Caere and southward to Cumae; within this district
there were only a few cities not included in it, such
as Tibur, Praeneste, Signia, Norba, and Ferentinum.
To this fell to be added the maritime colonies on
the coasts of Italy which uniformly possessed the
full Roman franchise, the Picenian and Trans-Apennine
colonies of the most recent times, to which the franchise
must have been conceded,(38) and a very considerable
number of Roman burgesses, who, without forming separate
communities in a strict sense, were scattered throughout
Italy in market-villages and hamlets (-fora et conciliabula-).
To some extent the unwieldiness of a civic community
so constituted was remedied, for the purposes of justice(39)
and of administration, by the deputy judges previously
mentioned;(40) and already perhaps the maritime(41)
and the new Picenian and Trans-Apennine colonies
exhibited at least the first lineaments of the system
under which afterwards smaller urban communities were
organized within the great city-commonwealth of Rome.
But in all political questions the primary assembly
in the Roman Forum remained alone entitled to act;
and it is obvious at a glance, that this assembly
was no longer, in its composition or in its collective
action, what it had been when all the persons entitled
to vote could exercise their privilege as citizens
by leaving their farms in the morning and returning
home the same evening. Moreover the government—whether
from want of judgment, from negligence, or from any
evil design, we cannot tell—no longer as
formerly enrolled the communities admitted to the
franchise after 513 in newly instituted election-districts,
but included them along with others in the old; so
that gradually each tribe came to be composed of different
townships scattered over the whole Roman territory.
Election-districts such as these, containing on an
average 8000—the urban naturally having
more, the rural fewer —persons entitled
to vote, without local connection or inward unity,
no longer admitted of any definite leading or of any
satisfactory previous deliberation; disadvantages
which must have been the more felt, since the voting
itself was not preceded by any free debate. Moreover,
while the burgesses had quite sufficient capacity to
discern their communal interests, it was foolish and
utterly ridiculous to leave the decision of the highest
and most difficult questions which the power that
ruled the world had to solve to a well-disposed but
fortuitous concourse of Italian farmers, and to allow
the nomination of generals and the conclusion of treaties
of state to be finally judged of by people who understood
neither the grounds nor the consequences of their
decrees. In all matters transcending mere communal
affairs the Roman primary assemblies accordingly played
a childish and even silly part. As a rule, the
people stood and gave assent to all proposals; and,
when in exceptional instances they of their own impulse
refused assent, as on occasion of the declaration
of war against Macedonia in 554,(42) the policy of
the market-place certainly made a pitiful opposition—and
with a pitiful issue—to the policy of the
state.