hares and hunting foxes in presence of the public;
now these innocent hunts were converted into formal
baitings of wild animals, and the wild beasts of Africa—lions
and panthers—were (first so far as can be
proved in 568) transported at great cost to Rome, in
order that by killing or being killed they might serve
to glut the eyes of the gazers of the capital.
The still more revolting gladiatorial games, which
prevailed in Campania and Etruria, now gained admission
to Rome; human blood was first shed for sport in the
Roman forum in 490. Of course these demoralizing
amusements encountered severe censure: the consul
of 486, Publius Sempronius Sophus, sent a divorce to
his wife, because she had attended funeral games;
the government carried a decree of the people prohibiting
the bringing over of wild beasts to Rome, and strictly
insisted that no gladiators should appear at the public
festivals. But here too it wanted either the
requisite power or the requisite energy: it succeeded,
apparently, in checking the practice of baiting animals,
but the appearance of sets of gladiators at private
festivals, particularly at funeral celebrations, was
not suppressed. Still less could the public
be prevented from preferring the comedian to the tragedian,
the rope-dancer to the comedian, the gladiator to
the rope-dancer; or the stage be prevented from revelling
by choice amidst the pollution of Hellenic life.
Whatever elements of culture were contained in the
scenic and artistic entertainments were from the first
thrown aside; it was by no means the object of the
givers of the Roman festivals to elevate—though
it should be but temporarily—the whole
body of spectators through the power of poetry to
the level of feeling of the best, as the Greek stage
did in the period of its prime, or to prepare an artistic
pleasure for a select circle, as our theatres endeavour
to do. The character of the managers and spectators
in Rome is illustrated by a scene at the triumphal
games in 587, where the first Greek flute-players,
on their melodies failing to please, were instructed
by the director to box with one another instead of
playing, upon which the delight would know no bounds.
Nor was the evil confined to the corruption of Roman manners by Hellenic contagion; conversely the scholars began to demoralize their instructors. Gladiatorial games, which were unknown in Greece, were first introduced by king Antiochus Epiphanes (579-590), a professed imitator of the Romans, at the Syrian court, and, although they excited at first greater horror than pleasure in the Greek public, which was more humane and had more sense of art than the Romans, yet they held their ground likewise there, and gradually came more and more into vogue.