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Now the men of Alba were wroth to think that the fortunes of the
whole people had been thus trusted to the hands of three soldiers;
and Mettus, being of an unstable mind, was led away to evil in his
desire to do them a pleasure. And as before he had sought for peace
when others were desirous of war, so now he desired war when
others were minded to be at peace. But because he knew that the
men of Alba were not able of their own strength to do that which
they desired, he stirred up certain others of the nations round about,
that they should make war openly against Rome. As for himself and
his people, he purposed that they should seem indeed to be friends
and allies, but should be ready for treachery when occasion served.
Thereupon the men of Fidenæ, being colonists from Rome, and the
men of Veii promised that they would make war, and Mettus on his
part promised that he would come over to them with his army in the
battle. First the men of Fidenæ rebelled, and King Tullus marched
against them, bidding Mettus come also with his army, and having
crossed the river Anio, pitched his camp where Anio flows into the
Tiber. And by this time the men of Veii also had come up with their
army, and these were on the right wing next to the river, and the
men of Fidenæ on the left, next to the mountains. The ordering of
King Tullus was that he and his men should do battle with the men
of Veii, and Mettus and the Albans with the men of Fidenæ. Now
Mettus, as he was not minded to do right, so had no courage to do
wrong boldly; and because he dared not to go over to the enemy,
led his men away slowly toward the mountains. Being come thither,
he set out his men in battle array, being minded to join them whom
he should perceive to prevail. At first the Romans marvelled that
Mettus and his men should so depart from them; and after a while
they sent a messenger to the king, saying, “The men of Alba have
left us.” Then the king knew in his heart that there was treachery,
and he vowed that he would build temples to Paleness and Panic, if
he should win the victory that day. Nevertheless he showed no sign
of fear, but cried to the horsemen with a loud voice, that the enemy
might hear, saying, “Go thou back to the battle, and bid thy
comrades be of good courage. Mettus does my bidding that he may
take the men of Fidenæ in the rear.” Also he bade the cavalry raise
their spears in the air, that so the Romans might, for the most part,
be hindered from seeing that the men of Alba had deserted them;
and they that saw, believing what the king had said, fought with the
more courage. Then there fell a great fear upon the enemy, for
these also had heard the saying, which, being in the Latin tongue,
was understood of the men of Fidenæ. They, therefore, fearing lest
Mettus and the army of Alba should come down from the mountains
and shut them off from their town, began to give ground. And when
the king had broken their array, he turned the more fiercely on the
men of Veii. These also fled before him, but were hindered from
escape by the river. And some, throwing away their arms, ran blindly
into the water, and some while they lingered on the bank, and knew
not whether they should fight or fly, so perished. Never before had
the Romans so fierce a fight with their enemies. After this the king
spoke in this fashion, “Men of Rome, if ever before ye had occasion
to give thanks for victory won, first to the immortal gods, and
secondly to your own valor, such occasion ye found in the battle of
yesterday. For ye fought not only with the enemy, but with that from
which there is peril greater by far, even treachery in allies. I would
not have you ignorant of the truth. It was not by any ordering of
mine that the men of Alba went toward the mountains. I gave no
such command; yet did I feign that I had given it to this end, that ye
might not know that we were deserted, and so might fight with the
better courage, and that our enemies, thinking that they should be
assailed from behind, might be stricken with fear and so fly before
us. Yet I say not that all the men of Alba are guilty of this matter.
They followed their captain, even as ye, men of Rome, would have
followed me whithersoever I might have led you. Mettus only is
guilty. He contrived this departure, even as he brought about this
war, and brake the covenant that was between Alba and Rome. And
what he hath done others may dare hereafter, if I do not so deal
with him that he shall be an ensample for all that come after.” Then
the captains of hundreds, having arms in their hands, laid hold upon
Mettus. After this the king spake again: “May the gods bless to the
people of Rome, and to me, and to you also, men of Alba, that
which I purpose to do. For my purpose is to carry away the people
of Alba to Rome; the commons of Alba will I make citizens of Rome,
and the nobles will I number among our senators. So shall there be
one city and one commonwealth.” When the men of Alba heard
these words, all had not the same mind about the matter, but all
kept silence, fearing to speak, because being without arms they
were compassed on every side with armed men.
Then said the king, “Mettus, if indeed thou couldst learn faith and
the keeping of treaties, I had suffered thee to live that thou mightest
have such teaching from me. But now, seeing that thy disease is
past healing, thou shalt teach other men to hold in reverence the
holy things which thou hast despised. For even as thou wast divided
in heart between Rome and Fidenæ, so shall thy body be divided.”
Then, at the king’s bidding, they brought two chariots, with four
horses harnessed to each of them; and binding the body of Mettus
to the chariots, they drave the horses divers ways so that the man
was torn asunder.
But because Alba was thus brought to destruction, Rome
increased greatly; for the number of the citizens was increased
twofold. The Cœlian hill was added to the city, in which hill, that
others might the more readily dwell there, the king himself
commanded that they should build him a palace. Also the chief
houses of Alba, as the house of Julius and of Servilius, were chosen
into the Senate; and that there might be a place of meeting for the
Senate being thus multiplied, the king built a temple and called it
Hostilia, after his own name. Also ten squadrons of horsemen were
chosen out of the men of Alba.
Now the end of King Tullus was this. There came a pestilence
upon the land. And when for this cause the people were wearied of
war, nevertheless the king, both because he delighted in war, and
because he believed that the young men should have better health if
they went abroad than if they tarried at home, gave them no rest.
But after a while he also fell into a tedious sickness, which so brake
him both in body and mind that, whereas in time past he thought it
unworthy of a king to busy himself with matters of religion, now he
gave himself up wholly to superstition, and filled the minds of his
people also with the like thoughts, so that they regarded nothing but
this, how they should make atonement to the gods, and so be rid of
their present distress. As for the king himself, men say that reading
the sacred book of King Numa he found therein certain sacrifices,
very secret and solemn, that should be done to Jupiter by such as
would bring him down from heaven, and that he shut himself up to
do these sacrifices; but because he set not about them rightly or did
than not in due form, there appeared to him no similitude of the
immortal gods (for such he had hoped to see); but Jupiter, having
great wrath at such unlawful dealings, struck him with lightning and
consumed both him and his house.
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