sketched, on the most extensive scale; but, by admitting
the Italians along with the Romans to emigration and
yet undoubtedly prescribing the erection of all the
new communities as burgess-colonies, it formed a first
step towards satisfying the claims—to which
it was so difficult to give effect, and which yet
could not be in the long run refused—of
the Italians to be placed on an equality with the
Romans. First of all, however, if the law passed
and Marius was called to the independent carrying out
of these immense schemes of conquest and assignation,
he would become practically—until those
plans should be realized or rather, considering their
indefinite and unlimited character, for his lifetime—monarch
of Rome; with which view it may be presumed that Marius
intended to have his consulship annually renewed,
like the tribunate of Gracchus. But, amidst
the agreement of the political positions marked out
for the younger Gracchus and for Marius in all other
essential particulars, there was yet a very material
distinction between the land-assigning tribune and
the land-assigning consul in the fact, that the former
was to occupy a purely civil position, the latter
a military position as well; a distinction, which
partly but by no means solely arose out of the personal
circumstances under which the two men had risen to
the head of the state. While such was the nature
of the aim which Marius and his comrades had proposed
to themselves, the next question related to the means
by which they purposed to break down the resistance—which
might be anticipated to be obstinate—of
the government party. Gaius Gracchus had fought
his battles with the aid of the capitalist class and
the proletariate. His successors did not neglect
to make advances likewise to these. The equites
were not only left in possession of the tribunals,
but their power as jurymen was considerably increased,
partly by a stricter ordinance regarding the standing
commission—especially important to the
merchants—as to extortions on the part of
the public magistrates in the provinces, which Glaucia
carried probably in this year, partly by the special
tribunal, appointed doubtless as early as 651 on the
proposal of Saturninus, respecting the embezzlements
and other official malversations that had occurred
during the Cimbrian movement in Gaul. For the
benefit, moreover, of the proletariate of the capital
the sum below cost price, which hitherto had to be
paid on occasion of the distributions of grain for
the -modius-, was lowered from 6 1/3 -asses- to a
mere nominal charge of 5/6 of an -as-. But although
they did not despise the alliance with the equites
and the proletariate of the capital, the real power
by which the confederates enforced their measures
lay not in these, but in the discharged soldiers of
the Marian army, who for that very reason had been
provided for in the colonial laws themselves after
so extravagant a fashion. In this also was evinced
the predominating military character, which forms
the chief distinction between this attempt at revolution
and that which preceded it.