shape in the usual way the desired actions for interest;
whereupon the offended creditors assembled in the
Forum under the leadership of the tribune of the people
Lucius Cassius, and attacked and killed the praetor
in front of the temple of Concord, just as in his priestly
robes he was presenting a sacrifice—an outrage
which was not even made a subject of investigation
(665). On the other hand it was said in the
circles of the debtors, that the suffering multitude
could not be relieved otherwise than by “new
account-books,” that is, by legally cancelling
the claims of all creditors against all debtors.
Matters stood again exactly as they had stood during
the strife of the orders; once more the capitalists
in league with the prejudiced aristocracy made war
against, and prosecuted, the oppressed multitude and
the middle party which advised a modification of the
rigour of the law; once more Rome stood on the verge
of that abyss into which the despairing debtor drags
his creditor along with him. Only, since that
time the simple civil and moral organization of a
great agricultural city had been succeeded by the social
antagonisms of a capital of many nations, and by that
demoralization in which the prince and the beggar
meet; now all incongruities had come to be on a broader,
more abrupt, and fearfully grander scale. When
the Social war brought all the political and social
elements fermenting among the citizens into collision
with each other, it laid the foundation for a new
resolution. An accident led to its outbreak.
The Sulpician Laws
Sulpicius Rufus
It was the tribune of the people Publius Sulpicius
Rufus who in 666 proposed to the burgesses to declare
that every senator, who owed more than 2000 -denarii-
(82 pounds), should forfeit his seat in the senate;
to grant to the burgesses condemned by non-free jury
courts liberty to return home; to distribute the new
burgesses among all the tribes, and likewise to allow
the right of voting in all tribes to the freedmen.
They were proposals which from the mouth of such a
man were at least somewhat surprising. Publius
Sulpicius Rufus (born in 630) owed his political importance
not so much to his noble birth, his important connections,
and his hereditary wealth, as to his remarkable oratorical
talent, in which none of his contemporaries equalled
him. His powerful voice, his lively gestures
sometimes bordering on theatrical display, the luxuriant
copiousness of his flow of words arrested, even if
they did not convince, his hearers. As a partisan
he was from the outset on the side of the senate, and
his first public appearance (659) had been the impeachment
of Norbanus who was mortally hated by the government
party.(22) Among the conservatives he belonged to
the section of Crassus and Drusus. We do not
know what primarily gave occasion to his soliciting
the tribuneship of the people for 666, and on its
account renouncing his patrician nobility; but he seems
to have been by no means rendered a revolutionist through