interval between the aedileship and praetorship—in
reality he was aedile in 675, probably praetor in
677, consul in 680. That the case of Pompeius
was a totally different one is obvious; but even as
to Pompeius, it is on several occasions expressly
stated (Cicero, de Imp. Pomp, ax, 62; Appian,
iii. 88) that the senate released him from the laws
as to age. That this should have been done with
Pompeius, who had solicited the consulship as a commander-in-chief
crowned with victory and a triumphator, at the head
of an army and after his coalition with Crassus also
of a powerful party, we can readily conceive.
But it would be in the highest degree surprising,
if the same thing should have been done with Caesar
on his candidature for the minor magistracies, when
he was of little more importance than other political
beginners; and it would be, if possible, more surprising
still, that, while there is mention of that—in
itself readily understood—exception, there
should be no notice of this more than strange deviation,
however naturally such notices would have suggested
themselves, especially with reference to Octavianus
consul at 21 (comp., e. g., Appian, iii. 88).
When from these irrelevant examples the inference
is drawn, “that the law was little observed
in Rome, where distinguished men were concerned,”
anything more erroneous than this sentence was never
uttered regarding Rome and the Romans. The greatness
of the Roman commonwealth, and not less that of its
great generals and statesmen, depends above all things
on the fact that the law held good in their case also.
15. IV. IX. Spain
16. At least the outline of these organizations
must be assigned to the years 674, 675, 676, although
the execution of them doubtless belonged, in great
part, only to the subsequent years.
17 IV. IX. The Provinces
18. The following narrative rests substantially
on the account of Licinianus, which, fragmentary as
it is at this very point, still gives important information
as to the insurrection of Lepidus.
19. Under the year 676 Licinianus states (p.
23, Pertz; p. 42, Bonn); [Lepidus?] -[le]gem frumentari[am]
nullo resistente l[argi]tus est, ut annon[ae] quinque
modi popu[lo da]rentur-. According to this account,
therefore, the law of the consuls of 681 Marcus Terentius
Lucullus and Gaius Cassius Varus, which Cicero mentions
(in Verr. iii. 70, 136; v. 21, 52), and to which also
Sallust refers (Hist. iii. 61, 19 Dietsch), did not
first reestablish the five -modii-, but only secured
the largesses of grain by regulating the purchases
of Sicilian corn, and perhaps made various alterations
of detail. That the Sempronian law (iv.
III. Alterations on the Constitution By Gaius
Gracchus) allowed every burgess domiciled in Rome
to share in the largesses of grain, is certain.
But the later distribution of grain was not so extensive
as this, for, seeing that the monthly corn of the
Roman burgesses amounted to little more than 33,000