1. – The
first of the Scipios opened the way for the world power of the Romans; the
second opened the way for luxury. For, when Rome was freed of the fear of
Carthage, and her rival in empire was out of her way, the path of virtue
was abandoned for that of corruption, not gradually, but in headlong
course. The older discipline was discarded to give place to the new. The
state passed from vigilance to slumber, from the pursuit of arms to the
pursuit of pleasure, from activity to idleness. It was at this time that
there were built, on the Capitol, the porticoes of Scipio Nasica, the
porticoes of Metellus already mentioned, and, in the Circus, the portico
of Gnaeus Octavius, the most splendid of them all; and private luxury soon
followed public extravagance.
Then
followed a war that was disaster and disgraceful to the Romans, the war in
Spain with Viriathus, a guerilla chief. The fortunes of this war during
its progress shifted constantly and were, more frequently than not,
adverse to the Romans. On the death of Viriathus through the perfidy
rather than the valour of Servilius Caepio, there broke out in Numantia a
war that was more serious still. Numantia city was never able to arm more
than ten thousand men of its own; but, whether it was owing to her native
valour, or to the inexperience of our soldiers, or to the mere kindness of
fortune, she compelled first other generals, and then Pompey, a man of
great name (he was the first of his family to hold the consulship) to sign
disgraceful treaties, and forced Mancinus Hostilius to terms no less base
and hateful. Pompey, however, escaped punishment through his influence. As
for Mancinus his sense of shame, in that he did not try to evade the
consequences, caused him to be delivered to the enemy by the fetial
priests, naked, and with his hands bound behind his back. The Numantines,
however, refused to receive him, following the example of the Samnites at
an earlier day at Caudium, saying that a national breach of faith should
not be atoned for by the blood of one man.
2. – The surrender of Mancinus aroused in the
state a quarrel of vast proportions. Tiberius Gracchus, the son of
Tiberius Gracchus, an illustrious and eminent citizen, and the grandson,
on his mother's side, of Scipio Africanus, had been quaestor in the army
of Mancinus and had negotiated the treaty. Indignant, on the one hand,
that any of his acts should be disavowed, and fearing the danger of a like
trial or a like punishment, he had himself elected tribune of the people.
He was a man of otherwise blameless life, of brilliant intellect, of
upright intentions, and, in a word, endowed with the highest virtues of
which a man is capable when favoured by nature and by training. In the
consulship of Publius Mucius Scaevola and Lucius Calpurnius (one hundred
and sixty-two years ago), he split with the party of the nobles, promised
the citizenship to all Italy, and at the same time, by proposing agrarian
laws which all immediately desired to see in operation, turned the state
topsyturvy, and brought it into a position of critical and extreme danger.
He abrogated the power of his colleague Octavius, who defended the
interests of the state, and appointed a commission of three to assign
lands and to found colonies, consisting of himself, his father-in-law the
ex-consul Appius, and his brother Gaius, then a very young man.
3. – At this crisis Publius Scipio Nasica
appeared. He was the grandson of the Scipio who had been adjudged by the
senate the best citizen of the state, the son of the Scipio who, as
censor, had built the porticoes on the Capitol, and great-grandson of
Gnaeus Scipio, that illustrious man who was the paternal uncle of Publius
Scipio Africanus. Although he was a cousin of Tiberius Gracchus, he set
his country before all ties of blood, choosing to regard as contrary to
his private interests everything that was not for the public weal, a
quality which earned for him the distinction of being the first man to be
elected pontifex maximus in absentia. He held no public office at this
time and was clad in the toga. Wrapping the fold of his toga about his
left forearm he stationed himself on the topmost steps of the Capitol and
summoned all those who wished for the safety of the state to follow him.
Then the optimates, the senate, the larger and better part of the
equestrian order, and those of the plebs who were not yet infected by
pernicious theories rushed upon Gracchus as he stood with his bands in the
area of the Capitol and was haranguing a throng assembled from almost
every part of Italy. As Gracchus fled, and was running down the steps
which led from the Capitol, he was struck by the fragment of a bench, and
ended by an untimely death the life which he might have made a glorious
one. This was the beginning in Rome of civil bloodshed, and of the licence
of the sword. From this time on right was crushed by might, the most
powerful now took precedence in the state, the disputes of the citizens
which were once healed by amicable agreements were now settled by arms,
and wars were now begun not for good cause but for what profit there was
in them. Nor is this to be wondered at; for precedents do not stop where
they begin, but, however narrow the path upon which they enter, they
create for themselves a highway whereon they may wander with the utmost
latitude; and when once the path of right is abandoned, men are hurried
into wrong in headlong haste, nor does anyone think a course is base for
himself which has proven profitable to others.
4. – While these events were taking place in
Italy King Attalus had died, bequeathing Asia in his will to the Roman
people, as Bithynia was later bequeathed to them by Nicomedes, and
Aristonicus, falsely claiming to be a scion of the royal house, had
forcibly seized the province. Aristonicus was subdued by Marcus Perpenna
and was later led in triumph, but by Manius Aquilius. He paid with his
life the penalty for having put to death at the very outset of the war the
celebrated jurist Crassus Mucianus, proconsul of Asia, as he was leaving
his province.
After all the defeats
experienced at Numantia, Publius Scipio Africanus Aemilianus, the
destroyer of Carthage, was a second time elected consul and then
dispatched to Spain, where he confirmed the reputation for good fortune
and for valour which he had earned in Africa. Within a year and three
months after his arrival in Spain he surrounded Numantia with his siege
works, destroyed the city and levelled it to the ground. No man of any
nationality before his day had immortalized his name by a more illustrious
feat of destroying cities; for by the destruction of Carthage and Numantia
he liberated us, in the one case from fear, in the other from a reproach
upon our name. This same Scipio, when asked by Carbo the tribune what he
thought about the killing of Tiberius Gracchus, replied that he had been
justly slain if his purpose had been to seize the government. When the
whole assembly cried out at this utterance he said, "How can I, who have
so many times heard the battle shout of the enemy without feeling fear, be
disturbed by the shouts of men like you, to whom Italy is only a
stepmother?" A short time after Scipio's return to Rome, in the consulship
of Manius Aquilius and Gaius Sempronius — one hundred sixty years ago —
this man who had held two consulships, had celebrated two triumphs, and
had twice destroyed cities which had brought terror to his country, was
found in the morning dead in his bed with marks as though of strangulation
upon his throat. Great man though he was, no inquest was held concerning
the manner of his death, and with covered head was borne to the grave the
body of him whose services had enabled Rome to lift her head above the
whole world. Whether his death was due to natural causes as most people
think, or was the result of a plot, as some historians state, the life he
lived was at any rate so crowded with honours that up to this time it was
surpassed in brilliance by none, excepting only his grandsire. He died in
his fifty-sixth year. If anyone questions this let him call to mind his
first consulship, to which he was elected in his thirty-eighth year, and
he will cease to doubt.
5. – In Spain, even before the destruction of
Numantia, Decimus Brutus had conducted a brilliant campaign in which he
penetrated to all the peoples of the country, took a great number of men
and cities and, by extending his operations to regions which hitherto had
scarcely been heard of, earned for himself the cognomen of
Gallaecus.
A few years before in this
same country Quintus Macedonicus had exercised command as general with a
discipline of remarkable rigour. For instance, in an assault upon a
Spanish town called Contrebia he ordered five legionary cohorts, which had
been driven down from a steep escarpment, forthwith to march up it again.
Though the soldiers were making their wills on the battlefield, as though
they were about to march to certain death, he was not deterred, but
afterwards received the men, whom he sent forth to die, back in camp
victorious. Such was the effect of shame mingled with fear, and of a hope
born of despair. Macedonicus won renown in Spain by the uncompromising
bravery of this exploit; Fabius Aemilianus, following the example of
Paulus on the other hand, by the severity of his discipline.
6. – After an interval of ten years the same
madness which had possessed Tiberius Gracchus now seized upon his brother
Gaius, who resembled him in his general virtues as well as in his mistaken
ambition, but far surpassed him in ability and eloquence. Gaius might have
been the first man in the state had he held his spirit in repose; but,
whether it was with the object of avenging his brother's death or of
paving the way for kingly power, he followed the precedent which Tiberius
had set and entered upon the career of a tribune. His aims, however, were
far more ambitious and drastic. He was for giving the citizenship to all
Italians, extending it almost to the Alps, distributing the public domain,
limiting the holdings of each citizen to five hundred acres as had once
been provided by the Licinian law, establishing new customs duties,
filling the provinces with new colonies, transferring the judicial powers
from the senate to the equites, and began the practice of distributing
grain to the people. He left nothing undisturbed, nothing untouched,
nothing unmolested, nothing, in short, as it had been. Furthermore he
continued the exercise of his office for a second
term.
The consul, Lucius Opimius, who, as
praetor, had destroyed Fregellae, hunted down Gracchus with armed men and
put him to death, slaying with him Fulvius Flaccus, a man who, though now
entertaining the same distorted ambitions, had held the consulship and had
won a triumph. Gaius had named Flaccus triumvir in the place of his
brother Tiberius and had made him his partner in his plans for assuming
kingly power. The conduct of Opimius was execrable in this one respect,
that he had proposed a reward to be paid for the head, I will not say of a
Gracchus, but of a Roman citizen, and had promised to pay it in gold.
Flaccus, together with his elder son, was slain upon the Aventine while
summoning to battle his armed supporters. Gracchus, in his flight, when on
the point of being apprehended by the emissaries of Opimius, offered his
neck to the sword of his slave Euporus. Euporus then slew himself with the
same promptness with which he had given assistance to his master. On the
same day Pomponius, a Roman knight, gave remarkable proof of his fidelity
to Gracchus; for, after holding back his enemies upon the bridge, as
Cocles had done of yore, he threw himself upon his sword. The body of
Gaius, like that of Tiberius before him, was thrown into the Tiber by the
victors, with the same strange lack of humanity.
7. – Such were the lives and such the deaths
of the sons of Tiberius Gracchus, and the grandsons of Publius Scipio
Africanus, and their mother Cornelia, the daughter of Africanus, still
lived to witness their end. An ill use they made of their excellent
talents. Had they but coveted such honours as citizens might lawfully
receive, the state would have conferred upon them through peaceful means
all that they sought to obtain by unlawful
agitations.
To this atrocity was added a
crime without precedent. The son of Fulvius Flaccus, a youth of rare
beauty who had not yet passed his eighteenth year and was in no way
involved in the acts of his father, when sent by his father as an envoy to
ask for terms, was put to death by Opimius. An Etruscan soothsayer, who
was his friend, seeing him dragged weeping to prison, said to him, "Why
not rather do as I do?" At these words he forthwith dashed out his brains
against the stone portal of the prison and thus ended his
life.
Severe investigations, directed
against the friends and followers of the Gracchi, followed. But when
Opimius, who during the rest of his career had been a man of sterling and
upright character, was afterwards condemned by public trial, his
conviction aroused no sympathy on the part of the citizens because of the
recollection of his cruelty in this instance. Rupilius and Popilius, who,
as consuls, had prosecuted the friends of Tiberius Gracchus with the
utmost severity, deservedly met at a later date with the same mark of
popular disapproval at their public
trials.
I shall insert here a matter
hardly relevant to these important events. It was this same Opimius from
whose consulship the famous Opimian wine received its name. That none of
this wine is now in existence can be inferred from the lapse of time,
since it is one hundred and fifty years, Marcus Vinicius, from his
consulship to yours.
The conduct of
Opimius met with a greater degree of disapproval because it was a case of
seeking revenge in a private feud, and this act of revenge was regarded as
having been committed rather in satisfaction of a personal animosity than
in defence of the rights of the state.
In
the legislation of Gracchus I should regard as the most pernicious his
planting of colonies outside of Italy. This policy the Romans of the older
time had carefully avoided; for they saw how much more powerful Carthage
had been than Tyre, Massilia than Phocaea, Syracuse than Corinth, Cyzicus
and Byzantium than Miletus, — all these colonies, in short, than their
mother cities — and had summoned all Roman citizens from the provinces
back to Italy that they might be enrolled upon the census lists. The first
colony to be founded outside of Italy was Carthage. Shortly afterwards the
colony of Narbo Martius was founded, in the consulship of Porcius and
Marcius.
8. – I must next record the severity of the
law courts in condemning for extortion in Macedonia Gaius Cato, an
ex-consul, the grandson of Marcus Cato, and son of the sister of
Africanus, though the claim against him amounted to but four thousand
sesterces. But the judges of that day looked rather at the purpose of the
culprit than at the measure of the wrong, applying to actions the
criterion of intention and weighing the character of the sin and not the
extent of it.
About the same time the two
brothers Marcus and Gaius Metellus celebrated their triumphs on one and
the same day. A coincidence equally celebrated which still remains unique,
was the conjunction in the consulship of the sons of Fulvius Flaccus, the
general who had conquered Capua, but one of these sons, however, had
passed by adoption into the family of Acidinus Manlius. As regards the
joint censorship of the two Metelli, they were cousins, not brothers, a
coincidence which had happened to the family of the Scipios
alone.
At this time the Cimbri and
Teutons crossed the Rhine. These peoples were soon to become famous by
reason of the disasters which they inflicted upon us and we upon them.
About the same time took place the famous triumph over the Scordisci of
Minucius, the builder of the porticoes which are famous even in our
day.
9. – At this same period flourished the
illustrious orators Scipio Aemilianus and Laelius, Sergius Galba, the two
Gracchi, Gaius Fannius, and Carbo Papirius. In this list we must not pass
over the names of Metellus Numidicus and Scaurus, and above all of Lucius
Crassus and Marcus Antonius. They were followed in time as well as in
talents by Gaius Caesar Strabo and Publius Sulpicius. As for Quintus
Mucius, he was more famous for his knowledge of jurisprudence than,
strictly speaking, for eloquence.
In the
same epoch other men of talent were illustrious: Afranius in the writing
of native comedy, in tragedy Pacuvius and Accius, a man who rose into
competition even with the genius of the Greeks, and made a great place for
his own work among theirs, with this distinction, however, that, while
they seemed to have more polish, Accius seemed to possess more real blood.
The name of Lucilius was also celebrated; he had served as a knight in the
Numantine war under Publius Africanus. At the same time, Jugurtha and
Marius, both still young men, and serving under the same Africanus,
received in the same camp the military training which they were later
destined to employ in opposing camps. At this time Sisenna, the author of
the Histories, was still a young man. His works on the Civil Wars and the
Wars of Sulla were published several years later, when he was a relatively
old man. Caelius was earlier than Sisenna, while Rutilius, Claudius
Quadrigarius and Valerius Antias were his contemporaries. Let us not
forget that at this period lived Pomponius, famed for his subject matter,
though untutored in style, and noteworthy for the new kind of composition
which he invented.
10. – Let us now go on to note the severity of
the censors Cassius Longinus and Caepio, who summoned before them the
augur Lepidus Aemilius for renting a house at six thousand sesterces. This
was a hundred and fifty-three years ago. Nowadays, if any one takes a
residence at so low a rate he is scarcely recognized as a senator. Thus
does nature pass from the normal to the perverted, from that to the
vicious, and from the vicious to the abyss of
extravagance.
At the same period took
place the notable victory of Domitius over the Arverni, and of Fabius over
the Allobroges. Fabius, who was the grandson of Paulus, received the
cognomen of Allobrogicus in commemoration of his victory. I must also note
the strange fortune which distinguished the family of the Domitii, the
more remarkable in view of the limited number of the family. Before the
present Gnaeus Domitius, a man of notable simplicity of life, there have
been seven Domitii, all only sons, but they all attained to the consulate
and priesthoods and almost all to the distinction of a triumph.
11. – Then followed the Jugurthan war waged
under the generalship of Quintus Metellus, a man inferior to no one of his
time. His second in command was Gaius Marius, whom we have already
mentioned, a man of rustic birth, rough and uncouth, and austere in his
life, as excellent a general as he was an evil influence in time of peace,
a man of unbounded ambition, insatiable, without self-control, and always
an element of unrest. Through the agency of the tax-gatherers and others
who were engaged in business in Africa he criticized the delays of
Metellus, who was now dragging on the war into its third year, charging
him with the haughtiness characteristic of the nobility and with the
desire to maintain himself in military commands. Having obtained a
furlough he went to Rome, where he succeeded in procuring his election as
consul and had the chief command of the war placed in his own hands,
although the war had already been practically ended by Metellus, who had
twice defeated Jugurtha in battle. The triumph of Metellus was none the
less brilliant, and the cognomen of Numidicus earned by his valour was
bestowed upon him. As I commented, a short time anyone, on the glory of
the family of the Domitii, let me now comment upon that of the Caecilii.
Within the compass of about twelve years during this period, the Metelli
were distinguished by consulships, censorships, or triumph more than
twelve times. Thus it is clear that, as in the case of cities and empires,
so the fortunes of families flourish, wane, and pass away.
12. – Gaius Marius, even at this time, had
Lucius Sulla associated with him as quaestor, as though the fates were
trying to avoid subsequent events. He sent Sulla to King Boccus and
through him gained possession of Jugurtha, about one hundred and
thirty-four years before the present time. He returned to the city as
consul designate for the second time, and on the kalends of January, at
the inauguration of his second consulship, he led Jugurtha in triumph.
Since, as has already been stated, an immense horde of the German races
called the Cimbri and the Teutons had defeated and routed the Consuls
Caepio and Manlius in Gaul, as before them Carbo and Silanus, had
scattered their armies, and had put to death Scaurus Aurelius an
ex-consul, and other men of renown, the Roman people was of the opinion
that no general was better qualified the repel these mighty enemies than
Marius. His consulships then followed each other in succession. The third
was consumed in preparation for this war. In this year Gnaeus Domitius,
the tribune of the people, passed a law that the priests, who had
previously been chosen by their colleagues, should now be elected by the
people. In his fourth consulship Marius met the Teutons in battle beyond
the Alps in the vicinity of Aquae Sextiae. More than a hundred and fifty
thousand of the enemy were slain by him on that day and the day after, and
the race of the Teutons was exterminated. In his fifth consulship the
consul himself and the proconsul Quintus Lutatius Catulus fought a most
successful battle on this side of the Alps on the plain called the Raudian
Plain. More than a hundred thousand of the enemy were taken or slain. By
this victory Marius seems to have earned some claim upon his country that
it should not regret his birth and to have counterbalanced his bad by his
good deeds. A sixth consulship was given him in the light of a reward for
his services. He must not, however, be deprived of the glory of this
consulship, for during this term as consul he restrained by arms the mad
acts of Servilius Glaucia and Saturninus Apuleius who were shattering the
constitution by continuing in office, and were breaking up the elections
with armed violence and bloodshed, and caused these dangerous men to be
put to death in the Curia Hostilia.
13. – After an interval of a few years Marcus
Livius Drusus entered the tribunate, a man of noble birth, of eloquent
tongue and of upright life; but in all his acts, his success was not in
keeping with his talents or his good intentions. It was his aim to restore
to the senate its ancient prestige, and again to transfer the law courts
to that order from the knights. The knights had acquired this prerogative
through the legislation of Gracchus, and had treated with severity many
noted men who were quite innocent, and, in particular, had brought to
trial on a charge of extortion and had condemned, to the great sorrow of
all the citizens, Publius Rutilius, one of the best men not only of his
age, but of all time. But in these very measures which Livius undertook on
behalf of the senate he had an opponent in the senate itself, which failed
to see that the proposals he also urged in interest of the plebs were made
as a bait and a sop to the populace, that they might, by receiving lesser
concessions, permit the passage of more important measures. In the end it
was the misfortune of Drusus to find that the senate gave more approval to
the evil measures of his colleagues than to his own plans, however
excellent, and that it spurned the dignity which he would confer it only
to accept tamely the real slights levelled against it by the others,
tolerating the mediocrity of his colleagues while it looked with jealous
eyes upon his own distinction.
14. – Since his excellent programme had fared
so badly, Drusus turned his attention to granting the citizenship to the
Italians. While he was engaged in this effort, and was returning from the
forum surrounded by the large and unorganized crowd which always attended
him, he was stabbed in the area before his house and died in a few hours,
the assassin leaving the weapon in his side. As he breathed his last and
gazed at the throng of those who stood weeping about him, he uttered the
words, most expressive of his own feelings: "O my relatives and friends,
will my country ever have another citizen like me?" Thus ended the life of
this illustrious man. One index of his character should not be passed
over. When he was building his house on the Palatine on the site where now
stands the house which once belonged to Cicero, and later to Censorinus,
and which now belongs to Statilius Sisenna, the architect offered to build
it in such a way that he would be free from the public gaze, safe from all
espionage, and that no one could look down into it. Livius replied, "If
you possess the skill you must build my house in such a way that whatever
I do shall be seen by all."
15. – The long smouldering fires of an Italian
war were now fanned into flame by the death of Drusus. One hundred and
twenty years ago, in the consulship of Lucius Caesar and Publius Rutilius,
all Italy took up arms against the Romans. The rebellion began with the
people of Asculum, who had put to death the praetor Servilius and
Fonteius, his deputy; it was then taken up by the Marsi, and from them it
made its ways into all the districts of Italy. The fortune of the Italians
was as cruel as their cause was just; for they were seeking citizenship in
the state whose power they were defending by their arms; every year and in
every war they were furnishing a double number of men, both of cavalry and
of infantry, and yet were not admitted to the rights of citizens in the
state which, through their efforts, had reached so high a position that it
could look down upon men of the same race and blood as foreigners and
aliens.
This war carried off more than
three hundred thousand of the youth of Italy. On the Roman side in this
war the most illustrious commanders were Gnaeus Pompeius, father of
Pompeius Magnus, Gaius Marius, already mentioned, Lucius Sulla, who in the
previous year had filled the praetorship, and Quintus Metellus, son of
Metellus Numidicus, who had deservedly received the cognomen of Pius, for
when his father had been exiled from the state by Lucius Saturninus, the
tribune of the people, because he alone refused to observe the laws which
the tribune had made, the son had effected his restoration through his own
devotion, aided by the authority of the senate and the unanimous sentiment
of the whole state. Numidicus earned no greater renown by his triumphs and
public honours than he earned by the cause of his exile, his exile, and
the manner of his return.
16. – On the Italian side the most celebrated
generals were Silo Popaedius, Herius Asinius, Insteius Cato, Gaius
Pontidius, Telesinus Pontius, Marius Ignatius, and Papius Mutilus; nor
ought I, through excess of modesty, to deprive my own kin of glory,
especially when that which I record is the truth; for much credit is due
to the memory of my great-grandfather Minatius Magius of Aeculanum,
grandson of Decius Magius, leader of the Campanians, of proven loyalty and
distinction. Such fidelity did Minatius display towards the Romans in this
war that, with a legion which he himself had enrolled among the Hirpini,
he took Herculaneum in conjunction with Titus Didius, was associated with
Lucius Sulla in the siege of Pompeii, and occupied Compsa. Several
historians have recorded his services, but the most extensive and clearest
testimony is that of Quintus Hortensius in his Annals. The Romans
abundantly repaid his loyal zeal by a special grant of the citizenship to
himself, and by making his sons praetors at a time when the number elected
was still confined to six.
So bitter was
this Italian war, and such its vicissitudes, that in two successive years
two Roman consuls, first Rutilius and subsequently Cato Porcius, were
slain by the enemy, the armies of the Roman people were routed in many
places, and the Romans were compelled to resort to military dress and to
remain long in that garb. The Italians chose Corfinium as their capital,
and named it Italica. Then little by little the strength of the Romans was
recruited by admitting to the citizenship those who had not taken arms or
had not been slow to lay them down again, and Pompeius, Sulla, and Marius
restored the tottering power of the Roman people.
17. – Except for the remnants of hostility
which lingered at Nola the Italian war was now in large measure ended, the
Romans, themselves exhausted, consenting to grant the citizenship
individually to the conquered and humbled states in preference to giving
it to them as a body when their own strength was still unimpaired. This
was the year in which Quintus Pompeius and Lucius Cornelius Sulla entered
upon the consulship. Sulla was a man to whom, up to the conclusion of his
career of victory, sufficient praise can hardly be given, and for whom,
after his victory, no condemnation can be adequate. He was sprung of a
noble family, the sixth in descent from the Cornelius Rufinus who had been
one of the famous generals in the war with Pyrrhus. As the renown of his
family had waned, Sulla acted a long while as though he had no thought of
seeking the consulship. Then, after his praetorship, having earned
distinction not only in the Italian war but also, even before that, in
Gaul, where he was second in command to Marius, and had routed the most
eminent leaders of the enemy, encouraged by his successes, he became a
candidate for the consulship and was elected by an almost unanimous vote
of the citizens. But this honour did not come to him until the forty-ninth
year of his age.
18. – It was about this time that Mithridates,
king of Pontus, seized Asia and put to death all Roman citizens in it. He
was a man about whom one cannot speak except with concern nor yet pass by
in silence; he was ever eager for war, of exceptional bravery, always
great in spirit and sometimes in achievement, in strategy a general, in
bodily prowess a soldier, in hatred to the Romans a Hannibal. He had sent
messages to various cities of Asia in which he had held out great promises
of reward, ordering that all Romans should be massacred on the same day
and hour throughout the province. In this crisis none equalled the
Rhodians either in courageous opposition to Mithridates or in loyalty to
the Romans. Their fidelity gained lustre from the perfidy of the people of
Mytilene, who handed Manius Aquilius and other Romans over to Mithridates
in chains. The Mytilenians subsequently had their liberty restored by
Pompey solely in consideration of his friendship for Theophanes. When
Mithridates was now regarded as a formidable menace to Italy herself, the
province of Asia fell to the lot of Sulla, as
proconsul.
Sulla departed from the city,
but was still lingering in the vicinity of Nola, since that city, as
though regretting its exceptional loyalty so sacredly maintained in the
Punic war, still persisted in maintaining armed resistance to Rome and was
being besieged by a Roman army. While he was still there Publius
Sulpicius, tribune of the people, a man of eloquence and energy, who had
earned situation by his wealth, his influence, his friendships, and by the
vigour of his native ability and his courage, and had previously won great
influence with the people by honourable means, now, as if regretting his
virtues, and discovering that an honourable course of conduct brought him
only disappointment, made a sudden plunge into evil ways, and attached
himself to Marius, who, though he had passed his seventieth year, still
coveted every position of power and every province. Along with other
pieces of pernicious and baleful legislation intolerable in a free state,
he proposed a bill to the assembly of the people abrogating Sulla's
command, and entrusting the Mithridatic war to Gaius Marius. He even went
so far as to cause, through emissaries of his faction, the assassination
of a man who was not only son of Quintus Pompeius the consul but also
son-in-law of Sulla.
19. – Thereupon Sulla assembled his army,
returned to the city, took armed possession of it, drove from the city the
twelve persons responsible for these revolutionary and vicious measures —
among them Marius, his son, and Publius Sulpicius — and caused them by
formal decree to be declared exiles. Sulpicius was overtaken by horsemen
and slain in the Laurentine marshes, and his head was raised aloft and
exhibited on the front of the rostra as a presage of the impending
proscription. Marius, who had held six consulships and was now more than
seventy years of age, was dragged, naked and covered with mud, his eyes
and nostrils alone showing above the water, from a reed-bed near the marsh
of Marica, where he had taken refuge when pursued by the cavalry of Sulla.
A rope was cast about his neck and he was led to the prison of Minturnae
on the order of its duumvir. A public slave of German nationality was sent
with a sword to put him to death. It happened that this man had been taken
a prisoner by Marius when he was commander in the war against the Cimbri;
when he recognized Marius, giving utterance with loud outcry to his
indignation at the plight of this great man, he threw away his sword and
fled from the prison. Then the citizens, taught by a foreign enemy to pity
one who had so short a time before been the first man in the state,
furnished Marius with money, brought clothing to cover him, and put him on
board a ship. Marius, overtaking his son near Aenaria, steered his course
for Africa, where he endured a life of poverty in a hut amid the ruins of
Carthage. There Marius, as he gazed upon Carthage, and Carthage as she
beheld Marius, might well have offered consolation the one to the
other.
20. – In this year the hands of Roman soldiers
were first stained with the blood of a consul. Quintus Pompeius, the
colleague of Sulla, was slain by the army of Gnaeus Pompeius the proconsul
in a mutiny which their general himself had stirred
up.
Cinna was a man as lacking in
restraint as Marius and Sulpicius. Accordingly, although the citizenship
had been given to Italy with the proviso that the new citizens should be
enrolled in but eight tribes, so that their power and numbers might not
weaken the prestige of the older citizens, and that the beneficiaries
might not have greater power than the benefactors, Cinna now promised to
distribute them throughout all the tribes. With this object he had brought
together into the city a great multitude from all parts of Italy. But he
was driven from the city by the united strength of his college and the
optimates, and set out for Campania. His consulship was abrogated by the
authority of the senate and Lucius Cornelius Merula, priest of Jupiter,
was chosen consul in his place. This illegal act was more appropriate in
the case of Cinna than it was a good precedent. Cinna was then received by
the army at Nola, after corrupting first the centurions and tribunes and
then even the private soldiers with promises of largesse. When they all
had sworn allegiance to him, while still retaining the insignia of the
consulate he waged war upon his country, relying upon the enormous number
of new citizens, from whom he had levied more than three hundred cohorts,
thus raising the number of his troops to the equivalent of thirty legions.
But his party lacked the backing of strong men; to remedy this defect he
recalled Gaius Marius and his son from exile, and also those who had been
banished with them.
21. – While Cinna was waging war against his
country, the conduct of Gnaeus Pompeius, the father of Pompeius Magnus,
was somewhat equivocal. As I have already told, the state had made use of
his distinguished services in the Marsian war, particularly in the
territory of Picenum; he had taken Asculum, in the vicinity of which,
though armies were scattered in other regions also, seventy-five thousand
Roman citizens and more than sixty thousand Italians had met in battle on
a single day. Foiled in his hope of a second term in the consulship, he
maintained a doubtful and neutral attitude as between the two parties, so
that he seemed to be acting entirely in his own interest and to be
watching his chance, turning with his army now to one side and now to the
other, according as each offered a greater promise for power for himself.
In the end, however, he fought against Cinna in a great and bloody battle.
Words almost fail to express how disastrous to combatants and spectators
alike was the issue of this battle, which began and ended beneath the
walls and close to the very hearths of Rome. Shortly after this battle,
while pestilence was ravaging both armies, as though their strength had
not been sapped enough by the war, Gnaeus Pompeius died. The joy felt at
his death almost counterbalanced the feeling of loss for the citizens who
had perished by sword or pestilence, and the Roman people vented upon his
dead body the hatred it had owed him while he
lived.
Whether there were two families of
the Pompeii or three, the first of that name to be consul was Quintus
Pompeius, who was colleague of Gnaeus Servilius, about one hundred and
sixty-seven years ago.
Cinna and Marius
both seized the city after conflicts which caused much shedding of blood
on both sides, but Cinna was the first to enter it, whereupon he proposed
a law authorizing the recall of Marius.
22. – Then Gaius Marius entered the city, and
his return was fraught with calamity for the citizens. No victory would
ever have exceeded his in cruelty had Sulla's not followed soon
afterwards. Nor did the licence of the sword play havoc among the obscure
alone; the highest and most distinguished men in the state were made the
victims of many kinds of vengeance. Amongst these Octavius the consul, a
man of the mildest temper, was slain by the command of Cinna. Merula,
however, who had abdicated his consulship just before the arrival of
Cinna, opened his veins and, as his blood drenched the altars, he implored
the gods to whom, as priest of Jupiter, he had formerly prayed for safety
of the state, to visit their wrath upon Cinna and his party. Thus did he
yield up the life which had served the state so well. Marcus Antonius, the
foremost statesman and orator of Rome, was struck down, at the order of
Marius and Cinna, by the swords of soldiers, though he caused even these
to hesitate by the power of his eloquence. Then there was Quintus Catulus,
renowned for his virtues in general and for the glory, which he had shared
with Marius, of having won the Cimbrian war; when he was being hunted down
for death, he shut himself in a room that had lately been plastered with
lime and sand; then he brought fire that it might cause a powerful vapour
to issue from the plaster, and by breathing the poisonous air and then
holding his breath he died a death according rather with his enemies'
wishes than with their judgement.
The
whole state was now plunging headlong into ruin; and yet no one had so far
appeared who either dared to offer for pillage the goods of a Roman
citizen, or could bring himself to demand them. Later, however, even this
extreme was reached, and avarice furnished a motive for ruthlessness; the
magnitude of one's crime was determined by the magnitude of his property;
he who possessed riches became a malefactor and was in each case the prize
set up for his own murder. In short nothing was regarded as dishonourable
that brought profit.
23. – Cinna then entered upon his second
consulship, and Marius upon his seventh, only to bring dishonour upon his
former six. An illness which came upon Marius at the very beginning of his
year of office ended the life of this man, who, impatient as he was of
tranquillity, was as dangerous to his fellow-citizens in peace as he had
been in war to Rome's enemies. In his place was chosen as consul suffectus
Valerius Flaccus, the author of a most disgraceful law, by which he had
ordained that one-fourth only of a debt should be paid to the creditors,
an act for which a well-deserved punishment overtook him within two years.
During this time, while Cinna held the reins of power in Italy, a large
proportion of the nobles took refuge with Sulla in Achaea, and afterwards
in Asia.
In the meantime Sulla fought
with the generals of Mithridates at Athens, in Boeotia, and in Macedonia
with such success that he recovered Athens, and, after surmounting many
difficulties in overcoming the manifold fortifications of Piraeus, slew
more than two hundred thousand of the enemy and made prisoners of as many
more. If anyone regards this period of rebellion, during which Athens
suffered siege at the hands of Sulla, as a breach of good faith on the
part of the Athenians, he shows a strange ignorance of the facts of
history; for so constant was the loyalty of the Athenians towards the
Romans that always and invariably, whenever the Romans referred to any act
of unqualified loyalty, they called it an example of "Attic faith." But at
this time, overwhelmed as they were by the arms of Mithridates, the
Athenians were in a most unhappy plight. Held in subjection by their
enemies and besieged by their friends, although in obedience to necessity
they kept their bodies within the walls, their hearts were outside their
fortifications. After the capture of Athens Sulla crossed into Asia, where
he found Mithridates submissive to all his demands and in the attitude of
a suppliant. He compelled him, after paying a fine in money and giving up
half his fleet, to evacuate Asia and all the other provinces which he had
seized; he also secured the return of all prisoners, inflicted punishment
upon deserters and others who had been in any way culpable, and obliged
Mithridates to be satisfied with the boundaries of his inheritance, that
is to say, with Pontus.
24. – Before the arrival of Sulla, Gaius
Flavius Fimbria, prefect of horse, had put to death Valerius Flaccus, a
man of consular rank, had taken command of his army, by which he was
saluted as imperator, and had succeeded in defeating Mithridates in
battle. Now, on the eve of Sulla's arrival, he took his own life. He was a
young man who, however reprehensible his bold designs might be, at any
rate executed them with bravery. In the same year Publius Laenas, tribune
of the people, threw Sextus Lucilius, tribune of the previous year, from
the Tarpeian rock. When his colleagues, whom he also indicted, fled in
fear to Sulla, he had a decree of banishment passed against
them.
Sulla had now settled affairs
across the sea. There came to him ambassadors of the Parthians — he was
the first of the Romans to be so honoured — and among them some wise men
who, from the marks on his body, foretold that his life and his fame would
be worthy of a god. Returning to Italy he landed at Brundisium, having not
more than thirty thousand men to face more than two hundred thousand of
the enemy. Of all the exploits of Sulla there is nothing that I should
consider more noteworthy than that, during the three years in which the
party of Marius and Cinna were continuously masters of Italy, he never hid
from them his intention to wage war on them, but at the same time he did
not interrupt the war which he then had on his hands. He considered that
his duty was to crush the enemy before taking vengeance upon citizens, and
that after he had repelled the menace of the foreigner and won a victory
in this way abroad, he should then prove himself the master in a war at
home. Before Lucius Sulla's arrival Cinna was slain in a mutiny of his
army. He was a man who deserved to die by the sentence of his victorious
enemies rather than at the hands of his angry soldiers. Of him one can
truly say that he formed daring plans, such as no good citizen would have
conceived, and that he accomplished what none but a most resolute man
could have accomplished, and that he was foolhardy enough in the
formulation of his plans, but in their execution a man. Carbo remained
sole consul throughout the year without electing a colleague in the place
of Cinna.
25. – One would think that Sulla had come to
Italy, not as the champion of war but as the establisher of peace, so
quietly did he lead his army through Calabria and Apulia into Campania,
taking unusual care not to inflict damage on crops, fields, men, or
cities, and such efforts did he make to end the war on just terms and fair
conditions. But peace could not be to the liking of men whose cause was
wicked and whose cupidity was unbounded. In the meantime Sulla's army was
daily growing, for all the better and saner citizens flocked to his side.
By a fortunate issue of events he overcame the consuls Scipio and Norbanus
near Capua. Norbanus was defeated in battle, while Scipio, deserted and
betrayed by his army, was allowed by Sulla to go unharmed. So different
was Sulla the warrior from Sulla the victor that, while his victory was in
progress he was mild and more lenient than was reasonable, but after it
was won his cruelty was unprecedented. For instance, as we have already
said, he disarmed the consul and let him go, and after gaining possession
of many leaders including Quintus Sertorius, so soon to become the
firebrand of a great war, he dismissed them unharmed. The reason, I
suppose, was that we might have a notable example of a double and utterly
contradictory personality in one and the same
man.
It was while Sulla was ascending
Mount Tifata that he had encountered Gaius Norbanus. After his victory
over him he paid a vow of gratitude to Diana, to whom that region is
sacred, and consecrated to the goddess the waters renowned for their
salubrity and water to heal, as well as all the lands in the vicinity. The
record of this pleasing act of piety is witnessed to this day by an
inscription on the door of the temple, and a bronze tablet within the
edifice.
26. – Carbo now became consul for the third
time, in conjunction with Gaius Marius, now aged twenty-six, the son of a
father who had been seven times consul. He was a man who showed his
father's spirit, though not destined to reach his years, who displayed
great fortitude in the many enterprises he undertook, and never belied the
name. Defeated by Sulla at Sacriportus he retired with his army to
Praeneste, which town, though already strong by nature, he had
strengthened by a garrison.
In order that
nothing should be lacking to the calamities of the state, in Rome, a city
in which there had already been rivalry in virtues, there was now a
rivalry in crimes, and that man now regarded himself as the best citizen
who had formerly been the worst. While the battle was being fought at
Sacriportus, within the city the praetor Damasippus murdered in the Curia
Hostilia, as supposed partisans of Sulla, Domitius, a man of consular
rank; Scaevola Mucius, pontifex maximus and famous author of works on
religious and civil law; Gaius Carbo, a former praetor, and brother of the
consul, and Antistius, a former aedile. May Calpurnia, the daughter of
Bestia and wife of Antistius, never lose the glory of a noble deed; for,
when her husband was put to death, as I have just said, she pierced her
own breast with the sword. What increment has his glory and fame received
through this brave act of a woman! and yet his own name is by no means
obscure.
27. – While Carbo and Marius were still
consuls, one hundred and nine years ago, on the Kalends of November,
Pontius Telesinus, a Samnite chief, brave in spirit and in action and
hating to the core the very name of Rome, having collected about him forty
thousand of the bravest and most steadfast youth who still persisted in
retaining arms, fought with Sulla, near the Colline gate, a battle so
critical as to bring both Sulla and the city into the gravest peril. Rome
had not faced a greater danger when she saw the camp of Hannibal within
the third milestone, than on this day when Telesinus went about from rank
to rank exclaiming: "The last day is at hand for the Romans," and in a
loud voice exhorted his men to overthrow and destroy their city, adding:
"These wolves that made such ravages upon Italian liberty will never
vanish until we have cut down the forest that harbours them." It was only
after the first hour of the night that the Roman army was able to recover
its breath, and the enemy retired. The next day Telesinus was found in a
half-dying condition, but with the expression of a conqueror upon his face
rather than that of a dying man. Sulla ordered his severed head to be
fixed upon a spear point and carried around the walls of
Praeneste.
The young Marius, now at last
despairing of his cause, endeavoured to make his way out of Praeneste
through the tunnels, wrought with great engineering skill, which led into
the fields in different directions; but, on emerging from the exit, he was
cut off by men who had been stationed there for that purpose. Some
authorities have asserted that he died by his own hand, some that he died
in company with the younger brother of Telesinus, who was also besieged
and was endeavouring to escape with him, and that each ran upon the
other's sword. Whatever the manner of his death, his memory is not
obscured even to-day by the great figure of his father. Sulla's estimate
of the young man is manifest; for it was only after he was slain that he
took the name of Felix, a name which he would have been completely
justified in assuming had his life ended with his
victory.
The siege of Marius in Praeneste
was directed by Ofella Lucretius, who had been a general on the Marian
side but had deserted to Sulla. Sulla commemorated the great good fortune
which fell to him on this day by instituting an annual festival of games
held in the circus, which are still celebrated as the games of Sulla's
victory.
28. – Shortly before Sulla's victory at
Sacriportus, several leaders of his party had routed the enemy in
successful engagements; the two Servilii at Clusium, Metellus Pius at
Faventia, and Marcus Lucullus in the vicinity of
Fidentia.
The terrors of the civil war
seemed nearly at an end when they received fresh impetus from the cruelty
of Sulla. Being made dictator (the office had been obsolete for one
hundred and twenty years, and had been last employed in the year after
Hannibal's departure from Italy; it is therefore clear that the fear which
caused the Roman people to feel the need of a dictator was outweighed by
the fear of his excessive power) Sulla now wielded with unbridled cruelty
the powers which former dictators had employed only to save their country
in times of extreme danger. He was the first to set the precedent for
proscription — would that he had been the last! The result was that in the
very state in which an actor who had been hissed from the stage has legal
redress for wilful abuse, a premium for the murder of a citizen was now
publicly announced; that the richest man was he who had slain the greatest
number; that the bounty for slaying an enemy was no greater than that for
slaying a citizen; and that each man became the prize set up for his own
death. Nor was vengeance wreaked upon those alone who had borne arms
against him, but on many innocents as well. In addition the goods of the
proscribed were sold, and their children were not only deprived of their
fathers' property but were also debarred from the right of seeking public
office, and to cap the climax of injustice, the sons of senators were
compelled to bear the burdens and yet lose the rights pertaining to their
rank.
29. – Just before the arrival of Lucius Sulla
in Italy, Gnaeus Pompeius, the son of the Gnaeus Pompeius who, as has
already been mentioned, won such brilliant successes in the Marsian war
during his consulship, though but twenty-three years of age — it was one
hundred and thirteen years ago — on his own initiative and with his own
private funds conceived and brilliantly executed a daring plan. To avenge
his country and restore her dignity he raised a strong army from the
district of Picenum which was filled with the retainers of his father. To
do justice to the greatness of this man would require many volumes, but
the brief compass of my work compels me to limit my description to a few
words.
On the side of his mother Lucilia
he was of senatorial stock. He was distinguished by a personal beauty, not
of the sort which gives the bloom of youth its charm, but stately and
unchanging, as befitted the distinction and good fortune of his career,
and this beauty attended him to the last day of his life. He was a man of
exceptional purity of life, of great uprightness of character, of but
moderate oratorical talent, ambitious of such power as might be conferred
upon him as a mark of honour, but not that which had to be forcibly
usurped. In war a resourceful general, in peace a citizen of temperate
conduct except when he feared a rival, constant in his friendships, easily
placated when offended, loyal in re-establishing terms of amity, very
ready to accept satisfaction, never or at least rarely abusing his power,
Pompey was free from almost every fault, unless it be considered one of
the greatest of faults for a man to chafe at seeing anyone his equal in
dignity in a free state, the mistress of the world, where he should justly
regard all citizens as his equals. From the day on which he had assumed
the toga he had been trained to military service on the staff of that
sagacious general, his father, and by a singular insight into military
tactics had so developed his excellent native talent, which showed great
capacity to learn what was best, that, while Sertorius bestowed the
greater praise upon Metellus, it was Pompey he feared the more
strongly.
30. – Shortly afterwards Marcus Perpenna, an
ex-praetor, one of those who had been proscribed, a man more distinguished
for his birth than for his character, assassinated Sertorius at Osca at a
banquet. By this wicked deed he ensured success to the Romans, and
destruction to his own faction, and for himself a death of extreme
dishonour. Metellus and Pompey won triumphs for their victories in Spain.
Pompey, who even at the time of his triumph was still a Roman knight,
entered the city in his triumphal car on the day before his entrance upon
his consulate. Who is there who does not feel surprise that this man, who
owed his elevation to the highest position in the state to so many
extraordinary commands, should have taken it ill that the senate and the
Roman people were willing to consider Gaius Caesar as a candidate for the
consulship a second time, though suing for it in absentia? So common a
failing is it for mankind to overlook every irregularity in their own
case, but to make no concessions to others, and to let their discontent
with conditions be vented upon suspected motives and upon persons instead
of the real cause. In this consulship Pompey restored the power of the
tribunes, of which Sulla had left the shadow without the
substance.
While war was being waged
against Sertorius in Spain sixty-four runaway slaves, escaping from a
gladiatorial school in Capua, seized swords in that city, and at first
took refuge on Mount Vesuvius; then, as their number increased daily, they
afflicted Italy with many serious disasters. Their number grew to such an
extent that in the last battle which they fought they confronted the Roman
army with ninety thousand men. The glory of ending this war belongs to
Marcus Crassus, who was soon by unanimous consent to be regarded as the
first citizen in the state.
31. – The personality of Pompey had now turned
the eyes of the world upon itself, and in all things he was now regarded
as more than a mere citizen. As consul he made the laudable promise, which
he also kept, that he would not go from that office to any province. But,
two years afterwards, when the pirates were terrifying the world, not as
heretofore by furtive marauding expeditions but with fleets of ships in
the manner of regular warfare, and had already plundered several cities of
Italy, Aulus Gabinius, a tribune, proposed an enactment to the effect that
Gnaeus Pompeius should be sent to crush them, and that in all the
provinces he should have a power equal to that of the proconsular
governors to a distance of fifty miles from the sea. By this decree the
command of almost the entire world was being entrusted to one man. Seven
years before, it is true, like power had been decreed to Marcus Antonius
as praetor. But sometimes the personality of the recipient of such power,
just as it renders the precedent more or less dangerous, increases or
diminishes its invidiousness. In the case of Antonius people had looked
upon his position with no concern. For it is not often that we begrudge
honours to those whose power we do not fear. On the other hand men shrink
from conferring extraordinary powers upon those who seem likely to retain
them or lay them aside only as they themselves choose, and whose
inclinations are their only check. The optimates advised against the grant
to Pompey, but sane advice succumbed to impulse.
32. – The sterling character of Quintus
Catulus and his modesty on this occasion are worthy of record. Opposing
the law before the assembled people he had said that Pompey was without
question a great man, but that he was now becoming too great for a free
republic, and that all powers ought not to be reposed in one man. "If
anything happens to Pompey," he added, "whom will you put in his place?"
The people shouted with one accord, "You, Catulus." Then, yielding to the
unanimous desire of the people for the proposed law and to this honourable
tribute of his fellow-citizens, he left the assembly. At this point one
would fain express admiration for the modesty of the man and the fairness
of the people; in the case of Catulus, because he ceased his opposition,
and, in the case of the people, because it was unwilling to withhold from
one who was speaking against the measure in opposition to them this real
evidence of their esteem.
About the same
time Cotta divided service upon the juries equally between the senatorial
and equestrian orders. Gaius Gracchus had taken this privilege from the
senate and given it to the knights, while Sulla had again transferred it
from the knights to the senate. Otho Roscius by his law restored to the
knights their places in the
theatre.
Meanwhile Gnaeus Pompey enlisted
the services of many illustrious men, distributed detachments of the fleet
to all the recesses of the sea, and in a short time with an invincible
force he freed the world from the menace of piracy. Near the Cilician
coast he delivered his final attack upon the pirates, who had already met
with frequent defeats in many other places, and completely routed them.
Then, in order that he might the more quickly put an end to a war that
spread over so wide an area, he collected the remnants of the pirates and
established them in fixed abodes in cities far from the sea. Some
criticize him for this; but although the plan is sufficiently recommended
by its author, it would have made its author great whoever he might have
been; for, by giving the pirates the opportunity to live without
brigandage, he restrained them from brigandage.
33. – When the war with the pirates was
drawing to a close, Pompey was assigned to the command against Mithridates
in place of Lucius Lucullus. Seven years before this, Lucullus, at the
conclusion of his consulship, had obtained the proconsulship of Asia, and
had been placed in command against Mithridates. In this post he had
performed some great and notable exploits, having defeated Mithridates
several times in different regions, freed Cyzicus by a brilliant victory,
and conquered Tigranes, the greatest of kings, in Armenia. That he had not
put an end to the war was due, one might say, to lack of inclination
rather than of ability; for although in all other respects he was a man of
laudable character and in war had scarcely ever been defeated, he was a
victim to the love of money. He was still engaged in carrying on the same
struggle when Manilius, tribune of the people, a man of venal character
always, and ready to abet the ambitions of others, proposed a law that
Pompey should be given the chief command in the Mithridatic war. The law
was passed, and the two commanders began to vie with each other in
recriminations, Pompey charging Lucullus with his unsavoury greed for
money, and Lucullus taunting Pompey with his unbounded ambition for
military power. Neither could be convicted of falsehood in his charge
against the other. In fact Pompey, from the time when he first took part
in public life, could not brook an equal at all. In undertakings in which
he should have been merely the first he wished to be the only one. No one
was ever more indifferent to other things or possessed a greater craving
for glory; he knew no restraint in his quest for office, though he was
moderate to a degree in the exercise of his powers. Entering upon each new
office with the utmost eagerness, he would lay them aside with unconcern,
and, although he consulted his own wishes in attaining what he desired, he
yielded to the wishes of others in resigning it. As for Lucullus, who was
otherwise a great man, he was the first to set the example for our present
lavish extravagance in building, in banquets, and in furnishings. Because
of the massive piles which he built in the sea, and of his letting the sea
in upon the land by digging through mountains, Pompey used to call him,
and not without point, the Roman Xerxes.
34. – During the same period the island of
Crete was brought under the sovereignty of the Roman people by Quintus
Metellus. For three years this island, under the leadership of Panares and
Lasthenes who had collected a force of twenty-four thousand men, swift in
their movements, hardened to the toils of war, and famous in their use of
the bow, had worn out the Roman armies. Gnaeus Pompeius could not refrain
from coveting some of this glory also, and sought to claim a share in his
victory. But the triumphs, both of Lucullus and of Metellus, were rendered
popular in the eyes of all good citizens not only by the distinguished
merits of the two generals themselves but also by the general unpopularity
of Pompey.
At this time the conspiracy of
Sergius Catiline, Lentulus, Cethegus, and other men of both the equestrian
and senatorial orders was detected by the extraordinary courage, firmness,
and careful vigilance of the consul Marcus Cicero, a man who owed his
elevation wholly to himself, who had ennobled his lowly birth, who was as
distinguished in his life as he was great in genius, and who saved us from
being vanquished in intellectual accomplishments by those whom we had
vanquished in arms. Catiline was driven from the city by fear of the
authority of the consul; Lentulus, a man of consular rank and twice a
praetor, Cethegus, and other men of illustrious family were put to death
in prison on the order of the consul, supported by the authority of the
senate.
35. – The meeting of the senate at which this
action had been taken raised the character of Marcus Cato, which had
already shone forth conspicuously in other matters, to a lofty pinnacle.
Descended from Marcus Cato, the first of the Porcian house, who was his
great-grandfather, he resembled Virtue herself, and in all his acts he
revealed a character nearer to that of gods than of men. He never did a
right action solely for the sake of seeming to do the right, but because
he could not do otherwise. To him that alone seemed reasonable which was
likewise just. Free from all the failings of mankind he always kept
fortune subject to his control. At this time, though he was only tribune
elect and still quite a young man, while others were urging that Lentulus
and the other conspirators should be placed in custody in the Italian
towns, Cato, though among the very last to be asked for his opinion,
inveighed against the conspiracy with such vigour of spirit and intellect
and such earnestness of expression that he caused those who in their
speeches had urged leniency to be suspected of complicity in the plot.
Such a picture did he present of the dangers which threatened Rome, by the
burning and destruction of the city and the subversion of the
constitution, and such a eulogy did he give of the consul's firm stand,
that the senate as a body changed to the support of his motion and voted
the imposition of the death penalty upon the conspirators, and a large
number of the senators escorted Cicero to his
home.
As for Catiline, he proceeded to
carry out his criminal undertaking with as much energy as he had shown in
planning it. Fighting with desperate courage, he gave up in battle the
life which he had forfeited to the executioner.
36. – No slight prestige is added to the
consulship of Cicero by the birth in that year — ninety-two years ago — of
the emperor Augustus, who was destined by his greatness to overshadow all
men of all races.
It may now seem an
almost superfluous task to indicate the period at which men of eminent
talent flourished. For who does not know that at this epoch, separated
only by differences in their ages, there flourished Cicero and Hortensius;
a little earlier Crassus, Cotta, and Sulpicius; a little later Brutus,
Calidius, Caelius, Calvus, and Caesar, who ranks next to Cicero; next to
them, and, as it were, their pupils, come Corvinus and Pollio Asinius,
Sallust, the rival of Thucydides, the poets Varro and Lucretius, and
Catullus, who ranks second to none in the branch of literature which he
undertook. It is almost folly to proceed to enumerate men of talent who
are almost beneath our eyes, among whom the most important in our age are
Virgil, the prince of poets, Rabirius, Livy, who follows close upon
Sallust, Tibullus, and Naso, each of whom achieved perfection in his own
branch of literature. As for living writers, while we admire them greatly,
a critical list is difficult to make.
37. – While these occurrences were taking
place in the city and in Italy, Gnaeus Pompeius carried on a notable
campaign against Mithridates, who after the departure of Lucullus had
again prepared a new army of great strength. The king was defeated and
routed, and after losing all his forces sought refuge in Armenia with his
son-in-law Tigranes, the most powerful king of his day, though his power
had been somewhat broken by Lucullus. Pompey accordingly entered Armenia
in pursuit of both kings at once. First a son of Tigranes, who was at
variance with his father, came to Pompey. Then the king in person, and, in
the guise of a suppliant, placed himself and his kingdom under the
jurisdiction of Pompey, prefacing this act with the statement that he
would not have submitted himself to the alliance of any man but Gnaeus
Pompeius, whether Roman or of any other nationality; that he would be
ready to bear any condition, favourable or otherwise, upon which Pompey
might decide; that there was no disgrace in being beaten by one whom it
would be a sin against the gods to defeat, and that there was no dishonour
in submitting to one whom fortune had elevated above all others. The king
was permitted to retain the honours of royalty, be was compelled to pay a
large sum of money, all of which, as was Pompey's practice, was remitted
to the quaestor and listed in the public accounts. Syria and the other
provinces which Mithridates had seized were wrested from him. Some were
restored to the Roman people, and others were then for the first time
brought under its sway — Syria, for instance — which first became a
tributary province at this time. The sovereignty of the king was now
limited to Armenia.
38. – It does not seem out of keeping with the
plan which I have set before me in my work to give a brief synopsis of the
races and nations which were reduced to provinces and made tributary to
Rome, and by what generals. Thus it will be easier to see at a glance when
grouped together, the facts already given in
detail.
Claudius the consul was the first
to cross into Sicily with an army, but it was only after the capture of
Syracuse, fifty years later, that it was converted into a province by
Marcellus Claudius. Regulus was the first to invade Africa, in the ninth
year of the First Punic war. It was one hundred and nine years later, one
hundred and seventy-three years ago, that Publius Scipio Aemilianus
destroyed Carthage and reduced Africa to the form of a province. Sardinia
finally became subject to the yoke in the interval between the First and
Second Punic War, through the agency of Titus Manlius the consul. It is a
strong proof of the warlike character of our state that only three times
did the closing of the temple of the double-faced Janus give proof of
unbroken peace: once under the kings, a second time in the consulship of
the Titus Manlius just mentioned, and a third time in the reign of
Augustus. The two Scipios, Gnaeus and Publius, were the first to lead
armies into Spain, at the beginning of the Second Punic War, two hundred
and fifty years ago; from that time on we alternately acquired and lost
portions of it until under Augustus the whole of it became tributary.
Paulus conquered Macedonia, Mummius Achaea, Fulvius Nobilior Aetolia,
Lucius Scipio, the brother of Africanus, wrested Asia from Antiochus, but,
by the gift of the senate and the Roman people, it soon afterwards passed
to the ownership of the Attalids. It was made a tributary province by
Marcus Perpenna after the capture of Aristonicus. No credit for the
conquest of Cyprus can be assigned to any general, since it was by a
decree of the Senate, carried out by Cato, that it became a province on
the death of its king, self-inflicted in consciousness of guilt. Crete was
punished by Metellus by the termination of the liberty which she had long
enjoyed. Syria and Pontus are monuments to the valour of Gnaeus
Pompeius.
39. – Domitius and Fabius, son of Paulus, who
was surnamed Allobrogicus, first entered the Gauls with an army; later
these provinces cost us much blood in our attempts at conquest alternating
with our loss of them. In all these operations the work of Caesar is the
most brilliant and most conspicuous. Reduced under his auspices and
generalship, they pay almost as much tribute into the treasury as the rest
of the world. Caesar also made Numidia a province, from which Metellus had
long before won by his valour the cognomen of
Numidicus.
Isauricus conquered Cilicia,
and Vulso Manlius Gallograecia after the war with Antiochus. Bithynia, as
has been already said, was bequeathed to the Romans by the will of
Nicomedes. Besides Spain and other countries whose names adorn his Forum,
Augustus made Egypt tributary, thereby contributing nearly as much revenue
to the treasury as his father had brought to it from the Gauls. Tiberius
Caesar extorted from the Illyrians and Dalmatians a definite confession of
submission such as that which Augustus had wrested from Spain. He also
added to our empire as new provinces Raetia, Vindelicia, Noricum,
Pannonia, and the Scordisci. These he conquered by arms. Cappadocia he
made tributary to the Roman people through the mere prestige of his name.
But let us now return to the order of events.
40. – Then followed the military exploits of
Gnaeus Pompeius, in regard to which it would be difficult to say whether
the glory they earned or labour they cost was the greater. Media, Albania,
and Iberia were invaded with victorious arms. Then he changed the
direction of his month to the regions of the interior, to the right of the
Black Sea — the Colchians, the Heniochi, and the Achaei. Mithridates was
crushed, the last of the independent kings except the rulers of the
Parthians, through the treachery of his son Pharnaces, it is true, but
during the period of Pompey's command. Then, after conquering all the
races in his path, Pompey returned to Italy, having achieved a greatness
which exceeded both his own hopes and those of his fellow-citizens, and
having, in all his campaigns, surpassed the fortune of a mere mortal. It
was owing to this impression that his return created such favourable
comment; for the majority of his countrymen had insisted that he would not
enter the city without his army, and that he would set a limit upon public
liberty according to his own caprice. The return of so great a general as
an ordinary citizen was all the more welcome because of the apprehensions
which had been entertained. For, dismissing his whole army at Brundisium,
and retaining none of his former power except the title of imperator, he
returned to the city with only the retinue which regularly attended him.
There he celebrated, for a period of two days, a most magnificent triumph
over the many kings whom he had conquered, and from the spoils he
contributed to the treasury a far larger sum of money than any other
general had ever done except Paulus.
In
Pompey's absence the tribunes of the people, Titus Ampius and Titus
Labienus, proposed a law that at the games of the circus Pompey should be
permitted to wear a golden crown and the full dress of the triumphator,
and at the theatre the purple-bordered toga and the golden crown. But he
forbore to use this honour more than once, and indeed that was itself too
often. This man was raised by fortune to the pinnacle of his career by
great leaps, first triumphing over Africa, then over Europe, then over
Asia, and the three divisions of the world thus became so many monuments
of his victory. Greatness is never without envy. Pompey met with
opposition from Lucullus and from Metellus Creticus, who did not forget
the slight he had received (indeed he had just cause for complaint in that
Pompey had robbed him of the captive generals who were to have adorned his
triumph), and from a section of the optimates who sought to prevent the
fulfilment of Pompey's promises to the various cities and the payment of
rewards in accordance with his wishes to those who had been of service to
him.
41. – Then followed the consulship of Gaius
Caesar, who now lays hold upon my pen and compels, whatever my haste, to
linger a while upon him. Sprung from the noble family of the Julii, and
tracing his descent from Venus and Anchises, a claim conceded by all
investigators of antiquity, he surpassed all his fellow-citizens in beauty
of person. He was exceedingly keen and vigorous of mind, lavish in his
generosity, and possessed a courage exceeding the nature, and even the
credence, of man. In the magnitude of his ambitions, in the rapidity of
his military operations, and in his endurance of danger, he closely
resembled Alexander the Great, but only when Alexander was free from the
influence of wine and master of his passions for Caesar, in a word, never
indulged in food or in sleep except as they ministered, not to pleasure,
but to life. To Gaius Marius he was closely related by blood; he was also
the son-in-law of Cinna, whose daughter no consideration of fear would
induce him to divorce, whereas Marcus Piso, a man of consular rank, had
divorced Annia, who had been the wife of Cinna, in order to win Sulla's
favour. Caesar was only about eighteen years of age at the time of Sulla's
dictatorship; and when a search was made for him with a view to putting
him to death, not, it is true, by Sulla himself, but by his minions and
partisans, he escaped from the city at night by assuming a disguise which
effectually concealed his rank. Later, but when still quite a young man,
he was captured by pirates and so conducted himself during the entire
period of his detention as to inspire in them to an equal degree both fear
and respect. Neither by day nor by night did he remove his shoes or loosen
his girdle — for why should a detail of the greatest significance be
omitted merely because it cannot be adorned in imposing language? — lest
the slightest change in his usual garb might cause him to be suspected by
his captors, who guarded him only with their eyes.
42. – It would take too long to tell of his
many bold plans for the punishment of the pirates, or how obstinately the
timid governor of Asia refused to second them. The following story,
however, may be told as a presage of his future greatness. On the night
following the day on which his ransom was paid by the cities of Asia — he
had, however, compelled the pirates before payment to give hostages to
these cities — although he was but a private citizen without authority,
and his fleet had been collected on the spur of the moment, he directed
his course to the rendezvous of the pirates, put to flight part of their
fleet, sank part, and captured several ships and many men. Well satisfied
with the success of his night expedition he returned to his friends and,
after handing his prisoners into custody, went straight to Bithynia to
Juncus, the proconsul — for the same man was governor of Bithynia as well
as of Asia — and demanded his sanction for the execution of his captives.
When Juncus, whose former inactivity had now given way to jealousy,
refused, and said that he would sell the captives as slaves, Caesar
returned to the coast with incredible speed and crucified all his
prisoners before anyone had had time to receive a dispatch from the consul
in regard to the matter.
43. – Not long afterwards he was hastening to
Italy to enter upon the priestly office of pontifex maximus to which he
had been elected in his absence in place of the ex-consul Cotta. Indeed,
while still little more than a boy he had already been made priest of
Jupiter by Marius and Cinna, but all their acts had been annulled in
consequence of Sulla's victory, and Caesar had thus lost this priesthood.
On the journey just mentioned, wishing to escape the notice of the pirates
who then infested all the seas and by this time had good reasons for being
hostile to him, he took two friends and ten slaves and embarked in a
four-oared boat, and in this way crossed the broad expanse of the Adriatic
Sea. During the voyage, sighting, as he thought, some pirate vessels, he
removed his outer garments, bound a dagger to his thigh, and prepared
himself for any event; but soon he saw that his eyes had deceived him and
that the illusion had been caused by a row of trees in the distance which
looked like masts and yards.
As for the
rest of his acts after his return to the city, they stand in less need of
description, since they are better known. I refer to his famous
prosecution of Gnaeus Dolabella, to whom the people showed more favour
than is usually exhibited to men under impeachment; to the well-known
political contests with Quintus Catulus and other eminent men; to his
defeat of Quintus Catulus, the acknowledged leader of the Senate, for the
office of pontifex maximus, before he himself had even been praetor; to
the restoration in his aedileship of the monuments of Gaius Marius in the
teeth of the opposition of the nobles; to the reinstatement of the
children of proscribed persons in the rights pertaining to their rank; and
to his praetorship and quaestorship passed in Spain, in which he showed
wonderful energy and valour. He was quaestor under Vetus Antistius, the
grandfather of our own Vetus, the consular and pontiff, himself the father
of two sons who have held the consulship and the priesthood and a man
whose excellence reaches our highest conception of human
integrity.
44. – But to resume. It was in Caesar's
consulship that there was formed between himself, Gnaeus Pompeius and
Marcus Crassus the partnership in political power which proved so baleful
to the city, to the world, and, subsequently at different periods to each
of the triumvirs themselves. Pompey's motive in the adoption of this
policy had been to secure through Caesar as consul the long delayed
ratification of his acts in the provinces across the seas, to which, as I
have already said, many still raised objections; Caesar agreed to it
because he realized that in making this concession to the prestige of
Pompey he would increase his own, and that by throwing on Pompey the odium
for their joint control he would add to his own power; while Crassus hoped
by the influence of Pompey and the power of Caesar he might achieve a
place of pre-eminence in the state which he had not been able to reach
single-handed. Furthermore, a tie of marriage was cemented between Caesar
and Pompey, in that Pompey now wedded Julia, Caesar's
daughter.
In this consulship, Caesar,
with Pompey's backing, passed a law authorizing a distribution to the
plebs of the public domain in Campania. And so about twenty thousand
citizens were established there, and its rights as a city were restored to
Capua one hundred and fifty-two years after she had been reduced to a
prefecture in the Second Punic War. Bibulus, Caesar's colleague, with the
intent rather than the power of hindering Caesar's acts, confined himself
to his house for the greater part of the year. By this conduct, whereby he
hoped to increase his colleague's unpopularity, he only increased his
power. At this time the Gallic provinces were assigned to Caesar for a
period of five years.
45. – About the same time Publius Clodius, a
man of noble birth, eloquent and reckless, who recognized no limits either
in speech or in act except his own caprice, of ill-repute as the debaucher
of his own sister, and accused of adulterous profanation of the most
sacred rites of the Roman people, having conceived a violent hatred
against Marcus Cicero — for what friendship could there be between men so
unlike? — caused himself to be transferred from a patrician into a
plebeian family and, as tribune, proposed a law that whoever put to death
a Roman citizen without trial should be condemned to exile. Although
Cicero was not expressly named in the wording of the bill, it was aimed at
him alone. And so this man, who had earned by his great services the
gratitude of his country, gained exile as his reward for saving the state.
Caesar and Pompey were not free from the suspicion of having had a share
in the fall of Cicero. Cicero seemed to have brought upon himself their
resentment by refusing to be a member of the commission of twenty charged
with the distribution of lands in Campania. Within two years Cicero was
restored to his country and to his former status, thanks to the interest
of Gnaeus Pompeius — somewhat belated, it is true, but effective when once
exerted — and thanks to the prayers of Italy, the decrees of the senate,
and the zealous activity of Annius Milo, tribune of the people. Since the
exile and return of Numidicus no one had been banished amid greater
popular disapproval or welcomed back with greater enthusiasm. As for
Cicero's house, the maliciousness of its destruction by Clodius was now
compensated for by the magnificence of its restoration by the
senate.
Publius Clodius in his tribunate
also removed Marcus Cato from the state, under the pretence of an
honourable mission. For he proposed a law that Cato should be sent to the
island of Cyprus in the capacity of quaestor, but with the authority of a
praetor and with a quaestor as his subordinate, with instructions to
dethrone Ptolemaeus, who by reason of his unmitigated viciousness of
character well deserved this humiliation. However, Julius before the
arrival of Cato, Ptolemy took his own life. Cato brought home from Cyprus
a sum of money which greatly exceeded all expectations. To praise Cato's
integrity would be sacrilege, but he can almost be charged with
eccentricity in the display of it; for, in spite of the fact that all the
citizens, headed by the consuls and the senate, poured out of the city to
meet him as he ascended the Tiber, he did not disembark and greet them
until he arrived at the place where the money was to be put
ashore.
46. – Meanwhile, in Gaul, Gaius Caesar was
carrying on his gigantic task, which could scarcely be covered in many
volumes. Not content with his many fortunate victories, and with slaying
or taking as prisoners countless thousands of the enemy, he even crossed
into Britain, as though seeking to add another world to our empire and to
that which he had himself won. Gnaeus Pompeius and Marcus Crassus, who had
once been consuls together, now entered upon their second consulship,
which office they not only won by unfair means, but also administered
without popular approval. In a law which Pompey proposed in the assembly
of the people, Caesar's tenure of office in his provinces was continued
for another five years, and Syria was decreed to Crassus, who was now
planning to make war upon Parthia. Although Crassus was, in his general
character, entirely upright and free from base desires, in his lust for
money and his ambition for glory he knew no limits, and accepted no
bounds. On his departure for Asia the tribunes of the people made
ineffectual efforts to detain him by the announcement of baleful omens. If
the curses which they called down upon him had affected Crassus alone, the
loss of the commander would not have been without advantage to the state,
had but the army been saved. He had crossed the Euphrates and was now
marching toward Seleucia when he was surrounded by King Orodes with his
innumerable bands of cavalry and perished together with the greater part
of his army. Remnants of the legions were saved by Gaius Cassius — (he was
later the perpetrator of a most atrocious crime, but was at that time
quaestor) — who not only retained Syria in its allegiance to the Roman
people, but succeeded, by a fortunate issue of events, in defeating and
putting to rout the Parthians when they crossed its borders.
47. – During this period, including the years
which immediately followed and those of which mention has already been
made, more than four hundred thousand of the enemy were slain by Gaius
Caesar and a greater number were taken prisoners. Many times had he fought
in pitched battles, many times on the march, many times as besieger or
besieged. Twice he penetrated into Britain, and in all his nine campaigns
there was scarcely one which was not fully deserving of a triumph. His
feats about Alesia were of a kind that a mere man would scarcely venture
to undertake, and scarcely anyone but a god could carry
through.
About the fourth year of
Caesar's stay in Gaul occurred the death of Julia, the wife of Pompey, the
one tie which bound together Pompey and Caesar in a coalition which,
because of each one's jealousy of the other's power, held together with
difficulty even during her lifetime; and, as though fortune were bent upon
breaking all the bonds between the two men destined for so great a
conflict, Pompey's little son by Julia also died a short time afterwards.
Then, inasmuch as agitation over the elections found vent in armed
conflicts and civil bloodshed, which continued indefinitely and without
check, Pompey was made consul for the third time, now without a colleague,
with the assent even of those who up to that time had opposed him for that
office. The tribute paid him by this honour, which seemed to indicate his
reconciliation with the optimates, served more than anything else to
alienate him from Caesar. Pompey, however, employed his whole power during
this consulship in curbing election
abuses.
It was at this time that Publius
Clodius was slain by Milo, who was a candidate for the consulship, in a
quarrel which arose in a chance meeting at Bovillae; a bad precedent, but
in itself a service to the state. Milo was brought to trial and convicted
quite as much through the influence of Pompey as on account of the odium
aroused by the deed. Cato, it is true, declared for his acquittal in an
opinion openly expressed. Had his vote been cast earlier, men would not
have been lacking to follow his example and approve the slaying of a
citizen as pernicious to the republic and as hostile to all good citizens
as any man who had ever lived.
48. – It was not long after this that the
first sparks of civil war were kindled. All fair-minded men desired that
both Caesar and Pompey should disband their armies. Now Pompey in his
second consulship had caused the provinces of Spain to be assigned to him,
and though he was actually absent from them, administering the affairs of
the city, he continued to govern them for three years through his
lieutenants, Afranius and Petreius, the former of consular and the latter
of praetorian rank; and while he agreed with those who insisted that
Caesar should dismiss his army, he was opposed to those who urged that he
should also dismiss his own. Had Pompey only died two years before the
outbreak of hostilities, after the completion of his theatre and the other
public buildings with which he had surrounded it, at the time when he was
attacked by a serious illness in Campania and all Italy prayed for his
safety as her foremost citizen, fortune would have lost the opportunity of
overthrowing him and he would have borne to the grave unimpaired all the
qualities of greatness that had been his in life. It was Gaius Curio,
however, a tribune of the people, who, more than anyone else, applied the
flaming torch which kindled the civil war and all the evils which followed
for twenty consecutive years. Curio was a man of noble birth, eloquent,
reckless, prodigal alike of his own fortune and chastity and of those of
other people, a man of the utmost cleverness in perversity, who used his
gifted tongue for the subversion of the state. No wealth and no pleasures
sufficed to satiate his appetites. He was at first on the side of Pompey,
that is to say, as it was then regarded, on the side of the republic. Then
he pretended to be opposed both to Pompey and Caesar, but in his heart he
was for Caesar. Whether his conversion was spontaneous or due to a bribe
of ten million sesterces, as is reported, we shall leave undetermined.
Finally, when a truce was on the point of being concluded on terms of the
most salutary character, terms which were demanded in a spirit of the
utmost fair-mindedness by Caesar and accepted by Pompey without protest,
it was in the end broken and shattered by Curio in spite of Cicero's
extraordinary efforts to preserve harmony in the
state.
As to the order of these events,
and of those which have been mentioned before, the reader is referred to
the special works of other historians, and I myself hope some day to give
them in full. But at the present time it will be consistent with the
general plan of this briefer narrative if I merely stop to congratulate
Quintus Catulus, the two Luculli, Metellus, and Hortensius, who, after
flourishing in public life without envy and rising to pre-eminence without
danger to themselves, in the course of nature died a peaceful or at least
a not untimely death before the outbreak of the civil wars.
49. – In the consulship Lentulus and
Marcellus, seven hundred and three years after the founding of the city
and seventy-eight before your consulship, Marcus Vinicius, the civil war
burst into flame. The one leader seemed to have the better cause, the
other the stronger; on the one was the appearance, on the other the
reality of power; Pompey was armed with the authority of the senate,
Caesar with the devotion of the soldiers. The consuls and the senate
conferred the supreme authority not on Pompey but on his cause. No effort
was omitted by Caesar that could be tried in the interest of peace, but no
offer of his was accepted by the Pompeians. Of the two consuls, one showed
more bitterness than was fair, the other, Lentulus, could not save himself
from ruin without bringing ruin upon the state, while Marcus Cato insisted
that they should fight to the death rather than allow the republic to
accept a single dictate from a mere citizen. The stern Roman of the
old-fashioned type would praise the cause of Pompey, the politic would
follow the lead of Caesar, recognizing that while there was on the one
side greater prestige, the other was the more
formidable.
When at last, rejecting all
the demands of Caesar, who was content to retain the title to the
province, with but a single legion, the senate decreed that he should
enter the city as a private citizen and should as such, submit himself to
the votes of the Roman people in his candidacy for the consulship, Caesar
concluded that war was inevitable and crossed the Rubicon with his army.
Gnaeus Pompeius, the consuls, and the majority of the senate abandoned
first the city, then Italy, and crossed the sea to Dyrrachium.
50. – Caesar, on his side, having got into his
power Domitius and the legions that were with him at Corfinium,
immediately released this commander and all others who so wished, and
allowed them to join Pompey, whom he now followed to Brundisium, making it
clear that he preferred to put an end to the war while the state was
uninjured and negotiation still possible, rather than to crush his fleeing
enemy. Finding that the consuls had crossed the sea he returned to the
city, and after rendering to the senate and also to the assembly of the
people an account of his motives and of the deplorable necessity of his
position, in that he had been driven to arms by others who had themselves
resorted to arms, he resolved to march on
Spain.
The rapidity of his march was
delayed for some time by the city of Massilia, which with more honesty of
intention than with wise discretion assumed the unseasonable rôle of
arbiter between the two armed leaders, an intervention suited only to
those who are in a position to coerce the combatant refusing obedience.
Next, the army, commanded by Afranius, an ex-consul, and Petreius, an
ex-praetor, taken off its guard by Caesar's energy and the lightning speed
of his arrival, surrendered to him. Both the commanders and all others, of
whatever rank, who wished to follow them were allowed to return to
Pompey.
51. – The next year found Dyrrachium and its
vicinity occupied by the camp of Pompey, who by summoning legions from all
the provinces beyond the sea, together with auxiliary troops of foot and
horse, and the forces of kings, tetrarchs, and other subject rulers, had
in this way collected a formidable army, and had with his fleets
established, as he thought, a successful blockade upon the sea to prevent
Caesar from transporting his legions across the Adriatic. But Caesar,
relying upon his usual rapidity of action and his famous luck, allowed
nothing to prevent him or his army from crossing and landing at any port
he pleased, and at first pitched his camp almost touching that of Pompey,
and then proceeded to surround the latter by entrenchments and siege
works. But lack of provisions was a more serious matter to the besiegers
than to the besieged. It was at this time that Balbus Cornelius, at
incredible risk, entered the camp of the enemy and held several
conferences with the consul Lentulus, whose only doubt was what price to
put upon himself. It was by stages such as this that Balbus, who was not
even the son of a Roman citizen born in Spain but actually a Spaniard,
paved the way for his later rise to the pontificate and to a triumph, and
from the rank of private citizen to that of a consul. Conflicts followed,
with shifting fortunes. One of these battles was much more favourable to
the Pompeians, and Caesar's troops were severely repulsed.
52. – Then Caesar marched with his army into
Thessaly, destined to be the scene of his victory. Pompey, in spite of the
contrary advice of others, followed his own impulse and set out after the
enemy. Most of his advisers urged him to cross into Italy — nor indeed was
there any course more expedient for his party — others advised him to
prolong the war, which, by reason of the esteem in which the party was
held, was daily becoming more favourable to
them.
The limits set to a work of this
kind will not permit me to describe in detail the battle of Pharsalia,
that day of carnage so fatal to the Roman name, when so much blood was
shed on either side, the clash of arms between the two heads of the state,
the extinction of one of the two luminaries of the Roman world, and the
slaughter of so many noble men on Pompey's side. One detail, however, I
cannot refrain from noting. When Gaius Caesar saw that Pompey's army was
defeated he made it his first and foremost concern to send out orders to
grant quarter — if I may use the habitual military expression. Ye immortal
gods! What a reward did this merciful man afterwards receive for his
kindness to Brutus! There is nothing more marvellous about that victory,
nothing more magnificent, nothing more glorious, than that our country did
not mourn the loss of any citizen save those who had fallen in battle. But
his offer of clemency was set at nought by the stubbornness of his
opponents, since the victor was more ready to grant life than the
vanquished to accept it.
53. – Pompey fled with the two Lentuli, both
ex-consuls, his own son Sextus, and Favonius, a former praetor, friends
whom chance had gathered about him as his companions. Some advised him to
take refuge with the Parthians, others in Africa, where he had in King
Juba a most loyal partisan; but, remembering the favours which he had
conferred upon the father of Ptolemy, who, though still between boyhood
and manhood, was now reigning at Alexandria, he decided to repair to
Egypt. But, in adversity who remembers past services? Who considers that
any gratitude is due to those who have met disaster? When does change of
fortune fail to shift allegiance? Envoys were sent by the king at the
instance of Theodotus and Achillas to receive Pompey at his arrival — he
was now accompanied in his flight by his wife Cornelia, who had been taken
on board at Mytilene — and to urge him to change from the merchant ship to
the vessel which had come out to meet him. Having accepted the invitation,
the first of the citizens of Rome was stabbed to death by the order and
dictation of an Egyptian vassal, the year of his death being the
consulship of Gaius Caesar and Publius Servilius. So died in his
fifty-eighth year, on the very eve of his birthday, that upright and
illustrious man, after holding three consulships, celebrating three
triumphs, conquering the whole world, and attaining to a pinnacle of fame
beyond which it is impossible to rise. Such was the inconsistency of
fortune in his case, that he who but a short time before had found no more
lands to conquer now found none for his
burial.
As regards Pompey's age, what
excuse, other than that of excessive preoccupation, shall I make for those
who have made an error of five years in the age of one who was not only a
great man but who almost belongs to our century, especially as it is so
easy to reckon from the consulship of Caius Atilius and Quintus Servilius?
I have added this remark not for the sake of criticizing others, but to
avoid criticism of myself.
54. – The loyalty of the king, and of those by
whose influence he was controlled, was no greater towards Caesar than it
had been toward Pompey. For, upon Caesar's arrival in Egypt, they assailed
him with plots and subsequently dared to challenge him in open warfare. By
suffering death they paid to both of these great commanders, the living
and the dead, a well-deserved
atonement.
Pompey the man was no more,
but his name still lived everywhere. For the strong support his party had
in Africa had stirred up in that country a war in which the moving spirits
were King Juba and Scipio, a man of consular rank, whom Pompey had chosen
for his father-in-law two years before his death. Their forces were
augmented by Marcus Cato, who, in spite of the great difficulty of the
march, and the lack of supplies in the regions traversed, succeeded in
conducting his legions to them. Cato, although offered the supreme command
by the soldiers, preferred to take orders from Scipio, his superior in
rank.
55. – Fidelity to my promise of brevity
reminds me how rapidly I must pass over the details of my narrative.
Caesar, following up his success, passed over to Africa, of which the
Pompeian armies now held possession since the death of Gaius Curio, the
leader there of the Caesarian party. At first his armies were attended by
a varying fortune, but later by his usual luck the forces of the enemy
were routed. Here again he showed no less clemency toward the vanquished
than to those whom he had defeated in the previous
war.
Caesar, victorious in Africa, was
now confronted by a more serious war in Spain (for the defeat of Pharnaces
may be passed over, since it added but little to his renown). This great
and formidable war had been stirred up by Gnaeus Pompeius, the son of
Pompeius Magnus, a young man of great energy in war, and reinforcements
flowed in from all parts of the world from among those who still followed
his father's great name. Caesar's usual fortune followed him to Spain; but
no battle in which he ever engaged was more bitterly fought or more
dangerous to his cause. Once, indeed, when the fight was now more than
doubtful, he leapt from his horse, placed himself before his lines, now
beginning to give way, and, after upbraiding fortune for saving him for
such an end, announced to his soldiers that he would not retreat a step.
He asked them to consider who their commander was and in what a pass they
were about to desert him. It was shame rather than valour that restored
their wavering line, and the commander showed more courage than his men.
Gnaeus Pompeius, badly wounded, was discovered on a pathless waste and put
to death. Labienus and Varus met their death in battle.
56. – Caesar, victorious over all his enemies,
returned to the city, and pardoned all who had borne arms against him, an
act of generosity almost passing belief. He entertained the city to
repletion with the magnificent spectacle of a gladiatorial show, a sham
battle of ships, mock battles of cavalry, infantry, and even mounted
elephants, and the celebration of a public banquet which was continued
through several days. He celebrated five triumphs. The emblems in his
Gallic triumph were of citrus wood; in his Pontic of acanthus; in his
Alexandrian triumph of tortoise-shell, in his African of ivory, and in his
Spanish of polished silver. The money borne in his triumphs, realized from
the sale of spoils, amounted to a little more than six hundred million
sesterces.
But it was the lot of this
great man, who behaved with such clemency in all his victories, that his
peaceful enjoyment of supreme power should last but five months. For,
returning to the city in October, he was slain on the ides of March.
Brutus and Cassius were the leaders of the conspiracy. He had failed to
win the former by the promise of the consulship, and had offended the
latter by the postponement of his candidacy. There were also in the plot
to compass his death some of the most intimate of all his friends, who
owed their elevation to the success of his party, namely Decimus Brutus,
Gaius Trebonius, and others of illustrious name. Marcus Antonius, his
colleague in the consulship, ever ready for acts of daring, had brought
great odium upon Caesar by placing a royal crown upon his head as he sat
on the rostra at the Lupercalia. Caesar put the crown from him, but in
such a way that he did not seem to be displeased.
57. – In the light of experience due credit
should be given to the counsel of Pansa and Hirtius, who had always warned
Caesar that he must hold by arms the position which he had won by arms.
But Caesar kept reiterating that he would rather die than live in fear,
and while he looked for a return for the clemency he had shown, he was
taken off his guard by men devoid of gratitude, although the gods gave
many signs and presages of the threatened danger. For the soothsayers had
warned him beforehand carefully to beware the Ides of March; his wife
Calpurnia, terrified by a dream, kept begging him to remain at home on
that day; and notes warning him of the conspiracy were handed him, but he
neglected to read them at the time. But verily the power of destiny is
inevitable; it confounds the judgement of him whose fortune it has
determined to reverse.
58. – Brutus and Cassius were praetors, and
Decimus Brutus was consul designate in the year in which they perpetrated
this deed. These three, with the remainder of the group of conspirators,
escorted by a band of gladiators belonging to Decimus Brutus, seized the
capitol. Thereupon Antonius, as consul, summoned the senate. Cassius had
been in favour of slaying Antony as well as Caesar, and of destroying
Caesar's will, but Brutus had opposed him, insisting that citizens ought
not to seek the blood of any but the "tyrant" — for to call Caesar
"tyrant" placed his deed in a better light. Dolabella, whom Caesar had
named for the consulship, with the intention of putting him in his own
place, had already seized the fasces and the insignia of that office.
Having summoned the senate, Antonius, acting as the guarantor of peace,
sent his own sons to the capitol as hostages and thus gave his assurance
to the slayers of Caesar that they might come down in safety. On the
motion of Cicero the famous precedent of the Athenians granting amnesty
for past acts was approved by decree of the senate.
59. – Caesar's will was then opened, by which
he adopted Gaius Octavius, the grandson of his sister Julia. Of the origin
of Octavius I must now say a few words, even if the account comes before
its proper place. Gaius Octavius, his father, though not of patrician
birth, was descended from a very prominent equestrian family, and was
himself a man of dignity, of upright and blameless life, and of great
wealth. Chosen praetor at the head of the poll among a list of candidates
of noble birth, this distinction won for him a marriage alliance with
Atia, a daughter of Julia. After he had filled the office of praetor, the
province of Macedonia fell to his lot, where he was honoured with the
title of imperator. He was returning thence to sue for the consulship when
he died on the way, leaving a son still in his early teens. Though he had
been reared in the house of his stepfather, Philippus, Gaius Caesar, his
great-uncle, loved this boy as his own son. At the age of eighteen
Octavius followed Caesar to Spain in his campaign there, and Caesar kept
him with him thereafter as his companion, allowing him to share the same
roof and ride in the same carriage, and though he was still a boy,
honoured him with the pontificate. When the civil war was over, with a
view to training his remarkable talents by liberal studies, he sent him to
Apollonia to study, with the intention of taking him with him as his
companion in his contemplated wars with the Getae and the Parthians. At
the first announcement of his uncle's death, although the centurions of
the neighbouring legions at once proffered their own services and those of
their men, and Salvidienus and Agrippa advised him to accept the offer, he
made such haste to arrive in the city that he was already at Brundisium
when he learned the details of the assassination and the terms of his
uncle's will. As he approached Rome an enormous crowd of his friends went
out to meet him, and at the moment of his entering the city, men saw above
his head the orb of the sun with a circle about it, coloured like the
rainbow, seeming thereby to place a crown upon the head of one destined
soon to greatness.
60. – His mother Atia and Philippus his
stepfather disliked the thought of his assuming the name of Caesar, whose
fortune had aroused such jealousy, but the fates that preside over the
welfare of the commonwealth and of the world took into their own keeping
the second founder and preserver of the Roman name. His divine soul
therefore spurned the counsels of human wisdom, and he determined to
pursue the highest goal with danger rather than a lowly estate and safety.
He preferred to trust the judgement concerning himself of a great-uncle
who was Caesar, rather than that of a stepfather, saying that he had no
right to think himself unworthy of the name of which Caesar had thought
him worthy. On his arrival, Antony, the consul, received him haughtily —
out of fear, however, rather than contempt — and grudgingly gave him,
after he had secured admission to Pompey's gardens, a few moments'
conversation with himself; and it was not long before Antony began
wickedly to insinuate that an attempt had been made upon his life through
plots fostered by Octavius. In this matter, however, the untrustworthiness
of the character of Antony was disclosed, to his discredit. Later the mad
ambition of Antony and Dolabella, the consuls, for the attainment of an
unholy despotism, burst into view. The seven hundred thousand sestertia
deposited by Gaius Caesar in the temple of Ops were seized by Antony; the
records of his acts were tampered with by the insertion of forged grants
of citizenship and immunity; and all his documents were garbled for money
considerations, the consul bartering away the public interests. Antony
resolved to seize the province of Gaul, which had been assigned by decree
to Decimus Brutus, the consul designate, while Dolabella had the provinces
beyond the sea assigned to himself. Between men by nature so unlike and
with such different aims there grew up a feeling of hatred, and in
consequence, the young Gaius Caesar was the object of daily plots on the
part of Antony.
61. – The state languished, oppressed by the
tyranny of Antony. All felt resentment and indignation, but no one had the
power to resist, until Gaius Caesar, who had just entered his nineteenth
year, with marvellous daring and supreme success, showed by his individual
sagacity a courage in the state's behalf which exceeded that of the
senate. He summoned his father's veterans first from Calatia then from
Casilinum; other veterans followed their example, and in a short time they
united to form a regular army. Not long afterwards, when Antony had met
the army which he had ordered to assemble at Brundisium from the provinces
beyond the sea, two legions, the Martian and the fourth, learning of the
feeling of the senate and the spirit shown by this courageous youth, took
up their standards and went over to Caesar. The senate honoured him with
an equestrian statue, which is still standing upon the rostra and
testifies to his years by its inscription. This is an honour which in
three hundred years had fallen to the lot of Lucius Sulla, Gnaeus
Pompeius, and Gaius Caesar, and to these alone. The senate commissioned
him, with the rank of propraetor, to carry on the war against Antony in
conjunction with Hirtius and Pansa, the consuls designate. Now in his
twentieth year, he conducted the war at Mutina with great bravery, and the
siege of Decimus Brutus there was raised. Antony was compelled to abandon
Italy in undisguised and disgraceful flight. Of the two consuls, the one
died upon the field of battle, and the other of his wound a few days
afterwards.
62. – Before the defeat of Antony the senate,
chiefly on the motion of Cicero, passed all manner of resolutions
complimentary to Caesar and his army. But, now that their fears had
vanished, their real feelings broke through their disguise, and the
Pompeian party once more took heart. By vote of the senate, Brutus and
Cassius were now confirmed in possession of the provinces which they had
seized upon their own authority without any decree of the senate; the
armies which had gone over to them were formally commended; and Brutus and
Cassius were given all authority and jurisdiction beyond the sea. It is
true that these two men had issued manifestoes — at first in real fear of
armed violence at the hands of Antony, and later to increase Antony's
unpopularity, with the pretence of fear — manifestos in which they
declared that for the sake of ensuring harmony in the republic they were
even ready to live in perpetual exile, that they would furnish no grounds
for civil war, and that the consciousness of the service they had rendered
by their act was ample reward. But, when they had once left Rome and Italy
behind them, by deliberate agreement and without government sanction they
had taken possession of provinces and armies, and under the pretence that
the republic existed wherever they were, they had gone so far as to
receive from the quaestors, with their own consent, it is true, the moneys
which these men were conveying to Rome from the provinces across the sea.
All these acts were now included in the decrees of the senate and formally
ratified. Decimus Brutus was voted a triumph, presumably because, thanks
to another's services, he had escaped with his life. Hirtius and Pansa
were honoured with a public funeral. Of Caesar not a word was said. The
senate even went so far as to instruct its envoys, who had been sent to
Caesar's army, to confer with the soldiers alone, without the presence of
their general. But the ingratitude of the senate was not shared by the
army; for, though Caesar himself pretended not to see the slight, the
soldiers refused to listen to any orders without the presence of their
commander. It was at this time that Cicero, with his deep-seated
attachment for the Pompeian party, expressed the opinion, which said one
thing and meant another, to the effect that Caesar "should be commended
and then — elevated."
63. – Meanwhile Antony in his flight had
crossed the Alps, and at first made overtures to Marcus Lepidus which were
rejected. Now Lepidus had surreptitiously been made pontifex in Caesar's
place, and, though the province of Spain had been assigned to him, was
still lingering in Gaul. Later, however, Antony showed himself several
times to the soldiers of Lepidus, and being, when sober, better than most
commanders, whereas none could be worse than Lepidus, he was admitted by
the soldiers through a breach which they made in the fortifications in the
rear of the camp. Antony still permitted Lepidus to hold the nominal
command, while he himself held the real authority. At the time when Antony
entered the camp, Juventius Laterensis, who had strongly urged Lepidus not
to ally himself with Antony now that he had been declared an enemy of the
state, finding his advice of no avail ran himself through with his own
sword, consistent unto death. Later Plancus and Pollio both handed over
their armies to Antony. Plancus, with his usual loose idea of loyalty,
after a long debate with himself as to which party to follow, and much
difficulty in sticking to his resolutions when formed, now pretended to
co-operate with his colleague, Decimus Brutus, the consul designate, thus
seeking to ingratiate himself with the senate in his dispatches, and again
betrayed him. But Asinius Pollio, steadfast in his resolution, remained
loyal to the Julian party and continued to be an adversary of the
Pompeians.
64. – Decimus Brutus, first abandoned by
Plancus, and later actually the object of his plots, deserted little by
little by his army, and now a fugitive, was slain by the emissaries of
Antony in the house of a noble named Camelus with whom he had taken
refuge. He thus met his just deserts and paid the penalty of his treason
to Gaius Caesar by whom he had been treated so well. He who had been the
foremost of all Caesar's friends became his assassin, and while he threw
upon Caesar the odious responsibility for the fortune of which he himself
had reaped the benefits, he thought it fair to retain what he had received
at Caesar's hands, and for Caesar, who had given it all, to
perish.
This is the period when Cicero in
a series of speeches branded the memory of Antony for all time to come.
Cicero assailed Antony with his brilliant and god-given tongue, whereas
Cannutius the tribune tore him to pieces with the ravening of a mad dog.
Each paid with his life for his defence of liberty. The proscription was
ushered in by the slaying of the tribune; it practically ended with the
death of Cicero, as though Antony were now sated with blood. Lepidus was
now declared by the senate an enemy of the state, as Antony had been
before him.
65. – Then began an interchange of letters
between Lepidus, Caesar, and Antony, and terms of agreement were
suggested. Antony reminded Caesar how hostile to him the Pompeian party
was, to what a height they had now risen, and how zealously Cicero was
extolling Brutus and Cassius. Antony threatened to join forces with Brutus
and Cassius, who had now control of seventeen legions, if Caesar rejected
this friendly gesture, and said that Caesar was under greater obligations
to avenge a father than he to avenge a friend. Then began their
partnership in political power, and, on the urgent advice and entreaty of
the armies, a marriage alliance was also made between Antony and Caesar,
in which Antony's stepdaughter was betrothed to Caesar. Caesar, with
Quintus Pedius as colleague, entered on the consulship one day before the
completion of his twentieth year on the twenty-second of September, seven
hundred and nine years after the founding of the city and seventy-two,
Marcus Vinicius, before the beginning of your
consulship.
This year saw Ventidius
joining the robes of the consular office to those of praetor in the very
city in which he had been led in triumph among the Picentine captives. He
also lived to celebrate a triumph of his own.
66. – Then the vengeful resentment of Antony
and Lepidus — for each of them had been declared public enemies, as has
already been stated, and both preferred to hear accounts of what they had
suffered, rather than of what they had deserved, at the hands of the
senate — renewed the horror of the Sullan proscription. Caesar protested,
but without avail, being but one against two. The climax of the shame of
this time was that Caesar should be forced to proscribe any one, or that
any one should proscribe the name of Cicero. By the crime of Antony, when
Cicero was beheaded the voice of the people was severed, nor did anyone
raise a hand in defence of the man who for so many years had protected the
interests both of the state and of the private citizen. But you
accomplished nothing, Mark Antony — for the indignation that surges in my
breast compels me to exceed the bounds I have set for my narrative — you
accomplished nothing, I say, by offering a reward for the sealing of those
divine lips and the severing of that illustrious head, and by encompassing
with a death-fee the murder of so great a consul and of the man who once
had saved the state. You took from Marcus Cicero a few anxious days, a few
senile years, a life which would have been more wretched under your
domination than was his death in your triumvirate; but you did not rob him
of his fame, the glory of his deeds and words, nay you but enhanced them.
He lives and will continue to live in the memory of the ages, and so long
as this universe shall endure — this universe which, whether created by
chance, or by divine providence, or by whatever cause, he, almost alone of
all the Romans, saw with the eye of his mind, grasped with his intellect,
illumined with his eloquence — so long shall it be accompanied throughout
the ages by the fame of Cicero. All posterity will admire the speeches
that he wrote against you, while your deed to him will call forth their
execrations, and the race of man shall sooner pass from the world than the
name of Cicero be forgotten.
67. – No one has even been able to deplore the
fortunes of this whole period with such tears as the theme deserves, much
less can one now describe it in words. One thing, however, demands
comment, that toward the proscribed their wives showed the greatest
loyalty, their freedmen not a little, their slaves some, their sons none.
So hard is it for men to brook delays in the realization of their
ambitions, whatever they might be. That no sacred tie might escape
inviolate, and, as it were, as an inducement and invitation to such
atrocities, Antony had Lucius Caesar, his uncle, placed upon the list, and
Lepidus his own brother Paulus. Plancus also had sufficient influence to
cause his brother Plancus Plotius to be enrolled among the proscribed. And
so the troops who followed the triumphal car of Lepidus and Plancus kept
repeating among the soldiers' jests, but amid the execrations of the
citizens, the following line: Brothers-german our two consuls
triumph over, not the Gauls.
68. – Let me now relate a matter which I
omitted in its proper place, for the person involved does not permit the
deed to rest in obscurity. This person is Marcus Caelius, a man closely
resembling Curio in eloquence and in spirit, though more than his peer in
either, and quite as clever in his worthlessness. Being quite as bankrupt
in property as in character and unable to save himself by paying even a
reasonable proportion of his debts, he came forward in his praetorship, at
the time when Caesar was fighting for the control of affairs on the field
of Pharsalus, as the author of a law for the cancellation of debts, nor
could he be deterred from his course by the authority of either the senate
or the consul. Calling to his aid Milo Annius, who was hostile to the
Caesarian party because he had failed to secure from them his recall, he
stirred up a sedition in the city, and openly raised armed bands in the
country. He was first banished from the state and was later overcome at
Thurii by the army of the consul, on the order of the senate. A like
fortune attended a similar attempt by Milo. While besieging Compsa, a city
of the Hirpini, he was struck by a stone, and thus the restless man, too
reckless to be called brave, paid the penalty he owed to Publius Clodius
and to his country, against which he was bearing
arms.
While engaged in supplying
omissions I should note the intemperate and untimely display of
independence shown towards Caesar by Marullus Epidius and Flavus
Caesetius, tribunes of the people, who in charging him with the desire for
the kingship, came near feeling the effects of his absolute power. Though
Caesar was constantly provoked by them, the only outcome of his wrath was
that he was satisfied to brand them through the employment of his power as
censor, and refrained from punishing them as dictator by banishing them
from the state; and he expressed his great regret that he had no
alternative but to depart from his customary clemency or suffer loss of
dignity. But I must now return to the regular order of my
narrative.
69. – Meanwhile in Asia, Dolabella, who
succeeded Gaius Trebonius as governor, had surprised the latter at Smyrna
and had put him to death, a man who had showed the basest ingratitude in
return for Caesar's kindness, and had shared in the murder of him to whom
he owed his advancement to the consulship. Dolabella had already occupied
Asia and had passed over into Syria when Gaius Cassius, taking over their
strong legions from Statius Murcus and Crispus Marcius, both praetorians
who had been saluted as imperator by their troops, shut him up in Laodicea
and by taking that city had caused his death; for Dolabella had promptly
offered his neck to the sword of his own slave. Cassius also gained
control of ten legions in that part of the empire. Marcus Brutus had
raised his strength to seven legions by wresting their troops, by
voluntary transfer of allegiance, from Gaius Antonius, the brother of
Marcus Antonius, in Macedonia, and from Vatinius in the vicinity of
Dyrrachium. Brutus had been obliged to offer battle to Antony, but
Vatinius he had overwhelmed by the weight of his own reputation, since
Brutus was preferable to any general, while no man could rank lower than
Vatinius, whose deformity of body was rivalled to such an extent by the
baseness of his character, that his spirit seemed to be housed in an abode
that was thoroughly worthy of it.
By the
Pedian law, proposed by Pedius, Caesar's colleague in the consulship, a
decree of banishment was passed upon all the assassins of Caesar. At this
time Capito, my uncle, a man of senatorial rank, assisted Agrippa in
securing the condemnation of Gaius Cassius. While all this was taking
place in Italy, Cassius in a vigorous and successful campaign had taken
Rhodes, an undertaking of great difficulty. Brutus had meanwhile conquered
the Lycians. The armies of both then crossed into Macedonia, where
Cassius, contrary to his nature, uniformly outdid even Brutus in clemency.
One will hardly find men who were ever attended by a more favourable
fortune than Brutus and Cassius, or who were more quickly deserted by her,
as though she were weary.
70. – Then Caesar and Antonius transported
their armies to Macedonia, and met Brutus and Cassius in battle near the
city of Philippi. The wing under the command of Brutus, after defeating
the enemy, captured Caesar's camp; for Caesar was performing his duties as
commander although he was in the poorest of health, and had been urged not
to remain in camp by Artorius his physician, who had been frightened by a
warning which had appeared to him in his sleep. On the other hand, the
wing commanded by Cassius had been routed and roughly handled, and had
retreated with much loss to higher ground. Then Cassius, judging his
colleague's success by his own fortune, sent a veteran with instructions
to report to him what was the large force of men which was now bearing
down in his direction. As the orderly was slow in reporting, and the force
approaching at a run was now close, while their identity and their
standards could not be recognized for the dust, imagining that the troops
rushing on him were those of the enemy, he covered his head with his
military cloak and undismayed presented his neck to the sword of his
freedman. The head of Cassius had scarcely fallen when the orderly arrived
with the report that Brutus was victorious. But when he saw his commander
lying prostrate, he uttered the words, "I shall follow him whose death my
tardiness has caused," and fell upon his
sword.
A few days later Brutus met the
enemy, and was beaten in battle. In retreat he withdrew at nightfall to a
hill, and there prevailed upon Strato of Aegaeae, one of his household, to
lend him his hand in his resolve to die. Raising his left arm above his
head, and with his right holding the point of Strato's sword he brought it
close to the left nipple, at the place where the heart beats, and throwing
himself upon the sword he died at once, transfixed by the
stroke.
71. – Messalla, a young man of brilliant
parts, was next in authority to Brutus and Cassius in their camp. Although
there were those who urged him to take command, he preferred to owe his
safety to the kindness of Caesar than to try once again the doubtful hope
of arms. Caesar, on his side, found no greater pleasure in his victories
than in granting life to Corvinus, nor was there ever a better example of
loyal gratitude than that shown by Corvinus to Caesar. No other war cost
the blood of so many illustrious men. In that battle the son of Cato fell;
the same fortune carried off Lucullus and Hortensius, the sons of eminent
citizens. Varro, when about to die, in mockery of Antony, with the utmost
freedom of speech prophesied for Antony the death he deserved, a prophecy
which came true. Drusus Livius, the father of Julia Augusta, and
Quintilius Varus, without making any appeal for mercy, ended their lives.
Livius died by his own hand in his tent; Varus first covered himself with
the insignia of his offices and then forced his freedman to commit the
deed.
72. – This was the end reserved by fortune for
the party of Marcus Brutus. He was in his thirty-seventh year, and had
kept his soul free from corruption until this day, which, through the
rashness of a single act, bereft him, together with his life, of all his
virtuous qualities. Cassius was as much the better general as Brutus was
the better man. Of the two, one would rather have Brutus as a friend, but
would stand more in fear of Cassius as an enemy. The one had more vigour,
the other more virtue. As it was better for the state to have Caesar
rather than Antony as emperor, so, had Brutus and Cassius been the
conquerors, it would have been better for is to be ruled by Brutus rather
than by Cassius.
Gnaeus Domitius, father
of Lucius Domitius our late contemporary, a man of eminent and noble
simplicity, and grandfather of Gnaeus Domitius, a young man of distinction
in our own day, seized a number of ships, and relying on himself to lead
his party, accompanied by a large number of companions who followed his
lead, entrusted himself to the fortunes of flight. Statius Murcus, who had
had charge of the fleet and the patrolling of the seas, sought Sextus
Pompey, son of Pompeius Magnus, with that portion of the army and of the
fleet which had been entrusted to him. Pompey had returned from Spain and
seized Sicily. The proscribed whom fortune had spared, at least from
immediate peril, now flocked to him from the camp of Brutus, from Italy,
and from other parts of the world. For men who had now no legal status any
leader would do, since fortune gave them no choice, but held out a place
of refuge, and as they fled from the storm of death any shelter served as
a harbour.
73. – Sextus was a young man without
education, barbarous in his speech, vigorous in initiative, energetic and
prompt in action as he was swift in expedients, in loyalty a marked
contrast to his father, the freedman of his own freedmen and slave of his
own slaves, envying those in high places only to obey those in the lowest.
The senate, which still consisted almost entirely of Pompeians, in the
period which followed the flight of Antony from Mutina, and at the very
time at which it had assigned to Brutus and Cassius the provinces across
the sea, had recalled Sextus for Spain — where Pollio Asinius the
praetorian had distinguished himself in his campaigns against him —
restored him to his father's property, and had entrusted to him the
guarding of the coast. Seizing Sicily, as we have said, and admitting into
his army slaves and runaways, he had raised his legions to their full
complement. He supported himself and his army on plunder, and through the
agency of Menas and Menecrates, his father's freedmen, who were in charge
of his fleet, he infested the seas by predatory and piratical expeditions;
nor was he ashamed thus to infest with piracy and its atrocities the sea
which had been freed from it by his father's arms and
leadership.
74. – After the defeat of the party of Brutus
and Cassius, Antony remained behind with the intention of visiting the
provinces beyond the sea. Caesar returned to Italy, which he found in a
much more troubled condition than he had expected. Lucius Antonius, the
consul, who shared the faults of his brother but possessed none of the
virtues which he occasionally showed, by making charges against Caesar
before the veterans at one moment, and at the next inciting to arms those
who had lost their farms when the division of lands was ordered and
colonists assigned, had collected a large army. In another quarter Fulvia,
the wife of Antony, who had nothing of the woman in her except her sex,
was creating general confusion by armed violence. She had taken Praeneste
as her base of operations; Antonius, beaten on all sides by the forces of
Caesar, had taken refuge in Perusia; Plancus, who abetted the faction of
Antony, offered the hope of assistance, rather than gave actual help.
Thanks to his own valour and his usual good fortune, Caesar succeeded in
storming Perusia. He released Antonius unharmed; and the cruel treatment
of the people of Perusia was due rather to the fury of the soldiery than
to the wish of their commander. The city was burned. The fire was begun by
Macedonicus, a leading man of the place who, after setting fire to his
house and contents, ran himself through with his sword and threw himself
into the flames.
75. – At the same period war broke out in
Campania at the instigation of the ex-praetor and pontiff, Tiberius
Claudius Nero, father of Tiberius Caesar, and a man of noble character and
high intellectual training, who now came forward as the protector of those
who had lost their lands. This war also was quickly extinguished and its
embers scattered by the arrival of
Caesar.
Who can adequately express his
astonishment at the changes of fortune, and the mysterious vicissitudes in
human affairs? Who can refrain from hoping for a lot different from that
which he now has, or from dreading the one that is the opposite of what he
expects? Take for example Livia. She, the daughter of the brave and noble
Drusus Claudianus, most eminent of Roman women in birth, in sincerity, and
in beauty, she, whom we later saw as the wife of Augustus, and as his
priestess and daughter after his deification, was then a fugitive before
the arms and forces of the very Caesar who was soon to be her husband,
carrying in her bosom her infant of two years, the present emperor
Tiberius Caesar, destined to be the defender of the Roman empire and the
son of this same Caesar. Pursuing by-paths that she might avoid the swords
of the soldiers, and accompanied by but one attendant, so as the more
readily to escape detection in her flight, she finally reached the sea,
and with her husband Nero made her escape by ship to Sicily.
76. – I shall not deprive my own grandfather
of the honourable mention which I should give to a stranger. Gaius
Velleius, chosen to a most honourable position among the three hundred and
sixty judges by Gnaeus Pompey, prefect of engineers under Pompey, Marcus
Brutus, and Tiberius Nero, and a man second to none, on the departure from
Naples of Nero, whose partisan he had been on account of his close
friendship, finding himself unable to accompany him on account of his age
and infirmities, ran himself through with his sword in
Campania.
Caesar allowed Fulvia to depart
from Italy unharmed, and with her Plancus who accompanied the woman in her
flight. As for Pollio Asinius, after he with his seven legions had long
kept Venetia under the control of Antony, and after he had accomplished
several brilliant exploits in the vicinity of Altinum and other cities of
that region, when he was on his way to join Antony with these legions he
won Domitius over to the cause of Antony by his counsel and by the pledge
of immunity. Up to this time Domitius, who, as we have already said, had
quitted the camp of Brutus after that leader's death and had established
himself in command of a fleet of his own, had remained at large. In view
of this act of Pollio any fair judge will see that he rendered as great a
service to Antony as Antony rendered to him. The return of Antony to Italy
and Caesar's preparations against him gave rise to fears of war, but a
peace was arranged at Brundisium.
It was
at this time that the criminal designs of Rufus Salvidienus were revealed.
This man, sprung from the most obscure origin, was not satisfied with
having received the highest honours in the state, and to have been the
first man of equestrian rank after Gnaeus Pompey and Caesar himself to be
elected consul, but aspired to mount to a height where he might see both
Caesar and the republic at his feet.
77. – Then in response to a unanimous demand
on the part of the people, who were now pinched by the high price of grain
because the sea was infested by pirates, a peace was arranged with Pompey
also, in the neighbourhood of Misenum. Pompey entertained Caesar and
Antony at dinner on board his ship, on which occasion he remarked, not
without point, that he was giving the dinner on "his own keels," thereby
recalling the name of the quarter in which stood his father's house, now
in the possession of Antony. By the terms of this treaty it was agreed
that Sicily and Achaea should be conceded to Pompey, but his restless soul
would not let him abide by the agreement. There was only one benefit which
he rendered to his country by attending the conference, namely, the
stipulation that all those who had been proscribed, or who for any other
reason had taken refuge with him, should be granted a safe return. Among
other illustrious men, Nero Claudius, Marcus Silanus, Sentius Saturninus,
Arruntius and Titius were thereby restored to the state. As to Statius
Murcus, however, who had doubled Pompey's forces by joining him with his
strong fleet, Pompey had already put him to death in Sicily as the result
of false accusations which had been brought against him, Menas and
Menecrates having expressed a dislike for such a man as their
colleague.
78. – It was during this period that Marcus
Antonius espoused Octavia, the sister of Caesar. Pompey had now returned
to Sicily, and Antony to the provinces across the sea, which Labienus had
thrown into a panic in consequence of the great movements he had set on
foot; for he had gone from the camp of Brutus to the Parthians, had led a
Parthian army into Syria, and had slain a lieutenant of Antony. Thanks to
the courageous generalship of Ventidius, Labienus perished in the battle
and with him the forces of the Parthians, including the most distinguished
of their young men, Pacorus, son of the Parthian
king.
During this time Caesar, wishing to
keep his soldiers from being spoiled by idleness, the great enemy of
discipline, was making frequent expeditions in Illyricum and Dalmatia and
thus hardening his army by endurance of danger and experience in warfare.
At this time also Calvinus Domitius, who, after filling the consulship,
was now governor of Spain, executed a rigorous act of discipline
comparable with the severity of the older days, in that he caused a chief
centurion by the name of Vibillius to be beaten to death for cowardly
flight from the line of battle.
79. – As Pompey's fleet was growing daily, and
his reputation as well, Caesar resolved to take up the burden of this new
war. Marcus Agrippa was charged with constructing the ships, collecting
soldiers and rowers, and familiarizing them with naval contests and
manoeuvres. He was a man of distinguished character, unconquerable by
toil, loss of sleep or danger, well disciplined in obedience, but to one
man alone, yet eager to command others; in whatever he did he knew no such
thing as delay, but with him action went hand in hand with conception.
Building an imposing fleet in lakes Avernus and Lucrinus, by daily drills
he brought the soldiers and the oarsmen to a thorough knowledge of
fighting on land and at sea. With this fleet Caesar made war on Pompey in
Sicily, after he had espoused Livia, who was given to him in marriage by
her former husband under circumstances which augured well for the state.
But this man, unconquerable by human power, received at this time a heavy
blow at the hands of fortune, since the greater part of his fleet was
wrecked and scattered in the vicinity of Velia and Cape Palinurus by a
violent scirocco. This delayed finishing the war, which, however, was
subsequently carried on with shifting and sometimes doubtful fortune. For
Caesar's fleet was again buffeted by a storm in the same locality, and
although the issue was favourable in the first naval battle, at Mylae,
under the leadership of Agrippa, a serious defeat was received near
Tauromenium beneath the very eyes of Caesar, in consequence of the
unexpected arrival of Pompey's fleet, and Caesar's own person was
endangered. The legions which were with Cornificius, Caesar's lieutenant,
came near being crushed by Pompey as soon as they landed. But fortune's
caprice at this critical period was soon amended by bravery in action;
when the fleets on both sides had been drawn up for battle, Pompey lost
almost all his ships, and fled to Asia, where, wavering between the rôle
of general and suppliant, now endeavouring to retain his dignity and now
pleading for his life, he was slain by Titius on the orders of Marcus
Antonius, whose aid he had sought. The hatred which Titius brought upon
himself by this act lasted for a long time; indeed, afterwards, when he
was celebrating games in Pompey's theatre, he was driven amid the
execrations of the people from the spectacle which he himself was
giving.
80. – While engaged in his war with Pompey,
Caesar had summoned Lepidus from Africa with twelve legions of half the
usual strength. This man, the most fickle of mankind, who had not earned
the long-continued kindness of fortune through any qualities of his own,
being nearer to the army of Pompey, annexed it to his own, though it was
following not his orders but Caesar's, and owned loyalty to him. His
numbers now swollen to twenty legions, he went to such lengths of madness
that, though but a useless partner in another's victory, a victory which
he had long delayed in refusing to agree to Caesar's plans and always
insisting upon something different from that which suited others, he
claimed the victory as entirely his own and had the effrontery to order
Caesar out of Sicily. The Scipios and the other Roman generals of the
olden time never dared or carried out a braver act than did Caesar at this
juncture. For although he was unarmed and dressed in his travelling cloak,
carrying nothing except his name, he entered the camp of Lepidus, and,
avoiding the weapons which were hurled at him by the orders of that
scoundrel, though his cloak was pierced by a lance, he had the courage to
carry off the eagle of a legion. Then could one know the difference
between the two commanders. Though armed, the soldiers followed Caesar who
was unarmed, while Lepidus, in the tenth year after arriving at a position
of power which his life had done nothing to deserve, now deserted both by
his soldiers and by fortune, wrapping himself in a dark cloak and lurking
in the rear of the crowd that thronged to Caesar, thus threw himself at
Caesar's feet. He was granted his life and the control of his own
property, but was shorn of the high position which he had shown himself
unable to maintain.
81. – There followed a sudden mutiny of the
army; for it happens not infrequently that when soldiers observe their own
numbers they break discipline and do not endure to ask for what they think
they can exact. The mutiny was broken up partly by severity, partly by
liberality on the part of the emperor, and considerable additions were at
the same time made to the Campanian colony by placing veterans on the
lands of that colony which had been left public. Lands in Crete were given
in return for these, which yielded a richer revenue of a million two
hundred thousand sesterces, and an aqueduct was promised which is to-day a
remarkable agency of health as well as an ornament to the
landscape.
In this war Agrippa by his
remarkable services earned the distinction of a naval crown, with which no
Roman had as yet been decorated. Caesar, on his victorious return to the
city, made the announcement that he meant to set apart for public use
certain houses which he had secured by purchase through his agents in
order that there might be a free area about his own residence. He further
promised to build a temple of Apollo with a portico about it, a work which
he constructed with rare munificence.
82. – In the summer in which Caesar so
successfully ended the war in Sicily, fortune, though kind in the case of
Caesar and the republic, vented her anger in the east. For Antony with
thirteen legions after passing through Armenia and then through Media, in
an endeavour to reach Parthia by this route, found himself confronted by
their king. First of all he lost two legions with all their baggage and
engines, and Statianus his lieutenant; later he himself with the greatest
risk to his entire army, on several occasions encountered perils from
which he dared not hope that escape was possible. After losing not less
than a fourth part of his soldiers, he was saved through the fidelity and
by the suggestion of a captive, who was nevertheless a Roman. This man had
been made prisoner in the disaster to the army of Crassus, but had not
changed his allegiance with his fortune. He came by night to a Roman
outpost and warned them not to pursue their intended course but to proceed
by a detour through the forest. It was this that saved Marcus Antonius and
his many legions; and yet, even so, not less than a fourth part of these
soldiers and of his entire army was lost, as we have already stated, and
of the camp-followers and slaves a third, while hardly anything of the
baggage was saved. Yet Antonius called this flight of his a victory,
because he had escaped with his life! Three summers later he returned to
Armenia, obtained possession of the person of Artavasdes its king by
deceit, and bound him with chains, which, however, out of regard for the
station of his captive, were of gold. Then as his love for Cleopatra
became more ardent and his vices grew upon him — for these are always
nourished by power and licence and flattery — he resolved to make war upon
his country. He had previously given orders that he should be called the
new Father Liber, and indeed in a procession at Alexandria he had
impersonated Father Liber, his head bound with the ivy wreath, his person
enveloped in the saffron robe of gold, holding in his hand the thyrsus,
wearing the buskins, and riding in the Bacchic chariot.
83. – In the midst of these preparations for
war Plancus went over to Caesar, not through any conviction that he was
choosing the right, nor from any love of the republic or of Caesar, for he
was always hostile to both, but because treachery was a disease with him.
He had been the most grovelling flatterer of the queen, a client with less
self-respect than a slave; he had also been a secretary to Antony and was
the author or the abettor of his vilest acts; for money he was ready to do
all things for all men; and at a banquet he had played the role of Glaucus
the Nereid, performing a dance in which his naked body was painted blue,
his head encircled with reeds, at the same time wearing a fish's tail and
crawling upon his knees. Now, inasmuch as he had been coldly treated by
Antony because of unmistakable evidence of his venal rapacity, he deserted
to Caesar. Afterwards he even went so far as to interpret the victor's
clemency as a proof of his own merit, claiming that Caesar had approved
that which he had merely pardoned. It was the example of this man, his
uncle, that Titius soon afterwards followed. The retort of Coponius, who
was the father-in-law of Publius Silius and a dignified praetorian, was
not so far from the mark when he said, as Plancus in the senate fresh from
his desertion was heaping upon the absent Antony many unspeakable charges,
"By Hercules, Antony must have done a great many things before you left
him."
84. – Then, in the consulship of Caesar and
Messala Corvinus, the decisive battle took place at Actium. The victory of
the Caesarian party was a certainty long before the battle. On the one
side commander and soldiers alike were full of ardour, on the other was
general dejection; on the one side the rowers were strong and sturdy, on
the other weakened by privations; on the one side ships of moderate size,
not too large for speed, on the other vessels of a size that made them
more formidable in appearance only; no one was deserting from Caesar to
Antony, while from Antony to Caesar someone or other was deserting daily;
and King Amyntas had embraced the better and more advantageous side. As
for Dellius, consistent to his habit, he now went over from Antony to
Caesar as he had deserted from Dolabella to Cassius and from Cassius to
Antony. The illustrious Gnaeus Domitius, who was the only one of the party
of Antony who refused to salute the queen except by name, went over to
Caesar at great and imminent risk to himself. Finally, before the eyes of
Antony and his fleet, Marcus Agrippa had stormed Leucas, had captured
Patrae, had seized Corinth, and before the final conflict had twice
defeated the fleet of the enemy.
85. – Then came the day of the great conflict,
on which Caesar and Antony led out their fleets and fought, the one for
the safety, the other for the ruin, of the world. The command of the right
wing of Caesar's fleet was entrusted to Marcus Lurius, of the left to
Arruntius, while Agrippa had full charge of the entire conflict at sea.
Caesar, reserving himself for that part of the battle to which fortune
might summon him, was present everywhere. The command of Antony's fleet
was entrusted to Publicola and Sosius. On the land, moreover, the army of
Caesar was commanded by Taurus, that of Antony by Canidius. When the
conflict began, on the one side was everything — commander, rowers, and
soldiers; on the other, soldiers alone. Cleopatra took the initiative in
the flight; Antony chose to be the companion of the fleeing queen rather
than of his fighting soldiers, and the commander whose duty it would have
been to deal severely with deserters, now became a deserter from his own
army. Even without their chief his men long continued to fight bravely,
and despairing of victory they fought to the death. Caesar, desiring to
win over by words those whom he might have slain with the sword, kept
shouting and pointing out to them that Antony had fled, and kept asking
them for whom and with whom they were fighting. But they, after fighting
long for their truant commander, reluctantly surrendered their arms and
yielded the victory, Caesar having promised them pardon and their lives
before they could bring themselves to sue for them. It was evident that
the soldiers had played the part of the good commander while the commander
had played that of the cowardly soldier, so that one might question
whether in case of victory he would have acted according to Cleopatra's
will or his own, since it was by her will that he had resorted to flight.
The land army likewise surrendered when Canidius had hurried after Antony
in precipitate flight.
86. – Who is there who, in the compass of so
brief a work, would attempt to state what blessings this day conferred
upon the world, or to describe the change which took place in the fortunes
of the state? Great clemency was shown in the victory; no one was put to
death, and but few banished who could not bring themselves even to become
suppliants. From this display of mercy on the part of the commander it may
be inferred how moderate a use Caesar would have made of the victory, had
he been allowed to do so, whether at the beginning of his triumvirate or
on the plain of Philippi. But, in the case of Sosius, it was the pledged
word of Lucius Arruntius, a man famous for his old-time dignity, that
saved him; later, Caesar preserved him unharmed, but only after long
resisting his general inclination to clemency. The remarkable conduct of
Asinius Pollio should not be passed by nor the words which he uttered. For
although he had remained in Italy after the peace of Brundisium, and had
never seen the queen nor taken any active part in Antony's faction after
this leader had become demoralized by his passion for her, when Caesar
asked him to go with him to the war at Actium he replied: "My services to
Antony are too great, and his kindness to me too well known; accordingly I
shall hold aloof from your quarrel and shall be the prize of the
victor."
87. – The following year Caesar followed
Cleopatra and Antony to Alexandria and there put the finishing touch upon
the civil wars. Antony promptly ended his life, thus by his death
redeeming himself from the many charges of lack of manhood. As for
Cleopatra, baffling the vigilance of her guards she caused an asp to be
smuggled in to her, and ended her life by its venomous sting untouched by
a woman's fears. It was in keeping with Caesar's fortune and his clemency
that not one of those who had borne arms against him was put to death by
him, or by his order. It was the cruelty of Antony that ended the life of
Decimus Brutus. In the case of Sextus Pompey, though Caesar was his
conqueror, it was likewise Antony who deprived him of his life, even
though he had given his word that he would not degrade him from his rank.
Brutus and Cassius, without waiting to discover the attitude of their
conquerors, died voluntary deaths. Of the end of Antony and Cleopatra we
have already told. As for Canidius, he showed more fear in the face of
death than was consistent with his lifelong utterances. The last of
Caesar's assassins to pay the penalty of death was Cassius of Parma, as
Trebonius had been the first.
88. – While Caesar was engaged in giving the
finishing touch to the war at Actium and Alexandria, Marcus Lepidus, a
young man whose good looks exceeded his prudence — son of the Lepidus who
had been one of the triumvirs for the re-establishment of order in the
state and of Junia the sister of Brutus — had formed plans for the
assassination of Caesar as soon as he should return to the city. The
guards of the city were at that time under the charge of Gaius Maecenas,
of equestrian rank, but none the less of illustrious lineage, a man who
was literally sleepless when occasion demanded, and quick to foresee what
was to be done and skilful in doing it, but when any relaxation was
allowed him from business cares would almost outdo a woman in giving
himself up to indolence and soft luxury. He was not less loved by Caesar
than Agrippa, though he had fewer honours heaped upon him, since he lived
thoroughly content with the narrow stripe of the equestrian order. He
might have achieved a position no less high than Agrippa, but had not the
same ambition for it. Quietly and carefully concealing his activity he
unearthed the plans of the hot-headed youth, and by crushing Lepidus with
wonderful swiftness and without causing disturbance to either men or
things he extinguished the portentous beginnings of a new and reviving
civil war. Lepidus himself paid the penalty for his ill-advised plot.
Servilia his wife must be placed on a parity with the wife of Antistius
already mentioned, for by swallowing live coals she compensated for her
untimely death by the lasting memory of her name.
89. – As for Caesar's return to Italy and to
Rome — the procession which met him, the enthusiasm of his reception by
men of all classes, ages, and ranks, and the magnificence of his triumphs
and of the spectacles which he gave — all this it would be impossible
adequately to describe even within the compass of a formal history, to say
nothing of a work so circumscribed as this. There is nothing that man can
desire from the gods, nothing that the gods can grant to a man, nothing
that wish can conceive or good fortune bring to pass, which Augustus on
his return to the city did not bestow upon the republic, the Roman people,
and the world. The civil wars were ended after twenty years, foreign wars
suppressed, peace restored, the frenzy of arms everywhere lulled to rest;
validity was restored to the laws, authority to the courts, and dignity to
the senate; the power of the magistrates was reduced to its former limits,
with the sole exception that two were added to the eight existing
praetors. The old traditional form of the republic was restored.
Agriculture returned to the fields, respect to religion, to mankind
freedom from anxiety, and to each citizen his property rights were now
assured; old laws were usefully emended, and new laws passed for the
general good; the revision of the senate, while not too drastic, was not
lacking in severity. The chief men of the state who had won triumphs and
had held high office were at the invitation of Augustus induced to adorn
the city. In the case of the consulship only, Caesar was not able to have
his way, but was obliged to hold that office consecutively until the
eleventh time in spite of his frequent efforts to prevent it; but the
dictatorship which the people persistently offered him, he as stubbornly
refused. To tell of the wars waged under his command, of the pacification
of the world by his victories, of his many works at home and outside of
Italy would weary a writer intending to devote his whole life to this one
task. As for myself, remembering the proposed scope of my work, I have
confined myself to setting before the eyes and minds of my readers a
general picture of his principate.
90. – When the civil wars had been
extinguished, as we have already told, and the rent limbs of the state
itself began to heal, the provinces, also, torn asunder by the long series
of wars began to knit together. Dalmatia, in rebellion for one hundred and
twenty years, was pacified to the extent of definitely recognizing the
sovereignty of Rome. The Alps, filled with wild and barbarous tribes, were
subdued. The provinces of Spain were pacified after heavy campaigns
conducted with varied success now by Caesar in person, now by Agrippa,
whom the friendship of the emperor had raised to a third consulship and
soon afterwards to a share in the emperor's tribunician power. Roman
armies had been sent into these provinces for the first time in the
consulship of Scipio and Sempronius Longus, in the first year of the
Second Punic war, two hundred and fifty years ago, under the command of
Gnaeus Scipio, the uncle of Africanus. For a period of two hundred years
the struggle was kept up with so much bloodshed on both sides that the
Roman people, by the loss of its commanders and armies, often suffered
disgrace, and sometimes its empire was really endangered. These, namely,
were the provinces that brought death to the Scipios; that taxed the
endurance of our ancestors in the disgraceful ten years' war under
Viriathus; that shook the Roman people with the panic of the Numantine
war; here occurred the disgraceful surrender of Quintus Pompeius, whose
terms the senate disavowed, and the more shameful capitulation of
Mancinus, which was also disavowed, and its maker ignominiously handed
over to the enemy; it was Spain that destroyed so many commanders who were
consulars or praetorians, and which in the days of our fathers raised
Sertorius to such a height of power that for a period of five years it was
not possible to decide whether there was greater strength in the arms of
the Spaniard or the Roman, and which of the two peoples was destined to
obey the other. These, then, were the provinces, so extensive, so
populous, and so warlike, which Caesar Augustus, about fifty years ago,
brought to such a condition of peace, that whereas they had never before
been free from serious wars, they were now, under the governorship of
Gaius Antistius and then of Publius Silius and of their successors, exempt
even from brigandage.
91. – While the pacification of the west was
going on, in the east the Parthian king restored to Augustus the Roman
standards which Orodes had taken at the time of Crassus' disaster, and
those which his son Phraates had captured on the defeat of Antony. This
title of Augustus was deservedly given him on the motion of Plancus with
the unanimous acclaim of the entire senate and the Roman people. Yet there
were those who did not like this prosperous state of affairs. For example,
Lucius Murena and Fannius Caepio had entered into a plot to assassinate
Caesar, but were seized by state authority and themselves suffered by law
what they had wished to accomplish by violence. They were two men quite
diverse in character, for Murena, apart from this act, might have passed
as a man of good character, while Caepio, even before this, had been of
the worst. Shortly afterwards a similar attempt was made by Rufus
Egnatius, a man who in all respects resembled a gladiator rather than a
senator. Securing the favour of the people in his aedileship by putting
out fires with his own gang of slaves, he increased it daily to such an
extent that the people gave him the praetorship immediately after the
aedileship. It was not long before he dared to become a candidate for the
consulship, but he was overwhelmed by the general knowledge of his
shameless deeds and crimes, and the state of his property came to be as
desperate as his mind. Therefore, collecting about him men of his own
kind, he resolved to assassinate Caesar in order that he might die after
getting rid of him whose existence was not compatible with his own. Such
men are so constituted that each would prefer to fall in a general
cataclysm than to perish alone, and, though suffering the same fate in the
end, to be less conspicuous in dying. He, however, was not more successful
than the rest in concealing his designs, and after being thrust into
prison with his fellow conspirators, died the death his life richly
deserved.
92. – The remarkable conduct of an excellent
man, Gaius Sentius Saturninus, who was consul about this time, must not be
cheated of its due record. Caesar was absent from the city engaged in
regulating the affairs of Asia and of the orient, and in bringing to the
countries of the world by his personal presence the blessings of Augustan
peace. On this occasion Sentius, chancing thus to be sole consul with
Caesar absent, adopting the rigorous regime of the older consuls, pursued
a general policy of old-fashioned severity and great firmness, bringing to
light the fraudulent tricks of the tax-collectors, punishing their
avarice, and getting the public moneys into the treasury. But it was
particularly in holding the elections that he played the consul. For in
the case of candidates for the quaestorship whom he thought unworthy, he
forbade them to offer their names, and when they insisted upon doing so,
he threatened them with the exercise of his consular authority if they
came down to the Campus Martius. Egnatius, who was now at the height of
popular favour, and was expecting to have his consulship follow his
praetorship as his praetorship had followed his aedileship, he forbade to
become a candidate, and failing in this, he swore that, even if Egnatius
were elected consul by the votes of the people, he would refuse to report
his election. This conduct I consider as comparable with any of the
celebrated acts of the consuls of the olden days. But we are naturally
more inclined to praise what we have heard than what has occurred before
our eyes; we regard the present with envy, the past with veneration, and
believe that we are eclipsed by the former, but derive instruction from
the latter.
93. – Some three years before the plot of
Egnatius was exposed, about the time of the conspiracy of Murena and
Caepio, fifty years from the present date, Marcus Marcellus died, the son
of Octavia, sister of Augustus, after giving a magnificent spectacle to
commemorate his aedileship and while still quite a youth. People thought
that, if anything should happen to Caesar, Marcellus would be his
successor in power, at the same time believing, however, that this would
not fall to his lot without opposition from Marcus Agrippa. He was, we are
told, a young man of noble qualities, cheerful in mind and disposition,
and equal to the station for which he was being reared. After his death
Agrippa, who had set out for Asia on the pretext of commissions from the
emperor, but who, according to current gossip, had withdrawn, for the time
being, on account of his secret animosity for Marcellus, now returned from
Asia and married Julia the daughter of Caesar, who had been the wife of
Marcellus, a woman whose many children were to be blessings neither to
herself nor to the state.
94. – At this period Tiberius Claudius Nero,
in his nineteenth year, began his public life as quaestor. I have already
told how, when he was three years of age, his mother Livia, the daughter
of Drusus Claudianus, had become the wife of Caesar, her former husband,
Tiberius Nero, himself giving her in marriage to him. Nurtured by the
teaching of eminent praeceptors, a youth equipped in the highest degree
with the advantages of birth, personal beauty, commanding presence, an
excellent education combined with native talents, Tiberius, as quaestor
when he was eighteen years old, gave early promise of becoming the great
man he now is, and already by his look revealed the prince. Now, acting on
the orders of his stepfather, he so skilfully regulated the difficulties
of the grain supply and relieved the scarcity of corn at Ostia and in the
city that it was apparent from his execution of this commission how great
he was destined to become. Shortly afterwards he was sent by his
stepfather with an army to visit the eastern provinces and restore them to
order, and in that part of the world gave splendid illustration of all his
strong qualities. Entering Armenia with his legions, he brought it once
more under the sovereignty of the Roman people, and gave the kingship to
Artavasdes. Even the king of the Parthians, awed by the reputation of so
great a name, sent his own children as hostages to Caesar.
95. – On Nero's return Caesar resolved to test
his powers in a war of no slight magnitude. In this work he gave him as a
collaborator his own brother Drusus Claudius, to whom Livia gave birth
when already in the house of Caesar. The two brothers attacked the Raeti
and Vindelici from different directions, and after storming many towns and
strongholds, as well as engaging successfully in pitched battles, with
more danger than real loss to the Roman army, though with much bloodshed
on the part of the enemy, they thoroughly subdued these races, protected
as they were by the nature of the country, difficult of access, strong in
numbers, and fiercely warlike.
Before this had
occurred the censorship of Plancus and Paulus, which, exercised as it was
with mutual discord, was little credit to themselves or little benefit to
the state, for the one lacked the force, the other the character, in
keeping with the office; Paulus was scarcely capable of filling the
censor's office, while Plancus had only too much reason to fear it, nor
was there any charge which he could make against young men, or hear others
make, of which he, old though he was, could not recognize himself as
guilty.
96. – Then occurred the death of Agrippa.
Though a "new man" he had by his many achievements brought distinction
upon his obscure birh, even to the extent of becoming the father-in-law of
Nero; and his sons, the grandsons of the emperor, had been adopted by
Augustus under the names of Gaius and Lucius. His death brought Nero
closer to Caesar, since his daughter Julia, who had been the wife of
Agrippa, now married Nero.
Shortly after,
the Pannonian war, which had been begun by Agrippa in the consulate of
your grandfather, Marcus Vinicius, was conducted by Nero, a war which was
important and formidable enough, and on account of its proximity a menace
to Italy. In another place I shall describe the tribes of the Pannonians
and the races of Dalmatians, the situation of their country and its
rivers, the number and extent of their forces, and the many glorious
victories won in the course of this war by this great commander; my
present work must keep to its design. After achieving this victory Nero
celebrated an ovation.
97. – But while everything was being
successfully managed in this quarter of the either, a disaster received in
Germany under Marcus Lollius the legate — he was a man who was ever more
eager for money than for honest action, and of vicious habits in spite of
his excessive efforts at concealment — and the loss of the eagle of the
fifth legion, summoned Caesar from the city to the provinces of Gaul. The
burden of responsibility for this war was then entrusted to Drusus
Claudius, the brother of Nero, a young man endowed with as many great
qualities as men's nature is capable of receiving or application
developing. It would be hard to say whether his talents were the better
adapted to a military career or the duties of life; at any rate, the charm
and the sweetness of his character are said to have been inimitable, and
also his modest attitude of equality towards his friends. As for his
personal beauty, it was second only to that of his brother. But, after
accomplishing to a great extent the subjection of Germany, in which much
blood of that people was shed on various battle-fields, an unkind fate
carried him off during his consulship, in his thirtieth year. The burden
of responsibility for this war was then transferred to Nero. He carried it
on with his customary valour and good fortune, and after traversing every
part of Germany in a victorious campaign, without any loss of the army
entrusted to him — for he made this one of his chief concerns — he so
subdued the country as to reduce it almost to the status of a tributary
province. He then received a second triumph, and a second
consulship.
98. – While the events of which we have spoken
were taking place in Pannonia and in Germany, a fierce rebellion arose in
Thrace, and all its clans were aroused to arms. It was terminated by the
valour of Lucius Piso, whom we still have with us to-day as the most
vigilant and at the same time the gentlest guardian of the security of the
city. As lieutenant of Caesar he fought the Thracians for three years, and
by a succession of battles and sieges, with great loss of life to the
Thracians, he brought these fiercest of races to their former state of
peaceful subjection. By putting an end to this war he restored security to
Asia and peace to Macedonia. Of Piso all must think and say that his
character is an excellent blend of firmness and gentleness, and that it
would be hard to find anyone possessing a stronger love of leisure, or, on
the other hand, more capable of action, and of taking the necessary
measures without thrusting his activity upon our notice.
99. – Soon afterwards Tiberius Nero, who had
now held two consulships and celebrated two triumphs; who had been made
the equal of Augustus by sharing with him the tribunician power; the most
eminent of all Roman citizens save one (and that because he wished it so);
the greatest of generals, attended alike by fame and fortune; veritably
the second luminary and the second head of the state — this man, moved by
some strangely incredible and inexpressible feeling of affection for
Augustus, sought leave for him who was both his father-in-law and
stepfather to rest from the unbroken succession of his labours. The real
reasons for this were soon made plain. Inasmuch as Gaius Caesar had
already assumed the toga of manhood, and Lucius was reaching maturity, he
concealed his reason in order that his own glory might not stand in the
way of the young men at the beginning of their careers. I must reserve for
my regular history a description of the attitude of the state at this
juncture, of the feelings of the individual citizens, of the tears of all
at taking leave of such a man, and how nearly the state came to laying
upon him its staying hand. Even in this brief epitome I ought to say that
all who departed for the provinces across the sea, whether proconsuls or
governors appointed by the emperor, went out of their way to see him at
Rhodes, and on meeting him they lowered their fasces to him though he was
but a private citizen — if such majesty could ever belong to a private
citizen — thereby confessing that his retirement was more worthy of honour
than their official position.
100. – The whole world felt the departure of
Nero from his position as protector of the city. The Parthian, breaking
away from his alliance with us, laid hold of Armenia, and the eyes of its
conqueror were no longer upon it.
But in
the city, in the very year in which Augustus, then consul with Gallus
Caninius (thirty years ago), had sated to repletion the minds and eyes of
the Roman people with the magnificent spectacle of a gladiatorial show and
a sham naval battle on the occasion of the dedication of the temple of
Mars, a calamity broke out in the emperor's own household which is
shameful to narrate and dreadful to recall. For his daughter Julia,
utterly regardless of her great father and her husband, left untried no
disgraceful deed untainted with either extravagance or lust of which a
woman could be guilty, either as the doer or as the object, and was in the
habit of measuring the magnitude of her fortune only in the terms of
licence to sin, setting up her own caprice as a law unto itself. Iulus
Antonius, who had been a remarkable example of Caesar's clemency, only to
become the violator of his household, avenged with his own hand the crime
he had committed. After the defeat of Marcus Antonius, his father,
Augustus had not only granted him his life, but after honouring him with
the priesthood, the praetorship, the consulship, and the governorship of
provinces, had admitted him to the closest ties of relationship through a
marriage with his sister's daughter. Quintius Crispinus also, who hid his
extraordinary depravity behind a stern brow, Appius Claudius, Sempronius
Gracchus, Scipio, and other men of both orders but of less illustrious
name, suffered the penalty which they would have paid had it been the wife
of an ordinary citizen they had debauched instead of the daughter of
Caesar and the wife of Nero. Julia was banished to an island and removed
from the eyes of her country and her parents, though her mother Scribonia
accompanied her and employed with her as a voluntary companion of her
exile.
101. – Shortly after this Gaius Caesar, who
had previously made a tour of other provinces, but only as a visitor, was
dispatched to Syria. On his way he first paid his respects to Tiberius
Nero, whom he treated with all honour as his superior. In his province he
conducted himself with such versatility as to furnish much material for
the panegyrist and not a little for the critic. On an island in the
Euphrates, with an equal retinue on each side, Gaius had a meeting with
the king of the Parthians, a young man of distinguished presence. This
spectacle of the Roman army arrayed on one side, the Parthian on the
other, while these two eminent lands not only of the empires they
represented but also of mankind thus met in conference — truly a notable
and a memorable sight — it was my fortunate lot to see early in my career
as a soldier, when I held the rank of tribune. I had already entered upon
this grade of the service under your father, Marcus Vinicius, and Publius
Silius in Thrace and Macedonia; later I visited Achaia and Asia and all
the eastern provinces, the outlet of the Black Sea and both its coasts,
and it is not without feelings of pleasure that I recall the many events,
places, peoples, and cities. As for the meeting, first the Parthian dined
with Gaius upon the Roman bank, and later Gaius supped with the king on
the soil of the enemy.
102. – It was at this time that there were
revealed to Caesar, through the Parthian king, the traitorous designs,
revealing a crafty and deceitful mind, of Marcus Lollius, whom Augustus
had desired to be the adviser of his still youthful son; and gossip spread
the report abroad. In regard to his death, which occurred within a few
days, I do not know whether it was accidental or voluntary. But the joy
which people felt at this death was equalled by the sorrow which the state
felt long afterwards at the decease in the same province of Censorinus, a
man born to win the affections of men. Then Gaius entered Armenia and at
first conducted his campaign with success; but later, in a parley near
Artagera, to which he rashly entrusted his person, he was seriously
wounded by a man named Adduus, so that, in consequence, his body became
less active, and his mind of less service to the state. Nor was there
lacking the companionship of persons who encouraged his defects by
flattery — for flattery always goes hand in hand with high position — as a
result of which he wished to spend his life in a remote and distant corner
of the world rather than return to Rome. Then, in the act of returning to
Italy, after long resistance and still against his will, he died in a city
of Lycia which they call Limyra, his brother Lucius having died about a
year before at Massilia on his way to Spain.
103. – But fortune, which had removed the hope
of the great name of Caesar, had already restored to the state her real
protector; for the return of Tiberius Nero from Rhodes in the consulship
of Publius Vinicius, your father, and before the death of either of these
youths, had filled his country with joy. Caesar Augustus did not long
hesitate, for he had no need to search for one to choose as his successor
but merely to choose the one who towered about the others. Accordingly,
what he had wished to do after the death of Lucius but while Gaius was
still living, and had been prevented from doing by the strong opposition
of Nero himself, he now insisted upon carrying out after the death of both
young men, namely, to make Nero his associate in the tribunician power, in
spite of his continued objection both in private and in the senate; and in
the consulship of Aelius Catus and Gaius Sentius, on the twenty-seventh of
June, he adopted him, seven hundred and fifty-four years after the
founding of the city, and twenty-seven years ago. The rejoicing of that
day, the concourse of the citizens, their vows as they stretched their
hands almost to the very heavens, and the hopes which they entertained for
the perpetual security and the eternal existence of the Roman empire, I
shall hardly be able to describe to the full even in my comprehensive
work, much less try to do it justice here. I shall simply content myself
with stating what a day of good omen it was for all. On that day there
sprang up once more in parents the assurance of safety for their children,
in husbands for the sanctity of marriage, in owners for the safety of
their property, and in all men the assurance of safety, order, peace, and
tranquillity; indeed, it would have been hard to entertain larger hopes,
or to have them more happily fulfilled.
104. – On the same day Marcus Agrippa, to whom
Julia had given birth after the death of Agrippa, was also adopted by
Augustus; but, in the case of Nero, an addition was made to the formula of
adoption in Caesar's own words: "This I do for reasons of state." His
country did not long detain at Rome the champion and the guardian of her
empire, but forthwith dispatched him to Germany, where, three years
before, an extensive war had broken out in the governorship of that
illustrious man, Marcus Vinicius, your grandfather. Vinicius had carried
on this war with success in some quarters, and in others had made a
successful defence, and on this account there had been decreed to him the
ornaments of a triumph with an honorary inscription recording his
deeds.
It was at this time that I became
a soldier in the camp of Tiberius Caesar, after having previously filled
the duties of the tribunate. For, immediately after the adoption of
Tiberius, I was sent with him to Germany as prefect of the cavalry.
Succeeding my father in that position, and for nine continuous years as
prefect of cavalry or as commander of a legion I was a spectacle of his
superhuman achievements, and further assisted in them to the extent of my
modest ability. I do not think that mortal man will be permitted to behold
again a sight like that which I enjoyed, when, throughout the most
populous parts of Italy and the full extent of the provinces of Gaul, the
people as they beheld once more their old commander, who by virtue of his
services had long been a Caesar before he was such in name, congratulated
themselves in even heartier terms than they congratulated him. Indeed,
words cannot express the feelings of the soldiers at their meeting, and
perhaps my account will scarcely be believed — the tears which sprang to
their eyes in their joy at the sight of him, their eagerness, their
strange transports in saluting him, their longing to touch his hand, and
their inability to restrain such cries as "Is it really you that we see,
commander?" "Have we received you safely back among us?" "I served with
you, general, in Armenia!" "And I in Raetia!" "I received my decoration
from you in Vindelicia!" "And I mine in Pannonia!" "And I in
Germany!"
105. – He at once entered Germany. The
Canninefates, the Attuarii, and Bructeri were subdued, the Cherusci
(Arminius, a member of this race, was soon to become famous for the
disaster inflicted upon us) were again subjugated, the Weser crossed, and
the regions beyond it penetrated. Caesar claimed for himself every part of
the war that was difficult or dangerous, placing Sentius Saturninus, who
had already served as legate under his father in Germany, in charge of
expeditions of a less dangerous character: a man many-sided in his
virtues, a man of energy and action, and of foresight, alike able to
endure the duties of a soldier as he was well trained in them, but who,
likewise, when his labours left room for leisure, made a liberal and
elegant use of it, but with this reservation, that one would call him
sumptuous and jovial rather than extravagant or indolent. About the
distinguished ability of this illustrious man and his famous consulship I
have already spoken. The prolonging of the campaign of that year into the
month of December increased the benefits derived from the great victory.
Caesar was drawn to the city by his filial affection, though the Alps were
almost blocked by winter's snows; but the defence of the empire brought
him at the beginning of spring back to Germany, where he had on his
departure pitched his winter camp at the source of the river Lippe, in the
very heart of the country, the first Roman to winter there.
106. – Ye Heavens, how large a volume could be
filled with the tale of our achievements in the following summer under the
generalship of Tiberius Caesar! All Germany was traversed by our armies,
races were conquered hitherto almost unknown, even by name; and the tribes
of the Cauchi were again subjugated. All the flower of their youth,
infinite in number though they were, huge of stature and protected by the
ground they held, surrendered their arms, and, flanked by a gleaming line
of our soldiers, fell with their generals upon their knees before the
tribunal of the commander. The power of the Langobardi was broken, a race
surpassing even the Germans in savagery; and finally — and this is
something which had never before been entertained even as a hope, much
less actually attempted — a Roman army with its standards was led four
hundred miles beyond the Rhine as far as the river Elbe, which flows past
the territories of the Semnones and the Hermunduri. And with this
wonderful combination of careful planning and good fortune on the part of
the general, and a close watch upon the seasons, the fleet which had
skirted the windings of the sea coast sailed up the Elbe from a sea
hitherto unheard of and unknown, and after proving victorious over many
tribes effected a junction with Caesar and the army, bringing with it a
great abundance of supplies of all kinds.
107. – Even in the midst of these great events
I cannot refrain from inserting this little incident. We were encamped on
the nearer bank of the aforesaid river, while on the farther bank
glittered the arms of the enemies' troops, who showed an inclination to
flee at every movement and manoeuvre of our vessels, when one of the
barbarians, advanced in years, tall of stature, of high rank, to judge by
his dress, embarked in a canoe, made as is usual with them of a hollowed
log, and guiding this strange craft he advanced alone to the middle of the
stream and asked permission to land without harm to himself on the bank
occupied by our troops, and to see Caesar. Permission was granted. Then he
beached his canoe, and, after gazing upon Caesar for a long time in
silence, exclaimed: "Our young men are insane, for though they worship you
as divine when absent, when you are present they fear your armies instead
of trusting to your protection. But I, by your kind permission, Caesar,
have to-day seen the gods of whom I merely used to hear; and in my life
have never hoped for or experienced a happier day." After asking for and
receiving permission to touch Caesar's hand, he again entered his canoe,
and continued to gaze back upon him until he landed upon his own bank.
Victorious over all the nations and countries which he approached, his
army safe and unimpaired, having been attacked but once, and that too
through deceit on the part of the enemy with great loss on their side,
Caesar led his legions back to winter quarters, and sought the city with
this haste as in the previous year.
108. – Nothing remained to be
conquered in Germany except the people of the Marcomanni, which, leaving
its settlements at the summons of its leader Maroboduus, had retired into
the interior and now dwelt in the plains surrounded by the Hercynian
forest. No considerations of haste should lead us to pass over this man
Maroboduus without mention. A man of noble family, strong in body and
courageous in mind, a barbarian by birth but not in intelligence, he
achieved among his countrymen no mere chief's position gained as the
result of internal disorders or chance or liable to change and dependent
upon the caprice of his subjects, but, conceiving in his mind the idea of
a definite empire and royal powers, he resolved to remove his own race far
away from the Romans and to migrate to a place where, inasmuch as he had
fled before the strength of more powerful arms, he might make his own all
powerful. Accordingly, after occupying the region we have mentioned, he
proceeded to reduce all the neighbouring races by war, or to bring them
under his sovereignty by treaty.
109. – The body of guards protecting the
kingdom of Maroboduus, which by constant drill had been brought almost to
the Roman standard of discipline, soon placed him in a position of power
that was dreaded even by our empire. His policy toward Rome was to avoid
provoking us by war, but at the same time to let us understand that, if he
were provoked by us he had in reserve the power and the will to resist.
The envoys whom he sent to the Caesars sometimes commended him to them as
a suppliant and sometimes spoke as though they represented an equal. Races
and individuals who revolted from us found in him a refuge, and in all
respects, with but little concealment, he played the part of a rival. His
army, which he had brought up to the number of seventy thousand foot and
four thousand horse, he was steadily preparing, by exercising it in
constant wars against his neighbours, for some greater task than that
which he had in hand. He was also to be feared on this account, that,
having Germany at the left and in front of his settlements, Pannonia on
the right, and Noricum in the rear of them, he was dreaded by all as one
who might at any moment descend upon all. Nor did he permit Italy to be
free from concern as regards his growing power, since the summits of the
Alps which mark her boundary were not more than two hundred miles distant
from his boundary line. Such was the man and such the region that Tiberius
Caesar resolved to attack from opposite directions in the course of the
coming year. Sentius Saturninus had instructions to lead his legions
through the country of the Catti into Boiohaemum, for that is the name of
the region occupied by Maroboduus, cutting a passage through the Hercynian
forest which bounded the region, while from Carnuntum, the nearest point
of Noricum in this direction, he himself undertook to lead against the
Marcomanni the army which was serving in Illyricum.
110. – Fortune sometimes breaks off
completely, sometimes merely delays, the execution of men's plans. Caesar
had already arranged his winter quarters on the Danube, and had brought up
his army to within five days' march of the advanced posts of the enemy;
and the legions which he had ordered Saturninus to bring up, separated
from the enemy by an almost equal distance, were on the point of effecting
a junction with Caesar at a predetermined rendezvous within a few days,
when all Pannonia, grown arrogant through the blessings of a long peace
and now at the maturity of her power, suddenly took up arms, bringing
Dalmatia and all the races of that region into her alliance. Thereupon
glory was sacrificed to necessity; and it did not seem to Tiberius a safe
course to keep his army buried in the interior of the country and thus
leave Italy unprotected from an enemy so near at hand. The full number of
the races and tribes which had rebelled reached a total of more than eight
hundred thousand. About two hundred thousand infantry trained to arms, and
nine thousand cavalry were being assembled. Of this immense number, which
acted under the orders of energetic and capable generals, one portion had
decided to make Italy its goal, which was connected with them by the line
of Nauportum and Tergeste, a second had already poured into Macedonia,
while a third had set itself the task of protecting their own territories.
The chief authority rested with the two Batones and Pinnes as generals.
Now all the Pannonians possessed not only a knowledge of Roman discipline
but also of the Roman tongue, many also had some measure of literary
culture, and the exercise of the intellect was not uncommon among them.
And so it came to pass, by Hercules, that no nation ever displayed such
swiftness in following up with war its own plans for war, and in putting
its resolves into execution. Roman citizens were overpowered, traders were
massacred, a considerable detachment of veterans, stationed in the region
which was most remote from the commander, was exterminated to a man,
Macedonia was seized by armed forces, everywhere was wholesale devastation
by fire and sword. Moreover, such a panic did this war inspire that even
the courage of Caesar Augustus, rendered steady and firm by experience in
so many wars, was shaken with fear.
111. – Accordingly levies were held, from
every quarter all the veterans were recalled to the standards, men and
women were compelled, in proportion to their income, to furnish freedmen
as soldiers. Men heard Augustus say in the senate, that, unless
precautions were taken, the enemy might appear in sight of Rome within ten
days. The services of senators and knights were demanded for this war, and
promised. All these our preparations would have been vain had we not had
the man to take command. And so, as a final measure of protection, the
state demanded from Augustus that Tiberius should conduct the
war.
In this war also my modest abilities
had an opportunity for glorious service. I was now, at the end of my
service in the cavalry, quaestor designate, and though not yet a senator I
was placed upon a parity with senators and even tribunes elect, and led
from the city to Tiberius a portion of the army which was entrusted to me
by Augustus. Then in my quaestorship, giving up my right to have a
province allotted me, I was sent to Tiberius as legatus
Augusti.
What armies of the enemy did we
see drawn up for battle in that first year! What opportunities did we
avail ourselves of through the foresight of the general to evade their
united forces and rout them in separate divisions! With what moderation
and kindness did we see all the business of warfare conducted, though
under the authority of a military commander! With what judgement did he
place our winter camps! How carefully was the enemy so blockaded by the
outposts of our army that he could nowhere break through, and that,
through lack of supplies and by disaffection within his own ranks, he
might gradually be weakened in strength!
112. – An exploit of Messalinus in the first
summer of the war, fortunate in its issue as it was bold in undertaking,
must here be recorded for posterity. This man, who was even more noble in
heart than in birth, and thoroughly worthy of having had Corvinus as his
father, and of leaving his cognomen to his brother Cotta, was in command
in Illyricum, and, at the sudden outbreak of the rebellion, finding
himself surrounded by the army of the enemy and supported by only the
twentieth legion, and that at but half its normal strength, he routed and
put to flight more than twenty thousand, and for this was honoured with
the ornaments of a triumph.
The
barbarians were so little satisfied with their numbers and had so little
confidence in their own strength that they had no faith in themselves
where Caesar was. The part of their army which faced the commander
himself, worn down according as it suited our pleasure or advantage, and
reduced to the verge of destruction by famine, not daring to withstand him
when he took the offensive, nor to meet our men when they gave them an
opportunity for fighting and drew up their line of battle, occupied the
Claudian mountain and defended itself behind fortifications. But the
division of their forces which had swarmed out to meet the army which the
consulars Aulus Caecina and Silvanus Plautius were bringing up from the
provinces across the sea, surrounded five of our legions, together with
the troops of our allies and the cavalry of the king (for Rhoemetalces,
king of Thrace, in conjunction with the aforesaid generals was bringing
with him a large body of Thracians as reinforcements for the war), and
inflicted a disaster that came near being fatal to all. The horsemen of
the king were routed, the cavalry of the allies put to flight, the cohorts
turned their backs to the enemy, and the panic extended even to the
standards of the legion. But in this crisis the valour of the Roman
soldier claimed for itself a greater share of glory than it left to the
generals, who departing far from the policy of their commander, had
allowed themselves to come into contact with the enemy before they had
learned through their scouts where the enemy was. At this critical moment,
when some tribunes of the soldiers had been slain by the enemy, the
prefect of the camp and several prefects of cohorts had been cut off, a
number of centurions had been wounded, and even some of the centurions of
the first rank had fallen, the legions, shouting encouragement to each
other, fell upon the enemy, and not content with sustaining their
onslaught, broke through their line and wrested a victory from a desperate
plight.
About this time Agrippa, who had
been adopted by his natural grandfather on the same day as Tiberius, and
had already, two years before, begun to reveal his true character,
alienated from himself the affection of his father and grandfather,
falling into reckless ways by a strange depravity of mind and disposition;
and soon, as his vices increased daily, he met the end which his madness
deserved.
113. – Listen now, Marcus Vinicius, to the
proof that Caesar was no less great in war as a general than you now see
him in peace as an emperor. When the two armies were united, that is to
say the troops which had served under Caesar and those which had come to
reinforce him, and there were now gathered together in one camp ten
legions, more than seventy cohorts, fourteen troops of cavalry and more
than ten thousand veterans, and in addition a large number of volunteers
and the numerous cavalry of the king — in a word a greater army than had
ever been assembled in one place since the civil wars — all were finding
satisfaction in this fact and reposed their greatest hope of victory in
their numbers. But the general, who was the best judge of the course he
pursued, preferring efficiency to show, and, as we have so often seen him
doing in all his wars, following the course which deserved approval rather
than that which was currently approval, after keeping the army which had
newly arrived for only a few days in order to allow it to recover from the
march, decided to send it away, since he saw that it was too large to be
managed and was not well adapted to effective control. And so he sent it
back whence it came, escorting it with his own army on a long exceedingly
laborious march, whose difficulty can hardly be described. His purpose in
this was, on the one hand, that no one might dare to attack his united
forces, and, on the other, to prevent the united forces of the enemy from
falling upon the departing division, through the apprehension of each
nation for its own territory. Then returning himself to Siscia, at the
beginning of a very hard winter, he placed his lieutenants, of whom I was
one, in charge of the divisions of his winter quarters.
114. – And now for a detail which in the
telling may lack grandeur, but is most important by reason of the true and
substantial personal qualities it reveals and also of its practical
service — a thing most pleasant as an experience and remarkable for the
kindness it displayed. Throughout the whole period of the German and
Pannonian war there was not one of us, or of those either above or below
our rank, who fell ill without having his health and welfare looked after
by Caesar with as much solicitude indeed as though this were the chief
occupation of his mind, preoccupied though he was by his heavy
responsibilities. There was a horsed vehicle ready for those who needed
it, his own litter was at the disposal of all, and I, among others, have
enjoyed its use. Now his physicians, now his kitchen, and now his bathing
equipment, brought for this one purpose for himself alone, ministered to
the comfort of all who were sick. All they lacked was their home and
domestic servants, but nothing else that friends at home could furnish or
desire for them. Let me also add the following trait, which, like the
others I have described, will be immediately recognized as true by anyone
who participated in that campaign. Caesar alone of commanders was in the
habit of also travelling in the saddle, and, throughout the greater
portion of the summer campaign, of sitting at the table when dining with
invited guests. Of those who did not imitate his own stern discipline he
took no notice, in so far as no harmful precedent was thereby created. He
often admonished, sometimes gave verbal reproof, but rarely punishment,
and pursued the moderate course of pretending in most cases not to see
things, and of administering only occasionally a
reprimand.
The winter brought the reward
of our efforts in the termination of the war, though it was not until the
following summer that all Pannonia sought peace, the remnants of the war
as a whole being confined to Dalmatia. In my complete work I hope to
describe in detail how those fierce warriors, many thousand in number, who
had but a short time before threatened Italy with slavery, now brought the
arms they had used in rebellion and laid them down, at a river called the
Bathinus, prostrating themselves one and all before the knees of the
commander; and how of their two supreme commanders, Bato and Pinnes, the
one was made a prisoner and the other gave himself
up.
In the autumn the victorious army was
led back to winter quarters. Caesar gave the chief command of all the
forces to Marcus Lepidus, a man who in name and in fortune approaches the
Caesars, whom one admires and loves the more in proportion to his
opportunities to know and understand him, and whom one regards as an
ornament to the great names from whom he springs.
115. – Caesar then devoted his attention and
his arms to his second task, the war in Dalmatia. What assistance he had
in this quarter from his aide and lieutenant Magius Celer Velleianus, my
brother, is attested by the words of Tiberius himself and of his father,
and signalized by the record of the high decorations conferred upon him by
Caesar on the occasion of his triumph. In the beginning of summer Lepidus
led his army out of winter quarters, in an effort to make his way to
Tiberius the commander, through the midst of races that were as yet
unaffected and untouched by the disasters of war and therefore still
fierce and warlike; after a struggle in which he had to contend with the
difficulties of the country as well as the attacks of the enemy, and after
inflicting great loss on those who barred his way, by the devastation of
fields, burning of houses, and slaying of the inhabitants, he succeeded in
reaching Caesar, rejoicing in victory and laden with booty. For these
feats, for which, if they had been performed under his own auspices he
would properly have received a triumph, he was granted the ornaments of a
triumph, the wish of the senate endorsing the recommendation of the
Caesars.
This campaign brought the
momentous war to a successful conclusion; for the Perustae and Desiadates,
Dalmatian tribes, who were almost unconquerable on account of the position
of their strongholds in the mountains, their warlike temper, their
wonderful knowledge of fighting, and, above all, the narrow passes in
which they lived, were then at last pacified, not now under the mere
generalship, but by the armed prowess of Caesar himself, and then only
when they were almost entirely
exterminated.
Nothing in the course of
this great war, nothing in the campaigns in Germany, came under my
observation that was greater, or that aroused my admiration more, than
these traits of its general; no chance of winning a victory ever seemed to
him timely, which he would have to purchase by the sacrifice of his
soldiers; the safest course was always regarded by him as the best; he
consulted his conscience first and then his reputation, and, finally, the
plans of the commander were never governed by the opinion of the army, but
rather the army by the wisdom of its leader.
116. – In the Dalmatian war Germanicus, who
had been dispatched in advance of the commander to regions both wild and
difficult, gave great proof of his valour. By his repeated services and
careful vigilance the governor of Dalmatia, Vibius Postumus the consular,
also earned the ornaments of a triumph. A few years before this honour had
been earned in Africa by Passienus and Cossus, both celebrated men, though
not alike in merit. Cossus passed on to his son, a young man born to
exhibit every variety of excellence, a cognomen that still testifies to
his victory. And Lucius Apronius, who shared in the achievements of
Postumus, earned by the distinguished valour which he displayed in this
campaign also, the honours which he actually won shortly
afterwards.
Would that it had not been
demonstrated, by greater proofs, how mighty an influence fortune wields in
all things; yet even here her power can be recognized by abundant
examples. For instance, Aelius Lamia, a man of the older type, who always
tempered his old-fashioned dignity by a spirit of kindliness, had
performed splendid service in Germany and Illyricum, and was soon to do so
in Africa, but failed to receive triumphal honours, not through any fault
of his, but through lack of opportunity; and Aulus Licinius Nerva
Silianus, the son of Publius Silius, a man who was not adequately praised
even by the friend who knew him best, when he declared that there were no
qualities which he did not possess in the highest degree, whether as an
excellent citizen or as an honest commander, through his untimely death
failed not only to reap the fruit of his close friendship with the emperor
but also to realize that lofty conception of his powers which had been
inspired by his father's eminence. If anyone shall say that I have gone
out of my way to mention these men, his criticism will meet no denial. In
the sight of honest men fair-minded candour without misrepresentation is
no crime.
117. – Scarcely had Caesar put the finishing
touch upon the Pannonian and Dalmatian war, when, within five days of the
completion of this task, dispatches from Germany brought the baleful news
of the death of Varus, and of the slaughter of three legions, of as many
divisions of cavalry, and of six cohorts — as though fortune were granting
us this indulgence at least, that such a disaster should not be brought
upon us when our commander was occupied by other wars. The cause of this
defeat and the personality of the general require of me a brief
digression.
Varus Quintilius, descended
from a famous rather than a high-born family, was a man of mild character
and of a quiet disposition, somewhat slow in mind as he was in body, and
more accustomed to the leisure of the camp than to actual service in war.
That he was no despiser of money is demonstrated by his governorship of
Syria: he entered the rich province a poor man, but left it a rich man and
the province poor. When placed in charge of the army in Germany, he
entertained the notion that the Germans were a people who were men only in
limbs and voice, and that they, who could not be subdued by the sword,
could be soothed by the law. With this purpose in mind he entered the
heart of Germany as though he were going among a people enjoying the
blessings of peace, and sitting on his tribunal he wasted the time of a
summer campaign in holding court and observing the proper details of legal
procedure.
118. – But the Germans, who with their great
ferocity combine great craft, to an extent scarcely credible to one who
has had no experience with them, and are a race to lying born, by trumping
up a series of fictitious lawsuits, now provoking one another to disputes,
and now expressing their gratitude that Roman justice was settling these
disputes, that their own barbarous nature was being softened down by this
new and hitherto unknown method, and that quarrels which were usually
settled by arms were now being ended by law, brought Quintilius to such a
complete degree of negligence, that he came to look upon himself as a city
praetor administering justice in the forum, and not a general in command
of an army in the heart of Germany. Thereupon appeared a young man of
noble birth, brave in action and alert in mind, possessing an intelligence
quite beyond the ordinary barbarian; he was, namely, Arminius, the son of
Sigimer, a prince of that nation, and he showed in his countenance and in
his eyes the fire of the mind within. He had been associated with us
constantly on private campaigns, and had even attained the dignity of
equestrian rank. This young man made use of the negligence of the general
as an opportunity for treachery, sagaciously seeing that no one could be
more quickly overpowered than the man who feared nothing, and that the
most common beginning of disaster was a sense of security. At first, then,
he admitted but a few, later a large number, to a share in his design; he
told them, and convinced them too, that the Romans could be crushed, added
execution to resolve, and named a day for carrying out the plot. This was
disclosed to Varus through Segestes, a loyal man of that race and of
illustrious name, who also demanded that the conspirators be put in
chains. But fate now dominated the plans of Varus and had blindfolded the
eyes of his mind. Indeed, it is usually the case that heaven perverts the
judgement of the man whose fortune it means to reverse, and brings it to
pass — and this is the wretched part of it — that that which happens by
chance seems to be deserved, and accident passes over into culpability.
And so Quintilius refused to believe the story, and insisted upon judging
the apparent friendship of the Germans toward him by the standard of his
merit. And, after this first warning, there was no time left for a
second.
119. – The details of this terrible calamity,
the heaviest that had befallen the Romans on foreign soil since the
disaster of Crassus in Parthia, I shall endeavour to set forth, as others
have done, in my larger work. Here I can merely lament the disaster as a
whole. An army unexcelled in bravery, the first of Roman armies in
discipline, in energy, and in experience in the field, through the
negligence of its general, the perfidy of the enemy, and the unkindness of
fortune was surrounded, nor was as much opportunity as they had wished
given to the soldiers either of fighting or of extricating themselves,
except against heavy odds; nay, some were even heavily chastised for using
the arms and showing the spirit of Romans. Hemmed in by forests and
marshes and ambuscades, it was exterminated almost to a man by the very
enemy whom it had always slaughtered like cattle, whose life or death had
depended solely upon the wrath or the pity of the Romans. The general had
more courage to die than to fight, for, following the example of his
father and grandfather, he ran himself through with his sword. Of the two
prefects of the camp, Lucius Eggius furnished a precedent as noble as that
of Ceionius was base, who, after the greater part of the army had
perished, proposed its surrender, preferring to die by torture at the
hands of the enemy than in battle. Vala Numonius, lieutenant of Varus,
who, in the rest of his life, had been an inoffensive and an honourable
man, also set a fearful example in that he left the infantry unprotected
by the cavalry and in flight tried to reach the Rhine with his squadrons
of horse. But fortune avenged his act, for he did not survive those whom
he had abandoned, but died in the act of deserting them. The body of
Varus, partially burned, was mangled by the enemy in their barbarity; his
head was cut off and taken to Maroboduus and was sent by him to Caesar;
but in spite of the disaster it was honoured by burial in the tomb of his
family.
120. – On hearing of this disaster, Caesar
flew to his father's side. The constant protector of the Roman empire
again took up his accustomed part. Dispatched to Germany, he reassured the
provinces of Gaul, distributed his armies, strengthened the garrison
towns, and then, measuring himself by the standard of his own greatness,
and not by the presumption of an enemy who threatened Italy with a war
like that of the Cimbri and Teutones, he took the offensive and crossed
the Rhine with his army. He thus made aggressive war upon the enemy when
his father and his country would have been content to let him hold them in
check, he penetrated into the heart of the country, opened up military
roads, devastated fields, burned houses, routed those who came against
him, and, without loss to the troops with which he had crossed, he
returned, covered with glory, to winter
quarters.
Due tribute should be paid to
Lucius Asprenas, who was serving as lieutenant under Varus his uncle, and
who, backed by the brave and energetic support of the two legions under
his command, saved his army from this great disaster, and by a quick
descent to the quarters of the army in Lower Germany strengthened the
allegiance of the races even on the hither side of the Rhine who were
beginning to waver. There are those, however, who believed that, though he
had saved the lives of the living, he had appropriated to his own use the
property of the dead who were slain with Varus, and that inheritances of
the slaughtered army were claimed by him at pleasure. The valour of Lucius
Caedicius, prefect of the camp, also deserves praise, and of those who,
pent up with him at Aliso, were besieged by an immense force of Germans.
For, overcoming all their difficulties which want rendered unendurable and
the forces of the enemy almost insurmountable, following a design that was
carefully considered, and using a vigilance that was ever on the alert,
they watched their chance, and with the sword won their way back to their
friends. From all this it is evident that Varus, who was, it must be
confessed, a man of character and of good intentions, lost his life and
his magnificent army more through lack of judgement in the commander than
of valour in his soldiers. When the Germans were venting their rage upon
their captives, an heroic act was performed by Caldus Caelius, a young man
worthy in every way of his long line of ancestors, who, seizing a section
of the chain with which he was bound, brought down with such force upon
his own head as to cause his instant death, both his brains and his blood
gushing from the wound.
121. – Tiberius showed the same valour, and
was attended by the same fortune, when he entered Germany on his later
campaigns as in his first. After he had broken the force of the enemy by
his expeditions on sea and land, had completed his difficult task in Gaul,
and had settled by restraint rather than by punishment the dissensions
that had broken out among the Viennenses, at the request of his father
that he should have in all the provinces and armies a power equal to his
own, the senate and Roman people so decreed. For indeed it was incongruous
that the provinces which were being defended by him should not be under
his jurisdiction, and that he who was foremost in bearing aid should not
be considered an equal in the honour to be won. On his return to the city
he celebrated the triumph over the Pannonians and Dalmatians, long since
due him, but postponed by reason of a succession of wars. Who can be
surprised at its magnificence, since it was the triumph of Caesar. Yet who
can fail to wonder at the kindness of fortune to him? For the most eminent
leaders of the enemy were not slain in battle, that report should tell
thereof, but were taken captive, so that in his triumph he exhibited them
in chains. It was my lot and that of my brother to participate in this
triumph among the men of distinguished rank and those who were decorated
with distinguished honours.
122. – Among the other acts of Tiberius
Caesar, wherein his remarkable moderation shines forth conspicuously, who
does not wonder at this also, that, although he unquestionably earned
seven triumphs, he was satisfied with three? For who can doubt that, when
he had recovered Armenia, had placed over it a king upon whose head he had
with his own hand set the mark of royalty, and had put in order the
affairs of the east, he ought to have received an ovation; and that after
his conquest of the Vindelici and the Raeti he should have entered the
city as victor in a triumphal chariot? Or that, after his adoption, when
he had broken the power of the Germans in three successive campaigns, the
same honour should have been bestowed upon him and should have been
accepted by him? And that, after the disaster received under Varus, when
this same Germany was crushed by a course of events which, sooner than was
expected, came to a happy issue, the honour of a triumph should have been
awarded to this consummate general? But, in the case of this man, one does
not know which to admire the more, that in courting toils and danger he
went beyond all bounds or that in accepting honours he kept within
them.
123. – We now come to the crisis which was
awaited with the greatest foreboding. Augustus Caesar had dispatched his
grandson Germanicus to Germany to put an end to such traces of the war as
still remained, and was on the point of sending his son Tiberius to
Illyricum to strengthen by peace the regions he had subjugated in war.
With the double purpose of escorting him on his way, and of being present
at an athletic contest which the Neapolitans had established in his
honour, he set out for Campania. Although he had already experienced
symptoms of growing weakness and of a change in his health for the worse,
his strong will resisted infirmity and he accompanied his son. Parting
from him at Beneventum he went to Nola. As his health grew daily worse,
and he knew full well for whom he must send if he wished to leave
everything secure behind him, he sent in haste for his son to return.
Tiberius hurried back and reached the side of the father of his country
before he was even expected. Then Augustus, asserting that his mind was
now at ease, and, with the arms of his beloved Tiberius about him,
commending to him the continuation of their joint work, expressed all his
readiness to meet the end if the fates should call him. He revived a
little at seeing Tiberius and at hearing the voice of one so dear to him,
but, ere long, since no care could withstand the fates, in his
seventy-sixth year, in the consulship of Pompeius and Apuleius he was
resolved into the elements from which he sprang and yielded up to heaven
his divine soul.
124. – Of the misgivings of mankind at this
time, the trepidation of the senate, the confusion of the people, the
fears of the city, of the narrow margin between safety and ruin on which
we then found ourselves, I have no time to tell as I hasten on my way, nor
could he tell who had the time. Suffice it for me to voice the common
utterance: "The world whose ruin we had feared we found not even
disturbed, and such was the majesty of one man that there was no need of
arms either to defend the good or to restrain the bad." There was,
however, in one respect what might be called a struggle in the state, as,
namely, the senate and the Roman people wrestled with Caesar to induce him
to succeed to the position of his father, while he on his side strove for
permission to play the part of a citizen on a parity with the rest rather
than that of an emperor over all. At last he was prevailed upon rather by
reason than by the honour, since he saw that whatever he did not undertake
to protect was likely to perish. He is the only man to whose lot it has
fallen to refuse the principate for a longer time, almost, than others had
fought to secure it.
After heaven had
claimed his father, and human honours had been paid to his body as divine
honours were paid to his soul, the first of his tasks as emperor was the
regulation of the comitia, instructions for which Augustus had left in his
own handwriting. On this occasion it was my lot and that of my brother, as
Caesar's candidates, to be named for the praetorship immediately after
those of noble families and those who had held the priesthoods, and indeed
to have had the distinction of being the last to be recommended by
Augustus and the first to be named by Tiberius Caesar.
125. – The state soon reaped the fruit of its
wise course in desiring Tiberius, nor was it long before it was apparent
what we should have had to endure had our request been refused, and what
we had gained in having it granted. For the army serving in Germany,
commanded by Germanicus in person, and the legions in Illyricum, seized at
the same moment by a form of madness and a deep desire to throw everything
into confusion, wanted a new leader, a new order of things, and a new
republic. Nay, they even dared to threaten to dictate terms to the senate
and to the emperor. They tried to fix for themselves the amount of their
pay and their period of service. They even resorted to arms; the sword was
drawn; their conviction that they would not be punished came near to
breaking out into the worst excesses of arms. All they needed was someone
to lead them against the state; there was no lack of followers. But all
this disturbance was soon quelled and suppressed by the ripe experience of
the veteran commander, who used coercion in many cases, made promises
where he could so with dignity, and by the combination of severe
punishment of the most guilty with milder chastisement of the
others.
In this crisis, while in many
respects the conduct of Germanicus was not lacking in rigour, Drusus
employed the severity of the Romans of old. Sent by his father into the
very midst of the conflagration, when the flames of mutiny were already
bursting forth, he preferred to hold to a course which involved danger to
himself than one which might prove a ruinous precedent, and used the very
swords of those by whom he had been besieged to coerce his besiegers. In
this task he had in Junius Bassus no ordinary helper, a man whom one does
not know whether to consider more useful in the camp or better in the
toga. A few years later, as proconsul in Africa, he earned the ornaments
of a triumph, with the title of
imperator.
The two provinces of Spain,
however, and the army in them were held in peace and tranquillity, since
Marcus Lepidus, of whose virtues and distinguished service in Illyricum I
have already spoken, was there in command, and since he had in the highest
degree the quality of instinctively knowing the best course and the
firmness to hold to his views. On the coast of Illyricum his vigilance and
fidelity was emulated in detail by Dolabella, a man of noble-minded
candour.
126. – Who would undertake to tell in detail
the accomplishments of the past sixteen years, since they are borne in
upon the eyes and hearts of all? Caesar deified his father, not by
exercise of his imperial authority, but by his attitude of reverence; he
did not call him a god, but made him one. Credit has been restored in the
forum, strife has been banished from the forum, canvassing for office from
the Campus Martius, discord from the senate-house; justice, equity, and
industry, long buried in oblivion, have been restored to the state; the
magistrates have regained their authority, the senate its majesty, the
courts their dignity; rioting in the theatre has been suppressed; all
citizens have either been impressed with the wish to do right, or have
been forced to do so by necessity. Right is now honoured, evil is
punished; the humble man respects the great but does not fear him, the
great has precedence over the lowly but does not despise him. When was the
price of grain more reasonable, or when were the blessings of peace
greater? The pax augusta, which has spread to the regions of the east and
of the west and to the bounds of the north and of the south, preserves
every corner of the world safe from the fear of brigandage. The
munificence of the emperor claims for its province the losses inflicted by
fortune not merely on private citizens, but on whole cities. The cities of
Asia have been restored, the provinces have been freed from the oppression
of their magistrates. Honour ever awaits the worthy; for the wicked
punishment is slow but sure; fair play has now precedence over influence,
and merit over ambition, for the best of emperors teaches his citizens to
do right by doing it, and though he is greatest among us in authority, he
is still greater in the example which he sets.
127. – It is but rarely that men of eminence
have failed to employ great men to aid them in directing their fortune, as
the two Scipios employed the two Laelii, whom in all things they treated
as equal to themselves, or as the deified Augustus employed Marcus
Agrippa, and after him Statilius Taurus. In the case of these men their
lack of lineage was no obstacle to their elevation to successive
consulships, triumphs, and numerous priesthoods. For great tasks require
great helpers, and it is important to the state that those who are
necessary to her service should be given prominence in rank, and that
their usefulness should be fortified by official authority. With these
examples before him, Tiberius Caesar has had and still has as his
incomparable associate in all the burdens of the principate Sejanus
Aelius, son of a father who was among the foremost in the equestrian
order, but connected, on his mother's side, with old and illustrious
families and families distinguished by public honours, while he had
brothers, cousins, and an uncle who had reached the consulship. He himself
combined with loyalty to his master great capacity for labour, and
possessed a well-knit body to match the energy of his mind; stern but yet
gay, cheerful but yet strict; busy, yet always seeming to be at leisure.
He is one who claims no honours for himself and so acquires all honours,
whose estimate of himself is always below the estimate of others, calm in
expression and in his life, though his mind is sleeplessly
alert.
128. – In the value set upon the character of
this man, the judgement of the whole state has long vied with that of the
emperor. Nor is it a new fashion on the part of the senate and the Roman
people to regard as most noble that which is best. For the Romans who,
three centuries ago, in the days before the Punic war, raised Tiberius
Coruncanius, a "new man," to the first position in the state, not only
bestowing on him all the other honours but the office of pontifex maximus
as well; and those who elevated to consulships, censorships, and triumphs
Spurius Carvilius, though born of equestrian rank, and soon afterwards
Marcus Cato, though a new man and not a native of the city but from
Tusculum, and Mummius, who triumphed over Achaia; and those who regarded
Gaius Marius, though of obscure origin, as unquestionably the first man of
the Roman name until his sixth consulship; and those who yielded such
honours to Marcus Tullius that on his recommendation he could secure
positions of importance almost for anyone he chose; and those who refused
no honour to Asinius Pollio, honours which could only be earned, even by
the noblest, by sweat and toil — all these assuredly felt that the highest
honours should be paid to the man of merit. It was but the natural
following of precedent that impelled Caesar to put Sejanus to the test,
and that Sejanus was induced to assist the emperor with his burdens, and
that brought the senate and the Roman people to the point where they were
ready to summon for the preservation of its security the man whom they
regarded as the most useful instrument.
129. – But having set before the reader a sort
of general outline of the principate of Caesar, let us now review some of
the details. With what sagacity did he draw to Rome Rhascupolis, the
slayer of his brother's son Cotys who shared the throne with him; in this
transaction Tiberius employed the rare services of Flaccus Pomponius, a
consular, and a man born to carry out tasks requiring accurate
discrimination, and who by his straightforward character also deserved
glory though he never sought it. With what dignity did he listen to the
trial of Drusus Libo, not in the capacity of emperor, but as a senator and
a judge! How swiftly did he suppress that ingrate in his plot for
revolution! How well had Germanicus been trained under his instructions,
having so thoroughly learned the rudiments of military science under him
that he was later to welcome him home as conqueror of Germany! What
honours did he heap upon him, young though he was, making the magnificence
of his triumph to correspond to the greatness of his deeds! How often did
he honour the people with largesses, and how gladly, whenever he could do
so with the senate's sanction, did he raise to the required rating the
fortunes of senators, but in such a way as not to encourage extravagant
living, nor yet to allow senators to lose their rank because of honest
poverty! With what honours did he send his beloved Germanicus to the
provinces across the seas! With what effective diplomacy, carried out
though the help and agency of his son Drusus, did he force Maroboduus, who
clung to the limits of the territories he had seized as a serpent to his
hole, to come forth like the serpent under the spell of his salutary
charms — a simile which I use with no disrespect to Caesar. With what
honour does he treat him while at the same time he holds him securely!
With what wonderful swiftness and courage did he repress the formidable
war, stirred up at the instigation of Sacrovir and Florus Julius, so that
the Roman people learned that he had conquered before they knew he was
engaged in war, and the news of victory preceded the news of the danger!
The African war also, which caused great consternation and grew more
formidable every day, was soon extinguished under his auspices and in
accordance with his plans.
130. – What public buildings did he construct
in his own name or that of his family! With what pious munificence,
exceeding human belief, does he now rear the temple to his father! With
what a magnificent control of personal feeling did he restore the works of
Gnaeus Pompey when destroyed by fire! For a feeling of kinship leads him
to protect every famous monument. With what generosity at the time of the
recent fire on the Caelian Hill, as well as on other occasions, did he use
his private fortune to make good the losses of people of all ranks in
life! And the recruiting of the army, a thing ordinarily looked upon with
great and constant dread, with what calm on the part of the people does he
provide for it, and without any of the usual panic attending conscription!
If either nature permits, or man's weak faculties allow, I may dare to
make this plaint to the gods: How has this man deserved, in the first
place, to have Drusus Libo enter upon a traitorous conspiracy against him,
or later to earn the hostility of Silius and Piso, though in the one case
he created his rank, and in the other he increased it? Passing on to
greater trials — although he regarded these as great enough — how did he
deserve the loss of his sons in their prime or of his grandson, the son of
Drusus? Thus far I have told of sorrows only, we must now come to the
shame. With what pain, Marcus Vinicius, have the past three years rent his
heart! With what fire, the more cruel because pent up, was his soul
consulted because of the grief, the indignation, and the shame he was
forced to suffer through his daughter-in-law and his grandson! His sorrow
at this time was crowned by the loss of his mother, a woman pre-eminent
among women, and who in all things resembled the gods more than mankind,
whose power no one felt except for the alleviation of trouble or the
promotion of rank.
131. – Let me end my volume with a prayer. O
Jupiter Capitolinus, and Mars Gradivus, author and stay of the Roman name,
Vesta, guardian of the eternal fire, and all other divinities who have
exalted this great empire of Rome to the highest point yet reached on
earth! On you I call, and to you I pray in the name of this people: guard,
preserve, protect the present state of things, the peace which we enjoy,
the present emperor, and when he has filled his post of duty — and may it
be the longest granted to mortals — grant him successors until the
latest time, but successors whose shoulders may be as capable of
sustaining bravely the empire of the world as we have found his to be:
foster the pious plans of all good citizens and crush the impious designs
of the wicked.