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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Caesar by Plutarch


man that should pass the Rhine with an army. He carried a bridge
across it, though it was very wide, and the current at that particular
point very full, strong, and violent, bringing down with its waters
trunks of trees, and other lumber, which much shook and
weakened the foundations of his bridge. But he drove great piles of
wood into the bottom of the river above the passage, to catch and
stop these as they floated down, and thus fixing his bridle upon the
stream, successfully finished his bridge, which no one who saw
could believe to be the work but of ten days.

In the passage of his army over it he met with no opposition; the
Suevi themselves, who are the most warlike people of all Germany,
flying with their effects into the deepest and most densely wooded
valleys. When he had burnt all the enemy’s country, and
encouraged those who embraced the Roman interest, he went back
into Gaul, after eighteen days’ stay in Germany. But his expedition
into Britain was the most famous testimony of his courage. For he
was the first who brought a navy into the western ocean, or who
sailed into the Atlantic with an army to make war; and by invading
an island, the reported extent of which had made its existence a
matter of controversy among historians, many of whom questioned
whether it were not a mere name and fiction, not a real place, he
might be said to have carried the Roman empire beyond the limits
of the known world. He passed thither twice from that part of Gaul
which lies over against it, and in several battles which he fought
did more hurt to the enemy than service to himself, for the
islanders were so miserably poor that they had nothing worth
being plundered of. When he found himself unable to put such an
end to the war as he wished, he was content to take hostages from
the king, and to impose a tribute, and then quitted the island. At
his arrival in Gaul, he found letters which lay ready to be conveyed
over the water to him from his friends at Rome, announcing his
daughter’s death, who died in labour of a child by Pompey. Caesar
and Pompey both were much afflicted with her death, nor were
their friends less disturbed, believing that the alliance was now
broken which had hitherto kept the sickly commonwealth in peace,
for the child also died within a few days after the mother. The
people took the body of Julia, in spite of the opposition of the
tribunes, and carried it into the field of Mars, and there her funeral
rites were performed, and her remains are laid.

Caesar’s army was now grown very numerous, so that he was
forced to disperse them into various camps for their winter
quarters, and he having gone himself to Italy as he used to do, in
his absence a general outbreak throughout the whole of Gaul
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