his work by
Zonaras. Even Appian’s narrative, though based on false views and full of the
grossest exaggeration, is not useless when critically considered.
In addition to these,
Diodorus, Frontinus, and others occasionally help us;
but, in spite of this comparative abundance of authorities, we are conscious
that in the Hannibalian war there remain many unsolved
problems and difficulties with respect to numbers, places, and
secondary events, and also that we are in the dark as to many of the
conditions of success, and as to the intentions and plans which determined on a
large scale the action of both the belligerent powers.
The main cause of the
superiority of Rome over Carthage we have found in the firm geographical and
ethnographical unity of the Roman state as compared with the chequered
character of the nationalities ruled over by Carthage, and in the disjointed
configuration of its territory, scattered over long lines of coast and islands.
The history of the war shows us clearly how these fundamental conditions acted.
Whilst Carthage, by the genius of her general and by the boldness of her
attack, thwarted the Roman plans and destroyed one army after another, the
fountain of the Roman power, the warlike population of Italy, remained
unexhausted, and flowed more freely in proportion as Carthage found it more and
more difficult to replenish her armies. Thus the war was in reality decided,
not on the field of battle, as the Persian war was decided at Salamis and at
Plataea, nor through the genius of a general and the enthusiastic bravery of
the troops, by which small nations have often triumphed over far superior foes.
It was decided long before the battle of Zama by the inherent momentum of these
two states, which entered the lists and continued to fight, not with a part of
their forces only, but with their whole strength. As, often, between two
equally matched pugilists, the victory is decided not by one blow or by a
succession of blows—the question being who can keep his breath longest and
remain longest on his legs—so, in the conflict between Rome and Carthage, not
skill and courage, but nerve and sinew, won the victory.
The advantage involved in the
geographical conformation of Italy was increased by the surprising number of
strong places, and by the circumstance that the capital of the country, the
heart of the Roman power, was situated, not at one extremity, but in the centre
of the long peninsula. The difficulties which the Italian fortresses opposed to
Hannibal’s progress appear on every page of the history of the war. These difficulties
were the more serious as the art of siege was comparatively unknown in
antiquity, and particularly in Carthage. Thus we see how, even in Gaul, the
cities of Placentia, Cremona, and Mutina, though
hardly fortified, defied the enemy during the whole course of the war, and
formed a barrier towards the north. Of the many Etruscan cities, not one, fell
into Hannibal’s power. After the battle at the lake Thrasymenus even the small colony at Spoletium could resist him.
In Apulia, in Samnium, Lucania, and Bruttium we hear of a great number of
fortified places, otherwise unknown, but which in this war, if they did not
fall by treason, were able to disturb the march of the victorious enemy. We
know more of the Greek towns, and of the fortresses in Campania; and if we
remember how Hannibal’s attacks on Naples, on Cumae, Nola, and Puteoli failed, and how the little place of Casilinum could for months oppose a desperate resistance to
the besieging army, we can easily understand that the conquest of Italy was a very
different undertaking from that of the Carthaginian territory, where, with the
exception of a few seaports, there were only open towns, a rich and easy spoil
for any aggressor.
The importance of the central
position of Rome is self-evident. That position prevented Hannibal from cutting
off the whole of Italy at once from Rome, and at the same time uniting all the
peoples against Rome. He had to choose either the northern or the southern part
of the peninsula as a basis of operations; and when he took up a position in
Apulia and Bruttium he lost his communication with Gaul.
The maintenance of this
communication was rendered extremely difficult by the narrowness of the
peninsula; and thus we see why the transport of Gallic auxiliaries for
Hannibal’s army ceased after the first years of the war, and how Hannibal had
then to rely upon the resources of the south of Italy alone. We need hardly
remark how useful this central position of Rome was in the decisive moment of
the war, during Hasdrubal’s invasion, nor how it facilitated the victory on the Metaurus. The same circumstances were repeated after
Mago’s landing at Genoa, and it may well be doubted whether, even under the
most favourable conditions, Mago would have been able to effect a junction with
Hannibal for the purpose of making a combined attack on Rome.
If we can hardly suppose that
the Carthaginians were ignorant of these circumstances, which were all in
favour of Rome, the undeviating persistency with which they continued to attack
Rome from the north of Italy is the more surprising. That it was impossible, or
even dangerous, to transport an army by sea to the south of Italy we cannot
suppose. The landing of Mago on the coast of Liguria would completely
invalidate such a supposition, and still more the landing of Scipio’s army in
the immediate neighbourhood of Utica. The ships of the ancients drew so little
water that they could approach almost any part of the coast, and it was by no
means necessary to be in possession of a fortified harbour before they could
venture to disembark troops. The ships could be drawn on shore and protected
from attacks of the enemy; and, indeed, the Roman fleet had, during the three
years’ war in Africa, no other protection but that which was afforded by such a
fortified camp of ships. We can think of no other reason for the attacks of
Hannibal, Hasdrubal, and Mago from the north of Italy but the hope of gaining
Gallic auxiliaries, and this very circumstance betrays the scantiness of the
resources upon which Carthage drew for the recruiting of her armies.
It is more difficult to
understand why she almost entirely abstained from vigorously carrying on the
war at sea. In the first war several great naval battles were fought, and the
decision was brought about by the victory of Catulus near the Aegatian Islands; but in the second Punic
war the importance of the fleet appears surprisingly diminished, both on the
Roman and on the Carthaginian side. Not one great battle was fought at sea.
Even the number of ships which Rome employed on the wide battlefield on the
coasts of Spain, Gaul, Liguria, Italy, Sicily, Corsica, Sardinia, and in the
East, was in no year equal to the number of those that, fought at Ecnomus alone. Further, whilst in the Sicilian war the
quinqueremes had almost entirely taken the place of the triremes, we now again
find triremes frequently mentioned. Repeatedly we hear of the ships being
withdrawn from service, and the troops that manned them being employed for the
war on land. If we are surprised to hear this of the Romans, who owed so much
to their former success at sea, and who were so justly proud of it, it is still
more surprising with regard to Carthage. The Romans had been attacked and could
not determine whether land or sea should be the theatre of the war. They were
obliged to meet Hannibal on land, and as long as they remained on the defensive
they could not pay much attention to the naval war; but why Carthage neglected
her fleet, and did not make better use of her superiority as mistress of the
seas, the absence of Carthaginian historians makes it impossible for us to
explain. It must have been possible, we might suppose, to intercept the Roman
transports of troops and materials of war that were sent from Italy to Sardinia
and to Spain, and particularly those that were destined for Africa, or at any
rate to make this conveyance very difficult. Yet we hear but little of the
capture of Roman convoys by Carthaginian ships. The Roman fleets sailed in
every direction almost unmolested. In the decisive operations of the war, the
Carthaginian navy made no attempt to take an active part. In fact during the
siege of Syracuse their fleet actually declined a battle with the Romans, and
thus brought about the loss of that important town. Further, we find Scipio
landing unopposed almost within sight of Carthage, and if the Roman transports
sometimes suffered from storms, they were never attacked by Carthaginian
cruisers. They sailed with the greatest regularity, almost as in times of
peace, and during the first winter provided the Roman army with all necessaries
at a time when it must have perished without such supplies. The minute
description of unimportant naval conflicts, as for instance that of one
Carthaginian quinquereme and eight triremes against one Roman quinquereme and
seven triremes, is an indirect proof of the decay of both navies. Nor is this
an exceptional case. In the Greek states the old naval superiority had long
disappeared. The Achaeans and the royal successors of Alexander could launch no
fleet that would bear comparison with those of the Hellenic republics when at
the height of their power. It produces a melancholy impression when we read how
the Achaean league sent out a fleet of ten ships against the pirates of
Illyria, and that King Philip, having borrowed five war ships of them, at
length determined to build a fleet of a hundred ships. Whilst the old rulers of
the sea retired exhausted, the barbarian pirates became bolder and bolder, and
their armed boats swept the seas and the coasts where once the proud triremes
of the free Greeks had reigned supreme.
In the absence of all information
which might enable us to account for the diminished importance of the
Carthaginian fleet, this neglect of their naval force may perhaps be explained
partly by the feet that Hannibal and his brothers, and even, before them,
Hamilcar Barcas, the chief movers and leaders of the
war, had devoted themselves by preference to the war by land, and excelled in
this branch of military science. They were persuaded that Rome must be attacked
and subdued in Italy. They therefore naturally advocated the application of all
the national resources to the army, and their advice was always followed in
Carthage. No doubt they were right in this, and Carthage would probably have
been exhausted much sooner if she had divided her strength between the army and
the fleet more than she actually did.
The military system and
organisation of the Romans underwent no important changes during the Hannibalian war; but a war which put so great a strain on the
national resources could not fail to bring about, some innovations. We see more
clearly than before the first signs of a standing and of a mercenary army, and
the gradual formation of a class of professional soldiers distinct from the
civil population; and, in connexion with this, we find serious symptoms of
moral decay. In the first Punic war it was still the rule to disband and
dismiss the legions at the end of the summer campaign. This system, rendered
inconvenient by the great distance of the theatre of the war in Sicily, could
not be universally carried out without abandoning the island during the winter
to the Carthaginian armies and garrisons. But still the Roman military system,
which required every citizen to serve in turn, made it necessary periodically
to reconstitute the legions; and, in the absence of higher considerations, the
peasants and artisans were not withdrawn from their families for more than one
or two campaigns.
The carrying out of this
arrangement became more and more difficult during the Hannibalian war, first because the military levies made it impossible regularly to relieve
the troops, then because the peril of the republic whilst Hannibal was in Italy
called for a standing army, and lastly because the regular renewal of the legions
in distant Spain would have caused too much expense. In addition to this, the
legions defeated at Cannae and at Herdonea were sent
to Sicily with the intention of punishing them for their conduct, by retaining
them under arms until the end of the war. Whilst the legions stationed in Italy
were less frequently relieved than formerly, the armies of Spain and Sicily
consisted chiefly of veterans, of whom many had served as much as fourteen
years. These soldiers were, evidently, very different from the old militia.
They had become estranged from
civil life; war had become their profession, and from war alone they derived
their support and hoped for gain. The Roman pay was not, as with a mercenary
army, a remuneration intended to induce men to enlist and to reward them for
their services. It was only a compensation, and a very insufficient
compensation, paid by the state to the citizen who was taken from his calling
and burdened with a public duty. Even the troops levied only for a short time
reckoned more upon the booty than on their pay, and as a rule the movable booty
was appropriated by a victorious army.
Though the Roman soldiery were
thus accustomed from the very beginning to rely on plunder, the demoralization
which necessarily resulted from this practice remained within narrow limits so
long as the soldiers did not make inadequate the service a profession, and so
long as they fought only against foreign enemies, and not against rebellious
subjects or allies. All this was changed in the Hannibalian war. The Roman soldiers, now serving for years together, became naturally more
and more estranged from a life of labour, and adopted the habits ot soldiers, which naturally lead to the destruction and
violent seizure of property. For the indulgence of such propensities Italy
during the Hannibalian war offered the most
favourable terms. A great number of Roman subjects had joined the invader. All
these revolted towns and villages were gradually reoccupied by the Romans, and
the soldiers could at the same time indulge in their desire for pillage and
inflict chastisement on a rebellions population.
In what manner this was done
we learn from the disgraceful scenes that took place in Locri—scenes which were
certainly no isolated instances of such ferocity, but which probably owe their
notoriety to the mutiny to which the pillage gave rise. At that time the
prosperity of whole districts of Italy was destroyed for many years—a prelude
to that desolation which continued down to the imperial epoch. That the havoc
made by the Roman soldiery in Sicily was even greater, the horrors of Leontini,
of Enna, and of Syracuse are sufficient evidence. In Spain the same rapacity
led to insubordination and mutiny. What Appian relates of the conquest of the
town of Locha in Africa shows that the Roman soldiers
ventured to satisfy their thirst for blood and love of plunder in utter
defiance of military discipline, and under the eyes of the commander himself.
If this could happen with troops levied from the population of Rome and of the
Latin and allied towns, and serving in the Roman legions, how much more reckless
must have been the conduct of the irregular troops to whom Rome had recourse
under the pressure of her disasters? When, after the fall of Syracuse, the
praetor Valerius Laevinus endeavoured to restore Sicily to order and to the occupations of peace, he
collected all the bands of marauders that were devastating Sicily, and sent
them over to Italy, in order to molest the Bruttians as much as possible. In like manner, the two notorious publicans and swindlers
Pomponius and Postumius waged war on their own
account, but with the sanction of the senate. Then, again, the slaves who had
been enlisted as soldiers, and dispersed after the death of Gracchus, can have
lived only by plunder, and must have contributed to the misery and wretchedness
into which years of war had plunged the whole population of Italy.
That the mercenaries and
foreign troops, employed in great numbers by the Romans, exercised a pernicious
influence on the discipline and bearing of the Roman soldiers, it is a fact
which cannot be doubted. The first traces of foreign mercenaries in the Roman
armies we have noticed already in the first Punic war. In the second war the
instances are very numerous. These troops were partly Greek mercenaries sent by Hiero, partly deserters from the Punic armies, partly
Gallic, Spanish, and Numidian auxiliaries, and partly genuine mercenaries
enlisted by Roman agents. All these troops were animated, not by patriotism or
a sense of duty, but by the hope of gain; and if we are justified in assuming
that the Roman, Latin, and Sabellic soldiers were
originally inspired by higher motives, still they could not fail to be affected
by the character of their mercenary comrades.
But it was by no means the
common soldiers alone who became more and more habituated to plunder. It seems
that even the superior officers set the example to their men. In Locri, Pleminius conducted himself as a barefaced robber, and his
quarrel with the two military tribunes arose only from their having disputed
the booty with the commander-in-chief. When Scipio had taken New Carthage, his
friends, as we are told, brought him the most beautiful maiden they could find
as a choice article of booty, and his refusal of this present was deemed an act
of exceeding magnanimity and self-denial. How Marcellus acted in Syracuse we
can judge from the complaints of the Syracusans. In fact it was an inveterate
vice of the Roman aristocracy, that they always surpassed the populace in
greed, and in skill in plundering. Hence, in the old times, the charge that
Camillus illegally appropriated the spoil of Veii, whilst the exceptional
praise bestowed upon Fabricius for his abstinence
only proves the general rule. But the most striking proof of the systematic
robbery of the Roman nobility is their wealth. This wealth was gained, not by
labour and economy, not by commerce and enterprise, but by plunder. It grew
with every new conquest; and since Rome had possessions out of Italy, the
wealth accumulated in certain hands attained princely dimensions, and raised
its possessors higher and higher above republican equality and above the laws.
Whilst the commanders of armies openly and by force seized upon whatever they
chose, another class of men carried on the same craft with quite as much skill
under the protection of legal forms. These were the contractors and merchants
who followed in the wake of the armies, as the jackal follows the lion, to
gather up the fragments left by the haste or satiety of those who had gone
before them. The soldiers could seldom make use of the booty that fell into
their hands, and they sought to convert it into ready money as quickly as
possible. For this purpose they had recourse to the traders, who, it seems,
regularly accompanied them, and knew how to take advantage of the ignorance or
impatience of the troops. These men bought valuables and all kinds of plunder,
but particularly the prisoners, and for what they had purchased at a low figure
in the camp they found a good market in Rome and elsewhere. Their business was
of course most lucrative, as they were obliged to share danger and hardships
with the soldiers. That they should be, as a rule, consummate rascals is
natural, and this circumstance contributed to brand the merchants of Rome as a
set of unprincipled impostors and as a species of thieves.
Another class of traders were
the usurers and speculators, who settled everywhere in the conquered countries,
and brought down the curse of the provinces on the name of Italians. The worst
of these were the farmers of the customs and revenues; but their practices
belong more to the long years of peace, and their system of oppression could
not be fully developed during the continuation of the war. On the other hand it
was precisely during the war that the army contractors flourished. These
speculators formed joint-stock companies and carried on a most lucrative trade.
There may have been honest people among them who became rich without stealing;
but when we think of the infamous acts of which a Postumius could be guilty, we cannot doubt that the practice of robbing the state was
then as general with these people as it has been with the same class in modern
times in all cases where they have not been subjected to strict control.
The consequence of every war
is an increased inequality in the distribution of property. Whilst war greatly
enriches a few, it impoverishes the mass of the people. The two principal
conditions of peace—productive labour and legal order—are in every war, more or
less set aside by destruction and violence. The former reduces the total amount
of capital, and the latter brings about an unequal and unfair distribution of
it. This is the case particularly in a predatory war; and in a certain sense
all the wars of antiquity, and particularly the wars waged by the Romans, were
predatory. A war so great as that which Hannibal waged against the Romans, and
which, after long suffering and privation, bestowed upon the victors so immense
a booty, could not but exercise a momentous influence upon Roman society and
the Roman state. On the one hand pauperism, and thereby the democratic element,
were increased; on the other hand, the power and wealth of the reigning
families grew more and more; and we already see the predecessors of those men
whose personal ambition and love of power could no longer be kept within bounds
by the laws of the republic.
We can form only an
approximate idea of the devastation of Italy at the close of the Hannibalian war, as we do not know the thousandth part of
the detail. Surely the dream Lad come to pass which, according to the narrative
of Livy, Hannibal bad dreamt before his departure from Spain. On his march from
the north of the peninsula to its southern extremity he had been followed by
the dreadful serpent which crushed plantations and fields in its coils, and
which was called the ‘desolation of Italy’. The southern portion in particular
had been visited most dreadfully by the scourge of war. In Samnium, in Apulia,
Campania, Lucania, and Bruttium there was hardly a village that had not been
burnt down or plundered, hardly a town that had not been besieged or stormed.
Those fared worst that fell alternately into the hands of the Romans and of the
Carthaginians. The most flourishing cities, and especially almost all the Greek
towns, were in this position, on which the fate of Capua is a memorable
commentary. But the great sufferings of this town must not divert our attention
from the misfortunes that befell other less prominent communities. Great tracts
of land were entirely deserted, whole populations of certain towns were
transplanted to other abodes. Forfeitures and executions followed upon the
reconquest of every rebellious township. A great part of Italy was for the
second time confiscated by the conquerors, and considerable tracts of land
became the property of the Roman people. Yet it was by no means the rebellious
Italians alone that felt the scourge of war. The trusty allies, the Latins, and
the Roman citizens themselves suffered as they had never suffered before.
Whilst the lands remained untilled, and the hands of the husbandman grasped
the sword instead of the plough, whilst the workshops stood empty, the families
were necessarily exposed to want, even if they had not had to suffer under the
pressure of an increased taxation. The decrease of the population is the surest
sign of the effect of the war on the citizens of Rome. Whilst in the year 220
the number of citizens un the census lists amounted to 270,213, it had fallen
in 204 to 214,000. We may certainly assume that the Hannibalian war cost Italy a million of lives.
It seems strange, at first
sight, that the great sufferings of the Roman people should have been the cause
of new festivities and popular rejoicings. But festivals and games were religious
ceremonies, designed to pacify the gods. The plague of the year 364 had been
the cause of the introduction of scenic games, and thus, in the course of the Hannibalian war, the number of public festivals increased,
in apparent contradiction to the public distress.
To the ancient ‘Roman’ or
‘great games,’ which had originated in the regal period, and to the ‘plebeian
games’ introduced at the commencement of the republic, there were added in the
year 212 the ‘Apollinarian games’ celebrated every year from 208 downwards; and
in the year 204 the ‘Megalesian games’ were
introduced, in honour of the great mother of the gods. Besides these the
celebration of games of Ceres is mentioned in the year 202, and very frequently
the several games were renewed and extended for longer periods.
Naturally such festivals, even
if at first they bore a religious character, could not fail to encourage the
love of pleasure. The numerous processions, the gorgeous funerals, and the
funeral games arranged by private persons at their own expense had the same
tendency. For this latter purpose the inhuman combats of gladiators, which
seemed destined to root out all the nobler and tenderer sympathies of man and
to extinguish all respect for the dignity of the human race, had been imported
from Etruria as early as the year 261, the first year of the war in Sicily.
This element of demoralisation was introduced simultaneously with the
humanising art and poetry of Greece, as if it had been intended to counteract
its influence; and thus grew the taste for the most abominable and disgusting
sights by which men have ever corrupted and killed within themselves all the
higher instincts of humanity.
A people that revelled in the
dying agonies of a man, murdered for their brutal pleasure before their eyes,
could not really feel the ennobling influence of pure art. We cannot therefore
wonder that Greek poetry never took deep root in the Roman mind, but only
covered its coarseness with outward ornament, just as the Greek mythology was
patched on to the unimaginative religion of Italy as an external addition. It is
eminently characteristic of the literature now developed among the Romans, that
it was transplanted and never fully acclimatised on the foreign soil. Instead
of passing through a natural growth, as in Greece, and advancing gradually from
epic to lyric poetry, and from lyric poetry to the drama, poetry was imported
into Italy complete, and all its branches were cultivated at the same time. We
may consider Livius Andronicus, from Tarentum, of
whom we have already mentioned a lyric composition, as the oldest poet of Rome.
His chief strength lay in the drama, and at the same time he also made the
Romans acquainted with the epic poetry of Greece by a translation of the
Odyssey. It is surprising that the Romans, from the very beginning, received
with such favour those Greek subjects which their poets treated in the Latin
tongue. They were certainly not acquainted with the overflowing wealth of Greek
myths and fables which formed the subject of the poems now transplanted to
Italy; yet they listened with breathless attention not only to the adventures
and sufferings of Ulysses, which in their simplicity are easy to understand,
but also to the tragic fate of the sons of Atreus and of Laios,
and to the crimes of Thyestes, Aigisthos, and Tereus,
which, in their dramatic form, roused the deepest emotion of the Greeks simply
because they were so generally known. We see here most clearly how the
marvellous influence of Greek fancy prevailed even over barbarians, and took by
storm an intellectual field hitherto uncultivated. Almost from the first moment
that the Romans were touched with the magic wand of Greek poetry, they had lost
their taste and affection for the first rude beginnings of their own poetic literature.
The Saturnian and Fescennine
verses and the Atellanian plays were cast aside and
despised by the educated. The Latin language was forced into Greek rhythms, and
the whole Greek apparatus of poetical conceptions, phrases, and rules was
slavishly adopted. A confusion of ideas was the consequence. The simple Romans
were often unable fully to understand what filled them with wonder and
astonishment. It was not possible for them to absorb and assimilate at once the
varied products of a foreign civilization, which had been the growth of
centuries, and to master at once the different philosophical systems from the
old simple mythology down to Epicurism and Enemerism. It was long before they found their way in this
flowery maze; but from the beginning their delight was great, and the victory
of the Hellenic mind over the Italian was decided.
The successor of the Greek Livius Andronicus was Naevius,
most likely a native of Campania. He also pursued the same path, but he seems
to have given to his poems a more national colouring. Like his predecessor, he
wrote tragedies and comedies according to the Greek pattern and filled with
Greek subjects; but he also selected materials from the national history, and
chose the first Punic war as the subject of an epic poem. In thus entering upon
the domain of real life and leaving that of mythology, he acted in accordance
with the tendency of the Italian mind, which had based the oldest dramatic
poetry on experience, and retained this principle in the satires, the only branch
of poetic literature which is native on Italian soil. Naevius was also a satirist; he persecuted with venomous irony the powerful nobles
destined by fate to become consuls in Rome, and paid for his audacity by exile.
The third and most eminent of those men who endeavoured to acclimatize Greek
poetry in Rome was the half-Greek Ennius, born at Rudiae in Calabria, a district which, from its nearness to
Tarentum, had become partly Greek. Like his predecessors, Ennius was versed in several kinds of poetry. He wrote tragedies, comedies, and heroic
poems, and it was he who first introduced the Greek hexameter for the latter,
and thus finally banished the old Saturnian verse from Roman poetry. His
Annals, in which he treats of the history of Rome from the foundation of the
town down to his own time, in eighteen books, have been of great importance to
the historians. As in England many, even educated, people derive their views of
English history in the middle ages from Shakespeare’s ‘Histories,’ so the
Romans, who read the ‘Annals of Ennius’ much more
diligently than those of the pontifices, often derived their first impressions
of the old times and heroes from his poetical descriptions; and even the annalists, who undertook to write the history of the Roman
people in the period intervening between the Punic wars and the time of Livy,
could not free themselves from the influence which a popular poet like Ennius exercised upon them. This is most striking in those
parts of the second Punic war in which Scipio plays a prominent part. Evidently
a considerable portion of this so-called history belongs to the domain of
fiction. Unfortunately, however, we are unable to ascertain from the scanty
fragments of the poems of Ennius whether the chief
source of these poetic ingredients was his Annals or a separate heroic poem
which he composed to the glory of Scipio.
Like literature, religion also
felt the influence of Greece during the Punic wars. The direct evidence of this
is found in the adoption of Greek deities, as for instance the great mother of
the gods, in the increasing importance of the worship of Apollo, of the
Sibylline books, and of the Delphic oracle, and in the decline of ancient
superstitions under the influence of free-thought. It is true the old auguries
and the yoke of ceremonial law, with its thousand restrictions and annoyances,
were not yet cast off, but they ceased to trouble the consciences of the
Romans. Scepticism had reached a considerable height when a Roman consul could
venture to say that "if the sacred fowls refused to feed, they should be
cast into the water, that they might drink". What Livy relates about C. Valerius Flaccus is also very significant. This man had in
his youth quarrelled with his brothers and other kinsfolk, owing to his own
irregular and dissolute mode of life, and was considered altogether a man lost
to decent society. But in order to save him from utter perdition, the chief
pontifex, P. Licinius, ordained him, against his
wish, to the office of priest of Jupiter (flamen dialis),
and under the influence of the sacred office this rake became not only a
respectable but even an exemplary man, and succeeded in regaining the official
seat in the senate which his predecessors in office had lost through their
unworthiness. Nothing can be more characteristic of the spirit of the Roman
religion, and of the total absence of a morally sanctifying element, than this
appointment of a notorious profligate as priest of the supreme god. It was a
fabric of formulae without meaning, a dish without meat. The religious cravings
were not satisfied, and men were carried either to the schools of Greek
philosophy or to the grossest and meanest superstition. Hence it ceases to be a
matter of wonder that in times of danger, as in the Gallic (225 B.C.) and in the Hannibalian war (210 B.C.), the Roman people should
return to the barbarous rite of human sacrifices, that the town should be
filled with magicians and prophets, that every form of superstition should be
readily received by the common people, and that religion and morals should
cease to make an effectual stand against selfishness and vice.
The increasing love of
pleasure in Rome, and the growing splendour of the public festivals and games,
cannot be considered as a proof of a general increase of wealth in the capital,
and still less in the whole empire. The treasures collected in Rome had not
been earned by labour, but captured by force of arms. The peaceful exchange of
goods, which is the result of productive labour and legitimate commerce,
enriches the buyer and the seller, and encourages both to renewed exertion. But
when brute force takes the place of a free exchange, both the robbed and the
robber become enervated. The curse of barrenness cleaves to stolen goods. Who
would gladly toil in the field or in the workshop, and earn a scanty livelihood
in the sweat of his brow, if he has once revelled in the spoils of a conquered
foe? The Roman soldiers lost in the long war the virtues of citizens. What they
had gained, they rapidly squandered, and they returned home to swell the
impoverished crowd that daily increased in the capital, attracted by the
amusements and still more by the hope of sharing the profits of the sovereign
people through the exercise of their sovereignty. Whilst, on the one hand, the
love of sight-seeing was nourished, we hear already of those demoralising
distributions of corn which destroyed, more than anything else, the spirit of
honourable independence and of self-help. Already, in the year 203, a quantity
of corn, that had been sent from Spain, was distributed at a low price by the
curule aediles. This was the most convenient way of keeping the populace
in good humour, and opposing those reformers who advocated the restoration of a
free peasantry by means of assignments of land on a large scale. At the close
of the Hannibalian war there was the best opportunity,
and at the same time the most urgent necessity, for a radical agrarian reform.
Great tracts ot land in Italy were deserted, while thousands of people
were impoverished and without employment. It was possible and even easy to
remedy both evils at once, and to spread over Italy a free and vigorous
population, such as had existed at the beginning of the war. If this was now
neglected, a future revolution and the fall of the republic became inevitable.
That it was neglected was the
fault of the nobility. A few colonies, it is true, were founded, and a certain
number of veterans received grants of land. But these measures were not carried
out in the spirit of the Flaminian distribution of lands in Picenum.
The estates of the nobility grew larger, and slaves took the place of a free
peasantry. The Licinian law, restricting the right of inclosure and of using the common pasture—a law which
had always been infringed more or less—now became gradually obsolete. By
degrees these various causes brought about that state of things which two
generations later converted the Gracchi into demagogues, and which, after the
failure of reform, led to the establishment of the monarchy. The course which
the development of the Roman state thus took, can be ascribed neither to
particular men nor to a particular class. It was the necessary consequence of
the fundamental form of the political and social institutions of Rome. The
growth of the republic involved the emancipation of the ruling class from all
public control.
The periodical admission of
all citizens to the public offices, which constitutes the real essence of
republican freedom and equality, was naturally checked by the supremacy of one
city over great districts; while the inequality in the division of wealth,
which impoverished and cowed the mass of the sovereign people, raised the
ruling classes above the authority of the laws. At the time of the Hannibalian war this process was completed, and the theory
of the constitution no longer agreed with the practice. The senate had ceased
to be merely a deliberative body, and the people had only a nominal control of
the legislative and executive power. The senate reigned exactly as a sovereign
reigns in a state which has only a sham constitution. The officers of the state
were its submissive servants, and the people were used as a tool to give the
stamp of legality to the edicts of the senate. The ruling nobility was fully
developed. The government was in the hands of a small number of noble families,
to which it was all but impossible to gain admission. During the whole course
of the Hannibalian war we find no instance of a ‘new
man’ having been chosen for any high republican office. The names of the Cornelii, Valerii, Fabii, Sempronii, Servilii, Atilii, Aemilii, Claudii, Fulvii, Sulpicii, Livii, Caecilii, Licinii fill the consular fasti of the period. Even the
most brilliant personal merit no longer sufficed to admit a man who was not a
member of the nobility to the higher offices of state. The knight L. Marcius,
who after the fall of Cn. and Publius Scipio, had saved the remainder of the
Roman army in Spain, and had afterwards been employed by the younger Scipio in
the most important operations of the war, was shut out, in spite of his merits,
from all high office, because he was not of noble descent, and this was at a
time when military ability was more important than any other. Even Laelius, Scipio’s staunch friend and confidant, obtained
admittance to the high offices of state with great difficulty, after he had
failed in his first candidature for the consulship, in spite of the
intercession of his powerful friends (192 B.C.). This jealousy of the nobility
with regard to interlopers was by no means due only to ambition and to a desire
to serve the state. The extension of the Roman republic had rendered the
honorary public offices sources of profit to their holders to an extent which
the old patricians had never anticipated when they consented to share them with
their plebeian rivals. There can be no doubt that it was even then chiefly the
prospect of pecuniary profit that increased the obstinacy of the conflict for
the possession of office. But in the olden time religious conservatism, and the
fear of the profanation of the auspices by the plebeians, had also exercised a
considerable influence. Now there was no longer any pretext for religious
scruples, and the families that were once in office excluded all outsiders
chiefly because they did not feel inclined to share the booty with them.
One of the most effectual
means of excluding new candidates was the burden laid on the aediles, who were
now required to furnish in part the cost of the public games. At first the
state had borne the expenses, and these had remained within reasonable limits.
But when the passion for public amusements increased, whilst at the same time
the conduct of the wars and the administration of the provinces brought immense
wealth to the noble houses, the younger members of the nobility used this
wealth to win popularity for themselves, by increasing the splendour and
prolonging the duration of the games at their own expense, and thus acquiring a
claim to the consulship and proconsulship, and the
means of enriching themselves. There is no economy more pernicious or more
costly than that of paying the public servants badly or not at all. The
consequence is that they indemnify themselves, and that they cease to consider
fraud, theft, and robbery as serious crimes. Thus the political life of Rome
moved continually in a narrowing and destructive circle, and approached more
and more to the fatal catastrophe. Corruption led to office and to wealth, and
this wealth again made corruption possible.
The calculating avarice of the
great, and the venality of the impoverished mass, were both engaged in bringing
about the ruin of the state, at first timidly and on a small scale, but with
constantly increasing boldness and recklessness. Even in the Hannibalian war we find traces of that cynical spirit
which a dominant party does not exhibit until it has lost both the fear of
rivalry and the fear of disgrace. It was even then not customary to measure by
the same standard the crimes of the nobility and those of the common people.
Whilst the soldiers who fled at Cannae were punished with the greatest severity
and condemned to serve in Sicily without pay, the young nobles, who had
certainly not behaved with exceptional gallantry, had risen step by step to the
highest offices of the republic. Cn. Cornelius Lentulus had been military tribune in the battle, and had escaped through the fleetness
of his horse: he became quaestor in the year 212, then curule aedile, and at
last even consul in 201. P. Sempronius Tuditanus, who had also been military tribune at Cannae,
became curule aedile in 214, praetor in 211, censor in 209, proconsul in 205,
and consul in 204. Q. Fabius Maximus, the son of the celebrated Cunctator, was
in a similar position; he became successively curule aedile, praetor, and
consul. Even L. Caecilius Metellus, who was said to
have formed the plan of leaving Italy after the battle of Cannae, and was
therefore the object of violent attacks from those who, like Scipio and Tuditanus, claimed for themselves the credit of greater
bravery, became, after his return, quaestor and tribune of the people. But,
above all others, P. Cornelius Scipio himself, the conqueror of Zama, was, in
spite of his flight at Cannae, loaded with honours and distinctions. It would
surely have been natural if the really ill-treated soldiers of Cannae had, in
the prayer for justice which they addressed to Marcellus, made use of the words
put into their mouth by Livy: ‘We have heard that our comrades in misfortune in
that defeat, who were then our legionary tribunes, are now candidates for
honours, and gain them. Will you then pardon yourselves and your sons,
Conscript Fathers, and only vent your rage against men of lower station? Is it
no disgrace for the consul and the other members of the nobility to take to
flight when no other hope is left? and have you sent us alone into battle for
certain death?’
If this contemptuous and
overbearing spirit of the nobility had been general at that time, the Roman
people would certainly not have borne the struggle with Carthage as bravely and
as successfully as they did. But these instances of political degeneracy were
as yet isolated. In the year 212, for instance, the nobility did not dare to
protect the incapable praetor Cn. Fulvius Flaccus,
who had lost the second battle of Herdonea, from an
accusation and from condemnation, after the fugitive troops had been punished
by being sent to serve in Sicily. In spite of the intercession of his brother
Quintus, who had already been three times consul, and who was at that moment
besieging Capua as proconsul, a capital charge was brought against him, and he
escaped the sentence only by going, as a voluntary exile, to Tarquinii.
In spite therefore of some
marks of decay already visible in the political and social
life of Rome, the period of the Hannibalian war was
still the zenith of the republican constitution and the heroic age of the Roman
people. From this time conquest followed upon conquest with surprising
rapidity. Within two generations Rome had attained an undisputed sovereignty
over all countries bordering on the Mediterranean. But the increase of wealth
and the decay of the old republican virtues kept pace with the extension of the
Roman power. We turn now to the consideration of the easy victories over the
degenerate Hellenic states, before describing the great struggles that preceded
the transition of the republic into the monarchy.
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