THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA, QUEEN OF EGYPTPART
I.
CLEOPATRA
AND CAESAR
CHAPTER VIII.
CLEOPATRA
AND CAESAR IN ROME.
Caesar’s movements
during the year after his departure from Egypt do not, for the purpose of this
narrative, require to be recorded in detail. From Alexandria, which
he may have left at about the middle of the first week in July, he sailed
in a fast-going galley across the 500 miles of open sea to Antioch,
arriving at that city a few days before the middle of that month. There he spent a day or two in regulating the affairs of the country,
and presently sailed on to Ephesus, some 600 miles from Antioch, which he
probably reached at the end of the third week of July. At Antioch he
heard that one of his generals, Domitius Calvinus, had been defeated by Pharnakes,
the son of Mithridates the Great, and had been driven out of Pontus, and
it seems that he at once sent three legions to the aid of the
beaten troops with orders to await in north-western Galatia or
Cappadocia for his coming. After a day or two at Ephesus, Caesar travelled
with extreme rapidity to the rendezvous, taking with him only a thousand
cavalry; and arriving at Zela, 500 miles from
Ephesus, on or before August 2nd, at once defeated the rebels. It had been
his custom in Gaul to travel by himself at the rate of a hundred miles a day,
and even with a heavily laden army he covered over forty miles a day, as
for example in his march from Rome to Spain, which he accomplished
in twenty-seven days, and he may thus have joined his main army and
commenced his preparations for the battle of Zela as early as the last days of July. The crushing defeat which he inflicted
on the enemy so shortly after taking over the command was thus a feat of
which he might justly be proud, and it so tickled his vanity that
in writing to a friend of his in Rome, named Amantius, he
described the campaign in the three famous words, Veni, vidi, vici, “I came, I saw, I conquered,” which
so clearly indicate that he was beginning to regard himself as a sort
of swift-footed, irresistible demigod.
Thence he sailed at
last for Italy, and reached Rome at the end of September, almost exactly a year
after his arrival in Egypt. He remained in Rome not more than two and
a half months, and about the middle of December he set out for North Africa,
where Cato, Scipio, and other fugitive friends of Pompey had established a
provisional government with the assistance of Juba, King of Numidia, and
were gathering their forces. Arriving at Hadrumetum on December 28th, he at once began the war, which soon ended in the entire
defeat and extermination of the enemy at Thapsus on April 6th. Of the
famous Pompeian leaders, Faustus Sulla, Lucius Africanus, and Lucius
Julius Caesar were put to death; and Lucius Manlius Torquatus,
Marcus Petreius, Scipio, and Cato committed
suicide; while, according to Plutarch, some fifty thousand men were slain in
the rout. Arriving once more in Rome on July 25th, BC 46, Caesar at
once began to prepare for his Triumph which was to take place in the
following month; and it would seem that he had already sent messengers to
Cleopatra, who had spent a quiet year of maternal interests in Alexandria,
to tell her to come with their baby to Rome.
According to Dion,
the Queen arrived shortly after the Triumph, but several modern writers are of opinion that she reached the capital in time for that event.
I am disposed to think that she made the journey to Italy in company
with the Egyptian prisoners who were to be displayed in the procession,
Princess Arsinoe, the eunuch Ganymedes, and
others, whom Caesar probably sent for in the late spring of this year soon
after the battle of Thapsus. Cleopatra could not have been averse to
witnessing the Triumph, for she must have regarded the late warfare in
Alexandria not so much as a Roman campaign against the Egyptians as an
Egypto-Roman suppression of an Alexandrian insurrection. The serious part
of the campaign could be interpreted as having been waged by Caesar on
behalf of herself and her brother, Ptolemy XIV, against the rebels Achillas and Ganymedes, and
later against this same Ptolemy who had gone over to the enemy; and the
victory might thus be celebrated both by her and by her Roman
champion. It would therefore be fitting that she should be a spectator of
the degradation of Arsinoe and Ganymedes;
and her presence in Rome at this time would obviously be desirable to
her as indicating that she and her country had suffered no defeat. Caesar,
on his part, must have desired her presence that she might witness the
dramatic demonstration of his power and popularity. He had just been
made Dictator for the third time, and this appointment no doubt led him to feel
the security of his position and the imminence of that rise to monarchical
power in which Cleopatra and their son were to play so essential a
part. He was beginning to regard himself as above criticism; and his two great
victories, in Pontus and Numidia, following upon his nine months of regal
life in Egypt, had somewhat turned his head, so that he no longer
considered the advisability of delaying his future consort’s introduction
to the people of Rome. He had yet much to accomplish before he could
ascend with her the throne of the world, but there can be no
question whatsoever that he now desired Cleopatra to begin to make
herself known in the capital; and, this being so, it seems to me to be highly
probable that he would wish her to refute, by her presence as a witness of
his Triumph, any suggestion that she herself was to be included in that
conquered Egypt about which he was so continuously boasting.
The Queen of
Egypt’s arrival in Rome must have caused something of a sensation. Cartloads of
baggage, and numerous agitated eunuchs and slaves doubtless heralded
her approach and followed in her train. Her little brother, Ptolemy XV,
now eleven or twelve years of age, whom she had probably feared to leave
alone in Alexandria lest he should follow the family tradition and
declare himself sole monarch, had been forced to accompany her, and now
added considerably to the commotion of her arrival. The one-year-old heir
of the Caesars and of the Ptolemies, surrounded by guards and fussing
nurses, must, however, have been the cynosure of all eyes; for every Roman
guessed its parentage, knowing as they did the peculiarities of their Dictator.
Cleopatra and her suite were accommodated in Caesar’s transtiberini horti, where a charming house stood
amidst beautiful gardens on the right bank of the Tiber, near the
site of the modern Villa Panfili; and it is to
be presumed that his legal wife Calpurnia was left as mistress of
another establishment within the city.
Caesar’s attitude
towards Cleopatra at this time is not easily defined. It is not to be presumed
that he was still very deeply in love with her; for natures such
as his are totally incapable of continued devotion. During his
residence in North Africa in the winter or early spring, he had been much
attracted by Eunoe, the wife of Bogud, King of Mauretania, and had consoled himself for the
temporary loss of Cleopatra by making her his mistress. Yet the Queen of
Egypt still exercised a very considerable influence over him; and when
she came to Rome it may be supposed that in his transpontine villa they
resumed with some satisfaction the intimate life which they had enjoyed in
the Alexandrian Palace. The first infatuation was over, however,
and both Caesar and Cleopatra must have felt that the basis of their
relationship was now a business agreement designed for their mutual benefit. In
all but name they were married, and it was the fixed intention of
both that their marriage should presently be recognised in Rome as it already had been in Egypt. Caesar, I suppose, took keen
pleasure in the company of the witty, vivacious, and regal girl; and he
was extremely happy to see her lodged in his villa, whither he could
repair at any time of the day or night to enjoy her brilliant and
refreshing society. Their baby son, too, was a source of interest and
enjoyment to him. He was now fourteen months old, and his likeness to
Caesar, so pronounced in after years, must already have been apparent.
Suetonius states that the boy came to resemble his father very closely,
and both in looks and in manners, notably in his walk, showed very clearly
his origin. These resemblances, already able to be observed, must
have delighted Caesar, who took such careful pride in his own
appearance and personality; and they must have formed a bond between
himself and Cleopatra as nearly permanent as anything could be in his
progressive and impatient nature. The Queen, on her part,
probably still took extreme pleasure in the companionship of
the great Dictator, who represented an ideal both of manhood and of social
charm. She must have loved the fertility of his mind, the autocratic power
of his will, and the energy of his personality; and though
premature age and ill-health were beginning to diminish his
aptitude for the role of ardent swain, she found in him, no doubt, a
lovable friend and husband, and one with whom the intimacies of daily
comradeship were a cause of genuine happiness. They were as well suited
to one another as two ambitious characters could be; and, moreover,
they were irrevocably bound to one another by the memory of past
passion not yet altogether in abeyance, by the sympathy of mutual
understanding, by the identity of their worldly interests, and by the
responsibilities of correlative parentage.
The arrival of
Cleopatra in Rome of course caused a scandal, to which Caesar showed his usual
nonchalant indifference. People were sorry for the Dictator’s
legal wife Calpurnia, who, since her marriage in BC 59, had been left
so much alone by her husband; and they were shocked by the open manner in
which the members of the Caesarian party paid court to the Queen. I find
no evidence to justify the modern belief1 that Roman society
was at the time annoyed at the introduction of an eastern lady into its
midst; for everybody must have known that Cleopatra had not one drop of
Egyptian blood in her veins, and must have realised that she was a pure Macedonian Greek, ruling over a city which was
the centre of Greek culture and civilisation.
But at the same time there is evidence to show that the Romans did
not like her. Cicero wrote that he detested her; and Dion says that the
people pitied Princess Arsinoe, her sister, whose degradation was a
consequence of Cleopatra’s success with Caesar. On the whole, however, her
advent did not cause as much stir as might have been expected, for she
seems to have acted with tactful moderation in the capital, and to have
avoided all ostentation.
The Triumph which
Caesar celebrated in August for the amusement of Rome and for his own
enjoyment was fourfold in character, and lasted for four days. Upon
the first day Caesar passed through the streets of Rome in the role of
conqueror of Gaul, and when darkness had fallen ascended the Capitol by
torchlight, forty elephants carrying numerous torch-bearers to right and
left of his chariot. The unfortunate Vercingetorix, who had been held
prisoner for six miserable years, was executed at the conclusion of this
impressive parade—an act of cold-blooded cruelty to an honourable foe (who had voluntarily surrendered to Caesar to save his countrymen from
further punishment) which, at the time, may have been excused on the
ground that such executions were customary at the end of a Triumph.
Upon the second day the conquest of the Dictator’s Egyptian enemies
was celebrated, and the Princess Arsinoe was led through the streets in
chains, together, it would seem, with Ganymedes,
the latter perhaps being executed at the close of the performance, and the
former being spared as a sort of compliment to Cleopatra’s royal house.
In this procession images of Achillas and Potheinos were carried along, and were greeted by the
populace with pleasant jeers; while a statue representing the
famous old Nilus, and a model of Pharos, the
wonder of the world, reminded the spectators of the importance of the
country now under Roman protection. African animals strange to Rome, such
as the giraffe, were led along in the procession, and other wonders from
Egypt and Ethiopia were displayed for the delight of the populace. On
the third day the conquest of Pontus was demonstrated, and a large tablet
with the arrogant words Veni, Vidi, Vici painted upon it was carried before the
conqueror. Finally, on the fourth day the victories in North Africa were
celebrated. In this last procession Caesar caused some offence by
exhibiting captured Roman arms; for the campaign had been fought
against Romans of the Pompeian party, a fact which at first he had
attempted to disguise by stating that the Triumph was celebrated over King
Juba of Numidia, who had sided with the enemy. Still graver offence
was caused, however, when it was seen that vulgar caricatures of Cato and
other of Caesar’s personal enemies were exhibited in the procession; and
the populace must have questioned whether such a jest at the expense of honourable Romans whose bodies were hardly yet cold in
their graves was in perfect taste. It would seem indeed that Caesar’s
judgment in such matters had become somewhat warped during this last year
of military and administrative success, and that he had begun to despise
those who were opposed to him as though they could be but misguided fools.
In this attitude one sees, perhaps, something of that same quality
which led him blandly to accept in Egypt a sort of divinity as by
personal right, and which persuaded him to aim always towards absolutism;
for a man is in no wise normal who considers himself a being meet for worship and
his enemy an object fit only for derision.
There seems, in
fact, little doubt that Caesar was not now in a normal condition of mind. For
some years he had been subject to epileptic seizures, and now
the distressing malady was growing more pronounced and the seizures
were of more frequent occurrence. At the battle of Thapsus he is said to
have been taken ill in this manner; and on other occasions he was
attacked while in discharge of his duties. Such a physical condition may
be accountable for much of his growing eccentricity, and, particularly,
one may attribute to it his increasing faith in his semi-divine powers.
Lombroso goes so far as to say that epilepsy is almost an
essential factor in the personality of one who believes himself to be
a Son of God or Messenger of the Deity. Akhnaton, the
great religious reformer of Ancient Egypt, suffered from epilepsy; the
Prophet Mohammed, to put it bluntly, had fits; and many other religious
reformers suffered in like manner. One cannot tell what hallucinations
and strange manifestations were experienced by Caesar under the influence
of this malady; but one may be sure that to Cleopatra they were clear
indications of his close relationship to the gods, and that in explanation
she did not fail to remind him both of his divine descent and her own
inherited divinity, in which, as her consort, he participated.
Towards the end of
September Caesar caused a sensation in Rome by an act which shows clearly
enough his attitude in this regard. He consecrated a magnificent temple in honour of Venus Genetrix, his divine ancestress; and
there, in the splendour of its marble
sanctuary, he placed a statue of Cleopatra, which had been
executed during the previous weeks by the famous Roman
sculptor, Archesilaus. The significance of this act has been
overlooked by modern historians. In placing in this shrine of Venus, at
the time of its inauguration, a figure of the Queen of Egypt, who in her
own country was the representative of Isis-Aphrodite upon earth, Caesar was
demonstrating the divinity of Cleopatra, and was telling the people, as it
were in everlasting phrases of stone, that the royal girl who now honoured his villa on the banks of the Tiber was no
less than a manifestation of Venus herself. It will presently be seen how,
in after years, Cleopatra went to meet Antony decked in the character of
Venus, and how she was then and on other occasions hailed by the
crowd as the goddess come down to earth; and we shall see how her
mausoleum actually formed part of the temple of that goddess. Both at this
date and in later times she was identified indiscriminately with Isis,
with Venus-Hathor, and with Venus-Aphrodite; and even after her death the
tradition so far survived that one of her famous pearl earrings was cut
into two parts, and, in this form, ultimately ornamented the ears of the
statue of Venus in the Pantheon at Rome. Coins dating from
this period have been found upon which Cleopatra is represented as
Aphrodite, carrying in her arms the baby Caesarion, who is supposed to be
Eros. Caesar was always boasting about the connection of his house
with this goddess; and now the placing of this statue of Cleopatra in
his new temple is, I think, to be interpreted as signifying that he wished
the Roman people to regard the Queen as a “young goddess,” which was the title given
to her by the Greeks and Egyptians in her own country.
It is not
altogether certain that Caesar himself was actually beginning to regard
Cleopatra in this light, though the increasing frequency of his epileptic
attacks, and his consequent hallucinations, may have now made such an
attitude possible even in the case of so hardened a sceptic as was the
Dictator in former years. It seems more reasonable to suppose that he was
at this time attempting to appeal to the imagination of the people
in anticipation of the great coup which he was about to execute; and
that, with this object in view, he allowed himself to be carried along by
a kind of enthusiastic self-deception. He applied no serious analysis to his
opinions in this regard; but, by means of a thoughtless vanity,
he seems to have given rein to an undefined conviction, very suitable
to his great purpose, that he himself was more than human, and that
Cleopatra was not altogether a woman of mortal flesh and blood. Even so
Alexander the Great had partially deluded himself when, on the one
hand, he named himself the son of Jupiter-Ammon, and, on the other, was
careful, once when wounded, to point out that ordinary mortal blood flowed
from his veins. And so, too, Napoleon Bonaparte, during his invasion
of Egypt, declared that he was the Prophet of God, and, in after years,
was willing to describe to a friend, as it were in jest, his vision of
himself as the founder of a new Faith.
The inauguration of
Caesar’s new temple, which was, one may say, the shrine of Cleopatra, was
accompanied by amazing festivities, and the excitable population
of this great city seemed, so to speak, to go mad with enthusiasm.
Great gladiatorial shows were organised, and a
miniature sea-fight upon an artificial lake was enacted for the public
entertainment The majority of the mob was ready enough to accept without
comment the exalted position of the statue of Cleopatra. At this time
in Rome they were very partial to new and foreign deities, celestial or in
the flesh; and actually the worship of the Egyptian goddess Isis, with
whom Cleopatra, as Venus, was so closely connected, had taken firm hold
of their imagination. For the last few years the religion of Isis had
been extremely popular with the lower classes in Rome; and when, in BC 58,
a law which had been made forbidding foreign temples to be located within
a certain area of the city, necessitated the destruction of a temple
of Isis, not one man could be found who would touch the sacred building,
and at last the Consul, Lucius Paullus, was
obliged to tuck up his toga and set to work upon the demolition of the
edifice with his own hands. Thus, this inaugural ceremony, so lavishly organised by Caesar, was a marked success; and in
spite of the indignation of Cicero, the statue of Cleopatra took its permanent
place, with popular consent, in the sanctuary of Venus. No expense was spared
on this or on any other occasion to please the people; and at one
time twenty-two thousand persons partook of a sumptuous meal at
Caesar’s expense. Such a courting of the people was, indeed, necessary at
this time; for although the Dictator was; at the moment practically
omnipotent, and though there was talk of securing him in his office for
a term of ten years, his party had not that solidity which was to be
desired of it. Antony, the right-hand man of the Caesarians, was, at the
time, in some disgrace owing to a quarrel with his master; and there were rumours that he wished to revenge himself by
assassinating Caesar. It was already becoming clear that the Pompeian
party, in spite of Pharsalia and Thapsus, was not yet dead, and still
waited to receive its death-blow. Some of the Dictator’s actions had given
considerable offence, and there were certain people in Rome who made use
of every opportunity to denounce him, and to offer their praise to
the memory of his enemy Cato, whose tragic death after the battle of
Thapsus, and the vilification of whose memory in the recent Triumph, had
caused such a painful impression. Cicero wrote an encomium upon this
unfortunate man, to which Caesar, in self-defence, replied
by publishing his Anti-Cato, which was marked by a tone of bitter and even
venomous animosity. All manner of unpleasant remarks were being made in
better class circles in regard to Cleopatra; and when the Dictator
publicly admitted the parentage of their child, and authorised him to bear the name of Caesar, it began to be whispered that his legal
marriage to the Queen was imminent.
The mixed
population of Rome delighted in political strife, and though Caesar’s position
seemed unassailable, there were always large numbers of persons ready
to make sporadic attacks upon it. There was at this time constant
rioting in the Forum, and an almost continuous restlessness was to be
observed in the streets and public places. In the theatres topical
allusions were received with frantic applause, and even in the
Senate disturbances were not infrequent. The people had always to be humoured, and Caesar was obliged at all times to play
to the gallery. Fortunately for him he possessed in the highest
degree the art of self-advertisement; and his charm of manner, together
with his striking and handsome appearance, made the desired appeal to the
popular fancy. His relationship to Cleopatra stood, on the whole, in his favour amongst the lower classes, who had hailed him
with coarse delight as the terror of the women of Gaul; and the fact that
she was a foreigner mattered not in the least to the heterogeneous
population of Rome. They themselves were largely a composition of the
nations of the earth; and that Caesar’s mistress, and probable future
wife, was a Greek, was to them in no wise a matter for comment. In any
theatre in Rome at that date one might sit amidst an audience of
foreigners to hear a drama given (at Caesar’s expense, by the way)
in language such as Greek, Phoenician, Hebrew, Syrian, or Spanish. To
them Cleopatra must have appeared as a wonderful woman, closely related to
the gods, come from a famous city across the waters to enjoy the society
of their own half-godlike Dictator; and they were quite prepared to
accept her as a pleasant and romantic adjunct to the political situation.
Among the many
reforms which Caesar now introduced there was one which was the direct outcome
of his visit to Egypt. For some time the irregularities of the calendar
had been causing much inconvenience, and the Dictator, very probably at
the Queen of Egypt’s suggestion, now decided to invite some of
Cleopatra’s court astronomers to Rome in order that they
might establish a new system based upon the Egyptian calendar of Eudoxus. Sosigenes was at that
time the most celebrated astronomer in Alexandria, and it was to
him, perhaps at Cleopatra’s advice, that Caesar now turned. After
very careful study it was decided that the present year, BC 46, should be
extended to fifteen months, or 445 days, in order that the nominal date
might be brought round to correspond with the actual season. The
so-called Julian calendar, which was thus established, is that upon which
our present system is based; and it is not without interest to recollect
that but for Cleopatra some entirely different set of months
would now be used throughout the world.
Caesar’s mind at
this time was full of his plans for the conquest of the East. In BC 65 Pompey
had brought to Rome many details regarding the overland route to the
Orient. This route started from the Port of Phasis on the Black Sea,
ascended the river of that name to its source in Iberia, passed over to
the valley of the river Cyrus (Kur), and so came to the coast of the
Caspian Sea. Crossing the water the route thence led along the river
Oxus, which at that time flowed into the Caspian, to its source, and thus
through Cashmir into India.
There must then
have been some talk of carrying the eagles along this highway to the Orient;
and while Caesar was in Egypt it seems probable, as we have
seen, that he had studied the question of leading Roman arms thither
by the great Egyptian trade route. Though this latter road to the
wonderful Orient, however, must have seemed to him, after consideration,
to be very suitable as a channel for the despatch of reinforcements, he appears to have favoured the land route across Asia for his original invasion. This approach to the
East was blocked by the Parthians, and Caesar now announced his
intention of conducting a campaign against these people. There is no
evidence to show that he desired to follow Alexander’s steps beyond
Parthia into India, but I am of opinion that such was his intention.
In view of the facts that the exploits of Alexander the Great had
been studied by him, that he publicly declared his wish to rival them,
that he must have heard from Pompey of the overland route to India with
which the Romans had become acquainted during the war against Mithridates,
that his love of distant conquest and exploration was inordinate, that he
had spent some months in studying conditions in Egypt—a country which was
in those days full of talk of India and of the new trade with the
Orient, that after leaving Egypt he began at once to prepare for a
campaign against the one nation which obstructed the overland route to the
East, that no other part of the known world, save poverty-stricken Germania, remained
to be brought by conquest under Roman sway, that India offered
possibilities of untold wealth, and that Cleopatra herself ultimately made
an attempt to reach those far countries,—the inference seems to me to
be clear that Caesar’s designs upon Parthia were only preliminary to
a contemplated invasion of the East. The riches of those distant lands were
already the talk of the age, and within the lifetime of young men
of this period streams of Indian merchandise, comprising diamonds, precious
stones, silks, spices, and scents, began to pour into Rome and were sold
each year, according to the somewhat exaggerated account of
Pliny, for some forty million pounds sterling. Could Caesar, the
world’s greatest spendthrift, the world’s most eager plunderer, have
resisted the temptation of making a bid for the loot which lay behind
Parthia? Does the fact that he said nothing of such an intention preclude
the possibility that thoughts of this kind now filled his mind, and
formed a topic of conversation between him and the adventurous Cleopatra,
the Ruler of the gateway of the Orient, who herself sent Caesar’s son to
India, as we shall see in due course? Napoleon, when he invaded Egypt
in 1798, said very little about his contemplated attack upon India; but it
was none the less dominant in his mind for that. Egypt and Parthia in
conjunction formed the basis of any attempt to capture the
Orient: Egypt with its route across the seas, and Parthia with
its highroad overland. Are we really to suppose that Caesar did waste
his time in Egypt, or was he then studying the same problem which now
directed his attention to Parthia? By means of his partnership with
Cleopatra he had secured one of the routes to India; and
the merchants of Alexandria, if not his own great imagination, must have
made clear to him the value of his possession in that regard; for ever
since the discovery of the over-sea route to the East that value has been recognised. The Venetian Sanuto in later years told his compatriots of the effect on India which would
follow from the conquest of the Nile Valley; the Comte Daru said that
the possession of Egypt meant the opening up of India; Leibnitz told Louis
XIV of France that an invasion of Egypt would result in the capture of
the Indian highroad; the Duc de Choiseul made a similar declaration
to Louis XV; Napoleon stated in his Memoirs that his object in
attacking Egypt was to lead an army of 60,000 men to India; and at the present day
England holds the Nile Valley as being the gateway of her distant
possessions. On the other side of the picture we see at the present time
the attempts of Russia to establish her power in Northern Persia
and Afghanistan, where once the Parthians of old held sway, in order
to be ready for that day when English power in India shall decline. Was
Caesar, then, straining every nerve only for the possession of the two
gateways of the Orient, or did his gaze penetrate through those
gateways to the vast wealth of the kingdoms beyond? I am disposed to
see him walking with Cleopatra in the gardens of the villa by the Tiber, just
as Napoleon paced the parks of Passeriano, “frequently
betraying by his exclamations the gigantic thoughts of his
unlimited ambition,” as Lacroix tells us of the French conqueror.
Such dreams,
however, were rudely interrupted by the news that the Pompeian party had
gathered its forces in Spain; and Caesar was obliged to turn his attention
to that part of the world. In the winter of BC 46, therefore, he set out
for the south-west, impatient at the delay which the new campaign
necessitated in his great schemes. He was in no mood to brook any
opposition in Rome, and before leaving the capital he arranged that he
should be made Consul without a colleague for the ensuing year BC 45, as
well as Dictator, thus giving himself absolutely autocratic power. On his
way to Spain he sent a despatch to Rome,
appointed eight praefecti urbi with full powers to act in his name,
thus establishing a form of cabinet government which should entirely
over-ride the wishes of the Senate and of the people; and in this manner
he secured the political situation to his own advantage. Naturally there
was a very great outcry against this high-handed action; but Caesar
was far too deeply occupied by his vast schemes, and far too annoyed by
this Spanish interruption of his course towards the great goal of his
ambitions, to pay much attention to the outraged feelings of his political opponents.
The enemy in Spain
were led by the two sons of the great Pompey, but at the battle of Munda,
fought on March 17, BC 45, they were entirely defeated with a loss of
some thirty thousand men. The elder of the two leaders, Cnaeus Pompeius, who was said to have once been a
suitor for Cleopatra’s heart, was killed shortly after the battle, but the
younger, Sextus, escaped. Caesar then returned to Rome, being met outside
the capital by Antony, with whom he was reconciled; and in the
early summer he celebrated his Triumph. In this he offended a number
of persons, owing to the fact that his victory had been won over his
fellow-countrymen, whose defeat, therefore, ought not to have been the
cause of more than a silent satisfaction. After Pharsalia Caesar had
celebrated no triumph, since Romans had there fought Romans; and, indeed,
as Plutarch says, “ he had seemed rather to be ashamed of the action than
to expect honour from it” But now he had come to
feel that he himself was Rome, and that his enemies were not simply
opposed to his party but were in arms against the State.
Knowing now that
the Pompeians were at last crushed, Caesar decided to
attempt to appease any ill-feeling directed against himself by the friends
of the fallen party; and for this purpose he caused the statues
of Pompey the Great, which had been removed from their pedestals, to
be replaced; and furthermore, he pardoned, and even gave office to,
several leaders of the Pompeian party, notably to Brutus and Cassius, who
afterwards were ranked amongst his murderers. He then settled down in
Rome to prepare for his campaign in the East, and, in the meantime, to put
into execution the many administrative reforms which were maturing in his
restless brain. It appears that he lived for the most part of this time in
the house of which his wife Calpurnia was mistress; but there can be
little doubt that he was a constant visitor at his transpontine villa, and
that he spent all his spare hours there in the society of Cleopatra, who
remained in Rome until his death.
CHAPTER IX.
THE
FOUNDATIONS OF THE EGYPTO-ROMAN MONARCHY.
|
Pietro da Cortona, Caesar offers the throne of Egyp to Cleopatra after his victory over Ptolemy XIII
|