cause of their being so late passing over into Africa;
and to request him to send to that war supplies of
Numidian horsemen.” Ample presents were
given them to be carried to the king; vases of gold
and silver, a purple robe, and a tunic adorned with
palms of purple, an ivory sceptre, and a robe of state,
with a curule chair. They were also directed to
assure him, that if he deemed any thing further requisite
to confirm and enlarge his kingdom, the Roman people,
in return for his good services, would exert their
utmost zeal to effect it. At this time, too,
ambassadors from Vermina, son of Syphax, came to the
senate apologizing for his mistaken conduct, on account
of his youth and want of judgment, and throwing all
the blame on the deceitful policy of the Carthaginians:
adding, “that as Masinissa had from an enemy
become a friend to the Romans, so Vermina would also
use his best endeavours that he should not be outdone
in offices of friendship to the Roman people either
by Masinissa, or by any other; and requesting that
he might receive from the senate the title of king,
friend, and ally.” The answer given to
these ambassadors was, that “not only his father
Syphax, from a friend and ally, had on a sudden, without
any reason, become an enemy to the Roman people, but
that he himself had made his first essay of manhood
in bearing arms against them. He must, therefore,
sue to the Roman people for peace, before he could
expect to be acknowledged king, ally, and friend;
that it was the practice of that people to bestow
the honour of such title, in return for great services
performed by kings towards them; that the Roman ambassadors
would soon be in Africa, to whom the senate would give
instructions to regulate conditions of peace with
Vermina, if he would leave the terms of it entirely
to the will of the Roman people; and that, if he wished
that any thing should be added, left out, or altered,
he must make a second application to the senate.”
The ambassadors sent to Africa on those affairs, were
Caius Terentius Varro, Publius Lucretius, and Cneius
Octavius, each of whom had a quinquereme assigned him.
12. A letter was then read in the senate, from
Quintus Minucius, the praetor, who held the province
of Bruttium, that “the money had been privately
carried off by night out of the treasury of Proserpine
at Locri; and that there were no traces to those to
whom the charge applied.” The senate was
highly incensed at finding that the practice of sacrilege
continued, and that even the fate of Pleminius, an
example so recent and so conspicuous both of the guilt
and of the punishment, did not deter men from it.
They ordered the consul, Cneius Aurelius, to signify
to the praetor in Bruttium, that “it was the
pleasure of the senate, that an inquiry be made concerning
the robbery of the treasury, according to the method
used by Marcus Pomponius, praetor, three years before;
that the money which could be discovered should be
restored, that what was not found should be made up,