I. The patrician family of the Marcii
at Rome produced many illustrious men, amongst whom
was Ancus Marcius, the grandson of Numa, who became
king after the death of Tullus Hostilius. To this
family also belonged Publius and Quintus Marcius,
who supplied Rome with abundance of excellent water,
and Censorinus, twice appointed censor by the Roman
people, who afterwards passed a law that no one should
hold that office twice.
Caius Marcius, the subject of this
memoir, was an orphan, and brought up by a widowed
mother. He proved that, hard though the lot of
an orphan may be, yet it does not prevent a man’s
becoming great and distinguished, and that the bad
alone allege it as an excuse for an intemperate life.
He also proves to us that a naturally noble nature,
if it be not properly disciplined, will produce many
good and bad qualities together, just as a rich field,
if not properly tilled, will produce both weeds and
good fruit. The immense energy and courage of
his mind used to urge him to attempt and to perform
great exploits, but his harsh and ambitious temper
made it difficult for him to live on friendly terms
with his companions. They used to admire his indifference
to pleasure and pain, and his contempt for bribes,
but in politics they were angered by his morose and
haughty manner, too proud for a citizen of a republic.
Indeed there is no advantage to be gained from a liberal
education so great as that of softening and disciplining
the natural ferocity of our disposition, by teaching
it moderation, and how to avoid all extremes.
However, at that period warlike virtues were valued
above all others at Rome, which is proved by the Romans
possessing only one word for virtue and for bravery,
so that virtue, a general term, is applied by them
to the particular form, courage.
II. Marcius, having an especial
passion for war, was familiar from childhood with
the use of arms. Reflecting that artificial weapons
are of little use without a body capable of wielding
them, he so trained himself for all possible emergencies
that he was both able to run swiftly and also to grapple
with his foe so strongly that few could escape from
him. Those who entered into any contest with him,
when beaten, used to ascribe their defeat to his immense
bodily strength, which no exertions could tire out.
III. He served his first campaign
while yet a youth, when Tarquin, the exiled King of
Rome, after many battles and defeats, staked all upon
one last throw, and assembled an army to attack Rome.
His force consisted chiefly of Latins, but many other
Italian states took his part in the war, not from
any attachment to his person, but through fear and
dislike of the growing power of Rome. In the
battle which ensued, in which various turns of fortune
took place, Marcius, while fighting bravely under
the eye of the dictator himself, saw a Roman fallen
and helpless near him. He at once made for this
man, stood in front of him, and killed his assailant.
After the victory, Marcius was among the first who
received the oak-leaf crown. This crown is given
to him who has saved the life of a citizen in battle,
and is composed of oak-leaves, either out of compliment
to the Arcadians, whom the oracle calls ’acorn
eaters,’ or because in any campaign in any country
it is easy to obtain oak-boughs, or it may be that
the oak, sacred to Jupiter the protector of cities,
forms a suitable crown for one who has saved the life
of a citizen. The oak is the most beautiful of
all wild trees, and the strongest of those which are
artificially cultivated. It afforded men in early
times both food and drink, by its acorns and the honey
found in it, while by the bird-lime which it produces,
it enables them to catch most kinds of birds and other
creatures, as additional dainties.
This was the battle in which they
say that the Dioscuri, Castor and Pollux, appeared,
and immediately after the battle were soon in the
Forum at Rome announcing the victory, with their horses
dripping with sweat, at the spot where now there is
a temple built in their honour beside the fountain.
In memory of this, the day of the victory, the 15th
of July, is kept sacred to the Dioscuri.
IV. To win distinction early
in life is said to quench and satisfy the eagerness
of some men whose desire for glory is not keen; but
for those with whom it is the ruling passion of their
lives, the gaining of honours only urges them on,
as a ship is urged by a gale, to fresh achievements.
They do not regard themselves as having received a
reward, but as having given a pledge for the future,
and they feel it their duty not to disgrace the reputation
which they have acquired, but to eclipse their former
fame by some new deed of prowess. Marcius, feeling
this, was ever trying to surpass himself in valour,
and gained such prizes and trophies that the later
generals under whom he served were always striving
to outdo the former ones in their expressions of esteem
for him, and their testimony to his merits. Many
as were the wars in which Rome was then engaged, Marcius
never returned from any without a prize for valour
or some especial mark of distinction. Other men
were brave in order to win glory, but Marcius won
glory in order to please his mother. That she
should hear him praised, see him crowned, and embrace
him weeping for joy, was the greatest honour and happiness
of his life. Epameinondas is said to have had
the same feelings, and to have considered it to be
his greatest good-fortune that his father and mother
were both alive to witness his triumphant success at
the battle of Leuktra. He, however, enjoyed the
sympathy and applause of both parents, but Marcius,
being fatherless, lavished on his mother all that affection
which should have belonged to his father, besides her
own share. So boundless was his love for Volumnia
that at her earnest desire he even married a wife,
but still continued to live in the house of his mother.
V. At this time, when his reputation
and influence were very considerable because of his
prowess, there was a party-quarrel going on in Rome
between the patricians, who wished to defend the privileges
of men of property, and the people, who were suffering
terrible ill-treatment at the hands of their creditors.
Those who possessed a small property were forced either
to pledge or to sell it, while those who were absolutely
destitute were carried off and imprisoned, though
they might be scarred and enfeebled from the wars in
which they had served in defence of their country.
The last campaign was that against the Sabines,
after which their rich creditors promised to treat
them with less harshness. In pursuance of a decree
of the Senate, Marcus Valerius the consul was the
guarantee of this promise. But when, after serving
manfully in this campaign and conquering the enemy,
they met with no better treatment from their creditors,
and the Senate seemed unmindful of its engagements,
allowing them to be imprisoned and distresses to be
levied upon their property as before, there were violent
outbreaks and riots in the city. This disturbed
condition of the commonwealth was taken advantage
of by the enemy, who invaded the country and plundered
it. When the consuls called all men of military
age to arms, no one obeyed, and then at last the patricians
hesitated. Some thought that they ought to yield
to the lower classes, and make some concessions instead
of enforcing the strict letter of the law against
them; while others, among whom was Marcius, opposed
this idea, not because he thought the money of great
consequence, but because he considered this to be
the beginning of an outburst of democratic insolence
which a wise government would take timely measures
to suppress before it gathered strength.
VI. As the Senate, although it
frequently met, came to no decision on this matter,
the plebeians suddenly assembled in a body, left the
city, and established themselves on what was afterwards
called the Mons Sacer, or Sacred Hill, near
the river Anio. They abstained from all factious
proceedings, and merely stated that they had been driven
from the city by the wealthy classes. Air and
water and a place in which to be buried, they said,
could be obtained anywhere in Italy, and they could
get nothing more than this in Rome, except the privilege
of being wounded or slain in fighting battles on behalf
of the rich. At this demonstration, the Senate
became alarmed, and sent the most moderate and popular
of its members to treat with the people. The
spokesman of this embassy was Menenius Agrippa, who,
after begging the plebeians to come to terms, and
pleading the cause of the Senate with them, wound up
his speech by the following fable: Once upon
a time, said he, all the members revolted against
the belly, reproaching it with lying idle in the body,
and making all the other members work in order to
provide it with food; but the belly laughed them to
scorn, saying that it was quite true that it took
all the food which the body obtained, but that it afterwards
distributed it among all the members. “This,”
he said, “is the part played by the Senate in
the body politic. It digests and arranges all
the affairs of the State, and provides all of you with
wholesome and useful measures.”
VII. Upon this they came to terms,
after stipulating that five men should be chosen to
defend the cause of the people, who are now known as
tribunes of the people. They chose for the first
tribunes the leaders of the revolt, the chief of whom
were Junius Brutus and Sicinius Vellutus. As
soon as the State was one again, the people assembled
under arms, and zealously offered their services for
war to their rulers. Marcius, though but little
pleased with these concessions which the plebeians
had wrung from the patricians, yet, noticing that
many patricians were of his mind, called upon them
not to be outdone in patriotism by the plebeians,
but to prove themselves their superiors in valour rather
than in political strength.
VIII. Corioli was the most
important city of the Volscian nation, with which
Rome then was at war. The consul Cominius was
besieging it, and the Volscians, fearing it might
be taken, gathered from all quarters, meaning to fight
a battle under the city walls, and so place the Romans
between two fires. Cominius divided his army,
and led one part of it to fight the relieving force,
leaving Titus Lartius, a man of the noblest birth
in Rome, to continue the siege with the rest of his
troops. The garrison of Corioli, despising
the small numbers of their besiegers, attacked them
and forced them to take shelter within their camp.
But there Marcius with a few followers checked their
onset, slew the foremost, and with a loud voice called
on the Romans to rally. He was, as Cato said
a soldier should be, not merely able to deal weighty
blows, but struck terror into his enemies by the loud
tones of his voice and his martial appearance, so
that few dared to stand their ground before him.
Many soldiers rallied round him and forced the enemy
to retreat; but he, not satisfied with this, followed
them close and drove them in headlong flight back
to the city. On arriving there, although he saw
that the Romans were slackening their pursuit as many
missiles were aimed at them from the city walls, and
none of them thought of daring to enter together with
the fugitives into a city full of armed men, yet he
stood and cheered them on, loudly telling them that
fortune had opened the city gates as much to the pursuers
as to the pursued. Few cared to follow him, but
he, forcing his way through the crowd of fugitives,
entered the city with them, none daring at first to
withstand him. Soon, when the enemy saw how few
of the Romans were within the gates, they rallied
and attacked them. Marcius, in the confused mass
of friends and foes, fought with incredible strength,
swiftness, and courage, overthrowing all whom he attacked,
driving some to the further parts of the town, and
forcing others to lay down their arms, so that Lartius
was able to march the rest of the Roman army into
the gates unmolested.
IX. When the city was taken,
the greater part of the soldiers fell to plundering
it, which greatly vexed Marcius. He loudly exclaimed
that it was a disgraceful thing, when the consul was
on the point of engaging with the enemy, that they
should be plundering, or, on the pretext of plunder,
keeping themselves safe out of harm’s way.
Few paid any attention to him, but with those few
he marched on the track of the main body, frequently
encouraging his followers to greater speed, and not
to give way to fatigue, and frequently praying to
Heaven that he might not come too late for the battle,
but arrive in time to share the labours and perils
of his countrymen. There was at that time a custom
among the Romans, when they were drawn up in order
of battle, ready to take their shields in their hands,
and to gird themselves with the trabea, to make
their will verbally, naming their heir in the presence
of three or four witnesses. The Roman army was
found by Marcius in the act of performing this ceremony.
At first some were alarmed at seeing him appear with
only a few followers, covered with blood and sweat;
but when he ran joyously up to the consul and told
him that Corioli was taken, Cominius embraced
him, and all the ranks took fresh courage, some because
they heard, and others because they guessed the glorious
news. They eagerly demanded to be led to battle.
Marcius now enquired of Cominius how the enemy’s
line of battle was arranged, and where it was strongest.
When the consul answered that he believed that the
men of Antium, the proudest and bravest troops of
the Volscians, were posted in the centre, he answered,
“I beg of you, place us opposite to those men.”
The consul, filled with admiration for his spirit,
placed him there. As soon as the armies met,
Marcius charged before the rest, and the Volscians
gave way before his onset. The centre, where
he attacked, was quite broken, but the ranks on either
side wheeled round and surrounded him, so that the
consul feared for his safety, and despatched the choicest
of his own troops to his aid. They found a hot
battle raging round Marcius, and many slain, but by
the shock of their charge they drove off the enemy
in confusion. As they began to pursue them, they
begged Marcius, now weary with toil and wounds, to
retire to the camp, but he, saying that “it was
not for victors to be weary,” joined in the
pursuit. The rest of the Volscian army was defeated,
many were slain, and many taken.
X. On the next day Lartius and the
rest joined the consul. He ascended a rostrum,
and after returning suitable thanks to Heaven for such
unexampled successes, turned to Marcius. First
he praised his conduct in the highest terms, having
himself witnessed some part of it, and having learned
the rest from Lartius. Next, as there were many
prisoners, horses, and other spoil, he bade him, before
it was divided, choose a tenth part for himself.
He also presented him with a horse and trappings,
as a reward for his bravery. As all the Romans
murmured their approval, Marcius coming forward said
that he gladly accepted the horse, and was thankful
for the praise which he had received from the consul.
As for the rest, he considered that to be mere pay,
not a prize, and refused it, preferring to take his
share with the rest. “One especial favour,”
said he, “I do beg of you. I had a friend
among the Volscians, who now is a captive, and from
having been a rich and free man has fallen to the
condition of a slave. I wish to relieve him from
one of his many misfortunesthat of losing
his liberty and being sold for a slave.”
After these words, Marcius was cheered more than he
had been before, and men admired his disinterestedness
more than they had admired his bravery. Even
those who grudged him his extraordinary honours now
thought that by his unselfishness he had shown himself
worthy of them, and admired his courage in refusing
such presents more than the courage by which he had
won the right to them. Indeed, the right use of
riches is more glorious than that of arms, but not
to desire them at all is better even than using them
well.
XI. When the cheering caused
by Marcius’s speech had subsided, Cominius said:
“Fellow soldiers, we cannot force a man against
his will to receive these presents; but, unless his
achievements have already won it for him, let us give
him the title of Coriolanus, which he cannot refuse,
seeing for what it is bestowed, and let us confirm
it by a general vote.”
Hence he obtained the third name of
Coriolanus. From this we may clearly see that
his own personal name was Caius, and that Marcius was
the common name of his family, while the third name
was added afterwards to mark some particular exploit,
peculiarity, or virtue in the bearer. So also
did the Greeks in former ages give men names derived
from their actions, such as Kallinikus (the Victor),
or Soter (the Preserver); or from their appearance,
as Fusco (the Fat), or Gripus (the Hook-nosed); or
from their virtues, as Euergetes (the Benefactor),
or Philadelphus (the Lover of his Brethren), which
were names of the Ptolemies: or from their success,
as Eudaemon (the Fortunate), a name given to the second
king of the race of Battus. Some princes have
even had names given them in jest, as Antigonus was
called Doson (the Promiser), and Ptolemy Lathyrus
(the Vetch).
The Romans used this sort of name
much more commonly, as for instance they named one
of the Metelli Diadematus, or wearer of the diadem,
because he walked about for a long time with his head
bound up because of a wound in the forehead.
Another of the same family was named
Celer (the Swift), because of the wonderful quickness
with which he provided a show of gladiators on the
occasion of his father’s funeral. Some even
to the present day derive their names from the circumstances
of their birth, as for instance a child is named Proculus
if his father be abroad when he is born, and Postumus
if he be dead. If one of twins survive, he is
named Vopiscus. Of names taken from bodily peculiarities
they use not only Sulla (the Pimply), Niger (the Swarthy),
Rufus (the Red-haired), but even such as Caecus (the
Blind), and Claudus (the Lame), wisely endeavouring
to accustom men to consider neither blindness nor
any other bodily defect to be any disgrace or matter
of reproach, but to answer to these names as if they
were their own. However, this belongs to a different
branch of study.
XII. When the war was over, the
popular orators renewed the party-quarrels, not that
they had any new cause of complaint or any just grievance
to proceed upon; but the evil result which had necessarily
been produced by their former riotous contests were
now made the ground of attacks on the patricians.
A great part of the country was left unsown and untilled,
while the war gave no opportunities for importation
from other countries. The demagogues, therefore,
seeing that there was no corn in the market, and that
even if there had been any, the people were not able
to buy it, spread malicious accusations against the
rich, saying that they had purposely produced this
famine in order to pay off an old grudge against the
people. At this juncture ambassadors arrived
from the town of Velitrae, who delivered up their city
to the Romans, desiring that they would send some
new inhabitants to people it, as a pestilence had
made such havoc among the citizens that there was
scarcely a tenth part of them remaining alive.
The wiser Romans thought that this
demand of the people of Velitrae would confer a most
seasonable relief on themselves, and would put an
end to their domestic troubles, if they could only
transfer the more violent partizans of the popular
party thither, and so purge the State of its more
disorderly elements. The consuls accordingly chose
out all these men and sent them to colonize Velitrae,
and enrolled the rest for a campaign against the Volsci,
that they might not have leisure for revolutionary
plottings, but that when they were all gathered together,
rich and poor, patrician and plebeian alike, to share
in the common dangers of a camp, they might learn
to regard one another with less hatred and illwill.
XIII. But Sicinnius and Brutus,
the tribunes of the people, now interposed, crying
aloud that the consuls were veiling a most barbarous
action under the specious name of sending out colonists.
They were despatching many poor men to certain destruction
by transporting them to a city whose air was full
of pestilence and the stench from unburied corpses,
where they were to dwell under the auspices of a god
who was not only not their own, but angry with them.
And after that, as if it was not sufficient for them
that some of the citizens should be starved, and others
be exposed to the plague, they must needs plunge wantonly
into war, in order that the city might suffer every
conceivable misery at once, because it had refused
any longer to remain in slavery to the rich.
Excited by these speeches, the people would not enrol
themselves as soldiers for the war, and looked with
suspicion on the proposal for the new colony.
The Senate was greatly perplexed, but Marcius, now
a person of great importance and very highly thought
of in the State, began to place himself in direct
opposition to the popular leaders, and to support
the patrician cause. In spite of the efforts of
the demagogues, a colony was sent out to Velitrae,
those whose names were drawn by lot being compelled
by heavy penalties to go thither; but as the people
utterly refused to serve in the campaign against the
Volscians, Marcius made up a troop of his own clients,
with which and what others he could persuade to join
him he made an inroad into the territory of Antium.
Here he found much corn, and captured many prisoners
and much cattle. He kept none of it for himself,
but returned to Rome with his troops loaded with plunder.
This caused the others to repent of their determination,
when they saw the wealth which these men had obtained,
but it embittered their hatred of Marcius, whom they
regarded as gaining glory for himself at the expense
of the people.
XIV. Shortly after this, however,
Marcius stood for the consulship, and then the people
relented and felt ashamed to affront such a man, first
in arms as in place, and the author of so many benefits
to the State. It was the custom at Rome for those
who were candidates for any office to address and
ingratiate themselves with the people, going about
the Forum in a toga without any tunic underneath it,
either in order to show their humility by such a dress,
or else in order to display the wounds which they
had received, in token of their valour. At that
early period there could be no suspicion of bribery,
and it was not for that reason that the citizens wished
their candidates to come down among them ungirt and
without a tunic. It was not till long afterwards
that votes were bought and sold, and that a candidature
became an affair of money. This habit of receiving
bribes, when once introduced, spread to the courts
of justice and to the armies of the commonwealth,
and finally brought the city under the despotic rule
of the emperors, as the power of arms was not equal
to that of money. For it was well said that he
who first introduced the habit of feasting and bribing
voters ruined the constitution. This plague crept
secretly and silently into Rome, and was for a long
time undiscovered. We cannot tell who was the
first to bribe the people or the courts of law at
Rome. At Athens it is said that the first man
who gave money to the judges for his acquittal was
Anytus the son of Anthemion, when he was tried for
treachery at Pylos towards the end of the Peloponnesian
War, a period when men of uncorrupted simplicity and
virtue were still to be found in the Forum at Rome.
XV. Marcius displayed many scars,
gained in the numerous battles in which for seventeen
years in succession he had always taken a prominent
part. The people were abashed at these evidences
of his valour, and agreed among themselves that they
would return him as consul. But when, on the
day of election, he appeared in the Forum, escorted
by a splendid procession of the entire Senate, and
all the patricians were seen collected round him evidently
intent upon obtaining his election, many of the people
lost their feeling of goodwill towards him, and regarded
him with indignation and envy; which passions were
assisted by their fear lest, if a man of such aristocratic
tendencies and such influence with the patricians
should obtain power, he might altogether destroy the
liberties of the people. For these reasons they
did not elect Marcius. When two persons had been
elected consuls, the Senate was much irritated, considering
that it, rather than its candidate Marcius, had been
insulted, while he was much enraged, and could not
bear his disgrace with any temper or patience, being
accustomed always to yield to the more violent and
ferocious emotions as being the more spirited course,
without any mixture of gravity and self-restraint,
virtues so necessary for political life. He had
never learned how essential it is for one who undertakes
to deal with men, and engage in public business, to
avoid above all things that self-will which, as Plato
says, is of the family of solitude, and to become
longsuffering and patient, qualities which some foolish
people hold very cheap. Marcius, plain and straightforward,
thinking it to be the duty of a brave man to bear down
all opposition, and not reflecting that it is rather
a sign of weakness and feebleness of mind to be unable
to restrain one’s passion, flung away in a rage,
bitterly irritated against the people. The young
aristocracy of Rome, who had ever been his fast friends,
now did him an ill service by encouraging and exasperating
his anger by their expressions of sympathy; for he
was their favourite leader and a most kind instructor
in the art of war when on a campaign, as he taught
them to delight in deeds of prowess without envying
and grudging one another their proper meed of praise.
XVI. While this was the state
of affairs at Rome, a large amount of corn arrived
there, some of which had been bought in Italy, but
most of it sent as a present from Sicily by Gelon
the despot; which gave most men hopes that the famine
would come to an end, and that the quarrel between
the patricians and plebeians would, under these improved
circumstances, be made up. The Senate at once
assembled, and the people eagerly waited outside the
doors of the senate house, expecting and hoping that
prices would be lowered, and that the present of corn
would be distributed gratis among them; and indeed
some of the senators advised the adoption of that
course. Marcius, however, rose and bitterly inveighed
against those who favoured the people, calling them
demagogues and betrayers of their own order, alleging
that by such gratification they did but cherish that
spirit of boldness and arrogance which had been spread
among the people against the patricians, which they
would have done well to crush upon its first appearance,
and not suffer the plebeians to grow so strong by
giving so much power to the tribunes of the people.
Now, he urged, they had become formidable because
every demand they made had been agreed to, and nothing
done against their wishes; they contemned the authority
of the consuls, and lived in defiance of the constitution,
governed only by their own seditious ringleaders, to
whom they gave the title of tribunes. For the
Senate to sit and decree largesses of corn to
the populace, as is done in the most democratic States
in Greece, would merely be to pay them for their disobedience,
to the common ruin of all classes. “They
cannot,” he went on to say, “consider this
largess of corn to be a reward for the campaign in
which they have refused to serve, or for the secession
by which they betrayed their country, or the scandals
which they have been so willing to believe against
the Senate. As they cannot be said to deserve
this bounty, they will imagine that it has been bestowed
upon them by you because you fear them, and wish to
pay your court to them. In this case there will
be no bounds to their insubordination, and they never
will cease from riots and disorders. To give
it them is clearly an insane proceeding; nay, we ought
rather, if we are wise, to take away from them this
privilege of the tribuneship, which is a distinct
subversion of the consulate, and a cause of dissension
in the city, which now is no longer one, as before,
but is rent asunder in such a manner that there is
no prospect of our ever being reunited, and ceasing
to be divided into two hostile factions.”
XVII. With much talk to this
effect Marcius excited the young men, with whom he
was influential, and nearly all the richer classes,
who loudly declared that he was the only man in the
State who was insensible both to force and to flattery.
Some of the elders, however, opposed him, foreseeing
what would be the result of his policy. Indeed,
no good resulted from it. The tribunes of the
people, as soon as they heard that Marcius had carried
his point, rushed down into the forum and called loudly
upon the people to assemble and stand by them.
A disorderly assembly took place, and on a report
being made of Marcius’s speech, the fury of
the people was so great that it was proposed to break
into the senate house; but the tribunes turned all
the blame upon Marcius alone, and sent for him to
come and speak in his own defence. As this demand
was insolently refused, the tribunes themselves, together
with the aediles, went to bring him by force, and
actually laid hands upon him. However, the patricians
rallied round him, thrust away the tribunes of the
people, and even beat the aediles, their assistants
in this quarrel. Night put an end to the conflict,
but at daybreak the consuls, seeing the people terribly
excited, and gathering in the forum from all quarters,
began to fear the consequences of their fury.
They assembled the senators and bade them endeavour,
by mild language and healing measures, to pacify the
multitude, as it was no season for pride or for standing
upon their dignity, but if they were wise they would
perceive that so dangerous and critical a posture
of affairs required a temperate and popular policy.
The majority of the senators yielded, and the consuls
proceeded to soothe the people in the best way they
could, answering gently such charges as had been brought
against them, even speaking with the utmost caution
when blaming the people for their late outrageous
conduct, and declaring that there should be no difference
of opinion between them about the way in which corn
should be supplied, and about the price of provisions.
XVIII. As the people now for
the most part had cooled down, and from their attentive
and orderly demeanour were evidently much wrought upon
by the words of the consuls, the tribunes came forward
and addressed them. They said that now that the
Senate had come to a better frame of mind, the people
would willingly make concessions in their turn; but
they insisted that Marcius should apologise for his
conduct, or deny if he could that he had excited the
Senate to destroy the constitution, that when summoned
to appear he had disobeyed, and that finally he had,
by beating and insulting the aediles in the market-place,
done all that lay in his power to raise a civil war
and make the citizens shed one another’s blood.
Their object in saying this was either to humble Marcius,
by making him entreat the clemency of the people, which
was much against his haughty temper, or else expecting
that he would yield to his fiery nature and make the
breach between himself and the people incurable.
The latter was what they hoped for from their knowledge
of his character.
Marcius came forward to speak in his
defence, and the people stood listening in dead silence.
But when, instead of the apologetic speech which they
expected, he began to speak with a freedom which seemed
more like accusing them than defending himself, while
the tones of his voice and the expression of his countenance
showed a fearless contempt for his audience, the people
became angry, and plainly showed their disapprobation
of what he said. Upon this, Sicinnius, the boldest
of the tribunes, after a short consultation with his
colleagues, came forward and said that the tribunes
had condemned Marcius to suffer the penalty of death,
and ordered the aediles to lead him at once to the
Capitol, and cast him down the Tarpeian rock.
When the aediles laid hold of him, many of the people
themselves seemed struck with horror and remorse, and
the patricians in the wildest excitement, called upon
one another to rescue him, and by main force tore
him from his assailants and placed him in the midst
of themselves. Some of them held out their hands
and besought the populace by signs, as no voice could
be heard in such an uproar. At last the friends
and relations of the tribunes, seeing that it was
impossible to carry out their sentence on Marcius without
much bloodshed, persuaded them to alter the cruel
and unprecedented part of the sentence, and not to
put him to death by violence, or without a trial,
but to refer the matter to the people, to be voted
upon by them. Upon this Sicinnius, turning to
the patricians, demanded what they meant by rescuing
Marcius from the people when they intended to punish
him. They at once retorted, “Nay, what
do you mean by dragging one of the bravest and best
men in Rome to a cruel and illegal death?” “You
shall not,” answered Sicinnius, “make
that a ground of quarrel with the people, for we allow
you what you demand, that this man be put on his trial.
You, Marcius, we summon to appear in the forum on the
third market-day ensuing, and prove your innocence
if you can, as the votes of your countrymen will be
then taken about your conduct.”
XIX. The patricians were glad
enough to terminate the affair in this way, and retired
rejoicing, bearing Marcius with them. During the
time which was to elapse before the third market-day
(which the Romans hold on every ninth day, and therefore
call them nundinae), they had some hope that
a campaign against the people of Antium would enable
them to put off the trial until the people’s
anger had abated through length of time and warlike
occupations; afterwards, as they came to terms at once
with the Antiates, the patricians held frequent meetings,
in which they expressed their fear of the people,
and considered by what means they could avoid delivering
Marcius up to them, and prevent their mob orators
from exciting them. Appius Claudius, who had the
reputation of being the bitterest enemy of the people
in Rome, gave it as his opinion that the Senate would
destroy itself and ruin the State utterly if it permitted
the people to assume the power of trying patricians
and voting on their trials; while the older men, and
those who were more inclined to the popular side,
thought that this power would render the people gentle
and temperate, and not savage and cruel. The
people, they said, did not despise the Senate, but
imagined that they were despised by it, so that this
privilege of holding the trial would agreeably salve
their wounded vanity, and, as they exercised their
franchise, they would lay aside their anger.
XX. Marcius, perceiving that
the Senate, divided between their regard for himself
and their fear of the people, knew not what to do,
himself asked the tribunes of the people what it was
that he was charged with, and what indictment they
intended to bring against him at his trial. When
they answered that the charge against him was one of
treason, because he had attempted to make himself
absolute despot in Rome, and that they would prove
it, he at once rose, saying that he would at once
defend himself before the people on that score, and
that if he were convicted, he would not refuse to
undergo any punishment whatever; “Only,”
said he, “do not bring forward some other charge
against me, and deceive the Senate.” When
they had agreed upon these conditions, the trial took
place.
The tribunes, however, when the people
assembled, made them vote by tribes, and not by centuries;
by which device the votes of rich respectable men
who had served the State in the wars would be swamped
by those of the needy rabble who cared nothing for
truth or honour. In the next place, they passed
by the charge of treason, as being impossible to prove,
and repeated what Marcius had originally said before
the Senate, when he dissuaded them from lowering the
price of corn, and advised the abolition of the office
of tribune. A new count in the indictment was
that he had not paid over the money raised by the sale
of the plunder after his expedition against Antium,
but had divided it among his own followers. This
last accusation is said to have disturbed Marcius more
than all the rest, as he had never expected it, and
was not prepared with any answer that would satisfy
the people, so that the praises which he bestowed
on those who had made that campaign with him only angered
the far greater number who had not done so. At
last the people voted. Marcius was condemned
by a majority of the tribes, and was sentenced to
perpetual banishment. After sentence was passed,
the people displayed greater joy than if they had
won a pitched battle, while the Senate was downcast
and filled with regret at not having run any risks
rather than allow the people to obtain so much power,
and use it so insolently. Nor was there any need
for distinctions of dress or anything else to distinguish
the two parties, because a plebeian might be told at
once by his delight, a patrician by his sorrow.
XXI. Marcius himself, however,
remained unmoved. Proud and haughty as ever,
he appeared not to be sorry for himself, and to be
the only one of the patricians who was not. This
calmness, however, was not due to any evenness of
temper or any intention of bearing his wrongs meekly.
It arose from concentrated rage and fury, which many
do not know to be an expression of great grief.
When the mind is inflamed with this passion, it casts
out all ideas of submission or of quiet. Hence
an angry man is courageous, just as a fever patient
is hot, because of the inflamed throbbing excitement
of his mind. And Marcius soon showed that this
was his own condition. He went home, embraced
his weeping wife and mother, bade them bear this calamity
with patience, and at once proceeded to the city gates,
escorted by the patricians in a body. Thence,
taking nothing with him, and asking no man for any
thing, he went off, accompanied by three or four of
his clients. He remained for a few days at some
farms near the city, agitated deeply by conflicting
passions. His anger suggested no scheme by which
he might benefit himself, but only how to revenge
himself on the Romans. At length he decided that
he would raise up a cruel war against them, and proceeded
at once to make application to the neighbouring nation
of the Volscians, whom he knew to be rich and powerful,
and only to have suffered sufficiently by their late
defeats to make them desirous of renewing their quarrel
with Rome.
XXII. There was a certain citizen
of Antium named Tullus Aufidius, who, from his wealth,
courage, and noble birth, was regarded as the most
important man in the whole Volscian nation. Marcius
knew that this man hated him more than any other Roman;
for in battle they had often met, and by challenging
and defying one another, as young warriors are wont
to do, they had, in addition to their national antipathy,
gained a violent personal hatred for one another.
In spite of this, however, knowing the generous nature
of Tullus, and longing more than any Volscian to requite
the Romans for their treatment, he justified the verses,
“’Tis hard to
strive with rage, which aye,
Though life’s the forfeit,
gains its way.”
He disguised himself as completely
as he could, and, like Ulysses,
“Into the city of his
foes he came.”
XXIII. It was evening when he
entered Antium, and although many met him, no one
recognised him. He went to Tullus’s house,
and entering, sat down by the hearth in silence, with
his head wrapped in his cloak. The domestics,
astonished at his behaviour, did not dare to disturb
him, as there was a certain dignity about his appearance
and his silence, but went and told Tullus, who was
at supper, of this strange incident. Tullus rose,
went to him, and inquired who he was and what he wanted.
Then at length Marcius uncovered his face, and, after
a short pause, said, “If you do not recognise
me, Tullus, or if you do not believe your eyes, I
must myself tell you who I am. I am Caius Marcius,
who has wrought you and the Volscians more mischief
than any one else, and who, lest I should deny this,
have received the additional title of Coriolanus.
This I cannot lose: every thing else has been
taken from me by the envious spite of the people,
and the treacherous remissness of the upper classes.
I am an exile, and I now sit as a suppliant on your
hearth, begging you, not for safety or protection,
for should I have come hither if I feared to die,
but for vengeance against those who drove me forth,
which I am already beginning to receive by putting
myself in your hands. If then, my brave Tullus,
you wish to attack your foes, make use of my misfortunes,
and let my disgrace be the common happiness of all
the Volscians. I shall fight for you much better
than I have fought against you, because I have the
advantage of knowing exactly the strength and weakness
of the enemy. If, however, you are tired of war,
I have no wish for life, nor is it to your credit to
save the life of one who once was your personal enemy,
and who now is worn out and useless.” Tullus
was greatly delighted with this speech, and giving
him his right hand, answered, “Rise, Marcius,
and be of good courage. You have brought us a
noble present, yourself; rest assured that the Volscians
will not be ungrateful.” He then feasted
Marcius with great hospitality, and for some days
they conferred together as to the best method of carrying
on the war.
XXIV. Rome meanwhile was disturbed
by the anger of the patricians towards the plebeians,
especially on account of the banishment of Marcius,
and by many portents which were observed both by the
priests and by private persons, one of which was as
follows. There was one Titus Latinus,
a man of no great note, but a respectable citizen and
by no means addicted to superstition. He dreamed
that he saw Jupiter face to face, and that the god
bade him tell the Senate that “they had sent
a bad dancer before his procession, and one who was
very displeasing to him.”
On first seeing this vision he said
that he disregarded it; but after it had occurred
a second and a third time he had the unhappiness to
see his son sicken and die, while he himself suddenly
lost the use of his limbs.
He told this story in the senate house,
to which he had been carried on a litter; and as soon
as he had told it, he found his bodily strength return,
rose, and walked home.
The senators, greatly astonished,
inquired into the matter. It was found that a
slave, convicted of some crime, had been ordered by
his master to be flogged through the market-place,
and then put to death. While this was being done,
and the wretch was twisting his body in every kind
of contortion as he writhed under the blows, the procession
by chance was following after him. Many of those
who walked in it were shocked at the unseemliness
of the spectacle, and disgusted at its inhumanity,
but no one did anything more than reproach and execrate
a man who treated his slaves with so much cruelty.
At that period men treated their slaves
with great kindness, because the master himself worked
and ate in their company, and so could sympathise
more with them. The great punishment for a slave
who had done wrong was to make him carry round the
neighbourhood the piece of wood on which the pole
of a waggon is rested. The slave who has done
this and been seen by the neighbours and friends,
lost his credit, and was called furcifer, for
the Romans call that piece of timber furca,
“a fork,” which the Greeks call hypostates,
“a supporter.”
XXV. So when Latinus related
his dream to the senators, and they were wondering
who the bad and unacceptable dancer could be who had
led the procession, some of them remembered the slave
who had been flogged through the market-place and
there put to death. At the instance of the priests,
the master of the slave was punished for his cruelty,
and the procession and ceremonies were performed anew
in honour of the gods. Hence we may see how wisely
Numa arranged this, among other matters of ceremonial.
Whenever the magistrates or priests were engaged in
any religious rite, a herald walked before them crying
in a loud voice “Hoc age.”
The meaning of the phrase is, “Do this,”
meaning to tell the people to apply their minds entirely
to the religious ceremony, and not to allow any thought
of worldly things to distract their attention, because
men as a rule only attend to such matters by putting
a certain constraint on their thoughts.
It is the custom in Rome to begin
a sacrifice, a procession, or a spectacle, over again,
not only when anything of this kind happens, but for
any trifling reason. Thus, if one of the horses
drawing the sacred car called Thensa stumbles, or
the charioteer takes the reins in his left hand, they
have decreed that the procession must begin again.
In later times they have been known to perform one
sacrifice thirty times, because every time some slight
omission or mistake took place.
XXVI. Meanwhile Marcius and Tullus
in Antium held private conferences with the chief
men of the Volscians, and advised them to begin the
war while Rome was divided by its domestic quarrels.
They discountenanced this proposal, because a truce
and cessation of hostilities for two years had been
agreed upon: but the Romans themselves gave them
a pretext for breaking the truce, by a proclamation
which was made at the public games, that all Volscians
should quit the city before sunset. Some say
this was effected by a stratagem of Marcius, who sent
a false accusation against the Volscians to the magistrates
at Rome, saying that during the public games they
meant to attack the Romans and burn the city.
This proclamation made them yet bitterer enemies to
the Romans than before; and Tullus, wishing to bring
the business to a climax, induced his countrymen to
send ambassadors to Rome to demand back the cities
and territory which the Romans had taken from the Volscians
in the late war. The Romans were very indignant
when they heard these demands, and made answer, that
the Volscians might be the first to take up arms,
but that the Romans would be the last to lay them down.
Upon this, Tullus convoked a general assembly, in
which, after determining upon war, he advised them
to summon Marcius to their aid, not owing him any
grudge for what they had suffered at his hands, but
believing that he would be more valuable to them as
a friend than he had been dangerous as an enemy.
XXVII. Marcius was called before
the assembly, and having addressed the people, was
thought by them to know how to speak as well as how
to fight, and was considered to be a man of great
ability and courage. He, together with Tullus,
was nominated general with unlimited powers. As
he feared the Volscians would take a long time to
prepare for the war, and that meanwhile the opportunity
for attack might pass away, he ordered the leading
men in the city to make all necessary preparations,
and himself taking the boldest and most forward as
volunteers, without levying any troops by compulsory
conscription, made a sudden and unexpected inroad
into the Roman territory. Here he obtained so
much plunder that the Volscians were wearied with
carrying it off and consuming it in their camp.
However, his least object was to obtain plunder and
lay waste the country; his main desire was to render
the patricians suspected by the people. While
all else was ravaged and destroyed, he carefully protected
their farms, and would not allow any damage to be
done or anything to be carried off from them.
This increased the disorders at Rome, the patricians
reproaching the people for having unjustly banished
so able a man, while the plebeians accused them of
having invited Marcius to attack in order to obtain
their revenge, and said that, while others fought,
they sat as idle spectators, having in the war itself
a sure safeguard of their wealth and estates.
Having produced this new quarrel among the Romans,
and, besides loading the Volscians with plunder, having
taught them to despise their enemy, Marcius led his
troops back in safety.
XXVIII. By great and zealous
exertions the entire Volscian nation was soon assembled
under arms. The force thus raised was very large;
part was left to garrison the cities, as a measure
of precaution, while the rest was to be used in the
campaign against Rome. Marcius now left Tullus
to determine which corps he would command. Tullus,
in answer, said that as Marcius, he knew, was as brave
a man as himself, and had always enjoyed better fortune
in all his battles, he had better command the army
in the field. He himself, he added, would remain
behind, watch over the safety of the Volscian cities,
and supply the troops with necessaries. Marcius,
strengthened by this division of the command, marched
to the town of Circeii, a Roman colony. As it
surrendered, he did it no harm, but laid waste the
country of Latium, where he expected the Romans would
fight a battle in defence of their allies the Latins,
who frequently sent to entreat their protection.
But at Rome the people were unwilling to fight, and
the consuls were just at the expiry of their term
of office, so that they did not care to run any risks,
and therefore rejected the appeals of the Latins.
Marcius now led his troops against the Latian cities,
Tolerium, Labici, Pedum, and Bola, all of which
he took by storm, sold the inhabitants for slaves,
and plundered the houses. Those cities, however,
which voluntarily came to his side he treated with
the utmost consideration, even pitching his camp at
a distance, for fear they might be injured by the
soldiery against his will, and never plundering their
territory.
XXIX. When at last he took Bollae,
a town not more than twelve miles from Rome, obtaining
immense booty and putting nearly all the adult inhabitants
to the sword, then not even those Volscians who had
been appointed to garrison the cities would any longer
remain at their posts, but seized their arms and joined
the army of Marcius, declaring that he was their only
general, and that they would recognise no other leader.
His renown and glory spread throughout all Italy, and
all men were astonished that one man by changing sides
should have produced so great a change. The affairs
of Rome were in the last disorder, the people refusing
to fight, while internal quarrels and seditious speeches
took place daily, until news came that Lavinium was
being invested by the enemy. This town contains
the most ancient images and sacred things of the tutelary
deities of Rome, and is the origin of the Roman people,
being the first town founded by Aeneas.
Upon this a very singular change of
opinions befel both the people and the Senate.
The people were eager to annul their sentence against
Marcius, and to beg him to return, but the Senate,
after meeting and considering this proposal, finally
rejected it, either out of a mere spirit of opposition
to anything proposed by the people, or because they
did not wish him to return by favour of the people;
or it may be because they themselves were now angry
with him for having shown himself the enemy of all
classes alike, although he had only been injured by
one, and for having become the avowed enemy of his
country, in which he knew that the best and noblest
all sympathised with him, and had suffered along with
him. When this resolution was made known to the
people, they were unable to proceed to vote or to
pass any bill on the subject, without a previous decree
of the Senate.
XXX. Marcius when he heard of
this was more exasperated than ever. He raised
his siege of Lavinium, marched straight upon Rome,
and pitched his camp five miles from the city, at
the place called Fossae Cluiliae. The
appearance of his army caused much terror and disturbance,
but nevertheless put an end to sedition, for no magistrate
or patrician dared any longer oppose the people’s
desire to recall him. When they beheld the women
running distractedly through the city, the old men
weeping and praying at the altars, and no one able
to take courage and form any plan of defence, it was
agreed that the people had been right in wishing to
come to terms with Marcius, and that the Senate had
committed a fatal error in inflicting a new outrage
upon him, just at the time when all unkindness might
have been buried. It was determined, therefore,
by the whole city that an embassy should be despatched
to Marcius, to offer him restoration to his own country,
and to beg of him to make peace. Those of the
Senate who were sent were relations of Marcius, and
expected to be warmly welcomed by a man who was their
near relation and personal friend. Nothing of
the kind, however, happened. They were conducted
through the enemy’s camp, and found him seated,
and displaying insufferable pride and arrogance, with
the chiefs of the Volscians standing round him.
He bade the ambassadors deliver their message; and
after they had, in a supplicatory fashion, pronounced
a conciliatory oration, he answered them, dwelling
with bitterness on his own unjust treatment; and then
in his capacity of general-in-chief of the Volscians,
he bade them restore the cities and territory which
they had conquered in the late war, and to grant the
franchise to the Volscians on the same terms as enjoyed
by the Latins. These, he said, were the only
conditions on which a just and lasting peace could
be made. He allowed them a space of thirty days
for deliberation, and on the departure of the ambassadors
immediately drew off his forces.
XXXI. This affair gave an opportunity
to several of the Volscians, who had long envied and
disliked his reputation, and the influence which he
had with the people. Among these was Tullus himself,
who had not been personally wronged by Marcius, but
who, as it is natural he should, felt vexed at being
totally eclipsed and thrown into the shade, for the
Volscians now thought Marcius the greatest man in their
whole nation, and considered that any one else ought
to be thankful for any measure of authority that he
might think fit to bestow. Hence secret hints
were exchanged, and private meetings held, in which
his enemies expressed their dissatisfaction, calling
the retreat from Rome an act of treason, not indeed
that he had betrayed any cities or armies to the enemy,
but he had granted them time, by which all other things
are won and lost. He had given the enemy a breathing
time, they said, of thirty days, being no less than
they required to put themselves in a posture of defence.
Marcius during this time was not idle,
for he attacked and defeated the allies of the Romans,
and captured seven large and populous towns. The
Romans did not venture to come to help their allies,
but hung back from taking the field, and seemed as
if paralysed and benumbed. When the term had
expired, Marcius presented himself a second time before
Rome, with his entire army. The Romans now sent
a second embassy, begging him to lay aside his anger,
withdraw the Volscians from the country, and then
to make such terms as would be for the advantage of
both nations. The Romans, they said, would yield
nothing to fear; but if he thought that special concessions
ought to be made to the Volscians, they would be duly
considered if they laid down their arms. To this
Marcius answered that, as general of the Volscians,
he could give them no answer; but that as one who
was still a citizen of Rome he would advise them to
adopt a humbler frame of mind, and come to him in three
days with a ratification of his proposals. If
they should come to any other determination, he warned
them that it would not be safe for them to come to
his camp again with empty words.
XXXII. When the ambassadors returned,
and the Senate heard their report, they determined
in this dreadful extremity to let go their sheet anchor.
They ordered all the priests, ministers, and guardians
of the sacred mysteries, and all the hereditary prophets
who watched the omens given by the flight of birds,
to go in procession to Marcius, dressed in their sacred
vestments, and beseech him to desist from the war,
and then to negotiate conditions of peace between
his countrymen and the Volscians. Marcius received
the priests in his camp, but relaxed nothing of his
former harshness, bidding the Romans either accept
his proposals or continue the war.
When the priests returned, the Romans
resolved in future to remain within the city, repulse
any assault which might be made on the walls, and
trust to time and fortune, as it was evident that they
could not be saved by anything that they could do.
The city was full of confusion, excitement, and panic
terror, until there happened something like what is
mentioned in Homer, but which men as a rule are unwilling
to believe. He observes that on great and important
occasions
“Athene placed
a thought within his mind;”
and again
“But some one of th’
immortals changed my mind,
And made me think of what
the folk would say;”
and
“Because he thought
it, or because the god
Commanded him to do so.”
Men despise the poet, as if, in order
to carry out his absurd mythological scheme, he denied
each man his liberty of will. Now Homer does
nothing of this kind, for whatever is reasonable and
likely he ascribes to the exercise of our own powers,
as we see in the common phrase
“But I reflected in my mighty
soul;”
and
“Thus spoke he, but the son
of Peleus raged,
Divided was his soul within his breast;”
and again
“But
she persuaded not
The wise Bellerophon, of noble
mind.”
But in strange and unlikely actions,
where the actors must have been under the influence
of some supernatural impulse, he does speak of the
god not as destroying, but as directing the human will;
nor does the god directly produce any decision, but
suggests ideas which influence that decision.
Thus the act is not an involuntary one, but opportunity
is given for a voluntary act, with confidence and
good hope superadded. For either we must admit
that the gods have no dealings and influence at all
with men, or else it must be in this way that they
act when they assist and strengthen us, not of course
by moving our hands and feet, but by filling our minds
with thoughts and ideas which either encourage us to
do what is right, or restrain us from what is wrong.
XXXIII. At Rome at this time
the women were praying in all the temples, especially
in that of Jupiter in the Capitol, where the noblest
ladies in Rome were assembled. Among them was
Valeria, the sister of the great Poplicola, who had
done such great services to the State both in peace
and war. Poplicola died some time before, as has
been related in his Life, but his sister was held
in great honour and esteem in Rome, as her life did
credit to her noble birth. She now experienced
one of the divine impulses of which I have spoken,
and, inspired by Heaven to do what was best for her
country, rose and called on the other ladies to accompany
her to the house of Volumnia, the mother of Marcius.
On entering, and finding her sitting with her daughter-in-law,
nursing the children of Marcius, Valeria placed her
companions in a circle round them, and spoke as follows:
“Volumnia, and you, Virgilia, we have come to
you, as women to women, without any decree of the Senate
or instructions from a magistrate; but Heaven, it
would appear, has heard our prayers, and has inspired
us with the idea of coming hither to beg of you to
save our countrymen, and to gain for yourselves greater
glory than that of the Sabine women when they reconciled
their husbands and their fathers. Come with us
to Marcius, join us in supplicating him for mercy,
and bear an honourable testimony to your country, that
it never has thought of hurting you, however terribly
it has been injured by Marcius, but that it restores
you to him uninjured, although possibly it will gain
no better terms by so doing.” When Valeria
had spoken thus, the other women applauded, and Volumnia
answered in the following words: “My friends,
besides those sufferings which all are now undergoing,
we are especially to be pitied. We have lost
the glory and goodness of our Marcius, and now see
him more imprisoned in than protected by the army
of the enemy. But the greatest misfortune of all
is that our country should have become so weak as
to be obliged to rest its hopes of safety on us.
I cannot tell if he will pay any attention to us, seeing
that he has treated his native country with scorn,
although he used to love it better than his mother,
his wife, and his children. However, take us,
and make what use of us you can. Lead us into
his presence, and there, if we can do nothing else,
we can die at his feet supplicating for Rome.”
XXXIV. Having spoken thus, she
took Virgilia and her children, and proceeded, in
company with the other women, to the Volscian camp.
Their piteous appearance produced, even in their enemies,
a silent respect. Marcius himself was seated
on his tribunal with the chief officers; and when
he saw the procession of women was at first filled
with amazement; but when he recognised his mother
walking first, although he tried to support his usual
stern composure, he was overcome by his emotion.
He could not bear to receive her sitting, but descended
and ran to meet her. He embraced his mother first,
and longest of all; and then his wife and children,
no longer restraining his tears and caresses, but
completely carried away by his feelings.
XXXV. When he had taken his fill
of embraces, perceiving that his mother desired to
address him, he called the chiefs of the Volscians
together, and listened to Volumnia, who addressed
him as follows:
“You may judge, my son, by our
dress and appearance, even though we keep silence,
to what a miserable condition your exile has reduced
us at home. Think now, how unhappy we must be,
beyond all other women, when fortune has made the
sight which ought to be most pleasing to us, most
terrible, when I see my son, and your wife here sees
her husband, besieging his native city. Even
that which consoles people under all other misfortunes,
prayer to the gods, has become impossible for us.
We cannot beg of heaven to give us the victory and
to save you, but our prayers for you must always resemble
the imprecations of our enemies against Rome.
Your wife and children are in such a position, that
they must either lose you or lose their native country.
For my own part, I cannot bear to live until fortune
decides the event of this war. If I cannot now
persuade you to make a lasting peace, and so become
the benefactor instead of the scourge of the two nations,
be well assured that you shall never assail Rome without
first passing over the corpse of your mother.
I cannot wait for that day on which I shall either
see my countrymen triumphing over my son, or my son
triumphing over his country. If indeed I were
to ask you to betray the Volscians and save your country,
this would be a hard request for you to grant; for
though it is base to destroy one’s own fellow
citizens, it is equally wrong to betray those who
have trusted you. But we merely ask for a respite
from our sufferings, which will save both nations
alike from ruin, and which will be all the more glorious
for the Volscians because their superiority in the
field has put them in a position to grant us the greatest
of blessings, peace and concord, in which they also
will share alike with us. You will be chiefly
to be thanked for these blessings, if we obtain them,
and chiefly to be blamed if we do not. For though
the issue of war is always doubtful, this much is
evident, that if you succeed, you will become your
country’s evil genius, and if you fail, you
will have inflicted the greatest miseries on men who
are your friends and benefactors, merely in order
to gratify your own private spite.”
XXXVI. While Volumnia spoke thus,
Marcius listened to her in silence. After she
had ceased, he stood for a long while without speaking,
until she again addressed him. “Why art
thou silent, my son? Is it honourable to make
everything give way to your rancorous hatred, and is
it a disgrace to yield to your mother, when she pleads
for such important matters? Does it become a
great man to remember that he has been ill treated,
and does it not rather become him to recollect the
debt which children owe to their parents. And
yet no one ought to be more grateful than you yourself,
who punish ingratitude so bitterly: in spite of
which, though you have already taken a deep revenge
on your country for its ill treatment of you, you
have not made your mother any return for her kindness.
It would have been right for me to gain my point without
any pressure, when pleading in such a just and honourable
cause; but if I cannot prevail by words, this resource
alone is left me.” Saying this, she fell
at his feet, together with his wife and children.
Marcius, crying out, “What have you done to
me, mother?” raised her from the ground, and
pressing her hand violently, exclaimed, “You
have conquered; your victory is a blessed one for
Rome, but ruinous to me, for I shall retreat conquered
by you alone.” After speaking thus, and
conferring for a short time in private with his mother
and his wife, he at their own request sent them back
to Rome, and the following night led away the Volscian
army. Various opinions were current among the
Volscians about what had taken place. Some blamed
him severely, while others approved, because they
wished for peace. Others again, though they disliked
what he had done, yet did not regard him as a traitor,
but as a soft-hearted man who had yielded to overwhelming
pressure. However, no one disobeyed him, but
all followed him in his retreat, though more out of
regard for his noble character than for his authority.
XXXVII. The Roman people, when
the war was at an end, showed even more plainly than
before what terror and despair they had been in.
As soon as they saw the Volscians retreating from
their walls, all the temples were opened, and filled
with worshippers crowned with garlands and sacrificing
as if for a victory. The joy of the senate and
people was most conspicuously shown in their gratitude
to the women, whom they spoke of as having beyond
all doubt saved Rome. The senate decreed that
the magistrates should grant to the women any mark
of respect and esteem which they themselves might
choose. The women decided on the building of
the temple of Female Fortune, the expenses of which
they themselves offered to subscribe, only asking
the state to undertake the maintenance of the services
in it. The senate praised their public spirit,
but ordered the temple and shrine to be built at the
public expense. Nevertheless, the women with
their own money provided a second image of the goddess,
which the Romans say, when it was placed in the temple
was heard to say,
“A pleasing gift
have women placed me here.”
XXXVIII. The legend says that
this voice was twice heard, which seems impossible
and hard for us to believe. It is not impossible
for statues to sweat, to shed tears, or to be covered
with spots of blood, because wood and stone often
when mouldering or decaying, collect moisture within
them, and not only send it forth with many colours
derived from their own substance, but also receive
other colours from the air; and there is nothing that
forbids us to believe that by such appearances as
these heaven may foreshadow the future. It is
also possible that statues should make sounds like
moaning or sighing, by the tearing asunder of the
particles of which they are composed; but that articulate
human speech should come from inanimate things is
altogether impossible, for neither the human soul,
nor even a god can utter words without a body fitted
with the organs of speech. Whenever therefore
we find many credible witnesses who force us to believe
something of this kind, we must suppose that the imagination
was influenced by some sensation which appeared to
resemble a real one, just as in dreams we seem to hear
when we hear not, and to see when we see not.
Those persons, however, who are full of religious
fervour and love of the gods, and who refuse to disbelieve
or reject anything of this kind, find in its miraculous
character, and in the fact that the ways of God are
not as our ways, a great support to their faith.
For He resembles mankind in nothing, neither in nature,
nor movement, nor learning, nor power, and so it is
not to be wondered at if He does what seems to us impossible.
Nay, though He differs from us in every respect, it
is in his works that He is most unlike us. But,
as Herakleitus says, our knowledge of things divine
mostly fails for want of faith.
XXXIX. When Marcius returned
to Antium, Tullus, who had long hated him and envied
his superiority, determined to put him to death, thinking
that if he let slip the present opportunity he should
not obtain another. Having suborned many to bear
witness against him, he called upon him publicly to
render an account to the Volscians of what he had
done as their general. Marcius, fearing to be
reduced to a private station while his enemy Tullus,
who had great influence with his countrymen, was general,
answered that he had been given his office of commander-in-chief
by the Volscian nation, and to them alone would he
surrender it, but that as to an account of what he
had done, he was ready at that moment, if they chose,
to render it to the people of Antium. Accordingly
the people assembled, and the popular orators endeavoured
by their speeches to excite the lower classes against
Marcius. When, however, he rose to speak, the
mob were awed to silence, while the nobility, and
those who had gained by the peace, made no secret
of their good will towards him, and of their intention
to vote in his favour. Under these circumstances,
Tullus was unwilling to let him speak, for he was
a brilliant orator, and his former services far outweighed
his last offence. Indeed, the whole indictment
was a proof of how much they owed him, for they never
could have thought themselves wronged by not taking
Rome, if Marcius had not brought them so near to taking
it. Tullus, therefore, thought that it would not
do to wait, or to trust to the mob, but he and the
boldest of his accomplices, crying out that the Volscians
could not listen to the traitor, nor endure him to
play the despot over them by not laying down his command,
rushed upon him in a body and killed him, without
any of the bystanders interfering in his behalf.
However, the most part of the nation was displeased
at this act, as was soon proved by the numbers who
came from every city to see his dead body, by the
splendid funeral with which he was honoured, and by
the arms and trophies which were hung over his tomb,
as that of a brave man and a consummate general.
The Romans, when they heard of his
death, made no sign of either honour or anger towards
him, except that they gave permission to the women,
at their request, to wear mourning for him for ten
months, as if they were each mourning for her father,
her brother, or her son. This was the extreme
limit of the period of mourning, which was fixed by
Numa Pompilius, as has been related in his Life.
The loss of Marcius was at once felt
by the Volscians. First of all, they quarrelled
with the Aequi, their friends and allies, and
even came to blows with them; next, they were defeated
by the Romans in a battle in which Tullus was slain,
and the flower of the Volscian army perished.
After this disaster they were glad to surrender at
discretion, and become the subjects of Rome.