from very conservative men, such as Quintus Scaevola.
He ventured to overthrow an arrangement as to the
elections which had subsisted for a century and a half,
and to re-establish the electoral census which had
been long obsolete and proscribed. He ventured
practically to withdraw the right of legislation from
its two primitive factors, the magistrates and the
comitia, and to transfer it to a board which had at
no time possessed formally any other privilege in
this respect than that of being asked for its advice.(26)
Hardly had any democrat ever exercised justice in
forms so tyrannical, or disturbed and remodelled the
foundations of the constitution with so reckless an
audacity, as this conservative reformer. But
if we look at the substance instead of the form, we
reach very different results. Revolutions have
nowhere ended, and least of all in Rome, without demanding
a certain number of victims, who under forms more
or less borrowed from justice atone for the fault
of being vanquished as though it were a crime.
Any one who recalls the succession of prosecutions
carried on by the victorious party after the fall
of the Gracchi and Saturninus(27) will be inclined
to yield to the victor of the Esquiline market the
praise of candour and comparative moderation, in so
far as, first he without ceremony accepted as war
what was really such and proscribed the men who were
defeated as enemies beyond the pale of the law, and,
secondly, he limited as far as possible the number
of victims and allowed at least no offensive outbreak
of fury against inferior persons. A similar
moderation appears in the political arrangements.
The innovation as respects legislation—the
most important and apparently the most comprehensive—in
fact only brought the letter of the constitution into
harmony with its spirit. The Roman legislation,
under which any consul, praetor, or tribune could
propose to the burgesses any measure at pleasure and
bring it to the vote without debate, had from the
first been, irrational and had become daily more so
with the growing nullity of the comitia; it was only
tolerated, because in practice the senate had claimed
for itself the right of previous deliberation and
regularly crushed any proposal, if put to the vote
without such previous deliberation, by means of the
political or religious veto.(28) The revolution hadswept
away thesebarriers; andin consequence that absurd
system now began fully to develop its results, and
to put it in the power of any petulant knave to overthrow
the state in due form of law. What was under
such circumstances more natural, more necessary, more
truly conservative, than now to recognize formally
and expressly the legislation of the senate to which
effect had been hitherto given by a circuitous process?
Something similar may be said of the renewal of the
electoral census. The earlier constitution was
throughout based on it; even the reform of 513 had
merely restricted the privileges of the men of wealth.