that decree of the senate, immediately after the termination
of its sitting proceeded to the army and urged it
embarkation. The summons to trust themselves
to the sea at that unfavourable season of the year
provoked among the already dissatisfied troops in
the head-quarters at Ancona a mutiny, to which Cinna
fell a victim (beg. of 670); whereupon his colleague
Carbo found himself compelled to bring back the divisions
that had already crossed and, abandoning the idea
of taking up the war in Greece, to enter into winter-quarters
in Ariminum. But Sulla’s offers met no
better reception on that account; the senate rejected
his proposals without even allowing the envoys to enter
Rome, and enjoined him summarily to lay down arms.
It was not the coterie of the Marians which primarily
brought about this resolute attitude. That faction
was obliged to abandon its hitherto usurped occupation
of the supreme magistracy at the very time when it
was of moment, and again to institute consular elections
for the decisive year 671. The suffrages on
this occasion were united not in favour of the former
consul Carbo or of any of the able officers of the
hitherto ruling clique, such as Quintus Sertorius or
Gaius Marius the younger, but in favour of Lucius
Scipio and Gaius Norbanus, two incapables, neither
of whom knew how to fight and Scipio not even how
to speak; the former of these recommended himself to
the multitude only as the great-grandson of the conqueror
of Antiochus, and the latter as a political opponent
of the oligarchy.(11) The Marians were not so much
abhorred for their misdeeds as despised for their
incapacity; but if the nation would have nothing to
do with these, the great majority of it would have
still less to do with Sulla and an oligarchic restoration.
Earnest measures of self-defence were contemplated.
While Sulla crossed to Asia and induced such defection
in the army of Fimbria that its leader fell by his
own hand, the government in Italy employed the further
interval of a year granted to it by these steps of
Sulla in energetic preparations; it is said that at
Sulla’s landing 100,000 men, and afterwards
even double that number of troops, were arrayed in
arms against him.
Difficult Position of Sulla
Against this Italian force Sulla had nothing to place
in the scale except his five legions, which, even
including some contingents levied in Macedonia and
the Peloponnesus, probably amounted to scarce 40,000
men. It is true that this army had been, during
its seven years’ conflicts in Italy, Greece,
and Asia, weaned from politics, and adhered to its
general—who pardoned everything in his
soldiers, debauchery, brutality, even mutiny against
their officers, required nothing but valour and fidelity
towards their general, and set before them the prospect
of the most extravagant rewards in the event of victory—with
all that soldierly enthusiasm, which is the more powerful
that the noblest and the meanest passions often combine