We have already described the man—with
his effort to be at once loyal republican and master
of Rome, with his vacillation and indecision, with
his pliancy that concealed itself under the boasting
of independent resolution. This was the first
great trial to which destiny subjected him; and he
failed to stand it. The pretext under which Pompeius
refused to dismiss the army was, that he distrusted
Crassus and therefore could not take the initiative
in disbanding the soldiers. The democrats induced
Crassus to make gracious advances in the matter, and
to offer the hand of peace to his colleague before
the eyes of all; in public and in private they besought
the latter that to the double merit of having vanquished
the enemy and reconciled the parties he would add the
third and yet greater service of preserving internal
peace to his country, and banishing the fearful spectre
of civil war with which they were threatened.
Whatever could tell on a vain, unskilful, vacillating
man—all the flattering arts of diplomacy,
all the theatrical apparatus of patriotic enthusiasm—was
put in motion to obtain the desired result; and—which
was the main point—things had by the well-timed
compliance of Crassus assumed such a shape, that Pompeius
had no alternative but either to come forward openly
as tyrant of Rome or to retire. So he at length
yielded and consented to disband the troops.
The command in the Mithradatic war, which he doubtless
hoped to obtain when he had allowed himself to be
chosen consul for 684, he could not now desire, since
Lucullus seemed to have practically ended that war
with the campaign of 683. He deemed it beneath
his dignity to accept the consular province assigned
to him by the senate in accordance with the Sempronian
law, and Crassus in this followed his example.
Accordingly when Pompeius after discharging his soldiers
resigned his consulship on the last day of 684, he
retired for the time wholly from public affairs, and
declared that he wished thenceforth to live a life
of quiet leisure as a simple citizen. He had
taken up such a position that he was obliged to grasp
at the crown; and, seeing that he was not willing
to do so, no part was left to him but the empty one
of a candidate for a throne resigning his pretensions
to it.
Senate, Equites, and Populares
The retirement of the man, to whom as things stood
the first place belonged, from the political stage
reproduced in the first instance nearly the same position
of parties, which we found in the Gracchan and Marian
epochs. Sulla had merely strengthened the senatorial
government, not created it; so, after the bulwarks
erected by Sulla had fallen, the government nevertheless
remained primarily with the senate, although, no doubt,
the constitution with which it governed—in
the main the restored Gracchan constitution—
was pervaded by a spirit hostile to the oligarchy.
The democracy had effected the re-establishment of
the Gracchan constitution; but without a new Gracchus