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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library-Caesar by Plutarch


for that they were met upon his summons, and were ready to vote
unanimously that he should be declared king of all the provinces
out of Italy, and might wear a diadem in any other place but Italy,
by sea or land. If any one should be sent to tell them they might
break up for the present, and meet again when Calpurnia should
chance to have better dreams, what would his enemies say? Or
who would with any patience hear his friends, if they should
presume to defend his government as not arbitrary and tyrannical?
But if he was possessed so far as to think this day unfortunate, yet
it were more decent to go himself to the senate, and to adjourn it in
his own person.

Brutus, as he spoke these words, took Caesar by the hand, and
conducted him forth. He was not gone far from the door, when a
servant of some other person’s made towards him, but not being
able to come up to him, on account of the crowd of those who
pressed about him, he made his way into the house, and
committed himself to Calpurnia, begging of her to secure him till
Caesar returned, because he had matters of great importance to
communicate to him.

Artemidorus, a Cnidian, a teacher of Greek logic, and by that
means so far acquainted with Brutus and his friends as to have got
into the secret, brought Caesar in a small written memorial the
heads of what he had to depose. He had observed that Caesar, as
he received any papers, presently gave them to the servants who
attended on him; and therefore came as near to him as he could,
and said, “Read this, Caesar, alone, and quickly, for it contains
matter of great importance which nearly concerns you.” Caesar
received it, and tried several times to read it, but was still hindered
by the crowd of those who came to speak to him. However, he kept
it in his hand by itself till he came into the senate. Some say it was
another who gave Caesar this note, and that Artemidorus could not
get to him, being all along kept off by the crowd.

All these things might happen by chance. But the place which was
destined for the scene of this murder, in which the senate met that
day, was the same in which Pompey’s statue stood, and was one of
the edifices which Pompey had raised and dedicated with his
theatre to the use of the public, plainly showing that there was
something of a supernatural influence which guided the action and
ordered it to that particular place. Cassius, just before the act, is
said to have looked towards Pompey’s statue, and silently
implored his assistance, though he had been inclined to the
doctrines of Epicurus. But this occasion, and the instant danger,
carried him away out of all his reasonings, and filled him for the
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