every breach of discipline. When the orders to
embark for Sicily arrived, and the soldier was to
exchange the luxurious ease of Campania for a third
campaign certainly not inferior to those of Spain
and Thessaly in point of hardship, the reins, which
had been too long relaxed and were too suddenly tightened,
snapt asunder. The legions refused to obey till
the promised presents were paid to them, scornfully
repulsed the officers sent by Caesar, and even threw
stones at them. An attempt to extinguish the
incipient revolt by increasing the sums promised not
only had no success, but the soldiers set out in masses
to extort the fulfilment of the promises from the
general in the capital. Several officers, who
attempted to restrain the mutinous bands on the way,
were slain. It was a formidable danger.
Caesar ordered the few soldiers who were in the city
to occupy the gates, with the view of warding off
the justly apprehended pillage at least at the first
onset, and suddenly appeared among the furious bands
demanding to know what they wanted. They exclaimed:
“discharge.” In a moment the request
was granted. Respecting the presents, Caesar
added, which he had promised to his soldiers at his
triumph, as well as respecting the lands which he
had not promised to them but had destined for them,
they might apply to him on the day when he and the
other soldiers should triumph; in the triumph itself
they could not of course participate, as having been
previously discharged. The masses were not prepared
for things taking this turn; convinced that Caesar
could not do without them for the African campaign,
they had demanded their discharge only in order that,
if it were refused, they might annex their own conditions
to their service. Half unsettled in their belief
as to their own indispensableness; too awkward to
return to their object, and to bring the negotiation
which had missed its course back to the right channel;
ashamed, as men, by the fidelity with which the Imperator
kept his word even to soldiers who had forgotten their
allegiance, and by his generosity which even now granted
far more than he had ever promised; deeply affected,
as soldiers, when the general presented to them the
prospect of their being necessarily mere civilian spectators
of the triumph of their comrades, and when he called
them no longer “comrades” but “burgesses,”—by
this very form of address, which from his mouth sounded
so strangely, destroying as it were with one blow
the whole pride of their past soldierly career; and,
besides all this, under the spell of the man whose
presence had an irresistible power—the
soldiers stood for a while mute and lingering, till
from all sides a cry arose that the general would
once more receive them into favour and again permit
them to be called Caesar’s soldiers. Caesar,
after having allowed himself to be sufficiently entreated,
granted the permission; but the ringleaders in this
mutiny had a third cut off from their triumphal presents.
History knows no greater psychological masterpiece,
and none that was more completely successful.