of minor importance—the games in honour
of Flora. The cost of these new festal amusements
was defrayed by the magistrates entrusted with the
providing of the respective festivals from their own
means: thus the curule aediles had, over and
above the old national festival, those of the Mother
of the Gods and of Flora; the plebeian aediles had
the plebeian festival and that of Ceres, and the urban
praetor the Apollinarian games. Those who sanctioned
the new festivals perhaps excused themselves in their
own eyes by the reflection that they were not at any
rate a burden on the public purse; but it would have
been in reality far less injurious to burden the public
budget with a number of useless expenses, than to
allow the providing of an amusement for the people
to become practically a qualification for holding
the highest office in the state. The future candidates
for the consulship soon entered into a mutual rivalry
in their expenditure on these games, which incredibly
increased their cost; and, as may well be conceived,
it did no harm if the consul expectant gave, over
and above this as it were legal contribution, a voluntary
“performance” (-munus-), a gladiatorial
show at his own expense for the public benefit.
The splendour of the games became gradually the standard
by which the electors measured the fitness of the candidates
for the consulship. The nobility had, in truth,
to pay dear for their honours—a gladiatorial
show on a respectable scale cost 720,000 sesterces
(7200 pounds)—but they paid willingly, since
by this means they absolutely precluded men who were
not wealthy from a political career.
Squandering of the Spoil
Corruption, however, was not restricted to the Forum;
it was transferred even to the camp. The old
burgess militia had reckoned themselves fortunate
when they brought home a compensation for the toil
of war, and, in the event of success, a trifling gift
as a memorial of victory. The new generals,
with Scipio Africanus at their head, lavishly scattered
amongst their troops the money of Rome as well as
the proceeds of the spoil: it was on this point,
that Cato quarrelled with Scipio during the last campaigns
against Hannibal in Africa. The veterans from
the second Macedonian war and that waged in Asia Minor
already returned home throughout as wealthy men:
even the better class began to commend a general,
who did not appropriate the gifts of the provincials
and the gains of war entirely to himself and his immediate
followers, and from whose camp not a few men returned
with gold, and many with silver, in their pockets:
men began to forget that the moveable spoil was the
property of the state. When Lucius Paullus again
dealt with it in the old mode, his own soldiers, especially
the volunteers who had been allured in numbers by the
prospect of rich plunder, fell little short of refusing
to the victor of Pydna by popular decree the honour
of a triumph—an honour which they already
threw away on every one who had subjugated three Ligurian
villages.