History of Julius Caesar by Jacob Abbott
page 7 of 188 (03%)
page 7 of 188 (03%)
|
himself be earning the same honors in some other field, to come back in
due time, and claim his share of power and celebrity in his turn. In this case, Rome would be sometimes distracted and rent by the conflicts and contentions of military rivals, who had acquired powers too vast for all the civil influences of the Republic to regulate or control. [Illustration: ROMAN PLEBEIANS.] [Sidenote: Military rivals.] [Sidenote: Marius and Sylla.] [Sidenote: The patricians and plebeians.] [Sidenote: Civil contests.] [Sidenote: Quarrel about the command of the army.] [Sidenote: Sylla's violence.] There had been two such rivals just before the time of Caesar, who had filled the world with their quarrels. They were Marius and Sylla. Their very names have been, in all ages of the world, since their day, the symbols of rivalry and hate. They were the representatives respectively of the two great parties into which the Roman state, like every other community in which the population at large have any voice in governing, always has been, and probably always will be divided, the upper and the lower; or, as they were called in those days, the patrician and the plebeian. Sylla was the patrician; the higher and more aristocratic portions of the community were on his side. Marius was the favorite of the plebeian masses. In the contests, however, which they waged with each other, they did not trust to the mere influence of votes. They relied much more upon the soldiers they could gather under their respective standards and upon their power of intimidating, by means of them, the Roman assemblies. There was a war to be waged with |
|