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Life of Marius 1 Of a third name for Caius Marius we are ignorant, as we are in the
case of Quintus Sertorius the subduer of Spain, and of Lucius Mummius
the captor of Corinth; for Mummius received the surname of Achaïcus
from his great exploit, as Scipio received that of Africanus, and
Metellus that of Macedonicus. From this circumstance particularly
Poseidonius thinks to confute those who hold that the third name is the
Roman proper name, as, for instance, Camillus, Marcellus, or Cato; for
if that were so, he says, then those with only two names would have had
no proper name at all. But it escapes his notice that his own line of
reasoning, if extended to women, robs them of their proper names; for
no woman is given the first name, which Poseidonius thinks was the
proper name among the Romans. Moreover, of the other two names, one
was common to the whole family, as in the case of the Pompeii, the
Manlii, or the Cornelii (just as a Greek might speak of the Heracleidae
or the Pelopidae), and the other was a cognomen or epithet, given with
reference to their natures or their actions, or to their bodily
appearances or defects, Macrinus, for example, or Torquatus, or Sulla
(like the Greek Mnemon, Grypus, or Callinicus).1 However, in these
matters the irregularity of custom furnishes many topics for discussion.
Life of Marius 2 As for the personal appearance of Marius, we have seen a marble
statue of him at Ravenna in Gaul,a and it very well portrays the
harshness and bitterness of character which were ascribed to him. For
since he was naturally virile and fond of war, and since he received a
training in military rather than in civil life, his temper was fierce
when he came to exercise authority. Moreover, we are told that he
never studied Greek literature, and never used the Greek language for
any matter of real importance, thinking it ridiculous to study a
literature the teachers of which were the subject of another people;
and when, after his second triumph and at the consecration of some
temple, he furnished the public with Greek spectacles, though he came
into the theatre, he merely sat down, and at once went away. Accordingly, just as Plato was wont to say often to Xenocrates the
philosopher, who had the reputation of being rather morose in his
disposition, "My good Xenocrates, sacrifice to the Graces," so if
Marius could have been persuaded to sacrifice to the Greek Muses and
Graces, he would not have put the ugliest possible crown upon a most
illustrious career in field and forum, nor have been driven by the
blasts of passion, ill-timed ambition, and insatiable greed upon the
shore of a most cruel and savage old age. However, his actual career
shall at once bring this into clear view.
>Life of Marius 3 Born of parents who were altogether obscure — poor people who lived
by the labour of their own hands (Marius was his father's name,
Fulcinia that of his mother), it was not till late that he saw the city
or got a taste of city ways. In the meantime he lived at
Cirrhaeaton, a village in the territory of Arpinum, in a manner that
was quite rude when compared with the polished life of a city, but
temperate, and in harmony with the rearing which the ancient Romans
gave their children. His first service as a soldier was in a campaign
against the Celtiberians, when Scipio Africanus was besieging
Numantia, and he attracted the notice of his general by excelling the
other young men in bravery, and by his very cheerful acceptance of the
changed regimen which Scipio introduced into his army when it was
spoiled by luxury and extravagance. It is said, too, that he
encountered and laid low an enemy in the sight of his general. Therefore he was advanced by his commander to many honours; and once,
when the talk after supper had to do with generals, and one of the
company (either because he really wished to know or merely sought to
please) asked Scipio where the Roman people would find any such
chieftain and leader to follow him, Scipio, gently tapping Marius on
the shoulder as he reclined next him, said: "Here, perhaps." So gifted
by nature were both men; the one in showing himself great while still a
young man, and the other in discerning the end from the beginning.
Life of Marius 4 So, then, Marius, filled with high hopes, we are told, by this speech
of Scipio in particular, as if it were a divine utterance in prophecy,
set out upon a political career, and was made •tribune of the people
with the assistance of Caecilius Metellus, of whose house he had
always been an hereditary adherent. While serving as tribune he
introduced a law concerning the mode of voting, which, as it was
thought, would lessen the power of the nobles in judicial cases;
whereupon Cotta the consul opposed him and persuaded the senate to
contest the law, and to summon Marius before it to explain his
procedure. The senate voted to do this, and Marius appeared before it.
He did not, however, behave like a young man who had just entered
political life without any brilliant services behind him, but assumed
at once the assurance which his subsequent achievements gave him, and
threatened to hale Cotta off to prison unless he had the vote
rescinded. Cotta then turned to Metellus and asked him to express his
opinion, and Metellus, rising in his place, concurred with the consul;
but Marius called in the officer and ordered him to conduct Metellus
himself to prison. Metellus appealed to the other tribunes, but none of
them came to his support, so the senate gave way and rescinded its
vote. Marius therefore came forth in triumph to the people and got them
to ratify his law. Men now thought him superior to fear, unmoved by
respect of persons, and a formidable champion of the people in
opposition to the senate. However, this opinion was quickly modified
by another political procedure of his. For when a law was introduced
providing for the distribution of grain to the citizens, he opposed it
most strenuously and carried the day, thereby winning for himself an
equal place in the esteem of both parties as a man who favoured neither
at the expense of the general good.
Life of Marius 5 After his tribuneship, he became a candidate for the higher
aedileship. For there are two classes of aediles, one taking its
name of "curule" from the chair with curving feet on which the
magistrates sit in the exercise of their functions, the other, and the
inferior, being called "plebeian." When the superior aediles have been
elected, the people cast a second vote for the others. Accordingly,
when it was clear that Marius was losing his election to the higher
office, he immediately changed his tactics and applied for the other.
But men thought him bold and obstinate, and he was defeated;
nevertheless, although he had met with two failures in one day, a thing
which had never happened to any candidate before, he did not lower his
assurance in the least, but not long afterwards became a candidate for
the praetors and nearly missed defeat; he was returned last of all,
and prosecuted for bribery.Suspicion was chiefly aroused by the sight of a servant of Cassius
Sabaco inside the palings among the voters; for Sabaco was an especial
friend of Marius. Sabaco was therefore summoned before the court, and
testified that the heat had made him so thirsty that he had called for
cold water, and that his servant had come in to him with a cup, and had
then gone away after his master had drunk. Sabaco, however, was
expelled from the senate by the censors of the next year, and it was
thought that he deserved this punishment, either because he had given
false testimony, or because of his intemperance. But Caius Herennius
also was brought in as a witness against Marius, and pleaded that it
was contrary to established usage for patrons (the Roman term for our
representatives at law) to bear witness against clients, and that the
law relieved them of this necessity; and not only the parents of
Marius but Marius himself had originally been clients of the house of
the Herennii. The jurors accepted this plea in avoidance of
testimony, but Marius himself contradicted Herennius, declaring that as
soon as he had been elected to his magistracy he had ceased to be a
client; which was not altogether true. For it is not every magistracy
that frees its occupants (as well as their posterity) from their
relations to a patron, but only that to which the law assigns the
curule chair. However, although during the first days of the trial
Marius fared badly and found the jurors severe towards him, on the last
day, contrary to all expectation, there was a tie vote and he was
acquitted.
Life of Marius 6 Well, then, for his praetorship Marius got only moderate
commendation. After his praetorship, however, the province of Farther
Spain was allotted to him, and here he is said to have cleared away the
robbers, although the province was still uncivilized in its customs and
in a savage state, and robbery was at that time still considered a most
honourable occupation by the Spaniards. But when he returned to
political life, he had neither wealth nor eloquence, with which the
magnates of the time used to influence the people. Still, the very
intensity of his assurance, his indefatigable labours, and his plain
and simple way of living, won him a certain popularity among his fellow
citizens, and his honours brought him increasing influence, so that he
married into the illustrious family of the Caesars and became the
husband of Julia, who was the aunt of that Caesar who in after times
became greatest among the Romans, and in some degree, because of his
relationship, made Marius his example, as I have stated in his Life.
There is testimony both to the temperance of Marius, and also to
his fortitude, of which his behaviour under a surgical operation is a
proof. He was afflicted in both legs, as it would appear, with varicose
veins, and as he disliked the deformity, he resolved to put himself
into the physician's hands. Refusing to be bound, he presented to him
one leg, and then, without a motion or a groan, but with a steadfast
countenance and in silence, endured incredible pain under the knife.
When, however, the physician was proceeding to treat the other leg,
Marius should suffer him no further, declaring that he saw the cure to
be not worth the pain.
Life of Marius 7 When Caecilius Metellus the consul was appointed commander-in‑chief
for the war against Jugurtha, he took Marius with him to Africa in the
capacity of legate. Here, in essaying great exploits and brilliant
struggles, Marius was not careful, like the rest, to enhance the glory
of Metellus and conduct himself in his interests; and deeming that he
had not so much been called by Metellus to the office of legate as he
was being introduced by Fortune into a most favourable opportunity as
well as a most spacious theatre for exploits, he made a display of
every sort of bravery. And though the war brought many hardships, he
neither shunned any great labour, nor disdained any that were small,
but surpassed the officers of his own rank in giving good counsel and
foreseeing what was advantageous, and vied with the common soldiers in
frugality and endurance, thereby winning much goodwill among them. For as a general thing it would seem that every man finds solace
for his labours in seeing another voluntarily share those labours; this
seems to take away the element of compulsion; and it is a most
agreeable spectacle for a Roman soldier when he sees a general eating
common bread in public, or sleeping on a simple pallet, or taking a
hand in the construction of some trench or palisade. For they have not
so much admiration for those leaders who share honour and riches with
them as for those who take part in their toils and dangers, but have
more affection for those who are willing to join in their toils than
for those who permit them to lead an easy life.By doing all these things and thereby winning the hearts of the
soldiers, Marius soon filled Africa, and soon filled Rome, with his
name and fame, and men in the camp wrote to those at home that there
would be no end or cessation of the war against the Barbarian unless
they chose Caius Marius consul.
Life of Marius 8 At all this Metellus was evidently displeased. But it was the affair
of Turpillius that most vexed him. This Turpillius was an hereditary
guest-friend of Metellus, and at this time was serving in the army as
chief of engineers. But he was put in charge of Vaga, a large city, and
because he relied for safety on his doing the inhabitants no wrong, but
rather treating them with kindness and humanity, he unawares came into
the power of the enemy; for they admitted Jugurtha into their city.
Still, they did Turpillius no harm, but obtained his release and sent
him away safe and sound. Accordingly, a charge of treachery was
brought against him; and Marius, who was a member of the council which
tried the case, was himself bitter, and exasperated most of the
others against the accused, so that Metellus was reluctantly forced to
pass sentence of death upon him. After a short time, however, the
charge was found to be false, and almost everybody sympathized with
Metellus in his grief; but Marius, full of joy and claiming the
condemnation as his own work, was not ashamed to go about saying that
he had fastened upon the path of Metellus a daemon who would avenge the
murder of a guest-friend.In consequence of this there was open enmity between the two men; and
we are told that on one occasion when Marius was present Metellus said
to him as if in mockery: "Dost thou purpose to leave us, my good Sir,
and sail for home, and stand for the consulship? Pray will it not
satisfy thee to be fellow-consul with this my son?" Now the son of
Metellus was at this time a mere stripling. However, Marius was eager
to be dismissed, and so, after making many postponements, and when only
twelve days remained before the election of consuls, Metellus dismissed
him. Marius accomplished the long journey from the camp to Utica and
the sea in two days and one night, and offered sacrifice before he
sailed. And the seer is said to have told him that the Deity revealed
for Marius successes that were of incredible magnitude and beyond his
every expectation. Elated by this prophecy he put out to sea. In
three days he crossed the sea with a favouring wind, and was at once
welcomed gladly by the populace, and after being introduced to the
assembly by one of the tribunes, he first made many slanderous charges
against Metellus, and then asked for the consulship, promising that he
would either kill Jugurtha or take him alive.
Life of Marius 9
He was triumphantly elected, and at once began to levy troops.
Contrary to law and custom he enlisted many a poor and insignificant
man, although former commanders had not accepted such persons, but
bestowed arms, just as they would any other honour, only on those whose
property assessment made them worthy to receive these, each soldier
being supposed to put his substance in pledge to the state. It was
not this, however, that brought most odium upon Marius, but the boldly
insolent and arrogant speeches with which he vexed the nobles, crying
out that he had carried off the consulship as spoil from the effeminacy
of the rich and well-born, and that he had wounds upon his own person
with which to vaunt himself before the people, not monuments of the
dead nor likenesses of other men. Often, too, he would mention by
name the generals in Africa who had been unsuccessful, now Bestia, and
now Albinus, men of illustrious houses indeed, but unfortunate
themselves, and unwarlike, who had met with disaster through lack of
experience; and he would ask his audience if they did not think that
the ancestors of these men would have much preferred to leave
descendants like himself, since they themselves had been made
illustrious, not by their noble birth, but by their valour and noble
deeds. Such talk was not mere empty boasting, nor was his desire to
make himself hated by the nobility without purpose; indeed the people,
who were delighted to have the senate insulted and always measured the
greatness of a man's spirit by the boastfulness of his speech,
encouraged him, and incited him not to spare men of high repute if
he wished to please the multitude.
Life of Marius 10
When he had crossed to Africa, Metellus, now become a victim of
jealousy, and vexed because, after he had brought the war to an end and
had nothing further to do except to seize the person of Jugurtha,
Marius was coming to enjoy the crown and the triumph,— a man whose
ingratitude towards his benefactor had raised him to power,— would not
consent to meet him, but privately left the country while Rutilius, who
had become his legate, handed over the army to Marius. And in the end
a retribution fell upon Marius; for Sulla robbed him of the glory of
his success, as Marius had robbed Metellus. How this came to pass, I
will narrate briefly, since the details are given more at length in my
Life of Sulla.Bocchus, the king of the Barbarians in the interior, was a son-inlaw
of Jugurtha, and apparently gave him little or no assistance in his
war, alleging his faithlessness as an excuse, and fearing the growth of
his power. But when Jugurtha in his flight and wandering felt
compelled to make him his last hope and sought haven with him, Bocchus
received him, more out of regard for his position as a suppliant than
from goodwill, and kept him in his hands. So far as his open acts were
concerned, Bocchus entreated Marius in behalf of his father-in‑law,
writing that he would not give him up and assuming a bold tone; but
secretly he planned to betray him, and sent for Lucius Sulla, who was
quaestor for Marius and had been of some service to Bocchus during the
campaign. But when Sulla had come to him in all confidence, the
Barbarian experienced a change of heart and felt repentant, and for
many days wavered in his plans, deliberating whether to surrender
Jugurtha or to hold Sulla also a prisoner. Finally however, he decided
upon his first plan of treachery, and put Jugurtha alive into the hands
of Sulla. This was the first seed of that bitter and incurable hatred between
Marius and Sulla, which nearly brought Rome to ruin. For many wished
Sulla to have the glory of the affair because they hated Marius, and
Sulla himself had a seal-ring made, which he used to wear, on which was
engraved the surrender of Jugurtha to him by Bocchus. By constantly
using this ring Sulla provoked Marius, who was an ambitious man, loath
to share his glory with another, and quarrelsome. And the enemies of
Marius gave Sulla most encouragement, by attributing the first and
greatest successes of the war to Metellus, but the last, and the
termination of it, to Sulla, so that the people might cease admiring
Marius and giving him their chief allegiance.
Life of Marius 11 Soon, however, all this envy and hatred and slander of Marius was
removed and dissipated by the peril which threatened Italy from the
west, as soon as the state felt the need of a great general and looked
about for a helmsman whom she might employ to save her from so great a
deluge of war. Then the people would have nothing to do with anyone of
high birth or of a wealthy house who offered himself at the consular
elections, but proclaimed Marius consul in spite of his absence from
the city. For no sooner had word been brought to the people of the
capture of Jugurtha than the reports about the Teutones and Cimbri
fell upon their ears. What these reports said about the numbers and
strength of the invading hosts was disbelieved at first, but afterwards
it was found to be short of the truth. For three hundred thousand armed
fighting men were advancing, and much larger hordes of women and
children were said to accompany them, in quest of land to support so
vast a multitude, and of cities in which to settle and live, just as
the Gauls before them, as they learned, had wrested the best part of
Italy from the Tyrrhenians and now occupied it. They themselves,
indeed, had not had intercourse with other peoples, and had traversed a
great stretch of country, so that it could not be ascertained what
people it was nor whence they had set out, thus to descend upon Gaul
and Italy like a cloud. The most prevalent conjecture was that they
were some of the German peoples which extended as far as the northern
ocean, a conjecture based on their great stature, their light-blue
eyes, and the fact that the Germans call robbers Cimbri.But there are some who say that Gaul was wide and large enough to
reach from the outer sea and the subarctic regionsc to the Maeotic Lake
on the east, where it bordered on Pontic Scythia, and that from that
point on Gauls and Scythians were mingled. These mixed Gauls and
Scythians had left their home and moved westward, not in a single
march, nor even continuously, but with each recurring spring they had
gone forward, fighting their way, and in the course of time had crossed
the continent. Therefore, while they had many different names for
different detachments, they called their whole army by the general name
of Galloscythians. Others, however, say that the Cimmerians who were first known to
the ancient Greeks were not a large part of the entire people, but
merely a body of exiles or a faction which was driven away by the
Scythians and passed from the Maeotic Lake into Asia under the lead of
Lygdamis; whereas the largest and most warlike part of the people dwelt
at the confines of the earth along the outer sea, occupying a land that
is shaded, wooded, and wholly sunless by reason of the height and
thickness of the trees, which reach inland as far as the Hercynii;
and as regards the heavens, they are under that portion of them where
the pole gets a great elevation by reason of the declination of the
parallels, and appears to have a position not far removed from the
spectator's zenith, and a day and a night divide the year into two
equal parts; which was of advantage to Homer in his story of Odysseus
consulting the shades of the dead. From these regions, then, these
Barbarians sallied forth against Italy, being called at first
Cimmerians, and then, not inappropriately, Cimbri. But all this is
based on conjecture rather than on sure historical evidence.Their numbers, however, are given by many writers as not less, but
more, than the figure mentioned above. Moreover, their courage and
daring made them irresistible, and when they engaged in battle they
came on with the swiftness and force of fire, so that no one could
withstand their onset, but all who came in their way became their prey
and booty, and even many large Roman armies, with their commanders, who
had been stationed to protect Transalpine Gaul, were destroyed
ingloriously; indeed, by their feeble resistance they were mainly
instrumental in drawing the on-rushing Barbarians down upon Rome. For
when the invaders had conquered those who opposed them, and had got
abundance of booty, they determined not to settle themselves anywhere
until they had destroyed Rome and ravaged Italy.
Life of Marius 12 Learning of these things from many quarters, the Romans summoned
Marius to the command. And he was appointed consul for the second
time,although the law forbade that a man in his absence and before
the lapse of a specified time should be elected again; still, the
people would not listen to those who opposed the election. For they
considered that this would not be the first time that the law had given
way before the demands of the general good, and that the present
occasion demanded it no less imperatively than when they had made
Scipio consul contrary to the laws, although at that time they were
not fearful of losing their own city, but desirous of destroying that
of the Carthaginians. This course was adopted, Marius came across the
sea from Africa with his army, and on the very Calends of January,
which with the Romans is the first day of the year, assumed the
consulship and celebrated his triumph, exhibiting to the Romans
Jugurtha in chains. This was a sight which they had despaired of
beholding, nor could any one have expected, while Jugurtha was alive,
to conquer the enemy; so versatile was he in adapting himself to the
turns of fortune, and so great craft did he combine with his courage. But we are told that when he had been led in triumph he lost his
reason; and that when, after the triumph, he was cast into prison,
where some tore his tunic from his body, and others were so eager to
snatch away his golden ear-ring that they tore off with it the lobe of
his ear, and when he had been thrust down naked into the dungeon pit,
in utter bewilderment and with a grin on his lips he said: "Hercules!
How cold this Roman bath is!" But the wretch, after struggling with
hunger for six days and up to the last moment clinging to the desire of
life, paid the penalty which his crimes deserved.In the triumphal procession there were carried, we are told, three
thousand and seven pounds of gold, of uncoined silver five thousand
seven hundred and seventy-five, and in coined money two hundred and
eighty-seven thousand drachmas.After the procession was over, Marius called the senate into session
on the Capitol, and made his entry, either through inadvertence or with
a vulgar display of his good fortune, in his triumphal robes; but
perceiving quickly that the senators were offended at this, he rose and
went out, changed to the usual robe with purple border, and then came
back.
Life of Marius 13
Setting out on the expedition, he
laboured to perfect his army as it
went along, practising the men in all kinds of running and in long
marches, and compelling them to carry their own baggage and to prepare
their own food. Hence, in after times, men who were fond of toil and
did whatever was enjoined upon them contentedly and without a murmur,
were called Marian mules. Some, however, think that this name had a
different origin. Namely, when Scipio was besieging Numantia, he
wished to inspect not only the arms and the horses, but also the
mules and the waggons, that every man might have them in readiness and
good order. Marius, accordingly, brought out for inspection both a
horse that had been most excellently taken care of by him, and a mule
that for health, docility, and strength far surpassed all the rest. The
commanding officer was naturally well pleased with the beasts of Marius
and often spoke about them, so that in time those who wanted to bestow
facetious praise on a persevering, patient, laborious man would call
him a Marian mule.
Life of Marius 14 And now, as it would seem, a great piece of good fortune befell
Marius. For the Barbarians had a reflux, as it were, in their course,
and streamed first into Spain. This gave Marius time to exercise the
bodies of his men, to raise their spirits to a sturdier courage, and,
what was the most important of all, to let them find out what sort of a
man he was. For his sternness in the exercise of authority and his
inflexibility in the infliction of punishment appeared to them, when
they became accustomed to obedience and good behaviour, salutary as
well as just, and they regarded the fierceness of his temper, the
harshness of his voice, and that ferocity of his countenance which
gradually became familiar, as fearful to their enemies rather than to
themselves. But it was above all things the uprightness of his
judicial decisions that pleased the soldiers; and of this the following
illustration is given.Caius Lusius, a nephew of his, had a command under him in the army. In
other respects he was a man of good reputation, but he had a weakness
for beautiful youths. This officer was enamoured of one of the young
men who served under him, by name Trebonius, and had on made
unsuccessful attempts to seduce him. But finally, at night, he sent a
servant with a summons for Trebonius. The young man came, since he
could not refuse to obey a summons, but when he had been introduced
into the tent and Caius attempted violence upon him, he drew his sword
and slew him. Marius was not with the army when this happened; but on
his return he brought Trebonius to trial. Here there were many
accusers, but not a single advocate, wherefore Trebonius himself
courageously took the stand and told all about the matter, bringing
witnesses to show that he had often refused the solicitations of Lusius
and that in spite of large offers he had never prostituted himself to
anyone. Then Marius, filled with delight and admiration, ordered the
customary crown for brave exploits to be brought, and with his own
hands placed it on the head of Trebonius, declaring that at a time
which called for noble examples he had displayed the most noble conduct.Tidings of this were brought to Rome and helped in no small degree to
secure for Marius his third consulship; at the same time, too, the
Barbarians were expected in the spring, and the Romans were unwilling
to risk battle with them under any other general. However, the
Barbarians did not come as soon as they were expected, and once more
the period of Marius's consulship expired. As the consular elections
were at hand, and as his colleague in the office had died, Marius left
Manius Aquillius in charge of the forces and came himself to Rome. Here
many men of great merit were candidates for the consulship, but Lucius
Saturninus, who had more influence with the people than any other
tribune, was won over by the flattering attentions of Marius, and in
his harangues urged the people to elect Marius consul. Marius affected
to decline the office and declared that he did not want it, but
Saturninus called him a traitor to his country for refusing to command
her armies at a time of so great peril. Now, it was clear that
Saturninus was playing his part at the instigation of Marius, and
playing it badly, too, but the multitude, seeing that occasion required
the ability as well as the good fortune of Marius, voted for his fourth
consulship, and made Catulus Lutatius his colleague, a man who was
esteemed by the nobility and not disliked by the common people.
Life of Marius 15 Learning that the enemy were near, Marius rapidly crossed the Alps,
and built a fortified camp along the river Rhone. Into this he brought
together an abundance of stores, that he might never be forced by lack
of provisions to give battle contrary to his better judgment. The
conveyance of what was needful for his army, which had previously been
a long and costly process where it was by sea, he rendered easy and
speedy. That is, the mouths of the Rhone, encountering the sea, took up
great quantities of mud and sand packed close with clay by the action
of the billows, and made the entrance of the river difficult,
laborious, and slow for vessels carrying supplies. So Marius brought
his army to the place, since the men had nothing else to do, and ran a
great canal. Into this he diverted a great part of the river and
brought it round to a suitable place on the coast, a deep bay where
large ships could float, and where the water could flow out smoothly
and without waves to the sea. This canal, indeed, still bears the name
of Marius.The Barbarians divided themselves into two bands, and it fell to the
lot of the Cimbri to proceed through Noricum in the interior of the
country against Catulus, and of a passage there, while the Teutones and
Ambrones were to march through Liguria along the sea-coast against
Marius. On the part of the Cimbri there was considerable delay and
loss of time, but the Teutones and Ambrones set out at once, passed
through the intervening country, and made their appearance before
Marius. Their numbers were limitless, they were hideous in their
aspect, and their speech and cries were unlike those of other peoples.
They covered a large part of the plain, and after pitching their camp
challenged Marius to battle.
Life of Marius 16 Marius, however, paid no heed to them, but kept his soldiers inside
their fortifications, bitterly rebuking those who would have made a
display of their courage, and calling those whose high spirit made them
wish to rush forth and give battle traitors to their country. For it
was not, he said, triumphs or trophies that should now be the object of
their ambition, but how they might ward off so great a cloud and
thunder-bolt of war and secure the safety of Italy. This was his
language in private to his officers and equals; but he would station
his soldiers on the fortifications by detachments, bidding them to
observe the enemy, and in this way accustomed them not to fear their
shape or dread their cries, which were altogether strange and
ferocious; and to make themselves acquainted with their equipment and
movements, thus in the course of time rendering what was only
apparently formidable familiar to their minds from observation. For he
considered that their novelty falsely imparts to terrifying objects
many qualities which they do not possess, but that with familiarity
even those things which are really dreadful lose their power to
affright. And so in the case of his soldiers, not only did the daily
sight of the enemy lessen somewhat their amazement at them, but also,
when they heard the threats and the intolerable boasting of the
Barbarians, their anger rose and warmed and set on fire their spirits;
for the enemy were ravaging and plundering all the country round, and
besides, often attacked the Roman fortifications with great temerity
and shamelessness, so that indignant speeches of his soldiers reached
the ears of Marius. "What cowardice, pray, has Marius discovered in
us that he keeps out of battle like women under lock and key? Come, let
us act like freemen and ask him if he is waiting for other soldiers to
fight in defence of Italy, and will use us as workmen all the time,
whenever there is need of digging ditches and clearing out mud and
diverting a river or two.d For it was to this end, as it would seem,
that he exercised us in those many toils, and these are the
achievements of his consulships which he will exhibit to his
fellow-citizens on his return to Rome. Or does he fear the fate of
Carbo and Caepio, whom the enemy defeated?19 But they were far behind
Marius in reputation and excellence, and led an army that was far
inferior to his. Surely it is better to do something, even if we perish
as they did, rather than to sit here and enjoy the spectacle of our
allies being plundered."
Life of Marius 17 Marius was delighted to hear of such expressions, and tried to calm
the soldiers down by telling them that he did not distrust them, but in
consequence of certain oracles was awaiting a fit time and place for
his victory. And indeed he used to carry about ceremoniously in a
litter a certain Syrian woman, named Martha, who was said to have the
gift of prophecy, and he would make sacrifices at her bidding. She had
previously been rejected by the senate when she wished to appear before
them with reference to these matters and predicted future events. Then
she got audience of the women and gave them proofs of her skill,
and particularly the wife of Marius, at whose feet she sat when some
gladiators were fighting and successfully foretold which one was going
to be victorious. In consequence of this she was sent to Marius by his
wife, and was admired by him. As a general thing she was carried along
with the army in a litter, but she attended the sacrifices clothed in a
double purple robe that was fastened with a clasp, and carrying a spear
that was wreathed with fillets and chaplets. Such a performance as
this caused many to doubt whether Marius, in exhibiting the woman,
really believed in her, or was pretending to do so and merely acted a
part with her.The affair of the vultures, however, which Alexander of Myndus relates,
is certainly wonderful. Two vultures were always seen hovering about
the armies of Marius before their victories, and accompanied them
on their journeys, being recognized by bronze rings on their necks; for
the soldiers had caught them, put these rings on, and let them go
again; and after this, on recognizing the birds, the soldiers greeted
them, and they were glad to see them when they set out upon a march,
feeling sure in such cases that they would be successful.Many signs also appeared, most of which were of the ordinary kind;
but from Ameria and Tuder, cities of Italy, it was reported that at
night there had been seen in the heavens flaming spears, and shields
which at first moved in different directions, and then clashed
together, assuming the formations and movements of men in battle, and
finally some of them would give way, while others pressed on in
pursuit, and all streamed away to the westward. Moreover, about this
time Bataces, the priest of the Great Mother,came from Pessinus
announcing that the goddess had declared to him from her shrine that
the Romans were going to be victorious and triumphant in war. The
senate gave credence to the story and voted that a temple should be
built for the goddess in commemoration of the victory; but when Bataces
came before the assembly and desired to tell the story, Aulus Pompeius,
a tribune of the people, prevented him, calling him an impostor, and
driving him with insults from the rostra. And lo, this did more than
anything else to gain credence for the man's story. For hardly had
Aulus gone back to his house after the assembly was dissolved, when he
broke out with so violent a fever that he died within a week, and
everybody knew and talked about it.
Life of Marius 18 But the Teutones, since Marius kept quiet, attempted to take his
camp by storm; many missiles, however, were hurled against them from
the fortifications, and they lost some of their men. They therefore
decided to march forward, expecting to cross the Alps without
molestation. So they packed up their baggage and began to march past
the camp of the Romans. Then, indeed, the immensity of their numbers
was made specially evident by the length of their line and the time
required for their passage; for it is said they were six days in
passing the fortifications of Marius, although they moved continuously.
And they marched close to the camp, inquiring whether the Romans had
any messages for their wives; "for," said they, "we shall soon be with
them." But when the Barbarians had passed by and were going on their
way, Marius also broke camp and followed close upon them, always
halting near by and at their very side, but strongly fortifying his
camps and keeping strong positions in his front, so that he could pass
the night in safety. Thus the two armies went on until came to the
place called Aquae Sextiae, from which they had to march only a short
distance and they would be in the Alps. For this reason, indeed, Marius
made preparations to give battle here, and he occupied for his camp a
position that was strong, but poorly supplied with water, wishing, as
they say, by this circumstance also to incite his soldiers to fight.
At any rate, when many of them were dissatisfied and said they would be
thirsty there, he pointed to a river that ran near the barbarian
fortifications, and told them they could get water there, but the price
of it was blood. "Why, then," they said, "dost thou not lead
at once against the enemy, while our blood is still moist?" To which
Marius calmly replied: "We must first make our camp strong."
Life of Marius 19 His soldiers, accordingly, though reluctant, obeyed; but the throng
of camp-servants, who had no water either for themselves or their
beasts, went down in a body to the river, some taking hatchets, some
axes, and some also swords and lances along with their water-jars,
determined to get water even if they had to fight for it. With these
only a few of the enemy at first engaged, since the main body were
taking their meal after bathing, and some were still bathing. For
streams of warm water burst from the ground in this place, and at these
the Romans surprised a number of the Barbarians, who were enjoying
themselves and making merry in this wonderfully pleasant place. Their
cries brought more of the Barbarians to the spot, and Marius had
difficulty in longer restraining his soldiers, since they had fears now
for their servants. Besides, the most warlike division of the enemy, by
whom at an earlier time the Romans under Manlius and Caepio had been
defeated (they were called Ambrones and of themselves numbered more
than thirty thousand), had sprung up from their meal and were running
to get their arms. However, though their bodies were surfeited and
weighed down with food and their spirits excited and disordered with
strong wine, they did not rush on in a disorderly or frantic course,
nor raise an inarticulate battle-cry, but rhythmically clashing their
arms and leaping to the sound they would frequently shout out all
together their tribal name Ambrones, either to encourage one another,
or to terrify their enemies in advance by the declaration. The first
of the Italians to go down against them were the Ligurians, and when
they had heard and understood what the Barbarians were shouting, they
themselves shouted back the word, claiming it as their own ancestral
appellation; for the Ligurians call themselves Ambrones by descent.
Often, then, did the shout echo and reecho from either side before they
came to close quarters; and since the hosts back of each party took up
the cry by turns and strove each to outdo the other first in the
magnitude of their shout, their cries roused and fired the spirit of
the combatants.Well, then, the Ambrones became separated by the stream; for they did
not all succeed in getting across and forming an array, but upon the
foremost of them the Ligurians at once fell with a rush, and the
fighting was hand-to‑hand. Then the Romans came to the aid of the
Ligurians, and charging down from the heights upon the Barbarians
overwhelmed and turned them back. Most of the Ambrones were cut down
there in the stream where they were all crowded together, and the river
was filled with their blood and their dead bodies; the rest, after the
Romans had crossed, did not dare to face about, and the Romans kept
slaying them until they came in their flight to their camp and waggons.
Here the women met them, swords and axes in their hands, and with
hideous shrieks of rage tried to drive back fugitives and pursuers
alike, the fugitives as traitors, and the pursuers as foes; they mixed
themselves up with the combatants, with bare hands tore away the
shields of the Romans or grasped their swords, and endured wounds and
mutilations, their fierce spirits unvanquished to the end. So, then, as
we are told, the battle at the river was brought on by accident rather
than by the intention of the commander.
Life of Marius 20 After destroying many of the Ambrones the Romans withdrew and night
came on; but in spite of so great a success the army did not indulge in
paeans of victory, or drinking in the tents, or friendly converse over
suppers, or that sweetest of delights for men who have fought and won a
battle, gentle sleep, but that night more than any other was spent in
fears and commotions. For their camp was still without palisade or
wall, and there were still left many myriads of the Barbarians who had
met with no defeat. These had been joined by all the Ambrones who
survived the battle, and there was lamentation among them all night
long, not like the wailings and groanings of men, but howlings and
bellowings with a strain of the wild beast in them, mingled with
threats and cries of grief, went up from this vast multitude and echoed
among the surrounding hills and over the river valley. The whole
plain was filled with an awful din, the Romans with fear, and even
Marius himself with consternation as he awaited some disorderly and
confused night-battle. However, the Barbarians made no attack either
during that night or the following day, but spent the time in
marshalling their forces and making preparations. Meanwhile, since the position of the Barbarians was commanded by
sloping glens and ravines that were shaded by trees, Marius sent
Claudius Marcellus thither with three thousand men-at‑arms, under
orders to lie concealed in ambush until the battle was on, and then to
show themselves in the enemy's rear. The rest of his soldiers, who had
taken supper in good season and then got a night's sleep, he led out at
day-break and drew up in front of the camp, and sent out his cavalry
into the plain. The Teutones, seeing this, could not wait for the
Romans to come down and fight with them on equal terms, but quickly and
wrathfully armed themselves and charged up the hill. But Marius,
sending his officers to all parts of the line, exhorted the soldiers to
stand firmly in their lines, and when the enemy had got within reach to
hurl their javelins, then take to their swords and crowd the Barbarians
back with their shields; for since the enemy were on precarious
ground their blows would have no force and the locking of their shields
no strength, but the unevenness of the ground would keep them turning
and tossing about. This was the advice he gave his men, and they saw
that he was first to act accordingly; for he was in better training
than any of them, and in daring far surpassed them all.
Life of Marius 21 Accordingly, the Romans awaited the enemy's onset, then closed with
them and checked their upward rush, and at last, crowding them back
little by little, forced them into the plain. Here, while the
Barbarians in front were at last forming in line on level ground, there
was shouting and commotion in their rear. For Marcellus had watched his
opportunity, and when the cries of battle were borne up over the hills
he put his men upon the run and fell with loud shouts upon the
enemy's rear, where he cut down the hindmost of them. Those in the
rear forced along those who were in front of them, and quickly plunged
the whole army into confusion, and under this double attack they could
not hold out long, but broke ranks and fled. The Romans pursued them
and either slew or took alive over a hundred thousand of them, besides
making themselves masters of the tents, waggons, and property, all of
which, with the exception of what was pilfered, was given to Marius by
vote of the soldiers. And though the gift that he received was so
splendid, it was thought to be wholly unworthy of his services in the
campaign, where the danger that threatened had been so great. There are some writers, however, who give a different account of the
division of the spoils, and also of the number of the slain.
Nevertheless, it is said that the people of Massalia fenced their
vineyards round with the bones of the fallen, and that the soil, after
the bodies had wasted away in it and the rains had fallen all winter
upon it, grew so rich and became so full to its depths of the putrefied
matter that sank into it, that it produced an exceeding great harvest
in after years, and confirmed the saying of Archilochus that "fields
are fattened" by such a process. And it is said that extraordinary
rains generally dash down after great battles, whether it is that some
divine power drenches and hallows the ground with purifying waters from
Heaven, or that the blood and putrefying matter send up a moist and
heavy vapour which condenses the air, this being easily moved and
readily changed to the highest degree by the slightest cause.
Life of Marius 22 After the battle, Marius collected such of the arms and spoils
of the Barbarians as were handsome, entire, and fitted to make a show
in his triumphal procession; all the rest he heaped up on a huge pure
and set on foot a magnificent sacrifice. The soldiers had taken their
stand about the pyre in arms, with chaplets on their heads, and Marius
himself, having put on his purple-bordered robe and girt it about him,
as the custom was, had taken a lighted torch, held it up towards heaven
with both hands, and was just about to set fire to the pyre, when some
friends were seen riding swiftly towards him, and there was deep
silence and expectancy on the part of all. But when the horsemen were
near, they leaped to the ground and greeted Marius, bringing him the
glad news that he had been elected consul for the fifth time, and
giving him letters to that effect. This great cause for rejoicing
having been added to the celebration of their victory, the soldiers,
transported with delight, sent forth a universal shout, accompanied by
the clash and clatter of their arms, and after his officers had crowned
Marius afresh with wreaths of bay, he set fire to the pyre and
completed the sacrifice.
Life of Marius 23 However, that power which permits no great successes to bring a pure
and unmixed enjoyment, but diversifies human life with a blending of
evil and of good — be it Fortune, or Nemesis, or Inevitable Necessity,
within a few days brought to Marius tidings of his colleague Catulus,
which, like a cloud in a calm and serene sky, involved Rome in another
tempest of fear. For Catulus, who was facing the Cimbri, gave up
trying to guard the passes of the Alps, lest he should be weakened
by the necessity of dividing his forces into many parts, and at once
descended into the plains of Italy. Here he put the river Atiso between
himself and the enemy, built strong fortifications on both banks of it
to prevent their crossing, and threw a bridge across the stream, that
he might be able to go to the help of the people on the other side in
case the Barbarians made their way through the passes and attacked the
fortresses. But these Barbarians were so contemptuous and bold in
following their enemies that, more by way of displaying their strength
and daring than because it was necessary at all, they endured the
snow-storms without any clothing, made their way through ice and deep
snow to the summits, and from there, putting their broad shields under
them and then letting themselves go, slid down the smooth and deeply
fissured cliffs. After they had encamped near the stream and examined
the passage, they began to dam it up, tearing away the neighbouring
hills, like the giants of old, carrying into the river whole trees with
their roots, fragments of cliffs, and mounds of earth, and crowding the
current out of its course; they also sent whirling down the stream
against the piles of the bridge heavy masses which made the bridge
quiver with their blows, until at last the greater part of the Roman
soldiers played the coward, abandoned their main camp, and began to
retreat. And now Catulus, like a consummately good commander, showed that he
had less regard for his own reputation than for that of his countrymen.
For finding that he could not persuade his soldiers to remain, and
seeing that they were making off in terror, he ordered his standard to
be taken up, ran to the foremost of the retiring troops, and put
himself at their head, wishing that the disgrace should attach to
himself and not to his country, and that his soldiers, in making their
retreat, should not appear to be running away, but following their
general. The Barbarian attacked and captured the fortress on the
further side of the Atiso, and they so much admired the Romans there,
who showed themselves bravest of men and fought worthily of their
country, that they let them go on parole, making them take oath upon
the bronze bull. This was subsequently captured, after the battle, and
was carried, we are told, to the house of Catulus as the chief prize of
the victory. But the country was now destitute of defenders, and the
Barbarians inundated and ravaged it.
Life of Marius 24 In view of these things Marius was summoned to Rome. When he had
arrived there, it was the general expectation that he would celebrate
the triumph which the senate had readily voted him. But he refused to
do so, either because he did not wish to deprive his soldiers and
comrades-in‑arms of their due honours, or because he would encourage
the multitude in view of the present crisis by entrusting the glory of
his first success to the fortune of the state, in the hope that it
would be returned to him enhanced by a second. Having said what was
suitable to the occasion, he set out to join Catulus, whom he tried to
encourage, while at the same time he summoned his own soldiers from
Gaul. When these had come, he crossed the Po and tried to keep the
Barbarians out of the part of Italy lying this side of the river. But
the Barbarians declined battle, alleging that they were waiting for
their brethren the Teutones and wondered why they were so long in
coming; this was either because they were really ignorant of their
destruction, or because they wished to have the appearance of
disbelieving it. For they terribly mishandled those who brought
tidings of it, and sent to Marius demanding territory for themselves
and their brethren and enough cities for them to dwell in. When Marius
asked their ambassadors whom they meant by their brethren, they said
they meant the Teutones. At this, all the other Romans who heard them
burst out laughing, and Marius scoffingly said: "Then don't trouble
yourself about your brethren, for they have landand they will have it
forever — land which we have given them." The ambassadors understood
his sarcasm and fell to abusing him, declaring that he should be
punished for it, by the Cimbri at once, and by the Teutones when they
came. "Verily," said Marius, "they are here, and it will not be right
for you to go away before you have embraced your brethren." Saying
this, he ordered the kings of the Teutones to be produced in fetters;
for they had been captured among the Alps, where they were fugitives,
by the Sequani.
Life of Marius 25 When these things had been reported to the Cimbri, they once more
advanced against Marius, who kept quiet and carefully guarded his camp.
And it is said that it was in preparation for this battle that Marius
introduced an innovation in the structure of the javelin. Up to this
time, it seems, that part of the shaft which was let into the iron head
was fastened there by two iron nails; but now, leaving one of these as
it was, Marius removed the other, and put in its place a wooden pin
that could easily be broken. His design was that the javelin,
after striking the enemy's shield, should not stand straight out, but
that the wooden peg should break, thus allowing the shaft to bend in
the iron head and trail along the ground, being held fast by the twist
at the point of the weapon.And now Boeorix the king of the Cimbri, with a small retinue, rode up
towards the camp and challenged Marius to set a day and a place and
come out and fight for the ownership of the country. Marius replied
that the Romans never allowed their enemies to give them advice about
fighting, but that he would nevertheless gratify the Cimbri in this
matter. Accordingly, they decided that the day should be the third
following, and the place the plain of Vercellae, which was suitable for
the operations of the Roman cavalry, and would give the Cimbri room to
deploy their numbers. When, therefore, the appointed time had come, the Romans drew up
their forces for battle. Catulus had twenty thousand three hundred
soldiers, while those of Marius amounted to thirty-two thousand, which
were divided between both wings and had Catulus between them in the
centre, as Sulla, who fought in this battle, has stated. He says
also that Marius hoped that the two lines would engage at their
extremities chiefly and on the wings, in order that his soldiers might
have the whole credit for the victory and that Catulus might not
participate in the struggle nor even engage the enemy (since the
centre, as is usual in battle-fronts of great extent, would be folded
back); and therefore arranged the forces in this manner. And we
are told that Catulus himself also made a similar statement in defence
of his conduct in the battle, and accused Marius of great malice in his
treatment of him.As for the Cimbri, their foot-soldiers advanced slowly from their
defences, with a depth equal to their front, for each side of their
formation had an extent of thirty furlongs; and their horsemen,
fifteen thousand strong, rode out in splendid style, with helmets made
to resemble the maws of frightful wild beasts or the heads of strange
animals, which, with their towering crests of feathers, made their
wearers appear taller than they really were; they were also equipped
with breastplates of iron, and carried gleaming white shields. For
hurling, each man had two lances; and at close quarters they used
large, heavy swords.
Life of Marius 26 At this time, however, they did not charge directly upon the Romans,
but swerved to the right and tried to draw them along gradually until
they got them between themselves and their infantry, which was drawn up
on their left. The Roman commanders perceived the crafty design, but
did not succeed in holding their soldiers back; for one of them shouted
that the enemy was taking to flight, and then all set out to pursue
them. Meanwhile the infantry of the Barbarians came on to the attack
like a vast sea in motion. Then Marius, after washing his hands, lifted
them to heaven and vowed a hecatomb to the gods; Catulus also in like
manner lifted his hands and vowed that he would consecrate the fortune
of that day. It is said, too, that Marius offered sacrifice, and that
when the victims had been shown to him, he cried with a loud voice:
"Mine is the victory."After the attack had begun, however, an experience befell Marius
which signified the divine displeasure, according to Sulla. For an
immense cloud of dust was raised, as was to be expected, and the two
armies were hidden from one another by it, so that Marius, when he
first led his forces to the attack, missed the enemy, passed by their
lines of battle, and moved aimlessly up and down the plain for some
time. Meanwhile, as chance would have it, the Barbarians engaged
fiercely with Catulus, and he and his soldiers, among whom Sulla says
he himself was posted, bore the brunt of the struggle. The Romans
were favoured in the struggle, Sulla says, by the heat, and by the sun,
which shone in the faces of the Cimbri. For the Barbarians were well
able to endure cold, and had been brought up in shady and chilly
regions, as I have said. They were therefore undone by the heat; they
sweated profusely, breathed with difficulty, and were forced to hold
their shields before their faces. For the battle was fought after the
summer solstice, which falls, by Roman reckoning, three days before the
new moon of the month now called August, but then Sextilis.
Moreover, the dust, by hiding the enemy, helped to encourage the
Romans. For they could not see from afar the great numbers of the foe,
but each one of them fell at a run upon the man just over against him,
and fought him hand to hand, without having been terrified by the sight
of the rest of the host. And their bodies were so inured to toil and so
thoroughly trained that not a Roman was observed to sweat or pant, in
spite of the great heat and the run with which they came to the
encounter. This is what Catulus is said to have written in extolling
his soldiers.
Life of Marius 27 The greatest number and the best fighters of the enemy were cut to
pieces on the spot; for to prevent their ranks from being broken, those
who fought in front were bound fast to one another with long chains
which were passed through their belts. The fugitives, however, were
driven back to their entrenchments, where the Romans beheld a most
tragic spectacle. The women, in black garments, stood at the waggons
and slew the fugitives — their husbands or brothers or fathers, then
strangled their little children and cast them beneath the wheels of the
waggons or the feet of the cattle, and then cut their own throats. It
is said that one woman hung dangling from the tip of a waggon-pole,
with her children tied to either ankle; while the men, for lack of
trees, fastened themselves by the neck to the horns of the cattle, or
to their legs, then plied the goad, and were dragged or trampled to
death as the cattle dashed away. Nevertheless, in spite of such
self-destruction, more than sixty thousand were taken prisoners; and
those who fell were said to have been twice that number. Now, the enemy's property became the booty of the soldiers of Marius,
but the spoils of battle, the standards, and the trumpets, were
brought, we are told, to the camp of Catulus; and Catulus relied
chiefly upon this as a proof that the victory was won by his men.
Furthermore, a dispute for the honour of the victory arose among the
soldiers, as was natural, and the members of an embassy from Parma were
chosen to act as arbitrators. These men the soldiers of Catulus
conducted among the dead bodies of the enemy, which were clearly seen
to have been pierced by their javelins; for these could be known by the
name of Catulus which had been cut into the shaft. However, the
entire success was attributed to Marius, both on account of his former
victory and of his superior rank. Above all, the people hailed him as
the third founder of Rome, that peril which he had averted from the
city was not less than that of the Gallic invasion; and all of them, as
they made merry at home with their wives and children, would bring
ceremonial offerings of food and libations of wine to Marius as well as
to the gods, and they were insistent that he alone should celebrate
both triumphs. Marius, however, would not do this, but celebrated his
triumph with Catulus, wishing to show himself a man of moderation after
a course of so great good fortune. Perhaps, too, he was afraid of the
soldiers, who were drawn up and ready, in case Catulus were deprived of
his honour, to prevent Marius also from celebrating a triumph.
Life of Marius 28 Thus, then, his fifth consulship was coming to an end; but he was as
eager for a sixth as another would have been for his first. He tried to
win over the people by obsequious attentions, and yielded to the
multitude in order to gain its favour, thus doing violence, not only to
the dignity and majesty of his high office, but also to his own nature,
since he wished to be a compliant man of the people when he was
naturally at farthest remove from this. In confronting a
political crisis or the tumultuous throng, we are told, his ambition made him
most timorous, and that undaunted firmness which he showed in battle
forsook him when he faced the popular assemblies, so that he was
disconcerted by the most ordinary praise or blame. And yet we are told
that when he had bestowed citizenship upon as many as a thousand men of
Camerinum for conspicuous bravery in the war, the act was held to be
illegal and was impeached by some; to whom he replied that the clash of
arms had prevented his hearing the voice of the law. However, he
appeared to be in greater fear and terror of the shouting in the
popular assemblies. At any rate, while in war he had authority and
power because his services were needed, yet in civil life his
leadership was more abridged, and he therefore had recourse to the
goodwill and favour of the multitude, not caring to be the best man if
only he could be the greatest. The consequence was that he came into
collision with all the aristocrats. It was Metellus, however, whom he
especially feared, a man who had experienced his ingratitude, and one
whose genuine excellence made him the natural enemy of those who tried
to insinuate themselves by devious methods into popular favour and
sought to control the masses by pleasing them. Accordingly, he schemed
to banish Metellus from the city. For this purpose he allied himself
with Saturninus and Glaucia, men of the greatest effrontery, who had a
rabble of needy and noisy fellows at their beck and call, and with
their assistance would introduce laws. He also stirred up the soldiery,
got them to mingle with the citizens in the assemblies, and thus
controlled a faction which could overpower Metellus. Then, according to
Rutilius, who is generally a lover of truth and an honest man, but
had a private quarrel with Marius, he actually got his sixth consulship
by paying down large sums of money among the tribes, and by buying
votes made Metellus lose his election to the office, and obtained as
his colleague in the consulship Valerius Flaccus, who was more a
servant than a colleague. And yet the people had never bestowed so
many consulships upon any other man except Corvinus Valerius. In the
case of Corvinus, however, forty-five years are said to have elapsed
between his first and his last consulship; where Marius, after his
first consulship, ran through the other five without a break.
Life of Marius 29 In this last consulship particularly did Marius make himself
hated, because he took part with Saturninus in many of his misdeeds.
One of these was the murder of Nonius, whom Saturninus slew because he
was a rival candidate for the tribuneship. Then, as tribune, Saturninus
introduced his agrarian law, to which was added a clause providing that
the senators should come forward and take oath that they would abide by
whatsoever the people might vote and make no opposition to it. In
the
senate Marius made pretence of opposing this part of the law, and
declared that he would not take the oath, and that he thought no other
sensible man would; for even if the law were not a bad one, it was an
insult to the senate that it should be compelled to make such
concessions, instead of making them under persuasion and of its own
free will. He said this, however, not because it was his real mind, but
that he might catch Metellus in the toils of a fatal trick. For
he himself regarded lying as part of a man's excellence and ability,
made no account of his agreements with the senators, and did not intend
to keep them; whereas he knew that Metellus was a steadfast man, who
thought with Pindar that "truth is the foundation of great
excellence," and he therefore wished to bind him beforehand by a
statement to the senate that he would not take the oath, and then have
his refusal to do so plunge him into a hatred on the part of the people
that could never be removed. And this was what came to pass. For Metellus declared that he would not take the oath, and the senate
broke up for a while; but after a few days Saturninus summoned the
senators to the rostra and tried to force them to take the oath. When
Marius came forward there was silence, and the eyes of all were
fastened upon him. Then, bidding a long farewell to all his boastful
and insincere expressions in the senate, he said his throat was not
broad enough to pronounce an opinion once for all upon so important a
matter, but that he would take the oath, and obey the law, if it was a
law; adding this bit of sophistry as a cloak for his shame. The
people, then, delighted at his taking the oath, clapped their hands in
applause, but the nobles were terribly dejected and hated Marius for
his change of front. Accordingly, all the senators took the oath in
order, through fear of the people, until the turn of Metellus came; but
Metellus, although his friends earnestly entreated him to take the oath
and not subject himself to the irreparable punishments which Saturninus
proposed for those who should refuse, would not swerve from his
purpose or take the oath, but, adhering to his principles and
prepared to suffer any evil rather than do a shameful deed, he left the
forum, saying to those about him that to do a wrong thing was mean, and
to do the right thing when there was no danger was any man's way, but
that to act honourably when it involved dangers was peculiarly the part
of a good and true man. Upon this, Saturninus got a vote passed that
the consuls should proclaim Metellus interdicted from fire, water, and
shelter; and the meanest part of the populace supported them and was
ready to put the man to death. The best citizens, however, sympathised
with Metellus and crowded hastily about him, but he would not allow a
faction to be raised on his account, and departed from the city,
following the dictates of prudence. "For," said he, "either
matters
will mend and the people will change their minds and I shall return at
their invitation, or, if matters remain as they are, it is best that I
should be away." But what great goodwill and esteem Metellus enjoyed
during his exile, and how he spent his time in philosophical studies at
Rhodes, will be better told in his Life.
Life of Marius 30 And now Marius, who was forced, in return for this assistance, to
look on quietly while Saturninus ran to extremes of daring and power,
brought about unawares a mischief that was not to be cured, but made
its way by arms and slaughter directly towards tyranny and subversion
of the government. And since he stood in awe of the nobles, while he
courted the favour of the multitude, he was led to commit an act of the
utmost meanness and duplicity. For when the leading men had come
to him by night and were trying to incite him against Saturninus,
without their knowledge he introduced Saturninus into the house by
another door; then, pretending to both parties that he had a diarrhoea,
he would run backwards and forwards in the house, now to the nobles and
now to Saturninus, trying to irritate and bring them into collision. However, when the senate and the knights began to combine and give
utterance to their indignation, he led his soldiers into the forum,
forced the insurgents to take refuge on the Capitol, and compelled them
to surrender for lack of water. For he cut off the water-conduits;
whereupon they gave up the struggle, called Marius, and surrendered
themselves on what was called the public faith. Marius did all he
could to save the men, but it was of no avail, and when they came down
into the forum they were put to death. This affair made Marius
obnoxious alike to the nobles and to the people, and when the time for
electing censors came he did not present himself as a candidate,
although everyone expected that he would, but allowed other and
inferior men to be elected, for fear that he would be defeated.
However, he tried to put a good face upon his conduct by saying that he
was unwilling to incur the hatred of many citizens by a severe
examination into their lives and manners.
Life of Marius 31 When a decree was introduced recalling Metellus from exile, Marius
opposed it strongly both by word and deed, but finding his efforts
vain, at last desisted; and after the people had adopted the measure
with alacrity, unable to endure the sight of Metellus returning, he set
sail for Cappadocia and Galatia, ostensibly to make the sacrifices
which he had vowed to the Mother of the Gods, but really having
another reason for his journey which the people did not suspect.
He
had, that is, no natural aptitude for peace or civil life, but had
reached his eminence by arms. And now, thinking that his influence and
reputation were gradually fading away because of his inactivity and
quietude, he sought occasions for new enterprises. For he hoped that if
he stirred up the kings of Asia and incited Mithridates to action, who
was expected to make war upon Rome, he would at once be chosen to lead
the Roman armies against him, and would fill the city with new
triumphs, and his own house with Pontic spoils and royal wealth. For
this reason, though Mithridates treated him with all deference and
respect, he would not bend or yield, but said: "O King, either strive
to be stronger than Rome, or do her bidding without a word." This
speech startled the king, who had often heard the Roman speech, but
then for the first time in all its boldness.
Life of Marius 32 On returning to Rome, he built a house for himself near the forum,
either, as he himself said, because he was unwilling that those who
paid their respects to him should have the trouble of coming a long
distance, or because he thought that distance was the reason why he did
not have larger crowds at his door than others. The reason, however,
was not of this nature; it was rather his inferiority to others in the
graces of intercourse and in political helpfulness, which caused him to
be neglected, like an instrument of war in time of peace. Of all
those who eclipsed him in popular esteem he was most vexed and annoyed
by Sulla, whose rise to power was due to the jealousy which the nobles
felt towards Marius, and who was making his quarrels with Marius
the basis of his political activity. And when Bocchus the Numidian, who
had been designated an ally of the Romans, set up trophy-bearing
Victories on the Capitol, and by their side gilded figures representing
Jugurtha surrendered by him to Sulla, Marius was transported with rage
and fury to see Sulla thus appropriating to himself the glory of his
achievements, and was making preparations to tear down the votive
offerings. But Sulla too was furious, and civil dissension was just
on the point of breaking out, when it was stopped by the Social War,
which suddenly burst upon the city. That is, the most warlike and
most numerous of the Italian peoples combined against Rome, and came
within a little of destroying her supremacy, since they were not only
strong in arms and men, but also had generals whose daring and ability
were amazing and made them a match for the Romans.
Life of Marius 33 This war, which was varied in its events and most changeful in its
fortunes, added much to Sulla's reputation and power, but took away as
much from Marius. For he was slow in making his attacks, and always
given to hesitation and delay, whether it was that old age had quenched
his wonted energy and fire (for he was now past his sixty-sixth year),
or that, as he himself said, a feeling of shame led him to go beyond
his powers in trying to endure the hardships of the campaign when his
nerves were diseased and his body unfit for work. However, even
then
he won a great victory in which he slew six thousand of the enemy; and
he never allowed them to get a grip upon him, but even when he was
hemmed about with trenches bided his time, and was not unduly
irritated by their insults and challenges. We are told that Publius
Silo, who had the greatest authority and power among the enemy, once
said to him, "If thou art a great general, Marius, come down and fight
it out with us"; to which Marius answer, "Nay, but do thou, if thou art
a great general, force me to fight it out with you against my will."
And at another time, when the enemy had given him an opportunity to
attack them, but the Romans had played the coward, and both sides had
withdrawn, he called an assembly of his soldiers and said to them: "I
do not know whether to call the enemy or you the greater cowards; for
they were not able to see your backs, nor you their napes." At last,
however, he gave up his command, on the ground that his infirmities
made him quite incapable of exercising it.
Life of Marius 34 But when the Italians had at last made their submission, and many
persons at Rome were suing for the command in the Mithridatic war, with
the aid of the popular leaders, contrary to all expectation the tribune
Sulpicius, a most audacious man, brought Marius forward and proposed to
make him pro-consul in command against Mithridates. The people were
divided in opinion, some preferring Marius, and others called for Sulla
and bidding Marius go to the warm baths at Baiae and look out for his
health, since he was worn out with old age and rheums, as he himself
said. For at Baiae, near Cape Misenum, Marius owned an expensive
house, which had appointments more luxurious and effeminate than
became a man who had taken active part in so many wars and campaigns.
This house, we are told, Cornelia bought for seventy-five thousand
drachmas and not long afterwards Lucius Lucullus purchased it for two
million five hundred thousand. So quickly did lavish expenditure spring
up, and so great an increase in luxury did life in the city take on. Marius, however, showing a spirit of keen emulation that might have
characterized a youth, shook off old age and infirmity and went down
daily into the Campus Martius, where he exercised himself with the
young men and showed that he was still agile in arms and capable of
feats of horsemanship, although his bulk was not well set up in his old
age, but ran to corpulence and weight. Some, then, were pleased to have him thus engaged, and would go down
into the Campus and witness his emulation in competitive contests; but
the better part were moved to pity at the sight of his greed and
ambition, because, though he had risen from poverty to the greatest
wealth and from obscurity to the highest place, he knew not how to set
bounds to his good fortune, and was not content to be admired and enjoy
quietly what he had, but as if in need of all things, and after winning
triumphs and fame, was setting out, with all his years upon him, for
Cappadocia and the Euxine sea, to fight it out with Archelaüs and
Neoptolemus, the satraps of Mithridates. And the justification for this
which Marius offered was thought to be altogether silly; he said,
namely, that he wished to take part personally in the campaign in order
to give his son a military training.
Life of Marius 35 These things brought to a head the secret disease from which the
state had long been suffering, and Marius found a most suitable
instrument for the destruction of the commonwealth in the audacity of
Sulpicius, who was in all things an admirer and an imitator of
Saturninus, except that he charged him with timidity and hesitation in
his political measures. Sulpicius himself was not a man of
hesitation, but kept six hundred of the Knights about him as a
body-guard, which he called his anti-senate; he also made an attack
with armed men upon the consuls as they were holding an assembly, and
when one of them fled from the forum, Sulpicius seized his son and
butchered him; Sulla, however, the other consul, as he was being
pursued past the house of Marius, did what no one would have expected
and burst into the house. His pursuers ran past the house and therefore
missed him, and it is said that Marius himself sent him off safely by
another door so that he came in haste to his camp. But Sulla himself,
in his Memoirs, says he did not fly for refuge to the house of Marius,
but withdrew thither in order to consult with Marius about the step
which Sulpicius was trying to force him to take (by surrounding him
with drawn swords and driving him to the house of Marius), and that
finally he went from there to the forum and rescinded the consular
decree for the suspension of public business, as Sulpicius and his
party demanded. When this had been done, Sulpicius, who was now
master of the situation, got the command conferred upon Marius by vote
of the people; and Marius, who was making his preparations for
departure, sent out two military tribunes to take over the command of
Sulla's army. Sulla, however, called upon his soldiers (who were no
fewer than thirty-five thousand legionaries) to resent this, and led
them forth against Rome. His soldiers also fell upon the tribunes whom
Marius had sent and slew them. Marius, too, put to death many of Sulla's friends in Rome, and
proclaimed freedom to the slaves if they would fight on his side. It is
said, however, that only three of them joined his ranks, and after a
feeble resistance to Sulla's entry into the city he was speedily driven
out and took to flight. As soon as he had made his escape from the
city his companions were scattered, and since it was dark, he took
refuge at one of his farmsteads, called Solonium. He also sent his
son to get provisions from the estate of his father-in‑law, Mucius,
which was not far off, while he himself went down to the coast at
Ostia, where a friend of his, Numerius, had provided a vessel for him.
Then, without waiting for his son, but taking his step-son Granius with
him, he set sail. The younger Marius reached the estate of Mucius, but
as he was getting supplies and packing them up, day overtook him and he
did not altogether escape the vigilance of his enemies; for some
horsemen came riding towards the place, moved by suspicion. When the
overseer of the farm saw them coming, he hid Marius in a waggon loaded
with beans, yoked up his oxen, and met the horsemen as he was driving
the waggon to the city. In this way young Marius was conveyed to the
house of his wife, where he got what he wanted, and then by night came
to the sea, boarded a ship that was bound for Africa, and crossed over.
Life of Marius 36 The elder Marius, after putting to sea, was borne by a favouring
wind along the coast of Italy; but since he was afraid of one
Geminius, who was a powerful man in Terracina and an enemy of his, he
told his sailors to keep clear of Terracina. The sailors were willing
enough to do as he wished, but the wind veered round and blew towards
the shore, bringing in a heavy surge, and it was thought that the
vessel would not hold out against the beating of the waves; besides,
Marius was in a wretched plight from sea-sickness, and therefore they
made their way, though with difficulty, to the coast near
Circeii.
Then, as the storm was increasing and their provisions were failing,
they landed from the vessel and wandered about. They had no definite
object in view, but, as is usual in cases of great perplexity, sought
always to escape the present evil as the most grievous, and fixed their
hopes on the unknown future. For the land was their enemy, and the sea
an enemy as well; they were afraid they might fall in with men, and
they were afraid they might not fall in with men because they had no
provisions. However, late in the day they came upon a few herdsmen;
these had nothing to give them in their need, but they recognized
Marius and bade him go away as fast as he could; for a little while
before numerous horsemen had been seen riding about there in search of
him. Thus at his wits' end, and, what was worst of all, his
companions fainting with hunger, he turned aside for the while from the
road, plunged into a deep forest, and there spent the night in great
distress. But the next day, compelled by want, and wishing to make use
of his strength before it failed him altogether, he wandered along the
shore, trying to encourage his companions, and begging them not to give
up the struggle before his last hope could be realized, for
which he was still reserving himself in reliance on ancient prophecies.
When, that is, he was quite young and living in the country, he had
caught in his cloak a falling eagle's nest, which had seven young ones
in it; at sight of this, his parents were amazed, and made enquiries of
the seers, who told them that their son would be most illustrious of
men, and was destined to receive the highest command and power seven
times. Some say that this really happened to Marius; but others say that
those who heard the story from him at this time and during the rest of
his flight, believed, and recorded it, though it was wholly fabulous.
For, they say, an eagle does not lay more than two eggs at one time,
and Musaeus also was wrong when, speaking of the eagle, he says:"Three indeed she layeth, and two hatcheth, but one only doth she
feed."
However, that Marius, during his flight and in his extremest
difficulties, often said that he should attain to a seventh consulship,
is generally admitted.
Life of Marius 37 But presently, when they were about twenty furlongs distant from
Minturnae, an Italian city, they saw from afar a troop of horsemen
riding towards them, and also, as it chanced, two merchant vessels
sailing along. Accordingly, with all the speed and strength they had,
they ran down to the sea, threw themselves into the water, and began to
swim to the ships. Granius and his party reached one of the ships and
crossed over to the opposite island, Aenaria by name; Marius
himself, who was heavy and unwieldy, two slaves with toil and
difficulty held above water and put into the other ship, the horsemen
being now at hand and calling out from the shore to the sailors either
to bring the vessel to shore or to throw Marius overboard and sail
whither they pleased. But since Marius supplicated them with tears in
his eyes, the masters of the vessel, after changing their minds often
in a short time, nevertheless replied to the horsemen that they would
not surrender Marius. The horsemen rode away in a rage, and the
sailors, changing their plan again, put in towards the shore; and after
casting anchor at the mouth of the Liris, where the river expands into
a lake, they advised Marius to leave the vessel, take some food ashore
with him, and recruit his strength after his hardships until a good
wind for sailing should arise; this usually arose, they said, when the
wind from the sea died away and a tolerably strong breeze blew from the
marshes. Marius was persuaded to follow their advice; so the sailors
carried him ashore, and he lay down in some grass, without the
slightest thought of what was to come. Then the sailors at once
boarded their vessel, hoisted anchor, and took to flight, feeling that
it was neither honourable for them to surrender Marius nor safe to
rescue him. Thus, forsaken of all men, he lay a long time speechless on
the shore, but recovered himself at last and tried to walk along, the
lack of any path making his progress laborious. He made his way
through deep marshes and ditches full of mud and water, until he came
to the hut of an old man who got his living from the water. At his feet
Marius fell down and besought him to save and help a man who, in
case he escaped his present perils, would recompense him beyond all his
hopes. Then the man, who either knew Marius from of old or saw that in
his face which won the regard due to superior rank, told him that if he
merely wanted to rest, the cabin would suffice, but that if he
wandering about trying to escape pursuers, he could be hidden in a
place that was more quiet. Marius begged that this might be done, and
the man took him to the marsh, bade him crouch down in a hollow place
by the side of the river, and threw over him a mass of reeds and other
material which was light enough to cover without injuring him.
Life of Marius 38 Not much time had elapsed, however, when a din and tumult at the hut
fell upon the ears of Marius. For Geminius had sent a number of men
from Terracina in pursuit of him, some of whom had chanced to come to
the old man's hut, and were frightening and berating him for having
received and hidden an enemy of Rome. Marius therefore rose from
his
hiding-place, stripped off his clothes, and threw himself into the
thick and muddy water of the marsh. Here he could not elude the men who
were in search of him, led him naked to Minturnae, and handed him over
to the magistrates there. Now, word had already been sent to every city
that Marius was to be pursued by the authorities and killed by his
captors. But nevertheless, the magistrates decided to deliberate on
the matter first; so they put Marius for safe-keeping in the house of a
woman named Fannia, who was thought to be hostile to him on account of
an ancient grievance.
Fannia, that is, had been married to Titinnius; but she had
separated herself from him and demanded back her dowry, which was
considerable. Her husband, however, had accused her of adultery; and
Marius, who was serving in his sixth consulship, had presided over the
trial. When the case was pleaded, and it appeared that Fannia had
been a dissolute woman, and that her husband had known this and yet had
taken her to wife and lived with her a long time, Marius was disgusted
with both of them, and decreed that the husband should pay back his
wife's dowry, while at the same time he imposed upon the woman, as a
mark of infamy, a fine of four coppers. However, at the time of which I speak, Fannia did not act like a
woman who had been wronged, but when she saw Marius, she put far from
her all resentment, cared for him as well as she could, and tried to
encourage him. Marius commended her, and said he was of good courage;
for an excellent sign had been given him. And this sign was as follows.When, as he was led along, he had come to the house of Fannia, the door
flew open and an ass ran out, in order to get a drink at a spring that
flowed hard by; with a saucy and exultant look at Marius the animal
at first stopped in front of him, and then, giving a magnificent bray,
went frisking past him triumphantly. From this Marius drew an omen and
concluded that the Deity was indicating a way of escape for him by sea
rather than by land; for the ass made no account of its dry fodder, but
turned from that to the water.After explaining this to Fannia, Marius lay down to rest alone, after
ordering the door of the apartment to be closed.
Life of Marius 39 Upon deliberation, the magistrates and councillors of Minturnae
decided not to delay, but to put Marius to death. No one of the
citizens, however, would undertake the task, so a horseman, either a
Gaul or a Cimbrian (for the story is told both ways), took a sword and
went intoº the room where Marius was. Now, that part of the room
where Marius happened to be lying had not a very good light, but was
gloomy, and we are told that to the soldier the eyes of Marius seemed
to shoot out a strong flame, and that a loud voice issued from the
shadows saying, "Man, does thou dare to slay Caius Marius?" At once,
then, the Barbarian fled from the room, threw his sword down on the
ground, and dashed out of doors, with this one cry: "I cannot kill
Caius Marius." Consternation reigned, of course, and then came pity,
a change of heart, and self-reproach for having come to so unlawful and
ungrateful a decision against a man who had been the saviour of Italy,
and who ought in all decency to be helped. "So, then," the talk ran,
"let him go where he will as an exile, to suffer elsewhere his allotted
fate. And let us pray that the gods may not visit us with their
displeasure for casting Marius out of our city in poverty and rags."
Moved by such considerations, they rushed into his room in a body,
surrounded him, and began to lead him forth to the sea. But although
this one and that one were eager to do him some service and all made
what haste they could, still there was delay. For the grove of Marica,
as it was called, which was held in veneration, and from which nothing
was permitted to be carried out that had ever been carried in, lay
between them and the sea as they were going, and if they went round it
they must needs lose time. At last, however, one of the older men cried
out and said that no path could forbid men's steps and passage if it
were the path of safety for Marius. And the speaker himself was the
first to take some of the things that were being carried to the ship
and pass through the holy place.
Life of Marius 40 Everything was speedily provided through such readiness as this, and
a certain Belaeus furnished a ship for Marius. Belaeus afterwards had a
painting made representing these scenes, and dedicated it in the temple
at the spot where Marius embarked and put to sea. Favoured by the wind
he was borne along by chance to the island of Aenaria, where he found
Granius and the rest of his friends, and set sail with them for
Africa. But their supply of fresh water failed, and they were
compelled to
touch at Erycina in Sicily. In this neighbourhood, as it chanced, the
Roman quaestor was on the watch, and almost captured Marius himself as
he landed; he did kill about sixteen of his men who came ashore for
water. Marius therefore put out to sea with all speed and crossed to
the island of Meninx, where he first learned that his son had come off
safely with Cethegus, and that they were on their way to Iampsas the
king of Numidia, intending to ask his aid. At this news Marius was a
little refreshed, and made bold to push on from the island to the
neighbourhood of Carthage.The Roman governor of Africa at this time was Sextilius, a man who had
received neither good nor ill at the hands of Marius, but whom, as it
was expected, pity alone would move to give him aid. Hardly, however,
had Marius landed with a few companions, when an official met him,
stood directly in front of him, and said: "Sextilius the governor
forbids thee, Marius, to set foot in Africa; and if thou disobeyest, he
declares that he will uphold the decrees of the senate and treat thee
as an enemy of Rome." When he heard this, Marius was rendered
speechless by grief and indignation, and for a long time kept quiet,
looking sternly at the official. Then, when asked by him what he had to
say, and what answer he would make to the governor, he answered with a
deep groan: "Tell him, then, that thou hast seen Caius Marius a
fugitive, seated amid the ruins of Carthage." And it was not inaptly
that he compared the fate of that city with his own reversal of fortune. Meanwhile Iampsas the king of Numidia, hesitating which course to
take, did indeed treat the younger Marius and his party with respect,
but always had some excuse for detaining them when they wished to go
away, and clearly had no good end in view in thus postponing their
departure. However, something occurred which, though not at all
extraordinary, led to their escape. The younger Marius, that is, being
a handsome fellow, one of the concubines of the king was pained to see
him treated unworthily, and this feeling of compassion ripened into
love. At first, then, Marius repelled the woman's advances; but when
he saw that there was no other way of escape for him and his friends,
and that her behaviour was based on a genuine affection, he accepted
her favours, whereupon she helped him in getting off,º and he ran away
with his friends and made his escape to his father. After father and
son had embraced one another, they walked along the sea-shore, and
there they saw some scorpions fighting, which the elder Marius
regarded as a bad omen. At once, therefore, they boarded a
fishing-boat and crossed over to the island of Cercina, which was not
far distant from the mainland;f and scarcely had they put out from land
when horsemen sent by the king were seen riding towards the spot whence
they had sailed. It would seem that Marius never escaped a greater
peril than this.
Life of Marius 41 But in Rome, Sulla was heard of as waging war with the generals of
Mithridates in Boeotia, and the consuls quarrelled and were resorting
to arms. A battle took place, Octavius won the day, cast out Cinna, who
was trying to be too arbitrary in his rule, and put Cornelius Merula in
his place as consul; whereupon Cinna assembled a force from the other
parts of Italy and made war anew upon Octavius and his colleague.
When Marius heard of these things, he thought best to sail thither as
fast as he could; so taking with him from Africa some Moorish horsemen,
and some Italians who had wandered thither, the number of both together
not exceeding a thousand, he put to sea. Putting in at Telamon in
Tyrrhenia, and landing there, he proclaimed freedom to the slaves; he
also won over the neighbourhood, who came flocking down to the sea
attracted by his fame, and in a few days had assembled a large force
and manned forty ships. And now, knowing that Octavius was a most excellent man and wished to
rule in the justest way, but that Cinna was distrusted by Sulla and was
making war upon the established constitution, he determined to join
Cinna with his forces. Accordingly he sent to Cinna and offered to obey
him in everything as consul. Cinna accepted his offer, named him
pro-consul, and sent him the fasces and other insignia of the office.
Marius, however, declared that these decorations were not suited to his
fortunes, and in mean attire, his hair uncut since the day of his
flight, being now over seventy years of age, came with slow steps to
meet the consul. For he wished that men should pity him; but with his
appeal for compassion there was mingled the look that was natural to
him and now more terrifying than ever, and through his downcast mien
there flashed a spirit which had been, not humbled, but made savage by
his reverses.
Life of Marius 42 After greeting Cinna and presenting himself to Cinna's soldiers, he
at once began his work and greatly changed the posture of affairs. In
the first place, by cutting off the grain-ships with his fleet and
plundering the merchants, he made himself master of the city's
supplies; next, he sailed to the maritime cities and took them; and
finally, he seized Ostia itself, which was treacherously surrendered to
him, plundering the property there and killing most of its inhabitants,
and by throwing a bridge across the river completely cut off the enemy
from such stores as might come by sea. Then he set out and
marched
with his army towards the city, and occupied the hill called Janiculum.
Octavius damaged his own cause, not so much through lack of skill, as
by a too scrupulous observance of the laws, wherein he unwisely
neglected the needs of the hour. For though many urged him to call the
slaves to arms under promise of freedom, he said he would not make
bondmen members of the state from which he was trying to exclude Marius
in obedience to the laws. Moreover, when Metellus (son of the
Metellus who had commanded in Africa and had been banished through the
intrigues of Marius) came to Rome, it was thought that he was far
superior to Octavius as a general, and the soldiers forsook Octavius
and came to him, entreating him to take the command and save the city;
for they would make a good fight, they said, and win the victory if
they got a tried and efficient leader. Metellus, however, was indignant
at them and bade them go back to the consul; whereupon they went off to
the enemy. Metellus also left the city, despairing of its safety. But Octavius was persuaded by certain Chaldaeans, sacrificers, and
interpreters of the Sibylline books to remain in the city, on the
assurance that matters would turn out well. For it would seem that this
man, although he was in other ways the most sensible man in Rome, and
most careful to maintain the dignity of the consular office free from
undue influence in accordance with the customs of the country and its
laws, which he regarded as unchangeable ordinances, had a weakness in
this direction, since he spent more time with charlatans and seers than
with men who were statesmen and soldiers. This man, then, before
Marius entered the city, was dragged down from the rostra by men who
had been sent on before, and butchered; and we are told that a
Chaldaean chart was found in his bosom after he had been slain. Now, it
seems very unaccountable that, of two most illustrious commanders,
Marius should succeed by regarding divinations, but Octavius should
be ruined.
Life of Marius 43 Matters being at this pass, the senate met and sent a deputation to
Cinna and Marius, begging them to enter the city and spare the
citizens. Cinna, accordingly, as consul, seated on his chair of office,
received the embassy and gave them a kindly answer; but Marius,
standing by the consul's chair without speaking a word, made it clear
all the while, by the heaviness of his countenance and the gloominess
of his look, that he would at once fill the city with slaughter.
After the conference was over they moved on towards the city. Cinna
entered it with a body-guard, but Marius halted at the gates and
angrily dissembled, saying that he was an exile and was excluded from
the country by the law, and if his presence there was desired, the vote
which cast him out must be rescinded by another vote, since, indeed, he
was a law-abiding man and was returning to a free city. So the people
were summoned to the forum; and before three or four of the tribes had
cast their votes, he threw aside his feigning and all that petty talk
about being an exile, and entered the city, having as his body-guard a
picked band of the slaves who had flocked to his standard, to whom he
had given the name of Bardyaei. These fellows killed many of the
citizens at a word of command from him, many, too, at a mere nod; and
at last, when Ancharius, a man of senatorial and praetorial dignity,
met Marius and got no salutation from him, they struck him down with
their swords before the face of their master. After this, whenever
anybody else greeted Marius and got no salutation or greeting in
return, this of itself was a signal for the man's slaughter in the
very street, so that even the friends of Marius, to a man, were full of
anguish and horror whenever they drew near to greet him. So many were
slain that at last Cinna's appetite for murder was dulled and sated;
but Marius, whose anger increased day by day and thirsted for blood,
kept on killing all whom he held in any suspicion whatsoever. Every
road and every city was filled with men pursuing and hunting down those
who sought to escape or had hidden themselves. Moreover, the trust men
placed in the ties of hospitality and friendship were found to be no
security against the strokes of Fortune; for few there were, all told,
who did not betray to the murderers those who had taken refuge with
them. All the more worthy of praise and admiration, then, was the
behaviour of the slaves of Cornutus. They concealed their master in his
house; then they hung up by the neck one of the many dead bodies that
lay about, put a gold ring on its finger, and showed it to the guards
of Marius, after which they decked it out as if it were their master's
body and gave it burial. Nobody suspected the ruse, and thus Cornutus
escaped notice and was conveyed by his slaves into Gaul.
Life of Marius 44 Marcus Antonius also, the orator, found a faithful friend, but it
did not save him. For this friend, who was a poor plebeian and had
received into his house a leading man of Rome, whom he wished to
entertain as well as he could, sent a slave to a neighbouring innkeeper
to get some wine. As the slave tasted the wine more carefully than
usual and ordered some of better quality, the innkeeper asked him what
was the reason that he did not buy the new and ordinary wine as
usual, instead of wanting some that was choice and expensive. The
slave, in his great simplicity, conscious that he was dealing with an
old acquaintance, told him that his master was entertaining Marcus
Antonius, who was concealed at his house. As soon as the slave had gone
home, the innkeeper, who was an impious and pestilent fellow, hastened
in person to find Marius, who was already at supper, and on being
introduced, promised to betray Antonius to him. When Marius heard
this, as we are told, a loud cry burst from his lips and he clapped his
hands for joy; he actually came near springing from his seat and
hurrying to the place himself, but his friends restrained him; so he
sent Annius and some soldiers with him, ordering them to bring him the
head of Antonius with all speed. Accordingly, when they were come to
the house, Annius stopped at the door, while the soldiers climbed the
stairs and entered the room. But when they beheld Antonius, every man
began to urge and push forward a companion to do the murder instead of
himself. So indescribable, however, as it would seem, was the grace
and charm of his words, that when Antonius began to speak and pray for
his life, not a soldier had the hardihood to lay hands on him or even
to look him in the face, but they all bent their heads down and wept.
Perceiving that there was some delay, Annius went upstairs, and saw
that Antonius was pleading and that the soldiers were abashed and
enchanted by his words; so he cursed his men, and running up to
Antonius, with his own hands cut off his head. Again, the friends of Catulus Lutatius, who had been a colleague of
Marius in the consulship, and with him had celebrated a triumph
over the Cimbri, interceded with him and begged Marius to spare his
life; but the only answer they could get was: "He must die." Catulus
therefore shut himself up in a room, lighted up a great quantity of
charcoal, and was suffocated. But headless trunks thrown into the streets and trampled under foot
excited no pity, though everybody trembled and shuddered at the sight.
The people were most distressed however, by the wanton licence of the
Bardyaei, as they were called, who butchered fathers of families in
their houses, outraged their children, violated their wives, and could
not be checked in their career of rapine and murder until Cinna and
Sertorius, after taking counsel together, fell upon them as they were
asleep in their camp, and transfixed them all with javelins.
Life of Marius 45 Meanwhile, as if a change of wind were coming on, messengers arrived
from all quarters with reports that Sulla had finished the war with
Mithridates, had recovered the provinces, and was sailing for home with
a large force. This gave a brief stay and a slight cessation to the
city's unspeakable evils, since men supposed that the war was all but
upon them. Accordingly, Marius was elected consul for the seventh time,
and assuming office on the Calends of January, which is the first day
of the year, he had a certain Sextus Lucinus thrown down the Tarpeian
rock. This was thought to be a most significant portent of the evils
that were once more to fall upon the partisans of Marius and upon the
city.But Marius himself, now worn out with toils, deluged, as it were,
with anxieties, and wearied, could not sustain his spirits, which shook
within him as he again faced the overpowering thought of a new war, of
fresh struggles, of terrors known by experience to be dreadful, and of
utter weariness. He reflected, too, that it was not Octavius or Merula
in command of a promiscuous throng and a seditious rabble against whom
he was now to run the hazard of war, but that the famous Sulla was
coming against him, the man who had once ejected him from the country,
and had now shut Mithridates up to the shores of the Euxine Sea. Tortured by such reflections, and bringing into review his long
wandering, his flights, and his perils, as he was driven over land and
sea, he fell into a state of dreadful despair, and was a prey to
nightly terrors and harassing dreams, wherein he would ever seem to
hear a voice saying:
"Dreadful, indeed, is the lions' lair, even though it be empty."
And since above all things he dreaded the sleepless nights, he gave
himself up to drinking-bouts and drunkenness at unseasonable hours and
in a manner unsuited to his years, trying thus to induce sleep as a way
of escape from his anxious thoughts. And finally, when one came with
tidings from the sea, fresh terrors fell upon him, partly because he
feared the future, and partly because he was wearied to satiety by the
present, so that it needed only a slight impulse to throw him into a
pleurisy, as Poseidonius the philosopher relates, who says that he went
in personally and conversed with Marius on the subjects of his
embassy after Marius had fallen ill. But a certain Caius Piso, an
historian, relates that Marius, while walking about with his friends
after supper, fell to talking about the events of his life, beginning
with his earliest days, and after recounting his frequent reversals of
fortune, from good to bad and from bad to good, said that it was not
the part of a man of sense to trust himself to Fortune any longer; and
after this utterance bade his friends farewell, kept his bed for seven
days consecutively, and so died. Some, however, say that his
ambitious nature was completely revealed during his illness by his
being swept into a strange delusion. He thought that he had the command
in the Mithridatic war, and then, just as he used to do in his actual
struggles, he would indulge in all sorts of attitudes and gestures,
accompanying them with shrill cries and frequent calls to battle. So
fierce and inexorable was the passion for directing that war which had
been instilled into him by his envy and lust of power. And therefore,
though he had lived to be seventy years old, and was the first man to
be elected consul for the seventh time, and was possessed of a house
and wealth which would have sufficed for many kingdoms at once, he
lamented his fortune, in that he was dying before he had satisfied and
completed his desires.
Life of Marius 46 Plato, however, when he was now at the point of death, lauded his
guardian genius and Fortune because, to begin with, he had been born a
man and not an irrational animal; again, because he was a Greek and not
a Barbarian; and still again, because his birth had fallen in the times
of Socrates. And indeed they say that Antipater of Tarsus, when
he was in like manner near his end and was enumerating the blessings of
his life, did not forget to mention his prosperous voyage from home to
Athens, just as though he thought that every gift of a benevolent
Fortune called for great gratitude, and kept it to the last in his
memory, which is the most secure storehouse of blessings for a man. Unmindful and thoughtless persons, on the contrary, let all that
happens to them slip away as time goes on; therefore, since they do not
hold or keep anything, they are always empty of blessings, but full of
hopes, and are looking away to the future while they neglect the
present. And yet the future may be prevented by Fortune, while the
present cannot be taken away; nevertheless these men cast aside the
present gift of Fortune as something alien to them, while they dream of
the future and its uncertainties. And this is natural. For they
assemble and heap together the external blessings of life before reason
and education have enabled them to build any foundation and basement
for these things, and therefore they cannot satisfy the insatiable
appetite of their soul. So, then, Marius died, seventeen days after entering upon his seventh
consulship. And immediately Rome was filled with great rejoicing and a
confident hope that she was rid of a grievous tyranny; but in a few
days the people perceived that they had got a new and vigorous master
in exchange for the old one; such bitterness and cruelty did the
younger Marius display, putting to death the best and most esteemed
citizens. He got the reputation of being bold and fond of danger in
fighting his enemies, and in the beginning was called a son of
Mars; but his deeds soon showed what he really was, and he was called
instead a son of Venus. And finally he was shut up in Praeneste by
Sulla, and after many vain attempts to save his life, when the city was
captured and he could not escape, he slew himself.
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