The leaders of the movement again kept in the background.
On this occasion they had set up as candidates for
the consulship Catilina himself and Gaius Antonius,
the younger son of the orator and a brother of the
general who had an ill repute from Crete. They
were sure of Catilina; Antonius, originally a Sullan
like Catilina and like the latter brought to trial
on that account some years before by the democratic
party and ejected from the senate(12)—otherwise
an indolent, insignificant man, in no respect called
to be a leader, and utterly bankrupt— willingly
lent himself as a tool to the democrats for the prize
of the consulship and the advantages attached to it.
Through these consuls the heads of the conspiracy
intended to seize the government, to arrest the children
of Pompeius, who remained behind in the capital, as
hostages, and to take up arms in Italy and the provinces
against Pompeius. On the first news of the blow
struck in the capital, the governor Gnaeus Piso was
to raise the banner of insurrection in Hither Spain.
Communication could not be held with him by way of
the sea, since Pompeius commanded the seas. For
this purpose they reckoned on the Transpadanes the
old clients of the democracy— among whom
there was great agitation, and who would of course
have at once received the franchise—and,
further, on different Celtic tribes.(13) The threads
of this combination reached as far as Mauretania.
One of the conspirators, the Roman speculator Publius
Sittius from Nuceria, compelled by financial embarrassments
to keep aloof from Italy, had armed a troop of desperadoes
there and in Spain, and with these wandered about
as a leader of free-lances in western Africa, where
he had old commercial connections.
Consular Elections
Cicero Elected instead of Catalina
The party put forth all its energies for the struggle
of the election. Crassus and Caesar staked their
money—whether their own or borrowed—and
their connections to procure the consulship for Catilina
and Antonius; the comrades of Catilina strained every
nerve to bring to the helm the man who promised them
the magistracies and priesthoods, the palaces and
country-estates of their opponents, and above all
deliverance from their debts, and who, they knew,
would keep his word. The aristocracy was in great
perplexity, chiefly because it was not able even to
start counter-candidates. That such a candidate
risked his head, was obvious; and the times were past
when the post of danger allured the burgess—now
even ambition was hushed in presence of fear.
Accordingly the nobility contented themselves with
making a feeble attempt to check electioneering intrigues
by issuing a new law respecting the purchase of votes—which,
however, was thwarted by the veto of a tribune of
the people—and with turning over their votes
to a candidate who, although not acceptable to them,
was at least inoffensive. This was Marcus Cicero,
notoriously a political trimmer,(14) accustomed to