were victorious; the shocking cruelty of his punishments;
his murdering his friends in the midst of feasting
and wine; with the folly of his fiction respecting
his birth. What must have been the consequence,
if his love of wine had daily become more intense?
if his fierce and uncontrollable anger? And as
I mention not any one circumstance of which there
is a doubt among writers, do we consider these as
no disparagements to the qualifications of a commander?
But then, as is frequently repeated by the silliest
of the Greeks, who are fond of exalting the reputation,
even of the Parthians, at the expense of the Roman
name, the danger was that the Roman people would not
have had resolution to bear up against the splendour
of Alexander’s name, who, however, in my opinion,
was not known to them even by common fame; and while,
in Athens, a state reduced to weakness by the Macedonian
arms, which at the very time saw the ruins of Thebes
smoking in its neighbourhood, men had spirit enough
to declaim with freedom against him, as is manifest
from the copies of their speeches, which have been
preserved; [we are to be told] that out of such a
number of Roman chiefs, no one would have freely uttered
his sentiments. How great soever our idea of
this man’s greatness may be, still it is the
greatness of an individual, constituted by the successes
of a little more than ten years; and those who give
it pre-eminence on account that the Roman people have
been defeated, though not in any entire war, yet in
several battles, whereas Alexander was never once unsuccessful
in a single fight, do not consider that they are comparing
the actions of one man, and that a young man, with
the exploits of a nation waging wars now eight hundred
years. Can we wonder if, when on the one side
more ages are numbered than years on the other, fortune
varied more in so long a lapse of time than in the
short term of thirteen years? [Footnote: The
duration of Alexander’s military career.] But
why not compare the success of one general with that
of another? How many Roman commanders might I
name who never lost a battle? In the annals of
the magistrates, and the records, we may run over whole
pages of consuls and dictators, with whose bravery,
and successes also, the Roman people never once had
reason to be dissatisfied. And what renders them
more deserving of admiration than Alexander, or any
king, is, that some of these acted in the office of
dictator, which lasted only ten, or it might be twenty
days, none, in a charge of longer duration than the
consulship of a year; their levies obstructed by plebeian
tribunes; often late in taking the field; recalled,
before the time, on account of elections; amidst the
very busiest efforts of the campaign, their year of
office expired; sometimes the rashness, sometimes
the perverseness of a colleague, proving an impediment
or detriment; and finally succeeding to the unfortunate
administration of a predecessor, with an army of raw
or ill-disciplined men. But, on the other hand,