History of Julius Caesar
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Jacob Abbott. History of Julius Caesar
History of Julius Caesar
Table of Contents
PREFACE
ENGRAVINGS
JULIUS CAESAR
CHAPTER I
MARIUS AND SYLLA
CHAPTER II
CAESAR'S EARLY YEARS
CHAPTER III
ADVANCEMENT TO THE CONSULSHIP
CHAPTER IV
THE CONQUEST OF GAUL
CHAPTER V
POMPEY
CHAPTER VI
CROSSING THE RUBICON
CHAPTER VII
THE BATTLE OF PHARSALIA
CHAPTER VIII
FLIGHT AND DEATH OF POMPEY
CHAPTER IX
CAESAR IN EGYPT
CHAPTER X
CAESAR IMPERATOR
CHAPTER XI
THE CONSPIRACY
CHAPTER XII
THE ASSASSINATION
Отрывок из книги
Jacob Abbott
Published by Good Press, 2019
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Harangues and political discussions.
The people of Rome had, of course, no printed books, and yet they were mentally cultivated and refined, and were qualified for a very high appreciation of intellectual pursuits and pleasures. In the absence, therefore, of all facilities for private reading, the Forum became the great central point of attraction. The same kind of interest which, in our day, finds its gratification in reading volumes of printed history quietly at home, or in silently perusing the columns of newspapers and magazines in libraries and reading-rooms, where a whisper is seldom heard, in Caesar's day brought every body to the Forum, to listen to historical harangues, or political discussions, or forensic arguments in the midst of noisy crowds. Here all tidings centered; here all questions were discussed and all great elections held. Here were waged those ceaseless conflicts of ambition and struggles of power on which the fate of nations, and sometimes the welfare of almost half mankind depended. Of course, every ambitious man who aspired to an ascendency over his fellow-men, wished to make his voice heard in the Forum. To calm the boisterous tumult there, and to hold, as some of the Roman orators could do, the vast assemblies in silent and breathless attention, was a power as delightful in its exercise as it was glorious in its fame. Caesar had felt this ambition, and had devoted himself very earnestly to the study of oratory.
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