Dialogues of the Dead eBook

George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Dialogues of the Dead.

Dialogues of the Dead eBook

George Lyttelton, 1st Baron Lyttelton
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Dialogues of the Dead.

Caesar.—­I took the necessary measures to secure to myself the fruits of my victories, and gave a head to the empire, which could neither subsist without one nor find another so well suited to the greatness of the body.

Scipio.—­There the true character of Caesar was seen unmasked.  You had managed so skilfully in the measures which preceded the civil war, your offers were so specious, and there appeared so much violence in the conduct of your enemies that, if you had fallen in that war, posterity might have doubted whether you were not a victim to the interests of your country.  But your success, and the despotism you afterwards exorcised, took off those disguises and showed clearly that the aim of all your actions was tyranny.

Caesar.—­Let us not deceive ourselves with sounds and names.  That great minds should aspire to sovereign power is a fixed law of Nature.  It is an injury to mankind if the highest abilities are not placed in the highest stations.  Had you, Scipio, been kept down by the republican jealousy of Cato, the censor Hannibal would have never been recalled out of Italy nor defeated in Africa.  And if I had not been treacherously murdered by the daggers of Brutus and Cassius, my sword would have avenged the defeat of Crassus and added the empire of Parthia to that of Rome.  Nor was my government tyrannical.  It was mild, humane, and bounteous.  The world would have been happy under it and wished its continuance, but my death broke the pillars of the public tranquillity and brought upon the whole empire a direful scene of calamity and confusion.

Scipio.—­You say that great minds will naturally aspire to sovereign power.  But, if they are good as well as great, they will regulate their ambition by the laws of their country.  The laws of Rome permitted me to aspire to the conduct of the war against Carthage; but they did not permit you to turn her arms against herself, and subject her to your will.  The breach of one law of liberty is a greater evil to a nation than the loss of a province; and, in my opinion, the conquest of the whole world would not be enough to compensate for the total loss of their freedom.

Caesar.—­You talk finely, Africanus; but ask yourself, whether the height and dignity of your mind—­that noble pride which accompanies the magnanimity of a hero—­could always stoop to a nice conformity with the laws of your country?  Is there a law of liberty more essential, more sacred, than that which obliges every member of a free community to submit himself to a trial, upon a legal charge brought against him for a public misdemeanour?  In what manner did you answer a regular accusation from a tribune of the people, who charged you with embezzling the money of the State?  You told your judges that on that day you had vanquished Hannibal and Carthage, and bade them follow you to the temples to give thanks to the gods.  Nor could you ever

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Dialogues of the Dead from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.