But the times of mercy were past. The more
unconditionally Sulla had up to the last moment granted
full pardon to those who came over to him, the more
inexorable he showed himself toward the leaders and
communities that had held out to the end. Of
the Praenestine prisoners, 12,000 in number, most
of the Romans and individual Praenestines as well as
the women and children were released, but the Roman
senators, almost all the Praenestines and the whole
of the Samnites, were disarmed and cut to pieces;
and the rich city was given up to pillage. It
was natural that, after such an occurrence, the cities
of new burgesses which had not yet passed over should
continue their resistance with the utmost obstinacy.
In the Latin town of Norba for instance, when Aemilius
Lepidus got into it by treason, the citizens killed
each other and set fire themselves to their town, solely
in order to deprive their executioners of vengeance
and of booty. In Lower Italy Neapolis had already
been taken by assault, and Capua had, as it would
seem, been voluntarily surrendered; but Nola was only
evacuated by the Samnites in 674. On his flight
from Nola the last surviving leader of note among
the Italians, the consul of the insurgents in the
hopeful year 664, Gaius Papius Mutilus, disowned by
his wife to whom he had stolen in disguise and with
whom he had hoped to find an asylum, fell on his sword
in Teanum before the door of his own house.
As to the Samnites, the dictator declared that Rome
would have no rest so long as Samnium existed, and
that the Samnite name must therefore be extirpated
from the earth; and, as he verified these words in
terrible fashion on the prisoners taken before Rome
and in Praeneste, so he appears to have also undertaken
a raid for the purpose of laying waste the country,
to have captured Aesernia(16) (674?), and to have converted
that hitherto flourishing and populous region into
the desert which it has since remained. In the
same manner Tuder in Umbria was stormed by Marcus
Crassus. A longer resistance was offered in Etruria
by Populonium and above all by the impregnable Volaterrae,
which gathered out of the remains of the beaten party
an army of four legions, and stood a two years’
siege conducted first by Sulla in person and then
by the former praetor Gaius Carbo, the brother of
the democratic consul, till at length in the third
year after the battle at the Colline gate (675) the
garrison capitulated on condition of free departure.
But in this terrible time neither military law nor
military discipline was regarded; the soldiers raised
a cry of treason and stoned their too compliant general;
a troop of horse sent by the Roman government cut
down the garrison as it withdrew in terms of the capitulation.
The victorious army was distributed throughout Italy,
and all the insecure townships were furnished with
strong garrisons: under the iron hand of the
Sullan officers the last palpitations of the revolutionary
and national opposition slowly died away.