that the plebeians could not but be painfully sensible
of their political disabilities; but undoubtedly in
the first instance the nobility had not much to fear
from a purely political opposition, if it understood
the art of keeping the multitude, which desired nothing
but equitable administration and protection of its
material interests, aloof from political strife.
In fact during the first period after the expulsion
of the kings we meet with various measures which were
intended, or at any rate seemed to be intended, to
gain the favour of the commons for the government
of the nobility especially on economic grounds.
The port-dues were reduced; when the price of grain
was high, large quantities of corn were purchased
on account of the state, and the trade in salt was
made a state-monopoly, in order to supply the citizens
with corn and salt at reasonable prices; lastly, the
national festival was prolonged for an additional
day. Of the same character was the ordinance
which we have already mentioned respecting property
fines,(1) which was not merely intended in general
to set limits to the dangerous fining-prerogative
of the magistrates, but was also, in a significant
manner, calculated for the especial protection of the
man of small means. The magistrate was prohibited
from fining the same man on the same day to an extent
beyond two sheep or beyond thirty oxen, without granting
leave to appeal; and the reason of these singular rates
can only perhaps be found in the fact, that in the
case of the man of small means possessing only a few
sheep a different maximum appeared necessary from
that fixed for the wealthy proprietor of herds of oxen
—a considerate regard to the wealth or poverty
of the person fined, from which modern legislators
might take a lesson.
But these regulations were merely superficial; the
main current flowed in the opposite direction.
With the change in the constitution there was introduced
a comprehensive revolution in the financial and economic
relations of Rome, The government of the kings had
probably abstained on principle from enhancing the
power of capital, and had promoted as far as it could
an increase in the number of farms. The new aristocratic
government, again, appears to have aimed from the
first at the destruction of the middle classes, particularly
of the intermediate and smaller holdings of land,
and at the development of a domination of landed and
moneyed lords on the one hand, and of an agricultural
proletariate on the other.
Rising Power of the Capitalists
The reduction of the port-dues, although upon the
whole a popular measure, chiefly benefited the great
merchant. But a much greater accession to the
power of capital was supplied by the indirect system
of finance-administration. It is difficult to
say what were the remote causes that gave rise to
it: but, while its origin may probably be referred
to the regal period, after the introduction of the
consulate the importance of the intervention of private