to have the old man hunted out in his last asylum—for
the tradition which inculpates the senate appears
to deserve no credit—Flamininus, whose
restless vanity sought after new opportunities for
great achievements, undertook on his own part to deliver
Rome from Hannibal as he had delivered the Greeks
from their chains, and, if not to wield—which
was not diplomatic—at any rate to whet and
to point, the dagger against the greatest man of his
time. Prusias, the most pitiful among the pitiful
princes of Asia, was delighted to grant the little
favour which the Roman envoy in ambiguous terms requested;
and, when Hannibal saw his house beset by assassins,
he took poison. He had long been prepared to
do so, adds a Roman, for he knew the Romans and the
word of kings. The year of his death is uncertain;
probably he died in the latter half of the year 571,
at the age of sixty-seven. When he was born,
Rome was contending with doubtful success for the
possession of Sicily; he had lived long enough to see
the West wholly subdued, and to fight his own last
battle with the Romans against the vessels of his
native city which had itself become Roman; and he was
constrained at last to remain a mere spectator, while
Rome overpowered the East as the tempest overpowers
the ship that has no one at the helm, and to feel
that he alone was the pilot that could have weathered
the storm. There was left to him no further hope
to be disappointed, when he died; but he had honestly,
through fifty years of struggle, kept the oath which
he had sworn when a boy.
Death of Scipio
About the same time, probably in the same year, died
also the man whom the Romans were wont to call his
conqueror, Publius Scipio. On him fortune had
lavished all the successes which she denied to his
antagonist—successes which did belong to
him, and successes which did not. He had added
to the empire Spain, Africa, and Asia; and Rome, which
he had found merely the first community of Italy, was
at his death mistress of the civilized world.
He himself had so many titles of victory, that some
of them were made over to his brother and his cousin.(9)
And yet he too spent his last years in bitter vexation,
and died when little more than fifty years of age in
voluntary banishment, leaving orders to his relatives
not to bury his remains in the city for which he had
lived and in which his ancestors reposed. It
is not exactly known what drove him from the city.
The charges of corruption and embezzlement, which
were directed against him and still more against his
brother Lucius, were beyond doubt empty calumnies,
which do not sufficiently explain such bitterness of
feeling; although it is characteristic of the man,
that instead of simply vindicating himself by means
of his account-books, he tore them in pieces in presence
of the people and of his accusers, and summoned the
Romans to accompany him to the temple of Jupiter and
to celebrate the anniversary of his victory at Zama.