Showing posts with label "Life of Caesar" by Plutarch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label "Life of Caesar" by Plutarch. Show all posts
Thursday, March 15, 2018
Happy Ides of March, y'all
Found this online and couldn't help but share it here, just for giggles.
I think I could craft one of these out of clay. Whaddoya say, Doc?
Sunday, March 4, 2018
Caesar: big ego or actual want for love?
Why does Caesar feel the need to make everyone like him? He is obviously a very powerful leader, particularly in the military, so why does he want common people to genuinely like him rather than just rule them by fear? Is it because of his ego or does he feel there is actually a true advantage to the common people genuinely liking who he is?
Caesar, The GOAT
“there was
no danger to which he did not willingly expose himself, no labour from which he
pleaded an exemption.” (Plutarch 210)
I believe
this quote is important because it shows Caesar as a fearless, and brave
leader. It goes along with a general theme of the text that Caesar was a
leader, and not just some guy who bossed everyone around without getting his
hands dirty.
Plutarch.
Plutarch's Lives of Illustrious Men. The J.C. Winston Co., 1908.
In Your Weakness You Find Your Strength
"But he did not make the weakness of his constitution a pretext for his ease, but rather used war as the best physic against his indispositions "( Plutarch, 210).
Plutarch, et al. Plutarch's Lives of Illustrious Men. The J.C. Winston Co., 1908
I chose this quote because it shows that Caesar did not let any shortcomings stand in the way of his quest for power. He used his weaknesses as a drive to fight harder, rather than have them hold him back and limit him.
Plutarch, et al. Plutarch's Lives of Illustrious Men. The J.C. Winston Co., 1908
I chose this quote because it shows that Caesar did not let any shortcomings stand in the way of his quest for power. He used his weaknesses as a drive to fight harder, rather than have them hold him back and limit him.
Man of Power and the People
A large part of Caesar's life, as presented by Plutarch, centers around his drive for power. In multiple instances, he uses his wit and cunning to win over the people, and they rally around him in times of need. They become tools in his quest for position and power, yet he treats them with the utmost of respect even beyond simple 'winning over'. He was generous and honorable to his soldiers: "All he gave to deserving soldiers as so much increase to his own riches...there was no danger to which he did not willingly expose himself, no labor from which he pleaded an exemption" (Plutarch, 210).
After reading about Caesar's life, what type of man can we conclude him to be? What are instances where he sides with the people only to gain their favor, and how does that later assist him in his rise to power and his impressive exploits as a leader? How does his relationship with the people (particularly the commoners, not the nobility) coincide with his power?
https://lassothemovies.files.wordpress.com/2013/05/little-caesar-1931.jpg
After reading about Caesar's life, what type of man can we conclude him to be? What are instances where he sides with the people only to gain their favor, and how does that later assist him in his rise to power and his impressive exploits as a leader? How does his relationship with the people (particularly the commoners, not the nobility) coincide with his power?
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From the movie Little Caesar. |
Wednesday, February 28, 2018
Fake Love
-Trevor Delane
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