not well be undertaken under circumstances more favourable.
It was in a high degree probable that, under the fresh
impression of the Catilinarian revolt, a rule which
promised order and security, although at the price
of freedom, would receive the submission of the whole
middle party—embracing especially the merchants
who concerned themselves only about their material
interests, but including also a great part of the aristocracy,
which, disorganized in itself and politically hopeless,
had to rest content with securing for itself riches,
rank, and influence by a timely compromise with the
prince; perhaps even a portion of the democracy, so
sorely smitten by the recent blows, might submit to
hope for the realization of a portion of its demands
from a military chief raised to power by itself.
But, whatever might be the position of party-relations,
of what importance, in the first instance at least,
were the parties in Italy at all in presence of Pompeius
and his victorious army? Twenty years previously
Sulla, after having concluded a temporary peace with
Mithradates, had with his five legions been able to
carry a restoration runningcounter to the natural
development of things in the face of the whole liberal
party, which had been arming en masse for years, from
the moderate aristocrats and the liberal mercantile
class down to the anarchists. The task of Pompeius
was far less difficult. He returned, after having
fully and conscientiously performed his different
functions by sea and land. He might expect to
encounter no other serious opposition save that of
the various extreme parties, each of which by itself
could do nothing, and which even when leagued together
were no more than a coalition of factions still vehemently
hostile to each other and inwardly at thorough variance.
Completely unarmed, they were without a military force
and without a head, without organization in Italy,
without support in the provinces, above all, without
a general; there was in their ranks hardly a soldier
of note—to say nothing of an officer—who
could have ventured to call forth the burgesses to
a conflict with Pompeius. The circumstance might
further be taken into account, that the volcano of
revolution, which had been now incessantly blazing
for seventy years and feeding on its own flame, was
visibly burning out and verging of itself to extinction.
It was very doubtful whether the attempt to arm the
Italians for party interests would now succeed, as
it had succeeded with Cinna and Carbo. If Pompeius
exerted himself, how could he fail to effect a revolution
of the state, which was chalked out by a certain necessity
of nature in the organic development of the Roman
commonwealth?
Mission of Nepos to Rome