B.C. 751
The rape of the Sabines. Narrative
of it. The population of Rome chiefly men. Necessity
of providing wives for them. Romulus sends
embassadors to the surrounding states. Insulting
replies. Anger of the Romans. Great
discovery made by Romulus. His plan. Plans
for the festival. Races, games, and shows. A
great concourse assembles at the fair. The
spectacles continue several weeks. The last
day of the fair. Signal to be made by Romulus. Excitement
of the Romans. Final preparations. The
moment arrives. The maidens seized. The
men fly. The Romans secure the captive maidens. An
incident. A captive “for Thalassius.” The
phrase “for Thalassius” becomes a proverb. Resentment
of the fathers and brothers of the maidens. The
captives called together in the morning. Address
made to them by Romulus. Acquiescence of
the captives. Cures. The Sabines
demand the restoration of the captives. Romulus
refuses to restore them. Ceremony in commemoration
of these events.
Every reader who has made even the
smallest beginning in the study of ancient history,
must be acquainted, in general, with the mode which
Romulus adopted to provide the people of his city with
wives, by the transaction which is commonly called
in history the rape of the Sabines. The
deed itself, as it actually occurred, may perhaps have
been one of great rudeness, violence, and cruelty.
If so, the historians who described it contrived to
soften the character of it, and to divest it in a
great measure of the repulsive features which might
have been supposed to characterize such a transaction,
for, according to the narrative which they give us,
the whole proceeding was conducted in such a manner
as to evince not only great ingenuity and sagacity
on the part of Romulus and his government, but also
great moderation and humanity. The circumstances,
as the historians relate them, were these:
As might naturally be supposed from
the manner in which the company which formed the population
of Rome had been collected, it consisted at first
almost wholly of men. The laws and regulations
referred to in the last chapter, in respect to the
family relation, were those framed after the organization
of the community had become somewhat advanced, since
at the outset there could be very few families, inasmuch
as the company which first met together to build the
city, consisted simply of an army of young men.
It is true that among those who joined them at first
there were some men of middle life and some families, still,
as is always the case with new cities and countries
suddenly and rapidly settled, the population consisted
almost entirely of men.
It was necessary that the men should
have wives. There were several reasons for this.
First, it was necessary for the comfort and happiness
of the people themselves. A community of mere
men is gloomy and desolate. Secondly, for the
continuance and perpetuity of the state it was necessary
that there should be wives and children, so that when
one generation should have passed away there might
be another to succeed it. And, thirdly, for the
preservation of order and law. Men unmarried
are, in the mass, proverbially ungovernable.
Nothing is so effectual in keeping a citizen away from
scenes of tumult and riot as a wife and children at
home. The fearful violence of the riots and insurrections
of which the city of Paris has so often been the scene,
is explained, in a great degree, by the circumstance
that so immense a proportion of the population are
unmarried. They have no homes, and no defenseless
wives and children to fear for, and so they fear nothing,
but give themselves up, in times of public excitement,
to the wildest impulses of passion. Romulus seems
to have understood this, and his first care was to
provide the way by which as many as possible of his
people should be married.
The first measure which he adopted,
was to send embassadors around to the neighboring
states, soliciting alliances with them, and stipulations
allowing of intermarriages between his people and theirs.
The proposal seemed not unreasonable, and it was made
in an unassuming and respectful manner. In the
message which Romulus commissioned the embassadors
to deliver, he admitted that his colony was yet small,
and by no means equal in influence and power to the
kingdoms whose alliance he desired; but he reminded
those whom he addressed that great results came sometimes
in the end from very inconsiderable beginnings, and
that their enterprise thus far, though yet in its
infancy, had been greatly prospered, and was plainly
an object of divine favor, and that the time might
not be far distant when the new state would be able
fully to reciprocate such favors as it might now receive.
The neighboring kings to whom these
embassages were sent rejected the proposals with derision.
They did not even give serious answers, obviously
considering the new city as a mere temporary gathering
and encampment of adventurers and outlaws, which would
be as transient as it was rude and irregular.
They looked to see it break up as suddenly and tumultuously
as it had been formed. They accordingly sent back
word to Romulus that he must resort to the same plan
to get women for his city that he had adopted to procure
recruits of men. He must open an asylum
for them. The low and the dissolute would come
flocking to him then, they said, from all parts, and
vagabond women would make just the kind of wives for
vagabond men.
Of course, the young men of the city
were aroused to an extreme pitch of indignation at
receiving this response. They were clamorous for
war. They wished Romulus to lead them out against
some of these cities at once, and allow them at the
same time to revenge the insults which they had received,
and to provide themselves with wives by violence,
since they could not obtain them by solicitation.
But Romulus restrained their ardor, saying that they
must do nothing rashly, and promising to devise a
better way than theirs to attain the end.
The plan which he devised was to invite
the people of the surrounding states and cities both
men and women, to come to Rome, with a view of seizing
some favorable occasion for capturing the women while
they were there, and driving the men away. The
difficulty in the way of the execution of this plan
was obviously to induce the people to come, and especially
to bring the young women with them. The native
timidity of the maidens, joined to the contemptuous
feelings which their fathers and brothers cherished,
in regard to every thing pertaining to the new city,
would very naturally keep them away, unless something
could be devised which would exert a very strong attraction.
Romulus waited a little time, in order
that any slight excitement which had been produced
by his embassy should have had time to subside, and
then he made, or pretended to make, a great discovery
in a field not far from his town. This discovery
was the finding of an ancient altar of Neptune, under
ground. The altar was brought to view by some
workmen who were making excavations at the place.
How it came to be under ground, and who had built
it, no one knew. The rumor of this great discovery
was spread immediately in every direction. Romulus
attached great importance to the event. The altar
had undoubtedly been built, he thought, by the ancient
inhabitants of the country, and the finding it was
a very momentous occurrence. It was proper that
the occasion should be solemnized by suitable religious
observances.
Accordingly, arrangements were made
for a grand celebration. In addition to the religious
rites, Romulus proposed that a great fair should be
held on a plain near the city at the same time.
Booths were erected, and the merchants of all the
neighboring cities were invited to come, bringing
with them such articles as they had for sale, and
those who wished to buy were to come with their money.
In a word, arrangements were made for a great and
splendid festival.
There were to be games too, races,
and wrestlings, and other athletic sports, such as
were in vogue in those times. The celebration
was to continue for many days, and the games and sports
were to come at the end. Romulus sent messengers
to all the surrounding country to proclaim the programme
of these entertainments, and to invite every body
to come; and he adroitly arranged the details in such
a manner that the chief attractions for grave, sober-minded
and substantial men should be on the earlier days
of the show, and that the latter days should be devoted
to lighter amusements, such as would possess a charm
for the young, the light-hearted and the happy.
It was among this last class that he naturally expected
to find the maidens whom his men would choose in looking
for wives.
When the time arrived the spectacles
commenced. There was a great concourse at the
outset, but the people who first came, were, as Romulus
supposed would be the case, chiefly men. They
came in companies, as if for mutual support and protection,
and they exhibited in a greater or less degree an
air of suspicion, watchfulness and mistrust.
They were, however, received with great cordiality
and kindness. They were conducted about the town,
and were astonished to find how considerable a town
it was. The streets, the houses, the walls, the
temples, simple in construction as they were, far surpassed
the expectations they had formed. The visitors
were treated with great hospitality, and entertained
in a manner which, considering the circumstances of
the case, was quite sumptuous. The women and children
too, who came on these first days, received from all
the Romans very special attention and regard.
As the celebrations went on from day
to day, a considerable change took place in the character
and appearance of the company. The men ceased
to be suspicious and watchful. Some went home,
and carried such reports of the new city, and of the
kindness, and hospitality, and gentle behavior of
the inhabitants, that new visitors came continually
to see for themselves. Every day the proportion
of stern and suspicious men diminished, and that of
gay and happy-looking youths and maidens increased.
In the mean time, the men of the city
were under strict injunctions from Romulus to treat
their guests in the most respectful manner, leaving
them entirely at liberty to go and come as they pleased,
except so far as they could detain them by treating
them with kindness and attention, and devising new
sports and amusements for them from day to day.
Things continued in this state for two or three weeks,
during all which time the new city was a general place
of resort for the people of all the surrounding country.
Of course a great many agreeable acquaintances would
naturally be formed between the young men of the city
and their visitors, as accidental circumstances, or
individual choice and preference brought them together;
and thus, without any directions on the subject from
Romulus, each man would very naturally occupy himself,
in anticipation of the general seizure which he knew
was coming, in making his selection beforehand, of
the maiden whom he intended, when the time for the
seizure came, to make his own; and the maiden herself
would probably be less terrified, and make less resistance
to the attempt to capture her, than if it were by
a perfect stranger that she was to be seized.
All this Romulus seems very adroitly
to have arranged. The time for the final execution
of the scheme was to be the last day of the celebration.
The best spectacle and show of all was to take place
on that day. The Romans were directed to come
armed to this show, but to keep their arms carefully
concealed beneath their garments. They were to
do nothing till Romulus gave the signal. He was
himself to be seated upon a sort of throne, in a conspicuous
place, where all could see him, presiding, as it were,
over the assembly, while the spectacle went on; and
finally, when he judged that the proper moment had
arrived, he was to give the signal by taking off a
certain loose article of dress which he wore a
sort of cloak or mantle and folding it
up, and then immediately unfolding it again. This
mantle was a sort of badge of royalty and was gayly
adorned with purple stripes upon a white ground.
It was well adapted, therefore, to the purpose of being
used as a signal, inasmuch as any motions that were
made with it could be very easily seen.
Every thing being thus arranged, the
assembly was convened, and the games and spectacles
went on. The Romans were full of excitement and
trepidation, each one having taken his place as near
as possible to the maiden whom he was intending to
seize, and occupying himself with keeping his eye
upon her as closely as he could, without seeming to
do so, and at the same time watching the royal mantle,
and every movement made by the wearer of it, that
he might catch the signal the instant that it should
be made. All this time the men among the guests
at the entertainment were off their guard, and wholly
at their ease having no suspicion whatever
of the mine that was ready to be sprung beneath them.
The wives, mothers, and children, too, were all safe,
as well as unsuspicious of danger; for Romulus had
given special charge that no married woman should
be molested. The men had had ample time and opportunity
in the many days of active social intercourse which
they had enjoyed with their guests, to know who were
free, and they were forbidden in any instance to take
a wife away from her husband.
At length the moment arrived for giving
the signal. Romulus took off his mantle, folded
it, and then unfolded it again. The Romans immediately
drew their swords, and rushed forward, each to secure
his own prize. A scene of the greatest excitement
and confusion ensued. The whole company of visitors
perceived of course that some great act of treachery
was perpetrated upon them, but they were wholly in
the dark in respect to the nature and design of it.
They were chiefly unarmed, and wholly unprepared for
so sudden an attack, and they fled in all directions
in dismay, protecting themselves and their wives and
children as well as they could, as they retired, and
aiming only to withdraw as large a number as possible
from the scene of violence and confusion that prevailed.
The Romans were careful not to do them any injury,
but, on the contrary, to allow them to withdraw, and
to take away all the mothers and children without
any molestation. In fact, it was the very object
and design of the onset which they made upon the company,
not only to seize upon the maidens, but to drive all
the rest of their visitors away. The men, therefore,
in the excitement and terror of the moment, fled in
all directions, taking with them those whom they could
most readily secure, who were, of course, those whom
the Romans left to them; while the Romans themselves
withdrew with their prizes, and secured them within
the walls of the city.
In reading this extraordinary story,
we naturally feel a strong disposition to inquire
what part the damsels themselves took, when they found
themselves thus suddenly seized and carried away, by
these daring and athletic assailants. Did they
resist and struggle to get free, or did they yield
themselves without much opposition to their fate?
That they did not resist effectually is plain, for
the Roman young men succeeded in carrying them away,
and securing them. It may be that they attempted
to resist, but found their strength overpowered by
the desperate and reckless violence of their captors.
And yet, it can not be denied that woman is endued
with the power of making by various means a very formidable
opposition to any attempt to abduct her by any single
man, when she is thoroughly in earnest about it.
How it was in fact in this case we have no direct
information, and we have consequently no means of
forming any opinion in respect to the light in which
this rough and lawless mode of wooing was regarded
by the objects of it, except from the events which
subsequently occurred.
One incident took place while the
Romans were seizing and carrying away their prizes,
which was afterward long remembered, as it became
the foundation of a custom which continued for many
centuries to form a part of the marriage ceremony
at Rome. It seems that some young men very
young, and of a humble class had seized
a peculiarly beautiful girl one of some
note and consideration, too, among her countrywomen and
were carrying her away, like the rest. Some other
young Romans of the patrician order seeing this, and
thinking that so beautiful a maiden ought not to fall
to the share of such plebeians, immediately set out
in full pursuit to rescue her. The plebeians
hurried along to escape from them, calling out at the
same time, “Thalassio! Thalassio!”
which means “For Thalassius, For Thalassius.”
They meant by this to convey the idea that the prize
which they had in possession was intended not for any
one of their own number, but for Thalassius.
Now Thalassius was a young noble universally known
and very highly esteemed by all his countrymen, and
when the rescuing party were thus led to suppose that
the beautiful lady was intended for him, they acquiesced
immediately, and desisted from their attempt to recapture
her, and thus by the aid of their stratagem the plebeians
carried off their prize in safety. When this
circumstance came afterward to be known, the ingenuity
of the young plebeians, and the success of their manoeuver,
excited very general applause, and the exclamation,
Thalassio, passed into a sort of proverb, and
was subsequently adopted as an exclamation of assent
and congratulation, to be used by the spectators at
a marriage ceremony.
Romulus had issued most express and
positive orders that the young captives should be
treated after their seizure in the kindest and most
respectful manner, and should be subject to no violence,
and no ill-treatment of any kind, other than that
necessary for conveying them to the places of security
previously designated. They suffered undoubtedly
a greater or less degree of distress and terror, but
finding that they were treated, after their seizure,
with respectful consideration, and that they were
left unmolested by their captors, they gradually recovered
their composure during the night, and in the morning
were quite self-possessed and calm. Their fathers
and brothers in the mean time had gone home to their
respective cities, taking with them the women and
children that they had saved, and burning with indignation
and rage against the perpetrators of such an act of
treachery as had been practiced upon them. They
were of course in a state of great uncertainty and
suspense in respect to the fate which awaited the
captives, and were soon eagerly engaged in forming
and discussing all possible plans for rescuing and
recovering them. Thus the night was passed in
agitation and excitement, both within and without
the city, the excitement of terror and distress,
great perhaps, though subsiding on the part of the
captives, and of resentment and rage which grew deeper
and more extended every hour, on the part of their
countrymen.
When the morning came, Romulus ordered
the captive maidens to be all brought together before
him in order that he might make as it were an apology
to them for the violence to which they had been subjected,
and explain to them the circumstances which had impelled
the Romans to resort to it.
“You ought not,” said
he, “to look upon it as an indignity that you
have been thus seized, for the object of the Romans
in seizing you was not to dishonor you, or to do you
any injury, but only to secure you for their wives
in honorable marriage; and far from being displeased
with the extraordinariness of the measures which they
have adopted to secure you, you ought to take pride
in them, as evincing the ardor and strength of the
affection with which you have inspired your lovers.
I will assure you that when you have become their
wives you shall be treated with all the respect and
tenderness that you have been accustomed to experience
under your fathers’ roofs. The brief coercion
which we have employed for the purpose of securing
you in the first instance, a coercion which
we were compelled to resort to by the necessity of
the case, is the only rudeness to which
you will ever be exposed. Forgive us then for
this one liberty which we have taken, and consider
that the fault, whatever fault in it there may be,
is not ours, but that of your fathers and brothers
who rejected our offers for voluntary and peaceful
alliances, and thus compelled us to resort to this
stratagem or else to lose you altogether. Your
destiny if you unite with us will be great and glorious.
We have not taken you captive to make you prisoners
or slaves, or to degrade you in any way from your
former position; but to exalt you to positions of high
consideration in a new and rising colony; a
colony which is surely destined to become great and
powerful, and of which we mean you to be the chief
glory and charm.”
The young and handsome Romans stood
by while Romulus made this speech, their countenances
animated with excitement and pleasure. The maidens
themselves seemed much inclined to yield to their fate.
Their resentment gradually subsided. It has been,
in fact, in all ages, characteristic of women to be
easily led to excuse and forgive any wrong on the
part of another which is prompted by love for herself:
and these injured maidens seemed gradually to come
to the conclusion, that considering all the circumstances
of the case their abductors were not so much in fault
after all. In a short time an excellent understanding
was established, and they were all married. There
were, it is said, about five or six hundred of them,
and it proved that most of them were from the nation
of the Sabines, a nation which inhabited a territory
north of the colony of the Romans. The capital
of the Sabines was a city called Cures.
Cures was about twenty miles from Rome.
The Sabines, in deliberating
on the course which they should pursue in the emergency,
found themselves in a situation of great perplexity.
In the first place the impulse which urged them to
immediate acts of retaliation and hostility was restrained
by the fact that so many of their beloved daughters
were wholly in the power of their enemies, and they
could not tell what cruel fate might await the captives
if they were themselves to resort to any measures
that would exasperate or provoke the captors.
Then again their own territory was very much exposed
and they were by no means certain, in case a war should
be commenced between them and the Romans, how it would
end. Their own population was much divided, being
scattered over the territory, or settled in various
cities and towns which were but slightly fortified,
and consequently were much exposed to assault in case
the Romans were to make an incursion into their country.
In view of all these considerations the Sabines
concluded that it would be best for them on the whole,
to try the influence of gentle measures, before resorting
to open war.
They therefore sent an embassy to
Romulus, to remonstrate in strong terms against the
wrong which the Romans had done them by their treacherous
violence, and to demand that the young women should
be restored. “If you will restore them
to us now,” said they, “we will overlook
the affront which you have put upon us, and make peace
with you; and we will enter into an alliance with
you so that hereafter your people and ours may be
at liberty to intermarry in a fair and honorable way,
but we can not submit to have our daughters taken away
from us by treachery and force.”
Reasonable as this proposition seems,
Romulus did not think it best to accede to it.
It was, in fact, too late, for such deeds once done
can hardly be undone. Romulus replied, that the
women, being now the wives of the Romans, could not
be surrendered. The violence, he said, of which
the Sabines complained was unavoidable. No
other possible way had been open to them for gaining
the end. He was willing, he added, to enter into
a treaty of peace and alliance with the Sabines,
but they must acknowledge, as a preliminary to such
a treaty, the validity of the marriages, which, as
they had already been consummated, could not now be
annulled.
The Sabines, on their part, could
not accede to these proposals. Being, however,
still reluctant to commence hostilities, they continued
the negotiations though while engaged in
them they seemed to anticipate an unfavorable issue,
for they were occupied all the time in organizing
troops, strengthening the defenses of their villages
and towns, and making other vigorous preparations for
war.
The Romans, in the mean time, seemed
to find the young wives which they had procured by
these transactions a great acquisition to their colony.
It proved, too, that they not only prized the acquisition,
but they exulted so much in the ingenuity and success
of the stratagem by which their object had been effected,
that a sort of symbolical violence in taking the bride
became afterward a part of the marriage ceremony in
all subsequent weddings. For always, in future
years, when the new-married wife was brought home
to her husband’s house, it was the custom for
him to take her up in his arms at the door, and carry
her over the threshold as if by force, thus commemorating
by this ceremony the coercion which had signalized
the original marriages of his ancestors, the founders
of Rome.