it was a body without a head, and that neither Pompeius
nor Crassus could be permanently such a head, was
in itself clear and had been made still clearer by
the recent events. So the democratic opposition,
for want of a leader who could have directly taken
the helm, had to content itself for the time being
with hampering and annoying the government at every
step. Between the oligarchy, however, and the
democracy there rose into new consideration the capitalist
party, which in the recent crisis had made common
cause with the latter, but which the oligarchs now
zealously endeavoured to draw over to their side,
so as to acquire in it a counterpoise to the democracy.
Thus courted on both sides the moneyed lords did not
neglect to turn their advantageous position to profit,
and to have the only one of their former privileges
which they had not yet regained—the fourteen
benches reserved for the equestrian order in the theatre—now
(687) restored to them by decree of the people.
On the whole, without abruptly breaking with the
democracy, they again drew closer to the government.
The very relations of the senate to Crassus and his
clients point in this direction; but a better understanding
between the senate and the moneyed aristocracy seems
to have been chiefly brought about by the fact, that
in 686 the senate withdrew from Lucius Lucullus the
ablest of the senatorial officers, at the instance
of the capitalists whom he had sorely annoyed, the
dministration of the province of Asia so important
for their purposes.(8)
The Events in the East, and Their Reaction on Rome
But while the factions of the capital were indulging
in their wonted mutual quarrels, which they were never
able to bring to any proper decision, events in the
east followed their fatal course, as we have already
described; and it was these events that brought the
dilatory course of the politics of the capital to a
crisis. The war both by land and by sea had there
taken a most unfavourable turn. In the beginning
of 687 the Pontic army of the Romans was destroyed,
and their Armenian army was utterly breaking up on
its retreat; all their conquests were lost, the sea
was exclusively in the power of the pirates, and the
price of grain in Italy was thereby so raised that
they were afraid of an actual famine. No doubt,
as we saw, the faults of the generals, especially
the utter incapacity of the admiral Marcus Antonius
and the temerity of the otherwise able Lucius Lucullus,
were in part the occasion of these calamities; no
doubt also the democracy had by its revolutionary
agitations materially contributed to the breaking up
of the Armenian army. But of course the government
was now held cumulatively responsible for all the
mischief which itself and others had occasioned, and
the indignant hungry multitude desired only an opportunity
to settle accounts with the senate.
Reappearance of Pompeius