extended their pitiful flattery of the people even
to this field; whenever a consul in the discharge of
his duty instituted rigorous levies for the Spanish
service, the tribunes made use of their constitutional
right to arrest him (603, 616); and it has been already
observed, that Scipio’s request that he should
be allowed a levy for the Numantine war was directly
rejected by the senate. Accordingly the Roman
armies before Carthage or Numantia already remind
one of those Syrian armies, in which the number of
bakers, cooks, actors, and other non-combatants exceeded
fourfold that of the so-called soldiers; already the
Roman generals are little behind their Carthaginian
colleagues in the art of ruining armies, and the wars
in Africa as in Spain, in Macedonia as in Asia, are
regularly opened with defeats; the murder of Gnaeus
Octavius is now passed over in silence; the assassination
of Viriathus is now a masterpiece of Roman diplomacy;
the conquest of Numantia is now a great achievement.
How completely the idea of national and manly honour
was already lost among the Romans, was shown with
epigrammatic point by the statue of the stripped and
bound Mancinus, which he himself, proud of his patriotic
devotedness, caused to be erected in Rome. Wherever
we turn our eyes, we find the internal energy as well
as the external power of Rome rapidly on the decline.
The ground won in gigantic struggles is not extended,
norin fact even maintained, in this period of peace.
The government of the world, which it was difficult
to achieve, it was still more difficult to preserve;
the Roman senate had mastered the former task, but
it broke down under the latter.
Chapter II
The Reform Movement and Tiberius Gracchus
The Roman Government before the Period of the Gracchi
For a whole generation after the battle of Pydna the
Roman state enjoyed a profound calm, scarcely varied
by a ripple here and there on the surface. Its
dominion extended over the three continents; the lustre
of the Roman power and the glory of the Roman name
were constantly on the increase; all eyes rested on
Italy, all talents and all riches flowed thither;
it seemed as if a golden age of peaceful prosperity
and intellectual enjoyment of life could not but there
begin. The Orientals of this period told each
other with astonishment of the mighty republic of
the west, “which subdued kingdoms far and near,
and whoever heard its name trembled; but it kept good
faith with its friends and clients. Such was
the glory of the Romans, and yet no one usurped the
crown and no one paraded in purple dress; but they
obeyed whomsoever from year to year they made their
master, and there was among them neither envy nor
discord.”
Spread of Decay