farmers. Instances indeed of assignations took
place, particularly in the recently conquered border-territories,
such as those of the domain of Ardea in 312, of Labici
in 336, and of Veii in 361—more however
on military grounds than for the relief of the farmer,
and by no means to an adequate extent. Individual
tribunes doubtless attempted to revive the law of
Cassius—for instance Spurius Maecilius and
Spurius Metilius instituted in the year 337 a proposal
for the distribution of the whole state-lands—but
they were thwarted, in a manner characteristic of
the existing state of parties, by the opposition of
their own colleagues or in other words of the plebeian
aristocracy. Some of the patricians also attempted
to remedy the common distress; but with no better
success than had formerly attended Spurius Cassius.
A patrician like Cassius and like him distinguished
by military renown and personal valour, Marcus Manlius,
the saviour of the Capitol during the Gallic siege,
is said to have come forward as the champion of the
oppressed people, with whom he was connected by the
ties of comradeship in war and of bitter hatred towards
his rival, the celebrated general and leader of the
optimate party, Marcus Furius Camillus. When
a brave officer was about to be led away to a debtor’s
prison, Manlius interceded for him and released him
with his own money; at the same time he offered his
lands to sale, declaring loudly that, as long as he
possessed a foot’s breadth of land, such iniquities
should not occur. This was more than enough to
unite the whole government party, patricians as well
as plebeians, against the dangerous innovator.
The trial for high treason, the charge of having
meditated a renewal of the monarchy, wrought on the
blind multitude with the insidious charm which belongs
to stereotyped party-phrases. They themselves
condemned him to death, and his renown availed him
nothing save that it was deemed expedient to assemble
the people for the bloody assize at a spot whence
the voters could not see the rock of the citadel—the
dumb monitor which might remind them how their fatherland
had been saved from the extremity of danger by the
hands of the very man whom they were now consigning
to the executioner (370).
While the attempts at reformation were thus arrested
in the bud, the social disorders became still more
crying; for on the one hand the domain-possessions
were ever extending in consequence of successful wars,
and on the other hand debt and impoverishment were
ever spreading more widely among the farmers, particularly
from the effects of the severe war with Veii (348-358)
and of the burning of the capital in the Gallic invasion
(364). It is true that, when in the Veientine
war it became necessary to prolong the term of service
of the soldiers and to keep them under arms not—as
hitherto at the utmost—only during summer,
but also throughout the winter, and when the farmers,
foreseeing their utter economic ruin, were on the point