CAIUS MARIUS. 97
mander than Octavius, the soldiers, deserting the consul, came to him and desired him to take the command of them and preserve the city ; that they, when they had got an experienced valiant commander, should fight cou- rageously, and come off conquerors. But when Metellus, offended at it, commanded them angrily to return to the consul, they revolted to the enemy. Metellus, too, see- ing the city in a desperate condition, left it ; but a com- pany of Chaldaeans, sacrificers, and interpreters of the Sibyl's books, persuaded Octavius that things would turn out happily, and kept him at Rome. He was, indeed, of all the Romans the most upright and just, and maintained the honor of the consulate, without cringing or compli- ance, as strictly in accordance with ancient laws and usages, as though they had been immutable mathemati- cal truths ; and yet fell, I know not how, into some weak- nesses, giving more observance to fortune-tellers and di- viners, than to men skilled in civil and military affairs. He therefore, before Marius entered the city, was pulled down from the rostra, and murdered by those that were sent before by Marius; and it is reported there was a Chaldaean writing found in his gown, when he was slain. And it seemed a thing very unaccountable, that of two famous generals, Marius should be often successful by the observing divinations, and Octavius ruined by the same means. When affairs were in this posture, the senate assembled, and sent a deputation to Cinna and Marius, desiring them to come into the city peaceably and spare the citizens. Cinna, as consul, received the embassy, sitting in the cu- rule chair, and returned a kind answer to the messen- gers ; Marius stood by him and said nothing, but gave sufficient testimony by the gloominess of his countenance, and the sternness of his looks, that he would in a short time fill the city with blood. As soon as the council vol. in. 7