enemies was a fiery and impressive speaker, and was
at least not guided by motives of vulgar selfishness.
When he was quaestor, the charge of the importation
of corn, which had fallen to him in the usual way,
had been withdrawn from him by decree of the senate,
not so much perhaps on account of maladministration,
as in order to confer this—just at that
time popular—office on one of the heads
of the government party, Marcus Scaurus, rather than
upon an unknown young man belonging to none of the
ruling families. This mortification had driven
the aspiring and sensitive man into the ranks of the
opposition; and as tribune of the people in 651 he
repaid what he had received with interest. One
scandalous affair had at that time followed hard upon
another. He had spoken in the open market of
the briberies practised in Rome by the envoys of king
Mithradates—these revelations, compromising
in the highest degree the senate, had wellnigh cost
the bold tribune his life. He had excited a
tumult against the conqueror of Numidia, Quintus Metellus,
when he was a candidate for the censorship in 652,
and kept him besieged in the Capitol till the equites
liberated him not without bloodshed; the retaliatory
measure of the censor Metellus—the expulsion
with infamy of Saturninus and of Glaucia from the senate
on occasion of the revision of the senatorial roll—had
only miscarried through the remissness of the colleague
assigned to Metellus. Saturninus mainly had
carried that exceptional commission against Caepio
and his associates(6) in spite of the most vehement
resistance by the government party; and in opposition
to the same he had carried the keenly-contested re-election
of Marius as consul for 652. Saturninus was decidedly
the most energetic enemy of the senate and the most
active and eloquent leader of the popular party since
Gaius Gracchus; but he was also violent and unscrupulous
beyond any of his predecessors, always ready to descend
into the street and to refute his antagonist with blows
instead of words.
Such were the two leaders of the so-called popular
party, who now made common cause with the victorious
general. It was natural that they should do
so; their interests and aims coincided, and even in
the earlier candidatures of Marius Saturninus at least
had most decidedly and most effectively taken his
side. It was agreed between them that for 654
Marius should become a candidate for a sixth consulship,
Saturninus for a second tribunate, Glaucia for the
praetorship, in order that, possessed of these offices,
they might carry out the intended revolution in the
state. The senate acquiesced in the nomination
of the less dangerous Glaucia, but did what it could
to hinder the election of Marius and Saturninus, or
at least to associate with the former a determined
antagonist in the person of Quintus Metellus as his
colleague in the consulship. All appliances,
lawful and unlawful, were put in motion by both parties;
but the senate was not successful in arresting the