According to the account given by
his historians, Caesar received many warnings of his
approaching fate, which, however, he would not heed.
Many of these warnings were strange portents and prodigies,
which the philosophical writers who recorded them
half believed themselves, and which they were always
ready to add to their narratives even if they did
not believe them, on account of the great influence
which such an introduction of the supernatural and
the divine had with readers in those days in enhancing
the dignity and the dramatic interest of the story.
These warnings were as follows:
At Capua, which was a great city at
some distance south of Rome, the second, in fact,
in Italy, and the one which Hannibal had proposed to
make his capital, some workmen were removing certain
ancient sepulchers to make room for the foundations
of a splendid edifice which, among his other plans
for the embellishment of the cities of Italy, Caesar
was intending to have erected there. As the excavations
advanced, the workmen came at last to an ancient tomb,
which proved to be that of the original founder of
Capua; and, in bringing out the sarcophagus, they
found an inscription, worked upon a brass plate, and
in the Greek character, predicting that if those remains
were ever disturbed, a great member of the Julian
family would be assassinated by his own friends, and
his death would be followed by extended devastations
throughout all Italy.
The horses, too, with which Caesar
had passed the Rubicon, and which had been, ever since
that time, living in honorable retirement in a splendid
park which Caesar had provided for them, by some mysterious
instinct, or from some divine communication, had warning
of the approach of their great benefactor’s
end. They refused their food, and walked about
with melancholy and dejected looks, mourning apparently,
and in a manner almost human, some impending grief.
There was a class of prophets in those
days called by a name which has been translated soothsayers.
These soothsayers were able, as was supposed, to look
somewhat into futurity dimly and doubtfully,
it is true, but really, by means of certain appearances
exhibited by the bodies of the animals offered in
sacrifices These soothsayers were consulted on all
important occasions; and if the auspices proved unfavorable
when any great enterprise was about to be undertaken,
it was often, on that account, abandoned or postponed.
One of these soothsayers, named Spurinna, came to
Caesar one day, and informed him that he had found,
by means of a public sacrifice which he had just been
offering, that there was a great and mysterious danger
impending over him, which was connected in some way
with the Ides of March, and he counseled him to be
particularly cautious and circumspect until that day
should have passed.
The Senate were to meet on the Ides
of March in a new and splendid edifice, which had
been erected for their use by Pompey. There was
in the interior of the building, among other decorations,
a statue of Pompey. The day before the Ides of
March, some birds of prey from a neighboring grove
came flying into this hall, pursuing a little wren
with a sprig of laurel in its mouth. The birds
tore the wren to pieces, the laurel dropping from
its bill to the marble pavement of the floor below.
Now, as Caesar had been always accustomed to wear a
crown of laurel on great occasions, and had always
evinced a particular fondness for that decoration,
that plant had come to be considered his own proper
badge, and the fall of the laurel, therefore, was naturally
thought to portend some great calamity to him.
The night before the Ides of March
Caesar could not sleep. It would not seem, however,
to be necessary to suppose any thing supernatural to
account for his wakefulness. He lay upon his bed
restless and excited, or if he fell into a momentary
slumber, his thoughts, instead of finding repose,
were only plunged into greater agitations, produced
by strange, and, as he thought, supernatural dreams.
He imagined that he ascended into the skies, and was
received there by Jupiter, the supreme divinity, as
an associate and equal. While shaking hands with
the great father of gods and men, the sleeper was
startled by a frightful sound. He awoke, and
found his wife Calpurnia groaning and struggling
in her sleep. He saw her by the moonlight which
was shining into the room. He spoke to her, and
aroused her. After staring wildly for a moment
till she had recovered her thoughts, she said that
she had had a dreadful dream. She had dreamed
that the roof of the house had fallen in, and that,
at the same instant, the doors had been burst open,
and some robber or assassin had stabbed her husband
as he was lying in her arms. The philosophy of
those days found in these dreams mysterious and preternatural
warnings of impending danger; that of ours, however,
sees nothing either in the absurd sacrilegiousness
of Caesar’s thoughts, or his wife’s incoherent
and inconsistent images of terror nothing
more than the natural and proper effects, on the one
hand, of the insatiable ambition of man, and, on the
other, of the conjugal affection and solicitude of
woman. The ancient sculptors carved out images
of men, by the forms and linéaments of which
we see that the physical characteristics of humanity
have not changed. History seems to do the same
with the affections and passions of the soul.
The dreams of Caesar and his wife on the night before
the Ides of March, as thus recorded, form a sort of
spiritual statue, which remains from generation to
generation, to show us how precisely all the inward
workings of human nature are from age to age the same.
When the morning came Caesar and Calpurnia
arose, both restless and ill at ease. Caesar
ordered the auspices to be consulted with reference
to the intended proceedings of the day. The soothsayers
came in in due time, and reported that the result
was unfavorable. Calpurnia, too, earnestly
entreated her husband not to go to the senate-house
that day. She had a very strong presentiment
that, if he did go, some great calamity would ensue.
Caesar himself hesitated. He was half inclined
to yield, and postpone his coronation to another occasion.
In the course of the day, while Caesar
was in this state of doubt and uncertainty, one of
the conspirators, named Decimus Brutus, came in.
This Brutus was not a man of any extraordinary courage
or energy, but he had been invited by the other conspirators
to join them, on account of his having under his charge
a large number of gladiators, who, being desperate
and reckless men, would constitute a very suitable
armed force for them to call in to their aid in case
of any emergency arising which should require it.
The conspirators having thus all their
plans arranged, Decimus Brutus was commissioned
to call at Caesar’s house when the time approached
for the assembling of the Senate, both to avert suspicion
from Caesar’s mind, and to assure himself that
nothing had been discovered It was in the afternoon,
the time for the meeting of the senators having been
fixed at five o’clock. Decimus Brutus
found Caesar troubled and perplexed, and uncertain
what to do. After hearing what he had to say,
he replied by urging him to go by all means to the
senate-house, as he had intended. “You
have formally called the Senate together,” said
he, “and they are now assembling. They
are all prepared to confer upon you the rank and title
of king, not only in Parthia, while you are conducting
this war but every where, by sea and land, except in
Italy. And now, while they are all in their places,
waiting to consummate the great act, how absurd will
it be for you to send them word to go home again,
and come back some other day, when Calpurnia shall
have had better dreams!”
He urged, too, that, even if Caesar
was determined to put off the action of the Senate
to another day, he was imperiously bound to go himself
and adjourn the session in person. So saying,
he took the hesitating potentate by the arm, and adding
to his arguments a little gentle force, conducted
him along.
The conspirators supposed that all
was safe The fact was, however, that all had been
discovered. There was a certain Greek, a teacher
of oratory, named Artemidorus. He had contrived
to learn something of the plot from some of the conspirators
who were his pupils. He wrote a brief statement
of the leading particulars, and, having no other mode
of access to Caesar, he determined to hand it to him
on the way as he went to the senate-house. Of
course, the occasion was one of great public interest,
and crowds had assembled in the streets to see the
great conqueror as he went along. As usual at
such times, when powerful officers of state appear
in public, many people came up to present petitions
to him as he passed. These he received, and handed
them, without reading, to his secretary who attended
him, as if to have them preserved for future examination.
Artemidorus, who was waiting for his opportunity,
when he perceived what disposition Caesar made of the
papers which were given to him, began to be afraid
that his own communication would not be attended to
until it was too late. He accordingly pressed
up near to Caesar, refusing to allow any one else to
pass the paper in; and when, at last, he obtained an
opportunity, he gave it directly into Caesar’s
hands saying to him, “Read this immediately:
it concerns yourself, and is of the utmost importance”
Caesar took the paper and attempted
to read it, but new petitions and other interruptions
constantly prevented him; finally he gave up the attempt,
and went on his way, receiving and passing to his secretary
all other papers, but retaining this paper of Artemidorus
in his hand.
Caesar passed Spurinna on his way
to the senate-house the soothsayer who
had predicted some great danger connected with the
Ides of March. As soon as he recognized him,
he accosted him with the words, “Well, Spurinna,
the Ides of March have come, and I am safe.”
“Yes,” replied Spurinna, “they have
come, but they are not yet over.”
At length he arrived at the senate-house,
with the paper of Artemidorus still unread in his
hand. The senators were all convened, the leading
conspirators among them. They all rose to receive
Caesar as he entered. Caesar advanced to the
seat provided for him, and, when he was seated, the
senators themselves sat down. The moment had now
arrived, and the conspirators, with pale looks and
beating hearts, felt that now or never the deed was
to be done.
It requires a very considerable degree
of physical courage and hardihood for men to come
to a calm and deliberate decision that they will kill
one whom they hate, and, still more, actually to strike
the blow, even when under the immediate impulse of
passion. But men who are perfectly capable of
either of these often find their resolution fail them
as the time comes for striking a dagger into the living
flesh of their victim, when he sits at ease and unconcerned
before them, unarmed and defenseless, and doing nothing
to excite those feelings of irritation and anger which
are generally found so necessary to nerve the human
arm to such deeds. Utter defenselessness is accordingly,
sometimes, a greater protection than an armor of steel.
Even Cassius himself, the originator
and the soul of the whole enterprise, found his courage
hardly adequate to the work now that the moment had
arrived; and, in order to arouse the necessary excitement
in his soul, he looked up to the statue of Pompey,
Caesar’s ancient and most formidable enemy,
and invoked its aid. It gave him its aid.
It inspired him with some portion of the enmity with
which the soul of its great original had burned; and
thus the soul of the living assassin was nerved to
its work by a sort of sympathy with a block of stone.
Foreseeing the necessity of something
like a stimulus to action when the immediate moment
for action should arrive, the conspirators had agreed
that, as soon as Caesar was seated, they would approach
him with a petition, which he would probably refuse,
and then, gathering around him, they would urge him
with their importunities, so as to produce, in the
confusion, a sort of excitement that would make it
easier for them to strike the blow.
There was one person, a relative and
friend of Caesar’s, named Marcus Antonius, called
commonly, however, in English narratives, Marc Antony,
the same who has been already mentioned as having been
subsequently connected with Cleopatra. He was
a very energetic and determined man, who, they thought,
might possibly attempt to defend him. To prevent
this, one of the conspirators had been designated to
take him aside, and occupy his attention with some
pretended subject of discourse, ready, at the same
time, to resist and prevent his interference if he
should show himself inclined to offer any.
Things being thus arranged, the petitioner,
as had been agreed, advanced to Caesar with his petition,
others coming up at the same time as if to second
the request. The object of the petition was to
ask for the pardon of the brother of one of the conspirators.
Caesar declined granting it. The others then
crowded around him, urging him to grant the request
with pressing importunities, all apparently reluctant
to strike the first blow. Caesar began to be
alarmed, and attempted to repel them. One of
them then pulled down his robe from his neck to lay
it bare. Caesar arose, exclaiming, “But
this is violence.” At the same instant,
one of the conspirators struck at him with his sword,
and wounded him slightly in the neck.
All was now terror, outcry, and confusion
Caesar had no time to draw his sword, but fought a
moment with his style, a sharp instrument of iron
with which they wrote, in those days, on waxen tablets,
and which he happened then to have in his hand.
With this instrument he ran one of his enemies through
the arm.
This resistance was just what was
necessary to excite the conspirators, and give them
the requisite resolution to finish their work.
Caesar soon saw the swords, accordingly, gleaming
all around him, and thrusting themselves at him on
every side. The senators rose in confusion and
dismay, perfectly thunderstruck at the scene, and not
knowing what to do. Antony perceived that all
resistance on his part would be unavailing, and accordingly
did not attempt any. Caesar defended himself
alone for a few minutes as well as he could, looking
all around him in vain for help, and retreating at
the same time toward the pedestal of Pompey’s
statue. At length, when he saw Brutus among his
murderers, he exclaimed, “And you too, Brutus?”
and seemed from that moment to give up in despair.
He drew his robe over his face, and soon fell under
the wounds which he received. His blood ran out
upon the pavement at the foot of Pompey’s statue,
as if his death were a sacrifice offered to appease
his ancient enemy’s revenge.
In the midst of the scene Brutus made
an attempt to address the senators, and to vindicate
what they had done, but the confusion and excitement
were so great that it was impossible that any thing
could be heard. The senators were, in fact, rapidly
leaving the place, going off in every direction, and
spreading the tidings over the city. The event,
of course, produced universal commotion. The citizens
began to close their shops, and some to barricade
their houses, while others hurried to and fro about
the streets, anxiously inquiring for intelligence,
and wondering what dreadful event was next to be expected.
Antony and Lepidus, who were Caesar’s two most
faithful and influential friends, not knowing how
extensive the conspiracy might be, nor how far the
hostility to Caesar and his party might extend, fled,
and, not daring to go to their own houses, lest the
assassins or their confederates might pursue them
there, sought concealment in the houses of friends
on whom they supposed they could rely and who were
willing to receive them.
In the mean time, the conspirators,
glorying In the deed which they had perpetrated, and
congratulating each other on the successful issue of
their enterprise, sallied forth together from the senate-house,
leaving the body of their victim weltering in its
blood, and marched, with drawn swords in their hands,
along the streets from the senate-house to the Capitol.
Brutus went at the head of them, preceded by a liberty
cap borne upon the point of a spear, and with his
bloody dagger in his hand. The Capitol was the
citadel, built magnificently upon the Capitoline Hill,
and surrounded by temples, and other sacred and civil
edifices, which made the spot the architectural wonder
of the world. As Brutus and his company proceeded
thither, they announced to the citizens, as they went
along, the great deed of deliverance which they had
wrought out for the country. Instead of seeking
concealment, they gloried in the work which they had
done, and they so far succeeded in inspiring others
with a portion of their enthusiasm, that some men
who had really taken no part in the deed joined Brutus
and his company in their march, to obtain by stealth
a share in the glory.
The body of Caesar lay for some time
unheeded where it had fallen, the attention of every
one being turned to the excitement, which was extending
through the city, and to the expectation of other great
events which might suddenly develop themselves in
other quarters of Rome. There were left only
three of Caesar’s slaves, who gathered around
the body to look at the wounds. They counted
them, and found the number twenty-three. It shows,
however, how strikingly, and with what reluctance,
the actors in this tragedy came up to their work at
last, that of all these twenty-three wounds only one
was a mortal one. In fact, it is probable that,
while all of the conspirators struck the victim in
their turn, to fulfill the pledge which they had given
to one another that they would every one inflict a
wound, each one hoped that the fatal blow would be
given, after all, by some other hand than his own.
At last the slaves decided to convey
the body home. They obtained a sort of chair,
which was made to be borne by poles, and placed the
body upon it. Then, lifting at the three handles,
and allowing the fourth to hang unsupported for want
of a man, they bore the ghastly remains home to the
distracted Calpurnia.
The next day Brutus and his associates
called an assembly of the people in the Forum, and
made an address to them, explaining the motives which
had led them to the commission of the deed, and vindicating
the necessity and the justice of it. The people
received these explanations in silence. They
expressed neither approbation nor displeasure.
It was not, in fact, to be expected that they would
feel or evince any satisfaction at the loss of their
master. He had been their champion, and, as they
believed, their friend. The removal of Caesar
brought no accession of power nor increase of liberty
to them. It might have been a gain to ambitious
senators, or powerful generals, or high officers of
state, by removing a successful rival out of their
way, but it seemed to promise little advantage to
the community at large, other than the changing of
one despotism for another. Besides, a populace
who know that they mast be governed, prefer generally,
if they must submit to some control, to yield their
submission to some one master spirit whom they can
look up to as a great and acknowledged superior.
They had rather have a Caesar than a Senate to command
them.
The higher authorities, however, were,
at might have been expected, disposed to acquiesce
in the removal of Caesar from his intended throne.
The Senate met, and passed an act of indemnity, to
shield the conspirators from all legal liability for
the deed they had done. In order, however, to
satisfy the people too, as far as possible, they decreed
divine honors to Caesar, confirmed and ratified all
that he had done while in the exercise of supreme
power, and appointed a time for the funeral, ordering
arrangements to be made for a very pompous celebration
of it.
A will was soon found, which Caesar,
it seems, had made some time before. Calpurnia’s
father proposed that this will should be opened and
read in public at Antony’s house; and this was
accordingly done. The provisions of the will
were, many of them, of such a character as renewed
the feelings of interest and sympathy which the people
of Rome had begun to cherish for Caesar’s memory.
His vast estate was divided chiefly among the children
of his sister, as he had no children of his own, while
the very men who had been most prominent in his assassination
were named as trustees and guardians of the property;
and one of them, Decimus Brutus, the one who
had been so urgent to conduct him to the senate-house,
was a second heir. He had some splendid gardens
near the Tiber, which he bequeathed to the citizens
of Rome, and a large amount of money also, to be divided
among them, sufficient to give every man a considerable
sum.
The time for the celebration of the
funeral ceremonies was made known by proclamation,
and, as the concourse of strangers and citizens of
Rome was likely to be so great as to forbid the forming
of all into one procession without consuming more
than one day, the various classes of the community
were invited to come, each in their own way, to the
Field of Mars, bringing with them such insignia, offerings,
and oblations as they pleased. The Field of Mars
was an immense parade ground, reserved for military
reviews, spectacles, and shows. A funeral pile
was erected here for the burning of the body There
was to be a funeral discourse pronounced, and Marc
Antony had been designated to perform this duty.
The body had been placed in a gilded bed, under a magnificent
canopy in the form of a temple, before the rostra
where the funeral discourse was to be pronounced.
The bed was covered with scarlet and cloth of gold
and at the head of it was laid the robe in which Caesar
had been slain. It was stained with blood, and
pierced with the holes that the swords and daggers
of the conspirators had made.
Marc Antony, instead of pronouncing
a formal panegyric upon his deceased friend, ordered
a crier to read the decrees of the Senate, in which
all honors, human and divine, had been ascribed to
Caesar. He then added a few words of his own.
The bed was then taken up, with the body upon it,
and borne out into the Forum, preparatory to conveying
it to the pile which had been prepared for it upon
the Field of Mars, A question, however, here arose
among the multitude assembled in respect to the proper
place for burning the body. The people seemed
inclined to select the most honorable place which
could be found within the limits of the city.
Some proposed a beautiful temple on the Capitoline
Hill. Others wished to take it to the senate-house,
where he had been slain. The Senate, and those
who were less inclined to pay extravagant honors to
the departed hero, were in favor of some more retired
spot, under pretense that the buildings of the city
would be endangered by the fire. This discussion
was fast becoming a dispute, when it was suddenly ended
by two men, with swords at their sides and knees in
their hands, forcing their way through the crowd with
lighted torches, and setting the bed and its canopy
on fire where it lay.
This settled the question, and the
whole company were soon in the wildest excitement
with the work of building up a funeral pile upon the
spot. At first they brought fagots and threw
upon the fire, then benches from the neighboring courts
and porticoes, and then any thing combustible which
came to hand. The honor done to the memory of
a deceased hero was, in some sense, in proportion
to the greatness of his funeral pile, and all the
populace on this occasion began soon to seize every
thing they could find, appropriate and unappropriate,
provided that it would increase the flame. The
soldiers threw on their lances and spears, the musicians
their instruments, and others stripped off the cloths
and trappings from the furniture of the procession,
and heaped them upon the burning pile.
So fierce and extensive was the fire,
that it spread to some of the neighboring houses,
and required great efforts to prevent a general conflagration.
The people, too, became greatly excited by the scene.
They lighted torches by the fire, and went to the houses
of Brutus and Cassius, threatening vengeance upon
them for the murder of Caesar. The authorities
succeeded though with infinite difficulty, in protecting
Brutus and Cassius from the violence of the mob, but
they seized one unfortunate citizen of the name of
Cinna, thinking it a certain Cinna who had been known
as an enemy of Caesar. They cut off his head,
notwithstanding his shrieks and cries, and carried
it about the city on the tip of a pike, a dreadful
symbol of their hostility to the enemies of Caesar.
As frequently happens, however, in such deeds of sudden
violence, these hasty and lawless avengers found afterward
that they had made a mistake, and beheaded the wrong
man.
The Roman people erected a column
to the memory of Caesar, on which they placed the
inscription, “To THE FATHER OF HIS COUNTRY.”
They fixed the figure of a star upon the summit of
it, and some time afterward, while the people were
celebrating some games in honor of his memory, a great
comet blazed for seven nights in the sky, which they
recognized as the mighty hero’s soul reposing
in heaven.