[History of Julius Caesar by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link bookHistory of Julius Caesar CHAPTER XI 20/23
Your character, your name, your position, your ancestry, and the course of conduct which you have already always pursued, inspire the whole city with the hope that you are to be their deliverer.
The citizens are all ready to aid you, and to sustain you at the hazard of their lives; but they look to you to go forward, and to act in their name and in their behalf, in the crisis which is now approaching." [Sidenote: Effect on Brutus.] [Sidenote: Brutus engages in the conspiracy.] Men of a very calm exterior are often susceptible of the profoundest agitations within, the emotions seeming to be sometimes all the more permanent and uncontrollable from the absence of outward display.
Brutus said little, but his soul was excited and fired by Cassius's words. There was a struggle in his soul between his grateful sense of his political obligations to Caesar and his personal attachment to him on the one hand, and, on the other, a certain stern Roman conviction that every thing should be sacrificed, even friendship and gratitude, as well as fortune and life, to the welfare of his country.
He acceded to the plan, and began forthwith to enter upon the necessary measures for putting it into execution. [Sidenote: Ligurius.] There was a certain general, named Ligurius, who had been in Pompey's army, and whose hostility to Caesar had never been really subdued.
He was now sick.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|