CÆSAR AND HIS FORTUNE
ful. It was soon known that Julius Cæsar had placed the figure of Marius in the Capitol.
Cæsar stepped from office to office—magistrate, chief priest, and then prætor, wearing the cloak with purple trimming. For a while he had a command in Spain. On his way to Spain he crossed the Alps. He and his troops marched by a little town.
“I wonder,” said a friend, pointing to the group of houses on the hillside, “it the people there strive for the highest places, as men do in Rome?”
“Why not?” replied Cæsar. “I should do so if I dwelt in that town. I had rather be the first man here than the second man in Rome.”
He carried on the war in Spain with much spirit, forcing the wild tribes to submit to the Roman eagles; and he led his legions as far as the Atlantic Ocean.
On his return to Rome he was elected consul. Then he took over the rule of Gaul—the country which is now the home of the great French nation, with the Belgians as their neighbors; but at that time it was parted among three hundred different tribes. And beyond the sea in the north was the land so often clothed in fog and beaten by contrary—winds the land of the Britons. In the plains and forests of this vast region the Romans—hard as oak, proud as kings, bold as lions—met the tribes, and grappled with them in many a
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