THE LIFE AND TIMES OF MARC ANTHONY
CHAPTER VIIIThe Civil War between Caesar and Pompey,in which Antony Acted as Caesar’s Chief Lieutenant.49-48 B.C.
Cesar’s
advance into Italy with only a small force was a perilous move, and was
intended more to give his enemies a taste of what he was prepared to do than to
precipitate a general conflict. He still hoped to be able to negotiate a
satisfactory peace; and when, having entered Ariminum (Rimini), just over the border, he was presently approached by two messengers
from Pompey who suggested terms of peace, he was in high hopes of a settlement
satisfactory to himself. The two men were Roscius Fabatus,
who had served under him in Gaul and was now Praetor, and Lucius Caesar, Antony’s
cousin, son of his mother’s brother. He received them courteously, and sent
them back with his offer to adhere to the terms of Cicero’s proposal, namely
that both he and Pompey should disarm, and that Pompey should remain in Spain during
the year of Caesar’s Consulship.
While
waiting for a reply he marched on down the eastern coast of Italy, taking
possession, without bloodshed, of the towns as far south as Asculum (Ascoli),
which was more or less opposite Rome; and those Pompeian officers who fell into
his hands he treated with the utmost politeness, sending them back to their
master with his compliments. When Pompey’s messengers returned, however, with
the impossible answer that terms could only be discussed after Caesar had
disbanded his army and had recrossed the Rubicon, it
was obvious that war could not be avoided.
Caesar
therefore dispatched Antony at the head of a force of Gallic cavalry across the
mountains to seize Arretium (Arezzo), a town, in Etruria on the main road to
Rome; and meanwhile he himself waited to see which way Pompey would move. He
was much discouraged, however, when one of his chief officers, Labienus, who
had held high command under him in Gaul and had been his intimate friend, now
deserted him and fled to Pompey; but he controlled his indignation, and contemptuously
sent the renegade’s baggage and money after him. It seemed that even his own
officers did not think that he had much chance of success against the
supposedly large forces at Pompey’s command; and when dispatches arrived
announcing that the faithful Antony had captured Arretium without a fight and
was there awaiting his chiefs further instructions Caesar could have had no idea
yet what those instructions would be.
Meanwhile,
in Rome, however, an astonishing situation had developed. At the news that
Antony, the insulted Tribune, was astride the road to the capital, at the head
of his invincible Gallic cavalry, everybody in the city thought that Caesar was
contemplating a rapid march on Rome, and thereupon the wildest panic occurred.
Senators and officials swarmed into Pompey’s house, and, brushing aside the frightened
servants, pushed their way into his presence, imploring him to bestir himself
and do something. What orders had he given to the troops, they asked? What troops
were available, anyway? Where was the vast army which he had
declared would arise when he had need of it? Why did he not stamp his
foot, as he had boasted, and produce them? Why had he allowed matters to come
to this pass when he was wholly unprepared to defend the capital?
Pompey
was bewildered, and he needed all his gentlemanly self-control to prevent
himself being infected by the prevailing terror. Suddenly he realized that
Caesar was a greater man than he, and his heart must have sunk as the abuse
hurled at him by these frightened men revealed to him how precarious was that
position of supremacy to which he had so long accustomed himself. With all the
dignity he could command he told them not to worry, but to rely on him to take
the necessary steps for the safety of the State; but he had no more idea what
those steps would be than had Caesar how to oppose them. Cicero pushed his way in—a
big, ponderous, grey-haired man, haggard with anxiety—and implored
him to send ambassadors to Caesar to treat for peace: he was horrified at the
turn affairs had taken, just when he had hopes of being allowed to celebrate
his public Triumph for his precious expedition against the Cilician brigands.
Those fond dreams must now for ever be banished, and in their place must remain
for many a day this nightmare of fear that by backing the wrong side he should
incur a second exile or even death. Cato, too, came stalking in like a specter
of doom, telling the distracted Pompey that war was the only honorable course,
and that he must bravely do or die.
After a
day or two of indecision, Pompey announced his plan. Rome must be evacuated,
and the government removed to Capua, a few miles inland from Naples.
This
decision caused a mad panic, and the horror and confusion in the city were
heightened by wild stories of terrible portents which had been observed.
Somebody said that it had rained blood during the night; somebody else spread
the report that the statues of the gods had been seen to sweat; yet another
declared that an unearthly flash of lightning had descended upon one of the
temples; and, most horrible of all, a stable-hand announced a prodigy—a mule
had foaled. People were praying in the streets; but the senators, frantically
packing their belongings, forgot to pray or to perform the daily sacrifices to
the gods. Soon the Appian Way, the highroad to Capua and the south, was blocked
with important fugitives and their slaves and baggage. The women and children
were left behind, and at the gates of the city there were indescribable scenes
of emotion, men sobbing and women shrieking as they bade goodbye.
Cicero
was one of the first to depart, leaving his unloved wife, Terentia, to mind his
great mansion in Rome. Pompey, not knowing what to do with him, had told him to
go down into Campania, the province in which Capua was situated, and to act as
best he could as a sort of semi-official governor of that district; but before
he left he received news that his son-in-law, Dolabella, the new husband of his
daughter Tullia, had declared for Caesar. The unfortunate orator was stunned at
the evacuation, and at Pompey’s collapse, and, in private, he poured out his
abuse alike upon him and upon Caesar, the one as incompetent, the other as mad.
Then, thinking that it would be best to go into retreat and try to keep out of harm’s
way, he settled himself at a villa of his near Formiae (Mola), half way between Rome and Naples, and in
utter dejection awaited what fate would bring him, sending messages to Pompey
saying that he was discharging his duties faithfully in Campania, but at the
same time writing to Caesar to say that he was neutral and was living quietly
on his estate.
Presently,
however, he received a reply from Caesar, suggesting that he should return to
the capital as a non-belligerent; and at this he wrote frantically to his
friend Atticus, begging for his advice. Would it show me a brave man, he asked,
“if I were to remain in Rome where I have filled the highest office in the
State, have achieved immortal deeds, and have been crowned with honors, but now
would be but an empty name, and would moreover incur some danger, and the
stigma of disgrace if Pompey should be victorious? Or shall I follow Pompey in
his ignominious flight?—and, if so, whither? But if I do this, what a raid Caesar,
if the victor, will make on my possessions when I am out of the way—fiercer
than on those of other people, because he will think perhaps that such attacks
on me will be popular with the masses”, who had never forgotten or forgiven
Cicero’s action against the Catilinarian conspirators. Antony always had that
grudge against him, and it was Antony who was now leading the supposed descent
on Rome.
Meanwhile
Cato had been sent to Sicily to keep that island quiet, and Pompey had gone to Luceria (Lucera) on the eastern
side of Italy, opposite Naples, where the bulk of his forces was concentrated.
Eighty miles to the north of this place was the fortress-town of Corfinium (Popoli); and here Pompey had placed a strong body of troops
under the command of the aristocratic Domitius Ahenobarbus, husband of Cato’s
sister, Porcia, who had been selected by the Senate before the debacle to
succeed Caesar as governor of Gaul. But by the middle of February, Caesar had
decided not to march on empty Rome, had recalled Antony from Arretium, and, having
made up his mind to come to grips with Pompey at once, had invested Corfinium
as the first step in his new plan.
After a
siege of a few days Domitius surrendered, giving his parole to Caesar, who
thereupon allowed him to go unmolested back to Pompey, while all his troops
went over to the conqueror and were enrolled in his ever increasing army.
Several senators and young aristocrats were captured in the town, but all were
allowed to depart with their baggage and their money, for, said Caesar, “I am quite
indifferent to the fact that those whom I release are said to go away to make
war on me again: my only wish is that I should act like myself and they like
what they are”.
This
extraordinary clemency won the gratitude
of thousands, and its effect was more valuable to Caesar than
many victories. He published abroad the announcement that he would never
imitate the harshness of Sulla at the overthrow of his, Cesar’s, great uncle,
Marius, but was determined to be generous and merciful, since, he declared, he
was always hoping for a reconciliation with Pompey. “What
a man!” wrote Cicero on hearing of this leniency. “How keen, how careful, how well-prepared! I declare that if
he puts no one to death and robs no one of his goods, he will soon become the
idol of those who most dreaded him”. “The country-towns”, he added in a later
letter, “are beginning to hold Caesar for a god, and there is no pretense about
their feelings as there was when they made their vows for Pompey”.
At the
fall of Corfinium Pompey retired from Luceria southwards
to Brindisi, which city Caesar reached in the second week in March, giving out
that he was still anxious for an interview and a reconciliation with his rival;
but in the following week Pompey, who retained command of the seas, skillfully
evacuated the town by night and shipped his army and the many senators who were
with him across the Adriatic to Greece, and when day dawned Caesar found the
enemy gone, the first phase of the Civil War being thus brought to a bloodless
but unsatisfactory end. Pompey’s flight to Greece may be described as a
strategic retreat “according to plan”. He had hoped at first to be able to hold
southern Italy, but, failing to do this, he was clearly wise in making his new
base in Epirus, across the sea; for his reputation in eastern Europe, Asia
Minor, and Syria was enormous, and the fact that he had with him the two
Consuls and most of the senators, would make his cause seem to the native rulers and subservient
peoples of these lands to be worthy of aid. Cicero, in fact, was
greatly troubled on this account, and pictured Pompey “leaving
no sea or land unransacked, arousing the passions of
barbarian kings, and bringing whole nations of armed savages into Italy in
immense armies”. Moreover, having absolute command of the seas, Pompey assumed
that he would be able freely to dispatch messengers, or make the journey
himself, by way of Sicily, and North Africa to Spain, where his two generals, Afranius and Petreius, were in
command of large armies.
Caesar’s
position, indeed, was hardly as satisfactory; for he was bottled up in Italy
without a fleet, with Greece and the east on one side and Spain on the other,
both in Pompey’s favor, and Gaul, to the north and west of him, ready to revolt.
The first thing to do, obviously, was to seize Rome, after which he would have
to secure Sicily and Sardinia, if he could find the ships in which to transport
a few troops thither, and, then, leaving a force to guard Italy and another to
protect the Dalmatian coast against invasion by land, he would have to march
into Spain, relying on a victory there to keep Gaul quiet. It was a stupendous
task; but only when it was accomplished could he hope to be in a position to
invade Greece and fight it out with Pompey.
He was
worried and anxious, therefore, as he turned towards the capital; and he was
not much relieved when he heard stories of the bad omens which had manifested
themselves on Pompey’s landing in Greece—how spiders had been found upon some
of the military standards, how a snake had glided across Pompey's footsteps,
and so forth. He was too intelligent to pay much attention to such portents;
but Antony was probably heartened by them, as, of course, were the troops.
On his
journey to the metropolis by the Appian Way, Caesar paid a call upon Cicero at Formiae, and invited him once more to come to Rome so as to
give tacit support to his cause; but the unfortunate man was still in a
quandary, not knowing which side would win in the end, and the interview gave
him the fright of his life, because he dared neither offend Pompey by going to
Rome nor Caesar by refusing to do so. Caesar, however, was extremely considerate,
and, realizing Cicero’s predicament, offered him time to think the matter over,
which led the orator to feel that he had won a diplomatic victory and caused
him to write that evening: “I fancy Caesar is not much in love with me, but no
matter: I am in love with myself”. He did not think much of Caesar's staff, the
members of which seemed to him to be very much like a gang of desperadoes, and
the Herculean Antony, travel-stained, and clanking fearsome y in his military armor,
must have been peculiarly upsetting to his nerves.
When
Caesar reached Rome he camped outside the gates, while Antony rode into the
city at the head of a troop of his awe-inspiring Gallic cavalry, receiving, no
doubt, a vociferous welcome from the mob. It was now the end of March, and not
much more than two months had elapsed since the Senate had driven Antony away
like a dog; yet, today, here he was, riding through the streets as a conqueror,
and the Senate was in exile. He was still Tribune of the People, and the crowd
hailed him as their rightful representative; and when he gave orders that all
senators and members of the government who had remained in Rome were to come to
him, the excited rabble dashed off in all directions to round them up. They
were a mere handful, but Antony marched them out through the gates to Caesar’s
tent with great gusto, and there Caesar addressed them as though he were
speaking to the full Senate and government, declaring that it was his object to
avoid bloodshed and that he wished to open negotiations with Pompey and his
misguided followers.
He then
entered the city, which he had not seen for nine long years, while Antony rode
at his side, pointing out to him the new buildings erected in his absence,
these including the great theatre in the Campus Martius,
built six years ago by Pompey at his own expense to hold forty thousand
spectators. Some sort of provisional government was then set up, and Marcus
Aemilius Lepidus, Praetor for that year, who had remained at his post, was made
acting-Consul. Lepidus was a patrician, but had been brought up in the democrat
party, his father having been that Lepidus who in 77 BC, just after the death of Sulla, had led the premature and unsuccessful
rebellion against the conservatives, as already recorded; and he had married
the daughter of Servilia, Caesar’s mistress, thus linking himself with the
Caesarian party. Curio, meanwhile, was sent off to deal with Cato in Sicily;
Dolabella was dispatched with Antony’s younger brother Caius to Illyria, at the
top of the Adriatic, to prevent Pompey marching northwards towards Italy by
that route; and another officer, Quintus Valerius,
was sent to obtain the surrender of Sardinia.
To
Antony, however, fell the plum of Caesar’s nominations: he was appointed
Commander-in-Chief of all the forces in Italy—which appointment, together with
his in Tribuneship, would, during Caesar’s coming absence in Spain, place him
in absolute control of Rome and the whole country. That he should have been
chosen for this work shows clearly enough the high regard Caesar entertained
for his abilities; and though Antony’s human weaknesses in after life, and the
simplicity of his nature, tend to make us think of him as a man of no very high
attainments of mind or character, we must not forget—as every historian seems
to do—that at this great crisis the amazingly sagacious Caesar
chose him out of all his officers for this most responsible and dangerous
position.
In
accepting the post Antony must have known that he staked his life; for if
Caesar were to be defeated in Spain and his cause overthrown, all the force of
the Pompeian storm would fall directly upon his, Antony’s, head. But his faith in Caesar never wavered and it was with a light heart
that he faced his difficult duties when, during the first week in April, his
chief set out for Spain to attack Pompey’s lieutenants, Afranius and Petreius, in that country. It was all very
well for Caesar to say, with a confident smile, that he was marching out
against an army without a general and that he would soon come back to fight a general
without an army: the hazard was far greater than that, and well Antony must
have known it.
His first
business was to help Lepidus to enlarge the diminutive Senate into a sound
working body, and to fill the various offices left vacant by the flight of the
government. The law made by Sulla that the descendants of the men proscribed by
him could not hold office, was still in force, in spite of the various attempts
of the democrats to abolish it; but Antony, at Caesar’s order, now caused it to
be removed from the statutes, and thereby was able to make numerous
appointments from the democratic ranks. Rome, indeed, was soon entirely in the
hands of the democracy, and Caesar’s cause came to be definitely the cause of
the People, while Pompey’s party became as definitely a conservative or
republican movement, since the old nobility and the traditionalists had
embraced it whole-heartedly and its members had gone with Pompey to Greece.
The
political situation, in fact, was now thoroughly clarified, and the civil war
had assumed the character of a straight political fight between the ideals of
the People and those of the republicans, Caesar and Antony, his right-hand man,
being the two arch-demagogues, and Pompey being the leader of the coalition of
old-fashioned conservatives and conservative-minded democrats. This being so,
some of the senators who had vacillated and had remained in the capital, now
slipped away to Greece in spite of Antony’s efforts to detain them; and soon
there was hardly a man of politically aristocratic sympathies left in Rome,
though the city was full of men of socially aristocratic standing who by being
democrats were in the fashionable movement of the time. Pompey might claim to
be the representative of the old order; but smart, up-to-date society, as personified
in the younger generation of intellectual and elegant men of fashion, looked to
Caesar as its leader.
Thus,
Rome retained its gaieties and its emancipated and rather loose social life,
even though it was the headquarters of a democracy with the rabble in tow. Now
Anthony was decidedly a man about town, a leading light in the fast society of
the metropolis; and though Caesar placed his trust in him more completely than
he did in any other living soul, he was not consistently a hard worker, and was
as much concerned with giving himself what he considered a good time as he was
with advancing his career. Politics, as such, did not deeply interest him, but
he enjoyed power, was elated by the excitement and turmoil of public life, and
was always happy when he was serving Caesar, whose trust and affection he repaid
with a blind devotion. Here in Rome he was temporarily under no restraint, and
after so many years of campaigning, he threw himself into all the fatalistic
fun of the town in such a spirit of youth that the pride of his mother, Julia,
in him must have been tempered by not a little anxiety.
His
mistress Fadia, by whom he had had two or three
children when he was a young man, was now dead or in retirement, and there was
talk of him making a match of it with his cousin Antonia, the daughter of his
exiled uncle, Caius Antonius; but meanwhile he amused himself with various
women, and, when he was not busy with his public duties, led the wild life
which was then common amongst the members of Rome's fashionable set, and which
now derived a new zest from the uncertainty of the future. To be bacchanalian
at such a time had all the mordant thrill of a game of dice with Death.
There was
a Greek actress named Cytheris who was at this time Antony’s mistress, and he
gave some offence to respectable people by gallantly calling her Volumnia, a name almost sacred to the Romans because it was
that of the wife of Coriolanus, the woman who, in 489 BC, saved Rome from her husband’s vengeance. Antony took her about
with him on the various political journeys he had to make to towns in the neighborhood
of the capital, and caused a good deal of outraged comment by introducing her
to the local notables who received him.
He was,
in fact, very proud of being her lover, for the stage and its celebrities
thrilled him—newly come as he was from the camp—as
greatly as it thrilled men ten years younger than himself who lived in Rome;
and his was not the nature to conceal his feelings. It has often been said that
Antony never grew up, but remained, as Renan puts it, “a colossal child, capable
of conquering a world, incapable of resisting a pleasure”; yet at this period of
his life, at any rate, that criticism does not quite meet the case: his boyish
attitude towards Rome’s gaieties was due, rather, to his having been out of
reach of them during the years in which young men were generally having their fill
of them and becoming blasé.
When he
had thus to go out of Rome he used to take his mother with him, assigning her a
carriage or litter and its escort not any more splendid, as Plutarch tells us,
than that given to Cytheris, a circumstance which led Cicero in after years to
pretend that the elder lady, utterly neglected, was forced to follow the
mistress of her profligate son as though the hussy had been her
daughter-in-law. But the fact that he did take his mother about with him
suggests, on the contrary, that he was a very affectionate son whose goings-on
were indulgently smiled at by the broad-minded Julia, accustomed as she had
been all her life to the lax morals of the fashionable world. It is conceivable
that she was very fond of Cytheris.
Plutarch
says that on these outings “he took with him golden cups and dishes fitter for
the ornaments of a state procession than for wayside picnics, and had pavilions
set up and sumptuous repasts laid out on the banks of rivers or in the woods”,
music being provided by a company “of singing-girls who, in the towns, were
billeted in the houses of serious fathers and mothers of families”; while
Cicero adds that in his entourage were carnages full of his jolly companions
and the caterers in charge of the festive arrangements.
In Rome
Antony enthusiastically patronized the theatres, and went to a great many
parties; but, with characteristic indifference to social propriety, he was as
often the guest of mere men on the stage as of the leaders of the social world,
two 0of his great friends being Sergius, the actor, and Hippias, the comedian.
At these entertainments he sometimes drank more than was good for him, and “spent
the next day in sleeping or walking off his debauches”. But at last a shocking
misadventure befell him. He had been out one night at the wedding-party of Hippias,
and early next morning had to address a meeting. He was feeling deadly sick
when he stepped up onto the platform, and he had hardly uttered a sentence
before he was overcome with nausea in the sight of his entire audience, one of
his friends snatching away his gown only just in time to prevent it being
ruined.
After
this disgusting incident it is to be supposed that he mended his ways somewhat,
for he knew that Caesar, while having a sympathetic understanding of the
libertine, could not tolerate a drunkard; and it was not long before his mother
persuaded him to marry his cousin Antonia and to make some effort to settle
down. If one may judge by the fact that after a while he became very jealous of
her men-friends, it may be supposed that, as sometimes happens, he found
himself in love with the wife chosen for him: and, at any rate, a year or so
later, she had become the mother of a little Antonia, and was being angrily
accused by Antony of flirting with Dolabella, who was married to Cicero’s
daughter, Tullia—all of which suggests that he was an exemplary husband.
But
whatever was the nature of his private affairs at this time, he was active
enough in the interests of Caesar in his public life, and incurred without
flinching the personal, if distant, hostility of Pompey, Cato, and all the
other prominent men residing out of Italy. He was the first man in Rome, and
the Pompeian spies reported, all he did, exaggerating his public deeds and his
private misdeeds until the conservative senators and officials, fretting at
their exile, must have writhed in their impotence.
But as
spring passed into summer the news from Caesar became increasingly bad. His
route to Spain had obliged him to pass by Massilia (Marseilles), but here the scoundrelly Domitius Ahenobarbus,
whom he had released on parole after his surrender at Corfinium, had
established himself with a powerful army, and for weeks held up Caesar’s
advance, while the Pompeian forces in Spain were able to prepare themselves for
battle. It is true that in Sicily Curio had found no difficulty in driving Cato
out of the island and forcing him to cross the sea in flight to Pompey; but
this small success was poor compensation for the thwarting of Caesar’s plans,
and such an atmosphere of gloom and apprehension descended upon Rome that even
Antony’s efforts to be gay were decidedly macabre.
Cicero,
of course, was one of the first to sense this feeling of nervousness, and he
began to congratulate himself upon having maintained his outward neutrality;
yet, as Pompey’s chances of ultimate victory brightened, he was filled with
dread lest his continued residence in Italy might put him in bad odor with the
exiles in Epirus. “The one thing which tortures me now”, he had already written
some weeks before this, “is that I did not follow Pompey into Greece. When I
saw him in January he was a panic-stricken man, and the ugly appearance of his
night without caring what happened to me put a stop to my affection for him; but now that affection is coming again to
the surface, and I cannot endure our separation. For whole days and nights,
like a caged bird, I gaze at the sea and long to fly away”.
Caesar
himself had written to him sternly advising him to remain neutral, and, after
the check at Marseilles, Antony also wrote the following carefully worded and
diplomatically friendly letter to him:
“But that
I have a strong affection for you—much greater, indeed, than you suppose—I
should not have been seriously alarmed at the rumor of your proposed flight
which has been circulated, particularly as I took it to be a false one; but my
liking for you is far too great to allow me to pretend that even the report,
however false, is not to me a matter of much concern. That you will really go
across seas I cannot believe when I think of the deep regard you have for
Dolabella and his admirable wife, your daughter Tullia, and of the equal regard
in which you yourself are held by us all, to whom, upon my word and honor, your
name and position are seemingly dearer than they are to yourself. Nevertheless,
I did not think myself at liberty as a friend to be indifferent to the remarks
even of unscrupulous people; and I have been the more anxious to act because I
hold that the part I have to play has been made more difficult by a coolness
between us, originating, indeed, more in suspicion on my part than in any
injury on yours. For I beg you will thoroughly assure yourself of this, that
there is no one for whom my feeling of friendliness is greater than for yourself,
with the exception of my dear friend Caesar, and that among Caesar’s most honored
friends a place is reserved for you. Therefore, my dear Cicero, I entreat you
to keep your future action entirely open. Reject the false honor of this man,
Pompey, who did you a great wrong in allowing you to be exiled that he might
afterwards lay you under an obligation. Do not, on the other hand, fly from one
who, even if he shall lose his love for you—and that need never be the case—will
none the less make it his study that you shall be secure and rich in honors”.
By the
second week in June, however, the reports of Caesar’s difficulties at
Marseilles had led a few more senators to slink away to Greece, and when a
false rumor was spread that Pompey was marching north and would take Caesar in
the rear, Cicero at last made up his mind to bolt. He wrote to his wife saying
that he was confident of Pompey’s coming victory, and that he was therefore going
to him in the full expectation of “returning with kindred spirits on some
future day to the defence of the Republic”. That night he sailed for Greece.
His
departure must have been a great blow to Antony, for it caused the uneasiness of
the Caesarians to be increased, and Caesar, no doubt, had told him to do his
best to prevent the orator's flight. Plutarch tells us, also, that at this time
Antony was none too popular, and that although he was greatly beloved by the
troops, in whose exercises and labors he personally joined, he was accused of
being too lazy and impatient to listen to the complaints of civilians who
petitioned him, and had got himself a bad name all round by making love to
other men’s wives. Yet it is admitted by the same writer that Caesar had no
fault to find with him, and that his bravery, energy, and military skill were
never in question, which suggests that the attacks made upon him were malicious
rather than true. Nevertheless, there seems to have been a certain amount of
actual disaffection in Rome during these trying days of anxiety, and when, in
July, news arrived that Caesar had left the siege of Marseilles to his
subordinates, had marched against Pompey’s legions in Spain, and had been defeated
by them, there was something like a panic in the city.
In
August, however, the whole situation changed. Dispatches were received
announcing that Caesar, after his first reverses, had outmaneuvered and trapped
the enemy in Spain, and that the entire Pompeian army there had surrendered,
while at Marseilles a victory had been won which made the speedy fall of that
city certain. Thereupon, in September, the acting-Consul, Lepidus, with the
help of Antony, passed a law through the Senate and the Comitia investing Caesar
with the powers of Dictator; and this move was all the more popular because of
the reports of Caesar’s continued leniency, for he had allowed all the
conquered troops an absolutely free choice of action—they could enter his
service, retire into civilian life, or even make their way to Pompey, as they
wished. It all seemed too wonderful to be true. The victory was miraculous; Caesar
was god-like. Everybody was cock-a-hoop, and Antony no doubt celebrated the
glad tidings by getting drunk.
News of
two reverses elsewhere, however, somewhat cooled the popular enthusiasm, and to
Antony brought much personal sorrow. After turning Cato out of Sicily, the
dashing Curio—that “slip of a girl” as Cicero, it will be remembered, had once
called him—had collected enough ships to transport two legions to North Africa
where Atticus Varus was in command of a considerable
Pompeian army; and having disembarked at Utica, near the ruins of Carthage, he
quickly gamed a victory over that general, and men proceeded to attack King
Juba of Numidia, who was supporting Pompey. Misled by false reports, Curio
found himself with a small force outnumbered and surrounded by the enemy in
desert country in the heat of summer; and there, as Appian records it, “it perished,
fighting bravely together with all his men”, his head being afterwards cut off
and carried to Juba. On hearing the news the officers in command of the ships
at Utica weighed anchor and sailed away, whereat the remaining soldiers of
Curio’s army, who were in reserve there, seized upon all the shipping in the
harbor in order to make their escape, and in the confusion many of them were
drowned, while the others, unable to get away, surrendered and were slaughtered
by Juba in cold blood.
Curio, it
will be remembered, had been Antony’s earliest friend, and more than friend,
and in the ensuing years they had stood side by side in many a dangerous
situation. His death, therefore, was a sad blow to him, from which he had
hardly recovered when news arrived that Dolabella had been defeated by Pompey’s
general in Illyria, and that Antony’s younger brother, Caius, had been taken
prisoner. The return of the victorious Caesar to Rome from Spain, however,
consoled him; and in the excitement of the rash of events which ensued he had
no time to mourn his friend or to worry about his brother.
In
November Caesar arrived back like a whirlwind, recklessly determined to waste
no time in getting to grips with Pompey himself. He gave orders to his army to
march straight down to Brindisi, where, it was understood, a great mobilization
would take place during the winter in preparation for the invasion of Greece in
the spring. Actually, however, his secret intention was to undertake that
invasion immediately; but had he told his soldiers, weary after their campaign in
Spain and their march back to Italy, that they were now going to be shipped
across the perilous seas and flung against Pompey’s fortified headquarters,
they would probably have mutinied. Caesar’s decision, however, was no more than
was to be expected of him, for his rapidity of action was usually phenomenal;
and, indeed, there was a certain impetuosity about him which sometimes landed
him in extremely awkward situations. Time after time, good luck rather than
good generalship extricated him from positions into which audacity and not
forethought had led him; and in observing the wild risks he took the historian
cannot fail to ask himself on occasion if he were
really a great general
Pompey,
however, erred as much on the side of anxious indecision as Caesar did on that
of rash confidence; and, strange to say, neither of them looked far ahead, the
difference between them being that Caesar could make up his mind in a flash and
could concentrate with astonishing intensity upon his immediate object, while
Pompey, as he grew older, found an increasing difficulty in forming a decision
of any kind. Caesar was a man of immense brainpower, indefatigable energy, and
the highest courage; but just as, in his private amours, “the marvel is that he
did not end in some dark corner with a dagger between his ribs”, so in his
military career it is startling to see how often he thrust that wonderful
cranium of his into the lion’s mouth and escaped, unscathed, by sheer good
fortune.
It has
already been remarked that he liked to gather about him men of audacious
courage, such as Clodius and Curio had been; and it was just that quality in
Antony, combined with his undying loyalty, which he loved. Antony, though
transparent and somewhat of an actor to boot, was in many ways a man after his
own heart—cultured, up-to-date in his tendencies, democratic in principle,
aristocratic in taste, heedless of conventions, a hater of hypocrisy; but it
was his dash and gallantry which endeared him to his chief, and now in this
desperate adventure which had been decided upon it was to Antony that Caesar
turned, confiding in him his audacious plan to transport the army piecemeal to
Greece in the ships he had built and the merchantmen he had commandeered, in
the teeth of Pompey’s watching fleet.
Only
eleven days did Caesar remain in Rome; but during that brief space he had
himself elected Consul for the coming year, 48 BC, with one of his officers as a nominal colleague; he abdicated
his Dictatorship in place of this more regular office; he set the government in
order; and he reorganized its finances. Incidentally he recalled from
banishment Gabinius, Antony’s former commander-in-chief in Syria and Egypt, and
various other exiles, with the notable exceptions of Milo and Antony’s uncle,
Caius Antonius, both of whom were too closely allied to the aristocratic party
to be pardoned with popular approval. Then, with Antony at his side, he set out
for Brindisi, and, having arrived, broke the news to those troops which were
already there that he was going to take them across to Greece at once. The
ships he had collected could carry no more than about fifteen thousand men,
that is to say five out of the twelve legions which were at his disposal, and a
small body of cavalry; but he declared that this would be quite a big enough
army to start with, and that the ships could then be sent back to fetch the
rest, many of whom had not yet reached Brindisi.
In the
first week in January 48 BC he set
sail, and Antony, who was left behind to bring the second lot over, watched his
departure, one may suppose, with feelings of the greatest anxiety, knowing that
if the enemy’s fleet were encountered Caesar and his men would be lost, and
that though it were eluded he would find himself isolated on the shores of
Greece, and outnumbered by Pompey by at least five to one. In three or four
days, however, the ships returned bringing the news that Caesar had landed
safely near Oricum (Ericho),
and was pushing north to Dyrrachium (Durazzo), Pompey’s base of supplies, which
there was great hope of taking by surprise, for Pompey and his main army were
an equal distance from the place. It was a fifty-mile race between the two
armies.
Antony’s
business, of course, was to embark another fifteen thousand men, and take them
across to Caesar’s aid; but before he could do so, Bibulus, Caesar’s old enemy
and joint-Consul ten years earlier, who was now Pompey’s admiral, dispatched a
powerful fleet across the sea and blockaded Antony’s ships in Brindisi harbor. Then developed a situation which was trying in the extreme to the
nerves of all concerned. Antony, and with him now Gabinius, were unable
to put to sea, knowing that Bibulus would send them to the bottom; and they
therefore kicked their heels in Brindisi, waiting for the opportunity which
never seemed to come. Caesar, on his part, just failed to reach Durazzo before
Pompey, and, in bitter disappointment, was obliged to dig himself in, a few
miles to the south, taking possession of a certain amount of country behind him
from which he could obtain supplies, but having no ships, and being open to a
combined attack by land, and sea.
As the
weeks went by and Antony did not come, Caesar became more and more desperate.
Food was running short, and his men were complaining: there was sickness, too,
in his camp. He could not understand what was delaying Antony, and began to
wonder whether he was playing him false. At last in desperation he ventured
upon one of those wildly daring exploits with which his life abounds.
Disguising himself in mean clothes, he boarded a small cargo-boat which,
apparently, had a permit to make the crossing to Italy; for, though he risked
shipwreck and capture, he felt that his only hope was to find out what was
wrong at Brindisi and to bring the rest of his army over to Greece himself. But
the attempt was a failure: a storm drove the vessel back to the shore in a
sinking condition, Caesar was recognized, and when, wet and cold, he at last
struggled back to his headquarters, everybody was indignant with him for taking
such an absurd risk. His anxiety to know what had happened to Antony, however,
was his excuse: for the first time he mistrusted him.
Meanwhile,
in Pompey’s camp all was at sixes and sevens—a fact which alone saved the little
Caesarian army from annihilation. Though he placed his reliance chiefly on his
Roman legions, of which he had eleven as against Caesar’s five, together with a
strong force of cavalry, he had under his command formidable bodies of the
famous Cretan archers, Thracian slingers, and Pontic javelin-throwers, while auxiliaries had been sent to him from Arabia, Armenia,
Athens, Bithynia, Boeotia, Cappadocia, Cilicia, Macedonia, Ionia, Palestine, Pamphylia, Sparta, Syria, and many other countries. His
sea-power consisted of six hundred men-of-war in perfect fighting trim, and
swarms of armed transports and merchantmen; while a fleet of sixty warships—then
awaiting orders at Corfu—had been sent to him by Cleopatra and her brother
Ptolemy, who had succeeded the bibulous Auletes as joint sovereigns of Egypt.
Quarrelsome
foreign potentates an generals were tumbling
over one another in the camp, and the place was swarming with Roman senators,
government officials, military commanders, naval officers, and the like. Cato
was there, urging Pompey to stake all on a big battle with Caesar. Cicero was
there, very dejected and miserable, having been snubbed by Pompey and told he
was not wanted by Cato, who said he ought to have remained neutral: indeed
Plutarch writes that Cicero “was sorry he had ever come, and showed it by
depreciating Pompey’s resources, finding fault in an underhand way with all he
did, and continually indulging in jests and sarcastic remarks at the expense of
his colleagues, but going about the camp with a gloomy and melancholy face
himself”. Amongst the many other men of note who worried Pompey with their
contradictory advice mention must be made of Marcus Brutus who now for the
first time plays a part in the events which are being related in these pages.
Everybody had expected that he would join the opposite side, for Caesar was
supposed to be his father and had certainly been his mother's lover for years;
and when, instead, he arrived at the headquarters in Greece, Pompey had been so
surprised and pleased that he had thrown his arms around him and had kissed
him. Now, however, Brutus was suffering from the prevailing but unaccountable
depression, and, being a very studious young man, spent all his days sitting in
his tent, writing an epitome of Polybius, the great Greek historian, apparently
to deaden the pricks of his conscience which told him that he ought to have
been with Caesar.
It is
impossible to understand why Pompey did not attack the harassed Caesar, and the
only explanation is that he doubted the fidelity of his Roman legions and
placed no reliance on the fighting qualities of his foreign troops. Caesar, of
course, expected a battle at any moment, and could no more comprehend than we
can why his rival held his hand. It seems, however, that Pompey was no longer a
great man: his genius had bloomed too soon, and from a light-hearted,
brilliant, and charming heyday he had passed to a depressed and hesitant
decline by gradual stages which had hardly been observed by his supporters
until too late. He was a haughty, silent, melancholy man at this time: it may
perhaps be said that he had never been the same since the death of his adored
wife, Julia, Caesar’s daughter; and his present wife, Cornelia, who was
awaiting events in Lesbos, was nothing to him except, as she seemed to suppose,
a bringer of ill-luck.
But if Pompey
was depressed, Caesar was frantic. He knew now that Antony was blockaded in
Brindisi, and somehow he managed to get a message across to him advising him to
march by land around the north end of the Adriatic and down into Greece. Antony,
however, was still hoping to break the blockade, yet dared not risk the total
loss of his army which would mean the end of Caesar. At last it was decided
that the forces should be divided, and that Gabinius should attempt the long
march by land and Antony the dash by sea, so that, in the likely event of
disaster to the latter half of the army there would still be a chance of
success for the former. Thereat, one morning in the spring, Gabinius marched
forth, and Antony was left to choose the best moment for the perilous adventure
upon which he had decided.
Just
then, as luck would have it, news came through that Bibulus, the enemy admiral,
had died; and a few days later, while there was a chance that the Pompeian
fleet was without orders, a strong south-west wind sprang up. Seizing the
opportunity, Antony embarked some ten or fifteen thousand men, and set sail at
dead of night, thus staking his life and his all upon this one throw of Fate’s
dice. In the darkness most of his vessels passed the blockading fleet
unobserved, but when at length the alarm was given a few of his small
battleships attacked the enemy, thus distracting them until the transports had
escaped; and when day dawned he was far out to sea. The following morning found
him close to the Greek shore, thirty miles south of Caesar’s camp at Durazzo;
but now the wind dropped, and the pursuing ships of war, propelled by their
five and six banks of oars, bore down upon them. Antony’s men could do no more
than prepare to sell their lives dearly, and the first enemy vessel which
approached was received with a shower of arrows.
Just
then, as by a miracle, the wind revived in increased force, and soon the
transports were scudding northwards under full sail, while the oared
battleships plunged after them in a heavy sea which in the end drove them onto
the shore, where many of them were wrecked. Antony, thus, got clean away,
sailed past Caesar’s camp, and safely landed at Lissus (Alessio), some thirty miles to the north of Durazzo.
Pompey at once marched upon this place to annihilate the newly landed troops,
leaving, however, a sufficient garrison at his base; but Caesar marched after
him, giving Durazzo a wide berth, and by a rapid maneuver joined forces with Antony,
whereupon Pompey had to retrace his steps, this time pursued by his reunited
enemies.
Thus
Antony’s breathless adventure ended in complete success, and he could
congratulate himself upon having literally saved his chief’s life. It was a
perilous feat after Caesar’s own heart, and it strengthened the bond between
them so that nothing, it seemed, could sever it.
Caesar
now felt himself strong enough to undertake a spectacular movement designed to
impress all Greece and the neighboring provinces with his power. With a sudden
rush he occupied the semicircle of hills around Pompey’s camp, and so rapidly
dug trenches and threw up earth-works that in a few days the Pompeians found
themselves in a state of siege. They replied by making their own lines a short
distance back from Caesar’s, a narrow No-man’s-land being left between the two
opposing armies; and in this condition of stalemate matters remained for
several weeks while spring passed into summer, the deadlock being at last
broken by a sharp battle in which Pompey’s men were the victors, and Caesar,
who was, as usual, in the thick of the fight, very nearly lost his life. At
about the same time news arrived that Gabinius had been defeated in Illyria,
and was dead and his army dispersed; but these disasters only had the effect of
making Caesar all the more anxious to force a full-dress battle, and at last,
in June, he abandoned his entrenchments and marched south-eastwards into
Thessaly where one of Pompey’s generals was still at large.
His
object was to enhance his reputation by overpowering this force, and also to
entice Pompey away from his base and the sea, and then to outflank him. Neither
Caesar nor Antony were happy men at this time, for their enemies still had the
advantage, and the war seemed likely to be protracted; but their depression was
as nothing compared with that of Pompey, who could not make up his mind whether
to follow Caesar, or to stay where he was, or to invade Italy.
At last,
however, he decided to march into Thessaly also, and to give battle, leaving a
small force at Durazzo under the command of Cato; but when the army was about
to march Cicero excused himself on the time-honored plea of ill-health, and remained
with Cato. Once again his nervous doubts as to which side would win had led him
to keep out of the whole business; but when it was reported to Caesar and
Antony that he was not with the oncoming Pompeian army they must have laughed
together and have been not a little heartened, for Cicero was the best of
weather-cocks. As a matter of fact the orator was not in good health. “Mental
anxiety is wearing me out, he wrote, and is causing me also extreme bodily
weakness”—a condition which may well have been aggravated by a proposal made by
Domitius Ahenobarbus (who had escaped from Marseilles back to Pompey) that all
senators who had not immediately come to Greece at the outbreak of hostilities
should now be put to death. The suggestion, of course, was not taken up; but
the very thought of it must have brought the cold perspiration out on Cicero0s
intellectual forehead.
Early in
August Pompey’s army came up with Caesar’s in the plain of Pharsalia, near the
city of Pharsalus (Farsa), in the heart of Thessaly;
and having some fifty thousand fighting men as against Caesar’s twenty-five
thousand, he decided, after much hesitation, to fight it out. On the morning of
the battle he addressed his troops, telling them to make an end of this madman
who had thrown the whole empire into confusion. “Fight in the consciousness of
a just cause”, he said, “for we are contending for liberty and country, and on
our side are law and honorable tradition”. Caesar, on his part, encouraged his
men by reminding them that it was Pompey who had demanded that they should be
disbanded without rewards after all their triumphs in Gaul. “Yet this Pompey
has now become slow and hesitating in all he does”, he declared, “and his star
has obviously passed its zenith. As for his foreign allies, pay no attention to
them whatsoever, but fight only with the Roman legions. Yet after your victory,
spare your countrymen, for they are your own flesh and blood. Kill only these
wretched foreigners”.
Pompey
then placed himself in command of his right wing, and assigned the left to
Domitius Ahenobarbus; while Caesar, on his side, took the right wing opposite Domitius,
and gave the left to Antony who thus faced Pompey himself. The long-expected
battle, which was to be the crisis of this war between the conservatives and
democrats, was neither very sanguinary, as battles go, nor long protracted.
Pompey’s cavalry were officered for the most part by young aristocrats in the
flower of their youth and the height of their beauty, as Plutarch tells us; and
with his whimsical smile, Caesar instructed his veterans to aim all their blows
at the faces of these elegant young men, for experience had taught him that
this type of soldier would not be willing to risk both a present danger and a
future blemish. And so it proved; for at the first encounter these young
officers ducked their heads, put up their left arms before their faces, lost
control of their horses, and threw the whole brigade into confusion and finally
into flight.
The
foreign auxiliaries, meanwhile, proved to be quite worthless, and got in the
way of the legionaries, whose hearts, anyhow, were not in the fight; and soon
an indescribable muddle developed amongst the Pompeians, which ended in a
general panic and rout. Antony, like Caesar, was never able to remember in
battle that a general’s business is to keep out of the actual fighting; and in
this case he seems to have hurled himself into the thick of the fray, and to
have fought his way through to Domitius Ahenobarbus, and to have killed him
with his own hand. Caesar lost about two hundred men all told; the enemy about
six thousand, together with nearly two hundred standards and the eagles of
eight legions.
Pompey
could not stem the flight, became bewildered, and at last rode in a sort of
stupor back to his camp, where he sat down in his tent, speechless. “He was no
longer himself”, says Plutarch, “nor remembered that he was Pompey the Great,
but was like one whom some god had deprived of his wits”. When the shouts and
cries warned him, however, that the Caesarians were coming, he sprang to his
feet, and moaning: “What!—even into my very camp?” mounted his horse and fled
northwards along the road to Larissa and the sea. And when Caesar, bareheaded
and breathless, dashed in amongst the tents, with Antony, sweating in the
summer heat at his side, he found his rival gone. “He would have it”, he groaned,
as he saw the havoc around him; “he brought it upon himself!”
Curiously
enough, the victor’s first thought was for Brutus. Before the battle Caesar had
given strict orders that on no account was this son of
Servilia and perhaps of himself to be harmed; and now, hearing that he had fled,
he scribbled a note to him telling him that all was forgiven, and sent a
detachment of mounted men to find him and give him the message. The young man
was soon traced, and wrote a reply apparently explaining his conduct in joining
Pompey as being due to his conscience; whereupon Caesar sent for him and
presently received him with every mark of affection. He then asked him whither
Pompey was directing his flight; and when Brutus told him that he supposed it
would be towards Syria or Egypt, Caesar made up his mind personally to hunt him
down before he could get out of Greece.
Most of
Pompey’s forces surrendered during the following day, and Caesar and Antony
were soon free to gallop off with a squadron of cavalry in pursuit of their
fallen enemy; but when some days later, they reached the Hellespont, they
heard, to their bitter vexation, that Pompey had sailed for the east, and
thereupon Caesar made perhaps the most reckless decision of his career. In
spite of the fact that the home government had to be re-established, the empire
pacified, Pompey’s troops in various provinces rounded up, the unconquered
fleet captured, Cato and the other “die-hards” arrested, and a hundred
outstanding tasks performed, he announced that under the escort of such
ships-of-war as he could now command he was going to take a legion or two to
Syria or Egypt or whatever the country might be wherein Pompey would seek
asylum. He had no idea what perils on sea and land would be encountered, or
when he would be back: possibly he would be away for months, but he would not
return until he had given the coup de grâce to Pompey. As to the cleaning up of the situation
here at home, he would leave the whole business to Antony; and therewith he
gave him his instructions and, with an affectionate slap on the back, sent him
off on his long journey to Rome to play, at the age of thirty-five, the part of
vice-autocrat of the Roman world.
When
Antony arrived once more on the shores of the Adriatic he heard that, after
Pharsalia, Cato, Cicero, and others had fled to Corfu, where the broken-hearted
Cicero had narrowly escaped being put to death as a traitor by the distracted
Pompeians, and had sought refuge at last at Patras at
the mouth of the Gulf of Corinth; while Cato had gone at length to North Africa.
Antony then crossed the sea, was met at Brindisi by his mistress, Cytheris, and
so returned in triumph to Rome.
Meanwhile
Pompey had played out in all its horror the role of a vanquished and fugitive
leader. A day or two after the battle, the skipper of a Roman merchantship which was about to sail from the port of Tempe
in north-eastern Thessaly, was just telling his men, as he leant idly over the
stern, how he had dreamed that Pompey had appeared before him, travel-stained
and dejected, when, suddenly clapping his hand to his forehead, he recognized
Pompey coming in actuality towards him in a small boat. The skipper’s political
sympathies were republican, and he therefore took the wretched fugitive on
board and agreed, at a price, to carry him whithersoever he wished to go, at
which Pompey asked to be taken first to Lesbos where he might pick up his wife,
Cornelia, and their young son, Sextus. On arriving there, a sailor was sent
ashore to fetch Cornelia; but when the man was ushered into her presence—and
she was housed, of course, like a queen, her husband's defeat being still
unknown—he burst into tears, and conveyed his news rather by his sobs than by
his words. Thereupon, Cornelia dropped at his feet in a dead faint.
As soon
as she had revived she ran headlong down the street to the docks, and, boarding
the ship, flung herself into Pompey's arms. “It is my fault!” she cried. “It is
I who has brought you bad luck. O, why have you come back to me? You ought to
have left to her evil genius one who has involved you only in her own
ill-fortune. I ought to have killed myself when I brought disaster to my first
husband, Publius Crassus, instead of letting myself
be reserved for a worse mischief, the ruin of Pompey the Great!” To this Pompey
replied that at any rate she had had a few years of happiness with him, a
little longer, in fact, than was usual in the case of the great. “We are all
mortals”, he said, “and we have to endure these ups and downs, hoping for
better luck next time. After all, it is no less possible to retrieve my
position than it was to lose it”.
The
townspeople, headed by the philosopher Cratippus,
then came down to the ship, offering to take care of him, but he told them to
submit to Caesar without fear, saying that he was a man of great goodness and
clemency; and he began to argue with Cratippus upon
the nature of Providence, having much to say just then in dispraise of the
gods, to which, however, the philosopher refused to reply, being convinced in
his heart that all was for the best. He decided, however, to remain with Pompey
and Cornelia to look after their spiritual welfare, and soon, taking their son
Sextus with them, they set sail for Attalia (Adala) in Asia Minor, where, on their arrival, they found some
sixty fugitive senators and a certain number of troops and ships, and heard
that Cato had gone to Africa, and that a great part of the fleet had not yet
surrendered to Caesar. Thereupon Pompey made some show of renewing the war,
and, transferring himself to a battleship, set out for Egypt with a considerable
escort, his object being to recoup his forces in that country, over which the
young Cleopatra and her brother Ptolemy, who were friendly to him, were
supposed to be ruling jointly. Actually, Cleopatra had just been driven out of
her kingdom by this brother of hers; and when Pompey arrived off the Egyptian
shore in the last days of September, it was the latter to whom the news was conveyed. Tales of the battle of Pharsalia and its consequences,
however, had already been brought to Egypt; and Ptolemy’s councilors decided
that the best thing to do would be to put the fugitive to death.
A boat
was therefore sent out to the battleship with an invitation to Pompey to land,
and, in spite of Cornelia’s frantic protests that he was going to his doom, he
stepped into it and was rowed towards the shore,
passing the time by reading over the speech which he proposed to make to the
Egyptian monarch. Only a short distance had been covered, however, when one of
the men in the boat stabbed him in the back, at which the others also set upon
him. Pompey in the old aristocratic manner, pulled his gown face, and sank to
the bottom of the boat; and a moment later his head was severed from his body.
Cornelia witnessed the murder, and her shriek of horror was heard by those on
shore. The Roman ships at once weighed anchor, and escape to sea.
Three
days later, Caesar arrived in hot pursuit; and thereupon an Egyptian deputation brought him Pompey's head as a
token of good will. Caesar, however, turned in abhorrence
from them, and, moving aside, bent down his face and wept.
CHAPTER IX
Antony as Vice-Dictator in Rome, and his Temporary
Estrangement from Caesar.
40—45 BC.
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