Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 2.1 | Liv. 2.2 (Latin) | >>Liv. 2.3 |
ch. 22.2He next gave his attention to the affairs of religion.
Certain public functions had hitherto been executed by the
kings in person; with the view of supplying their place a
king for sacrifices was created, [Note] and lest he should become
king in anything more than name, and so threaten that liberty
which was their first care, his office was made subordinate
to the Pontifex Maximus. I think that they went to
unreasonable lengths in devising safeguards for their
liberty, in all, even the smallest points. The second
consul—L. Tarquinius Collatinus
—bore an unpopular name—this was his sole offence—and men
said that the Tarquins had been too long in power. They began
with Priscus; then Servius Tullius reigned, and Superbus
Tarquinius, who even after this interruption had not lost sight
of the throne which another filled, regained it by crime and
violence as the hereditary possession of his house. And now
that he was expelled, their power was being wielded by
Collatinus; the Tarquins did not know how to live in a
private station, the very name was a danger to liberty. What
were at first whispered hints became the common talk of the
City, and as the people were becoming suspicious and alarmed,
Brutus summoned an assembly. He first of all rehearsed the
people's oath, that they would suffer no man to reign or to
live in
At first the consul was struck dumb with astonishment at this extraordinary request; then, when he was beginning to speak, the foremost men in the commonwealth gathered round him and repeatedly urged the same plea, but with little success. It was not till Spurius Lucretius, his superior in age and rank, and also his father-in-law, began to use every method of entreaty and persuasion that he yielded to the universal wish. The consul, fearing lest after his year of office had expired and he returned to private life, the same demand should be made upon him, accompanied with loss of property and the ignominy of banishment, formally laid down the consulship, and after transferring all his effects to Lanuvium, withdrew from the State. A decree of the senate empowered Brutus to propose to the people a measure exiling all the members of the house of Tarquin. He conducted the election of a new consul, and the centuries elected as his colleague Publius Valerius, who had acted with him in the expulsion of the royal family.
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 2.1 | Liv. 2.2 (Latin) | >>Liv. 2.3 |