such signs and portents ought to form an express warning
against rebuilding on a site accursed by the gods.
The senate thereby found itself in its conscience
compelled to have a law proposed, which prohibited
the planting of the colony of Junonia. Gracchus,
who with the other men nominated to establish it was
just then selecting the colonists, appeared on the
day of voting at the Capitol whither the burgesses
were convoked, with a view to procure by means of
his adherents the rejection of the law. He wished
to shun acts of violence, that he might not himself
supply his opponents with the pretext which they sought;
but he had not been able to prevent a great portion
of his faithful partisans, who remembered the catastrophe
of Tiberius and were well acquainted with the designs
of the aristocracy, from appearing in arms, and amidst
the immense excitement on both sides quarrels could
hardly be avoided. The consul Lucius Opimius
offered the usual sacrifice in the porch of the Capitoline
temple; one of the attendants assisting at the ceremony,
Quintus Antullius, with the holy entrails in his hand,
haughtily ordered the “bad citizens” to
quit the porch, and seemed as though he would lay
hands on Gaius himself; whereupon a zealous Gracchan
drew his sword and cut the man down. A fearful
tumult arose. Gracchus vainly sought to address
the people and to disclaim the responsibility for
the sacrilegious murder; he only furnished his antagonists
with a further formal ground of accusation, as, without
being aware of it in the confusion, he interrupted
a tribune in the act of speaking to the people—an
offence, for which an obsolete statute, originating
at the time of the old dissensions between the orders,(28)
had prescribed the severest penalty. The consul
Lucius Opimius took his measures to put down by force
of arms the insurrection for the overthrow of the
republican constitution, as they were fond of designating
the events of this day. He himself passed the
night in the temple of Castor in the Forum; at early
dawn the Capitol was filled with Cretan archers, the
senate-house and Forum with the men of the government
party—the senators and the section of the
equites adhering to them—who by order of
the consul had all appeared in arms and each attended
by two armed slaves. None of the aristocracy
were absent; even the aged and venerable Quintus Metellus,
well disposed to reform, had appeared with shield
and sword. An officer of ability and experience
acquired in the Spanish wars, Decimus Brutus, was
entrusted with the command of the armed force; the
senate assembled in the senate-house. The bier
with the corpse of Antullius was deposited in front
of it; the senate, as if surprised, appeared en masse
at the door in order to view the dead body, and then
retired to determine what should be done. The
leaders of the democracy had gone from the Capitol
to their houses; Marcus Flaccus had spent the night
in preparing for the war in the streets, while Gracchus