to moral and thereby even to political importance.
In an utterly wretched and cowardly age his courage
and his negative virtues told powerfully on the multitude;
he even formed a school, and there were individuals—it
is true they were but few—who in their turn
copied and caricatured afresh the living pattern of
a philosopher. On the same cause depended also
his political influence. As he was the only conservative
of note who possessed if not talent and insight, at
any rate integrity and courage, and was always ready
to throw himself into the breach whether it was necessary
to do so or not, he soon became the recognized champion
of the Optimate party, although neither his age nor
his rank nor his intellect entitled him to be so.
Where the perseverance of a single resolute man could
decide, he no doubt sometimes achieved a success,
and in questions of detail, more particularly of a
financial character, he often judiciously interfered,
as indeed he was absent from no meeting of the senate;
his quaestorship in fact formed an epoch, and as long
as he lived he checked the details of the public budget,
regarding which he maintained of course a constant
warfare with the farmers of the taxes. For the
rest, he lacked simply every ingredient of a statesman.
He was incapable of even comprehending a political
aim and of surveying political relations; his whole
tactics consisted in setting his face against every
one who deviated or seemed to him to deviate from
the traditionary moral and political catechism of
the aristocracy, and thus of course he worked as often
into the hands of his opponents as into those of his
own party. The Don Quixote of the aristocracy,
he proved by his character and his actions that at
this time, while there was certainly still an aristocracy
in existence, the aristocratic policy was nothing
more than a chimera.
Democratic Attacks
To continue the conflict with this aristocracy brought
little honour. Of course the attacks of the
democracy on the vanquished foe did not on that account
cease. The pack of the Populares threw themselves
on the broken ranks of the nobility like the sutlers
on a conquered camp, and the surface at least of politics
was by this agitation ruffled into high waves of foam.
The multitude entered into the matter the more readily,
as Gaius Caesar especially kept them in good humour
by the extravagant magnificence of his games (689)—in
which all the equipments, even the cages of the wild
beasts, appeared of massive silver—and generally
by a liberality which was all the more princely that
it was based solely on the contraction of debt.
The attacks on the nobility were of the most varied
kind. The abuses of aristocratic rule afforded
copious materials; magistrates and advocates who were
liberal or assumed a liberal hue, like Gaius Cornelius,
Aulus Gabinius, Marcus Cicero, continued systematically
to unveil the most offensive and scandalous aspects
of the Optimate doings and to propose laws against