paying the war-contributions to Rome, could not possibly
find belief in the senate. But they probably
discerned only the immediate object of Hamilcar’s
plans, viz. to procure compensation in Spain
for the tribute and the traffic of the islands which
Carthage had lost; and they deemed an aggressive war
on the part of the Carthaginians, and in particular
an invasion of Italy from Spain—as is evident
both from express statements to that effect and from
the whole state of the case—as absolutely
impossible. Many, of course, among the peace
party in Carthage saw further; but, whatever they
might think, they could hardly be much inclined to
enlighten their Roman friends as to the impending
storm, which the Carthaginian authorities had long
been unable to prevent, for that step would accelerate,
instead of averting, the crisis; and even if they did
so, such denunciations proceeding from partisans would
justly be received with great caution at Rome.
By degrees, certainly, the inconceivably rapid and
mighty extension of the Carthaginian power in Spain
could not but excite the observation and awaken the
apprehensions of the Romans. In fact, in the
course of the later years before the outbreak of war,
they did attempt to set bounds to it. About the
year 528, mindful of their new-born Hellenism, they
concluded an alliance with the two Greek or semi-Greek
towns on the east coast of Spain, Zacynthus or Saguntum
(Murviedro, not far from Valencia), and Emporiae (Ampurias);
and when they acquainted the Carthaginian general
Hasdrubal that they had done so, they at the same time
warned him not to push his conquests over the Ebro,
with which he promised compliance. This was
not done by any means to prevent an invasion of Italy
by the land-route—no treaty could fetter
the general who undertook such an enterprise—but
partly to set a limit to the material power of the
Spanish Carthaginians which began to be dangerous,
partly to secure the free communities between the Ebro
and the Pyrenees whom Rome thus took under her protection,
a basis of operations in case of its being necessary
to land and make war in Spain. In reference
to the impending war with Carthage, which the senate
did not fail to see was inevitable, they hardly apprehended
any greater inconvenience from the events that had
occurred in Spain than that they might be compelled
to send some legions thither, and that the enemy would
be somewhat better provided with money and soldiers
than, without Spain, he would have been; they were
at any rate firmly resolved, as the plan of the campaign
of 536 shows and as indeed could not but be the case,
to begin and terminate the next war in Africa, —a
course which would at the same time decide the fate
of Spain. Further grounds for delay were suggested
during the first years by the instalments from Carthage,
which a declaration of war would have cut off, and
then by the death of Hamilcar, which probably induced
friends and foes to think that his projects must have