I. Julius Caesar, the Divine,
lost his father when he was in the sixteenth year of his age; and
the year following, being nominated to the office of high-priest of
Jupiter, he repudiated Cossutia, who was very wealthy, although her
family belonged only to the equestrian order, and to whom he had
been contracted when he was a mere boy. He then married Cornelia,
the daughter of Cinna, who was four times consul; and had by her,
shortly afterwards, a daughter named Julia. Resisting all the
efforts of the dictator Sylla to induce him to divorce Cornelia, he
suffered the penalty of being stripped of his sacerdotal office,
his wife’s dowry, and his own patrimonial estates; and, being
identified with the adverse faction, was compelled to withdraw from
Rome. After changing his place of concealment nearly every night,
although he was suffering from a quartan ague, and having effected
his release by bribing the officers who had tracked his footsteps,
he at length obtained a pardon through the intercession of the
vestal virgins, and of Mamercus Aemilius and Aurelius Cotta, his
near relatives. We are assured that when Sylla, having withstood
for a while the entreaties of his own best friends, persons of
distinguished rank, at last yielded to their importunity, he
exclaimed—either by a divine impulse, or from a shrewd conjecture:
“Your suit is granted, and you may take him among you; but know,”
he added, “that this man, for whose safety you are so extremely
anxious, will, some day or other, be the ruin of the party of the
nobles, in defence of which you are leagued with me; for in this
one Caesar, you will find many a Marius.”
II. His first campaign was served
in Asia, on the staff of the praetor, M. Thermus; and being
dispatched into Bithynia 9, to bring thence a fleet, he loitered so
long at the court of Nicomedes, as to give occasion to reports of a
criminal intercourse between him and that prince; which received
additional credit from his hasty return to Bithynia, under the
pretext of recovering a debt due to a freed-man, his client. The
rest of his service was more favourable to his reputation; and when
Mitylene was taken by storm, he was presented by Thermus with the
civic crown.
III. He served also in Cilicia,
under Servilius Isauricus, but only for a short time; as upon
receiving intelligence of Sylla’s death, he returned with all speed
to Rome, in expectation of what might follow from a fresh agitation
set on foot by Marcus Lepidus. Distrusting, however, the abilities
of this leader, and finding the times less favourable for the
execution of this project than he had at first imagined, he
abandoned all thoughts of joining Lepidus, although he received the
most tempting offers.
IV. Soon after this civil discord
was composed, he preferred a charge of extortion against Cornelius
Dolabella, a man of consular dignity, who had obtained the honour
of a triumph. On the acquittal of the accused, he resolved to
retire to Rhodes, with the view not only of avoiding the public
odium which he had incurred, but of prosecuting his studies with
leisure and tranquillity, under Apollonius, the son of Molon, at
that time the most celebrated master of rhetoric. While on his
voyage thither, in the winter season, he was taken by pirates near
the island of Pharmacusa, and detained by them, burning with
indignation, for nearly forty days; his only attendants being a
physician and two chamberlains. For he had instantly dispatched his
other servants and the friends who accompanied him, to raise money
for his ransom. Fifty talents having been paid down, he was landed
on the coast, when, having collected some ships, he lost no time in
putting to sea in pursuit of the pirates, and having captured them,
inflicted upon them the punishment with which he had often
threatened them in jest. At that time Mithridates was ravaging the
neighbouring districts, and on Caesar’s arrival at Rhodes, that he
might not appear to lie idle while danger threatened the allies of
Rome, he passed over into Asia, and having collected some auxiliary
forces, and driven the king’s governor out of the province,
retained in their allegiance the cities which were wavering, and
ready to revolt.
V. Having been elected military
tribune, the first honour he received from the suffrages of the
people after his return to Rome, he zealously assisted those who
took measures for restoring the tribunitian authority, which had
been greatly diminished during the usurpation of Sylla. He
likewise, by an act, which Plotius at his suggestion propounded to
the people, obtained the recall of Lucius Cinna, his wife’s
brother, and others with him, who having been the adherents of
Lepidus in the civil disturbances, had after that consul’s death
fled to Sertorius; which law he supported by a speech.
VI. During his quaestorship he
pronounced funeral orations from the rostra, according to custom,
in praise of his aunt Julia, and his wife Cornelia. In the
panegyric on his aunt, he gives the following account of her own
and his father’s genealogy, on both sides: “My aunt Julia derived
her descent, by the mother, from a race of kings, and by her
father, from the Immortal Gods. For the Marcii Reges, her mother’s
family, deduce their pedigree from Ancus Marcius, and the Julii,
her father’s, from Venus; of which stock we are a branch. We
therefore unite in our descent the sacred majesty of kings, the
chiefest among men, and the divine majesty of Gods, to whom kings
themselves are subject.” To supply the place of Cornelia, he
married Pompeia, the daughter of Quintus Pompeius, and
grand-daughter of Lucius Sylla; but he afterwards divorced her,
upon suspicion of her having been debauched by Publius Clodius. For
so current was the report, that Clodius had found access to her
disguised as a woman, during the celebration of a religious
solemnity, that the senate instituted an enquiry respecting the
profanation of the sacred rites.
VII. Farther-Spain fell to his
lot as quaestor; when there, as he was going the circuit of the
province, by commission from the praetor, for the administration of
justice, and had reached Gades, seeing a statue of Alexander the
Great in the temple of Hercules, he sighed deeply, as if weary of
his sluggish life, for having performed no memorable actions at an
age at which Alexander had already conquered the world. He,
therefore, immediately sued for his discharge, with the view of
embracing the first opportunity, which might present itself in The
City, of entering upon a more exalted career. In the stillness of
the night following, he dreamt that he lay with his own mother; but
his confusion was relieved, and his hopes were raised to the
highest pitch, by the interpreters of his dream, who expounded it
as an omen that he should possess universal empire; for that the
mother who in his sleep he had found submissive to his embraces,
was no other than the earth, the common parent of all
mankind.
VIII. Quitting therefore the
province before the expiration of the usual term, he betook himself
to the Latin colonies, which were then eagerly agitating the design
of obtaining the freedom of Rome; and he would have stirred them up
to some bold attempt, had not the consuls, to prevent any
commotion, detained for some time the legions which had been raised
for service in Cilicia. But this did not deter him from making,
soon afterwards, a still greater effort within the precincts of the
city itself.