Julius Caesar

Read Julius Caesar for Free Online

Book: Read Julius Caesar for Free Online
Authors: Ernle Bradford
the reasons for his popularity with women was undoubtedly his elegance and charm—something which, one suspects, was singularly lacking in most Roman husbands. (Cicero has a scathing reference to the meticulous arrangement of Caesar’s hair and his habit of adjusting his parting with one finger.) But his womanizing, though it may have infuriated some members of his own class (for obvious reasons), can only have amused the masses while he endeared himself to them by his extravagant expenditure.
    Plutarch writes on this score:
     
    He was so profuse in his expenses, that before he had any public employment, he was in debt thirteen hundred talents. [Impossible to calculate in the shifting values of modern currencies, but many thousands of pounds sterling.] Many thought that by incurring such expense to be popular, he changed a solid good for what would prove but a short and uncertain return; but in truth he was purchasing what was of the greatest value at an inconsiderable rate. When he was made surveyor of the Appian way, he disbursed, besides the public money, a great sum out of his private purse; and when he was aedile (magistrates superintending trade, money, streets and buildings, the games etc.) he provided such a number of gladiators, that he entertained the people with three hundred and twenty single combats, and by his great liberality and magnificence in theatrical shows, in processions, and public feastings, he threw into the shade all the attempts that had been made before him, and gained so much upon the people, that every one was eager to find out new offices and new honors for him in return for his munificence.
     
    Between the years 72-70 Caesar disappears from the view of his ancient biographers. Some of his subsequent biographers have found it impossible to believe that during this period he was inactive, for these were the years of the great revolt of the slaves under Spartacus, when this former Thracian bandit was leading an army which ravaged Italy and two consuls and one Roman army after another were defeated. Yet we can be very sure that his biographers would have been quick to tell us if he had been in any way involved, since they detail much more trivial parts of his life. It would seem that Caesar, now rising thirty, was absorbed by indolence and luxury, only disturbed by a passion for internal politics and in laying the foundations for his future career by what amounted to bribing the masses. It may well be that at this time in his life he was making amends to himself for his hard years under Sulla and his self-exile in the eastern empire at a time when most young men of his class were enjoying the pleasures of Rome.
    Certainly, he did not stint himself now, and tales of his wild extravagance lulled to rest any fears there may ever have been among the Optimates that Caesar was another Marius. Abstemious with regard to drink, he also seems to have been more or less indifferent to the quality of food, but he was a passionate collector of every form of art: gems, statues, carvings, and paintings by the masters. Suetonius writes that, “so high were the prices he paid for slaves of attainments and good character that he was ashamed of his extravagance and would not have the sums put down in his accounts.” He was a connoisseur of pearls, particularly of the fresh water variety (later given as one of his reasons for invading Britain where they were said to be plentiful). He gave Servilia, the mother of Marcus Brutus so prominent among his murderers, a pearl of almost inestimable value—60,000 gold pieces—and she is described as “the woman whom Caesar loved best.” (It is possible that he was Brutus’ father.) But he loved many, and Suetonius lists a number of the wives of the nobility whom he seduced at one time or another, among them those of most of his friends, including Pompey, Crassus and Gabinius—and that at a time when they were the leaders of the party to which he subscribed and whose

Similar Books

A Bolt From the Blue

Diane A. S. Stuckart

Matheson, Richard - ss

Dance of the Dead

The Lovegrove Hermit

Rosemary Craddock

Kilty Pleasure

Shelli Stevens