had nevertheless happened in Greece nor emerge out
of their half-free position into complete independence,
as Macedonia had attempted to do not without success.
No state was to be allowed utterly to perish, but
no one was to be permitted to stand on its own resources.
Accordingly the vanquished foe held at least an equal,
often a better, position with the Roman diplomatists
than the faithful ally; and, while a defeated opponent
was reinstated, those who attempted to reinstate themselves
were abased—as the Aetolians, Macedonia
after the Asiatic war, Rhodes, and Pergamus learned
by experience. But not only did this part of
protector soon prove as irksome to the masters as
to the servants; the Roman protectorate, with its ungrateful
Sisyphian toil that continually needed to be begun
afresh, showed itself to be intrinsically untenable.
Indications of a change of system, and of an increasing
disinclination on the part of Rome to tolerate by
its side intermediate states even in such independence
as was possible for them, were very clearly given
in the destruction of the Macedonian monarchy after
the battle of Pydna, The more and more frequent and
more and more unavoidable intervention in the internal
affairs of the petty Greek states through their misgovernment
and their political and social anarchy; the disarming
of Macedonia, where the northern frontier at any rate
urgently required a defence different from that of
mere posts; and, lastly, the introduction of the payment
of land-tax to Rome from Macedonia and Illyria, were
so many symptoms of the approaching conversion of
the client states into subjects of Rome.
The Italian and Extra-Italian Policy of Rome
If, in conclusion, we glance back at the career of
Rome from the union of Italy to the dismemberment
of Macedonia, the universal empire of Rome, far from
appearing as a gigantic plan contrived and carried
out by an insatiable thirst for territorial aggrandizement,
appears to have been a result which forced itself
on the Roman government without, and even in opposition
to, its wish. It is true that the former view
naturally suggests itself—Sallust is right
when he makes Mithradates say that the wars of Rome
with tribes, cities, and kings originated in one and
the same prime cause, the insatiable longing after
dominion and riches; but it is an error to give forth
this judgment—influenced by passion and
the event—as a historical fact. It
is evident to every one whose observation is not superficial,
that the Roman government during this whole period
wished and desired nothing but the sovereignty of
Italy; that they were simply desirous not to have
too powerful neighbours alongside of them; and that—not
out of humanity towards the vanquished, but from the
very sound view that they ought not to suffer the
kernel of their empire to be stifled by the shell—they
earnestly opposed the introduction first of Africa,
then of Greece, and lastly of Asia into the sphere
of the Roman protectorate, till circumstances in each