in particular the bestowal and prolongation of the
command, should have been at once left to the only
authority which was in a position to undertake it—the
senate—and there should have been reserved
for the comitia the mere formality of confirmation.
The brilliant successes of the Scipios in the difficult
arena of Spanish warfare showed what might in this
way be achieved. But political demagogism, which
was already gnawing at the aristocratic foundations
of the constitution, had seized on the management
of the Italian war. The absurd accusation, that
the nobles were conspiring with the enemy without,
had made an impression on the “people.”
The saviours to whom political superstition looked
for deliverance, Gaius Flaminius and Gaius Varro,
both “new men” and friends of the people
of the purest dye, had accordingly been empowered
by the multitude itself to execute the plans of operations
which, amidst the approbation of that multitude, they
had unfolded in the Forum; and the results were the
battles on the Trasimene lake and at Cannae.
Duty required that the senate, which now of course
understood its task better than when it recalled half
the army of Regulus from Africa, should take into its
hands the management of affairs, and should oppose
such mischievous proceedings; but when the first of
those two defeats had for the moment placed the rudder
in its hands, it too had hardly acted in a manner
unbiassed by the interests of party. Little as
Quintus Fabius may be compared with these Roman Cleons,
he had yet conducted the war not as a mere military
leader, but had adhered to his rigid attitude of defence
specially as the political opponent of Gaius Flaminius;
and in the treatment of the quarrel with his subordinate,
had done what he could to exasperate at a time when
unity was needed. The consequence was, first,
that the most important instrument which the wisdom
of their ancestors had placed in the hands of the
senate just for such cases—the dictatorship—broke
down in his hands; and, secondly—at least
indirectly—the battle of Cannae. But
the headlong fall of the Roman power was owing not
to the fault of Quintus Fabius or Gaius Varro, but
to the distrust between the government and the governed—to
the variance between the senate and the burgesses.
If the deliverance and revival of the state were
still possible, the work had to begin at home with
the re-establishment of unity and of confidence.
To have perceived this and, what is of more importance,
to have done it, and done it with an abstinence from
all recriminations however just, constitutes the glorious
and imperishable honour of the Roman senate.
When Varro—alone of all the generals who
had command in the battle —returned to
Rome, and the Roman senators met him at the gate and
thanked him that he had not despaired of the salvation
of his country, this was no empty phraseology veiling
the disaster under sounding words, nor was it bitter
mockery over a poor wretch; it was the conclusion