History of Julius Caesar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about History of Julius Caesar.

History of Julius Caesar eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about History of Julius Caesar.

[Sidenote:  His person and character.]

Sometimes they who become great in their maturer years are thoughtful, grave, and sedate when young.  It was not so, however, with Caesar.  He was of a very gay and lively disposition.  He was tall and handsome in his person, fascinating in his manners, and fond of society, as people always are who know or who suppose that they shine in it.  He had seemed, in a word, during his residence at Rome, wholly intent upon the pleasures of a gay and joyous life, and upon the personal observation which his rank, his wealth, his agreeable manners and his position in society secured for him.  In fact, they who observed and studied his character in these early years, thought that, although his situation was very favorable for acquiring power and renown, he would never feel any strong degree of ambition to avail himself of its advantages.  He was too much interested, they thought, in personal pleasures ever to become great, either as a military commander or a statesman.

[Sidenote:  Sylla’s estimation of Caesar.] [Sidenote:  Caesar’s friends intercede for him.]

Sylla, however, thought differently.  He had penetration enough to perceive, beneath all the gayety and love of pleasure which characterized Caesar’s youthful life, the germs of a sterner and more aspiring spirit, which, he was very sorry to see, was likely to expend its future energies in hostility to him.  By refusing to submit to Sylla’s commands, Caesar had, in effect, thrown himself entirely upon the other party, and would be, of course, in future identified with them.  Sylla consequently looked upon him now as a confirmed and settled enemy.  Some friends of Caesar among the patrician families interceded in his behalf with Sylla again, after he had fled from Rome.  They wished Sylla to pardon him, saying that he was a mere boy and could do him no harm.  Sylla shook his head, saying that, young as he was, he saw in him indications of a future power which he thought was more to be dreaded than that of many Mariuses.

[Sidenote:  Caesar’s studies.] [Sidenote:  His ambition to be an orator.]

One reason which led Sylla to form this opinion of Caesar was, that the young nobleman, with all his love of gayety and pleasure, had not neglected his studies, but had taken great pains to perfect himself in such intellectual pursuits as ambitious men who looked forward to political influence and ascendency were accustomed to prosecute in those days He had studied the Greek language, and read the works of Greek historians; and he attended lectures on philosophy and rhetoric, and was obviously interested deeply in acquiring power as a public speaker.  To write and speak well gave a public man great influence in those days.  Many of the measures of the government were determined by the action of great assemblies of the free citizens, which action was itself, in a great measure, controlled by the harangues of orators who had such powers of voice and such qualities of mind as enabled them to gain the attention and sway the opinions of large bodies of men.

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History of Julius Caesar from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.