Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
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ch. 412.41 [Note]For the next year Sp. Cassius and Proculus Verginius were elected consuls. A treaty was concluded with the Hernici, two-thirds of their territory was taken from them. Of this Cassius intended to give half to the Latins and half to the Roman plebs. He contemplated adding to this a quantity of land which, he alleged, though State land, was occupied by private individuals. This alarmed many of the patricians, the actual occupiers, as endangering the security of their property. On public grounds, too, they felt anxious, as they considered that by this largess the consul was building up a power dangerous to liberty. Then for the first time an Agrarian Law was proposed, and never, from that day to the times within our own memory, has one been mooted without the most tremendous commotions.
The other consul resisted the proposed grant. In this he was supported by the senate, whilst the plebs was far from unanimous in its favour. They were beginning to look askance at a boon so cheap as to be shared between citizens and allies, and they often heard the consul Verginius in his public speeches predicting that his colleague's gift was fraught with mischief, the land in question would bring slavery on those who took it, the way was being prepared for a throne. Why were the allies, he asked, and the Latin league included? What necessity was there for a third part of the territory of the Hernici, so lately our foes, being restored to them, unless it was that these nations might have Cassius as their leader in place of Coriolanus?
The opponent of the Agrarian Law began to be popular. Then
both consuls tried who could go furthest in humouring the
plebs. Verginius said that he would consent to the assignment
of the lands provided they were assigned to none but Roman
citizens. Cassius had courted popularity amongst the allies
by including them in the distribution and had thereby sunk
in the estimation of his fellow-citizens. To recover their
favour he gave orders for the money which had been received
for the corn from
It is generally asserted that immediately upon his vacating
office he was condemned and put to death. Some assert that
his own father was the author of his punishment, that he
tried him privately at home, and after scourging him put him
to death and devoted his private property to
Livy, ab Urbe Condita (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Liv.]. | ||
<<Liv. 2.40 | Liv. 2.41 (Latin) | >>Liv. 2.42 |