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Crassus
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CRASSUS
MARCUS CRASSUS lived at the same period with Pompey and
Cæsar and Cicero, whose lives follow this, and he was
one of the best public speakers in Rome. Often when
others refused to undertake a case that seemed
unimportant, he would give it so much of his time and
attention that his fellow-citizens looked upon him as
one who was ever ready to work for them. Besides, he
had a pleasant way of greeting even the humblest of his
countrymen,
[366] and of calling each by name, that added much to his
popularity. This was unlike many rich men, and Crassus
was enormously rich, for not only was he the owner of
several silver-mines, but he had valuable lands and a
host of slaves, whom he hired out. They were laborers
on his estates, readers, writers, silversmiths,
stewards, and household waiters. These he always
overlooked himself, for he considered it the duty of a
master to see that his servants were properly
instructed in their various pursuits.
When Cinna and Marius got the power into their own
hands, an account of which has been given in their
respective lives, the father and brother of Crassus
were killed, but he, being very young, was considered
unimportant, and so escaped. But he knew that he was
living in dangerous times, and therefore, taking with
him three friends and ten servants, he fled to Spain,
where he had once been with his father, and hid in a
cave by the sea-shore. This cave belonged to a man
named Vibius Pacianus, who was so pleased to know that
young Crassus was safe that, after inquiring into the
number of occupants of the cave, he ordered his steward
to take a certain supply of food every day to a rock
which he named and there leave it, promising him his
liberty if he obeyed, but threatening death if he
asked any questions or sought to find out for whom the
food was intended.
Crassus lived in that by no means unpleasant dwelling
for eight months, abundantly supplied with comforts and
luxuries sent regularly by the friendly Pacianus,
whose servants never saw him or knew whom they were
serving. At last news came of Cinna's death, and then
Crassus left his hiding-place and joined Sylla's army,
where his services were very valuable. But Crassus had
two grave faults: he was avaricious and covetous; so
when Pompey was honored with a triumph, it made him
very angry because he did not also get one. One day,
when a citizen announced that "Pompey the Great was
coming," Crassus asked, with a scornful laugh, "How big
is he?"
Pompey's ability for war was so great that Crassus soon
felt how useless it would be to compete with him: he
therefore turned his attention to affairs of state, and
became very influential. He was ambitious and covetous,
as we have said, but not ill-natured or bad-hearted,
and he was always ready to serve those who needed
[367] him. When Cæsar was going to Spain as prætor, his
creditors wanted to stop him and take his things, but
Crassus promised to see that they were all paid at a
given time, and this was a noble act of friendship.
Crassus showed himself a good soldier in the war with
Spartacus, the gladiator. There was at Capua a man who
trained gladiators and kept them in confinement, not
because they were criminals, but because they were his
slaves, and he was cruel. They were for the most part
Gauls and Thracians, and were made to fight merely to
amuse their master and his guests. At last they
determined to bear the imprisonment no longer, and two
hundred of them formed a plot to escape. It was
discovered, but not until seventy-eight had got off;
these went to a cook's shop and armed themselves with
all sorts of knives, hatchets, and spits, with which
they marched noisily through Capua until they reached a
place where they were able to defend themselves. On the
way they came upon a wagon filled with gladiators'
arms; they seized these, and then chose three captains,
Spartacus being the chief and giving the name to the
insurrection.
Spartacus was a brave, high-spirited man, superior to
his condition both in intellect and disposition, for,
unlike most Thracians, he was humane and gentle. When
he first went to Rome to be sold, a snake coiled itself
upon his face while he slept, and his wife, who was a
kind of prophetess, declared it to be a sign that he
would become powerful.
Well, the seventy-eight gladiators routed those Capuans
who came out to fight them, and so got hold of all the
weapons they required in place of the butcher-knives.
Clodius, with a body of three thousand men, was sent
from Rome, and he besieged the gladiators on a mountain
that could be reached by only one narrow, difficult
passage, which he kept guarded. The top of the mountain
was covered with wild vines, of which the gladiators
made strong ladders long enough to reach down a steep,
slippery precipice on the opposite side to where
Clodius had posted his army. By means of these ladders
they all got down and made their way around to the
Romans, who were taken completely by surprise and lost
their camp. This gave the gladiators another supply of
arms, with which they equipped
[368] a number of sturdy herdsmen and shepherds who had
joined them.
Other prætors were sent from Rome, but Spartacus
defeated them all, and his name began to be a terror in
the land. But he was too sensible a man to suppose that
his success would long continue against the forces that
could easily be raised to oppose him; so he marched his
army towards the Alps, intending to send every man to
his own home, some to Thrace, others to Gaul. However,
with their increase of numbers and repeated successes,
they were not willing tamely to disband; they disobeyed
their leader and went about ravaging Italy, until the
senate, aroused to a sense of the danger that was
likely to follow, sent out two consuls, each with a
large army. In course of time both were defeated by
Spartacus. Then Crassus was appointed general of the
war, and a great many of the patrician young men
volunteered under his command.
It was at Rhegium that he came upon the gladiators, and
the first thing he did was to build a wall across the
isthmus. This was a most difficult undertaking, but it
kept the soldiers busy and the enemy from foraging; so
when Spartacus, who had not considered the importance
of this great undertaking, suddenly found his
provisions failing and himself walled in, he spent the
whole of one snowy, stormy night filling up a ditch
with earth and boughs of trees, and so passed over a
third of his army.
Crassus now began to fear that the gladiators would
march straight to Rome; but his mind was soon relieved
when they separated, for some reason or other, and
part of them encamped on the Lucanian lake. He fell
upon them without delay, drove them off, and would have
put an end to them had not Spartacus come up just in
time to rally them.
Meanwhile, Crassus had written to the senate to send
Lucullus from Thrace and Pompey from Spain to his
assistance. He now began to repent that he had done so,
for he was always jealous of Pompey, who was a greater
commander than he, and feared that he might arrive in
time to carry off the honors. He therefore followed up
Spartacus and his army with all speed, and gave them
battle as soon as they made a stand.
When they brought Spartacus his horse, he drew his
sword and killed him, saying, "If I am victorious, I
shall get many better
[369] horses from the enemy; if I am defeated, I shall have
no need of this one." Then, through showers of darts
and heaps of slain, he made straight for Crassus, but
did not reach him, though he killed two centurions that
fell upon him together. He stood his ground, bravely
defending himself, until he was surrounded by the enemy
and cut to pieces.
Although Crassus had shown himself a good general and
had gallantly exposed his person, he was only wreathing
a laurel for the brow of Pompey, who met those that
were escaping from the field, put them to the sword,
and wrote to the senate, "Crassus has indeed beaten the
gladiators in a pitched battle, but I have put an end
to the war."
On his return to Rome, Pompey had a magnificent triumph
for his conquest over Sertorius in Spain, but Crassus
could not even accept an ovation, because it would have
been undignified, seeing that he had defeated only
fugitive slaves. The difference between a triumph and
an ovation is explained in the life of Marcellus.
Pompey and Crassus were both made consuls. They seemed
pleased at first, but it was not long before they began
to quarrel to such an extent that they could accomplish
nothing of importance to the country. But Crassus, in
order to increase his popularity, offered a great
sacrifice to Hercules, entertained people at ten
thousand tables, and gave them a supply of corn for
three months. At the close of their consulship a Roman
knight who was much respected mounted the rostrum and
announced that he had had a vision, in which, he said,
"Jupiter appeared to me and commanded me to tell you
that you should not permit your consuls to go out of
office until they are friends." The people cried out
that they must become reconciled to each other. Pompey
stood perfectly still and said nothing; but Crassus
advanced towards him, and, holding out his hand, said,
"I am not ashamed, fellow-citizens, nor do I think it
beneath me, to make the first advances to Pompey, whom
you called Great while he was but a beardless
youth, and whom you honored with a triumph before he
was even senator."
Somewhat later, Crassus was accused of being mixed up
in the conspiracy of Catiline, but he was tried and
acquitted by the whole senate. This was a plot to burn
the city, and when the senate investigated it they
naturally could not believe that a man who
[370] owned such an amount of property as Crassus did could
desire to destroy it.
Now we come to the closing scene in the life of
Crassus. He and Pompey were not really friends,
although they had shaken hands to gratify an assembly
of the people; so when Cæsar returned and desired to
stand for the consulship he managed to reconcile the
two, because he knew the importance of their influence.
Having accomplished that, he formed the well-known
league commonly called the First Triumvirate; and that
was a sad day for the liberty of the Roman people.
Cæsar gained most by this league, for it helped him to
the very top of the ladder of fame. Pompey agreed to it
because he loved power, Crassus because he worshipped
gold and saw a way to increase the millions he already
had. So Cæsar was elected consul, and by means of
persuasion and force the other two were associated with
him. Pompey was appointed to the government of Spain,
and Crassus to that of Syria, but he expected to extend
it to India and the very shores of the Eastern
Ocean,—not for fame, but for riches.
He first proposed to attack the Parthians, but they had
been friendly to Rome; consequently the people opposed
it, and would not let him depart until Pompey, whose
influence was great, acted as escort. Even then Ateius,
the tribune, met him at the gate, and tried to stop him
by force, but, failing in that, he ran and got a pan of
burning coals, on which he sprinkled incense, and
called down the most horrible curses of certain strange
and dreadful gods on the heads of the army. An
imprecation of this kind was seldom used, because it
was said that not only the person who used it, but his
country, was sure to be unhappy. Therefore Ateius was
much blamed for his rashness.
However, Crassus could not be stopped; so he put to
sea, and after a stormy and dangerous voyage, and the
loss of a number of vessels, reached Brundusium, whence
he proceeded to Syria. The Romans met with little
resistance, because they were not expected, and overran
the greater part of Mesopotamia; but then Crassus
committed a fatal error. Instead of following up his
success and conquering the great city of Babylon, which
he might have done with ease, he merely fortified the
towns and returned into Syria to
[371] pass the winter. There he was joined by his son,
Publius, who was sent from Gaul by Cæsar at the head of
a thousand select horsemen.
Instead of devoting the winter to disciplining his
army, as a great general ought to have done, Crassus
spent his time inquiring into the revenues of the
cities and weighing the treasures he found in the
temple of Hierapolis, said to have been the richest in
the world.
In the spring he took the field again with a splendid
army; but part of it, headed by Cassius, the quæstor,
tried to dissuade him from going farther, particularly
as the soothsayers pronounced all the signs
unfavorable. Crassus paid no attention to any of them,
but marched straight on to the river Euphrates.
While he was crossing, there was a dreadful storm,
accompanied by terrific peals of thunder and fearful
flashes of lightning, and part of his bridge was
destroyed. The spot he had marked out for his camp was
struck twice by lightning; a richly-caparisoned
war-horse ridden by one of the generals ran away,
jumped into the river, and was drowned with the rider;
and when the foremost eagle was moved in order for the
march, it turned back of its own accord. These and
other bad omens had a very depressing effect on the
minds of the superstitious Romans, and it was increased
when Crassus let fall the entrails of the animal he was
sacrificing. However, his presence of mind did not
desert him, and he said, with a smile, "See what it is
to be old! but my sword shall not slip out of my hands
in this manner, I promise you."
After crossing the river, Crassus was joined by an
artful, wicked Arabian chief named Ariamnes, who led
him to ruin. This man expressed so much friendship for
the Romans, and flattered them to such a degree, that
Crassus believed in him, and allowed him to become his
guide because he knew the country so well. The traitor
led the way along a smooth, easy road at first, but
after a while he struck into a sandy desert, where not
a drop of water nor a vestige of vegetation was to be
seen for miles. No sooner was the imposture discovered
than Ariamnes made his escape in the night.
The troops were worn out with their long, fatiguing
march, and almost exhausted from thirst, when they were
attacked by the Parthian forces under Surena, a man of
high position, and one of the
[372] most remarkable commanders of his day. Crassus was so
dismayed by the suddenness of the enemy's approach that
he was scarcely able to draw up his army properly;
however, after several changes one wing was at last
placed under Cassius, the other under Publius Crassus,
the centre being commanded by the general himself.
The Parthians came on, filling the air with a horrible
din and loud bellowing, for they had instruments
covered with leather and surrounded with brass bells,
which they beat continually, because experience had
taught them that nothing sooner disturbed the enemy
than the dismal sounds they produced. Besides, they had
a peculiar way of advancing and retreating as occasion
required, firing their formidable arrows all the time,
and drawing the enemy after them as they chose.
From the beginning the Romans fought at a disadvantage,
and the battle was desperate and bloody. Young Crassus
was sent with a detachment against the Parthian
cavalry, and, although he showed himself a true hero,
he and all his men were slain. The first knowledge the
general received of his son's death was when the
Parthians advanced again with loud shouts and songs of
victory, holding the head of Publius on the point of a
spear. "Does anybody know the family and parents of
this young man?" they asked, in tones of contempt:
"for it is not possible that so brave and gallant a
youth can be the son of Crassus, the greatest coward
and meanest wretch in the world."
This sight broke the spirit of the Romans more than all
they had suffered. Crassus, though bowed down with
grief, rode up and down the ranks and cried, "Romans,
this loss is mine. The fortunes and glory of Rome stand
safe in you. If you have any pity for me, who am bereft
of the best of sons, show it in your revenge on the
enemy. Put an end to their triumph; avenge their
cruelty. Be not astonished at this loss; they who
aspire to great things must expect to suffer. Lucullus
did not defeat Tigranes, nor Scipio Antiochus, without
some bloodshed. Rome has been blessed with great good
fortune, but she has also known adversity, and it is
through perseverance and fortitude that she has risen
to her present height of power."
Thus he spoke, but his troops were not inspirited by
his speech, and when he ordered them to shout for
battle, although they
[373] obeyed, their shouts were feeble and unequal, while
those of the enemy were bold and strong.
The fight lasted throughout the day, and the enemy's
pikes did great execution; for they were so large and
strong, and were pushed with such violence, that they
often pierced through two men at once. When night came
on, the enemy sent a message that they would give
Crassus one night to bewail the loss of his son, if he
did not in the mean time decide to go and surrender
himself to King Arsaces.
The Romans were in a dreadful condition. Their wounded
were lying on all sides, their dying groans and shrieks
of agony filling the air, and preventing those who were
able from paying proper attention to the burial of the
dead. They could not remove the wounded without being
observed by the enemy, and they dared not desert them.
Flight was thus rendered impossible. They believed
Crassus to be the cause of all their miseries, yet they
called on him to speak to them; but he had given
himself up to despair, and, having sought an obscure
corner, had completely enveloped himself in a cloak,
and lay stretched upon the ground.
Some of the officers tried to console him, but, finding
it impossible to do so, they called a council of war
and resolved to retire. This was therefore carried into
effect as silently as possible, but as soon as the sick
and wounded saw that they were to be deserted their
doleful cries filled the whole army with confusion.
Nevertheless they were left, and at break of day the
Parthians fell upon them and killed four thousand.
Their cavalry despatched a large number of stragglers
on the plain, and then surrounded a hill where one of
the Roman officers had stationed himself during the
night with four cohorts, and put to death all except
twenty, who cut their way through the enemy, sword in
hand, and made their escape.
Crassus escaped to Caræ, and as soon as Surena heard
where he was he determined to besiege the city; but,
not wishing to do so unless he was absolutely certain
that the Roman general was there, he sent an
interpreter to the walls to summon Crassus or Cassius,
and say that Surena desired an interview. When Crassus
appeared, the man said that Surena was ready to
conclude a peace
[374] with him on condition that he would give up Mesopotamia
and be upon terms of friendship with the king, his
master, for he thought that such a peace would be of
advantage to both sides.
Cassius answered for the general, and desired that the
time and place might be fixed as soon as possible for
the interview. The interpreter, having obtained the
information he sought, rode off.
Next day Surena led up his troops and began the siege,
telling the Romans that if they wanted peace all they
had to do was to deliver up Crassus and Cassius bound.
The Romans were very indignant at having been so
imposed upon, and at once made arrangements for their
general to escape. This ought to have been kept secret,
but Crassus told the whole plan to one of his guides,
named Andromachus, a perfidious man, who repeated all
he heard to the Parthians.
In the night Crassus marched out of Caræ with only
four cohorts of foot-soldiers, a small number of
cavalry, and five lictors, led by the false
Andromachus. They got into some difficult places, and
made little progress until day dawned, and then it was
discovered that the Parthians were coming up. One of
the Roman generals, who, with a small force, had
reached a hill not far off, saw the danger Crassus was
in, and immediately went to his aid. Then all the
soldiers took Crassus in their midst, and, fencing him
around with their shields, stoutly declared that no
Parthian arrow should touch their general while any of
them were left alive.
Fearing that Crassus might escape him after all, Surena
resorted to stratagem. He instructed his soldiers to
say in the presence of the prisoners that the king did
not want to continue the war with the Romans, but meant
to treat Crassus generously and to regain his
friendship and alliance. These prisoners were soon
after dismissed, and of course they reported to their
general what the Parthians had said. After drawing back
his troops, Surena, with a few of his principal
officers, went over to the spot where the Romans were
stationed, and, having unstrung his bow, offered his
hand to Crassus, and said, "Our king has hitherto,
though against his desire, given proofs of his power,
but now it would be a pleasure to him to come to terms
with the Romans and suffer them to depart in peace."
The troops were delighted, and urged their general to
go with
[375] Surena to complete the peace, but he felt suspicious of
the sudden friendship, and hesitated. Then they began
to reproach him. "You are very willing to expose us to
the weapons of the Parthians, but you dare not meet
them yourself, even though they lay down their arms and
ask for a friendly conference." This and other sneering
remarks at last decided the fate of Crassus; and as he
left he turned back and said, "All you Roman officers
that are present will bear witness to the necessity I
am under to take this step. When you are safe, pray
tell the world that I was deceived by the enemy, and
not that I was abandoned by my countrymen."
Octavius and Petronius, two officers, also a few
soldiers, went forward with their general. The first
persons they met were two of Surena's men, who
addressed Crassus in Greek, and bade him send some of
his soldiers to make sure that Surena and his company
had no weapons concealed about their persons. "That is
not necessary," he answered; "for if my life had been
of any account I should not thus put myself in your
hands."
Just then Surena himself, with half a dozen officers,
advanced on horseback. "What is this I behold?" he
asked,—"a Roman general on foot, when we are riding?"
He then ordered a horse to be brought, and, as soon as
Crassus had mounted, the equerries began to urge him
forward. Octavius seized the bridle on one side and
Petronius on the other, while the rest of the Romans
tried to draw off those Parthians who pressed up to
Crassus on each side. A scuffle ensued; Octavius drew
his sword and killed one of the equerries; another came
forward, and was killed also. Petronius received a blow
on his breastplate, but was not wounded. Crassus was
killed, and his head and right hand were cut off and
sent to the Parthian king. The rest of his escort
escaped.
Thus ended the tragic expedition that cost the lives of
twenty thousand Romans and the imprisonment of ten
thousand more. It had been undertaken by Crassus not
for the glory of his country, but for the
gratification of his ruling passion, love of gold, and
he met the fate he deserved.
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