the proposal of the tribune of the people Gaius Mamilius
Limetanus, in spite of the timid attempts of the senate
to avert the threatened punishment, an extraordinary
jury-commission was appointed to investigate the high
treason that had occurred in connection with the question
of the Numidian succession; and its sentences sent
the two former commanders-in-chief Gaius Bestia and
Spurius Albinus as well as Lucius Opimius, the head
of the first African commission and the executioner
withal of Gaius Gracchus, along with numerous other
less notable men of the government party, guilty and
innocent, into exile. That these prosecutions,
however, were only intended to appease the excitement
of public opinion, in the capitalist circles more especially,
by the sacrifice of some of the persons most compromised,
and that there was in them not the slightest trace
of a rising of popular indignation against the government
itself, void as it was of right and honour, is shown
very clearly by the fact that no one ventured to attack
the guiltiest of the guilty, the prudent and powerful
Scaurus; on the contrary he was about this very time
elected censor and also, incredible as it may seem,
chosen as one of the presidents of the extraordinary
commission of treason. Still less was any attempt
even made to interfere with the functions of the government,
and it was left solely to the senate to put an end
to the Numidian scandal in a manner as gentle as possible
for the aristocracy; for that it was time to do so,
even the most aristocratic aristocrat probably began
to perceive.
Cancelling of the Second Treaty
Metellus Appointed to the Command
Renewal of the War
The senate in the first place cancelled the second
treaty of peace— to surrender to the enemy
the commander who had concluded it, as was done some
thirty years before, seemed according to the new ideas
of the sanctity of treaties no longer necessary—and
determined, this time in all earnest, to renew the
war. The supreme command in Africa was entrusted,
as was natural, to an aristocrat, but yet to one of
the few men of quality who in a military and moral
point of view were equal to the task. The choice
fell on Quintus Metellus. He was, like the whole
powerful family to which he belonged, in principle
a rigid and unscrupulous aristocrat; as a magistrate,
he, no doubt, reckoned it honourable to hire assassins
for the good of the state and would presumably have
ridiculed the act of Fabricius towards Pyrrhus as
unpractical knight errantry, but he was an inflexible
administrator accessible neither to fear nor to corruption,
and a judicious and experienced warrior. In
this respect he was so far free from the prejudices
of his order that he selected as his lieutenants not
men of rank, but the excellent officer Publius Rutilius
Rufus, who was esteemed in military circles for his
exemplary discipline and as the author of an altered
and improved system of drill, and the brave Latin