UNIVERSAL BIOGRAPHICAL LIBRARY
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LIFE AND WARSOFJULIUS CAESAR.
Caius Julius
Cesar was born in 100 b. c. (some authorities hold 102 B. C.), of an old patrician
family which had come from Alba under the reign of Tullus Hostilius, and which had enjoyed many public trusts.
His father had been praetor and had died when Caesar was about sixteen years
old. His mother, Aurelia, was of good stock of plebeian origin, and was a woman
of exceptionally fine character. Caesar was proud of his forbears. In
pronouncing the funeral oration of his aunt Julia, who had married Marius,
Suetonius tells us that he thus spoke of his descent: “My aunt Julia, on the
maternal side, is of the issue of kings; on
the paternal side, she descends from the immortal gods; for her mother was a
Marcia, and the family Marcius Rex are the descendants of Ancus Marcius. The Julia family, to which I belong, descends from Venus herself. Thus
our house unites to the sacred character of kings, who are the most powerful
among men, the venerated holiness of the gods, who keep kings themselves in
subjection.”
Aurelia devoted her life to her son’s
education, and by this his natural mental and moral nature enabled him to
profit as few youths can. He grew to manhood with many of the best qualities of
head and heart stamped upon him. As pedagogue he had a Gaul, M. Antonius Gnipho, who had received all the benefits of an education
in Alexandria. His body grew strong,—though originally delicate and having a
.tendency to epilepsy,—his carriage was erect, his manner open and kindly,
and his countenance singularly engaging and expressive, if not handsome. He
had black, piercing eyes, pale face, straight aquiline nose, small handsome
mouth, with finely curled lips which bore a look of kindliness; large brow showing
great intellectual activity and power. In his youth his face was well-rounded.
He was moderate in his diet and temperate; his health, harmed by neither excess
of labor or of pleasure, was uniformly good, though
at Corduba and later at Thapsus he had serious
nervous attacks. He exposed himself to all weathers, was an excellent gymnast,
and noted as a rider. “From his first youth he was much used to horseback, and
had even acquired the facility of riding with dropped reins and his hands
joined behind his back ” (Plutarch). By judicious exercise he gradually became
able to endure great fatigue. His dress was careful, and his person neat and
tasteful to the extreme. Like the youth of every age he was over fond of
outward adornment. Suetonius speaks of his keypattern ornamented toga and loose
girdle. Sulla once remarked that it would be well to look out for yonder dandy
— and dandies in every age have notably made among the best of soldiers and
men. This habit of personal nicety—not to say vanity—clung to him through
life. “And when,” says Cicero, “I look at his hair, so artistically arranged,
and when I see him scratch his head with one finger,” lest perchance he should
disarrange it, “I cannot believe that such a man could conceive so black a
design as to overthrow the Roman Republic ” (Plutarch).
Caesar was fond of art as of books. He
spoke Greek and Latin with equal ease and fluency, as was common to the cultured
classes. He wrote several works which earned him a reputation for clear and
forcible style, but he was not equally happy as a poet. “For Caesar and Brutus
have also made verses, and have placed them in the public libraries. They are
poets as feeble as Cicero, but happier in that fewer people know of them,”
says Tacitus. His life up to manhood was that of a city youth of good family
and breeding, perhaps according to our notions lax, but within the bounds set
by the age in which he lived; in later years he was a thorough man of the
world. He was fond of female society, and cultivated it throughout his life. He
possessed a marked taste for pictures, jewels, statues; and, as we are told by Dio Cassius, habitually wore a ring with a very
beautiful seal of an armed Venus. He joined excellent physical endurance to
very exceptional mental and nervous strength. “He was liberal to prodigality,
and of a courage above human nature and even imagination,” says Velleius
Paterculus. Plutarch calls him the second orator in Rome. Pliny speaks of his
extraordinary memory. Seneca gives him credit for great calmness in anger, and
Plutarch says he was affable, courteous and gracious to a degree which won him
the affection of the people. “In voice, gesture, a grand and noble
personality, he had a certain brilliancy in speaking, without a trace of
artifice,” testifies Cicero. To the external advantages which distinguished him
from all other citizens, Caesar joined an impetuous and powerful soul, says
Velleius. One could scarcely add a single qualification to his equipment for
the profession of arms. Such was Caius Julius Caesar in the estimation of his
contemporaries.
At fourteen years of age, Marius
procured for him the appointment of priest of Jupiter. At sixteen he was betrothed
to Cossutia, the daughter of a wealthy knight, but
broke the engagement a year later. At eighteen he married Cornelia, daughter
of Cinna. He is said to have been already well known for his personal and
intellectual characteristics; but this was doubtless as the promising young
scion of a well-known family, rather than from any services actually
accomplished.
When Sulla rode into power on the wreck
of the Marian party, he would have liked to bring over this brilliant young man
to his cause, but he found Caesar immovable. He ordered him to put away
Cornelia, whose father had belonged to the Marian faction, but this Caesar
bluntly refused, though he forfeited his priesthood and his wife’s fortune, was
declared incapable of inheriting in his own family, and ran danger of his life.
This was at a time when such men as Piso and Pompey
divorced their wives to suit the politics of the day, and scores a high mark to
Caesar’s credit. Finally, after a period of concealment in the Sabine country,
through the influence of friends, Caesar was forgiven by Sulla. But Sulla
prophesied truly, says Suetonius, that there was more than one Marius lurking
in the personality of Caesar.
Caesar deemed it wise, under the
circumstances, to keep away from Rome. He could not remain without being thrust actively
into the political turmoil, which he could see was but an interlude. Such
discretion he manifested all through his political career. He spent some time
in Bithynia, where he was guest of King Nicomedes.
Here, under the praetor M. Thermus, he served as contubernalis (aide de camp) against Mithridates, and was (81 b. c.) actively employed both in war
and diplomacy. At the siege of Mitylene he received a civic crown for saving
the life of a Roman soldier. His reputation for morality of demeanor was rudely compromised by his conduct at the court of Nicomedes;
but such facts do not concern the soldier. The morals of each age and clime
must stand by themselves. Caesar in no wise differed from his compeers. He then
served at sea under Servilius in the campaign of 78 b. C., against the Cilician pirates. On
Sulla’s death he returned to Rome.
Here his conduct was marked by great
moral courage and independence coupled with common sense and a liberal policy;
and in some civil proceedings his powers of oratory, which he studied with
great care, raised him high in the estimation of the people. It was an usual
means of introducing one’s self to the public to pose as advocate in some great
political prosecution. Such was Caesar’s part in the prosecution of Dolabella.
He was twenty-one years old, and his oration, “which we still read with
admiration,” says Tacitus, in a moment made him famous. He later attacked
Antonius Hybrida, and was engaged in other celebrated
causes. These attacks were really aimed at Sulla’s party, though still in
power, rather than at individuals.
Preferring not to join for the present
in the profitless political struggles of Rome, Caesar set sail for Rhodes,
which at that time was a marked centre of learning, intending to devote some
time to study. On the way thither he was captured by pirates of Pharmacusa (Fermaco), a small
island of the Sporades. The pirates demanded twenty talents ransom, but Caesar
contemptuously volunteered to pay them fifty, a piece of originality which
insured him good treatment. While waiting some forty days for the receipt of
the ransom-money, Caesar gained such influence with these men, that he was
treated rather as a king than as a prisoner. He disarmed all their suspicions
and entertained them by his eloquence and wit. He is said to have told them
which they treated as a jest—that he would return, capture and crucify them
all. He was as good as his word. Collecting vessels and men so soon as he was
released, he fell unawares upon the pirates, recovered his money, took much
booty, and punished them as he had threatened to do. Suetonius states that from
motives of
pity he had them all strangled first and only nailed their corpses to the
cross.
After a short stay in Rhodes, where he
studied under Apollonius Molo, the most celebrated of the masters of eloquence,
he undertook on his own authority and cost a campaign against Mithridates in
Cyzicus, in which he was measurably successful. He now learned from Rome that
he had been nominated pontifex, in place of his uncle, L. Aurelius Cotta. He
returned, and shortly after was also elected military tribune. He declined
service in armies under the command of the Sullan generals, at the time of the campaigns against Sertorius in Spain. He would
gladly have gone to the front to learn his duties in the field, but did not
care to take a part against one who represented the old Marian party. He as
usual cleverly avoided useless complications. Still he was ambitious of power,
and set to work to form a party for himself in the state; and by employing
fortune, friends, energy and ability, he succeeded in doing this. Being made
quaestor, he accompanied the proconsul Antistius Vetus to Spain. Returned to Rome, he was in 68 b. c. made curator of the Appian Way
and aedile curulis, and largely increased his
popularity by the splendor of the public games he
gave.
His next office was that of judex quaestionis, or judge of the criminal court, in 64 b.c., and in the succeeding year he
was made pontifex maximus. After still another year he became praetor. During
all this time he had been earning the hate of the aristocrats and the favor of the people. He was assigned the charge of the
province of Hispania Ulterior, in 61 b.C., but could not leave Rome till some one had become
bondsman for his debts, amounting, it is said, to over four thousand talents,
or, according to Plutarch, to eight hundred and thirty talents, from one to
five million dollars, as the sum. Caesar’s recklessness in money
matters was a characteristic which pursued him through life.
Crassus was prevailed on to be his
security. He relied for repayment on Caesar’s future successes. He was not
deceived. Political preferment in Rome was coupled with opportunities of making
money indefinitely great. The control of a province opened endless avenues of
gain. And though no one was more careful to observe the forms of law, though no
one was more law-abiding in the technical sense, Caesar was in larger matters
as unscrupulous as Napoleon. It was the habit of his day.
Caesar’s province as praetor—Farther
Spain, or Boetica —possibly included some adjoining
territories. He left Rome so soon as his money matters were arranged, without
waiting for the instructions of the Senate, whose action was delayed by some
political trials. The lowlanders of his province had been long subject to
forays by the mountaineers of Lusitania, a section of country only half subject
to the Roman power, if at all. Caesar found two legions, or twenty cohorts,
under the colors. These he at once increased by a
third legion, or ten additional cohorts, giving him some ten thousand men. The
tribes of Mons Herminium (Sierra di Estrella) in
Lusitania (Portugal) were constantly troubling the province. Unable to control
them by the command of the Roman people, whose authority the hardy uplanders
laughed to scorn, Caesar promptly undertook a campaign against them, and by
vigorous measures reduced them to submission. Much of the detail of this
campaign is not known. The other tribes of the mountains, lest they should
suffer a like harsh fate, migrated beyond the Douro. This enabled Caesar to
possess himself of the strong places of the country in the valley of the Munda
(Mondego), basing on which, he set out to pursue the fugitives, whom he soon reached.
The barbarians turned upon him, and to unsettle his cohorts by making the
legionaries eager for booty, they drove their herds before them. But Caesar’s
men always felt the influence of the strong hand, and these cohorts, though new
to him, had already learned to obey. An army is the mirror of its captain,
reflecting his force and character as well as his intelligence. So now. Not a
soldier left the ranks, and the Lusitanians were quickly routed. In this
campaign Caesar scoured the country on both banks of the Durius.
Meanwhile the Mt. Herminianites had again revolted, hoping that Caesar would be defeated by the migrating
tribes, and that they could close the road against his retreat and have him at
their mercy. Caesar had advanced towards the Durius on
the eastern slope of one of the minor ranges. Finding that the barbarians had
closed this way, and not caring to encounter a guerilla warfare when he could operate to better advantage, he sought an outlet on the
slope which descends towards the sea; but this, too, the barbarians closed by
occupying the country from the foothills of the mountains to the shore.
Caesar had to fight his way through; but this his legions found no difficulty
in doing on the easier terrain near the sea. In attacking the enemy, Caesar
operated by his left and managed to cut them off from the interior so as to
drive them towards the sea, where he could more readily handle them. They took
refuge on an island, which some critics have identified with the headland of Carvoeiro, now joined to the mainland, some forty-five
miles north of Lisbon. The strait could be crossed in places at low tide on
foot, but with difficulty. Having cooped up his enemy, Caesar proposed to
destroy him. It was impracticable to cross the strait under the fire of the
barbarians. Caesar built some rafts, and put over a portion of his troops. Part
of the rest, over eager, attempted to ford the strait, but, sharply attacked by
the barbarians, they were driven back into the rising tide and engulfed. The
first attack thus failed, the small part for which the rafts sufficed being
unable to effect a landing.
But Caesar never gave up what was
possible of accomplishment. Camping opposite the island, where he could hold
the Lusitanians, he dispatched messengers to Gades for ships. On the arrival of these, he was able to put a suitable force over to
the island, which done, he had no difficulty in subduing the enemy’s force.
This matter ended, he sailed to Brigantium (Corunna),
whose inhabitants, terrified at the novel sight of such mighty vessels,
voluntarily gave up the contest.
This campaign resulted in the submission
of all Lusitania, and added much territory to the Roman holding in Spain.
Caesar was saluted Imperator by his soldiers and allowed a triumph by the
Senate, which also decreed a holiday in honor of his
success. So little is given us by the historians beyond the bare outline of the
campaign, that we can say of it only that it was Caesar’s first lesson in war.
When he attacked the Gallic question, he showed that he was familiar
with war, but not with the management of its greater problems. Gaul was his
school in the grand operations of war. It is to be regretted that we do not
know how he had learned what unquestionably he knew of the art previous to his
first campaign in Gaul. He had manifestly covered an immense territory, but we
know naught of his method.
With the civil administration of his
province after this war we have no concern. Caesar accumulated great wealth; as
Suetonius says, by the begging of subsidies; as Napoleon III phrases it, “by
contributions of war, a good administration, and even by the gratitude of
those whom he governed.” The fact remains, but Caesar did no more than every
governor of a Roman province felt it his right to do.
Caesar unquestionably cared for money,
but not from miserly motives. Hannibal was accused of avarice; but every coin
he accumulated went to fan the flame of war against his country’s oppressors.
Caesar used his gold to create an army, to win to himself the love of his
legions. Such an amount of booty was taken in Spain as not only to reward his
soldiers with exceptional liberality, but to pay off his own debts. His
ambition was satisfied in every way.
That Caesar was ambitious is no
reproach. No man lacking ambition ever rose out of mediocrity, ever
accomplished anything in the world’s economy. At a small village in crossing
the Alps, Caesar is said to have exclaimed: “I would rather be first here than
second in Rome!” Every great man is ambitious. It is the purpose of his
ambition and the means he takes to satisfy it which are the test of its being a
virtue or a vice. Caesar’s ambition was more personal than Hannibal’s. It was
akin to that of Alexander and Napoleon. In the temple of Hercules at Gades, standing before the statue of Alexander, Caesar exclaimed that he had yet done nothing, when long before his age
Alexander had conquered the world. Such was not the ambition of Hannibal for
Gustavus.
For his victories in Spain, Caesar was
entitled to a triumph, but he denied himself this glory in order to run for the
consulship.
The Roman Senate had demonstrated its
inability to control the rival factions which were shaking the foundations of
the state. Finally a breach between the Senate and Pompey, who was the
strongest man in Rome, was brought about by its refusal to grant an allotment
of lands for his Eastern veterans. As a result, Pompey, Caesar and Crassus
formed a secret compact to act together to divide the power and offices of Rome.
They and their friends, with the easy methods of the day, could readily control
both the Senate and the people.
Caesar was unanimously elected consul,
and with him was chosen Calpurnius Bibulus. The
latter was to all purposes, and easily, shelved as a nonentity. Caesar’s first
year was passed in law-making. He was able, by Pompey’s aid, to procure the
passage of a law by which he received for five years control of Illyria and
Cisalpine Gaul, with four legions. This was his first great step upward. The
governorship would enable him to win renown and to create an army devoted to
his own person, a stepping-stone to almost any greatness. Among his other
measures he caused Ariovistus, king of the Suevi, one of his later great antagonists,
to be declared a friend and ally of Rome.
Before leaving for Gaul he married his
daughter Julia to Pompey, as a bond during his absence, and himself—his wife
Cornelia having died some years before—married Calpurnia, daughter of Piso, the ex-consul. Cicero and Cato, Caesar’s rich and
powerful opponents, it was agreed should be exiled. The foundation was well
laid for permanence.
Caesar had reached the goal of his
political ambition by years of persistent effort and by means of every kind,
not always such as were most to his credit. But now began a new life. He was
forty-two years old, and politics ceded to arms. We shall hereafter view him in
a new and far more worthy role,—a role which has made one of the great chapters
in the history of the art of war.
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