the citizens and farmers of Rome. And in truth
Publius Scipio was one, who was himself enthusiastic,
and who inspired enthusiasm. He was not one of
the few who by their energy and iron will constrain
the world to adopt and to move in new paths for centuries,
or who at any rate grasp the reins of destiny for
years till its wheels roll over them. Publius
Scipio gained battles and conquered countries under
the instructions of the senate; with the aid of his
military laurels he took also a prominent position
in Rome as a statesman; but a wide interval separates
such a man from an Alexander or a Caesar. As
an officer he rendered at least no greater service
to his country than Marcus Marcellus; and as a politician,
although not perhaps himself fully conscious of the
unpatriotic and personal character of his policy, he
injured his country at least as much, as he benefited
it by his military skill. Yet a special charm
lingers around the form of that graceful hero; it
is surrounded, as with a dazzling halo, by the atmosphere
of serene and confident inspiration, in which Scipio
with mingled credulity and adroitness always moved.
With quite enough of enthusiasm to warm men’s
hearts, and enough of calculation to follow in every
case the dictates of intelligence, while not leaving
out of account the vulgar; not naive enough to share
the belief of the multitude in his divine inspirations,
nor straightforward enough to set it aside, and yet
in secret thoroughly persuaded that he was a man specially
favoured of the gods—in a word, a genuine
prophetic nature; raised above the people, and not
less aloof from them; a man of steadfast word and
kingly spirit, who thought that he would humble himself
by adopting the ordinary title of a king, but could
never understand how the constitution of the republic
should in his case be binding; so confident in his
own greatness that he knew nothing of envy or of hatred,
courteously acknowledged other men’s merits,
and compassionately forgave other men’s faults;
an excellent officer and a refined diplomatist without
the repellent special impress of either calling, uniting
Hellenic culture with the fullest national feeling
of a Roman, an accomplished speaker and of graceful
manners—Publius Scipio won the hearts of
soldiers and of women, of his countrymen and of the
Spaniards, of his rivals in the senate and of his greater
Carthaginian antagonist. His name was soon on
every one’s lips, and his was the star which
seemed destined to bring victory and peace to his
country.
Scipio Goes to Spain
Capture of New Carthage
Publius Scipio went to Spain in 544-5, accompanied by the propraetor Marcus Silanus, who was to succeed Nero and to serve as assistant and counsellor to the young commander-in-chief, and by his intimate friend Gaius Laelius as admiral, and furnished with a legion exceeding the usual strength and a well-filled chest. His appearance on the scene was at once signalized by one of the boldest and most fortunate -coups de