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HE CIVIL WARS FOLLOWING THE DEATH OF CÆSAR.—ANTONIUS.—AUGUSTUS.
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The most powerful men in Rome at this time, were Marcus
Antonius, the most able of Cæsar's lieutenants,
the most constant of his friends, and the nearest
of his relatives, although a man utterly unprincipled;
Octavius, grandson of Julius, whom Cæsar adopted as his
heir, a young man of nineteen; Lepidus, colleague consul
with Cæsar, the head of the ancient family of the Lepidi,
thirteen of whom had been honored with curule magistracies;
Sextus Pompeius, son of Pompey; Brutus and Cassius,
chief conspirators; Dolabella, a man of consular rank,
and one of the profligate nobles of his time; Hirtia and
Pansa, consuls; Piso, father-in-law of Cæsar, of a powerful
family, which boasted of several consuls; and Cicero—still
influential from his great weight of character. All these
men were great nobles, and had filled the highest offices.
Antonius takes the lead at Rome.
The man who, to all appearance, had the fairest chance
for supreme command in those troubled times, was Antony,
whose mother was Julia, Cæsar's sister. He was grandson
to the great orator M. Antonius, who flourished during the
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civil wars between Marius and Sulla, and was distinguished
for every vice, folly, and extravagance which characterized
the Roman nobles. But he was a man of consummate ability
as a general, was master of the horse, and was consul with
Cæsar, when he was killed, B.C. 44. He was also eloquent,
and pronounced the funeral oration of the murdered Imperator,
as nearest of kin. He had possession of Cæsar's papers,
and was the governor of Cisalpine Gaul. He formed a union
with Lepidus, to whom he offered the office of Pontifex Maximus,
the second office in the State. As consul, he could
unlock the public treasury, which he rifled to the extent of
seven hundred million of sesterces—the vast sum left by
Cæsar. One of his brothers was prætor, and another, a
tribune. He convened the Senate, and employed, by the
treasure he had at command, the people to overawe the Senate,
as the Jacobin clubs of the French revolution overawed
the Assembly. He urged the Senate to ratify Cæsar's acts
and confirm his appointments, and in this was
supported by Cicero and a majority of the members.
Now that the deed was done, he wished to have the
past forgotten. This act of amnesty confirmed his fearful
pre-eminence, and the inheritance of the mighty dead seemingly
devolved upon him. The conspirators came to terms
with him, and were even entertained by him, and received
the provinces which he assigned to them. Brutus received
Macedonia; Cassius, Syria; Trebonius, Asia; Cimber, Bythinia;
and Decimus, Cisalpine Gaul. Dolabella was his colleague
in the consulship,—a personal enemy, yet committed
to his policy.
Cæsar had left three hundred sesterces to every citizen,
(about £3,) and his gardens beyond the Tiber to the use
of the people. Such gifts operated in producing an intense
gratitude for the memory of a man who had proved so great
a benefactor, and his public funeral was of unprecedented
splendor. Antony, as his nearest heir, and the first magistrate,
pronounced the oration, which was a consummate
piece of dramatic art, in which he inflamed the passions of the
[pg 548]
people, and stimulated them to frenzy, so that they turned
upon the assassins with fury. But he assured the Senate of
his moderation, abolished the dictatorship forever, and
secured his own personal safety by a body-guard.
Octavius.
He had, however, a powerful rival in the young Octavius,
who had been declared by Cæsar's will his principal heir,
then absent in Apollonia. He resolved to return at
once and claim his inheritance, and was warmly
received at Brundusium by the veteran troops, and especially
by Cicero, who saw in him a rival to Antony. Octavius
flattered the old orator, and ingratiated himself in the favor
of everybody by his unassuming manners, and his specious
language. He entered Rome under favorable omens, paid
his court to the senators, and promised to fulfill his uncle's
requests. He was received by Antony in the gardens of
Pompeius, and claimed at once his inheritance. Antony
replied that it was not private property but the public treasure,
and was, moreover, spent. Octavius was not to be put off,
and boldly declared that he would and could pay the legacies,
and contrived to borrow the money. Such an act
secured unrivaled popularity. He gave magnificent shows,
and then claimed that the jeweled crown of Cæsar should be
exhibited on the festival which he instituted to Venus, and
to whose honor Cæsar had vowed to build a temple, on the
morning of his victory at Pharsalia. The tribunes, instigated
by Antonius, refused to sanction this mark of honor, but fortune
favored Octavius, and, in the enthusiasm of the festival,
which lasted eleven days, the month Quintilius was changed
to Julius—the first demigod whom the Senate had translated
to Olympus.
Brutus and Cassius.
Meanwhile Brutus and Cassius retired from public affairs,
lingering in the neighborhood of Rome, and the provinces
promised to them were lost. At Antium they had
an interview with Cicero, who advised them to
keep quiet, and not venture to the capital, where the people
were inflamed against them. Their only encouragement was
the successes of Sextus Pompeius in Spain, who had six
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legions at his command. Cicero foresaw that another civil
war was at hand, and had the gloomiest forebodings, for one
or the other of the two great chieftains of the partisans of
Cæsar was sure of ultimately obtaining the supreme power.
The humiliating conviction that the murder of Cæsar was a
mistake, was now deeply impressed upon his mind, since it
would necessarily inaugurate another bloody war. Self banished
from Rome, this great and true patriot wandered from
place to place to divert his mind. But neither the fascinations
of literature, nor the attractions of Tusculum, Puteoli,
Pompeii, and Neapolis, where he had luxurious villas, could
soothe his anxious and troubled soul. Religious, old, and
experienced, he could only ponder on the coming and final
prostration of that cause of constitutional liberty to which
he was devoted.
Cicero.
Antonius, also aware of the struggle which was impending,
sought to obtain the government of Cisalpine Gaul, and of
the six legions destined for the Parthian war. But he was
baffled by the Senate, and by the intrigues of Octavius, who
sheltered himself behind the august name of the man by
whom he had been adopted. He therefore made a hollow
reconciliation with Octavius, and by his means, obtained the
Gaulish provinces. Cicero, now only desirous to die honorably,
returned to Rome to accept whatever fate
was in store for him, and defend to the last his
broken cause. It was then, in the Senate, that he launched
forth those indignant philippies against Antonius, as a public
enemy, which are among his greatest efforts, and which
most triumphantly attest his moral courage.
The hollow reconciliation between Antonius and Octavius
was not of long duration, and the former, as consul, repaired
to Brundusium to assume command of the legions stationed
there, and Octavius collected his forces in Campania. Both
parties complained of each other, and both invoked the
name of Cæsar. Cicero detested the one, and was blinded
as to the other.
Prospects of civil war.
Situation of Roman affairs.
The triumvirate of Antonius, Octavius and Lepidus.
They proscribe their enemies.
The term of office as consul, which Antonius held, had now
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expired, and Hirtius, one of the new consuls, marched into
Cisalpine Gaul, and Octavius placed himself under
his command. The Senate declared a state of public
danger. The philippics of Cicero had taken effect, and
the Senate and the government were now opposed to Antonius,
as the creator of a new revolution. The consuls crossed
swords with Antonius at Forum Gallorum, and the consul
Pansa fell, but success was with the government. Another
success at Mutina favored the government party, which
Octavius had joined. On the news of this victory, Cicero
delivered his fourteenth and last philippic against Antonius,
who now withdrew from Cisalpine Gaul, and formed a junction
with Lepidus beyond the Alps. Octavius declined to
pursue him, and Plancus hesitated to attack him, although
joined by Decimus, one of the murderers of Cæsar, with ten
legions. Octavius now held aloof from the government
army, from which it was obvious that he had ambitious
views of his own to further, and was denounced by Plancus
to Cicero. The veteran statesman, at last, perceived that
Octavius, having deserted Decimus (who, of all the
generals, was the only one on whose fidelity the
State could securely lean), was not to be further relied upon,
and cast his eyes to Macedonia and Syria, to which provinces
Brutus and Cassius had retired. The Senate, too, now distrusted
Octavius, and treated him with contumely; but supported
by veteran soldiers, he demanded the consulship, and
even secretly corresponded with Antonius, and assured him
of his readiness to combine with him and Lepidus, and invited
them to follow him to Rome. He marched at the head
of eight legions, pretending all the while to be coerced by
them. The Senate, overawed, allowed him, at twenty years
of age, to assume the consulship, with Pedius, grand-nephew
of Cæsar, for his colleague. Since Hirtius and Pansa had
both fallen, Octavius, then leaving the city in the hands of
a zealous colleague, opened negotiations with Antonius and
Lepidus, perceiving that it was only in conjunction with
them that his usurpation could be maintained. They met
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for negotiations at Bononia, and agreed to share the empire
between them. They declared themselves triumvirs for the
settlement of the commonwealth, and after a conference
of three days, divided between themselves
the provinces and legions. They then concerted
a general proscription of their enemies. The number whom
they thus doomed to destruction was three hundred senators
and two thousand knights, from the noblest families of
Rome, among whom were brothers, uncles, and favorite officers.
The possession of riches was fatal to some, and of
beautiful villas to others. Cicero was among this number, as
was to be expected, for he had exhausted the Latin language
in vituperations of Antonius, whom he hated beyond all
other mortals, and which hatred was itself a passion. He
spoke of Cæsar with awe, of Pompey with mortification,
of Crassus with dislike, and of Antony with
bitter detestation and unsparing malice. It was impossible
that he could escape, even had he fled to the ends of the
earth. The vacillation of his last hours, his deep distress,
and mournful agonies are painted by Plutarch. He fell a
martyr to the cause of truth, and public virtue, and exalted
patriotism, although his life was sullied by weakness and
infirmities, such as vanity, ambition, and jealousy. In the
dark and wicked period which he adorned by his transcendent
talents and matchless services, he lived and died in faith—the
most amiable and the most noble of all his contemporaries.
The triumvirs had now gratified their vengeance by a
series of murders never surpassed in the worst ages of religious
and political fanaticism. And all these horrible crimes
were perpetrated in the name of that great and august
character who had won the world by his sword. The prestige
of that mighty name sanctioned their atrocities and upheld
their power. Cæsar still lived, although assassinated,
and the triumvirs reigned as his heirs or avengers, even as
Louis Napoleon grasped the sceptre of his uncle, not from
any services he had rendered, but as the heir of his conquests.
[pg 552]
The Romans loved Cæsar as the French loved Napoleon,
and submitted to the rule of the triumvirs, as the French
submitted to the usurpations of the proscribed prisoner of
Ham. And in the anarchy which succeeded the assassination
of the greatest man of antiquity, it must need be that the
strongest would seize the reins, since all liberty and exalted
patriotism had fled.
Cassius and Brutus rally the aristocracy.
Battle of Philippi.
But these usurpers did not secure their power without one
more last struggle of the decimated and ruined
aristocracy. They rallied under the standards of
Brutus and Cassius in Macedonia and Syria. The
one was at the head of eight legions, and the other of eleven,
a still formidable force. Sextus Pompeius also still lived,
and had intrenched himself in Sicily. A battle had still to
be fought before the republic gave its last sigh. Cicero
ought to have joined these forces, and might have done so,
but for his vacillation. So Lepidus, as consul, took control
of Rome and the interests of Italy, while Antonius marched
against Brutus and Cassius in the East, and Octavius assailed
Sextus in Sicily; unable, however, to attack him without
ships, he joined his confederate. Their united forces were
concentrated in Philippi, in Thrace, and there was fought
the last decisive battle between the republicans, if the senatorial
and aristocratic party under Brutus and Cassius can
be called republicans, and the liberators, as they called themselves,
or the adherents of Cæsar. The republicans had a
force of eighty thousand infantry and twenty thousand
cavalry, while the triumvirs commanded a still superior
force. The numbers engaged in this great conflict exceeded
all former experience, and the battle of Philippi
was the most memorable in Roman annals, since
all the available forces of the empire were now arrayed
against each other. The question at issue was, whether
power should remain with the old constitutional party, or
with the party of usurpation which Cæsar had headed and
led to victory. It was whether Rome should be governed
by the old forms, or by an imperator with absolute authority.
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The forces arrayed on that fatal battle-field—the last conflict
for liberty ever fought at Rome—were three times as great
as fought at Pharsalia. On that memorable battle-field the
republic perished. The battle was fairly and bravely fought
on both sides, but victory inclined to the Cæsarians, in two
distinct actions, after an interval of twenty days, B.C. 42.
Both Cassius and Brutus fell on their own swords, and their
self-destruction, in utter despair of their cause, effectually
broke up their party.
Roman liberty extinguished.
The empire was now in the hands of the triumvirs. The
last contest was decisive. Future struggles were worse than
useless. Destiny had proclaimed the extinction of
Roman liberties for ever. It was vice and faction
which had prepared the way for violence, and the last appeal
to the sword had settled the fate of the empire, henceforth to
be governed by a despot.
But there being now three despots among the partisans of
Cæsar, who sought to grasp his sceptre, Which should prevail?
Antonius was the greatest general; Octavius was the
greatest man; Lepidus was the tool of both. The real
rivalry was between Octavius and Antonius. But they did
not at once quarrel. Antonius undertook the subjugation of
the eastern provinces, and Octavius repaired to Rome. The
former sought, before the great encounter with his rival, to
gain military éclat from new victories; the latter to control
factions and parties in the capital. They first got rid of
Lepidus, now that their more powerful enemies were subdued,
and compelled him to surrender the command in Italy
and content himself with the government of Africa. Antonius,
commanding no less than twenty-eight legions, which,
with auxiliaries, numbered one hundred and seventy thousand,
had perhaps the best chance. His exactions were awful; but
he squandered his treasures, and gave vent to his passions.
Cleopatra and Antonius.
War between Octavius and Sextus.
The real cause of his overthrow was Cleopatra, for had he
not been led aside by his inordinate passion for this
woman, and had he exercised his vast power with
the wisdom and ability which he had previously shown,
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the most able of all of Cæsar's generals, he probably would
have triumphed over every foe. On his passage through
Cilicia, he was met by Cleopatra, in all the pomp and luxury
of an Oriental sovereign. She came to deprecate his wrath,
ostensibly, and ascended the Cydnus in a bark with gilded
stern and purple sails, rowed with silver oars, to the sound
of pipes and flutes. She reclined, the most voluptuous of
ancient beauties, under a spangled canopy, attended by
Graces and Cupids, while the air was scented with the perfumes
of Olympus. She soon fascinated the most powerful
man in the empire, who, forgetting his ambition, resigned
himself to love. Octavius, master of himself, and of Italy,
confiscated lands for the benefit of the soldiership prepared
for future contingencies. Though Antonius married Octavia,
the sister of Octavius, he was full of intrigues against him
and Octavius, on his part, proved more than a match in
duplicity and concealed hostilities. They, however, pretended
to be friends; and the treaty of Brundusium, celebrated
by Virgil, would seem to indicate that the world was
now to enjoy the peace it craved. After a debauch, Antonius
left Rome for the East, and Octavius for Gaul, each with a
view of military conquests. Antonius, with his new wife, had
seemingly forgotten Cleopatra, and devoted himself to the
duties of the camp with an assiduity worthy of Cæsar himself.
Octavius has a naval conflict with Sextus,
and is defeated, but Sextus fails to profit from his
victory, and Octavius, with the help of his able lieutenants,
and re-enforced by Antonius, again attacks Sextus, and is
again defeated. In a third conflict he is victorious, and Sextus
escapes to the East. Lepidus, ousted and cheated by
both Antonius and Octavius, now combines with Sextus and
the Pompeians, and makes head against Octavius; but is
deserted by his soldiers, and falls into the hands of his
enemy, who spares his life in contempt. He had owed his
elevation to his family influence, and not to his own abilities.
Sextus, at last, was taken and slain.
At this juncture Octavius was at the head of the Cæsarian
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party. He had won the respect and friendship of the Romans
by his clemency and munificence. He was not a great
general, but he was served by a great general, Agrippa, and
by another minister of equal talents, Mecrenas. He controlled
even more forces than Antonius, no less than forty-five legions
of infantry, and twenty-five thousand cavalry, and thirty-seven
thousand light-armed auxiliaries. Antonius, on the
other hand, had forfeited the esteem of the Romans by his
prodigalities, by his Oriental affectations, and by his slavery
to Cleopatra.
This artful and accomplished woman again met Antonius
in Asia, and resumed her sway. The general of one hundred
battles became effeminated by his voluptuous dalliance, so
that his Parthian campaign was a failure, even though he led
an army of one hundred thousand men. He was obliged to
retreat, and his retreat was disastrous. It was while he was
planning another campaign that Octavia, his wife, and the
sister of his rival,—a woman who held the most dignified
situation in the world,—brought to his camp both money and
troops, and hoped to allay the jealousies of her husband, and
secure peace between him and her brother. But Antonius
heartlessly refused to see this noble-minded woman, while he
gave provinces to Cleopatra. At Alexandria this abandoned
profligate plunged, with his paramour, into every excess of
extravagant debauchery, while she who enslaved him only
dreamed of empire and domination. She may have loved
him, but she loved power more than she did debauchery.
Her intellectual accomplishments were equal to her personal
fascinations, and while she beguiled the sensual Roman with
costly banquets, her eye was steadily directed to the establishment
of her Egyptian throne.
The rupture which Octavia sought to prevent between her
brother and her husband—for, with the rarest magnanimity
she still adhered to him in spite of his infatuated love for
Cleopatra—at last took place, when Octavius was triumphant
over Sextus, and Antonius was unsuccessful in the distant
East. Octavius declared war against the queen of Egypt,
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and Antonius divorced Octavia. Throughout the winter of
B.C. 31, both parties prepared for the inevitable conflict, for
Rome now could have but one master. The fate of the empire
was to be settled, not by land forces, but a naval battle,
and that was fought at Actium, not now with equal forces,
for those of Antonius had been weakened by desertions.
Moreover, he rejected the advice of his ablest generals, and
put himself under the guidance of his mistress, while Octavius
listened to the counsels of Agrippa.
The battle had scarcely begun before Cleopatra fled, followed
by Antonius. The destruction of the Antonian fleet
was the consequence. This battle, B.C. 31, gave the empire
of the world to Octavius, and Antonius fled to Alexandria
with the woman who had ruined him. And it was well that
the empire fell into the hands of a politic and profound statesman,
who sought to consolidate it and preserve its peace,
rather than into those of a debauched general, with insatiable
passions and blood-thirsty vengeance. The victor landed in
Egypt, while the lovers abandoned themselves to despair.
Antonius, on the rumor of Cleopatra's death, gave himself a
mortal wound, but died in the arms of her for whom he had
sacrificed fame, fortune, and life. Cleopatra, in the interview
which Octavius sought at Alexandria, attempted to fascinate
him by those arts by which she had led astray both Cæsar
and Antonius, but the cold and politic conqueror was unmoved,
and coldly demanded the justification of her political
career, and reserved her to grace his future triumph. She
eluded his vigilance, and destroyed herself, as is supposed,
by the bite of asps, since her dead body showed none of the
ordinary spots of poison. She died, B.C. 30, in the fortieth
year of her age, and was buried as a queen by the side of her
lover. Her son Cæsarion, by Julius Cæsar, was also put to
death, and then the master of the world “wiped his blood-stained
sword, and thrust it into the scabbard.” No more
victims were needed. No rivalship was henceforth to be
dreaded, and all opposition to his will had ceased.
Octavius reduced Egypt to the form of a Roman province,
[pg 557]
and after adjusting the affairs of the East, among which was
the confirmation of Herod as sovereign of Judea, he returned
to Rome to receive his new honors, and secure his undivided
sovereignty. Peace was given to the world at last. The
imperator dedicated temples to the gods, and gave games
and spectacles to the people. The riches of all previous
conquests were his to dispose and enjoy—the extent of
which may be conjectured from the fact that Cæsar alone had
seized an amount equal to one hundred and seventy million
pounds, not reckoning the relative value to gold in these
times. Divine honors were rendered to Octavius as the
heir of Cæsar. He assumed the prænomen of imperator,
but combined in himself all the great offices of the republic
which had been overturned. As censor, he purged and controlled
the Senate, of which he was appointed princeps, or
chief. As consul he had the control of the armies of the State;
as perpetual proconsul over all the provinces of the empire, he
controlled their revenues, their laws, their internal reforms,
and all foreign relations. As tribune for life, he initiated
legal measures before the Comitia of the tribes; as Pontifex
Maximus, he had the regulation of all religious ceremonials.
All these great offices were voted him by a subservient people.
The only prerogative which remained to them was the
making of laws, but even this great and supreme power he
controlled, by assuming the initiation of all laws and
measures,—that which Louis Napoleon has claimed in the
Corps Legislatif. He had also resorted to edicts, which had
the force of laws, and ultimately composed no small part of
the Roman jurisprudence. Finally, he assumed the name of
Cæsar, as he had of Augustus, and consummated the reality
of despotism by the imposing title of imperator, or
emperor.
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