138-78 B.C. page 19
But he, brave man, telling him he could not
accept the obligation of life from the hands of one who had been the
ruin of his country, went in among the rest, and submitted willingly
to the stroke. What Lucius Catilina did was thought to exceed all
other acts. For having, before matters came to an issue, made away
with his brother, he besought Sylla to place him in the list of
proscription, as though he had been alive, which was done; and
Catiline, to return the kind office, assassinated a certain Marcus
Marius, one of the adverse party, and brought the head to Sylla, as he
was sitting in the forum, and then going to the holy water of
Apollo, which was nigh, washed his hands.
There were other things, besides this bloodshed, which gave offence.
For Sylla had declared himself dictator, an office which had then been
laid aside for the space of one hundred and twenty years. There was,
likewise, an act of grace passed on his behalf, granting indemnity for
what was passed, and for the future intrusting him with the power of
life and death, confiscation, division of lands, erecting and
demolishing of cities, taking away of kingdoms, and bestowing them
at pleasure.
He conducted the sale of confiscated property after
such an arbitrary, imperious way, from the tribunal, that his gifts
excited greater odium even than his usurpations; women, mimes, and
musicians, and the lowest of the freed slaves had presents made them
of the territories of nations and the revenues of cities: and women of
rank were married against their will to some of them. Wishing to
insure the fidelity of Pompey the Great by a nearer tie of blood, he
bade him divorce his present wife, and forcing Aemilia, the daughter
of Scaurus and Metella, his own wife, to leave her husband, Manius
Glabrio, he bestowed her, though then with child, on Pompey, and she
died in childbirth at his house.
When Lucretius Ofella, the same who reduced Marius by siege, offered
himself for the consulship, he first forbade him; then, seeing he
could not restrain him, on his coming down into the forum with a
numerous train of followers, he sent one of the centurions who were
immediately about him, and slew him, himself sitting on the tribunal
in the temple of Castor, and beholding the murder from above. The
citizens apprehending the centurion, and dragging him to the tribunal,
he bade them cease their clamouring and let the centurion go, for he
had commanded it.
His triumph was, in itself, exceedingly splendid, and
distinguished by the rarity and magnificence of the royal spoils;
but its yet greatest glory was the noble spectacle of the exiles.
For in the rear followed the most eminent and most potent of the
citizens, crowned with garlands, and calling Sylla saviour and father,
by whose means they were restored to their own country, and again
enjoyed their wives and children.
When the solemnity was over, and the
time come to render an account of his actions, addressing the public
assembly, he was as profuse in enumerating the lucky chances of war as
any of his own military merits. And, finally, from this felicity he
requested to receive the surname of Felix.
In writing and
transacting business with the Greeks, he styled himself
Epaphroditus, and on his trophies which are still extant with us the
name is given Lucius Cornelius Sylla Epaphroditus. Moreover, when
his wife had brought him forth twins, he named the male Faustus and
the female Fausta, the Roman words for what is auspicious and of happy
omen.
The confidence which he reposed in his good genius, rather
than in any abilities of his own, emboldened him, though deeply
involved in bloodshed, and though he had been the author of such great
changes and revolutions of state, to lay down his authority, and place
the right of consular elections once more in the hands of the
people. And when they were held, he not only declined to seek that
office, but in the forum exposed his person publicly to the people,
walking up and down as a private man.
And contrary to his will, a
certain bold man and his enemy, Marcus Lepidus, was expected to become
consul, not so much by his own interest, as by the power and
solicitation of Pompey, whom the people were willing to oblige. When
the business was over, seeing Pompey going home overjoyed with the
success, he called him to him and said, "What a polite act, young man,
to pass by Catulus, the best of men, and choose Lepidus, the worst! It
will be well for you to be vigilant, now that you have strengthened
your opponent against yourself."
Sylla spoke this, it may seem, by a
prophetic instinct, for, not long after, Lepidus grew insolent and
broke into open hostility to Pompey and his friends.
Sylla, consecrating the tenth of his whole substance to Hercules,
entertained the people with sumptuous feastings. The provision was
so much above what was necessary, that they were forced daily to throw
great quantities of meat into the river, and they drank wine forty
years old and upwards.
In the midst of the banqueting, which lasted
many days, Metella died of a disease. And because that the priest
forbade him to visit the sick, or suffer his house to be polluted with
mourning, he drew up an act of divorce and caused her to be removed
into another house whilst alive.