Soon afterwards Curtius Rufus obtained the same honour. He had
opened mines in the territory of the Mattiaci for working certain veins
of silver. The produce was small and soon exhausted. The toil meanwhile
of the legions was only to a loss, while they dug channels for water and
constructed below the surface works which are difficult enough in the open
air. Worn out by the labour, and knowing that similar hardships were endured
in several provinces, the soldiers wrote a secret despatch in the name
of the armies, begging the emperor to give in advance triumphal distinctions
to one to whom he was about to entrust his forces.
Of the birth of Curtius Rufus, whom some affirm to have been the
son of a gladiator, I would not publish a falsehood, while I shrink from
telling the truth. On reaching manhood he attached himself to a quaestor
to whom Africa had been allotted, and was walking alone at midday in some
unfrequented arcade in the town of Adrumetum, when he saw a female figure
of more than human stature, and heard a voice, "Thou, Rufus, art the man
who will one day come into this province as proconsul." Raised high in
hope by such a presage, he returned to Rome, where, through the lavish
expenditure of his friends and his own vigorous ability, he obtained the
quaestorship, and, subsequently, in competition with well-born candidates,
the praetorship, by the vote of the emperor Tiberius, who threw a veil
over the discredit of his origin, saying, "Curtius Rufus seems to me to
be his own ancestor." Afterwards, throughout a long old age of surly sycophancy
to those above him, of arrogance to those beneath him, and of moroseness
among his equals, he gained the high office of the consulship, triumphal
distinctions, and, at last, the province of Africa. There he died, and
so fulfilled the presage of his destiny.
At Rome meanwhile, without any motive then known or subsequently
ascertained, Cneius Nonius, a Roman knight, was found wearing a sword amid
a crowd who were paying their respects to the emperor. The man confessed
his own guilt when he was being torn in pieces by torture, but gave up
no accomplices, perhaps having none to hide.
During the same consulship, Publius Dolabella proposed that a spectacle
of gladiators should be annually exhibited at the cost of those who obtained
the quaestorship. In our ancestors' days this honour had been a reward
of virtue, and every citizen, with good qualities to support him, was allowed
to compete for office. At first there were no distinctions even of age,
which prevented a man in his early youth from becoming a consul or a dictator.
The quaestors indeed were appointed while the kings still ruled, and this
the revival by Brutus of the lex curiata plainly shows. The consuls retained
the power of selecting them, till the people bestowed this office as well
as others. The first so created were Valerius Potitus and Aemilius Mamercus
sixty-three years after the expulsion of the Tarquins, and they were to
be attached to the war-department. As the public business increased, two
more were appointed to attend to affairs at Rome. This number was again
doubled, when to the contributions of Italy was added the tribute of the
provinces. Subsequently Sulla, by one of his laws, provided that twenty
should be elected to fill up the Senate, to which he had intrusted judicial
functions. These functions the knights afterwards recovered, but the quaestorship
was obtained, without expense, by merit in the candidates or by the good
nature of the electors, till at Dolabella's suggestion it was, so to speak,
put up to sale.
In the consulship of Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire and Lucius Vipstanus the question
of filling up the Senate was discussed, and the chief men of Gallia Comata,
as it was called, who had long possessed the rights of allies and of Roman
citizens, sought the privilege of obtaining public offices at Rome. There
was much talk of every kind on the subject, and it was argued before the
emperor with vehement opposition. "Italy," it was asserted, "is not so
feeble as to be unable to furnish its own capital with a senate. Once our
native-born citizens sufficed for peoples of our own kin, and we are by
no means dissatisfied with the Rome of the past. To this day we cite examples,
which under our old customs the Roman character exhibited as to valour
and renown. Is it a small thing that Veneti and Insubres have already burst
into the Senate-house, unless a mob of foreigners, a troop of captives,
so to say, is now forced upon us? What distinctions will be left for the
remnants of our noble houses, or for any impoverished senators from Latium?
Every place will be crowded with these millionaires, whose ancestors of
the second and third generations at the head of hostile tribes destroyed
our armies with fire and sword, and actually besieged the divine Julius
at Alesia. These are recent memories. What if there were to rise up the
remembrance of those who fell in Rome's citadel and at her altar by the
hands of these same barbarians! Let them enjoy indeed the title of citizens,
but let them not vulgarise the distinctions of the Senate and the honours
of office."