THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA, QUEEN OF EGYPTPART
I.
CLEOPATRA
AND CAESAR
CHAPTER V.
CAIUS
JULIUS CAESAR.
When Caesar thus
made the acquaintance of the adventurous young Queen of Egypt he was a man of
advanced middle age. He had already celebrated his fifty-fourth birthday,
having been born on July 12, BC 102, and time was beginning to mark him
down. The appalling dissipations of his youth to some extent may have added
to the burden of his years; and, though he was still active and keen
beyond the common measure, his face was heavily lined and seamed, and his
muscles, I suppose, showed something of that tension to which the
suppleness of early manhood gives place. Yet he remained graceful and
full of the quality of youth, and he carried himself with the air of one
conscious of his supremacy in the physical activities of life. He was a
lightly-built man, of an aristocratic type which is to be found
indiscriminately throughout Europe, and which nowadays, by a convention of
thought, is usually associated in the mind with the cavalry barracks or
the polo-ground. He appeared to be, and was, a perfect horseman. It
is related of him that in Gaul he bred and rode a horse which no
other man in the army dared mount; and it was his habit to demonstrate the
firmness of his seat by clasping his hands behind his back and setting the
horse at full gallop. Though by no means a small man, he must have scaled
under ten stone, and in other days and other climes he might have been
mistaken for a gentleman jockey. He was an extremely active soldier,
a clever, graceful swordsman, a powerful swimmer, and an excellent
athlete. In battle he had proved himself brave, gallant, and cool-headed;
and in his earlier years he had been regarded as a dashing young officer
who was neither restrained in the performance of striking deeds of
bravery nor averse to receiving a gallery cheer for his
pains. Already at the age of twenty-one he had won the civic crown,
the Victoria Cross of that period, for saving a soldier’s life at the
storming of Mytelene. In action he exposed
himself bare-headed amongst his men, cheering them and encouraging them by
his own fine spirits; and it is related how once he laid hands on a
distraught standard-bearer who was running to cover, turned
him round, and suggested to him that he had mistaken the direction of
the enemy.
His thin,
clean-shaven face, his keen dark eyes, his clear-cut features, his hard, firm
mouth with its whimsical expression, and his somewhat pale and liverish
complexion, gave him at first sight the appearance of one who, being by
nature a sportsman and a man of the world, a fearless rider and a keen
soldier, had enjoyed every moment of an adventurous life. He was
particularly well groomed and scrupulously clean, and his scanty hair
was carefully arranged over his fine, broad head. His toga was
ornamented with an unusually broad purple stripe, and was edged with a
long fringe. He loved jewellery, and on one
occasion bought a single pearl for £60,000, which he afterwards gave to a
lady of his acquaintance.
Indeed, it is said
that he only invaded Britain because he had heard that fine pearls were to be
obtained there. There was thus a certain foppishness in his
appearance, and a slight suggestion of conceit and personal
vanity marked his manner, which gave the impression that he was not
unaware of his good looks, nor desirous of concealing the fact of his disreputable
successes with the fair sex. Yet he was at this time by no means an old
roue. His great head, the penetration of his dark eyes, and
the occasional sternness of his expression were a speedy indication that
much lay behind these inoffensive airs and graces; and all those who came
into his presence must have felt the power of his will and brain, even
though direct observation did not convey to them more than
the pleasing outlines of an elderly cavalier’s figure. Regarded in
certain lights and on certain occasions, the expression of his furrowed
face showed the imagination, the romantic vision, and the artistic culture
of his mind; but usually the qualities which were impressed upon a visitor
who conversed with him at close quarters were those of keenness,
determination, and, particularly, gentlemanliness, combined with the
rather charming confidence of a man of fashion. His manner at all times
was quiet and gracious; yet there was a certain fire, a
controlled vivacity in his movements, which revealed the
creative soldier and administrator behind the ideal aristocrat. His
voice though high, and sometimes shrill, was occasionally very pleasant to the
ear; but notwithstanding the fact that he was a wonderful orator, there
was a correctness in his choice of words which was occasionally almost
pedantic. His manner of speech was direct and straightforward, and his
honesty of purpose and loftiness of principle were not doubted save by
those who chanced to be aware of his little regard for moral integrity.
Caesar was, in
fact, an extremely unscrupulous man. I do not find it possible to accept the
opinion of his character held by most historians, or to suppose
him to- have been an heroic figure who lived and died for his lofty
and patriotic principles. There was immense good in him, and he had the
unquestionable merit of being a great man with vast ambitions for the
orderly governance of the nations of the earth; but when he threw
himself with such enthusiasm into the task of winning the heart of the
harum-scarum young Queen of Egypt, it seems to me that he was very well
qualified to deceive her, and to play upon her emotions with all the
known arts and wiles of a wicked world. So notorious was his habit of
leading women astray, that when he returned to Rome from his Gallic Wars
his soldiers sang a marching song in which the citizens were warned
to protect their ladies from him lest he should treat them as he had
treated all the women of Gaul. “Urbani, servate uxores,” they
sang; “Calvum moechum adducimus.”
He had no
particular religion, not much honour, and few high
principles; and in this regard all that can be said in his favour is that he was perfectly free from cant, never
pretended to be virtuous, nor attempted to hide from his contemporaries
the multitude of his sins. As a young man he indulged in every kind of
vice, and so scandalous was his reputation for licentiousness that it
was a matter of blank astonishment to his Roman friends when,
nevertheless, he proved himself so brave and strenuous a soldier. His
relationship with the mother of Brutus, who was thought to be his own
son, shows that he prosecuted love intrigues while yet a boy. At one time
he passed through a phase of extreme effeminacy, with its attendant
horrors; and there was a period when he used to spend long hours each
day in the practice of the mysteries of the toilet, being scented and
curled and painted in the manner prescribed by the most degenerate young men of
the aristocratic classes. Indeed so effeminate was he, that after
staying with his friend Nicomedes, the King
of Bithynia, he was jestingly called Queen of Bithynia; and on
another occasion in Rome a certain wag named Octavius saluted Pompey as
King and Caesar as Queen of Rome. His intrigues with the wives of his
friends had been as frequent as they were notorious. No goodlooking woman was safe from him, least of all
those whom he had the opportunity of seeing frequently, owing to his
friendship for their husbands or other male relatives. Not even political
considerations checked his amorous inclinations, as may be judged from the
fact that he made a victim of Mucia, the wife of
Pompey, whose friendship he most eagerly desired at that time. “He
was the inevitable correspondent in every fashionable divorce,” writes Oman; “and
when we look at the list of the ladies whose names are linked with
his, we can only wonder at the state of society in Rome which
permitted him to survive unscathed to middle age. The marvel is that he
did not end in some dark corner, with a dagger between his ribs, long
before he attained the age of thirty.” Being a brilliant opportunist he
made use of his success with women to promote his own interests, and at
one time he is said to have conducted love intrigues with the wives
of Pompey, Crassus, and Gabinius, all leaders of his political party.
Even the knowledge of the habits of the young fops of the period, which he had
acquired while emulating their mode of life, was turned to good account
by him in after years. At the battle of Pharsalia, which had been fought but a
few weeks before his arrival in Egypt, he had told his troops who
were to receive the charges of the enemy’s patrician cavalry that
they should not attempt to hamstring the horses or strike at their legs,
but should aim their blows at the riders’ faces, “in the hopes,” as
Plutarch says, “that young gentlemen who had not known much
of battles and wounds, but came, wearing their hair long, in the
flower of their age and height of their beauty, would be more apprehensive
of such blows and not care for hazarding both a danger at present and
a blemish for the future. And so it proved, for they turned about,
and covered their faces to safeguard them.”
In regard to money
matters Caesar was entirely without principle. In his early years he borrowed
vast sums on all sides, spent them recklessly, and seldom paid
his debts save with further borrowed money. While still a young man
he owed his creditors the sum of £280,000; and though most of this had now
been paid off by means of the loot from the Gallic Wars, there had been
times in his life when ruin stared him in the face. Most of his debts
were incurred in the first place in buying for himself a high position in Roman
political life, and in the second place in paying the electioneering
expenses of candidates for office who would be likely to advance his
power. He engaged the favour of the people by giving
enormous public feasts, and on one occasion twenty-two thousand persons were
entertained at his expense at a single meal. While he was aedile he paid for
three hundred and twenty gladiatorial combats; and innumerable fetes and shows
were given by him throughout his life, and were paid for by the tears and
anguish of his conquered enemies.
He was one of the
most ambitious men who have ever walked the stage of life, his devouring
passion for absolute power being at all times abnormal; and he cared not
one jot in what manner he obtained or expended money so long as his
career was advanced by that means. He could not brook the thought of
playing a secondary part in the world’s affairs, and nothing short of
absolute autocracy satisfied his aspirations. While crossing the Alps on
one occasion the poverty of a small mountain village was pointed out to
him, and he was heard to remark that he would rather be first man in that
little community than second man in Rome. On another occasion he was seen
to burst into tears while reading the life of Alexander the Great, for the
thought was intolerable to him that another man should have conquered the
world at an age when he himself had done nothing of the kind. This
restless “passion after honour,” as Plutarch
terms it, was not apparent in his manner and was not noticed save by
those who knew him well. He was too gentlemanly, too well dressed, too
beautifully groomed, to give the impression of one who was seeking
indefatigably for his own advancement, and at whose heart the
demons of insatiate ambition were so continuously gnawing. “When I
see his hair so carefully arranged,” said Cicero, “and observe him
adjusting it with one finger, I cannot imagine it should enter such a
man’s thoughts to subvert the Roman State.” Yet this elegant soldier,
whose manners were so quietly aristocratic, whose charm was so
delectable, would sink to any depths of moral depravity, whether financial or
otherwise, in order to convert the world into his footstool. When he
and Catullus were rival candidates for the office of
Pontifex Maximus, the latter offered him a huge sum of money to
retire from the contest; but Caesar, spurning the proffered bribe with
indignation, replied that he was about to borrow a larger sum than that in
order to buy the votes for himself. At another period of his
amazing career he desired to effect the downfall of Cicero, who was
much in his way, and circumstances so fell out that this could best be
accomplished by the appointment of a certain young scamp named Clodius as tribune. Now Clodius was the paramour of Caesar’s wife Pompeia, whom
the Dictator had made correspondent in the action for divorce which he had
brought against that lady; yet, since it served his ambitious purpose, he
did not now hesitate to obtain the appointment of this amorous
rogue and use him for his infamous purposes. The story need not here
be related of how Clodius had disguised
himself as a woman, and had thus obtained admission to certain secret
female rites at which Pompeia was
officiating; how he had been discovered; how he had only escaped the
death penalty for his sacrilege owing to the fact that the judges were
afraid to condemn him since he was a favourite with the mob, and afraid to acquit him for fear of offending the nobility,
and had therefore written their verdicts so illegibly that nobody
could read them; and how Pompeia had been
divorced by her husband, who had then made the famous remark that “Caesar’s
wife must be above suspicion”; but it will be apparent that Plutarch is justified
in regarding the man’s appointment to the tribuneship as one of
the most disgraceful episodes in the Dictator’s career.
Caesar’s first wife
was named Cossutia, and was a wealthy heiress whom he
had married for her money’s sake. Having, however, fallen in love with
Cornelia, the daughter of Cinna, he divorced Cossutia,
and wedded the woman of his heart, pluckily refusing to part with her
when ordered to do so for political reasons by the terrible Sulla.
Cornelia died in BC 68, and in the following year he married Pompeia, of whom we have just heard, in order to
strengthen his alliance with Pompey, to whom she was related.
Caesar’s marriage
to Calpurnia, after the dismissal of Pompeia, again
showed his indifference to the moral aspect of political life. Calpurnia
was the daughter of Calpurnius Piso, the pupil and disciple of Philodemus the
Epicurean, a man whose verses in the Greek Anthology, and whose habits of
life, were as vicious and poisonous as any in that licentious age. Caesar
at once obtained the consulship for his disreputable father-in-law,
thereby causing Cato to protest that it was intolerable that the
government should be prostituted by such marriages, and that persons
should advance one another to the highest offices in the land by
means of women. Caesar went so far as to propose, shortly after this,
that he should divorce Calpurnia and marry Pompey’s daughter, who would
have to be divorced from her husband, Faustus Sulla, for the purpose; and
that Pompey should marry Octavia, Caesar’s niece, although she was at
that time married to C. Marcellus, and also would have to be divorced.
There was a
startling nonchalance in Caesar’s behaviour, a
studied callousness, which was not less apparent to his contemporaries than to
us. His wonderful ability to squander other people’s money, his total
disregard of principle, his undisguised satisfaction in political and domestic
intrigue, revealed an unconcern which must inspire for all time the
admiration of the criminal classes, and which, in certain
instances, must appeal very forcibly to the imagination of
all high-spirited persons. Who can resist the charm of the story of
his behaviour to the pirates of Pharmacusa?
For thirty-eight days he was held prisoner at that place by a band of most
ferocious and bloodthirsty Cilicians, and during that
time he treated his captors with a degree of reckless insouciance
unmatched in the history of the world. When they asked him for a
ransom of twenty talents he laughed in their faces, and said that he was
worth at least fifty, which sum he ultimately paid over to them. He
insisted upon joining in their games, jeered at them for their barbarous
habits, and ordered them about as though they were his slaves. When he
wished to sleep he demanded that they should keep absolute silence as
they sat over their camp-fires; or, when the mood pleased him, he took
part in their sing-songs, read them his atrocious Latin verses (for he was
ever a poor poet), and abused them soundly if they did not applaud. A
hundred times a day he told them that he would have them all hanged as
soon as he was free, a pleasantry at which the pirates laughed
heartily, thinking it a merry jest; but no sooner was he released than
he raised a small force, attacked his former captors, and, taking most of
them prisoners, had them all crucified. Crucifixion is a form of death by
torture, the prolonged and frightful agony of which is not fully
appreciated at the present day, owing to a complacent familiarity
with the most notorious case of its application; but Caesar being, on
occasion, with all his indifference, a kind-hearted man, decided at the last
moment mercifully to put an end to the agonies of his disillusioned victims, and
with a sort of considerate nonchalance he therefore quietly cut their
throats.
He was not by any
means consistently a cruel man, and his kindness and magnanimity were often
demonstrated. He shed tears, it will be remembered, upon seeing the signet-ring
of his murdered enemy, Pompey; and in Rome he ordered that unfortunate
soldier’s statues to be replaced upon the pedestals from which they
had been thrown. In warfare, however, he was often ruthless, and had
recourse to wholesale massacres which could hardly be regarded as
necessary measures. At Uxellodunum and elsewhere
he caused thousands of prisoners to be maimed by the hacking off of their
right hands; and his slaughter of the members of the Senate of the
Veneti seems to have been an unnecessary piece of brutality. His behaviour in regard to the Usipetes and Tencteri will always remain the chief stain
upon his military reputation. After concluding peace with these
unfortunate peoples, he attacked them when they were disarmed, and killed
430,000 of them—men, women, and children. For this barbarity Cato proposed
that he should be put in chains and delivered over to the remnant of
the massacred tribes, that they might wreak their vengeance upon him.
During his ten
years’ campaigning in Gaul he took 800 towns by storm, subdued 300 states,
killed a million men, and sent another million into slavery. His cold-blooded execution of the brave Vercingetorix, after six years
of captivity, seems more cruel to us, perhaps, than it did to his
contemporaries; and it may be said in his favour that
he treated the terrified remnant of the conquered peoples with justice and
moderation. In spite of a kindly and even affable manner, his wit was
caustic and his words often terribly biting. When a certain young man
named Metellus, at that time tribune, had
persistently questioned whether Caesar had a right to appropriate
treasury funds in the prosecution of his wars, Caesar threatened
to put him to death if any more was heard of his dissent. “And this
you know, young man,” said he, “is more disagreeable for me to say than to
do.” He associated freely with all manner of persons, and although
so obviously an aristocrat, he was noted for his friendliness and
tact in dealing with the lower classes. During his campaigns he shared all
hardships with his men, and, consequently, was much beloved by them, in
spite of their occasional objection to the heavy work or strenuous manoeuvres which he required them to undertake. He was
wont to travel in time of war at the rate of a hundred miles a day; and
when a river or stream obstructed his progress he did not hesitate to dive
straightway into the water and swim to the opposite shore. On the march
he himself usually slept in his litter, or curled up on the floor of
his chariot, and his food was of the coarsest description. At no time,
indeed, was he a gourmet; and it is related how once he ate without a
murmur some asparagus which had been treated with something very much
like an ointment in mistake for sauce. In later life he drank no wine of
any kind, an abstemiousness which was probably forced upon him by
ill-health; and he who, in his early years, had been notorious for
his dissipations and luxurious living, was, at the time with which we
are now dealing, famous for his abstinence.
When Caesar arrived
in Alexandria he was come direct from his great victory over Pompey at
Pharsalia, and was now absolute master of the Roman world. His
brilliant campaigns in Gaul had raised him to the highest position in
the Republic, and now that Pompey was dead he was without any appreciable
rival. He carried himself with careful dignity, and presumed—quite
correctly—that all eyes were turned upon him. He had, as Mommsen
says, “a pleasing consciousness of his own manly beauty”; and the
thought of his many brilliant victories and successful surmounting of all
obstacles gave him the liveliest satisfaction. No longer was his
elegant frame shaken with sobs at the envious thought of the exploits
of Alexander the Great; but, since his insatiable ambition still urged him
to make use of his opportunities, he was for the moment content to indulge
his passion for conquest by attempting to win the affections of
the charming, omnipotent, and fabulously wealthy Queen of Egypt.
CHAPTER VI.
CLEOPATRA
AND CAESAR IN THE BESIEGED PALACE AT ALEXANDRIA.
|
JULIUS CAESAR |