Porcia, as we before
observed, was the daughter of Cato.
observed, was the daughter of Cato.
Plutarch - Lives - v7
Era-
pylus, who likewise lived with Brutus, as we find in
his own epistles, and in those of his friends, was an
orator, and left a short but a well written narrative of
the death of Caesar, intitled Brutus.
Brutus spoke with great ability in Latin, both in the
field and at the bar. In Greek he affected the senten-
tious and laconic way. There are several instances of
this in his epistles. Thus, in the beginning of the war,
he wrote to the Pergamenians: 'I hear you have given
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
143
money to Dolabella. If you gave it willingly, yon
must own you injured me; if unwillingly, show it by
giving willingly to me. ' Thus, on another occasion, to
the Samians: 'Your deliberations are tedious; your
actions slow: what, think you, will be the conse-
quence V Of the Pataraeans thus: 'The Xanthians
rejected my kindness, and desperately made their coun-
try their grave. The Pataraeans confided in me, and
retained their liberty. It is in your own choice to
imitate the prudence of the Pataraans, or to suffer the
fate of the Xanthians. ' And such is the style of his
most remarkable letters.
While he was yet very young he accompanied Cato
to Cyprus in the expedition against Ptolemy. After
Ptolemy had killed himself, Cato, being detained by
business in the isle of Rhodes, sent Caninius to secure
the king's treasure; but suspecting his fidelity, he
wrote to Brutus to sail immediately to Cyprus from
Pamphylia ; where, after a fit of sickness, he stayed for
the re-establishment of bis health. He obeyed the order
with reluctance, both out of respect to Caninius, who
was superseded with disgrace, and because he thought
the employment illiberal, and by no means proper for
a young man who was in pursuit of philosophy. Ne-
vertheless he executed the commission with such dili-
gence, that he had the approbation of Cato; and hav-
ing turned the effects of Ptolemy into ready money, he
brought the greatest part of it to Rome.
When Rome was divided into two factions, and
Pompey and Caesar were in arms against each other,
it was generally believed that Brutus would join Cae-
sar, because his father had been put to death by Pom-
pey. However, he thought it his duty to sacrifice his
resentments to the interest of his country; and judg-
ing Pompey's to be the better cause, he joined his
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? 144
PLUTARCH.
party, though before he would not even salute Pompey
when he met him, esteeming it a crime to have any
conversation with the murderer of his father. He now
looked on him as the head of the commonwealth; and
therefore, enlisting under his banner, he sailed for Sicily
in quality of lieutenant to Sestius, who was governor
of the island. There however he found no opportunity
to distinguish himself; and being informed that Pom-
pey and Caesar were encamped near each other, and
preparing for that battle on which the whole empire
depended, he went voluntarily into Macedonia to have
his share in the danger. Pompey, it is said, was so
much surprised and pleased with his coming, that he
rose to embrace him in the presence of his guards, and
treated him with as much respect as if he had been his
superior. During the time that he was in camp, those
hours that he did not spend with Pompey he employed
in reading and study; and thus he passed the day be-
fore the battle of Pharsalia. It was the middle of
summer; the heats were intense, the marshy situation
of the camp disagreeable, and his tent-bearers were
long in coming. Nevertheless, though extremely ha-
rassed and fatigued, he did not anoint himself till
noon; and then, taking a morsel of bread, while others
were at rest, or musing on the event of the ensuing
day, he employed himself till the evening in writing
an epitome of Polybius.
Caesar, it is said, had so high an esteem for him,
that he ordered his officers by all means to save him,
if he would surrender himself; and, if he refused, to
let him escape with his life. Some have placed this
kindness to the account of Servilia, the mother of
Brutus, with whom Caesar had connexions of a tender
uature in the early part of his life. Besides, as this
affair was in full blow about the time when Brutus was
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
145
born, Caesar had some reason to believe he might be
his son. The intrigue was notorious: when the senate
was debating on the dangerous conspiracy of Catiline,
Cato and Caesar, who took different sides of the ques-
tion, happened to sit near each other. In the midst of
the business a note was brought to Caesar from without,
which he read silently to himself. Cato, hereon, loudly
accused Caesar of receiving letters from the enemies of
the commonwealth; and Caesar finding that it had oc-
casioned a disturbance in the senate, delivered the
note to Cato as he had received it. Cato, when he
found it to be nothing but a frivolous letter from his
own sister Servilia, threw it back again to Caesar.
'Take it, you sot/ said he, and went on with the public
business.
After the battle of Pharsalia, when Pompey had fled
towards the sea, and Caesar was storming the camp,
Brutus escaped through one of the gates, and fled into
a watery marsh, where he hid himself amongst the
reeds. From thence he ventured out in the night, aud
got safe to Larissa. From Larissa he wrote to Caesar,
who expressed the greatest pleasure in hearing of his
safety, sent for him, and entertained him amongst the
first of his friends. When no one could give account
which way Pompey had fled, Caesar walked for some
time alone with Brutus, to consult his opinion; and
finding that it was for Egypt, he rejected the opinions
of the rest, and directed his march for that country.
Pompey had, indeed, taken the route of Egypt, as
Brutus conjectured; but he had already met his fate.
Brutus had so much influence with Caesar, that he
reconciled him to his friend Cassius; and when he
spoke in behalf of the king of Africa, though there
were many impeachments against him, he obtained for
PLUT. VoL. VII. K
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? 146
PLUTARCH.
him a great part of his kingdom. 1 When he first be-
gan to speak on this occasion, Caesar said, 'I know
not what this young man intends; but whatever it is,
he intends it strongly. ' His mind was steady, and not
easily moved by intreaties. His principles were rea-
son, and honor, and virtue; and the ends to which
these directed him he prosecuted with so much vigor,
that he seldom failed of success. No flattery could
induce him to attend to unjust petitions; and though
that ductility of mind which may be wrought on by the
impudence of importunity, is by some called good-
nature, he considered it as the greatest disgrace. He
used to say that he suspected those who could refuse
no favors had not very honestly employed the flower
of their youth.
Cassar, previously to his expedition into Africa
against Cato and Scipio, appointed Brutus to the go-
vernment of Gallio Cisalpina. And this was very for-
tunate for that particular province: for while the inha-
bitants of other provinces were oppressed and treated
like slaves, by the violence and rapacity of their go-
vernors, Brutus behaved with so much kindness to the
people under his jurisdiction, that they were in some
measure indemnified for their former sufferings. Yet
he ascribed every thing to the goodness of Caesar;
and it was no small gratification to the latter to find,
on- his return through Italy, not only Brutus himself,
but all the cities under his command, ready to attend
his progress, and industrious to do him honor.
As there were several pretorships vacant, it was the
general opinion that the chief of them, which is the
pretorship of the city, would be conferred either on
Brutus or on Cassius. Some say that this competition
1 Plutarch must here be mistaken. It was Deiotarus, and
not the king of Africa, that Brutus pleaded for.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
147
heightened the variance that had already taken place
between Brutus and Cassius; for there was a misun-
derstanding between them, though Cassius was allied
to Brutus by marrying his sister Junia. Others say
that this competition was a political manoeuvre of
Caesar's, who had encouraged it by favoring both their
hopes in private. Be that as it may, Brutus had little
more than the reputation of his virtue to set against
the gallant actions performed by Cassius in the Par-
thian war. Caesar weighed the merits of each; and
after consulting with his friends, 'Cassius,' he said,
'has the better title to it, notwithstanding Brutus
must have the first pretorship. ' Another pretorship
was therefore given to Cassius; but he was not so much
obliged by this as offended by the loss of the first.
Brutus had, or at least might have had, equal in-
fluence with Caesar in every thing else: he might
have stood the first in authority and interest, but he
was drawn off by Cassius' party. Not that he was
perfectly reconciled to Cassius, since the competition
for the pretorial appointments; but he listened to his
friends, who were perpetually advising him not to be
soothed or cajoled by Caesar; but to reject the civili-
ties of a tyrant, whose object was not to reward, but to
disarm his virtue. On the other hand, Cassar had his
suspicions, and Brutus his accusers; yet the former
thought he had less to fear from his spirit, his au-
thority, and his connexions, than he had to hope from
his honesty. When he was told that Antony and Do-
Labella had some dangerous conspiracy on foot, ' It is
not,' said he, ' the sleek and fat men that I fear, but
the pale and the lean;' meaning Brutus and Cassius.
Afterwards, when he was advised to beware of Brutus,
he laid his hand on his breast, and said, ' Do not you
think, then, that Brutus will wait till I have done with
this poor body V as if he thought Brutus the only pro-
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? 148
PLUTARCH.
per person to succeed him in his immense power. In?
deed it is extremely probable that Brutus would have
been the first man in Rome, could he have had patience
awhile to be the second, and have waited till time had
wasted the power of Caesar, and dimmed the lustre of
his great actions. But Cassius, a man of violent pas-
sions, and an enemy to Caesar, rather for personal than
political hatred, still urged him against the dictator.
It was universally said that Brutus hated the imperial
power, and that Cassius hated the emperor. Cassius,
indeed, pretended that Caesar had injured him. He
complained that the lions which he had procured when
he was nominated edile, and which he had sent to Me-
gara, Caesar had taken and converted to his own use,
having found them there when that city was taken
by Calanus. Those lions, it is said, were very fatal to
the inhabitants; for as soon as their city was taken,
they opened their dens, and unchained them in the
streets, that they might stop the irruption of the
enemy: but instead of that they fell on the citizens,
and tore them in such a manner, that their very ene-
mies were struck with horror. Some say that this was
the principal motive with Cassius for conspiring against
Caesar; but they are strangely mistaken. Cassius had
a natural aversion to the whole race of tyrants, which
he showed even when he was at school with Faustus
the son of Sylla. When Faustus was boasting amongst
the boys of the unlimited power of his father, Cassius
rose and struck him on the face. The friends and
tutors of Faustus would have taken on themselves
to punish the insult; but Pompey prevented it, and,
sending for the boys, examined them himself. On
which Cassius said, ' Come along, Faustus! repeat, if
you dare, before Pompey, the expressions which pro-
voked me, that I may punish you in the same man-
ner. ' Such was the disposition of Cassius.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
149
But Brutus was animated to this undertaking by the
persuasion of his friends, by private intimations and
anonymous letters. Under the statue of his ancestor,
who destroyed the Tarquins, was placed a paper with
these words: 'O that we had a Brutus now! O that
Brutus were now alive! ' His own tribunal on which
he sat as pretor was continually filled with such in-
scriptions as these: 'Brutus, thou sleepest! Thou
art not a true Brutus! ' The sycophants of Caesar
were the occasion of this; for, amongst other invidious
distinctions which they paid him, they crowned his
statues by night, that the people might salute him
king, instead of dictator. However, it had a contrary
effect, as I have shown more at large in the life of
Caesar.
When Cassius solicited his friends to engage in the
conspiracy, they all consented, on condition that Bru-
tus would take the lead. They concluded that it was
not strength of hands, or resolution, that they wanted,
but the countenance of a man of reputation, to preside
at this sacrifice, and to justify the deed. They were
sensible that, without him, they should neither proceed
with spirit, nor escape suspicion when they had effected
their purpose. The world, they knew, would conclude,
that if the action had been honorable, Brutus would
not have refused to engage in it. Cassius having con-
sidered these things, determined to pay Brutus the
first visit after the quarrel that had been between
them; and as soon as the compliments of reconciliation
were over, he asked him, 'Whether he intended to
be in the senate on the calends of March; for it was
reported,' he said, 'that Caesar's friends designed to
move that he should be declared king. ' Brutus an-
swered, ' He should not be there;' and Cassius re-
plied,--' But what if they should send for us V--' It
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? 150 PLUTARCH.
would then,' said Brutus, ' be my duty, not only to
speak against it, bat to sacrifice my life for the liberties
of Rome. ' Cassius, encouraged by this, proceeded:--
'But what Roman will bear to see you die? Do not
you know yourself, Brutus? Think you that those
inscriptions you found on your tribunal were placed
there by weavers and victuallers, and not by the first
men in Rome? From other pretors they look for pre-
sents, and shows, and gladiators; but from you they
expect the abolition of tyranny, as a debt which your
family has entailed on you. They are ready to suffer
every thing on your account, if you are really what
you ought, and what they expect you to be. ' After
this he embraced Brutus, and being perfectly recon-
ciled, they retired to their respective friends.
In Pompey's party there was one Quintus Ligarius,
whom Caesar had pardoned, though he had borne arms
against him. This man, less grateful for the pardon
he had received, than offended with the power which
made him stand in need of it, hated Caesar, but was
the intimate friend of Brutus. The latter one day
visited him, and finding him not well, said, 'O Li-
garius, what a time is this to be sick! ' On which he
raised himself on his elbow, and taking Brutus by the
hand, answered, 'If Brutus has any design worthy of
himself, Ligarius is well. ' They now tried the incli-
nations of all they could trust, and took into the con-
spiracy, not only their familiar friends, but such as
they knew to be brave, and above the fear of death:
for this reason, though they had the greatest regard
for Cicero, and the utmost confidence in his principles
as a republican, they concealed the conspiracy from,
him, lest his natural timidity, and the weariness of age,
should retard those measures which required the most
resolute dispatch.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
151
Brutus likewise thought proper to leave his friends
Statilius and Favonius, the followers of Cato, out of
the conspiracy. He had tried their sentiments, under
the color of a philosophical dispute; in which Favo-
nius observed, that the worst absolute government was
preferable to a civil war:. and Statilius added, that it
became no wise man to expose himself to fear and
danger on account of the faults and follies of others.
But Labeo, who was present, contradicted both. And
Brutus, though he was then silent, as if the dispute
had been difficult to determine, afterwards communi-
cated the design to Labeo, who readily concurred in
it. It was then agreed to gain over the other Brutus,
surnamed Albinus, who, though not distinguished by
his personal courage, was of consequence, on account
of the great number of gladiators he bred for the pub-
lic shows, and the intire confidence that Caesar placed
in him. To the solicitations of Cassius and Labeo he
made no answer; but when he came privately to Bru-
tus, and found that he was at the head of the conspi-
racy, he made no scruple of joining them. The name
of Brutus drew in many more of the most considerable
persons of the state ; and though they had entered into
no oath of secrecy, they kept the design so close, that
notwithstanding the gods themselves denounced the
event, by a variety of prodigies, no one would give
credit to the conspiracy.
Brutus now felt his consequence lie heavy on him.
The safety of some of the greatest men in Rome de-
pended on his conduct, and he could not think of the
danger they were to encounter without anxiety. In
public, indeed, he suppressed his uneasiness: but at
home, and especially by night, he was not the same
man. Sometimes he would start from his sleep; at
others, he was totally immersed in thought: from
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? 152 PLUTARCH.
which, and the like circumstances, it was obvious to
his wife that he was revolving in his mind some diffi-
cult and dangerous enterprise.
Porcia, as we before
observed, was the daughter of Cato. She was married
to her cousin Brutus very young, though she was a
widow, and had a son, named Bibulus, after his father.
There is a small tract of his still extant, called ' Me-
moirs of Brutus. ' Porcia added to the affection of a
wife the prudence of a woman who was not unac-
quainted with philosophy; and she resolved not to in-
quire into her husband's secrets before she had made
the following trial of her own firmness. She ordered
all her attendants out of her apartment, and, with a
small knife, gave herself a deep wound in the thigh.
This occasioned a great effusion of blood, extreme pain,
and a fever in consequence of that pain. Brutus was
extremely afflicted for her, and as he attended her, in
the height of her pain, she thus spoke to him: 'Bru-
tus, when you married the daughter of Cato you did
not, I presume, consider her merely as a female com-
panion, but as the partner of your fortunes. You, in-
deed, have given me no reason to repent my marriage:
but what proof, either of affection or fidelity, can you
receive from me, if I may neither share in your secret
griefs, nor in your secret councils? I am sensible that
secrecy is not the characteristic virtue of my sex: but
surely our natural weakness may be strengthened by a
virtuous education, and by honorable connexions; and
Porcia can boast that she is the daughter of Cato, and
the wife of Brutus. Yet even in these distinctions I
placed no absolute confidence till I tried, and found
that I was proof against pain. ' When she had said
this she showed him her wound, and informed him of
her motives: on which Brutus was so struck with her
magnanimity that, with lifted hands, he intreated the
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
153
gods to favor his enterprise, and enable him to approve
himself worthy of Porcia. He then took every means
to cure her wound, and restore her health.
A meeting of the senate being appointed, at which
Caesar was expected to attend, that was thought a pro-
per time for the execution of their design; for then
they could not only appear together without suspicion,
but as some of the most considerable persons in the
commonwealth would be present, they flattered them-
selves that, as soon as the deed was done, they would
join in asserting the common liberty. The place too
where the senate was to meet seemed providentially
favorable for their purpose. It was a portico adjoining
to the theatre, and in the midst of a saloon, furnished,
with benches, stood a statue of Pompey, which had
been erected to him by the commonwealth when he
adorned that part of the city with those buildings.
Here the senate was convened on the ides of March;
and it seemed as if some god should bring Caesar to
this place to revenge on him the death of Pompey.
When the day came, Brutus went out, and took
with him a dagger; which last circumstance was known
only to his wife. The rest met at the house of Cassius,
and conducted his son, who was that day to put on the
toga virilis, to the forum: from whence they proceeded
to Pompey's portico, and waited for Caesar. Any one
that had been privy to the design of the conspirators
would here have been astonished at their calm and con-
sistent firmness. Many of them were pretors, and ob-
liged by their office to hear and determine causes.
These they heard with so much calmness, and decided
with so much accuracy, that one could not have sup-
posed there had been any thing else on their minds;
and when a certain person appealed from the judgment
of Brutus to Caesar, Brutus, looking round on the as-
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PLUTARCH.
sembly, said, ' Caesar neither does, nor shall hinder me
from acting agreeably to the laws. ' Nevertheless they
were disturbed by many accidents. Though the day
was far spent, still Caesar did not come, being detained
by his wife and the soothsayers, on account of defects
in the sacrifices. In the mean time a person came up
to Casca, one of the conspirators, and taking him by
the hand, 'You concealed the thing from me,' said he,
'but Brutus has told me all. ' Casca expressed his
surprise; on which the other said, laughing, 'How
came you to be so rich on a sudden, as to stand for the
edileship V so near was the great secret being blown by
the ambiguity of this man's discourse! At the same
time Popilius Laena, a senator, after saluting Brutus
and Cassius in a very obliging manner, said, in a
whisper, 'My best wishes are with you: but make
no delay; for it is now no secret. ' After saying this,
he immediately went away, and left them in great con-
sternation; for they concluded that every thing was
discovered. Soon after this a messenger came running
from Brntus' house, and told him that his wife was
dying. Porcia had been under extreme anxiety, and
in great agitations about the event. At every little
noise or voice she heard she started up and ran to the
door, like one of the frantic priestesses of Bacchus, in-
quiring of every one that came from the forum what
Brutus was doing. She sent messenger after messenger
to make the same inquiries; and being unable any
longer to support the agitations of her mind, she at
length fainted away. She had not time to retire to her
chamber. As she sat in the middle of the house, her
spirits failed, her color changed, and she lost her senses
and her speech. Her women shrieked, the neighbors
ran to their assistance, and a report was soon spread
through the city that Porcia was dead. However, by
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
155
the care of those that were about her, she recovered
in a little time. Brutus was greatly distressed with
the news, and not without reason; but his private
grief gave way to the public concern; for it was now-
reported that Caesar was coming on a litter. The ill
omen of his sacrifices had deterred him from entering
on business of importance, and be proposed to defer it
under a pretence of indisposition. As soon as he came
out of the litter Popilius Liena, who a little before had
wished Brutus success, went up, and spoke to him for
a considerable time, Caesar all the while standing, and
seeming very attentive. The conspirators not being
able to hear what he said, suspected, from what passed
between him and Brutus, that he was now making a
discovery of their design. This disconcerted them ex-
tremely, and looking on each other, they agreed, by
the silent language of the countenance, that they should
not stay to be taken, but despatch themselves. With
this intent Cassius and some others were just about to
draw their daggers from under their robes, when Bru-
tus observing from the looks and gestures of Liena
that he was petitioning, and not accusing, encouraged
Cassius by the cheerfulness of his countenance. This
was the only way by which he could communicate
his sentiments, being surrounded by many who were
strangers to the conspiracy. Liena, after a little while,
kissed Caesar's hand, and left him; and it plainly ap-
peared, on the whole, that he had been speaking about
his own affairs.
The senate was already seated, and the conspirators
got close about Caesar's chair, under pretence of pre-
ferring a suit to him. Cassius turned his face to Pom-
pey's statue, and invoked it, as if it had been sensible
of his prayers. Trebonius kept Antony in conversation
without the court. And now Caesar entered, and tha
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PLUTARCH.
whole senate rose to salute him. The conspirator*
crowded around him, and set Tullius Cimber, one of
their number, to solicit the recall of his brother, who
was banished. They all united in the solicitation, took
hold of Caesar's hand, and kissed his head and his
breast. He rejected their applications, and finding
that they would not desist, at length rose from his seat
in anger. Tullius on this laid hold of his robe, and
pulled it from his shoulders. Casca, who stood behind,
gave him the first, though but a slight wound with his
dagger, near the shoulder. Caesar caught the handle
of the dagger, and said in Latin, 'Villain! Casca!
what dost thou mean V Casca, in Greek, called his
brother to his assistance. Caesar was wounded by num-
bers almost at the same instant, and looked round him
for some way to escape; but when he saw the dagger
of Brutus pointed against him, he let go Casca's hand,
and covering his head with his robe, resigned himself
to their swords. The conspirators pressed so eagerly
to stab him, that they wounded each other. Brutus, in
attempting to have his share in the sacrifice, received a
wound in his hand, and all of them were covered with
blood.
Caesar thus slain, Brutus stepped forward into the
middle of the senate-house, and proposing to make a
speech, desired the senators to stay. They fled, how-
ever, with the utmost precipitation, though no one
pursued; for the conspirators had no design on any
life but Caesar's; and, that taken away, they invited
the rest to liberty. Indeed, all but Brutus were of
opinion that Antony should fall with Caesar. They
considered him as an insolent man, who in his princi-
ples favored monarchy, and who had made himself
popular in the army. Moreover, besides his natural
disposition to despotism, he had at this time the consu-
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
157
lar power, and was the colleague of Caesar. Brutus,
on the other hand, alleged the injustice of such a mea-
sure, and suggested the possibility of Antony's change
of principle. He thought it far from being improbable
that, after the destruction of Caesar, a man so passion-
ately fond of glory should be inspired by an emulation
to join in restoring the commonwealth. Thus Antony
was saved; though, in the general consternation, he
fled, in the disguise of a plebeian. Brutus and his
party betook themselves to the capitol; and showing
their bloody hands and naked swords, proclaimed li-
berty to the people as they passed. At first all was
lamentation, distraction, and tumult: but as no farther
violence was committed, the senators and the people
recovered their apprehensions, and went in a body to
the conspirators in the capitol. Brutus made a popular
speech adapted to the occasion; and this being well
received, the conspirators were encouraged to come
down into the forum. The rest were undistinguished:
but persons of the first quality attended Brutus, con-
ducted him with great honor from the capitol, and
placed him in the rostrum. At the sight of Brutus
the populace, though disposed to tumult, were struck
with reverence; and when he began to speak, they at-
tended with silence. It soon appeared, however, that
it was not the action, but the man, they respected; for
when Cinna spoke, and accused Caesar, they loaded
him with the most opprobrious language; and became
so outrageous, that the conspirators thought proper
once more to retire into the capitol. Brutus now ex-
pected to be besieged, and therefore dismissed the
principal people that attended him, because he thought
it unreasonable that they who had no concern in the
action should be exposed to the danger that followed
it. Next day the senate assembled in the temple of
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? 158
PLUTARCH.
Tellus, and Antony, Plancus, and Cicero, in their re-
spective speeches, persuaded and prevailed on the peo-
ple to forget what had passed. Accordingly, the con-
spirators were not only pardoned, but it was decreed
that the consuls should take into consideration what
honors and dignities were proper to be conferred on
them. After this the senate broke up; and Antony,
having sent his son as an hostage to the capitol, Brutus
and his party came down, and mutual compliments
passed between them. Cassius was invited to sup with
Antony, Brutus with Lepidus, and the rest were enter-
tained by their respective friends.
Early next morning the senate assembled again, and
voted thanks to Antony for preventing a civil war, as
well as to Brutus and his party for their services to the
commonwealth. The latter had also provinces distri-
buted amongst them. Crete was allotted to Brutus,
Africa to Cassius, Asia toTrebonius, Bithynia to Cim-
ber, and the other Brutus had that part of Gaul which
lies on the Po.
Caesar's will and his funeral came next in question.
Antony proposed that the will should be read in pub-
lic, and that the funeral should not be private, or
without proper magnificence, lest such treatment should
exasperate the people. Cassius strongly opposed this;
but Brutus agreed to it; and here he fell into a second
error. His preservation of so formidable an enemy as
Antony was a mistaken thing; but his giving up the
management of Caesar's funeral to him was an irre-
parable fault. The publication of the will had an im-
mediate tendency to inspire the people with a passion-
ate regret for the death of Caesar; for he had left to
each Roman citizen seventy-five drachmas, besides the
public use of his gardens beyond the Tiber, where now
the temple of Fortune stands. When the body was
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? MARCUS BRUTUS. 159
brought into the forum, and Antony spoke the usual
funeral eulogium, as he perceived the people affected
by his speech, he endeavored still more to work on
their passions, by unfolding the bloody garment of Cre-
sar, showing thein in how many places it was pierced,
and pointing out the number of his wounds. This
threw every thing into confusion. Some called aloud
to kill the murderers; others, as was formerly done in
the case of that seditious demagogue Clodius, snatched
the benches and tables from the neighboring shops,
and erected a pile for the body of Ca? sar in the midst
? of consecrated places and surrounding temples. As
soon as the pile was in flames, the people, crowding
from all parts, snatched the half-burnt brands, and ran
round the city to fire the houses of the conspirators;
but they were on their guard against such an assault,
and prevented the effects.
There was a poet named Cinna, who had no concern
in the conspiracy, but was rather a friend of Caesar's.
This man dreamt that Caesar invited him to supper;
and that, when he declined the invitation, he took him
by the hand, and constrained him to follow him into a
dark and deep place, which he entered with the utmost
horror. The agitation of his spirits threw him into a
fever, which lasted the remaining part of the night.
In the morning, however, when Caesar was to be in-
terred, he was ashamed of absenting himself from the
solemnity: he therefore mingled with the multitude
that had just been enraged by the speech of Antony;
and being unfortunately mistaken for that Cinna who
had before inveighed against Caesar, he was torn to
pieces. This, more than any thing, except Antony's
change of conduct, alarmed Brutus and his party.
They now thought it necessary to consult their safety,
and retired to Antium. Here they sat down, with an
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? 160 PLUTARCH.
intent to return as soon as the popular fury should
subside; and for this, considering the inconstancy of
the multitude, they concluded that they should not
have long to wait. The senate moreover was in their
interest; and though they did not punish the mur-
derers of Cinna, they caused strict inquiry to be made
after those who attempted to burn the houses of the
conspirators. Antony, too, became obnoxious to the
people; for they suspected him of erecting another
kind of monarchy. The return of Brutus was conse-
quently wished for; and, as he was to exhibit shows
and games in his capacity as pretor, it was expected.
Brutus however had received intelligence that several
of Caesar's old soldiers, to whom he had distributed
lands and colonies, had stolen, by small parties, into
Rome, and that they lay in wait for him; he therefore
did not think proper to come himself; notwithstanding
which, the shows that were exhibited on his account
were extremely magnificent; for he had bought a con-
siderable number of wild beasts, and ordered that they
should all be reserved for that purpose. He went
himself as far as Naples to collect a number of come-
dians; and being informed of one Canutius, who was
much admired on the stage, he desired his friends to
use all their interest to bring him to Rome. Canutius
was a Grecian, and Brutus therefore thought that no
compulsion should be used. He wrote likewise to Ci-
cero, and begged that he would by all means be pre-
sent at the public shows.
Such was the situation of his affairs when, on the ar-
rival of Octavius at Rome, things took another turn.
He was son to the sister of Caesar, who had adopted
and appointed him his heir. He was pursuing his stu-
dies at Apollonia, and in expectation of meeting Caesar
there on his intended expedition against the Parthians,
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
1G1
at the time when Caesar was slain. On hearing of this
event he immediately came to Rome, and, to ingratiate
himself with the people, assumed the name of Caesar.
By punctually distributing amongst the citizens the
money that was left them by his uncle, he soon took
the lead of Antony; and, by his liberality to the sol-
diers, he brought over to his party the greatest number
of those who had served under Caesar. Cicero, like-
wise, who hated Antony, joined his interest: and this
was so much resented by Brutus, that, in his letters, he
reproached him in the severest terms. 'He perceived,'
he said, 'that Cicero was tame enough to bear a ty-
rant, and was only afraid of the tyrant that hated him;
that his compliments to Octavius were meant to pur-
chase an easy slavery: but our ancestors,' said Brutus,
'scorned to bear even a gentle master. ' He added,
that 'as to the measures of peace, or war, he was un-
determined; but in one thing he was resolved, which
was, never to be a slave! ' He expressed his surprise
'that Cicero should prefer an infamous accommodation
even to the dangers of civil war; and that the only
fruits he expected from destroying the tyranny of An-
tony should be the establishment of a new tyrant in
Octavius. ' Such was the spirit of his first letters.
The city was now divided into two factions: some
joined Caesar, others remained with Antony, and the
army was sold to the best bidder. Brutus, of course,
despaired of any desirable event; and being resolved
to leave Italy, he went by land to Lucania, and came
to the maritime town of Elea. Porcia, being to return
from thence to Rome, endeavored, as well as possible,
to conceal the sorrow that oppressed her; but, not-
withstanding her magnanimity, a picture which she
found there betrayed her distress. The subject was
the parting of Hector and Andromache. He was re-
PLUT.
pylus, who likewise lived with Brutus, as we find in
his own epistles, and in those of his friends, was an
orator, and left a short but a well written narrative of
the death of Caesar, intitled Brutus.
Brutus spoke with great ability in Latin, both in the
field and at the bar. In Greek he affected the senten-
tious and laconic way. There are several instances of
this in his epistles. Thus, in the beginning of the war,
he wrote to the Pergamenians: 'I hear you have given
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
143
money to Dolabella. If you gave it willingly, yon
must own you injured me; if unwillingly, show it by
giving willingly to me. ' Thus, on another occasion, to
the Samians: 'Your deliberations are tedious; your
actions slow: what, think you, will be the conse-
quence V Of the Pataraeans thus: 'The Xanthians
rejected my kindness, and desperately made their coun-
try their grave. The Pataraeans confided in me, and
retained their liberty. It is in your own choice to
imitate the prudence of the Pataraans, or to suffer the
fate of the Xanthians. ' And such is the style of his
most remarkable letters.
While he was yet very young he accompanied Cato
to Cyprus in the expedition against Ptolemy. After
Ptolemy had killed himself, Cato, being detained by
business in the isle of Rhodes, sent Caninius to secure
the king's treasure; but suspecting his fidelity, he
wrote to Brutus to sail immediately to Cyprus from
Pamphylia ; where, after a fit of sickness, he stayed for
the re-establishment of bis health. He obeyed the order
with reluctance, both out of respect to Caninius, who
was superseded with disgrace, and because he thought
the employment illiberal, and by no means proper for
a young man who was in pursuit of philosophy. Ne-
vertheless he executed the commission with such dili-
gence, that he had the approbation of Cato; and hav-
ing turned the effects of Ptolemy into ready money, he
brought the greatest part of it to Rome.
When Rome was divided into two factions, and
Pompey and Caesar were in arms against each other,
it was generally believed that Brutus would join Cae-
sar, because his father had been put to death by Pom-
pey. However, he thought it his duty to sacrifice his
resentments to the interest of his country; and judg-
ing Pompey's to be the better cause, he joined his
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? 144
PLUTARCH.
party, though before he would not even salute Pompey
when he met him, esteeming it a crime to have any
conversation with the murderer of his father. He now
looked on him as the head of the commonwealth; and
therefore, enlisting under his banner, he sailed for Sicily
in quality of lieutenant to Sestius, who was governor
of the island. There however he found no opportunity
to distinguish himself; and being informed that Pom-
pey and Caesar were encamped near each other, and
preparing for that battle on which the whole empire
depended, he went voluntarily into Macedonia to have
his share in the danger. Pompey, it is said, was so
much surprised and pleased with his coming, that he
rose to embrace him in the presence of his guards, and
treated him with as much respect as if he had been his
superior. During the time that he was in camp, those
hours that he did not spend with Pompey he employed
in reading and study; and thus he passed the day be-
fore the battle of Pharsalia. It was the middle of
summer; the heats were intense, the marshy situation
of the camp disagreeable, and his tent-bearers were
long in coming. Nevertheless, though extremely ha-
rassed and fatigued, he did not anoint himself till
noon; and then, taking a morsel of bread, while others
were at rest, or musing on the event of the ensuing
day, he employed himself till the evening in writing
an epitome of Polybius.
Caesar, it is said, had so high an esteem for him,
that he ordered his officers by all means to save him,
if he would surrender himself; and, if he refused, to
let him escape with his life. Some have placed this
kindness to the account of Servilia, the mother of
Brutus, with whom Caesar had connexions of a tender
uature in the early part of his life. Besides, as this
affair was in full blow about the time when Brutus was
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
145
born, Caesar had some reason to believe he might be
his son. The intrigue was notorious: when the senate
was debating on the dangerous conspiracy of Catiline,
Cato and Caesar, who took different sides of the ques-
tion, happened to sit near each other. In the midst of
the business a note was brought to Caesar from without,
which he read silently to himself. Cato, hereon, loudly
accused Caesar of receiving letters from the enemies of
the commonwealth; and Caesar finding that it had oc-
casioned a disturbance in the senate, delivered the
note to Cato as he had received it. Cato, when he
found it to be nothing but a frivolous letter from his
own sister Servilia, threw it back again to Caesar.
'Take it, you sot/ said he, and went on with the public
business.
After the battle of Pharsalia, when Pompey had fled
towards the sea, and Caesar was storming the camp,
Brutus escaped through one of the gates, and fled into
a watery marsh, where he hid himself amongst the
reeds. From thence he ventured out in the night, aud
got safe to Larissa. From Larissa he wrote to Caesar,
who expressed the greatest pleasure in hearing of his
safety, sent for him, and entertained him amongst the
first of his friends. When no one could give account
which way Pompey had fled, Caesar walked for some
time alone with Brutus, to consult his opinion; and
finding that it was for Egypt, he rejected the opinions
of the rest, and directed his march for that country.
Pompey had, indeed, taken the route of Egypt, as
Brutus conjectured; but he had already met his fate.
Brutus had so much influence with Caesar, that he
reconciled him to his friend Cassius; and when he
spoke in behalf of the king of Africa, though there
were many impeachments against him, he obtained for
PLUT. VoL. VII. K
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? 146
PLUTARCH.
him a great part of his kingdom. 1 When he first be-
gan to speak on this occasion, Caesar said, 'I know
not what this young man intends; but whatever it is,
he intends it strongly. ' His mind was steady, and not
easily moved by intreaties. His principles were rea-
son, and honor, and virtue; and the ends to which
these directed him he prosecuted with so much vigor,
that he seldom failed of success. No flattery could
induce him to attend to unjust petitions; and though
that ductility of mind which may be wrought on by the
impudence of importunity, is by some called good-
nature, he considered it as the greatest disgrace. He
used to say that he suspected those who could refuse
no favors had not very honestly employed the flower
of their youth.
Cassar, previously to his expedition into Africa
against Cato and Scipio, appointed Brutus to the go-
vernment of Gallio Cisalpina. And this was very for-
tunate for that particular province: for while the inha-
bitants of other provinces were oppressed and treated
like slaves, by the violence and rapacity of their go-
vernors, Brutus behaved with so much kindness to the
people under his jurisdiction, that they were in some
measure indemnified for their former sufferings. Yet
he ascribed every thing to the goodness of Caesar;
and it was no small gratification to the latter to find,
on- his return through Italy, not only Brutus himself,
but all the cities under his command, ready to attend
his progress, and industrious to do him honor.
As there were several pretorships vacant, it was the
general opinion that the chief of them, which is the
pretorship of the city, would be conferred either on
Brutus or on Cassius. Some say that this competition
1 Plutarch must here be mistaken. It was Deiotarus, and
not the king of Africa, that Brutus pleaded for.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
147
heightened the variance that had already taken place
between Brutus and Cassius; for there was a misun-
derstanding between them, though Cassius was allied
to Brutus by marrying his sister Junia. Others say
that this competition was a political manoeuvre of
Caesar's, who had encouraged it by favoring both their
hopes in private. Be that as it may, Brutus had little
more than the reputation of his virtue to set against
the gallant actions performed by Cassius in the Par-
thian war. Caesar weighed the merits of each; and
after consulting with his friends, 'Cassius,' he said,
'has the better title to it, notwithstanding Brutus
must have the first pretorship. ' Another pretorship
was therefore given to Cassius; but he was not so much
obliged by this as offended by the loss of the first.
Brutus had, or at least might have had, equal in-
fluence with Caesar in every thing else: he might
have stood the first in authority and interest, but he
was drawn off by Cassius' party. Not that he was
perfectly reconciled to Cassius, since the competition
for the pretorial appointments; but he listened to his
friends, who were perpetually advising him not to be
soothed or cajoled by Caesar; but to reject the civili-
ties of a tyrant, whose object was not to reward, but to
disarm his virtue. On the other hand, Cassar had his
suspicions, and Brutus his accusers; yet the former
thought he had less to fear from his spirit, his au-
thority, and his connexions, than he had to hope from
his honesty. When he was told that Antony and Do-
Labella had some dangerous conspiracy on foot, ' It is
not,' said he, ' the sleek and fat men that I fear, but
the pale and the lean;' meaning Brutus and Cassius.
Afterwards, when he was advised to beware of Brutus,
he laid his hand on his breast, and said, ' Do not you
think, then, that Brutus will wait till I have done with
this poor body V as if he thought Brutus the only pro-
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? 148
PLUTARCH.
per person to succeed him in his immense power. In?
deed it is extremely probable that Brutus would have
been the first man in Rome, could he have had patience
awhile to be the second, and have waited till time had
wasted the power of Caesar, and dimmed the lustre of
his great actions. But Cassius, a man of violent pas-
sions, and an enemy to Caesar, rather for personal than
political hatred, still urged him against the dictator.
It was universally said that Brutus hated the imperial
power, and that Cassius hated the emperor. Cassius,
indeed, pretended that Caesar had injured him. He
complained that the lions which he had procured when
he was nominated edile, and which he had sent to Me-
gara, Caesar had taken and converted to his own use,
having found them there when that city was taken
by Calanus. Those lions, it is said, were very fatal to
the inhabitants; for as soon as their city was taken,
they opened their dens, and unchained them in the
streets, that they might stop the irruption of the
enemy: but instead of that they fell on the citizens,
and tore them in such a manner, that their very ene-
mies were struck with horror. Some say that this was
the principal motive with Cassius for conspiring against
Caesar; but they are strangely mistaken. Cassius had
a natural aversion to the whole race of tyrants, which
he showed even when he was at school with Faustus
the son of Sylla. When Faustus was boasting amongst
the boys of the unlimited power of his father, Cassius
rose and struck him on the face. The friends and
tutors of Faustus would have taken on themselves
to punish the insult; but Pompey prevented it, and,
sending for the boys, examined them himself. On
which Cassius said, ' Come along, Faustus! repeat, if
you dare, before Pompey, the expressions which pro-
voked me, that I may punish you in the same man-
ner. ' Such was the disposition of Cassius.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
149
But Brutus was animated to this undertaking by the
persuasion of his friends, by private intimations and
anonymous letters. Under the statue of his ancestor,
who destroyed the Tarquins, was placed a paper with
these words: 'O that we had a Brutus now! O that
Brutus were now alive! ' His own tribunal on which
he sat as pretor was continually filled with such in-
scriptions as these: 'Brutus, thou sleepest! Thou
art not a true Brutus! ' The sycophants of Caesar
were the occasion of this; for, amongst other invidious
distinctions which they paid him, they crowned his
statues by night, that the people might salute him
king, instead of dictator. However, it had a contrary
effect, as I have shown more at large in the life of
Caesar.
When Cassius solicited his friends to engage in the
conspiracy, they all consented, on condition that Bru-
tus would take the lead. They concluded that it was
not strength of hands, or resolution, that they wanted,
but the countenance of a man of reputation, to preside
at this sacrifice, and to justify the deed. They were
sensible that, without him, they should neither proceed
with spirit, nor escape suspicion when they had effected
their purpose. The world, they knew, would conclude,
that if the action had been honorable, Brutus would
not have refused to engage in it. Cassius having con-
sidered these things, determined to pay Brutus the
first visit after the quarrel that had been between
them; and as soon as the compliments of reconciliation
were over, he asked him, 'Whether he intended to
be in the senate on the calends of March; for it was
reported,' he said, 'that Caesar's friends designed to
move that he should be declared king. ' Brutus an-
swered, ' He should not be there;' and Cassius re-
plied,--' But what if they should send for us V--' It
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? 150 PLUTARCH.
would then,' said Brutus, ' be my duty, not only to
speak against it, bat to sacrifice my life for the liberties
of Rome. ' Cassius, encouraged by this, proceeded:--
'But what Roman will bear to see you die? Do not
you know yourself, Brutus? Think you that those
inscriptions you found on your tribunal were placed
there by weavers and victuallers, and not by the first
men in Rome? From other pretors they look for pre-
sents, and shows, and gladiators; but from you they
expect the abolition of tyranny, as a debt which your
family has entailed on you. They are ready to suffer
every thing on your account, if you are really what
you ought, and what they expect you to be. ' After
this he embraced Brutus, and being perfectly recon-
ciled, they retired to their respective friends.
In Pompey's party there was one Quintus Ligarius,
whom Caesar had pardoned, though he had borne arms
against him. This man, less grateful for the pardon
he had received, than offended with the power which
made him stand in need of it, hated Caesar, but was
the intimate friend of Brutus. The latter one day
visited him, and finding him not well, said, 'O Li-
garius, what a time is this to be sick! ' On which he
raised himself on his elbow, and taking Brutus by the
hand, answered, 'If Brutus has any design worthy of
himself, Ligarius is well. ' They now tried the incli-
nations of all they could trust, and took into the con-
spiracy, not only their familiar friends, but such as
they knew to be brave, and above the fear of death:
for this reason, though they had the greatest regard
for Cicero, and the utmost confidence in his principles
as a republican, they concealed the conspiracy from,
him, lest his natural timidity, and the weariness of age,
should retard those measures which required the most
resolute dispatch.
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
151
Brutus likewise thought proper to leave his friends
Statilius and Favonius, the followers of Cato, out of
the conspiracy. He had tried their sentiments, under
the color of a philosophical dispute; in which Favo-
nius observed, that the worst absolute government was
preferable to a civil war:. and Statilius added, that it
became no wise man to expose himself to fear and
danger on account of the faults and follies of others.
But Labeo, who was present, contradicted both. And
Brutus, though he was then silent, as if the dispute
had been difficult to determine, afterwards communi-
cated the design to Labeo, who readily concurred in
it. It was then agreed to gain over the other Brutus,
surnamed Albinus, who, though not distinguished by
his personal courage, was of consequence, on account
of the great number of gladiators he bred for the pub-
lic shows, and the intire confidence that Caesar placed
in him. To the solicitations of Cassius and Labeo he
made no answer; but when he came privately to Bru-
tus, and found that he was at the head of the conspi-
racy, he made no scruple of joining them. The name
of Brutus drew in many more of the most considerable
persons of the state ; and though they had entered into
no oath of secrecy, they kept the design so close, that
notwithstanding the gods themselves denounced the
event, by a variety of prodigies, no one would give
credit to the conspiracy.
Brutus now felt his consequence lie heavy on him.
The safety of some of the greatest men in Rome de-
pended on his conduct, and he could not think of the
danger they were to encounter without anxiety. In
public, indeed, he suppressed his uneasiness: but at
home, and especially by night, he was not the same
man. Sometimes he would start from his sleep; at
others, he was totally immersed in thought: from
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? 152 PLUTARCH.
which, and the like circumstances, it was obvious to
his wife that he was revolving in his mind some diffi-
cult and dangerous enterprise.
Porcia, as we before
observed, was the daughter of Cato. She was married
to her cousin Brutus very young, though she was a
widow, and had a son, named Bibulus, after his father.
There is a small tract of his still extant, called ' Me-
moirs of Brutus. ' Porcia added to the affection of a
wife the prudence of a woman who was not unac-
quainted with philosophy; and she resolved not to in-
quire into her husband's secrets before she had made
the following trial of her own firmness. She ordered
all her attendants out of her apartment, and, with a
small knife, gave herself a deep wound in the thigh.
This occasioned a great effusion of blood, extreme pain,
and a fever in consequence of that pain. Brutus was
extremely afflicted for her, and as he attended her, in
the height of her pain, she thus spoke to him: 'Bru-
tus, when you married the daughter of Cato you did
not, I presume, consider her merely as a female com-
panion, but as the partner of your fortunes. You, in-
deed, have given me no reason to repent my marriage:
but what proof, either of affection or fidelity, can you
receive from me, if I may neither share in your secret
griefs, nor in your secret councils? I am sensible that
secrecy is not the characteristic virtue of my sex: but
surely our natural weakness may be strengthened by a
virtuous education, and by honorable connexions; and
Porcia can boast that she is the daughter of Cato, and
the wife of Brutus. Yet even in these distinctions I
placed no absolute confidence till I tried, and found
that I was proof against pain. ' When she had said
this she showed him her wound, and informed him of
her motives: on which Brutus was so struck with her
magnanimity that, with lifted hands, he intreated the
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
153
gods to favor his enterprise, and enable him to approve
himself worthy of Porcia. He then took every means
to cure her wound, and restore her health.
A meeting of the senate being appointed, at which
Caesar was expected to attend, that was thought a pro-
per time for the execution of their design; for then
they could not only appear together without suspicion,
but as some of the most considerable persons in the
commonwealth would be present, they flattered them-
selves that, as soon as the deed was done, they would
join in asserting the common liberty. The place too
where the senate was to meet seemed providentially
favorable for their purpose. It was a portico adjoining
to the theatre, and in the midst of a saloon, furnished,
with benches, stood a statue of Pompey, which had
been erected to him by the commonwealth when he
adorned that part of the city with those buildings.
Here the senate was convened on the ides of March;
and it seemed as if some god should bring Caesar to
this place to revenge on him the death of Pompey.
When the day came, Brutus went out, and took
with him a dagger; which last circumstance was known
only to his wife. The rest met at the house of Cassius,
and conducted his son, who was that day to put on the
toga virilis, to the forum: from whence they proceeded
to Pompey's portico, and waited for Caesar. Any one
that had been privy to the design of the conspirators
would here have been astonished at their calm and con-
sistent firmness. Many of them were pretors, and ob-
liged by their office to hear and determine causes.
These they heard with so much calmness, and decided
with so much accuracy, that one could not have sup-
posed there had been any thing else on their minds;
and when a certain person appealed from the judgment
of Brutus to Caesar, Brutus, looking round on the as-
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? 164
PLUTARCH.
sembly, said, ' Caesar neither does, nor shall hinder me
from acting agreeably to the laws. ' Nevertheless they
were disturbed by many accidents. Though the day
was far spent, still Caesar did not come, being detained
by his wife and the soothsayers, on account of defects
in the sacrifices. In the mean time a person came up
to Casca, one of the conspirators, and taking him by
the hand, 'You concealed the thing from me,' said he,
'but Brutus has told me all. ' Casca expressed his
surprise; on which the other said, laughing, 'How
came you to be so rich on a sudden, as to stand for the
edileship V so near was the great secret being blown by
the ambiguity of this man's discourse! At the same
time Popilius Laena, a senator, after saluting Brutus
and Cassius in a very obliging manner, said, in a
whisper, 'My best wishes are with you: but make
no delay; for it is now no secret. ' After saying this,
he immediately went away, and left them in great con-
sternation; for they concluded that every thing was
discovered. Soon after this a messenger came running
from Brntus' house, and told him that his wife was
dying. Porcia had been under extreme anxiety, and
in great agitations about the event. At every little
noise or voice she heard she started up and ran to the
door, like one of the frantic priestesses of Bacchus, in-
quiring of every one that came from the forum what
Brutus was doing. She sent messenger after messenger
to make the same inquiries; and being unable any
longer to support the agitations of her mind, she at
length fainted away. She had not time to retire to her
chamber. As she sat in the middle of the house, her
spirits failed, her color changed, and she lost her senses
and her speech. Her women shrieked, the neighbors
ran to their assistance, and a report was soon spread
through the city that Porcia was dead. However, by
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
155
the care of those that were about her, she recovered
in a little time. Brutus was greatly distressed with
the news, and not without reason; but his private
grief gave way to the public concern; for it was now-
reported that Caesar was coming on a litter. The ill
omen of his sacrifices had deterred him from entering
on business of importance, and be proposed to defer it
under a pretence of indisposition. As soon as he came
out of the litter Popilius Liena, who a little before had
wished Brutus success, went up, and spoke to him for
a considerable time, Caesar all the while standing, and
seeming very attentive. The conspirators not being
able to hear what he said, suspected, from what passed
between him and Brutus, that he was now making a
discovery of their design. This disconcerted them ex-
tremely, and looking on each other, they agreed, by
the silent language of the countenance, that they should
not stay to be taken, but despatch themselves. With
this intent Cassius and some others were just about to
draw their daggers from under their robes, when Bru-
tus observing from the looks and gestures of Liena
that he was petitioning, and not accusing, encouraged
Cassius by the cheerfulness of his countenance. This
was the only way by which he could communicate
his sentiments, being surrounded by many who were
strangers to the conspiracy. Liena, after a little while,
kissed Caesar's hand, and left him; and it plainly ap-
peared, on the whole, that he had been speaking about
his own affairs.
The senate was already seated, and the conspirators
got close about Caesar's chair, under pretence of pre-
ferring a suit to him. Cassius turned his face to Pom-
pey's statue, and invoked it, as if it had been sensible
of his prayers. Trebonius kept Antony in conversation
without the court. And now Caesar entered, and tha
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? 156
PLUTARCH.
whole senate rose to salute him. The conspirator*
crowded around him, and set Tullius Cimber, one of
their number, to solicit the recall of his brother, who
was banished. They all united in the solicitation, took
hold of Caesar's hand, and kissed his head and his
breast. He rejected their applications, and finding
that they would not desist, at length rose from his seat
in anger. Tullius on this laid hold of his robe, and
pulled it from his shoulders. Casca, who stood behind,
gave him the first, though but a slight wound with his
dagger, near the shoulder. Caesar caught the handle
of the dagger, and said in Latin, 'Villain! Casca!
what dost thou mean V Casca, in Greek, called his
brother to his assistance. Caesar was wounded by num-
bers almost at the same instant, and looked round him
for some way to escape; but when he saw the dagger
of Brutus pointed against him, he let go Casca's hand,
and covering his head with his robe, resigned himself
to their swords. The conspirators pressed so eagerly
to stab him, that they wounded each other. Brutus, in
attempting to have his share in the sacrifice, received a
wound in his hand, and all of them were covered with
blood.
Caesar thus slain, Brutus stepped forward into the
middle of the senate-house, and proposing to make a
speech, desired the senators to stay. They fled, how-
ever, with the utmost precipitation, though no one
pursued; for the conspirators had no design on any
life but Caesar's; and, that taken away, they invited
the rest to liberty. Indeed, all but Brutus were of
opinion that Antony should fall with Caesar. They
considered him as an insolent man, who in his princi-
ples favored monarchy, and who had made himself
popular in the army. Moreover, besides his natural
disposition to despotism, he had at this time the consu-
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
157
lar power, and was the colleague of Caesar. Brutus,
on the other hand, alleged the injustice of such a mea-
sure, and suggested the possibility of Antony's change
of principle. He thought it far from being improbable
that, after the destruction of Caesar, a man so passion-
ately fond of glory should be inspired by an emulation
to join in restoring the commonwealth. Thus Antony
was saved; though, in the general consternation, he
fled, in the disguise of a plebeian. Brutus and his
party betook themselves to the capitol; and showing
their bloody hands and naked swords, proclaimed li-
berty to the people as they passed. At first all was
lamentation, distraction, and tumult: but as no farther
violence was committed, the senators and the people
recovered their apprehensions, and went in a body to
the conspirators in the capitol. Brutus made a popular
speech adapted to the occasion; and this being well
received, the conspirators were encouraged to come
down into the forum. The rest were undistinguished:
but persons of the first quality attended Brutus, con-
ducted him with great honor from the capitol, and
placed him in the rostrum. At the sight of Brutus
the populace, though disposed to tumult, were struck
with reverence; and when he began to speak, they at-
tended with silence. It soon appeared, however, that
it was not the action, but the man, they respected; for
when Cinna spoke, and accused Caesar, they loaded
him with the most opprobrious language; and became
so outrageous, that the conspirators thought proper
once more to retire into the capitol. Brutus now ex-
pected to be besieged, and therefore dismissed the
principal people that attended him, because he thought
it unreasonable that they who had no concern in the
action should be exposed to the danger that followed
it. Next day the senate assembled in the temple of
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? 158
PLUTARCH.
Tellus, and Antony, Plancus, and Cicero, in their re-
spective speeches, persuaded and prevailed on the peo-
ple to forget what had passed. Accordingly, the con-
spirators were not only pardoned, but it was decreed
that the consuls should take into consideration what
honors and dignities were proper to be conferred on
them. After this the senate broke up; and Antony,
having sent his son as an hostage to the capitol, Brutus
and his party came down, and mutual compliments
passed between them. Cassius was invited to sup with
Antony, Brutus with Lepidus, and the rest were enter-
tained by their respective friends.
Early next morning the senate assembled again, and
voted thanks to Antony for preventing a civil war, as
well as to Brutus and his party for their services to the
commonwealth. The latter had also provinces distri-
buted amongst them. Crete was allotted to Brutus,
Africa to Cassius, Asia toTrebonius, Bithynia to Cim-
ber, and the other Brutus had that part of Gaul which
lies on the Po.
Caesar's will and his funeral came next in question.
Antony proposed that the will should be read in pub-
lic, and that the funeral should not be private, or
without proper magnificence, lest such treatment should
exasperate the people. Cassius strongly opposed this;
but Brutus agreed to it; and here he fell into a second
error. His preservation of so formidable an enemy as
Antony was a mistaken thing; but his giving up the
management of Caesar's funeral to him was an irre-
parable fault. The publication of the will had an im-
mediate tendency to inspire the people with a passion-
ate regret for the death of Caesar; for he had left to
each Roman citizen seventy-five drachmas, besides the
public use of his gardens beyond the Tiber, where now
the temple of Fortune stands. When the body was
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? MARCUS BRUTUS. 159
brought into the forum, and Antony spoke the usual
funeral eulogium, as he perceived the people affected
by his speech, he endeavored still more to work on
their passions, by unfolding the bloody garment of Cre-
sar, showing thein in how many places it was pierced,
and pointing out the number of his wounds. This
threw every thing into confusion. Some called aloud
to kill the murderers; others, as was formerly done in
the case of that seditious demagogue Clodius, snatched
the benches and tables from the neighboring shops,
and erected a pile for the body of Ca? sar in the midst
? of consecrated places and surrounding temples. As
soon as the pile was in flames, the people, crowding
from all parts, snatched the half-burnt brands, and ran
round the city to fire the houses of the conspirators;
but they were on their guard against such an assault,
and prevented the effects.
There was a poet named Cinna, who had no concern
in the conspiracy, but was rather a friend of Caesar's.
This man dreamt that Caesar invited him to supper;
and that, when he declined the invitation, he took him
by the hand, and constrained him to follow him into a
dark and deep place, which he entered with the utmost
horror. The agitation of his spirits threw him into a
fever, which lasted the remaining part of the night.
In the morning, however, when Caesar was to be in-
terred, he was ashamed of absenting himself from the
solemnity: he therefore mingled with the multitude
that had just been enraged by the speech of Antony;
and being unfortunately mistaken for that Cinna who
had before inveighed against Caesar, he was torn to
pieces. This, more than any thing, except Antony's
change of conduct, alarmed Brutus and his party.
They now thought it necessary to consult their safety,
and retired to Antium. Here they sat down, with an
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? 160 PLUTARCH.
intent to return as soon as the popular fury should
subside; and for this, considering the inconstancy of
the multitude, they concluded that they should not
have long to wait. The senate moreover was in their
interest; and though they did not punish the mur-
derers of Cinna, they caused strict inquiry to be made
after those who attempted to burn the houses of the
conspirators. Antony, too, became obnoxious to the
people; for they suspected him of erecting another
kind of monarchy. The return of Brutus was conse-
quently wished for; and, as he was to exhibit shows
and games in his capacity as pretor, it was expected.
Brutus however had received intelligence that several
of Caesar's old soldiers, to whom he had distributed
lands and colonies, had stolen, by small parties, into
Rome, and that they lay in wait for him; he therefore
did not think proper to come himself; notwithstanding
which, the shows that were exhibited on his account
were extremely magnificent; for he had bought a con-
siderable number of wild beasts, and ordered that they
should all be reserved for that purpose. He went
himself as far as Naples to collect a number of come-
dians; and being informed of one Canutius, who was
much admired on the stage, he desired his friends to
use all their interest to bring him to Rome. Canutius
was a Grecian, and Brutus therefore thought that no
compulsion should be used. He wrote likewise to Ci-
cero, and begged that he would by all means be pre-
sent at the public shows.
Such was the situation of his affairs when, on the ar-
rival of Octavius at Rome, things took another turn.
He was son to the sister of Caesar, who had adopted
and appointed him his heir. He was pursuing his stu-
dies at Apollonia, and in expectation of meeting Caesar
there on his intended expedition against the Parthians,
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? MARCUS BRUTUS.
1G1
at the time when Caesar was slain. On hearing of this
event he immediately came to Rome, and, to ingratiate
himself with the people, assumed the name of Caesar.
By punctually distributing amongst the citizens the
money that was left them by his uncle, he soon took
the lead of Antony; and, by his liberality to the sol-
diers, he brought over to his party the greatest number
of those who had served under Caesar. Cicero, like-
wise, who hated Antony, joined his interest: and this
was so much resented by Brutus, that, in his letters, he
reproached him in the severest terms. 'He perceived,'
he said, 'that Cicero was tame enough to bear a ty-
rant, and was only afraid of the tyrant that hated him;
that his compliments to Octavius were meant to pur-
chase an easy slavery: but our ancestors,' said Brutus,
'scorned to bear even a gentle master. ' He added,
that 'as to the measures of peace, or war, he was un-
determined; but in one thing he was resolved, which
was, never to be a slave! ' He expressed his surprise
'that Cicero should prefer an infamous accommodation
even to the dangers of civil war; and that the only
fruits he expected from destroying the tyranny of An-
tony should be the establishment of a new tyrant in
Octavius. ' Such was the spirit of his first letters.
The city was now divided into two factions: some
joined Caesar, others remained with Antony, and the
army was sold to the best bidder. Brutus, of course,
despaired of any desirable event; and being resolved
to leave Italy, he went by land to Lucania, and came
to the maritime town of Elea. Porcia, being to return
from thence to Rome, endeavored, as well as possible,
to conceal the sorrow that oppressed her; but, not-
withstanding her magnanimity, a picture which she
found there betrayed her distress. The subject was
the parting of Hector and Andromache. He was re-
PLUT.
