did not beseem to be merely one of the five hundred
senators of Rome. In reality, no one was more
fitted to take his place as a member of an aristocratic
government than Pompeius. His dignified outward
appearance, his solemn formality, his personal bravery,
his decorous private life, his want of all initiative
might have gained for him, had he been born two hundred
years earlier, an honourable place by the side of
Quintus Maximus and Publius Decius: this mediocrity,
so characteristic of the genuine Optimate and the
genuine Roman, contributed not a little to the elective
affinity which subsisted at all times between Pompeius
and the mass of the burgesses and the senate.
Even in his own age he would have had a clearly defined
and respectable position had he contented himself
with being the general of the senate, for which he
was from the outset destined. With this he was
not content, and so he fell into the fatal plight of
wishing to be something else than he could be.
He was constantly aspiring to a special position
in the state, and, when it offered itself, he could
not make up his mind to occupy it; he was deeply indignant
when persons and laws did not bend unconditionally
before him, and yet he everywhere bore himself with
no mere affectation of modesty as one of many peers,
and trembled at the mere thought of undertaking anything
unconstitutional. Thus constantly at fundamental
variance with, and yet at the same time the obedient
servant of, the oligarchy, constantly tormented by
an ambition which was frightened at its own aims,
his much-agitated life passed joylessly away in a
perpetual inward contradiction.
Crassus
Marcus Crassus cannot, any more than Pompeius, be
reckoned among the unconditional adherents of the
oligarchy. He is a personage highly characteristic
of this epoch. Like Pompeius, whose senior he
was by a few years, he belonged to the circle of the
high Roman aristocracy, had obtained the usual education
befitting his rank, and had like Pompeius fought with
distinction under Sulla in the Italian war.
Far inferior to many of his peers in mental gifts,
literary culture, and military talent, he outstripped
them by his boundless activity, and by the perseverance
with which he strove to possess everything and to
become all-important. Above all, he threw himself
into speculation. Purchases of estates during
the revolution formed the foundation of his wealth;
but he disdained no branch of gain; he carried on
the business of building in the capital on a great
scale and with prudence; he entered into partnership
with his freedmen in the most varied undertakings;
he acted as banker both in and out of Rome, in person
or by his agents; he advanced money to his colleagues
in the senate, and undertook— as it might
happen—to execute works or to bribe the
tribunals on their account. He was far from
nice in the matter of making profit. On occasion
of the Sullan proscriptions a forgery in the lists