counsel and action, Cato fought his way up to the
consulate and a triumph, and even to the censorship.
Having in his seventeenth year entered the burgess-army,
he had passed through the whole Hannibalic war from
the battle on the Trasimene lake to that of Zama;
had served under Marcellus and Fabius, under Nero
and Scipio; and at Tarentum and Sena, in Africa, Sardinia,
Spain, and Macedonia, had shown himself capable as
a soldier, a staff-officer, and a general.
He was the same in the Forum, as in the battle-field.
His prompt and fearless utterance, his rough but
pungent rustic wit, his knowledge of Roman law and
Roman affairs, his incredible activity and his iron
frame, first brought him into notice in the neighbouring
towns; and, when at length he made his appearance
on the greater arena of the Forum and the senate-house
in the capital, constituted him the most influential
advocate and political orator of his time. He
took up the key-note first struck by Manius Curius,
his ideal among Roman statesmen;(50) throughout his
long life he made it his task honestly, to the best
of his judgment, to assail on all hands the prevailing
declension; and even in his eighty-fifth year he battled
in the Forum with the new spirit of the times.
He was anything but comely—he had green
eyes, his enemies alleged, and red hair—and
he was not a great man, still less a far-seeing statesman.
Thoroughly narrow in his political and moral views,
and having the ideal of the good old times always
before his eyes and on his lips, he cherished an obstinate
contempt for everything new. Deeming himself
by virtue of his own austere life entitled to manifest
an unrelenting severity and harshness towards everything
and everybody; upright and honourable, but without
a glimpse of any duty lying beyond the sphere of police
order and of mercantile integrity; an enemy to all
villany and vulgarity as well as to all refinement
and geniality, and above all things the foe of his
foes; he never made an attempt to stop evils at their
source, but waged war throughout life against symptoms,
and especially against persons. The ruling lords,
no doubt, looked down with a lofty disdain on the
ignoble growler, and believed, not without reason,
that they were far superior; but fashionable corruption
in and out of the senate secretly trembled in the
presence of the old censor of morals with his proud
republican bearing, of the scar-covered veteran from
the Hannibalic war, and of the highly influential senator
and the idol of the Roman farmers. He publicly
laid before his noble colleagues, one after another,
his list of their sins; certainly without being remarkably
particular as to the proofs, and certainly also with
a peculiar relish in the case of those who had personally
crossed or provoked him. With equal fearlessness
he reproved and publicly scolded the burgesses for
every new injustice and every fresh disorder.
His vehement attacks provoked numerous enemies, and
he lived in declared and irreconcilable hostility