ploughshare when they became unable to work, because
in like manner it would not have been good economy
to retain them longer. In earlier times religious
considerations had here also exercised an alleviating
influence, and had released the slave and the plough-ox
from labour on the days enjoined for festivals and
for rest.(9) Nothing is more characteristic of the
spirit of Cato and those who shared his sentiments
than the way in which they inculcated the observance
of the holiday in the letter, and evaded it in reality,
by advising that, while the plough should certainly
be allowed to rest on these days, the slaves should
even then be incessantly occupied with other labours
not expressly prohibited. On principle no freedom
of movement whatever was allowed to them—a
slave, so runs one of Cato’s maxims, must either
work or sleep—and no attempt was ever made
to attach the slaves to the estate or to their master
by any bond of human sympathy. The letter of
the law in all its naked hideousness regulated the
relation, and the Romans indulged no illusions as
to the consequences. “So many slaves, so
many foes,” said a Roman proverb. It was
an economic maxim, that dissensions among the slaves
ought rather to be fostered than suppressed.
In the same spirit Plato and Aristotle, and no less
strongly the oracle of the landlords, the Carthaginian
Mago, caution masters against bringing together slaves
of the same nationality, lest they should originate
combinations and perhaps conspiracies of their fellow-countrymen.
The landlord, as we have already said, governed his
slaves exactly in the same way as the Roman community
governed its subjects in the “country estates
of the Roman people,” the provinces; and the
world learned by experience, that the ruling state
had modelled its new system of government on that
of the slave-holder. If, moreover, we have risen
to that little-to-be-envied elevation of thought which
values no feature of an economy save the capital invested
in it, we cannot deny to the management of the Roman
estates the praise of consistency, energy, punctuality,
frugality, and solidity. The pithy practical
husbandman is reflected in Cato’s description
of the steward, as he ought to be. He is the
first on the farm to rise and the last to go to bed;
he is strict in dealing with himself as well as with
those under him, and knows more especially how to
keep the stewardess in order, but is also careful
of his labourers and his cattle, and in particular
of the ox that draws the plough; he puts his hand
frequently to work and to every kind of it, but never
works himself weary like a slave; he is always at
home, never borrows nor lends, gives no entertainments,
troubles himself about no other worship than that
of the gods of the hearth and the field, and like a
true slave leaves all dealings with the gods as well
as with men to his master; lastly and above all, he
modestly meets that master and faithfully and simply,
without exercising too little or too much of thought,