The Gracchi Marius and Sulla eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 234 pages of information about The Gracchi Marius and Sulla.

The Gracchi Marius and Sulla eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 234 pages of information about The Gracchi Marius and Sulla.

[Sidenote:  Murder of Massiva.] But now a cousin of the king, named Massiva, a grandson of Masinissa, at the instigation of the consul Albinus, claimed the Numidian crown.  In the present state of parties he was sure of support, so Jugurtha had recourse to the second weapon which he always used when the first was useless.  He had him assassinated by his adherent Bomilcar, and assisted the latter to escape from Italy.  At last his savage audacity had overstepped even the forbearance of the rogues in his pay. [Sidenote:  Jugurtha expelled from Rome.] He was ordered to leave Rome, and, as he went, uttered the famous epigram, ’A city for sale, and when the first buyer comes, doomed to ruin!’ [Sidenote:  Futile campaign of Albinus.] It is possible that Spurius Albinus, who was next sent against him, was playing the game of Scaurus and Bestia over again; for he effected nothing in his campaign in 110.  Nor does his brother’s rashness exonerate him.  Left as propraetor in charge of the army, this man, in January 109, determined to try and carry off Jugurtha’s treasures by a coup de main.  To do this he marched against Suthul, where the treasures were kept, at a season when the heavy rains turn the land into water. [Sidenote:  Jugurtha overthrows Aulus Albinus.] Jugurtha retreated into the interior, enticing Aulus Albinus by hopes of coming to terms, and meanwhile tampering with his officers.  Then, on a dark night, he surrounded the army.  The traitors whom he had bribed deserted their posts.  The soldiers threw away their arms, and next day Jugurtha forced Aulus to agree to go under the yoke, to make peace, and, perhaps, in mockery of the Senate’s treatment of the Numidian envoys, to leave Numidia in ten days.  Of course the Senate would not acknowledge the treaty.  Nor did they even go through the farce of surrendering the man who had made it.  The chivalry of the era of Regulus would have seemed quixotic to cynics like Scaurus.  The other Albinus, hastening to Africa, found the troops mutinous, and could effect nothing.  Another tribune now stepped forward to impeach all, whether soldiers or civilians, who had assisted Jugurtha to the prejudice of the State.  In spite of the aid of the rich Latins, who had just been gratified by the remission of the vectigal, the senators were beaten and the bill passed.  Triumvirs were appointed to investigate the matter; but one of them was Scaurus, sure to float most buoyantly where the scum of scoundrelism was thickest. [Sidenote:  Banishment of Romans who had taken Jugurtha’s bribes.] The judices were equites, and among those condemned were Bestia, Sp.  Albinus, Opimius, and Caius Cato, the grandson of Cato the censor.  Opimius died at Dyrrhachium, a poor man; and probably no harder punishment could have befallen him.

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The Gracchi Marius and Sulla from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.