were sold on public account to the citizens of Rome
at 24 and even at 12 -asses- (1 shilling 8 pence or
ten pence). Some years afterwards (558), more
than 240,000 bushels of Sicilian grain were distributed
at the latter illusory price in the capital.
In vain Cato inveighed against this shortsighted policy:
the rise of demagogism had a part in it, and these
extraordinary, but presumably very frequent, distributions
of grain under the market price by the government
or individual magistrates became the germs of the
subsequent corn-laws. But, even where the transmarine
corn did not reach the consumers in this extraordinary
mode, it injuriously affected Italian agriculture.
Not only were the masses of grain which the state
sold off to the lessees of the tenths beyond doubt
acquired under ordinary circumstances by these so
cheaply that, when re-sold, they could be disposed
of under the price of production; but it is probable
that in the provinces, particularly in Sicily—in
consequence partly of the favourable nature of the
soil, partly of the extent to which wholesale farming
and slave-holding were pursued on the Carthaginian
system(10)—the price of production was in
general considerably lower than in Italy, while the
transport of Sicilian and Sardinian corn to Latium
was at least as cheap as, if not cheaper than, its
transport thither from Etruria, Campania, or even northern
Italy. In the natural course of things therefore
transmarine corn could not but flow to the peninsula,
and lower the price of the grain produced there.
Under the unnatural disturbance of relations occasioned
by the lamentable system of slave-labour, it would
perhaps have been justifiable to impose a duty on
transmarine corn for the protection of the Italian
farmer; but the very opposite course seems to have
been pursued, and with a view to favour the import
of transmarine corn to Italy, a prohibitive system
seems to have been applied in the provinces—for
though the Rhodians were allowed to export a quantity
of corn from Sicily by way of special favour, the
export of grain from the provinces must probably, as
a rule, have been free only as regarded Italy, and
the transmarine corn must thus have been monopolized
for the benefit of the mother-country.
Prices of Italian Corn
The effects of this system are clearly evident.
A year of extraordinary fertility like 504—when
the people of the capital paid for 6 Roman -modii-
(1 1/2 bush.) of spelt not more than 3/5 of a -denarius-
(about 5 pence), and at the same price there were sold
180 Roman pounds (a pound = 11 oz.) of dried figs,
60 pounds of oil, 72 pounds of meat, and 6 -congii-
(= 4 1/2 gallons) of wine—is scarcely by
reason of its very singularity to be taken into account;
but other facts speak more distinctly. Even
in Cato’s time Sicily was called the granary
of Rome. In productive years Sicilian and Sardinian
corn was disposed of in the Italian ports for the
freight. In the richest corn districts of the