there continued to smoulder; and even Macedonia, formerly
so tranquil, consumed its strength in the intestine
strife that arose out of its new democratic constitutions.
It was the fault of the rulers as well as the ruled,
that the last vital energies and the last prosperity
of the nations were expended in these aimless feuds.
The client states ought to have perceived that a
state which cannot wage war against every one cannot
wage war at all, and that, as the possessions and
power enjoyed by all these states were practically
under Roman guarantee, they had in the event of any
difference no alternative but to settle the matter
amicably with their neighbours or to call in the Romans
as arbiters. When the Achaean diet was urged
by the Rhodians and Cretans to grant them the aid
of the league, and seriously deliberated as to sending
it (601), it was simply a political farce; the principle
which the leader of the party friendly to Rome then
laid down—that the Achaeans were no longer
at liberty to wage war without the permission of the
Romans— expressed, doubtless with disagreeable
precision, the simple truth that the sovereignty of
the dependent states was merely a formal one, and
that any attempt to give life to the shadow must necessarily
lead to the destruction of the shadow itself.
But the ruling community deserves a censure more
severe than that directed against the ruled.
It is no easy task for a man—any more than
for a state—to own to insignificance; it
is the duty and right of the ruler either to renounce
his authority, or by the display of an imposing material
superiority to compel the ruled to resignation.
The Roman senate did neither. Invoked and importuned
on all hands, the senate interfered incessantly in
the course of African, Hellenic, Asiatic, and Egyptian
affairs; but it did so after so inconstant and loose
a fashion, that its attempts to settle matters usually
only rendered the confusion worse. It was the
epoch of commissions. Commissioners of the senate
were constantly going to Carthage and Alexandria,
to the Achaean diet, and to the courts of the rulers
of western Asia; they investigated, inhibited, reported,
and yet decisive steps were not unfrequently taken
in the most important matters without the knowledge,
or against the wishes, of the senate. It might
happen that Cyprus, for instance, which the senate
had assigned to the kingdom of Cyrene, was nevertheless
retained by Egypt; that a Syrian prince ascended the
throne of his ancestors under the pretext that he
had obtained a promise of it from the Romans, while
the senate had in fact expressly refused to give it
to him, and he himself had only escaped from Rome
by breaking their interdict; that even the open murder
of a Roman commissioner, who under the orders of the
senate administered as guardian the government of Syria,
passed totally unpunished. The Asiatics were
very well aware that they were not in a position to
resist the Roman legions; but they were no less aware