The Republic and The Laws (Oxford World's Classics) (29 page)

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The law adds: ‘He shall have a grasp of public affairs’
*
[11]. It is essential for a senator to be familiar with the state of the country (that has wide implications—knowing what it has in the way of troops, how well off it is financially, what allies, friends, and tributaries the country has, what laws, conditions, and treaties apply to each), to understand legislative procedure, and to be aware of traditional precedent. You can now appreciate the whole range of knowledge, application, and memory without which no senator can be properly equipped for his job.

41

Then there are the people’s assemblies. Here the first and most important rule is ‘there must be no violence’ [11]. Nothing is more damaging to a state, nothing so contrary to justice and law, nothing less appropriate to a civilized community, than to force through a measure by violence
*
where a country has a settled and established constitution. The law further requires that a magistrate imposing a veto should be obeyed. There is nothing more admirable than that; for it is better to obstruct a good proposal than to acquiesce in a bad one [11].

 

As for my rule that ‘The responsibility shall rest with the presiding magistrate’ [11], I have taken the whole provision from the opinion expressed by that very judicious man, Crassus.
*
The Senate followed his advice when the consul Gaius Claudius raised the subject of the disorder fomented by Gnaeus Carbo.
*
It ruled that disorder could not take place in the people’s assembly without the consent of the presiding magistrate; for he had the power to close the meeting as soon as a veto had been exercised and a commotion had begun. Anyone who allows things to go on when no business can be done is inviting violence. By this law he loses his immunity
*
to prosecution.

 

Then comes the ruling ‘Anyone who blocks a harmful measure shall be deemed a public benefactor’ [11]. Who would not loyally come to the aid of the state if he knew he would be praised by the voice of such an excellent law?

43

This is followed by regulations which we also have in the laws and customs of our state: ‘They shall observe the auspices and obey the official augur’ [11]. It is the duty of a conscientious augur to bear in mind that he must be ready to assist on momentous national occasions, that he has been assigned as an advisor and servant to Jupiter the Best and the Greatest (just as officials have been assigned to him to observe the auspices at his command), and that certain specific areas of the sky have been allotted to him so that he may be able to give frequent assistance to the state from that quarter.

 

Then come regulations about the reading of bills, the handling of items one at a time, and the right to consult magistrates and private citizens [11].

 

After that we have two splendid laws taken from the Twelve 44 Tables. One gets rid of legislation directed at private individuals,
*
the other forbids any motion regarding a citizen’s life to be proposed except through the chief assembly
[11].
What an excellent provision our ancestors made for future generations, at a time when seditious plebeian tribunes had not been created or even thought of! They refused to allow laws to be passed against individual people (for that is what
privilegium
means). What could be more unjust than such laws when, by definition, a law is something enjoined and binding on everyone? They forbade legislation against individuals unless it was passed by the Assembly of Centuries; for when the people are split up according to wealth, rank, and age, they think more carefully about their votes than when they meet indiscriminately in their tribes. Hence Lucius Cotta, a 45 man of great ability and deep insight, was all the more justified in saying that in my case no legal measure at all had been passed against me. He pointed out that, apart from the fact that those transactions took place in the presence of armed slaves, no valid decision could be taken by the Council of the Plebs about a citizen’s life, nor by any assembly against an individual; therefore I did not need a law (to rehabilitate me), because absolutely no legal action had been taken against me.
*
However, you and other very distinguished men preferred to take the view that the whole of Italy
*
should make clear its opinion of a man against whom slaves and brigands claimed to have passed a law.

44
45

Next comes a regulation about accepting money and offering bribes. Since laws have to be endorsed by court verdicts rather than verbal formulae, I have added ‘The penalty shall fit the crime’ [11]. In this way each offender is to be paid back in his own coin— violence being punished by death or exile, greed by a fine, improper canvassing by disgrace.

46

The final laws are not in force in our community, but they are necessary for the good of the state. We have no method of protecting our laws; and so our laws are what our clerks want them to be. We obtain them from copyists, but have no official record
*
confirmed by an official text. The Greeks
*
used to be more punctilious in this respect. They used to appoint ‘Guardians of the Law’, and these men would keep an eye, not just on the text of laws (that practice was also current among our ancestors), but also on men’s behaviour, and would call them back when they strayed beyond the law. This duty should be discharged by the censors. (Remember I have enacted that ‘the post of censor shall always have occupants’ [11].) Before these same men, outgoing magistrates are to give a public account of what they have done during their period of office [11], and the censors are to pronounce a preliminary judgement on them. In Greece this function is performed by officially appointed accusers. Yet these men cannot be strict if they are not doing the job voluntarily. So it is better that the account should be given and the case stated before the censors. A full hearing, however, should be reserved for a trial, with prosecutor, in a court of law.
*

47

That is all that needs to be said about magistrates, unless you think I have left something out.

 

ATTICUS
: Well, even if we say nothing, does the point we have reached not suggest to you what you should deal with next?

 

MARCUS
: Next? I suppose you mean the courts, Pomponius, for that subject follows on from the magistrates.

 

48–9. A discussion is adumbrated on the legal powers of magistrates

ATTICUS
: What? Don’t you think something should be said about the law of the Roman people, as you set out to do?

 

MARCUS
: What, may I ask, do you find wanting at this point?

 

ATTICUS
: Wanting? Why, something which I think it is disgraceful for statesmen not to know about. You said a moment ago that the text of the laws was obtained from copyists. By the same token I notice that most magistrates, owing to their ignorance of their own legal system, know only as much as their clerks wish. Therefore, if, when you were setting out your laws about religion, you thought it right to speak about the transference of religious duties, you should see to it, now that your magistrates have been duly appointed, that you discuss the legal powers of those in positions of authority.

 

MARCUS
: I shall do so briefly, if I can manage it; for Marcus Junius
*
wrote a very full account of the matter to your father, who was a friend of his, and (in my view anyhow) handled it in an expert and thorough manner. As for us, we should think and speak independently on the subject of natural law, but on Roman public law we shall state what has come down to us from earlier generations.

49

ATTICUS
: That is certainly my view, and I look forward to the very treatment you indicate . . .

 

FRAGMENTS OF THE LAWS

1. We should think ourselves lucky that death will bring a state which is either better, or else no worse, than what we know in life. For when the mind is active without the body, that kind of life is divine; but if the mind is devoid of consciousness, we surely experience no ill (Lactantius,
Divinae Institutiones
3. 19).

2. Just as one and the same nature holds together and underpins the universe, and all its parts are in harmony with one another, so all human beings blend with each other by nature; but because of their wickedness they are at variance, and they fail to understand that they are blood-relatives and are placed under one and the same protection. If that point were grasped, there can be no doubt that men would live the life of gods (Lactantius,
Divinae Institutiones
5. 8).

3. Since, then, as we can see, the sun has now moved a little beyond the zenith, and this whole place is not yet sufficiently shaded by these young trees, let us, if you agree, go down to the Liris and carry on the remainder of our discussion in the shade of those alders (Macrobius,
Saturnalia 6
. 4. 8).

APPENDIX
NOTES ON THE ROMAN CONSTITUTION

Official Bodies

The
Senate
or
Council of Elders
was a body of 300 with ten members from each of thirty voting districts
(curiae)
, which in turn were based on the original three tribes. The senators, or fathers of families, represented the richest and most powerful clans. At one time, as a much smaller body, they had advised the king. Under the Republic they advised the magistrates who consulted them, but in virtue of their corporate experience their influence in every area of government was far weightier than that implies.

The
comitia curiata
or
Assembly of Voting Districts
, originally consisting wholly of patricians, ratified the appointment of a new king. It met at the king’s behest to pledge loyalty in war or to endorse a death-sentence. It also had some more minor functions, such as witnessing wills and adoptions. Its importance dwindled with the passage of time.

The
comitia centuriata
or
Assembly of Centuries
, which was originally summoned by the king, met in the
Campus Martius
(Field of Mars). Its organization and procedure are described on pp.
47–8, 189–90.
The function of the body was to enact laws; to elect consuls, praetors, and censors; to vote in capital cases (i.e. those involving death or exile); and to declare war and peace.

The
comitia tributa
or
Assembly of Tribes
, representing the whole population, was convened by a consul or praetor. It elected quaestors and curule aediles. As it met within the city and was more democratic than the Assembly of Centuries, it gradually increased in importance. Its measures were apparently subject to the approval of Senate until 339.

The
concilium plebis
or
Council of the Plebs
, like the
comitia tributa
was organized by tribes, but was not attended by patricians. It was presided over by a tribune and it elected tribunes and plebeian aediles. It also issued resolutions
(plebiscita)
, which after 287 had the status of laws, and heard trials of non-capital offences. The Council drew closer in function to the Assembly of Tribes (which patricians often failed to attend), and frequently the two bodies are not distinguished in our sources.

The plebeian leaders were not members of an impoverished urban proletariat. Their families were squires of substantial means, and when they succeeded in gaining access to the governing class, they soon formed a new nobility which in its turn became exclusive. In the last 150 years of the Republic ten new men reached the consulship. Cicero was the only one to do so between 93 and
48.

In the Senate, members were invited to speak in order of seniority. In the other bodies there was no debate from the floor; members simply voted on the issues presented to them. (At the preliminary meetings, however, officials would vigorously advocate or oppose bills.) Ropes divided the membership according to centuries or tribes. These enclosures were connected to the magistrate’s platform by gangways. Each century or tribe produced a majority vote, which was then conveyed to the magistrate. Up to 241
BC
new tribes were added for new citizens, but after that the number was fixed at 35: four in the city, sixteen in the immediate vicinity, and fifteen elsewhere, resulting from Rome’s expansion in Italy. Thereafter new citizens, in particular the Italians after 84, were distributed through the existing tribes, which consequently ceased to be territorial units.

The
king
wore a purple robe and sat in an ivory chair—the
sella curulis
(derived from
currus
= chariot). He was attended by officials (lictors) carrying the
fasces
(bundles of rods tied round an axe) which symbolized his absolute power. Though head of the state religion, he delegated the performance of rituals and the interpretation of religious law to priests. He appointed arbitrators for civil suits and special officials for cases of treason and homicide. He was in charge of foreign relations, and was responsible for raising and commanding an army. His financial resources came from rents of public domains, customs, licences from the salt trade, and fines.

Magistrates

Consuls
were two equal ‘colleagues’, elected annually by the Assembly of Centuries, and gave their names to the year. They inherited the king’s regalia (though the full purple robe was reserved for special occasions), and also his attendants and symbols of power. They were in charge of foreign relations and had command of the army. At home they were the chief magistrates, convening and presiding over the Senate. In 366 the first plebeian became consul; but, as Roman magistrates had no salaries, such men had to be well off.

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