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ANCIENT AND MODERN

Peter Jones
The sort of flak that Mr Blair’s recent
autocratic performances have drawn was also directed at Julius Caesar
in his final year — from Cicero in particular — and we all know
what happened to Julius Caesar.
At the start of the civil war against Pompey (49 bc) which brought
Caesar to power, Cicero was already saying that Caesar had put personal
advantage before ‘the safety and honour of the country’. Appointed
dictator, Caesar effectively decided who was to hold what positions,
and seemed almost to hire and fire consuls at will. On one occasion
he had a friend made consul for an afternoon, at which Cicero joked
‘the consul’s vigilance was extraordinary: in his whole term of
office, he never closed an eye’. Cicero tells us that decrees were
drawn up in private houses, and that he was often astonished to
find himself a signatory to them (‘letters have been brought to
me from monarchs at the end of the earth thanking me for my motion
to give them the royal title, when I was unaware even of their existence,
let alone their recent elevation’).
Caesar certainly knew how to look after his friends. He loaded them
into the Senate, for example, and the Senate reciprocated with grotesque
awards of honours, but the problem was that, having filled the Senate
with his cronies, he then basically ignored them. As a result, the
politician and philosopher Seneca could remark that it was Caesar’s
‘glory, ambition and refusal to set limits to his own pre-eminence’
that brought about his and the country’s downfall. Indeed, this
passion for total control was turned into a joke: after he had brilliantly
reformed the calendar — long overdue — and someone observed that
the constellation Lyra was due to rise that evening, Cicero remarked,
‘Yes, on Caesar’s instructions.’
Caesar was not unaware of this. On one occasion, Cicero relates
waiting for an audience with Caesar, and Caesar commenting, ‘I’d
be a fool to suppose that even an easy-going fellow like Cicero
could be my friend when he has to sit about waiting on my convenience
all the time.’ But it did not alter his behaviour.
Will anything alter Blair’s? True, New Labour will collapse when
he goes, but we, like the Romans, tend to feel the country should
come first, not some vacuous political daydream, however sincere.
© 2004 The Spectator.co.uk
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