still worse—the fixing of ropes and barriers,[381]
and horses, and standing under the open sky, during
the heat in the sun, and during the cold when they
were forced into the mud or the ice; so that slavery
was considered a relief from the burden of debt, and
a blessing. Such evils as these Lucullus discovered
in the cities, and in a short time he relieved the
sufferers from all of them. In the first place,
he declared that the rate of interest should be reckoned
at the hundredth part,[382] and no more; in the second,
he cut off all the interest which exceeded the capital;
thirdly, what was most important of all, he declared
that the lender should receive the fourth part of
the income of the debtor; but any lender who had tacked
the interest to the principal was deprived of the whole:
thus, in less than four years all the debts were paid,
and their property was given back to them free from
all encumbrance. Now the common debt originated
in the twenty thousand talents which Sulla had laid
on Asia as a contribution, and twice this amount was
repaid to the lenders, though they had indeed now
brought the debt up to the amount of one hundred and
twenty thousand talents by means of the interest.
The lenders, however, considered themselves very ill
used, and they raised a great outcry against Lucullus
at Rome, and they endeavoured to bribe some of the
demagogues to attack him; for the lenders had great
influence, and had among their debtors many of the
men who were engaged in public life. But Lucullus
gained the affection of the cities which had been
favoured by him, and the other provinces also longed
to see such a man over them, and felicitated those
who had the good luck to have such a governor.
XXI. Appius Clodius,[383] who was sent to Tigranes
(now Clodius was the brother of the then wife of Lucullus),
was at first conducted by the king’s guides
through the upper part of the country, by a route
unnecessarily circuitous and roundabout, and one that
required many days’ journeying; but, as soon
as the straight road was indicated to him by a freedman,
a Syrian by nation, he quitted that tedious and tricky
road, and, bidding his barbarian guides farewell, he
crossed the Euphrates in a few days, and arrived at
Antiocheia,[384] near Daphne. There he waited
for Tigranes, pursuant to the king’s orders
(for Tigranes was absent, and still engaged in reducing
some of the Phoenician cities), and in the meantime
he gained over many of the princes who paid the Armenian
a hollow obedience, among whom was Zarbienus, King
of Gordyene,[385] and he promised aid from Lucullus
to many of the enslaved cities, which secretly sent
to him—bidding them, however, keep quiet
for the present. Now the rule of the Armenians
was not tolerable to the Greeks, but was harsh; and
what was worse, the king’s temper had become
violent and exceedingly haughty in his great prosperity;
for he had not only everything about him which the
many covet and admire, but he seemed to think that