had rested for its support against the oligarchy,
so the latter should rest for its support against the
moneyed aristocracy, on the paid and in some degree
organized proletariate; while the government had formerly
accepted the feeding of the proletariate at the expense
of the state as an inevitable evil, Drusus now thought
of employing it, at least for the moment, against
the moneyed aristocracy. It was only to be expected
that the better part of the aristocracy, just as it
formerly consented to the agrarian law of Tiberius
Gracchus, would now readily consent to all those measures
of reform, which, without touching the question of
a supreme head, only aimed at the cure of the old
evils of the state. In the question of emigration
and colonization, it is true, they could not go so
far as the democracy, since the power of the oligarchy
mainly rested on their free control over the provinces
and was endangered by any permanent military command;
the ideas of equalizing Italy and the provinces and
of making conquests beyond the Alps were not compatible
with conservative principles. But the senate
might very well sacrifice the Latin and even the Campanian
domains as well as Sicily in order to raise the Italian
farmer class, and yet retain the government as before;
to which fell to be added the consideration, that
they could not more effectually obviate future agitations
than by providing that all the land at all disposable
should be brought to distribution by the aristocracy
itself, and that according to Drusus’ own expression,
nothing should be left for future demagogues to distribute
but “the street-dirt and the daylight.”
In like manner it was for the government—whether
that might be a monarch, or a close number of ruling
families—very much a matter of indifference
whether the half or the whole of Italy possessed the
Roman franchise; and hence the reforming men on both
sides probably could not but coincide in the idea
of averting the danger of a recurrence of the insurrection
of Fregellae on a larger scale by a judicious and
reasonable extension of the franchise, and of seeking
allies, moreover, for their plans in the numerous
and influential Italians. Sharply as in the question
of the headship of the state the views and designs
of the two great political parties differed, the best
men of both camps had many points of contact in their
means of operation and in their reforming tendencies;
and, as Scipio Aemilianus may be named alike among
the adversaries of Tiberius Gracchus and among the
promoters of his reforming efforts, so Drusus was
the successor and disciple no less than the antagonist
of Gaius. The two high-born and high-minded youthful
reformers had a greater resemblance than was apparent
at the first glance; and, personally also, the two
were not unworthy to meet, as respects the substance
of their patriotic endeavours, in purer and higher
views above the obscuring mists of prejudiced partisanship.
Discussions on the Livian Laws