began to do the same with their gladiatorial games,
and by means of such leading or state performances
of the age to make themselves a laughing-stock to
their descendants. What sums were spent on these
and on funeral solemnities generally, may be inferred
from the testament of Marcus Aemilius Lepidus (consul
in 567, 579; 602); he gave orders to his children,
forasmuch as the true last honours consisted not in
empty pomp but in the remembrance of personal and
ancestral services, to expend on his funeral not more
than 1,000,000 -asses- (4000 pounds). Luxury
was on the increase also as respected buildings and
gardens; the splendid town house of the orator Crassus
(663), famous especially for the old trees of its
garden, was valued with the trees at 6,000,000 sesterces
(60,000 pounds), without them at the half; while the
value of an ordinary dwelling-house in Rome may be
estimated perhaps at 60,000 sesterces (600 pounds).(49)
How quickly the prices of ornamental estates increased,
is shown by the instance of the Misenian villa, for
which Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, paid 75,000
sesterces (750 pounds), and Lucius Lucullus, consul
in 680, thirty-three times that price. The villas
and the luxurious rural and sea-bathing life rendered
Baiae and generally the district around the Bay of
Naples the El Dorado of noble idleness. Games
of hazard, in which the stake was no longer as in
the Italian dice-playing a trifle, became common,
and as early as 639 a censorial edict was issued against
them. Gauze fabrics, which displayed rather than
concealed the figure, and silken clothing began to
displace the old woollen dresses among women and even
among men. Against the insane extravagance in
the employment of foreign perfumery the sumptuary
laws interfered in vain.
But the real focus in which the brilliance of this
genteel life was concentrated was the table.
Extravagant prices—as much as 100,000
sesterces (1000 pounds)—were paid for an
exquisite cook. Houses were constructed with
special reference to this object, and the villas in
particular along the coast were provided with salt-water
tanks of their own, in order that they might furnish
marine fishes and oysters at any time fresh to the
table. A dinner was already described as poor,
at which the fowls were served up to the guests entire
and not merely the choice portions, and at which the
guests were expected to eat of the several dishes
and not simply to taste them. They procured
at a great expense foreign delicacies and Greek wine,
which had to be sent round at least once at every
respectable repast. At banquets above all the
Romans displayed their hosts of slaves ministering
to luxury, their bands of musicians, their dancing-girls,
their elegant furniture, their carpets glittering
with gold or pictorially embroidered, their purple
hangings, their antique bronzes, their rich silver
plate. Against such displays the sumptuary laws
were primarily directed, which were issued more frequently