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ARCHIVAL INSIGHTS
INTO THE EVOLUTION OF ECONOMICS
The Emergence
of Arthur Laffer
The Foundations of Supply-
Side Economics in Chicago
and Washington, 1966–1976
Brian Domitrovic
Archival Insights into the Evolution of Economics
Series Editor
Robert Leeson
Stanford University
Stanford, CA, USA
This series provides unique archival insights into the evolution of economics.
Each volume examines the defining controversies of one or more of the
major schools.
The Emergence of
Arthur Laffer
The Foundations of Supply-Side Economics
in Chicago and Washington, 1966–1976
Brian Domitrovic
The Laffer Center
The Woodlands, TX, USA
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer
Nature Switzerland AG 2021
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publication does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are
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For Bob Mundell
Acknowledgments
For supply of information central to this book’s content, Arthur Laffer has
been both forthcoming about his life and career and helpful in finding,
and often acquiring, further relevant sources. All six children in the Laffer
family have been distinctly helpful as well, if Arthur Jr. and Rachel may be
singled out. At the Laffer firm, Mike Madzin, Randi Butler, Nick
Drinkwater, Kenny Smith, and Richard Neikirk have been of great assis-
tance. Thanks as well go to Dick Strong, Bob Mundell, Valerie Natsios-
Mundell, Mark Molesky, Steve Forbes, Robert Leeson, Nathan Lewis,
Ralph Benko, Larry Kudlow, Don Critchlow, Marc Miles, Chuck Kadlec,
Pinar Emiralioglu, Brian Jordan, Tony Batman, and Jeanne and Rex
Sinquefield. And thanks go to Sam Houston State University and the staffs
of archival collections, including those held at the Richard M. Nixon
Library, the Harry S. Truman Library, the Duke University Libraries, the
University of Chicago Library, the MIT Libraries, the Economists’ Papers
Archive at the Duke University Libraries, and depositories at Stanford
and Yale.
vii
Contents
1 American Abundance 1
4 Rising at Chicago 65
6 1065115
ix
x Contents
9 Global Monetarism205
Index249
Abbreviations
xi
CHAPTER 1
American Abundance
Neil always has a good time using all the stuff with his girlfriend and her
family. Her father had built a little business installing bathroom porcelain.
The point of the novella appears to be that Neil cannot let his rather
mild mean and indifferent side from intruding on his courting of the
young woman, and the force of this petty trait makes them break up. He
looks at his reflection in her college-library window and asks himself why
he cannot simply take advantage of the good things that he has before
him. It was a tough question, and Roth did not answer it. This was the
closing vignette of the book. “What was it that had turned winning into
losing,” Neil asks himself as he stares at his reflection, wondering what
unknown counterproductive forces are inside his head, allowing “and los-
ing—who knows—into winning?”
One of the central issues implied in Goodbye, Columbus was that some-
thing had to be made, some reckoning taken, of the blooming economic
prosperity of the 1950s. The United States, if not much of the world
recently cursed by the most horrible conflict, and prior to that the Great
Depression, clearly had set to producing the likes of mass affluence once
World War II was over with. The novella testified to this. But what if, wel-
comed into the expansiveness of a prosperity such as that of the postwar
era, as Neil was via his girl, one is feckless, too much of a schmuck to enjoy
it when offered? Is there something wrong with such a person—in terms
of character, or morally? It could even be possible that at some level of
consciousness such a person dislikes prosperity, would rather it moderate,
and might be ready to take subtle action to see it curtailed. This is an
unsettling thought. But human envy and willful incompetence have their
native prowess. “I looked hard at that image of me, at that darkening of
the glass,” Neil said, and then the image broke up, the questions cut off in
various stages of being formed as they were summoned up from within.1
Neil’s girlfriend’s brother went to Ohio State University. He has a pho-
nograph record of songs that the college band plays over announcements
of the sports teams’ exploits. At the end, a voice expresses the sentiments
of the graduating seniors, saying, “Goodbye, Columbus,” as in the loca-
tion of the university, Columbus, Ohio. Going out to Ohio, that too was
consistent, in the 1950s, with the habits of Eastern seaboarders who were
living large in the great postwar prosperity. Ohio, the home of some of the
greatest nineteenth-century enterprises that defined the twentieth century,
Goodyear, Procter & Gamble, and Standard Oil, enterprises that swelled
the life—the mass affluence of all the workers and the executives and their
so often big and extended families—that great business success can carry
1 AMERICAN ABUNDANCE 3
Nobel Prizewinners. Laffer got early tenure at this place. While he was
taking graduate classes at Stanford University two years before, the
American Economic Review published an article of his. A paper he pre-
sented at a hyper-critical Chicago economic “workshop” launched a revo-
lution in international macroeconomics half a decade later, in the 1970s,
even as it was never published. His dean at Chicago, George P. Shultz,
swept him in 1970 into a special position in presidential government, as
inaugural economist at the White House’s new Office of Management and
Budget (OMB).
The economics of this young phenom had a central point. This was that
postwar prosperity was going great. The point was obvious, perhaps, but
Laffer brought mathematics and sequences of logic to his demonstrations.
His chief area of interest was the international monetary system. He
argued that the prevailing global arrangement of major currencies fixed at
rates of exchange to the dollar, and the dollar itself to gold, was serving
the needs of the world economy well. Great economic growth was the
evidence. As a secondary interest he was curious about the dynamics of
growth within a given country. What makes a domestic economy really
move, given that there were so many nice examples in the 1960s—this was
an interest he was developing at an increasing level of intensity, as his
articles on the satisfactoriness of the current quasi-classical monetary sys-
tem got published in all the top places.
Laffer was successful as a young economist because of the intriguing
way he posed his arguments to his peers in the academy. However, the
thrust of his arguments, for saying that postwar prosperity was going
great, made him exceptional. This point was not obvious within his field,
the record shows. The regnant schools of macroeconomics, incumbent
Keynesianism and the fully rising challenger monetarism, contended from
their basic premises that the market economy cannot keep humming on its
own and, moreover, that threats to economic stability and performance
were gathering in the 1960s. The economy needed shrewd government
interventions at every turn, and more than it was currently getting.
Keynesianism wore such assumptions on its sleeve. Under the condi-
tions of late capitalism, per John Maynard Keynes in his 1930s vein, those
with money, the rich, are so satiated with the wealth accumulated over
generations of success that they lose inspiration to invest. The lack of
investment in such a context, a “liquidity trap,” in turn creates unemploy-
ment. The natural condition of the economy as a big industrial revolution
progresses into its latter stages is that markets clear below the level of
1 AMERICAN ABUNDANCE 5
deficits, changing the tax code, and engineering spending programs, all in
the in the name of domestic aggregate demand and investment manage-
ment. Budget deficits in particular notoriously spooked the exchange-rate
markets. To overcome this obstacle, the best option was a “benign neglect”
policy of letting the dollar-gold crisis mature until a transition from fixed
to flexible exchange rates forced itself into being. From the perspectives of
both monetarism and Keynesianism, the one way to achieve balance-of-
payments equilibrium given gold and fixed rates was to slow down eco-
nomic growth domestically. This was a horrible option and the real-world
crisis that the extant system was courting.5
And yet here was this young tenured economist at Chicago, this Arthur
Laffer, saying that the booming economy was excellent of its own accord
and not heading toward crisis, in particular with regard to that whipping
boy, the international monetary system. Fixed exchange rates for Laffer
approximated perfection, as he said characteristically at a conference in
January 1970: “With fixed exchange rates and price level flexibility…the
real, as well as the nominal, money stock is perfectly elastic. Unemployment,
as a result of monetary phenomena, should not exist.” No need for
Keynesianism or monetarism—old-fashioned fixed exchange rates con-
duce to the results to which these two modernist schools aspired.
“Although these two systems”—of flexible and fixed exchange rates—“are
often thought of as analytically identical, the differences between them
may be the difference between underemployment and prosperity.” As for
the balance-of-payments crisis, he found it phony. From a journal article
of his from 1969: “The United States should have over-all balance of pay-
ments deficits. Foreigners as well as the United States gain from the
U.S. role as the international financial intermediary.” As for how to “solve”
the balance-of-payments “crisis,” he had a solution in a 1969 paper, the
one that upended the field the next decade: “An increase in the rate of
growth of a country relative to the rest of the world will improve that
country’s overall balance of payments.” In future years, he had a formula
for “an increase in the rate of growth of a country,” substantial marginal
tax cuts.6
The debates Laffer was joining in the first years of his career through
1970 were in the classic area of the free market versus government inter-
vention. There had been such debates before, to be sure, but the promi-
nent ones of several decades prior had not taken place when the market
economy was successful and predominant. When F.A. Hayek issued his cri
de coeur to the market of 1944, The Road to Serfdom, in the wake of the
8 B. DOMITROVIC
Depression and during ultra-big-government World War II, the tone was
unmistakably one of entreaty. Hayek’s dedication was “to the socialists of
all parties,” conceding that there were quite a few socialists. Postwar pros-
perity presented the opposite problem as had the Great Depression. The
Depression forced the defenders of the market to prove their relevance.
Postwar prosperity forced the prophets of intervention to prove theirs.
The preferred option, in the latter case, ultimately was to take refuge in
the shadows, to see an unworkability in the international monetary sys-
tem, of which most people were oblivious, as the mechanism of crisis.
Meanwhile the experience of the continual postwar prosperity remained
keen and palpable.
Laffer therefore had a grand time as a kid economist, through at least
1970, tweaking the macroeconomic consensus. Paper after paper of his
showed how fixed exchange rates and convertibility in gold—those fossils
of the nineteenth century—were readily delivering postwar prosperity,
with no natural end in sight. Gamely, these papers came out in the august
places, the AER, the Journal of Political Economy, Harvard University
Press. As Laffer made his contributions to the field, he got his tenure,
promotion, citations, and invitations to speak—the accoutrements of a top
economist arriviste. These times did not last. Just as Laffer climbed up to
the pinnacle with tenure at Chicago, the United States did something
inexplicable with respect to its beloved postwar prosperity. It traded win-
ning for losing.
Stagflation
The tennis cans, riding crops, overstuffed refrigerators, family cars, Silicon
Valley startups, jobs-for-life, the various contents and trappings of the leg-
endary postwar American abundance went alternatively scarce and dear in
price in the years after 1969. The decade of the 1970s has gone down in
history, justifiably, as that of “stagflation,” the difficult-to-grasp combination
of minimal or negative economic growth with severe consumer-price infla-
tion. The numbers confer the point. In the 1960s, there was a nine-year
boom of 5 percent annual growth in real economic output. Price increases
averaged about a percent per year, tipping up to 5 percent at the end. From
1969 through 1982, there were four recessions, three of them double-dip,
and one of them, that of 1973–75, swallowing an entire year (1974).
Unemployment naturally surged during these recessions, reaching shocking
peaks of 9 percent in the mid-1970s and 11 percent in the early 1980s.
1 AMERICAN ABUNDANCE 9
Consumer prices took off like a moonshot. From the time of the lunar
rocket in 1969 until 1982, the increases were fully 165 percent—nearly 8
percent per year. It was true, apparently, that the economy of the 1950s
and the 1960s had been careening toward crisis all along. Stagflation in
the 1970s through the early 1980s showed it.
Laffer therefore came into his own as a beacon of contrarian wisdom in
these changed circumstances—perhaps one could suppose. This is not
what occurred. Rather, the profession of academic economics all but
expectorated him from its ranks. The great 1970s stagflation, at least over
its first phase, when the public was still somewhat quiescent about it, func-
tioned as a vindication of the king macroeconomic theories that had been
crying crisis ever since postwar prosperity had gotten dismayingly regular.
The calls welled up for the assistance of these theories in the early 1970s.
Budget and tax policy had to be adjusted toward full employment—
Keynesianism was in its cockpit. The Federal Reserve sure has made a mess
of things now and it needs rules—monetarism had been waiting for this its
whole life.
Laffer and to be sure his redoubtable colleague Mundell were true
enough to themselves to point out that the stagflation of the 1970s had
come care of the specific “reform” which macroeconomics had been bay-
ing for and then finally got. In 1971, the United States stopped redemp-
tions in gold for dollars, ending the gold standard. And within a
year-and-a-half, by early 1973, all major currencies had abandoned fixed
rates of exchange to one another. Now currencies “floated,” having a new
value at every moment in the marketplace and inconvertible in gold or
anything else—as had been the clear and interminably repeated recom-
mendation of the macroeconomic profession for the past decade. There
had been no crisis brewing in the economy, Laffer and Mundell said.
Rather, the economy met a fate that the establishment of professional eco-
nomics had engineered for it by means of maladroit policy.
Laffer’s basic diagnosis was twofold. Inflation came care of “devalua-
tion,” or a currency trading on the markets against other currencies for
less than previously. Laffer spelled out, in a series of works in the early
1970s, how a domestic economy’s “relative price structure,” what each
good and service costs in terms of every other good and service in the
economy, generally stays stable. Therefore when imports become more
expensive, as happens given a currency devaluation, the prices of all the
other goods in the domestic economy go up to maintain the relative price
structure against those imported goods. He found that numerically, the
10 B. DOMITROVIC
after 1971. He cast around for other university appointments, landing one
at the University of Southern California in 1976. In the meantime, he
pressed on with work along the lines he had done prior to 1971, this time
under the auspices of an urgent problem that had to be solved. The nation
had to go back to fixed rates and probably gold, and it had to focus on
real-life production instead of some succession of policy fixes recom-
mended by an economic-advisory elite. He had a hard time getting his
work past peer review—it had been so easy before 1971—but he had alter-
native audiences care of his spell at OMB. There he had become acquainted
not only with major players in government, such as Richard M. Nixon and
Gerald R. Ford administration officials Shultz, Donald H. Rumsfeld, and
Richard Cheney. He also got to know major journalists, above all the new
leadership of the editorial page of the Wall Street Journal, Robert L. Bartley
and Jude Wanniski.
Laffer started telling these people about his economics. As stagflation
worsened, especially after the final collapse of fixed rates in early 1973,
such high officials and thought leaders gave Laffer all sorts of attention.
He found new platforms, such as the Journal editorial page, private semi-
nars to rising Members of Congress and presidential officials, and legisla-
tive testimony. As the public found the huge double-dip inflationary
recession of 1973–75 increasingly infuriating, Laffer started to become a
national sage. It was sometime in this period that he first sketched out his
curve relating tax rates against tax revenues, the “Laffer curve,” one of the
most famous economics graphs—in terms of its popular recognizability—
of all time. A contribution of this volume is to present the earliest extant
version of the Laffer curve that has yet been discovered. Lore has it that
Laffer first sketched the curve, sometime in 1974, “on the back of a paper
napkin,” thanks to the recollection of Wanniski. The evidence here shows
that Laffer had actually worked his curve out a great deal in modelling
beforehand.7
Arthur Laffer has a twofold notoriety in modern American economic
history. In the first place, he drew his curve. It got so much attention in
the popular press in the late 1970s and early 1980s that, according to the
calculations of economist Robert Shiller, it rivalled the chatter over major
contemporaneous popular-cultural fads such as the Rubik’s cube. In the
second place, Laffer was the one who introduced former California gover-
nor Ronald Reagan to the idea of cutting tax rates, and he assisted Reagan
as an advisor through his victory in the presidential election in 1980 and
his two-term presidency thereafter. Reagan had scarcely toyed with
12 B. DOMITROVIC
have called on, in total, a small fraction of the possible sources. Reading a
sample of a theoretician’s words will not equip the researcher to confer
historical understanding; reading pertinent sources in fullness is a neces-
sary condition of interpreting a few well. This is an axiom of historical
methodology. There is a peremptory quality, a hastiness in historiography
about supply-side economics and its practitioners, as if the conclusions are
obvious. These people over-promised, were amateurish, or were in the
pocket of the business establishment—to linger on sources after citing a
few is unnecessary.9
Yet to linger on sources in this case is to begin to reveal profundity. And
if the economics of Laffer, and that of his colleagues, was profound to
some minimum degree, then the standard argumentative apparatus about
supply-side economics being a “crank” movement that derailed the
enlightened march of wisdom into policy via professionalization meets a
formidable challenge. But the stakes are greater than this. In the early part
of his career, and to an extent later, Laffer was an evocative participant in
a major sociological transformation that was working its way through the
United States. He was a high member of a new kind of elite, that of top
academic economists, making a bid for relevance beyond any those in this
station had claimed before, and at the expense of traditional social elites
that were at the same time confronting their own impending decadence.
In the balance hung the fate of a country grown accustomed to epochal
prosperity.
Notes
1. Philip Roth, Novels & Stories 1959–1962 (New York: Library of America,
2005), 21, 37, 108.
2. Robert A. Mundell, “The Composition of International Reserves and the
Future of the Dollar,” Guidelines for International Monetary Reform:
Hearings before the Subcommittee on International Exchange and Payments
of the Joint Economic Committee, July 28, 1965, p. 48.
3. Traditionally, the definition of the Keynesian liquidity trap is narrow and
technical, referring to the near equivalence in the rate of return among
interest-bearing instruments and cash. Given that Keynes’s observations
about the liquidity preference involved comments on the slack nature of
investment demand from the multi-generational rich, the term probably
should refer to the general need, late in stages of extended economic devel-
opment, for high rates of return to get the settled rich to part with their
money via investment. In this sense is the term “liquidity trap” used in this
14 B. DOMITROVIC
work. As Keynes wrote in the General Theory: “Not only is the marginal
propensity to consume weaker in a wealthy community, but owing to its
accumulation of capital being already larger, the opportunities for further
investment are less attractive unless the rate of interest”—on comparatively
passive financial assets—“falls at a sufficiently rapid rate.” John Maynard
Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money (1936), ch.
3 part II, http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks03/0300071h/printall.html.
4. Milton Friedman, “A Monetary and Fiscal Framework for Economic
Stability,” AER 38, no. 3 (June 1948), 245–47.
5. The term “benign neglect” became current in international monetary
reform circles after March 1970, when Nixon advisor Daniel P. Moynihan
introduced it in the context of racial and urban policy.
6. Arthur B. Laffer, “Two Arguments for Fixed Rates,” in The Economics of
Common Currencies, eds. Harry G. Johnson and Alexander K. Swoboda
(Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1973), 32; “The U.S. Balance
of Payments—A Financial Center View,” Law and Contemporary Problems
34, no. 1 (Winter 1969), 46; “An Anti-Traditional Theory of the Balance of
Payments Under Fixed Exchange Rates,” unpublished manuscript, February
1969, Laffer archive, p. 22.
7. Jude Wanniski, The Way the World Works: How Economies Fail—and Succeed
(New York: Basic Books, 1978), 288.
8. Robert J. Shiller, “Narrative Economics,” Cowles Foundation Discussion
Paper No. 2069, Yale University, p. 24.
9. Among methodologically rigorous books the leader is Monica Prasad,
Starving the Beast: Ronald Reagan and the Tax Cut Revolution (New York:
Russell Sage Foundation, 2018). Prasad, a sociologist, makes innovative use
of polling data in assessing the popularity of the supply-side program.
Astonishingly, she has to dedicate attention to discrediting, by means of
evidence, the presumption that there was a racial element to the supply-side
revolution. Her efforts in this regard suggest that a reason that the history
of supply-side economics has not been treated in scholarship as expansively
as might befit the most significant economic-policy revolution since the
New Deal is that it did not evince racial animus. As Nancy MacLean’s noto-
rious Democracy in Chains: The Deep History of the Radical Right’s Stealth
Plan for America (New York: Viking, 2017) indicated, the mood of scholar-
ship may well be that the free-market movement is to be studied expansively
only in those areas in which it is suggestive (even if by means of dubious
historical method) of such animus. Another historiographical motif is that
business pressure groups’ adoption of the cause of supply-side economics
conveyed the movement to the fore of policy. The effect is to minimize the
intellectual-historical status of supply-side economics. See the relevant
sections of Benjamin C. Waterhouse, Lobbying America: The Politics of
1 AMERICAN ABUNDANCE 15
next year the family moved to Cleveland, his parents’ hometown. His
father was returning to a previous employer, the Cleveland Graphite
Bronze Company, to supervise a manufacturing unit. Cleveland Graphite
Bronze, founded in 1919, produced bearings and bushings for the auto-
motive industry. It expanded greatly with World War II, tripling its work-
force to 7500, inclusive of hiring hundreds of women to work in its
aircraft-parts division. It experienced unique union difficulties during the
war, an experience that steeled William Laffer’s resolve against “right-to-
work”—the prerogative of a worker not to join a union in a predominantly
union shop—a resolve not passed down to his son. In September 1944,
the United States War department took temporary control of the opera-
tions of the company—the first such takeover in Ohio during the war—as
5000 Cleveland Graphite Bronze workers went on strike.
The pretext of the strike was small: the company had fired a worker
after a string of violations. The animus behind the strike, however,
appeared to derive from competition among unions. Leadership of the
company’s workers’ major union, the Mechanics Educational Society of
America (MESA), was concerned about inroads that Congress of Industrial
Organization affiliates were making among the rank-and-file at the com-
pany. MESA decided to show its strength as an organization by calling a
strike as American military forces were making strides in all theatres and
required uninterrupted materiel shipments. By forcing the company into
federal control, MESA showed that it could push it around. After two
months, MESA and the company agreed to cooperate, and the govern-
ment overseers left. Afterwards, the company prevailed in arbitration in
the original complaint that had touched off the strike.
William Laffer endured these developments, and clearly strove to incor-
porate their lessons into his conception of business strategy, as a member
of the United States War Production Board and as Cleveland Graphite
Bronze’s chief planning officer, a promotion he gained in 1943. In 1955,
he was named president of the firm, which several years earlier had renamed
itself the Clevite Corporation. The company increasingly specialized in
defense and space-program products. It developed an acoustic torpedo for
use against submarines, circuit boards for submarines, and transistors and
fuel-cell electrodes for rockets. In 1959, it made a major expansion of its
Waltham, Massachusetts, transistor factory, which would employ 1500
persons. In 1960, Clevite bought Shockley Transistor of Palo Alto,
California, the developer of the transistor, and three years removed from
its suffering the departure of the “traitorous eight” of engineers to
2 IN THE SCOPE OF PAUL BARAN 19
calculating the profit residual. The priority in these times was on contacts
at and relationships with government agencies and familiarity and experi-
ence with bureaucratic procedures. Lacking these advantages as a matter
of definition, startup companies faced the costs of high tax rates on their
own, putting them at a disadvantage to the established competitors they
sought to challenge or even topple.
The Fortune 500 list of the biggest companies in the country, which
first appeared in 1955 and on which Clevite regularly ranked in the 400
range, had more firms from Ohio in these years than from any other state
outside of New York, Illinois, and Pennsylvania. And Cleveland had more
names on the list than any other city in Ohio (in 1960, sixteen). The
Cleveland in which Arthur Laffer grew up in an executive’s family remained
at the apex of its business significance that had been established in the
heyday of the American industrial revolution in the latter part of the cen-
tury before, when John D. Rockefeller organized Standard Oil in that city,
Euclid Avenue’s “millionaires row” of homes set a new standard of execu-
tive opulence, and the streetcar suburb was pioneered. Laffer’s mother
Molly’s father Arthur B. Betz (who died in 1947) was a major steel ware-
houser in Cleveland, owning a series of sheds that kept giant pieces of
equipment on call for Great Lakes freighters when their engine compo-
nents failed.
Arthur Betz was self-made. His first job was a runner at corporate
offices of a metals firm later bought out by United States Steel. William
Laffer’s father had been a brain surgeon. The family remembers his
remarkable collection of diseased brains, which this Dr. Laffer would
study, kept in his research space at home in bell jars with formaldehyde.
Mertice Laffer, Arthur’s grandmother, was a notable suffragist, her 1916
“Votes For Women” attire now held in a Cleveland museum. Both the
Betz and Laffer families were Presbyterian and came from smaller internal
Ohio towns that had received German immigrants in the early nineteenth
century. A Laffer ancestor’s home in Hanover, Ohio, was a stop on the
underground railroad for the fugitive enslaved. In keeping with the liberal
family tradition on the matter of race, Laffer’s father was the main finan-
cier of the Forest City Hospital in Cleveland (opened 1957), which served
a consortium of African-American doctors seeking greater involvement in
all aspects of hospital services and management. By the time of Arthur’s
birth, both the Betz and Laffer families were firmly Republican in terms of
their political orientation. Molly ran three times at the top of the straight-
ticket Republican slate for the Ohio House of Representatives. The slate
2 IN THE SCOPE OF PAUL BARAN 21
Elective Affinities
As he met success in his senior year at Yale, Laffer decided that he wanted
to go to business school and applied to Stanford University’s. Stanford
accepted him on the condition that his senior-year grades came in strong,
which they did. In the fall of 1963, Laffer enrolled in Stanford’s Master of
Business Administration program. He was marking out a path to the kind
of executive career pursued by his father. But atypically for a business stu-
dent, and building on the enthusiasm of the nine courses in economics he
had taken the year before in college, he began taking graduate classes in
the economics department. The first was an economic development class
from Paul A. Baran, who, Laffer recalls, ordinarily but not in this case
detested business students.
Baran was a noted Marxist and to some degree advertised himself as
one of the very few open Marxists on a major American university faculty.
Born in the Russian empire to a father who was a Menshevik activist, he
studied in Weimar Germany and the Soviet Union in the 1920s. One of
his mentors was Friedrich Pollock, a principal of the group that had
recently formed the Institut für Sozialforschung (Institute for Social
Research) in Frankfurt am Main and would come to be widely known as
the Frankfurt School. Pollock was the member of the Institut responsible
for developing its signature views on “state capitalism,” a term that had
recently come into currency and referring to the methods by which large
corporations collude with governments to forestall the natural processes
of social revolution in advanced industrial economies. Baran avowed in
1951 that “my associations at the university of Frankfurt am Main in
1929,” inclusive of a fellowship and an assistantship at the Institut, “had a
significant impact on my political thinking.”6
Baran studied and taught mainly in Germany in the 1920s and early
1930s, completing a doctorate in Berlin with a dissertation on left-wing
notions of economic planning. He left the country in 1933. He came to
the United States in 1939, worked in various economic-research positions
for the federal government and the Federal Reserve, and was appointed to
the Stanford economics faculty in 1949. He attained the rank of professor
in 1951. Baran published two monographs, The Political Economy of
Growth (1957) and the posthumous Monopoly Capital (1966), co-
authored and finished by the fervently left-wing political economist Paul
Sweezy. Both books make unmistakable Baran’s main intellectual interests
in economics. His central concern was the economic “surplus,” or the
2 IN THE SCOPE OF PAUL BARAN 25
over the next two decades, it was certainly not neo-Marxian. But the elec-
tive affinities with Baran’s economics are unmistakable.
The central item in Laffer’s body of work, the Laffer curve, developed
from studies of “Harberger triangles” illustrating the “deadweight loss”
from an imposition of a tax. This is a topic in a latter chapter of this book.
Laffer’s core idea, the beating heart of the Laffer curve, is that tax rates
cause changes in behavior that necessarily involve losses. There may be
gains, if the revenues used from tax collections yield utilities greater than
the losses, but there inescapably are losses. The first Laffer curve as Laffer
outlined it in his private notes around 1974 had immediately below it a
von Neumann-Morgenstern general utility function requiring a greater
than null result from any tax-rate change.
The central matter in tax policy, as Laffer’s theory in this area would
develop, was that there must be a clear, accurate, and perhaps even enlight-
ened assessment of what exactly will result comprehensively in the econ-
omy from a tax change. If an increase in the rate of income tax will result
in further revenue, the issue of whether the revenue will be spent well is
essential. If a change in a federal rate affects collections in other federal tax
jurisdictions, in state and local tax collections, and in tax systems abroad,
to what effect in each case and in total is an essential issue. If a tax rate is
to change, assessing its advisability must involve assessing things at a dis-
tance from the immediate economic domain of that rate, including how
the taking of income and economic activity in general might shift in reac-
tion to the change. Laffer came characteristically to inquire after what the
“secondary, tertiary, and quaternary” effects might be of changes in a tax
rate in one given jurisdiction across the global economy over time. This
was the origin of the fabled “free lunch” of supply-side economics. If tax-
rate cuts broadly eliminate deadweight losses, there is no trade-off between
growth and tax revenues. As economist Robert E. Lucas, who admittedly
had been skeptical of supply-side economics earlier in his career, wrote in
1990 several years before he won the Nobel Prize, “the supply-side econo-
mists … have delivered the largest genuinely free lunch I have seen in 25
years in this business, and I believe we would have a better society if we
followed their advice.”9
Baran for his part asked what was the level of economic production and
whether what was produced beyond necessities was good. The latter may
be a subjective judgment, but such concerns did not immobilize him. He
pursued questions of whether the economic surplus was being dealt with
productively with the relentlessness typifying the fabled Marxist academic.
28 B. DOMITROVIC
thinking should shape policy, and those who excelled in the processes of
business should stick to that. The argument was self-serving, arrogating to
economics the mantle of policy.
The justification for Tobin’s claims went unprovided. Presumably, they
rested upon the nature of the professional accoutrements that the disci-
pline had been gaining in recent years. The New Economists and their
colleagues had academic degrees, avant-garde theory (continually updated
Keynesianism), posts at institutions with marked social and intellectual
cachet, a developed mathematical apparatus suggestive of science, peer
review, a prestige hierarchy among the universities and the journals, awards
and distinctions, and posts in government and the highbrow organs of
journalism (Tobin wrote for the New Republic). Acutely processed profes-
sionalization itself was the warrant of economics’ enlightenment. It was a
remarkable bid of afflatus for Tobin to posit that non-economists—busi-
nesspeople—involved in the economy were cursed with the burden of hav-
ing to shake being transfixed by the likes of a “taboo.”
The social-competitive nature of the Tobin position had no counterpart
in the Baran position. Baran did not seek to insult the business commu-
nity’s intellectual capabilities and in the offing make a run for power. He
was more forthright. He declared that a range of standard practices in the
economy was wasteful and recommended trying to think better about
how to use productive resources. He was unable to ground a claim for the
wisdom of Marxist planning, but this problem had dogged Marxism from
the start and was probably endemic to it. If Marxism could prove its wis-
dom, it would have to subject itself to falsifiability (as Karl Popper had
argued), and this ran counter to the agit-prop ethos of the doctrine. Baran
offered no resolution to these standard criticisms of Marxism. But in no
way did he seek to advance his guild at the expense of the business power
elite, as Tobin strove to.
Laffer, that son of a 1950s/60s-era CEO, probably concurred with
Baran’s evidentiary points. Clevite maintained an apartment on 59th
Street in New York, clearly a tax deduction, which Laffer remembers the
family having the run of when he was a boy. And Clevite chased the com-
paratively easy money and oddball projects of the government-contracting
leviathan while elbowing out non-connected smaller companies and start-
ups. These things cannot have appeared to him as expressions of optimal
productivity and entrepreneurship. Baran’s points were intriguing to him.
They showed that such suboptimality, such waste, could be identified in a
first step toward better alternatives.
2 IN THE SCOPE OF PAUL BARAN 31
in the job he had while a business student. He worked the night watch at
the Clevite Palo Alto facility, that of Shockley Transistor. He got to know
the namesake, William Shockley, the 1956 Nobel laureate in physics for
his joint research in the development of the semiconductor transistor.
At this juncture in his career, Shockley was following ultimately blind
leads into human genetics, and he wore smarting traces of the effect on
him of the departure of the likes of Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore (the
Intel founders), and Eugene Kleiner (the venture capitalist) from his firm
several years earlier. It was apparent that Shockley had been seeding some-
thing quite big, indeed what we now see as the vast technological revolu-
tion centered in Silicon Valley. Laffer thought Shockley a little odd, but
quite interesting, and a window into a world that was coming of age.
Shockley talked with Laffer about Germanium transistors as well as genet-
ics and may have tried to recruit the young business student. The contact
ended when Clevite sold the Shockley outfit to ITT in 1965.
If Laffer’s time on the night watch at Shockley Transistor offered a tip
into a nascent world of entrepreneurial opportunity, it also cemented this
MBA student’s commitment to scholarly economics. Laffer took the job
not only to earn a few dollars, but to do so while he could read in a silent
and unperturbed environment. The night watch job gave him a chance to
master his economic-course syllabi. The business students typically
reserved their extra hours for leisure, networking, or prep-work on an
entrepreneurial idea. Laffer husbanded his extra hours for his economics
education. Nighttime at Shockley became his study hall in advanced eco-
nomics. When he got the Morgan Stanley offer, he had come too far in
acquaintance if not penetration of the field to turn away.
Aside from Abramovitz, who tapped Laffer as a research assistant,
Laffer took courses from his dissertation committee member Ronald
McKinnon, his adviser Emile Despres, Melvin Reder, Marc Nerlove, John
Gurley, and Edward Shaw. Other faculty members teaching in the depart-
ment included Kenneth Arrow (the 1972 economics Nobelist) and Lorie
Tarshis (Keynes’s main American popularizer and the subject of barbs in
William F. Buckley’s God and Man at Yale of 1951). The written work in
economics that Laffer soon began to produce with rapidity and in quantity
reflected the subject matter of these courses. They also reflected thematic
consolidations that Laffer made as he shaped his own economics in
extended hours of study, mainly at nighttime at Shockley. The law of one
price as elucidated classically in Marshall, Jevons, and Wicksell; the
Samuelson price-factor equalization theorem; the Stolper-Samuelson
2 IN THE SCOPE OF PAUL BARAN 33
CHAPTER I.
TO SYRACUSE.
When Elissa left New Carthage, with the prospect before her of
becoming a lifelong prisoner in Rome, the war was indeed, as Scipio
had said, raging with fury both in Sicily and Italy. For it is a matter of
the greatest astonishment how, in spite of the terrible reverses which
she had suffered on Italian soil, Rome pulled herself together for
renewed efforts, not only in Italy, then occupied by a successful
invading army, but for a continuation of the conflict upon foreign
shores. Thus she sent forth fleets and armies to Sardinia, to Spain,
and to Sicily, and the Carthaginians, encouraged to renewed
exertions by the glorious battle of Cannæ, did likewise.
Thus war was being carried on, at the same time, in all parts of the
Mediterranean.
It was raging, too, on Numidian soil, where the kings, Syphax and
Massinissa, were now fighting against each other.
Scipio had concluded a treaty with Massinissa, who was fighting
therefore nominally in the interests of Rome, against Carthage; but,
in reality, in rage and disappointment at the loss of the beautiful
Sophonisba, whom he had vowed should be his. In the end,
Massinissa was eventually successful in a pitched battle against his
uncle, the kind-hearted Syphax, whom he slew, and thereupon he
seized upon the fair Sophonisba, whom he promptly forced to be his
own unwilling spouse.
Scipio, not thinking it was wise that his ally Massinissa should
have in his household a Carthaginian wife, sent him a message that
he should send her away to her own country; but rather than lose
her, Massinissa presented the unfortunate girl with a cup of poison,
and ordered her to drink it.
Remarking placidly that it seemed an inappropriate end for the
bride of two kings, but that anything was better than life itself, poor
Sophonisba gladly swallowed the poison, and died in agony.
Elissa, while sailing along the coast of Sicily, reflected sadly on
this tragedy.
“Such,” she thought, “is the fate of humanity, and the ruling of the
gods cannot be foretold. Therefore, as in the very hour of greatest
prosperity sudden and great reverses may be awaiting us, it
behoveth us all never to neglect the service of those omnipotent
rulers of our being.”
Thus reflected Elissa when she looked back upon her own sudden
fall from a position of almost regal rank to the state of a mere
prisoner of war being deported to a foreign land.
At this time the war in Sicily centred round the enormous and
powerful city of Syracuse, which had, with all its surrounding territory,
remained, under King Hiero, an independent kingdom for no less
than fifty years past. In the previous Punic war, when every other city
in Sicily fell, first to one power then to another, neither Roman nor
Carthaginian had ever been able to set foot within its walls. And this
was chiefly owing to the wisdom of King Hiero himself, who, after
various sieges and conflicts with each power in turn, concluded an
alliance with Rome, which he maintained throughout his long reign of
fifty years’ duration. But Hiero being dead, and succeeded by his
grandson Hieronymus, all this was soon changed.
The young king was a debauched youth with an overweening idea
of his own importance, and he openly insulted the ambassadors who
came to him from Rome to seek a renewal of the old alliance.
Insolently asking them, “What account the Romans had been able to
give of themselves at Cannæ?” he declared for Carthage.
The city of Syracuse being full of intrigue, some wishing to remain
faithful to Rome, others to attach themselves to Carthage, while all
alike were disgusted with the cruelties and debauchery of the young
king; the latter was soon assassinated, as were also all the
princesses of the royal family, including Hiero’s daughter Demarata,
and his grand-daughter Harmonia, and their respective husbands
Andranodorus and Themistius.
Heraclea, the youngest daughter of Hiero, and her two beautiful
daughters were murdered with the greatest brutality, after a terrible
struggle; but no sooner were they dead than a messenger arrived
from the magistrates who had ordered their murder, but had now
relented, to stay the execution, for the very people themselves, who
had been thirsting for all the royal blood a short time before, had now
turned round upon the magistrates who had ordered the crime and
ousted them, calling for the election of new pretors in place of the
massacred Andranodorus and Themistius.
And thus it came to pass that two young generals, brothers,
named Hippocrates and Epicydes, who were envoys from Hannibal
to the Syracusans, came to be elected into power. These two young
men were Syracusans themselves on the father’s side, but their
mother was a Carthaginian, and they had been brought up in
Carthage, where Cleandra had known them well while living there
with her husband. They had already been at the bottom of the
plotting and the counter-plotting against Rome, and although there
were still various parties in the city, upon their election, after various
vicissitudes and some fighting within the walls, they contrived to
completely embroil the whole of the inhabitants with Rome. This was
done by Hippocrates openly attacking, with Syracusan soldiers, a
body of troops belong to the Roman consul, Appius Claudius, which
the latter had sent to protect his allies in the neighbouring city of
Leontini. Epicydes also repaired to Leontini, and by specious
arguments persuaded the inhabitants of Leontini to rise against
Rome.
Meanwhile the other Roman consul, Marcus Marcellus, he who
used to be known by the title of “The Sword of Rome,” who was in
the vicinity with a large force, demanded from the Syracusans the
surrender of the two brothers, who had dared to attack Roman
troops while a state of peace, or at all events of truce, existed
between Syracuse and Rome. But the Syracusans pretending that
they had no authority to give up the two brothers, as they were now
in the free city of Leontini, the two Roman consuls attacked the last
mentioned city and stormed it. But the two brothers escaped, and
with their usual cleverness persuaded the force of six hundred
Cretans, who were with the Syracusan force, which, in the Roman
interest, had been sent to capture them, to join their own standard
against Rome. And the Cretans in turn persuaded the other
Syracusan troops to join them also.
Thus had Hippocrates and Epicydes contrived to completely
embroil Syracuse with Rome, and when the ships of Caius Lælius
with Elissa on board arrived at the port of Syracuse, they found that
the gates of the city were shut, and that it was about to be invested
both by sea and land by the two Roman consuls, while the two
brothers were supreme within the city, and had on their side a large
body of Roman soldiers who had deserted to Syracuse.
Throughout the sea voyage of Elissa and Cleandra, Caius Lælius
had faithfully kept his promise to Scipio, and treated Hannibal’s
daughter with the greatest respect and kindness. They had visited in
turn various ports upon the coasts of Sicily, and the Roman flag-ship
and the two other vessels had on a recent occasion narrowly
escaped capture at the hands of a Carthaginian squadron off the
seaport of Lilybæum. Unfortunately for Elissa, however, Caius
Lælius had, after a sea-fight, contrived to make good his escape,
although he himself had received a severe wound from a sling during
the action. By this wound he was for a time quite incapacitated, and
thus was confined to his cabin when his ships arrived off Syracuse.
Now during the voyage he had become much attached to Cleandra,
whom, it may be remembered, knew the Latin tongue well. She was
ever about him, nursing him when sick in his cabin, and Lælius,
taking no notice of her presence, freely discussed before her the
whole state of affairs with his flag captain, an officer by name Labeo
Ascanius. Hence she soon learned the whole condition of affairs,
and, moreover, that her two friends, the brothers Hippocrates and
Epicydes, were in possession of the city of Syracuse.
With her usual quick-wittedness Cleandra soon set about devising
a means for the escape of Elissa and herself from the ship; for
however kind Lælius might be himself to the two ladies, they were,
none the less, prisoners, and likely to be so for life. Their future fate
was uncertain; only one thing seemed certain, that they would
infallibly be separated from each other upon arrival in Rome.
Now it so happened that not only Caius Lælius but also his flag-
captain, Labeo Ascanius, had, during the voyage, become much
enamoured of Cleandra, whose beauty had increased rather than
diminished during the four or five years which had elapsed since her
flight from New Carthage to Old Carthage. While the Admiral Lælius
was well, this officer had had no opportunity of expressing his
admiration of Cleandra, but she had, none the less, been perfectly
well aware of the fact, and had determined, if possible, to utilise it.
Now that his chief was utterly incapacitated and he himself in
supreme command, Ascanius had every opportunity of conversing
with and making love to Cleandra, who, while using great discretion
lest any of the other officers or seamen should observe anything,
made opportunities herself, and encouraged him with all the wiles of
a clever woman, still, however, keeping him, in a certain measure, at
a distance, and not granting all the favours that he sought of her. At
length the Roman became, through her artifices, so inflamed with
passion that he told her that he would do anything in the world for
her sake if she would but be his. Cleandra, not yet sure of him, did
not show him her hand, but, the better to bend him to her will,
secretly and repeatedly stirred up Caius Lælius against him on
various pretexts, and especially by false reports that she gave him
about what was going on in the ship during his own illness. Thus
Lælius, being rendered peevish by sickness, on several occasions
unjustly found great fault with Ascanius, who became, in turn,
incensed against his commander. He did not suspect Cleandra of
being the cause of these reports, but his first lieutenant, a man of
great probity, named Horatius Calvinus.
At length one day, after Lælius had once again found fault unjustly
with his flag-captain, Ascanius, going forth in a rage, accused
Calvinus of being the traitor who falsely accused him to the admiral,
and, listening to no excuses, put him in irons, treating him with the
greatest indignity.
Now was Cleandra’s opportunity. She had learned from Labeo
Ascanius himself that his own brother, named Caius Ascanius,
formerly a centurion in the troops under Marcellus, was among those
who had deserted to the Carthaginian flag, and was now with her
friends, Hippocrates and Epicydes, in the city. She took good care
not to inform Lælius about his flag-captain having put Calvinus in
irons, for it suited her better that he should remain there. However,
she falsely informed Ascanius in the afternoon that the Admiral had
learned the fact, and had announced to her his intention of publicly
degrading him on the following morning, and of placing Calvinus
over his head.
Then she plainly proposed to him that to escape from such an
unjust degradation he should leave the ship that very night and join
his brother. He could take her and Elissa with him in a boat, and,
under pretence that he was acting under the admiral’s orders, and
about to deliver them over to Appius Claudius, the Roman Consul
commanding the fleet that had just arrived, row them ashore, and
land at the city steps in the port. These steps, as could be plainly
seen from the ships, were protected by a guard of Carthaginian
soldiers. As he would be steersman himself, Ascanius could, she
pointed out, easily direct the boat to the steps. She suggested he
should only take two men, and they such as were faithful to himself.
As a reward for his saving them, Cleandra promised to become his
wife so soon as they should land. Thus was the plot laid, and
Ascanius agreed willingly to Cleandra’s proposals.
That very night, after dark had set in, did Ascanius take the two
ladies, who had with them nought save their jewels, to shore in a
boat. And upon their arrival at the steps, and Elissa proclaiming
aloud in the Carthaginian tongue her name and quality, she was
instantly most warmly welcomed with her companions. Thus was
their escape successfully contrived by Cleandra’s cleverness, and
that night they supped with Hippocrates and Epicydes.
Hippocrates and Epicydes took them to the house of Archimedes,
the ancient mathematician, to whose wonderful genius the excellent
state of the defences of the city was mainly attributable. Archimedes
welcomed them most hospitably, and Cleandra’s promise to
Ascanius was immediately redeemed by her becoming his wife that
very night, his brother Caius and others being invited to the wedding-
feast at midnight, when was much festivity. But Cleandra, while
thanking her new husband for having rescued her from a life-long
slavery, took good care not to inform him by what wiles she had won
him to her will. And he, imagining that he had escaped an unjust
degradation on the morrow, and being convinced that he had won for
his wife the woman whom he loved, and moreover that she loved
him with equal passion, felt no qualms of conscience whatever at his
desertion from the Roman standard. Even if he had felt any, were not
his own brother and hundreds of other Roman soldiers present who
had joined the Carthaginian cause without any of the provocation
that he had himself received? He had been, for his part, at least so
he believed, merely forced to an act of self-preservation.
On the following day Hippocrates appointed Ascanius to a
command in his forces, for, as were all the other deserters in the city,
he was now so irretrievably committed that nought but crucifixion or
torture could be his lot should he ever again fall into the hands of his
own compatriots. There was, therefore, no fear of any treachery to
Syracuse on the part of the deserters; it was indeed they who, by
fighting to the very last, were mainly instrumental in beating off the
assailants for a period of at least three years.
In the meantime, the sage Archimedes had welcomed Elissa and
her followers within his hospitable walls, and a considerable sum of
money for her maintenance was at once voted by the Senate under
the direction of Hippocrates and Epicydes. Archimedes occupied a
palace in the city proper, which was named Achradina, whereas the
port whereon Elissa had landed on the previous night abutted on
Achradina, and was known as Ortygia or the island. They were, in
fact, two separate towns, each surrounded by a wall. There were, in
addition, two large suburbs surrounded by separate walls, and
named respectively Tycha and Neapolis, and the whole city was
enclosed by an outside wall no less than eighteen miles in
circumference; thus some idea can be formed of its size and the
difficulty of a besieging force in investing it. There were two
harbours, the greater and the lesser, and while Caius Lælius had
joined the Roman fleet under Appius Claudius in the lesser harbour,
the Carthaginian fleet, under an admiral named Bomilcar, was riding
securely at anchor under the walls in the larger one.
Elissa soon learned that, while Marcus Marcellus was threatening
the city with a large Roman land force on one side, there were on the
other hand, for its protection, a large number of Carthaginian troops,
encamped close at hand under the command of a general named
Himilco.
There was thus, at first at all events, no danger to be apprehended
of the city falling. In fact, the siege had not begun—it was an
attempted blockade at best; and by means of the fleet, free
communication was, for a considerable time, established with the
outside world. Ships were constantly coming and going from both
Carthage and Italy, and although there were occasional small sea
fights, yet, owing to the preponderance of the Phœnician ships, the
port was virtually open.
Being now only about ninety miles away from the city of Carthage,
on the opposite African coast, Elissa was sorely tempted to risk
sailing thither to visit the land of her ancestors, which she had never
yet seen. From taking this step, however, she was dissuaded by the
prudent Cleandra, who assured her that the enemies of her race
were far too strong in Carthage for her to venture alone and
unprotected within that noble city. For Hannibal’s very successes had
made the anti-Barcine party more bitter than ever against him.
Elissa was, however, now able to communicate with her father
direct, for hearing that the inhabitants of the city of Capua had
recently surrendered to him, she wrote to Hannibal there,
acquainting him in full of all that had taken place, and of her now
being at Syracuse. Moreover she offered, should he see fit, to leave
Syracuse and join him at Capua, in which city she learned that he
had established himself with his whole army, intending to remain
there for the winter.
It was some considerable time before Elissa received from
Hannibal any reply to her letter, but it came at length, just as the
spring was commencing.
Hannibal’s letter, which was written by the hand of his friend and
scribe Silenus, was so lengthy that it would be impossible to
transcribe it here. In it, however, after applauding her for her bravery
upon many occasions, and commiserating with her deeply upon the
fall of New Carthage, he informed her that his own army was
constantly decreasing in numbers, and was also, to his great
annoyance, considerably deteriorated in its quality by the ease and
delights which the men had experienced during a whole winter
passed in the enervating atmosphere of the pleasure-loving city of
Capua. He complained bitterly of the small number of reinforcements
that had reached him from Carthage, and urged her to remain in
Syracuse, and there, by her presence and example, inspire the
garrison and the Carthaginian troops, whether of the land forces
under Himilco or the sea forces under Bomilcar, to heroic and
continued efforts against Claudius and Marcellus. By this means he
pointed out that the Roman troops now in Sicily would be compelled
to remain there, and thus be unable to cross over into Italy to assist
the Romans in prosecuting the war against himself. He informed her
further that unless some reinforcements arrived to help him before
long he would soon be obliged to content himself with merely
defensive operations at the ports he had already captured, but that in
that case it would be a matter of great importance that he should be
able to make an ally of some foreign power who would be willing to
fight with him against Rome. And none, he added, seemed to him so
fitting for this purpose as the young King Philip V. of Macedon, who
was now constantly engaged in wars of his own in Illyria, or against
the various leagues in the Peloponnesus of Greece. These, Hannibal
pointed out, Philip seemed in a fair way to subdue, and when he had
done so, a young prince of so much ambition would doubtless
require a new field whither he might direct his successful arms.
Therefore, since it seemed to Hannibal that Elissa by her position on
the sea at Syracuse might possibly sooner or later be able to obtain
an opportunity of either sending an embassy to Philip, or personally
going to meet him, he enclosed a document, giving her full powers
on his own behalf to enter into a treaty of offensive and defensive
alliance with the Macedonian.
In conclusion, Hannibal gave to his daughter news of Sosilus, of
Silenus, and Chœras, all of whom, he said, had hitherto survived the
hardships of the long-continued war. Of Maharbal he merely said
that he continued to be, as formerly, as his own right arm in all
matters appertaining to the war, and that he now looked forward to a
period when peace might be assured, that he might reward the
fidelity of the Numidian general by giving to him her, Elissa’s, hand in
marriage. Hannibal added that Maharbal was writing to her on his
own behalf.
Having read her father’s epistle, Elissa turned to her lover’s letter.
Within its pages Maharbal breathed forth such unswerving and
straightforward devotion, such absolute faith and trust in herself and
her integrity and honour, that before it was half finished she thanked
the gods a thousand times that they had inspired her with sufficient
strength to remain faithful to this man who had been such an
invaluable aid to Hannibal in assisting him to maintain ever to the
fore the honour and glory of Carthage. But her cheek burned with
shame even as she read. For she realised to her sorrow that
whatever honour had prompted her to do in the past or might prompt
her to do in the future, she would nevertheless far rather have
received those burning lines of love and devotion from the hand of
Scipio, the enemy of her father and her country, than from the hand
of Maharbal, the brave upholder of her country’s honour and her
father’s life-long friend. But such is life, and such are the hearts of
women, and despite her burning cheek Elissa knew that since she
had ever behaved most straightforwardly and honourably by her
absent lover she had done Maharbal no wrong.
Just after she received these letters, the investment of Syracuse
by the Romans was commenced with great determination on the
land side and the sea side alike. Thus was no opportunity given to
Elissa for any reply, neither did she have any means at her
command for establishing any understanding with Philip of Macedon.
CHAPTER II.
FROM SYRACUSE TO MACEDON.