Caesar too set out with such views; but they were
simply ideals, which might have some influence on
realities, but could not be directly realized.
Neither the simple civil power, as Gaius Gracchus
possessed it, nor the arming of the democratic party,
such as Cinna though in a very inadequate fashion
had attempted, was able to maintain a permanent superiority
in the Roman commonwealth; the military machine fighting
not for a party but for a general, the rude force
of the condottieri—after having first appeared
on the stage in the service of the restoration—soon
showed itself absolutely superior to all political
parties. Caesar could not but acquire a conviction
of this amidst the practical workings of party, and
accordingly he matured the momentous resolution of
making this military machine itself serviceable to
his ideals, and of erecting such a commonwealth, as
he had in his view, by the power of condottieri.
With this design he concluded in 683 the league with
the generals of the opposite party, which, notwithstanding
that they had accepted the democratic programme, yet
brought the democracy and Caesar himself to the brink
of destruction. With the same design he himself
came forward eleven years afterwards as a condottiere.
It was done in both cases with a certain naivete—with
good faith in the possibility of his being able to
found a free commonwealth, if not by the swords of
others, at any rate by his own. We perceive without
difficulty that this faith was fallacious, and that
no one takes an evil spirit into his service without
becoming himself enslaved to it; but the greatest
men are not those who err the least. If we still
after so many centuries bow in reverence before what
Caesar willed and did, it is not because he desired
and gained a crown (to do which is, abstractly, as
little of a great thing as the crown itself) but because
his mighty ideal—of a free commonwealth
under one ruler—never forsook him, and preserved
him even when monarch from sinking into vulgar royalty.
Caesar Consul
The election of Caesar as consul for 695 was carried without difficulty by the united parties. The aristocracy had to rest content with giving to him—by means of a bribery, for which the whole order of lords contributed the funds, and which excited surprise even in that period of deepest corruption—a colleague in the person of Marcus Bibulus, whose narrow-minded obstinacy was regarded in their circles as conservative energy, and whose good intentions at least were not at fault if the genteel lords did not get a fit return for their patriotic expenditure.
Caesar’s Agrarian Law