youths than among the older members of their order.
Certainly the courts were not free; if the regents
were in earnest, the courts ventured as little as the
senate to refuse obedience. None of their antagonists
were prosecuted by the opposition with such hatred—so
furious that it almost passed into a proverb—as
Vatinius, by far the most audacious and unscrupulous
of the closer adherents of Caesar; but his master
gave the command, and he was acquitted in all the processes
raised against him. But impeachments by men who
knew how to wield the sword of dialectics and the
lash of sarcasm as did Gaius Licinius Calvus and Gaius
Asinius Pollio, did not miss their mark even when
they failed; nor were isolated successes wanting.
They were mostly, no doubt, obtained over subordinate
individuals, but even one of the most high-placed
and most hated adherents of the dynasts, the consular
Gabinius, was overthrown in this way. Certainly
in his case the implacable hatred of the aristocracy,
which as little forgave him for the law regarding the
conducting of the war with the pirates as for his
disparaging treatment of the senate during his Syrian
governorship, was combined with the rage of the great
capitalists, against whom he had when governor of
Syria ventured to defend the interests of the provincials,
and even with the resentment of Crassus, with whom
he had stood on ceremony in handing over to him the
province. His only protection against all these
foes was Pompeius, and the latter had every reason
to defend his ablest, boldest, and most faithful adjutant
at any price; but here, as everywhere, he knew not
how to use his power and to defend his clients, as
Caesar defended his; in the end of 700 the jurymen
found Gabinius guilty of extortions and sent him into
banishment.
On the whole, therefore, in the sphere of the popular
elections and of the jury-courts it was the regents
that fared worst. The factors which ruled in
these were less tangible, and therefore more difficult
to be terrified or corrupted than the direct organs
of government and administration. The holders
of power encountered here, especially in the popular
elections, the tough energy of a close oligarchy—grouped
in coteries—which is by no means finally
disposed of when its rule is overthrown, and which
is the more difficult to vanquish the more covert
its action. They encountered here too, especially
in the jury-courts, the repugnance of the middle classes
towards the new monarchical rule, which with all the
perplexities springing out of it they were as little
able to remove. They suffered in both quarters
a series of defeats. The election-victories
of the opposition had, it is true, merely the value
of demonstrations, since the regents possessed and
employed the means of practically annulling any magistrate
whom they disliked; but the criminal trials in which
the opposition carried condemnations deprived them,
in a way keenly felt, of useful auxiliaries.
As things stood, the regents could neither set aside
nor adequately control the popular elections and the
jury-courts, and the opposition, however much it felt
itself straitened even here, maintained to a certain
extent the field of battle.