[305]. Philipp. ii. 32.

[306]. It is not easy to say what Caesar’s projects were, as his work was interrupted by his death. Some insist that he only desired a sort of dictatorship for life; the greater number suppose that he thought of permanently establishing monarchical rule. The question is too grave to be entered upon incidentally, and settled in a few words. I will simply say that perhaps he only thought at first of the dictatorship; but in proportion as he became more powerful, the idea of founding a monarchy seemed to take more consistency in his mind. Yet it may be inferred from a passage in Plutarch (Brut. 7), that he was not decided on the question of an hereditary succession when he died.

[307]. Ad fam. xii. 17.

[308]. Brut. 51.

[309]. Pro Rabir. 7.

[310]. Pro Rosc. Am. 12.

[311]. Ad fam. iv. 5.

[312]. Ibid. xiii. 68.

[313]. Ibid. xii. 18.

[314]. Ibid. vi. 9.