matters; he was no doubt a great orator, author, and
general, but he became each of these merely because
he was a consummate statesman. The soldier more
especially played in him altogether an accessory part,
and it is one of the principal peculiarities by which
he is distinguished from Alexander, Hannibal, and
Napoleon, that he began his political activity not
as an officer, but as a demagogue. According
to his original plan he had purposed to reach his object,
like Pericles and Gaius Gracchus, without force of
arms, and throughout eighteen years he had as leader
of the popular party moved exclusively amid political
plans and intrigues—until, reluctantly convinced
of the necessity for a military support, he, when already
forty years of age, put himself at the head of an
army. It was natural that he should even afterwards
remain still more statesman than general—just
like Cromwell, who also transformed himself from a
leader of opposition into a military chief and democratic
king, and who in general, little as the prince of
Puritans seems to resemble the dissolute Roman, is
yet in his development as well as in the objects which
he aimed at and the results which he achieved of all
statesmen perhaps the most akin to Caesar. Even
in his mode of warfare this improvised generalship
may still be recognized; the enterprises of Napoleon
against Egypt and against England do not more clearly
exhibit the artillery-lieutenant who had risen by
service to command than the similar enterprises of
Caesar exhibit the demagogue metamorphosed into a
general. A regularly trained officer would hardly
have been prepared, through political considerations
of a not altogether stringent nature, to set aside
the best-founded military scruples in the way in which
Caesar did on several occasions, most strikingly in
the case of his landing in Epirus. Several of
his acts are therefore censurable from a military
point of view; but what the general loses, the statesman
gains. The task of the statesman is universal
in its nature like Caesar’s genius; if he undertook
things the most varied and most remote one from another,
they had all without exception a bearing on the one
great object to which with infinite fidelity and consistency
he devoted himself; and of the manifold aspects and
directions of his great activity he never preferred
one to another. Although a master of the art
of war, he yet from statesmanly considerations did
his utmost to avert civil strife and, when it nevertheless
began, to earn laurels stained as little as possible
by blood. Although the founder of a military
monarchy, he yet, with an energy unexampled in history,
allowed no hierarchy of marshals or government of praetorians
to come into existence. If he had a preference
for any one form of services rendered to the state,
it was for the sciences and arts of peace rather than
for those of war.