Ok, there’s lots of ignorance to expose, I admit. This particular example is in regard to my appalling lack of understanding of ancient Roman history. I’ve been watching the HBO series “Rome” and have enjoyed it for the most part. It’s not “Six Feet Under” or “The Sopranos” in terms of the writing or the acting, but enjoyable nonetheless, despite some incredibly gory moments. (The fight scene from last week was perhaps the most grisly television fight I’ve ever seen.)
My point in bringing this up at all is I spent the entire season anticipating the murder of Julius Caesar. And it arrived without much premonition; there was no “Beware the Ides of March” announcement. It passed without a word between Brutus and Caesar at that crucial final moment; no spoken “Et tu, Brute.” Yet, the phrase “Thus always to tyrants,” the same words spoken in Latin by John Wilkes Booth after he shot Abraham Lincoln, arose from the Senate floor after Caesar died. I suspect I’ve been lulled into false knowledge – that perhaps those scenes were created by William Shakespeare rather than drawn from Roman historians. I do not know; perhaps I’ll read more about it.
One other point: after the dismembering and decapitations from the previous episode, the stabbings by the senators upon the body of Caesar looked more like bee stings in comparison. Deadly ones, I’ll grant (and some laudable Foley artistry throughout the series, I might add), but I found the contrast quite interesting. Overall, not quite the death or the drama I expected, but I don’t feel I completely wasted my Sunday evenings for the past three months.
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