apparently disdained to strive with destiny.
Next morning, when they learned the preparations made
by their opponents at the Capitol and the Forum, both
proceeded to the Aventine, the old stronghold of the
popular party in the struggles between the patricians
and the plebeians. Gracchus went thither silent
and unarmed; Flaccus called the slaves to arms and
entrenched himself in the temple of Diana, while he
at the same time sent his younger son Quintus to the
enemy’s camp in order if possible to arrange
a compromise. The latter returned with the announcement
that the aristocracy demanded unconditional surrender;
at the same time he brought a summons from the senate
to Gracchus and Flaccus to appear before it and to
answer for their violation of the majesty of the tribunes.
Gracchus wished to comply with the summons, but Flaccus
prevented him from doing so, and repeated the equally
weak and mistaken attempt to move such antagonists
to a compromise. When instead of the two cited
leaders the young Quintus Flaccus once more presented
himself alone, the consul treated their refusal to
appear as the beginning of open insurrection against
the government; he ordered the messenger to be arrested
and gave the signal for attack on the Aventine, while
at the same time he caused proclamation to be made
in the streets that the government would give to whosoever
should bring the head of Gracchus or of Flaccus its
literal weight in gold, and that they would guarantee
complete indemnity to every one who should leave the
Aventine before the beginning of the conflict.
The ranks on the Aventine speedily thinned; the valiant
nobility in union with the Cretans and the slaves
stormed the almost undefended mount, and killed all
whom they found, about 250 persons, mostly of humble
rank. Marcus Flaccus fled with his eldest son
to a place of concealment, where they were soon afterwards
hunted out and put to death. Gracchus had at
the beginning of the conflict retired into the temple
of Minerva, and was there about to pierce himself with
his sword, when his friend Publius Laetorius seized
his arm and besought him to preserve himself if possible
for better times. Gracchus was induced to make
an attempt to escape to the other bank of the Tiber;
but when hastening down the hill he fell and sprained
his foot. To gain time for him to escape, his
two attendants turned to face his pursuers and allowed
themselves to be cut down, Marcus Pomponius at the
Porta Trigemina under the Aventine, Publius Laetorius
at the bridge over the Tiber where Horatius Cocles
was said to have once singly withstood the Etruscan
army; so Gracchus, attended only by his slave Euporus,
reached the suburb on the right bank of the Tiber.
There, in the grove of Furrina, were afterwards found
the two dead bodies; it seemed as if the slave had
put to death first his master and then himself.
The heads of the two fallen leaders were handed over
to the government as required; the stipulated price