I. IN the course of his sixteenth year [c. 85/84 B.C.] he lost his father. In
the next consulate, having previously been nominated priest of Jupiter [by Marius and
Cinna, Cos. 86], he broke his engagement with Cossutia, a lady of only equestrian rank,
but very wealthy, who had been betrothed to him before he assumed the gown of manhood, and
married Cornelia, daughter of that Cinna who was four times consul, by whom he afterwards
had a daughter Julia; and the dictator Sulla could by no means force him to put away his
wife. Therefore besides being punished by the loss of his priesthood, his wife's dowry,
and his family inheritances, Caesar was held to be one of the opposite party. He was
accordingly forced to go into hiding, and though suffering from a severe attack of quartan
ague, to change from one covert to another almost every night, and save himself from
Sulla's detectives by bribes. But at last, through the good offices of the Vestal virgins
and of his near kinsmen, Mamercus Aemilius and Aurelius Cotta, he obtained forgiveness.
Everyone knows that when Sulla had long held out against the most devoted and eminent men
of his party who interceded for Caesar, and they obstinately persisted, he at last gave
way and cried, either by divine inspiration or a shrewd forecast: 'Have your way and take
him; only bear in mind that the man you are so eager to save will one day deal the death
blow to the cause of the aristocracy, which you have joined with me in upholding; for in
this Caesar there is more than one Marius.'
II. He served his first campaign in Asia on the personal staff of Marcus
Thermus, governor of the province [81 BC]. Being sent by Thermus to Bithynia, to fetch a
fleet, he dawdled so long at the court of Nicomedes that he was suspected of improper
relations with the king; and he lent color to this scandal by going back to Bithynia a few
days after his return, with the alleged purpose of collecting a debt for a freedman, one
of his dependents. During the rest of the campaign he enjoyed a better reputation, and at
the storming of Mytilene [80 BC] Thermus awarded him the civic crown [a chaplet of oak
leaves, given for saving the life of a fellow-citizen, the highest military award of the
Roman state].
III. He served too under Servilius Isauricus in Cilicia, but only for a short
time; for learning of the death of Sulla, and at the same time hoping to profit by a
counter-revolution which Marcus Lepidus was setting on foot, he hurriedly returned to Rome
[78 BC]. But he did not make common cause with Lepidus, although he was offered highly
favorable terms, through lack of confidence both in that leader's capacity and in the
outlook, which he found less promising than he had expected.
IV. Then, after the civil disturbance had been quieted, he brought a charge of
extortion against Cornelius Dolabella, an ex-consul who had been honored with a triumph
[77 BC]. On the acquittal of Dolabella, Caesar determined to withdraw to Rhodes, to escape
from the ill-will which he had incurred, and at the same time to rest and have leisure to
study under Apollonius Molo, the most eminent teacher of oratory of that time. While
crossing to Rhodes [74 BC], after the winter season had already begun, he was taken by
pirates near the island of Pharmacussa and remained in their custody for nearly forty days
in a state of intense vexation, attended only by a single physician and two body-servants;
for he had sent off his travelling companions and the rest of his attendants at the
outset, to raise money for his ransom. Once he was set on shore on payment of fifty
talents, he did not delay then and there to launch a fleet and pursue the departing
pirates, and the moment they were in his power to inflict on them the punishment which he
had often threatened when joking with them. He then proceeded to Rhodes, but as
Mithridates was devastating the neighboring regions, he crossed over into Asia, to avoid
the appearance of inaction when the allies of the Roman people were in danger. There he
levied a band of auxiliaries and drove the king's prefect from the province, thus holding
the wavering and irresolute states to their allegiance.
V. While serving as military tribune, the first office which was conferred on
him by vote of the people after his return to Rome, he ardently supported the leaders in
the attempt to re-establish the authority of the tribunes of the commons, the extent of
which Sulla had curtailed. Furthermore, through a bill proposed by one Plotius [70 B.C.],
he effected the recall of his wife's brother Lucius Cinna, as well as of the others who
had taken part with Lepidus in his revolution and after the consul's death had fled to
Sertorius; and he personally spoke in favor of the measure.
VI. When quaestor [67 B.C.], he pronounced the customary orations from the
rostra in praise of his aunt Julia and his wife Cornelia, who had both died. And in the
eulogy of his aunt he spoke in the following terms of her paternal and maternal ancestry
and that of his own father: "The family of my aunt Julia is descended by her mother
from the kings, and on her father's side is akin to the immortal Gods; for the Marcii
Reges (her mother's family name) go back to Ancus Marcius, and the Julii, the family of
which ours is a branch, to Venus. Our stock therefore has at once the sanctity of kings,
whose power is supreme among mortal men, and the claim to reverence which attaches to the
Gods, who hold sway over kings themselves." In place of Cornelia he took to wife
Pompeia, daughter of Quintus Pompeius and granddaughter of Lucius Sulla. But he afterward
divorced her [62 B.C.], suspecting her of adultery with Publius Clodius; and in fact the
report that Clodius had gained access to her in woman's garb during a public religious
ceremony was so persistent, that the senate decreed that the pollution of the sacred rites
be judicially investigated.
VII. As quaestor it fell to his lot to serve in Hispania Ulterior. When he was
there, while making the circuit of the towns, to hold court under commission from the
praetor, he came to Gades, and noticing a statue of Alexander the Great in the temple of
Hercules, he heaved a sigh, and as if out of patience with his own incapacity in having as
yet done nothing noteworthy at a time of life when Alexander had already brought the world
to his feet, he straightway asked for his discharge, to grasp the first opportunity for
greater enterprises at Rome. Furthermore, when he was dismayed by a dream the following
night (for he thought that he had offered violence to his mother) the soothsayers inspired
him with high hopes by their interpretation, which was that he was destined to rule the
world, since the mother whom he had seen in his power was none other than the earth, which
is regarded as the common parent of all mankind.
VIII. Departing therefore before his term was over, he went to the Latin
colonies which were in a state of unrest and meditating a demand for citizenship [those
towns beyond the Po River, such as Verona, Comum, and Cremona, wished to obtain the rights
of citizenship, which had been given to many of the Italian towns at the close of the
Social War of 90-88 B.C.] and he might have spurred them on to some rash act, had not the
consuls, in anticipation of that very danger, detained there for a time the legions which
had been enrolled for service in Cilicia.
IX. For all that he presently made a more daring attempt at Rome; for a few days
before he entered upon his aedileship he was suspected of having made a conspiracy with
Marcus Crassus, an ex-consul, and likewise with Publius Sulla and Lucius Autronius, who,
after their election to the consulship, had been found guilty of corrupt practices [65
B.C.]. The design was to set upon the senate at the opening of the year and put to the
sword as many as they thought good; then Crassus was to usurp the dictatorship, naming
Caesar as his master of horse, and when they had organized the state according to their
pleasure, the consulship was to be restored to Sulla and Autronius. This plot is mentioned
by Tanusius Geminus in his History, by Marcus Bibulus in his edicts, and by Gaius
Curio the elder in his speeches. Cicero too seems to hint at it in a letter to Axius,
where he says that Caesar in his consulship established the despotism which he had had in
mind when he was aedile. Tanusius adds that Crassus, either conscience-stricken or moved
by fear, did not appear on the day appointed for the massacre, and that therefore Caesar
did not give the signal which it had been agreed that he should give; and Curio says that
the arrangement was that Caesar should let his toga fall from his shoulder. Not only
Curio, but Marcus Actorius Naso as well declare that Caesar made another plot with Gnaeus
Piso, a young man to whom the province of Hispania had been assigned unasked and out of
the regular order, because he was suspected of political intrigues at Rome; that they
agreed to rise in revolt at the same time, Piso abroad and Caesar at Rome, aided by the
Ambrani and the peoples beyond the Po; but that Piso's death brought both their designs to
naught.
X. When aedile [65 B.C.], Caesar decorated not only the Comitium and the Forum
with its adjacent basilicas, but the Capitol as well, building temporary colonnades for
the display of a part of his material. He exhibited combats with wild beasts and
stageplays too, both with his colleague and independently. The result was that Caesar
alone took all the credit even for what they spent in common, and his colleague Marcus
Bibulus openly said that his was the fate of Pollux: "For," said he, "just
as the temple erected in the Forum to the twin brethren, bears only the name of Castor, so
the joint liberality of Caesar and myself is credited to Caesar alone." Caesar gave a
gladiatorial show besides, but with somewhat fewer pairs of combatants than he had
purposed; for the huge band which he assembled from all quarters so terrified his
opponents, that a bill was passed limiting the number of gladiators which anyone was to be
allowed to keep in the city.
XI. Having won the goodwill of the masses, Caesar made an attempt through some
of the tribunes to have the charge of Egypt given him by a decree of the commons, seizing
the opportunity to ask for so irregular an appointment because the citizens of Alexandria
had deposed their king, who had been named by the senate an ally and friend of the Roman
people, and their action was generally condemned. He failed however because of the
opposition of the Optimates [a political faction among the Roman nobiles];
wishing therefore to impair their prestige in every way he could, he restored the trophies
commemorating the victories of Gaius Marius over Jugurtha and over the Cimbri and Teutoni,
which Sulla had long since demolished. Furthermore in conducting prosecutions for murder,
he included in the number of murderers even those who had received moneys from the public
treasury during the proscriptions for bringing in the heads of Roman citizens, although
they were expressly exempted by the Cornelian laws.
XII. He also bribed a man to bring a charge of high treason against Gaius
Rabirius, who some years before, had rendered conspicuous service to the senate in
repressing the seditious designs of the tribune Lucius Saturninus; and when he had been
selected by lot to sentence the accused, he did so with such eagerness, that when Rabirius
appealed to the people, nothing was so much in his favor as the bitter hostility of his
judge.
XIII. After giving up hope of the special commission, he announced his candidacy
for the office of pontifex maximus, resorting to the most lavish bribery. Thinking on the
enormous debt which he had thus contracted, he is said to have declared to his mother on
the morning of the election, as she kissed him when he was starting for the polls, that he
would never return except as pontifex. And in fact he so decisively defeated two very
strong competitors (for they were greatly his superiors in age and rank), that he polled
more votes in their tribes than were cast for both of them in all the tribes.
XIV. When the conspiracy of Catiline was detected [63 B.C.], and all the rest of
the senate favored inflicting the extreme penalty on those implicated in the plot, Caesar,
who was now praetor elect, alone proposed that their goods be confiscated and that they be
imprisoned each in a separate town. Nay, more, he inspired such fear in those who favored
severer measures, by picturing the hatred which the Roman commons would feel for them for
all future time, that Decimus Silanus, consul elect, was not ashamed to give a milder
interpretation to his proposal (since it would have been humiliating to change it)
alleging that it had been understood in a harsher sense than he intended. Caesar would
have prevailed too, for a number had already gone over to him, including Cicero, the
consul's brother, had not the address of Marcus Cato kept the wavering senate in line. Yet
not even then did he cease to delay the proceedings, but only when an armed troop of Roman
knights that stood on guard about the place threatened him with death as he persisted in
his headstrong opposition. They even drew their swords and made such passes at him that
his friends who sat next him forsook him, while a few had much ado to shield him in their
embrace or with their robes. Then, in evident fear, he not only yielded the point, but for
the rest of the year kept aloof from the House.
XV. On the first day of his praetorship [62 B.C.] he called upon Quintus Catulus
to render an account to the people touching the restoration of the CapitoI, proposing a
bill for turning over the commission to another [namely, Gnaeus Pompeius]. But he withdrew
the measure, since he could not cope with the united opposition of the optimates,
seeing that they had at once dropped their attendance on the newly elected consuls and
hastily gathered in throngs, resolved on an obstinate resistance.
XVI. Nevertheless, when Caecilius Metellus, tribune of the commons, brought
forward some bills of a highly seditious nature in spite of the veto of his colleagues,
Caesar abetted him and espoused his cause in the stubbornest fashion, until at last both
were suspended from the exercise of their public functions by a decree of the senate. Yet
in spite of this Caesar had the audacity to continue in office and to hold court, but when
he learned that some were ready to stop him by force of arms, he dismissed his lictors,
laid aside his robe of office, and slipped off privily to his house, intending to remain
in retirement because of the state of the times. Indeed, when the populace on the
following day flocked to him quite of their own accord, and with riotous demonstrations
offered him their aid in recovering his position, he held them in check. Since this action
of his was wholly unexpected, the senate, which had been hurriedly convoked to take action
about that very gathering, publicly thanked him through its leading men; then summoning
him to the House and lauding him in the strongest terms, they rescinded their former
decree and restored him to his rank.
XVII. He again fell into danger by being named among the accomplices of
Catiline, both before the commissioner [quaesitor] Novius Niger by an informer
called Lucius Vettius and in the senate by Quintus Curius, who had been voted a sum of
money from the public funds as the first to disclose the plans of the conspirators. Curius
alleged that his information came directly from Catiline, while Vettius actually offered
to produce a letter to Catiline in Caesar's hand writing. But Caesar, thinking that such
an indignity could in no wise be endured, showed by appealing to Cicero's testimony that
he had of his own accord reported to the consul certain details of the plot, and thus
prevented Curius from getting the reward. As for Vettius, after his bond was declared
forfeit and his goods seized, he was roughly handled by the populace assembled before the
rostra, and all but torn to pieces. Caesar then put him in prison, and Novius the
commissioner went there too, for allowing an official of superior rank to be arraigned
before his tribunal.
XVIII. Being allotted the province of Hispania Ulterior [61 B.C.] after his
praetorship, Caesar got rid of his creditors, who tried to detain him, by means of
sureties and contrary both to precedent and law was on his way before the provinces were
provided for [i.e., without waiting for the decrees of the senate which formally
confirmed the appointments of the new governors, and provided them with funds and
equipment]; possibly through fear of a private impeachment or perhaps to respond more
promptly to the entreaties of our allies for help. After restoring order in his province,
he made off with equal haste, and without waiting for the arrival of his successor, to sue
at the same time for a triumph and the consulship. But inasmuch as the day for the
elections had already been announced and no account could be taken of Caesar's candidacy
unless he entered the city as a private citizen, and since his intrigues to gain exemption
from the laws met with general protest, he was forced to forgo the triumph, to avoid
losing the consulship.
XIX. [60 B.C.] Of the two other candidates for this office, Lucius Lucceius and
Marcus Bibulus, Caesar joined forces with the former, making a bargain with him that since
Lucceius had less influence but more funds, he should in their common name promise largess
to the electors from his own pocket. When this became known, the optimates
authorized Bibulus to promise the same amount, being seized with fear that Caesar would
stick at nothing when he became ohief magistrate, if he had a colleague who was heart and
soul with him. Many of them contributed to the fund, and even Cato did not deny that
bribery under such circumstances was for the good of the commonwealth. So Caesar was
chosen consul with Bibulus. With the same motives the optimates took care that
provinces of the smallest importance should be assigned to the newly elected consuls; that
is, mere woods and pastures [It seems to designate provinces where the duties of the
governor would be confined to guarding the mountain-pastures and keeping the woods free
from bandits. The senate would not run the risk of letting Caesar secure a province
involving the command of an army]. Thereupon Caesar, especially incensed by this slight,
by every possible attention courted the goodwill of Gnaeus Pompeius, who was at odds with
the senate because of its tardiness in ratifying his acts after his victory over king
Mithridates [in the Third Mithridatic War]. He also patched up a peace between Pompeius
and Marcus Crassus, who had been enemies since their consulship, which had been one of
constant wrangling. Then [60 B.C.] he so made a compact with both of them, that no step
should be taken in public affairs which did not suit any one of the three.
XX. Caesar's very first enactment after becoming consul was, that the
proceedings both of the senate and of the people should day by day be compiled and
published. He also revived a by-gone custom, that during the months when he did not have
the fasces an orderly should walk before him, while the lictors followed him. He
brought forward an agrarian law too, and when his colleague announced adverse omens
[Business could be interrupted or postponed at Rome by the announcement of an augur or a
magistrate that he had seen a flash of lightning or some other adverse sign; sometimes an
opponent merely announced that he would 'watch the skies' for such omens], he resorted to
arms and drove him from the Forum; and when next day Bibulus made complaint in the senate
and no one could be found who ventured to make a motion, or even to express an opinion
about so high-handed a proceeding (although decrees had often been passed touching less
serious breaches of the peace), Caesar's conduct drove him to such a pitch of desperation,
that from that time until the end of his term he did not leave his house, but merely
issued proclamations announcing adverse omens.
From that time on Caesar managed all the affairs of state alone and after his own
pleasure; so that sundry witty fellows, pretending by way of jest to sign and seal
testamentary documents, wrote "Done in the consulship of Julius and Caesar,"
instead of 'Bibulus and Caesar," writing down the same man twice, by name and by
surname. Presently too the following verses were on everyone's lips:
"In Caesar's year, not Bibulus', an act took place of late;
For naught do I remember done in Bibulus' consulate."
The plain called Stellas, which had been devoted to public uses by the men of
by-gone days, and the Campanian territory, which had been reserved to pay revenues for the
aid of the government, he divided without casting lots [through a special commission of
twenty men] among twenty thousand citizens who had three or more children each. When the
publicans asked for relief, he freed them from a third part of their obligation, and
openly warned them in contracting for taxes in the future not to bid too recklessly. He
freely granted everything else that anyone took it into his head to ask, either without
opposition or by intimidating anyone who tried to object. Marcus Cato, who tried to delay
proceedings [by making a speech of several hours' duration; Gell. 4.10.8. The senate arose
in a body and escorted Cato to prison, and Caesar was forced to release him], was dragged
from the House by a lictor at Caesar's command and taken off to prison. When Lucius
Lucullus was somewhat too outspoken in his opposition, he filled him with such fear of
malicious prosecution [for his conduct during the Third Mithridatic War] that Lucullus
actually fell on his knees before him. Because Cicero, while pleading in court, deplored
the state of the times, Caesar transferred the orator's enemy Publius Clodius that very
same day from the patricians to the plebeians [59 B.C.], a thing for which Clodius had for
a long time been vainly striving; and that too at the ninth hour [That is, after the close
of the business day, an indication of the haste with which the adoption was rushed
through]. Finally taking action against all the opposition in a body, he bribed an
informer to declare that he had been egged on by certain men to murder Gnaeus Pompeius,
and to come out upon the rostra and name the guilty parties according to a pre-arranged
plot. But when the informer had named one or two to no purpose and not without suspicion
of double-dealing, Caesar, hopeless of the success of his over-hasty attempt, is supposed
to have had him taken off by poison.
XXI. At about the same time he took to wife Calpurnia, daughter of Lucius Piso,
who was to succeed him in the consulship, and affianced his own daughter Julia to Gnaeus
Pompeius, breaking a previous engagement with Servilius Caepio, although the latter had
shortly before rendered him conspicuous service in his contest with Bibulus. And after
this new alliance he began to call upon Pompeius first to give his opinion in the senate,
although it had been his habit to begin with Crassus, and it was the rule for the consul
in calling for opinions to continue throughout the year the order which he had established
on the Kalends of January.
XXII. Backed therefore by his father-in-law and son-in-law, out of all the
numerous provinces he made Gallia his choice, as the most likely to enrich him and furnish
suitable material for triumphs. At first, it is true, by the bill of Vatinius he received
only Gallia Cisalpina with the addition of Illyricum; but presently he was assigned Gallia
Comata as well by the senate, since the members feared that even if they should refuse it,
the people would give him this also. Transported with joy at this success, he could not
keep from boasting a few days later before a crowded house, that having gained his heart's
desire to the grief and lamentation of his opponents, he would therefore from that time
mount on their heads [used in a double sense, one sexual]; and when someone insultingly
remarked that that would be no easy matter for any woman, he replied in the same vein that
Semiramis too had been queen in Syria and the Amazons in days of old had held sway over a
great part of Asia.
XXIII. When at the close of his consulship the praetors Gaius Memmius and Lucius
Domitius moved an inquiry into his conduct during the previous year, Caesar laid the
matter before the senate; and when they failed to take it up, and three days had been
wasted in fruitless wrangling, went off to his province. Whereupon his quaestor was at
once arraigned on several counts, as a preliminary to his own impeachment. Presently he
himself too was prosecuted by Lucius Antistius, tribune of the commons, and it was only by
appealing to the whole college that he contrived not to be brought to trial, on the ground
that he was absent on public service. Then to secure himself for the future, he took great
pains always to put the magistrates for the year under personal obligation, and not to aid
any candidates or suffer any to be elected, save such as guaranteed to defend him in his
absence. And he did not hesitate in some cases to exact an oath to keep this pledge or
even a written contract.
XXIV. [55 B.C.] When, however, Lucius Domitius, candidate for the consulship,
openly threatened to effect as consul what he had been unable to do as praetor, and to
take his armies from him, Caesar compelled Pompeius and Crassus to come to Luca, a city in
his province, where he prevailed on them to stand for a second consulship, to defeat
Domitius; and he also succeeded through their influence in having his term as governor of
Gallia made five years longer. Encouraged by this, he added to the legions which he had
received from the state others at his own cost, one actually composed of men of Gallia
Transalpina and bearing a Gallic name too (for it was called Alauda [A Celtic word
meaning a crested lark (Plin. N.H. 11.37) which was the device on the helmets of
the legion]), which he trained in the Roman tactics and equipped with Roman arms; and
later on he gave every man of it citizenship. After that he did not let slip any pretext
for war, however unjust and dangerous it might be, picking quarrels as well with allied,
as with hostile and barbarous nations; so that once the senate decreed that a commission
be sent to inquire into the condition of the Gallic provinces, and some even recommended
that Caesar be handed over to the enemy. But as his enterprises prospered, thanksgivings
were appointed in his honor oftener and for longer periods than for anyone before his
time.
XXV. [58-49 B.C.] During the nine years of his command this is in substance what
he did. All that part of Gallia which is bounded by the Pyrenees, the Alps and the
Cévennes, and by the Rhine and Rhone rivers, a circuit of some 3,200 miles [Roman
measure, about 3,106 English miles], with the exception of some allied states which had
rendered him good service, he reduced to the form of a province; and imposed upon it a
yearly tribute of 40,000,000 sesterces. He was the first Roman to build a bridge and
attack the Germans beyond the Rhine; and he inflicted heavy losses upon them. He invaded
the Britons too, a people unknown before, vanquished them, and exacted moneys and
hostages. Amid all these successes he met with adverse fortune but three times in all: in
Britannia, where his fleet narrowly escaped destruction in a violent storm; in Gallia,
when one of his legions was routed at Gergovia; and on the borders of Germania, when his
lieutenants Titurius and Aurunculeius were ambushed and slain.
XXVI. Within this same space of time he lost first his mother, then his
daughter, and soon afterwards his grandchild. Meanwhile, as the community was aghast at
the murder of Publius Clodius, the senate had voted that only one consul should be chosen,
and expressly named Gnaeus Pompeius. When the tribunes planned to make him Pompeius'
colleague, Caesar urged them rather to propose to the people that he be permitted to stand
for a second consulship without coming to Rome, when the term of his governorship drew
near its end, to prevent his being forced for the sake of the office to leave his province
prematurely and without finishing the war. On the granting of this, aiming still higher
and flushed with hope, he neglected nothing in the way of lavish expenditure or of favors
to anyone, either in his public capacity or privately. He began a forum with the proceeds
of his spoils, the ground for which cost more than a hundred million sesterces. He
announced a combat of gladiators and a feast for the people in memory of his daughter, a
thing quite without precedent. To raise the expectation of these events to the highest
possible pitch, he had the material for the banquet prepared in part by his own household,
although he had let contracts to the markets as well. He gave orders too that whenever
famous gladiators fought without winning the favor of the people [when ordinarily they
would be put to death], they should be rescued by force and kept for him. He had the
novices trained, not in a gladiatorial school by professionals, but in private houses by
Roman knights and even by senators who were skilled in arms, earnestly beseeching them, as
is shown by his own letters, to give the recruits individual attention and personally
direct their exercises. He doubled the pay of the legions for all time. Whenever grain was
plentiful, he distributed it to them without stint or measure, and now and then gave each
man a slave from among the captives.
XXVII. Moreover, to retain his relationship and friendship with Pompeius, Caesar
offered him his sister's granddaughter Octavia in marriage, although she was already the
wife of Gaius Marcellus, and asked for the hand of Pompeius' daughter, who was promised to
Faustus Sulla. When he had put all Pompeius' friends under obligation, as well as the
great part of the senate, through loans made without interest or at a low rate, he
lavished gifts on men of all other classes, both those whom he invited to accept his
bounty and those who applied to him unasked, including even freedmen and slaves who were
special favorites of their masters or patrons. In short, he was the sole and ever ready
help of all who were in legal difficulties or in debt and of young spendthrifts, excepting
only those whose burden of guilt or of poverty was so heavy, or who were so given up to
riotous living, that even he could not save them; and to these he declared in the plainest
terms that what they needed was a civil war.
XXVIII. He took no less pains to win the devotion of princes and provinces all
over the world, offering prisoners to some by the thousand as a gift, and sending
auxiliary troops to the aid of others whenever they wished, and as often as they wished,
without the sanction of the senate or people, besides adorning the principal cities of
Asia and Graecia with magnificent public works, as well as those of Italia and the
provinces of Gallia and Hispania. At last [51 B.C.], when all were thunder-struck at his
actions and wondered what their purpose could be, the consul Marcus Claudius Marcellus,
after first making proclamation that he purposed to bring before the senate a matter of
the highest public moment, proposed that a successor to Caesar be appointed before the end
of his term, on the ground that the war was ended, peace was established, and the
victorious army ought to be disbanded; also that no account be taken of Caesar at the
elections, unless he were present, since Pompeius' subsequent action [i.e., in
correcting the bill after it had been passed and filed, as explained in the following
sentence] had not annulled the decree of the people. And it was true that when Pompeius
proposed a bill touching the privileges of officials, in the clause where he debarred
absentees from candidacy for office he forgot to make a special exception in Caesar's
case, and did not correct the oversight until the law had been inscribed on a tablet of
bronze and deposited in the treasury. Not content with depriving Caesar of his provinces
and his privilege, Marcellus also moved that the colonists whom Caesar had settled in
Novum Comum by the bill of Vatinius should lose their citizenship, on the ground that it
had been given from political motives and was not authorized by the law.
XXIX. Greatly troubled by these measures, and thinking, as they say he was often
heard to remark, that now that he was the leading man of the state, it was harder to push
him down from the first place to the second than it would be from the second to the
lowest, Caesar stoutly resisted Marcellus, partly through vetoes of the tribunes and
partly through the other consul, Servius Sulpicius. When next year Gaius Marcellus, who
had succeeded his cousin Marcus as consul, tried the same thing, Caesar by a heavy bribe
secured the support of the other consul, Aemilius Paulus, and of Gaius Curio, the most
reckless of the tribunes. But seeing that everything was being pushed most persistently,
and that even the consuls elect were among the opposition, he sent a written appeal to the
senate, not to take from him the privilege which the people had granted, or else to compel
the others in command of armies to resign also; feeling sure, it was thought, that he
could more readily muster his veterans as soon as he wished, than Pompeius his newly
levied troops. He further proposed a compromise to his opponents, that after giving up
eight legions and Gallia Transalpina, he be allowed to keep two legions and Gallia
Cisalpina, or at least one legion and Illyricum, until he was elected consul.
XXX. But when the senate declined to interfere, and his opponents declared that
they would accept no compromise in a matter affecting the public welfare, he crossed to
Gallia Citerior, and after hearing all the legal cases, halted at Ravenna, intending to
resort to war if the senate took any drastic action against the tribunes of the commons
who interposed vetoes in his behalf. Now this was his excuse for the civil war, but it is
believed that he had other motives. Gnaeus Pompeius used to declare that since Caesar's
own means were not sufficient to complete the works which he had planned, nor to do all
that he had led the people to expect on his return, he desired a state of general unrest
and turmoil. Others say that he dreaded the necessity of rendering an account for what he
had done in his first consulship contrary to the auspices and the laws, and regardless of
vetoes; for Marcus Cato often declared, and took oath too, that he would impeach Caesar
the moment he had disbanded his army. It was openly said too that if he was out of office
on his return, he would be obliged, like Milo [who had been accused and tried for the
murder of Publius Clodius], to make his defence in a court hedged about by armed men. The
latter opinion is the more credible one in view of the assertion of Asinius Pollio, that
when Caesar at the battle of Pharsalus saw his enemies slain or in flight, he said, word
for word: "They would have it so. Even I, Gaius Caesar, after so many great deeds,
should have been found guilty, if I had not turned to my army for help." Some think
that habit had given him a love of power, and that weighing the strength of his
adversaries against his own, he grasped the opportunity of usurping the despotism which
had been his heart's desire from early youth. Cicero too was seemingly of this opinion,
when he wrote in the third book of his De Officiis [3.82; cf. 1.26] that
Caesar ever had upon his lips these lines of Euripides [Phoenissae, 524ff.], of
which Cicero himself adds a version:
'If wrong may e'er be right, for a throne's sake
Were wrong most right:---be God in all else feared.'
XXXI. [49 B.C.] Accordingly, when word came that the veto of the tribunes had
been set aside and they themselves had left the city, he at once sent on a few cohorts
with all secrecy, and then, to disarm suspicion, concealed his purpose by appearing at a
public show, inspecting the plans of a gladiatorial school which he intended building, and
joining as usual in a banquet with a large company. It was not until after sunset that he
set out very privily with a small company, taking the mules from a bakeshop hard by and
harnessing them to a carriage; and when his lights went out and he lost his way, he was
astray for some time, but at last found a guide at dawn and got back to the road on foot
by narrow bypaths. Then, overtaking his cohorts at the river Rubicon, which was the
boundary of his province, he paused for a while, and realizing what a step he was taking,
he turned to those about him and said: 'Even yet we may draw back; but once cross yon
little bridge, and the whole issue is with the sword."
XXXII. As he stood in doubt, this sign was given him. On a sudden there appeared
hard by a being of wondrous stature and beauty, who sat and played upon a reed; and when
not only the shepherds flocked to hear him, but many of the soldiers left their posts, and
among them some of the trumpeters, the apparition snatched a trumpet from one of them,
rushed to the river, and sounding the war-note with mighty blast, strode to the opposite
bank. Then Caesar cried: " Take we the course which the signs of the gods and the
false dealing of our foes point out. The die is cast [ A>Iacta alea est,' inquit'].
XXXIII. Accordingly, crossing with his army, and welcoming the tribunes of the
plebeians, who had come to him after being driven from Rome, he harangued the soldiers
with tears, and rending his robe from his breast besought their faithful service. It is
even thought that he promised every man the estate of an eques, but that came of a
misunderstanding; for since he often pointed to the finger of his left hand as he
addressed them and urged them on, declaring that to satisfy all those who helped him to
defend his honor he would gladly tear his very ring from his hand, those on the edge of
the assembly, who could see him better than they could hear his words, assumed that he
said what his gesture seemed to mean; and so the report went about that he had promised
them the right of the ring and four hundred thousand sesterces as well [The equites
as well as senators had the privilege of wearing a gold ring, and must possess an estate
of 400,000 sesterces].
XXXIV. The sum total of his movements after that is, in their order, as follows:
He overran Umbria, Picenum, and Etruria, took prisoner Lucius Domitius, who had been
irregularly named his successor, and was holding Corfinium with a garrison, let him go
free, and then proceeded along the Adriatic to Brundisium, where Pompeius and the consuls
had taken refuge, intending to cross the sea as soon as might be. After vainly trying by
every kind of hindrance to prevent their sailing, he marched off to Rome, and after
calling the senate together to discuss public business, went to attack Pompeius' strongest
forces, which were in Hispania under command of three of his lieutenants--Marcus Petreius,
Lucius Afranius, and Marcus Varro---saying to his friends before he left "I go to
meet an army without a leader, and I shall return to meet a leader without an army."
And in fact, though his advance was delayed by the siege of Massilia, which had shut its
gates against him, and by extreme scarcity of supplies, he nevertheless quickly gained a
complete victory.
XXXV. [48 B.C.] Returning thence to Rome, he crossed into Macedonia, and after
blockading Pompeius for almost four months behind mighty ramparts, finally routed him in
the battle at Pharsalus, followed him in his flight to Alexandria, and when he learned
that his rival had been slain, made war on King Ptolemy, whom he perceived to be plotting
against his own safety as well; a war in truth of great difficulty, convenient neither in
time nor place, but carried on during the winter season, within the walls of a
well-provisioned and crafty foeman, while Caesar himself was without supplies of any kind
and ill-prepared. Victor in spite of all, he turned over the rule of Egypt to Cleopatra
and her younger brother [47 B.C.], fearing that if he made a province of it, it might one
day under a headstrong governor be a source of revolution. From Alexandria he crossed to
Syria, and from there went to Pontus, spurred on by the news that Pharnaces, son of
Mithridates the Great, had taken advantage of the situation to make war, and was already
flushed with numerous successes; but Caesar vanquished him in a single battle within five
days after his arrival and four hours after getting sight of him, often remarking on
Pompeius' good luck in gaining his principal fame as a general by victories over such
feeble foemen. Then he overcame Scipio and Juba [46 B.C.], who were patching up the
remnants of their party in Africa, and the sons of Pompeius in Spain [45 B C.].
XXXVI. In all the civil wars he suffered not a single disaster except through
his lieutenants, of whom Gaius Curio perished in Africa, Gaius Antonius fell into the
hands of the enemy in Illyricum, Publius Dolabella lost a fleet also off Illyricum, and
Gnaeus Domitius Calvinus an army in Pontus. Personally he always fought with the utmost
success, and the issue was never even in doubt save twice: once at Dyrrachium, where he
was put to flight, and said of Pompeius, who failed to follow up his success, that he did
not know how to use a victory; again in Spain, in the final struggle, when, believing the
battle lost, he actually thought of suicide.
XXXVII. Having ended the wars, he celebrated five triumphs, four in a single
month, but at intervals of a few days, after vanquishing Scipio; and another on defeating
Pompeius' sons. The first and most splendid was the Gallic triumph, the next the
Alexandrian, then the Pontic, after that the African, and finally the Hispanic, each
differing from the rest in its equipment and display of spoils. As he rode through the
Velabrum on the day of his Gallic triumph, the axle of his chariot broke, and he was all
but thrown out; and he mounted the Capitol by torchlight, with forty elephants bearing
lamps on his right and his left. In his Pontic triumph he displayed among the show-pieces
of the procession an inscription of but three words, "I came, I saw, I
conquered," [ 'Veni, vidi, vici'] not indicating the events of the war, as the others
did, but the speed with which it was finished.
XXXVIII. To each and every foot-soldier of his veteran legions he gave
twenty-four thousand sesterces by way of plunder, over and above the two thousand apiece
which he had paid them at the beginning of the civil strife. He also assigned them lands,
but not side by side, to avoid dispossessing any of the former owners. To every man of the
people, besides ten pecks of grain and the same number of pounds of oil, he distributed
the three hundred sesterces which he had promised at first, and one hundred apiece because
of the delay. He also remitted a year's rent in Rome to tenants who paid two thousand
sesterces or less, and in Italy up to five hundred sesterces. He added a banquet and a
dole of meat, and after his Hispanic victory two dinners; for deeming that the former of
these had not been served with a liberality creditable to his generosity, he gave another
five days later on a most lavish scale.
XXXIX. He gave entertainments of divers kinds: a combat of gladiators and also
stage-plays in every ward all over the city, performed too by actors of all languages, as
well as races in the circus, athletic contests, and a sham sea-fight. In the gladiatorial
contest in the Forum Furius Leptinus, a man of praetorian stock, and Quintus Calpenus, a
former senator and pleader at the bar, fought to a finish. A Pyrrhic dance was performed
by the sons of the princes of Asia and Bithynia. During the plays Decimus Laberius, a
Roman eques, acted a farce of his own composition, and having been presented with
five hundred thousand sesterces and a gold ring [in token of his restoration to the rank
of eques, which he forfeited by appearing on the stage], passed from the stage
through the orchestra and took his place in the fourteen rows [the first fourteen rows
above the orchestra, reserved for the equites by the law of L. Roscius Otho,
tribune of the plebeians, in 67 B.C.]. For the races the circus was lengthened at either
end and a broad canal was dug all about it; then young men of the highest rank drove
four-horse and two-horse chariots and rode pairs of horses, vaulting from one to the
other. The game called Troy was performed by two troops, of younger and of older boys.
Combats with wild beasts were presented on five successive days, and last of all there was
a battle between two opposing armies, in which five hundred foot-soldiers, twenty
elephants, and thirty horsemen engaged on each side. To make room for this, the goals were
taken down and in their place two camps were pitched over against each other. The athletic
competitions lasted for three days in a temporary stadium built for the purpose in the
region of the Campus Martius. For the naval battle a pool was dug in the lesser Codeta and
there was a contest of ships of two, three, and four banks of oars, belonging to the
Tyrian and Egyptian fleets, manned by a large force of fighting men. Such a throng flocked
to all these shows from every quarter, that many strangers had to lodge in tents pitched
in the streets or along the roads, and the press was often such that many were crushed to
death, including two senators.
XL. Then turning his attention to the reorganisation of the state, he reformed
the calendar, which the negligence of the pontiffs had long since so disordered, through
their privilege of adding months or days at pleasure, that the harvest festivals did not
come in summer nor those of the vintage in the autumn; and he adjusted the year to the
sun's course by making it consist of three hundred and sixty-five days, abolishing the
intercalary month, and adding one day every fourth year [the year had previously consisted
of 355 days, and the deficiency of about eleven days was made up by inserting an
intercalary month of twenty-two or twenty-three days after February]. Furthermore, that
the correct reckoning of seasons might begin with the next Kalends of January, he inserted
two other months between those of November and December; hence the year in which these
arrangements were made was one of fifteen months, including the intercalary month, which
belonged to that year according to the former custom.
XLI. He filled the vacancies in the senate, enrolled additional patricians, and
increased the number of praetors, aediles, and quaestors, as well as of the minor
officials; he reinstated those who had been degraded by official action of the censors or
found guilty of bribery by verdict of the jurors. He shared the elections with the people
on this basis: that except in the case of the consulship, half of the magistrates should
be appointed by the people's choice, while the rest should be those whom he had personally
nominated. And these he announced in brief notes like the following, circulated in each
tribe: 'Caesar the Dictator to this or that tribe. I commend to you so and so, to hold
their positions by your votes." He admitted to office even the sons of those who had
been proscribed. He limited the right of serving as jurors to two classes, the equestrian
and senatorial orders, disqualifying the third class, the tribunes of the treasury. He
made the enumeration of the people neither in the usual manner nor place, but from street
to street aided by the owners of blocks of houses, and reduced the number of those who
received grain at public expense from three hundred and twenty thousand to one hundred and
fifty thousand. And to prevent the calling of additional meetings at any future time for
purposes of enrolment, he provided that the places of such as died should be filled each
year by the praetors from those who were not on the list.
XLII. Moreover, to keep up the population of the city, depleted as it was by the
assignment of eighty thousand citizens to colonies across the sea, he made a law that no
citizen older than twenty or younger than forty, who was not detained by service in the
army, should be absent from Italia for more than three successive years; that no senator's
son should go abroad except as the companion of a magistrate or on his staff; and that
those who made a business of grazing should have among their herdsmen at least one-third
who were men of free birth. He conferred citizenship on all who practiced medicine at
Rome, and on all teachers of the liberal arts, to make them more desirous of living in the
city and to induce others to resort to it. As to debts, he disappointed those who looked
for their cancellation, which was often agitated, but finally decreed that the debtors
should satisfy their creditors according to a valuation of their possessions at the price
which they had paid for them before the civil war, deducting from the principal whatever
interest had been paid in cash or pledged through bankers; an arrangement which wiped out
about a fourth part of their indebtedness. He dissolved all collegii
[associations], except those of ancient foundation. He increased the penalties for crimes;
and inasmuch as the rich involved themselves in guilt with less hesitation because they
merely suffered exile, without any loss of property, he punished murderers of freemen by
the confiscation of all their goods, as Cicero writes, and others by the loss of one-half.
XLIII. He administered justice with the utmost conscientiousness and strictness.
Those convicted of extortion he even dismissed from the senatorial order. He annulled the
marriage of an ex-praetor, who had married a woman the very day after her divorce,
although there was no suspicion of adultery. He imposed duties on foreign wares. He denied
the use of litters and the wearing of scarlet robes or pearls to all except to those of a
designated position and age, and on set days. In particular, he enforced the law against
extravagance, setting watchmen in various parts of the market, to seize and bring to him
dainties which were exposed for sale in violation of the law; and sometimes he sent his
lictors and soldiers to take from a dining-room any articles which had escaped the
vigilance of his watchmen, even after they had been served.
XLIV. In particular, for the adornment and convenience of the city, also for the
protection and extension of the Empire, he formed more projects and more extensive ones
every day; first of all, to rear a temple to Mars, greater than any in existence, filling
up and levelling the pool in which he had exhibited the sea-fight, and to build a theater
of vast size, sloping down from the Tarpeian Rock; to reduce the civil code to fixed
limites, and of the vast and prolix mass of statutes to include only the best and most
essential in a limited number of volumes; to open to the public the greatest possible
libraries of Greek and Latin books, assigning to Marcus Varro the charge of procuring and
classifying them; to drain the Pomptine marshes; to let out the water from Lake Fucinus;
to make a highway from the Adriatic across the summit of the Apennines as far as the
Tiber; to cut a canal through the Isthmus; to check the Dacians, who had poured into
Pontus and Thrace; then to make war on the Parthians by way of Lesser Armenia, but not to
risk a battle with them until he had first tested their mettle. All these enterprises and
plans were cut short by his death. But before I speak of that, it will not be amiss to
describe briefly his personal appearance, his dress, his mode of life, and his character,
as well as his conduct in civil and military life.
XLV. He is said to have been tall of stature, with a fair complexion, shapely
limbs, a somewhat full face, and keen black eyes; sound of health, except that towards the
end he was subject to sudden fainting fits and to nightmare as well. He was twice attacked
by the falling sickness [morbus comitialis, so-called because an attack was
considered sufficient cause for the postponement of elections, or other public business.
This is thought to have been epilepsy.] during his campaigns. He was somewhat overnice in
the care of his person, being not only carefully trimmed and shaved, but even having
superfluous hair plucked out, as some have charged; while his baldness was a disfigurement
which troubled him greatly, since he found that it was often the subject of the gibes of
his detractors. Because of it he used to comb forward his scanty locks from the crown of
his head, and of all the honors voted him by the senate and people there was none which he
received or made use of more gladly than the privilege of wearing a laurel wreath at all
times. They say, too, that he was remarkable in his dress; that he wore a senator's tunic
[Latus clavus, the broad purple stripe, is also applied to a tunic with the broad
stripe. All senators had the right to wear this; the peculiarity in Caesar's case
consisted in the long fringed sleeve.] with fringed sleeves reaching to the wrist, and
always had a girdle [While a girdle was commonly worn with the ordinary tunic, it was not
usual to wear one with the latus clavus.] over it, though rather a loose one; and
this, they say, was the occasion of Sulla's mot, when he often warned the nobles to
keep an eye on the ill-girt boy.
XLVI. He lived at first in the Subura in a modest house, but after he became
pontifex maximus, in the official residence on the Sacred Way. Many have written that he
was very fond of elegance and luxury; that having laid the foundations of a countryhouse
on his estate at Nemi and finished it at great cost, he tore it all down because it did
not suit him in every particular, although at the time he was still poor and heavily in
debt; and that he carried tesselated and mosaic floors about with him on his campaigns.
XLVII. They say that he was led to invade Britannia by the hope of getting
pearls, and that in comparing their size he sometimes weighed them with his own hand; that
he was always a most enthusiastic collector of gems, carvings, statues, and pictures by
early artists; also of slaves of exceptional figure and training at enormous prices, of
which he himself was so ashamed that he forbade their entry in his accounts.
XLVIII. It is further reported that in the provinces he gave banquets constantly
in two dining halls, in one of which his officers or Greek companions, in the other Roman
civilians and the more distinguished of the provincials reclined at table. He was so
punctilious and strict in the management of his household, in small matters as well as in
those of greater importance, that he put his baker in irons for serving him with one kind
of bread and his guests with another; and he inflicted capital punishment on a favorite
freedman for adultery with the wife of a Roman eques, although no complaint was
made against him.
XLIX. There was no stain on his reputation for chastity except his intimacy with
King Nicomedes, but that was a deep and lasting reproach, which laid him open to insults
from every quarter. I say nothing of the notorious lines of Licinius Calvus:
Whate'er Bithynia had, and Caesar's paramour.
I pass over, too, the invectives of Dolabella and the elder Curio, in which Dolabella
calls him 'the queen's rival, the inner partner of the royal couch,' and Curio, 'the
brothel of Nicomedes and the stew of Bithynia.' I take no account of the edicts of
Bibulus, in which he posted his colleague as 'the queen of Bithynia,' saying that 'of old
he was enamored of a king, but now of a king's estate.' At this same time, so Marcus
Brutus declares, one Octavius, a man whose disordered mind made him somewhat free with his
tongue, after saluting Gnaeus Pompeius as Rex [or 'king'] in a crowded assembly,
greeted Caesar as Regina ["queen"]. But Gaius Memmius makes the direct
charge that he acted as cup-bearer to Nicomedes with the rest of his wantons at a large
dinner-party, and that among the guests were some merchants from Rome, whose names Memmius
gives. Cicero, indeed, is not content with having written in sundry letters that Caesar
was led by the king's attendants to the royal apartments, that he lay on a golden couch
arrayed in purple, and that the virginity of this son of Venus was lost in Bithynia; but
when Caesar was once addressing the senate in defence of Nysa, daughter of Nicomedes, and
was enumerating his obligations to the king, Cicero cried: "No more of that, pray,
for it is well known what he gave you, and what you gave him in turn." Finally, in
his Gallic triumph his soldiers, among the bantering songs which are usually sung by those
who follow the chariot, shouted these lines, which became a by-word:
"All the Gauls did Caesar vanquish, Nicomedes vanquished him;
Lo! now Caesar rides in triumph, victor over all the Gauls,
Nicomedes does not triumph, who subdued the conqueror."
L. That he was unbridled and extravagant in his intrigues is the general
opinion, and that he seduced many illustrious women, among them Postumia, wife of Servius
Sulpicius, Lollia, wife of Aulus Gabinius, Tertulla, wife of Marcus Crassus, and even
Gnaeus Pompeius' wife Mucia. At all events there is no doubt that Pompeius was taken to
task by the elder and the younger Curio, as well as by many others, because through a
desire for power he had afterwards married the daughter of a man on whose account he
divorced a wife who had borne him three children and whom he had often referred to with a
groan as an Aegisthus. But beyond all others Caesar loved Servilia, the mother of Marcus
Brutus, for whom in his first consulship he bought a pearl costing six million sesterces.
During the civil war, too, besides other presents, he knocked down some fine estates to
her in a public auction at a nominal price, and when some expressed their surprise at the
low figure, Cicero wittily remarked: "It's a better bargain than you think, for there
is a third off'---and in fact it was thought that Servilia was prostituting her own
daughter Tertia to Caesar [The word play is on tertia (pars)--- 'third part'---and Tertia,
daughter of Servilia, in a rather low and vulgar sexual jest].
LI. That he did not refrain from intrigues in the provinces is shown in
particular by this couplet, which was also shouted by the soldiers in his Gallic triumph:
'Men of Rome, keep close your consorts, here's a bald adulterer.
Gold in Gallia you spent in dalliance, which you borrowed here in Rome."
LII. He had love affairs with queens too, including Eunoe the Mauretanian, wife
of Bogudes, on whom, as well as on her husband, he bestowed many splendid presents, as
Naso writes; but above all with Cleopatra, with whom he often feasted until daybreak, and
he would have gone through Egypt with her in her state-barge almost to Aethiopia [i.e.,
Kush], had not his soldiers refused to follow him. Finally he called her to Rome and did
not let her leave until he had ladened her with high honors and rich gifts, and he allowed
her to give his name to the child which she bore. In fact, according to certain Greek
writers, this child was very like Caesar in looks and carriage. Marcus Antonius declared
to the senate that Caesar had really acknowledged the boy, and that Gaius Matius, Gaius
Oppius, and other friends of Caesar knew this. Of these Gaius Oppius, as if admitting that
the situation required apology and defence, published a book, to prove that the child whom
Cleopatra fathered on Caesar was not his. Helvius Cinna, tribune of the plebeians,
admitted to several that he had a bill drawn up in due form, which Caesar had ordered him
to propose to the people in his absence, making it lawful for Caesar to marry what wives
he wished, and as many as he wished, 'for the purpose of begetting children' [the words liberorum
quaerendorum causa are a legal formula indicating that the purpose of marriage is to
beget legal heirs]. But to remove all doubt that he had an evil reputation both for
shameless vice and for adultery, I have only to add that the elder Curio in one of his
speeches calls him "every woman's man and every man's woman."
LIII. That he drank very little wine not even his enemies denied. There is a
saying of Marcus Cato that Caesar was the only man who undertook to overthrow the state
when sober. Even in the matter of food Gaius Oppius tells us that he was so indifferent,
that once when his host served stale oil instead of fresh, and the other guests would have
none of it, Caesar partook even more plentifully than usual, not to seem to charge his
host with carelessness or lack of manners.
LIV. Neither when in command of armies nor as a magistrate at Rome did he show a
scrupulous integrity; for as certain men have declared in their memoirs, when he was
proconsul in Hispania, he not only begged money from the allies, to help pay his debts,
but also attacked and sacked some towns of the Lusitanians although they did not refuse
his terms and opened their gates to him on his arrival. In Gallia he pillaged shrines and
temples of the gods filled with offerings, and oftener sacked towns for the sake of
plunder than for any fault. In consequence he had more gold than he knew what to do with,
and offered it for sale throughout Italia and the provinces at the rate of three thousand
sesterces the pound. In his first consulship he stole three thousand pounds of gold from
the Capitol, replacing it with the same weight of gilded bronze. He made alliances and
thrones a matter of barter, for he extorted from Ptolemy alone in his own name and that of
Pompeius nearly six thousand talents, while later on he met the heavy expenses of the
civil wars and of his triumphs and entertainments by the most bare-faced pillage and
sacrilege.
LV. In eloquence and in the art of war he either equalled or surpassed the fame
of their most eminent representatives. After his accusation of Dolabella, he was without
question numbered with the leading advocates. At all events, when Cicero reviews the
orators in his Brutus, he says that he does not see to whom Caesar ought to yield
the palm, declaring that his style is elegant as well as transparent, even grand and in a
sense noble. Again in a letter to Cornelius Nepos he writes thus of Caesar: "Come
now, what orator would you rank above him of those who have devoted themselves to nothing
else? Who has cleverer or more frequent epigrams? Who is either more picturesque or more
choice in diction?" He appears, at least in his youth, to have imitated the manner of
Caesar Strabo, from whose speech entitled Pro Sardis he actually transferred some
passages word for word to a trial address of his own. He is said to have delivered himself
in a high-pitched voice with impassioned action and gestures, which were not without
grace. He left several speeches, including some which are attributed to him on
insufficient evidence. Augustus had good reason to think that the speech Pro Quintus
Metellus was rather taken down by shorthand writers who could not keep pace with his
delivery, than published by Caesar himself; for in some copies I find that even the title
is not Pro Metellus, but, Quam scripsit Metello ["Which he wrote for
Metellus"] although the discourse purports to be from Caesar's lips, defending
Metellus and himself against the charges of their common detractors. Augustus also
questions the authenticity of the address Apud milites quoque in Hispania, although
there are two sections of it, one purporting to have been spoken at the first battle, the
other at the second when Asinius Pollio writes that because of the sudden onslaught of the
enemy, he actually did not have time to make an harangue.
LVI. He left memoirs too of his deeds in the Gallic war and in the civil strife
with Pompeius; for the author of the Alexandrian, African, and Hispanic Wars is unknown;
some think it was Oppius, others Hirtius, who also supplied the final book of the Gallic
War, which Caesar left unwritten. With regard to Caesar's memoirs Cicero, also in the Brutus speaks in the following terms: "He wrote memoirs which deserve the highest praise;
they are naked in their simplicity, straightforward yet graceful, stripped of all
rhetorical adornment, as of a garment; but while his purpose was to supply material to
others, on which those who wished to write history might draw, he haply gratified silly
folk, who will try to use the curling-irons on his narrative, but he has kept men of any
sense from touching the subject." Of these same memoirs Hirtius uses this emphatic
language: "They are so highly rated in the judgment of all men, that he seems to have
deprived writers of an opportunity, rather than given them one; yet our admiration for
this feat is greater than that of others; for they know how well and faultlessly he wrote,
while we know besides how easily and rapidly he finished his task." Asinius Pollio
thinks that they were put together somewhat carelessly and without strict regard for
truth; since in many cases Caesar was too ready to believe the accounts which others gave
of their actions, and gave a perverted account of his own, either designedly or perhaps
from forgetfulness; and he thinks that he intended to rewrite and revise them. He left
besides a work in two volumes De Analogia, the same number of Anti-Catones ['Against
Cato'], in addition to a poem, entitled Iter ['The Journey']. He wrote the first of
these works while crossing the Alps and returning to his army from Gallia Citerior, where
he heard lawsuits; the second about the time of the battle of Munda, and the third in the
course of a twenty-four days' journey from Rome to Hispania Ulterior. Some letters of his
to the senate are also preserved, and he seems to have been the first to reduce such
documents to pages and the form of a note-book [i.e., to book form], whereas
previously consuls and generals sent their reports written right across the sheet [i.e.,
without columns or margins, but across the sheet without rhyme or reason]. There are
also letters of his to Cicero, as well as to his intimates on private affairs, and in the
latter, if he had anything confidential to say, he wrote it in cipher, that is, by so
changing the order of the letters of the alphabet, that not a word could be made out. If
anyone wishes to decipher these, and get at their meaning, he must substitute the fourth
letter of the alphabet, namely D, for A, and so with the others. We also have mention of
certain writings of his boyhood and early youth, such as the Laudes Herculis ["Praises of Hercules"], a tragedy Oedipus, and a Dicta Collectanea ["Collection
of Apophthegms"]; but Augustus forbade the publication of all these minor works in a
very brief and frank letter sent to Pompeius Macer, whom he had selected to set his
libraries in order.
LVII. He was highly skilled in arms and horsemanship, and of incredible powers
of endurance. On the march he headed his army, sometimes on horseback, but oftener on
foot, bareheaded both in the heat of the sun and in rain. He covered great distances with
incredible speed, making a hundred miles a day in a hired carriage and with little
baggage, swimming the rivers which barred his path or crossing them on inflated skins, and
very often arriving before the messengers sent to announce his coming.
LVIII. In the conduct of his campaigns it is a question whether he was more
cautious or more daring, for he never led his army where ambuscades were possible without
carefully reconnoitering the country, and he did not cross to Britannia without making
personal inquiries about the harbors, the course, and the approach to the island. But on
the other hand, when news came that his camp in Germania was beleaguered, he made his way
to his men through the enemies' pickets, disguised as a Gaul. He crossed from Brundisium
to Dyrrachium in winter time, running the blockade of the enemy's fleets; and when the
troops which he had ordered to follow him delayed to do so, and he had sent to fetch them
many times in vain, at last in secret and alone he boarded a small boat at night with his
head muffled up; and he did not reveal who he was, or suffer the helmsman to give way to
the gale blowing in their teeth, until he was all but overwhelmed by the waves.
LIX. No regard for religion ever turned him from any undertaking, or even
delayed him. Though the victim escaped as he was offering sacrifice, he did not put off
his expedition against Scipio and Juba. Even when he had a fall as he disembarked, he gave
the omen a favorable turn by crying: "I hold you fast, Africa." Furthermore, to
make the prophecies ridiculous which declared that the stock of the Scipios was fated to
be fortunate and invincible in that province, he kept with him in camp a contemptible
fellow belonging to the Cornelian family, to whom the nickname Salvito had been given as a
reproach for his manner of life.
LX. He joined battle, not only after planning his movements in advance but on a
sudden opportunity, often immediately at the end of a march, and sometimes in the foulest
weather, when one would least expect him to make a move. It was not until his later years
that he became slower to engage, through a conviction that the oftener he had been victor,
the less he ought to tempt fate, and that he could not possibly gain as much by success as
he might lose by a defeat. He never put his enemy to flight without also driving him from
his camp, thus giving him no respite in his panic. When the issue was doubtful, he used to
send away the horses, and his own among the first, to impose upon his troops the greater
necessity of standing their ground by taking away that aid to flight.
LXI. He rode a remarkable horse, too, with feet that were almost human; for its
hoofs were cloven in such a way as to look like toes. This horse was foaled on his own
place, and since the soothsayers had declared that it foretold the rule of the world for
its master, he reared it with the greatest care, and was the first to mount it, for it
would endure no other rider. Afterwards, too, he dedicated a statue of it before the
temple of Venus Genetrix.
LXII. When his army gave way, he often rallied it single-handed, planting
himself in the way of the fleeing men, laying hold of them one by one, and even catching
them by the throat and forcing them to face the enemy; that, too, when they were in such a
panic that an eagle-bearer made a pass at him with the point [the standard of the legion
was a silver eagle with outstretched wings, mounted on a pole which had a sharp point at
the other end, so that it could be set firmly in the ground] as he tried to stop him,
while another left the standard in Caesar's hand when he would hold him back.
LXIII. His presence of mind was no less renowned, and the instances of it will
appear even more striking. After the battle of Pharsalus, when he had sent on his troops
and was crossing the strait of the Hellespont in a small passenger boat, he met Lucius
Cassius, of the hostile party, with ten armored ships, and made no attempt to escape, but
went to meet Cassius and actually urged him to surrender; and Cassius sued for mercy and
was taken on board.
LXIV. At Alexandria, while assaulting a bridge, he was forced by a sudden sally
of the enemy to take to a small skiff; when many others threw themselves into the same
boat, he plunged into the sea, and after swimming for two hundred paces, got away to the
nearest ship, holding up his left hand all the way, so as not to wet some papers which he
was carrying, and dragging his cloak after him with his teeth, to keep the enemy from
getting it as a trophy.
LXV. He valued his soldiers neither for their personal character nor their
fortune, but solely for their prowess, and he treated them with equal strictness and
indulgence; for he did not curb them everywhere and at all times, but only in the presence
of the enemy. Then he required the strictest discipline, not announcing the time of a
march or a battle, but keeping them ready and alert to be led on a sudden at any moment
wheresoever he might wish. He often called them out even when there was no occasion for
it, especially on rainy days and holidays. And warning them every now and then that they
must keep close watch on him, he would steal away suddenly by day or night and make a
longer march than usual, to tire out those who were tardy in following.
LXVI. When they were in a panic through reports about the enemy's numbers, he
used to rouse their courage not by denying or discounting the rumours, but by falsely
exaggerating the true danger. For instance, when the anticipation of Juba's coming filled
them with terror, he called the soldiers together and said: "Let me tell you that
within the next few days the king will be here with ten legions, thirty thousand horsemen,
a hundred thousand light-armed troops, and three hundred elephants. Therefore some of you
may as well cease to ask further questions or make surmises and may rather believe me,
since I know all about it. Otherwise, I shall surely have them shipped on some worn out
craft and carried off to whatever lands the wind may blow them."
LXVII. He did not take notice of all their offences or punish them by rule, but
he kept a sharp look out for deserters and mutineers, and chastised them most severely,
shutting his eyes to other faults. Sometimes, too, after a great victory he relieved them
of all duties and gave them full licence to revel, being in the habit of boasting that his
soldiers could fight well even when reeking of perfumes. In the assembly he addressed them
not as "soldiers," but by the more fiattering term "comrades," and he
kept them in fine trim, furnishing them with arms inlaid with silver and gold, both for
show and to make them hold the faster to them in battle, through fear of the greatness of
the loss. Such was his love for them that when he heard of the disaster to Titurius, he
let his hair and beard grow long, and would not cut them until he had taken vengeance.
LXVIII. In this way he made them most devoted to his interests as well as most
valiant. When he began the civil war, every centurion of each legion proposed to supply a
horseman from his own savings, and the soldiers one and all offered their service without
pay and without rations, the richer assuming the care of the poorer. Throughout the long
struggle not one deserted and many of them, on being taken prisoner, refused to accept
their lives, when offered them on the condition of consenting to serve against Caesar.
They bore hunger and other hardships, both when in a state of siege and when besieging
others, with such fortitude, that when Pompeius saw in the works at Dyrrachium a kind of
bread made of herbs, on which they were living, he said that he was fighting wild beasts;
and he gave orders that it be put out of sight quickly and shown to none of his men, for
fear that the endurance and resolution of the foe would break their spirit. How valiantly
they fought is shown by the fact that when they suffered their sole defeat before
Dyrrachium, they insisted on being punished, and their commander felt called upon rather
to console than to chastise them. In the other battles they overcame with ease countless
forces of the enemy, though decidedly fewer in number themselves. Indeed one cohort of the
sixth legion, when set to defend a redoubt, kept four legions of Pompeius at bay for
several hours, though almost all were wounded by the enemy's showers of arrows, of which a
hundred and thirty thousand were picked up within the ramparts. And no wonder, when one
thinks of the deeds of individual soldiers, either of Cassius Scaeva the centurion, or of
Gaius Acilius of the rank and file, not to mention others. Scaeva, with one eye gone, his
thigh and shoulder wounded, and his shield bored through in a hundred and twenty places,
continued to guard the gate of a fortress put in his charge. Acilius in the sea-fight at
Massilia grasped the stern of one of the enemy s ships, and when his right hand was lopped
off, rivalling the famous exploit of the Greek hero Cynegirus, boarded the ship and drove
the enemy before him with the boss of his shield.
LXIX. They did not mutiny once during the ten years of the Gallic war; in the
civil wars they did so now and then, but quickly resumed their duty, not so much owing to
any indulgence of their general as to his authority. For he never gave way to them when
they were insubordinate, but always boldly faced them, discharging the entire ninth legion
in disgrace before Placentia, though Pompey was still in the field, reinstating them
unwillingly and only after many abject entreaties, and insisting on punishing the
ringleaders.
LXX. Again at Rome, when the men of the Tenth Legion clamored for their
discharge and rewards with terrible threats and no little peril to the city, though the
war in Africa was then raging, he did not hesitate to appear before them, against the
advice of his friends, and to disband them. But with a single word, calling them
"citizens," instead of 'soldiers," he easily brought them round and bent
them to his will; for they at once replied that they were his "soldiers" and
insisted on following him to Africa, although he refused their service. Even then he
punished the most insubordinate by the loss of a third part of the plunder and of the land
intended for them.
LXXI. Even when a young man he showed no lack of devotion and fidelity to his
dependents. He defended Masintha, a youth of high birth, against King Hiempsal [of
Numidia] with such spirit, that in the dispute he caught the king's son Juba by the beard.
On Masintha's being declared tributary to the king, he at once rescued him from those who
would carry him off and kept him hidden for some time in his own house; and when presently
he left for Hispania after his praetorship, he carried the young man off in his own
litter, unnoticed amid the crowd that came to see him off and the lictors with their
fasces.
LXXII. His friends he treated with invariable kindness and consideration. When
Gaius Oppius was his companion on a journey through a wild, woody country and was suddenly
taken ill, Caesar gave up to him the only shelter there was, while he himself slept on the
ground out-of-doors. Moreover, when he came to power, he advanced some of his friends to
the highest positions, even though they were of the humblest origin, and when taken to
task for it, flatly declared that if he had been helped in defending his honor by brigands
and cut-throats, he would have requited even such men in the same way.
LXXIII. On the other hand he never formed such bitter enmities that he was not
glad to lay them aside when opportunity offered. Although Gaius Memmius had made highly
caustic speeches against him, to which he had replied with equal bitterness, he went so
far as to support Memmius afterwards in his suit for the consulship. When Gaius Calvus,
after some scurrilous epigrams, took steps through his friends towards a reconciliation,
Caesar wrote to him first and of his own free will. Valerius Catullus, as Caesar himself
did not hesitate to say, inflicted a lasting stain on his name by the verses about
Mamurra; yet when he apologised, Caesar invited the poet to dinner that very same day, and
continued his usual friendly relations with Catullus's father.
LXXIV. Even in avenging wrongs he was by nature most merciful, and when he got
hold of the pirates who had captured him, he had them crucified, since he had sworn
beforehand that he would do so, but ordered that their throats be cut first. He could
never make up his mind to harm Cornelius Phagites, although when he was sick and in hiding
the man had waylaid him night after night, and even a bribe had barely saved him from
being handed over to Sulla. The slave Philemon, his amanuensis, who had promised Caesar's
enemies that he would poison him, he merely punished by death, without torture. When
summoned as a witness against Publius Clodius, the paramour of his wife Pompeia, charged
on the same count with sacrilege, Caesar declared that he had no evidence, although both
his mother Aurelia and his sister Julia had given the same jurors a faithful account of
the whole affair; and on being asked why it was then that he had put away his wife, he
replied: "Because I maintain that the members of my family should be free from
suspicion, as well as from accusation."
LXXV. He certainly showed admirable self-restraint and mercy, both in his
conduct of the civil war and in the hour of victory. While Pompeius announced that he
would treat as enemies those who did not take up arms for the government, Caesar gave out
that those who were neutral and of neither party should be numbered with his friends. He
freely allowed all those whom he had made centurions on Pompeius' recommendation to go
over to his rival. When conditions of surrender were under discussion at Ilerda, and
friendly intercourse between the two parties was constant, Afranius and Petreius, with a
sudden change of purpose, put to death all of Caesar's soldiers whom they found in their
camp; but Caesar could not bring himself to retaliate in kind. At the battle of Pharsalus
he cried out, "Spare your fellow citizens," and afterwards allowed each of his
men to save any one man he pleased of the opposite party. And it will be found that no
Pompeian lost his life except in battle, save only Afranius and Faustus, and the young
Lucius Caesar; and it is believed that not even these men were slain by his wish, even
though the two former had taken up arms again after being pardoned, while Caesar had not
only cruelly put to death the dictator's slaves and freedmen with fire and sword, but had
even butchered the wild beasts which he had procured for the entertainment of the people.
At last, in his later years, he went so far as to allow all those whom he had not yet
pardoned to return to Italy, and to hold magistracies and the command of armies: and he
actually set up the statues of Lucius Sulla and Pompey, which had been broken to pieces by
the populace. After this, if any dangerous plots were formed against him, or slanders
uttered, he preferred to quash rather than to punish them. Accordingly, he took no further
notice of the conspiracies which were detected, and of meetings by night, than to make
known by proclamation that he was aware of them; and he thought it enough to give public
warning to those who spoke ill of him, not to persist in their conduct, bearing with good
nature the attacks on his reputation made by the scurrilous volume of Aulus Caecina and
the abusive lampoons of Pitholaus.
LXXVI. Yet after all, his other actions and words so turn the scale, that it is
thought that he abused his power and was justly slain. For not only did he accept
excessive honors, such as an uninterrupted consulship, the dictatorship for life, and the
censorship of public morals, as well as the forename Imperator, the surname of Pater
Patriae ['Father of his Country'], a statue among those of the kings, and a raised
couch in the orchestra [at the theater]; but he also allowed honors to be bestowed on him
which were too great for mortal man: a golden throne in the Senate and on the judgment
seat; a chariot and litter [for carrying his statues among those of the gods] in the
procession at the circus; temples, altars, and statues beside those of the gods; a special
priest, an additional college of the Luperci, and the calling of one of the months by his
name. In fact, there were no honors which he did not receive or confer at pleasure. He
held his third and fourth consulships in name only, content with the power of the
dictatorship conferred on him at the same time as the consulships. Moreover, in both years
he substituted two consuls for himself for the last three months, in the meantime holding
no elections except for tribunes and plebeian aediles, and appointing praefects instead of
the praetors, to manage the affairs of the city during his absence. When one of the
consuls suddenly died the day before the Kalends of January, he gave the vacant office for
a few hours to a man who asked for it. With the same disregard of law and precedent he
named magistrates for several years to come, bestowed the emblems of consular rank on ten
ex-praetors, and admitted to the Senate men who had been given citizenship, and in some
cases half-civilized Gauls. He assigned the charge of the mint and of the public revenues
to his own slaves, and gave the oversight and command of the three legions which he had
left at Alexandria to a favorite of his called Rufo, son of one of his freedmen.
LXXVII. No less arrogant were his public utterances, which Titus Ampius records:
that the state was nothing, a mere name without body or form; that Sulla did not know his
ABC's when he laid down his dictatorship; that men ought now to be more circumspect in
addressing him, and to regard his word as law. So far did he go in his presumption, that
when a soothsayer once reported of a sacrifice direful innards without a heart, he said:
"They will be more favorable when I wish it; it should not be regarded as a portent,
if a beast has no heart" [playing on the double meaning of cor
('heart')--which was also regarded as the seat of intelligence].
LXXVIII. But it was the following action in particular that roused deadly hatred
against him. When the Senate approached him in a body with many highly honorary decrees,
he received them before the temple of Venus Genetrix without rising. Some think that when
he attempted to get up, he was held back by Cornelius Balbus; others, that he made no such
move at all, but on the contrary frowned angrily on Gaius Trebatius when he suggested that
he should rise. And this action of his seemed the more intolerable, because when he
himself in one of his triumphal processions rode past the benches of the tribunes, he was
so incensed because a member of the college, Pontius Aquila by name, did not rise, that he
cried: "Come then, Aquila, take back the republic from me, you tribune"; and for
several days he would not make a promise to any one without adding, "That is, if
Pontius Aquila will allow me."
LXXIX. To an insult which so plainly showed his contempt for the Senate he added
an act of even greater insolence; for at the Latin Festival, as he was returning to the
city, amid the extravagant and unprecedented demonstrations of the populace, someone in
the press placed on his statue a laurel wreath with a white fillet tied to it [an emblem
of royalty]; and when Epidius Marullus and Caesetius Flavus, tribunes of the plebeians,
gave orders that the ribbon be removed from the wreath and the man taken off to prison,
Caesar sharply rebuked and deposed them, either offended that the hint at regal power had
been received with so little favor, or, as he asserted, that he had been robbed of the
glory of refusing it. But from that time on he could not rid himself of the odium of
having aspired to the title of monarch, although he replied to the plebeians, when they
hailed him as king, "I am Caesar and no king" [with a pun on rex ('king')
as a Roman name], and at the Lupercalia, when the consul Marcus Antonius several times
attempted to place a crown upon his head as he spoke from the rostra, he put it aside and
at last sent it to the Capitol, to be offered to Jupiter Optimus Maximus. Nay, more, the
report had spread in various quarters that he intended to move to Ilium or Alexandria,
taking with him the resources of the state, draining Italia by levies, and leaving the
charge of the city to his friends; also that at the next meeting of the Senate Lucius
Cotta would announce as the decision of the Fifteen [the quindecimviri sacris faciundis
('college of fifteen priests') in charge of the Sybilline books], that inasmuch as it was
written in the books of fate that the Parthians could be conquered only by a king, Caesar
should be given that title.
LXXX. It was this that led the conspirators to hasten in carrying out their
designs, in order to avoid giving their assent to this proposal. Therefore the plots which
had previously been formed separately, often by groups of two or three, were united in a
general conspiracy, since even the populace no longer were pleased with present
conditions, but both secretly and openly rebelled at his tyranny and cried out for
defenders of their liberty. On the admission of foreigners to the Senate, a placard was
posted: "God bless the Republic! let no one consent to point out the Senate to a
newly made senator." The following verses too were sung everwhere:---
'Caesar led the Gauls in triumph, led them to the senate house;
Then the Gauls put off their breeches, and put on the latus clavus.''
When Quintus Maximus, whom he had appointed consul in his place for three months, was
entering the theater, and his lictor called attention to his arrival in the usual manner,
a general shout was raised: "He's no consul!" At the first election after the
deposing of Caesetius and Marullus, the tribunes, several votes were found for their
appointment as consuls. Some wrote on the base of Lucius Brutus' statue, "Oh, that
you were still alive"; and on that of Caesar himself:---
'First of all was Brutus consul, since he drove the kings from Rome;
Since this man drove out the consuls, he at last is made our king."
More than sixty joined the conspiracy against him, led by Gaius Cassius and Marcus and
Decimus Brutus. At first they hesitated whether to form two divisions at the elections in
the Campus Martius, so that while some hurled him from the bridge [the pons
suffragiorum, a temporary bridge of planks over which the voters passed one by one, to
cast their ballots] as he summoned the tribes to vote, the rest might wait below and slay
him; or to set upon him in the Via Sacra or at the entrance to the theater. When,
however, a meeting of the Senate was called for the Ides of March in the curia
adjoining the Theater of Gnaeus Pompeius, they readily gave that time and place the
preference.
LXXXI. Now Caesar's approaching murder was foretold to him by unmistakable
signs. A few months before, when the settlers assigned to the colony at Capua by the
Julian Law were demolishing some tombs of great antiquity, to build country houses, and
plied their work with the greater vigor because as they rummaged about they found a
quantity of vases of ancient workmanship, there was discovered in a tomb, which was said
to be that of Capys, the founder of Capua, a bronze tablet, inscribed with Greek words and
characters to this purport: "Whenever the bones of Capys shall be moved, it will come
to pass that a son of llium shall be slain at the hands of his kindred, and presently
avenged at heavy cost to Italia." And let no one think this tale a myth or a lie, for
it is vouched for by Cornelius Balbus, an intimate friend of Caesar. Shortly before his
death, as he was told, the herds of horses which he had dedicated to the river Rubicon
when he crossed it, and had let loose without a keeper, stubbornly refused to graze and
wept copiously. Again, when he was offering sacrifice, the soothsayer Spurinna warned him
to beware of danger, which would come not later than the Ides of March; and on the day
before the Ides of that month a little bird called the king-bird flew into the Curia
of Pompeius with a sprig of laurel, pursued by others of various kinds from the grove hard
by, which tore it to pieces in the hall. In fact the very night before his murder he
dreamt now that he was flying above the clouds, and now that he was clasping the hand of
Jupiter; and his wife Calpurnia thought that the pediment of their house fell, and that
her husband was stabbed in her arms; and on a sudden the door of the room flew open of its
own accord. Both for these reasons and because of poor health he hesitated for a long time
whether to stay at home and put off what he had planned to do in the senate; but at last,
urged by Decimus Brutus not to disappoint the full meeting which had for some time been
waiting for him, he went forth almost at the end of the fifth hour; and when a note
revealing the plot was handed him by someone on the way, he put it with others which he
held in his left hand, intending to read them presently. Then, after several victims had
been slain, and he could not get favorable omens, he entered the Senate in defiance of
portents, laughing at Spurinna and calling him a false prophet, because the Ides of March
were come without bringing him harm; though Spurinna replied that they had of a truth
come, but they had not gone.
LXXXII. [44 B.C.] As he took his seat, the conspirators gathered about him as if
to pay their respects, and straightway Tillius Cimber, who had assumed the lead, came
nearer as though to ask something; and when Caesar with a gesture put him off to another
time, Cimber caught his toga by both shoulders; then as Caesar cried, "Why, this is
violence!" one of the Cascas stabbed him from one side just below the throat. Caesar
caught Casca's arm and ran it through with his stylus, but as he tried to leap to his
feet, he was stopped by another wound. When he saw that he was beset on every side by
drawn daggers, he muffled his head in his robe, and at the same time drew down its lap to
his feet with his left hand, in order to fall more decently, with the lower part of his
body also covered. And in this wise he was stabbed with three and twenty wounds, uttering
not a word, but merely a groan at the first stroke, though some have written that when
Marcus Brutus rushed at him, he said in Greek, 'You too, my child?" All the
conspirators made off, and he lay there lifeless for some time, until finally three common
slaves put him on a litter and carried him home, with one arm hanging down. And of so many
wounds none turned out to be mortal, in the opinion of the physician Antistius, except the
second one in the breast. The conspirators had intended after slaying him to drag his body
to the Tiber, confiscate his property, and revoke his decrees; but they forebore through
fear of Marcus Antonius the consul, and Lepidus, the master of horse.
LXXXIII. Then at the request of his father-in-law, Lucius Piso, the will was
unsealed and read in Antonius' house, which Caesar had made on the preceding Ides of
September at his place near Lavicum [September 18, 45 B.C.], and put in the care of the
chief of the Vestals. Quintus Tubero states that from his first consulship until the
beginning of the civil war it was his wont to write down Gnaeus Pompeius as his heir, and
to read this to the assembled soldiers. In his last will, however, he named three heirs,
his sisters' grandsons---Gaius Octavius (to three-fourths of his estate), and Lucius
Pinarius and Quintus Pedius (to share the remainder). At the end of the will, too, he
adopted Gaius Octavius into his family and gave him his name. He named several of his
assassins among the guardians of his son, in case one should be born to him, and Decimus
Brutus even among his heirs in the second degree. To the people he left his gardens near
the Tiber for their common use and three hundred sesterces to each man.
LXXXIV. When the funeral was announced, a pyre was erected in the Campus Martius
near the tomb of Julia, and on the rostra a gilded shrine was placed, made after the model
of the temple of Venus Genetrix; within was a couch of ivory with coverlets of purple and
gold, and at its head a pillar hung with the robe in which he was slain. Since it was
clear that the day would not be long enough for those who offered gifts, they were
directed to bring them to the Campus by whatsoever
streets of the city they wished, regardless of any order of precedence. At the funeral
games, to rouse pity and indignation at his death, these words from the Armorum of
Pacuvius were sung:---- 'Saved I these men that they might murder me?" and words of a
like purport from the Electra of Atilius. Instead of a eulogy the consul Antonius
caused a herald to recite the decree of the Senate in which it had voted Caesar all divine
and human honors at once, and likewise the oath with which they had all pledged themselves
to watch over his personal safety; to which he added a very few words of his own. The bier
on the rostra was carried down into the Forum by magistrates and ex-magistrates; and while
some were urging that it be burned in the temple of Jupiter of the Capitol, and others in
the Curia of Pompeius, on a sudden two beings [cf. the apparition at the
Rubicon] with swords by their sides and brandishing a pair of darts set fire to it with
blazing torches, and at once the throng of bystanders heaped upon it dry branches, the
judgment seats with the benches, and whatever else could serve as an offering. Then the
musicians and actors tore off their robes, which they had taken from the equipment of his
triumphs and put on for the occasion, rent them to bits and threw them into the flames,
and the veterans of the legions the arms with which they had adorned themselves for the
funeral; many of the women too, offered up the jewels which they wore and the amulets and
robes of their children. At the height of the public grief a throng of foreigners went
about lamenting each after the fashion of his country, above all the Jews, who even
flocked to the place for several successive nights.
LXXXV. Immediately after the funeral the people ran to the houses of Brutus and
Cassius with firebrands, and after being repelled with difficulty, they slew Helvius Cinna
when they met him, through a mistake in the name, supposing that he was Cornelius Cinna,
who had the day before made a bitter indictment of Caesar and for whom they were looking;
and they set his head upon a spear and paraded it about the streets. Afterwards they set
up in the Forum a solid column of Numidian marble almost twenty feet high, and inscribed
upon it, "To the Father of his Country." At the foot of this they continued for
a long time to sacrifice, make vows, and settle some of their disputes by an oath in the
name of Caesar.
LXXXVI. Caesar left in the minds of some of his friends the suspicion that he
did not wish to live longer and had taken no precautions, because of his failing health;
and that therefore he neglected the warnings which came to him from portents and from the
reports of his friends. Some think that it was because he had full trust in that last
decree of the senators and their oath that he dismissed even the armed bodyguard of
Hispanic soldiers that formerly attended him. Others, on the contrary, believe that he
elected to expose himself once for all to the plots that threatened him on every hand,
rather than to be always anxious and on his guard. Some, too, say that he was wont to
declare that it was not so much to his own interest as to that of his country that he
remain alive; he had long since had his fill of power and glory; but if aught befell him,
the Republic would have no peace, but would be plunged in civil strife under much worse
conditions.
LXXXVII. About one thing almost all are fully agreed, that he all but desired
such a death as he met; for once when he read in Xenophon [Cyropedeia, 8.7] how
Cyrus in his last illness gave directions for his funeral, he expressed his horror of such
a lingering kind of end and his wish for one which was swift and sudden. And the day
before his murder, in a conversation which arose at a dinner at the house of Marcus
Lepidus, as to what manner of death was most to be desired, he had given his preference to
one which was sudden and unexpected.
LXXXVIII. [44 B.C.] He died in the fifty-sixth year of his age, and was numbered
among the gods, not only by a formal decree, but also in the conviction of the common
people. For at the first of the games which his heir Augustus gave in honor of his
apotheosis, a comet shone for seven successive days, rising about the eleventh hour [about
an hour before sunset] and was believed to be the soul of Caesar, who had been taken to
heaven; and this is why a star is set upon the crown of his head in his statue. It was
voted that the curia in which he was slain be walled up, that the Ides of March be
called the Day of Parricide, and that a meeting of the senate should never be called on
that day.
LXXXIX. Hardly any of his assassins survived him for more than three years, or
died a natural death. They were all condemned, and they perished in various ways---some by
shipwreck, some in battle; some took their own lives with the self-same dagger with which
they had impiously slain Caesar.
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