Caesar Wasted His 20s. Here’s How He Made Up for It - Alex Petkas

English
CChris Williamson
자격증/평생교육도서/문학경영/리더십

Transcript

00:00:00Why is learning about Roman history useful or instructive at helping us in the modern world?
00:00:05Why should anybody care?
00:00:07I think that—so when I was starting my podcast, I'd been doing it for a couple of months
00:00:17with a kind of hunch on this question, and I wasn't really able to articulate it to my satisfaction.
00:00:25But a friend of mine a few months in recommended that I read this book by Nietzsche, one of
00:00:33his early books that—and I'd read some Nietzsche before—it's called On the Advantage
00:00:40and Disadvantage of History for Life.
00:00:44And Nietzsche talks in there about how history can sort of drain the life out of you and turn
00:00:52you into a kind of crippled shell of a person.
00:00:57It can kind of get you in this state where you question all of your decisions.
00:01:04It can kind of overload you with knowledge and cause you to retreat into the cloister
00:01:10or the library or, you know, be a kind of opiate for a life that is not fulfilling.
00:01:19But he says that—and he quotes Goethe at the beginning of that book—that something
00:01:24like Goethe said, "I hate all knowledge that does not quicken and enliven me."
00:01:32Like, away with it.
00:01:34And history can be very quickening and enlivening.
00:01:37And the way that Nietzsche frames it is—the most enlivening approach to history is embodied
00:01:44by one of his favorite authors, Plutarch, this great ancient philosopher who was also
00:01:50one of history's most widely read and entertaining biographers.
00:01:55And Plutarch embodies this mode of reading history, or mode of approaching any number
00:02:04of subjects, really.
00:02:05Not just history, kings and battles, but art history or engineering, statuary—and he calls
00:02:13it "monumental," the monumental approach to history, where you're looking not so much
00:02:20for precise facts, although the facts kind of matter for the story, you're looking for
00:02:27examples of greatness.
00:02:30And you're looking for those examples—and this is me interpreting Nietzsche a little
00:02:33bit—but I think of history as a kind of source for finding your true self.
00:02:45You're kind of looking for yourself, you're looking for somebody who's trying to do something
00:02:52that represents a version of the greatest thing that you could do with your own life.
00:02:58And so it's about finding resonance for achievement.
00:03:03And I think this is what the greats tend to get out of history, there's a lot of stories
00:03:07of this happening.
00:03:08Julius Caesar and the statue of Alexander is a famous one.
00:03:12So that's what I look to history for, and it's where I've gotten a lot of my own inspiration.
00:03:21And I think it's ultimately about imitation—there's a lot of philosophy around this that we could
00:03:29dig into a little deeper.
00:03:31Isn't it crazy that we think about history as being one thing—or at least the uninformed
00:03:36amongst us think about history as being one thing—but I found out recently that ancient
00:03:41Egypt had their own Egyptologists because Egypt was so old that 2500 BC was studying 5000 BC.
00:03:53So the same thing—that people of history were learning from people from their history.
00:03:57Yeah, and I studied for a little while with this great scholar when I was in grad school,
00:04:05and he said—he was a specialist in the late Roman world, like 4th century AD.
00:04:13And he would always say, "Late antiquity is a very old world."
00:04:19And it is, because in the 4th century AD, they're as far away from Homer as we are from Charlemagne.
00:04:28It's crazy to think—the world hasn't changed as much for them as it has for us since
00:04:34that time period.
00:04:35But even Plutarch, who's a kind of model for so many things for me—he's this Greek
00:04:40philosopher living in the Roman Empire in the reign of Hadrian, Trajan, so Roman peace about
00:04:47100 AD is like his apogee—he's studying and doing the biographies of figures that lived
00:04:54500, 700, down to around 100 to 200 years before him.
00:05:01So it's all really old.
00:05:02They already have this deep conception of what history is, what it's for, and a sense
00:05:09of tradition.
00:05:10And I think we can learn a lot from the way that they approach their own history, which
00:05:14is often very different from the way that we approach them or we approach our own history.
00:05:18What about Julius Caesar?
00:05:19What can we learn about living a good life from him?
00:05:22Well, to come back to this example, that is probably my favorite story about Caesar.
00:05:29And it's a famous story, so people might have heard of it, but maybe they haven't kind of
00:05:34grasped the true meaning of it.
00:05:37So Caesar is a young man in sort of mid-career, early 30s.
00:05:44He's gotten a job as a quaestor, and he gets sent off for his tour of duty one year to Spain,
00:05:54which is a Roman province.
00:05:57And a quaestor is like a chief of staff, the paper guy for a Roman governor, a consul or
00:06:05a proconsul.
00:06:06And at one of his leisure moments, Caesar is going around with his friends in a temple.
00:06:14And a temple, it's a temple to Hercules, and a temple in antiquity is kind of like a museum.
00:06:19It's like where you would put great statues and art and dedications and gold and stuff
00:06:28on the walls.
00:06:29And he's going in there, they're like touring the museum, as it were, Caesar and his buddies.
00:06:35And his buddies kind of keep moving on, and they realize they look back, Caesar is not
00:06:39with them.
00:06:40And he's standing in front of a statue of Alexander the Great in this temple of Hercules.
00:06:46And they're like, "Caesar, are you coming?
00:06:50Wait a sec, are you crying?"
00:06:53Because he's weeping in front of the statue of Alexander the Great.
00:06:56And he looks to them and he says, "Do you not think it is a matter for tears that when
00:07:00Alexander was my age, he was the ruler of so many great peoples, and yet I have done nothing
00:07:07worthy of great renown?"
00:07:10And this is only one of two instances that we know of where Julius Caesar cried.
00:07:17The Romans weren't really into crying as much as the Greeks.
00:07:22I think they were a little bit more open.
00:07:24They were about like us.
00:07:26The Greeks are crying all the time.
00:07:27I mean, if you read Homer, you know, Achilles is, you know, bawling and throwing ash on himself
00:07:33when his buddy Patroclus dies in the Trojan War.
00:07:36And in the Odyssey, it's like every single time somebody mentions the word Troy, like
00:07:42everybody just bursts out in tears and, you know, his family is always crying for him because
00:07:46they don't know where he is, and Odysseus is always crying about everything.
00:07:50But the Romans were a little bit more restrained.
00:07:53So I think for Julius Caesar to cry there, something happened that was really significant
00:08:00for him.
00:08:02And how I read that is Caesar, I mean, he's already had a pretty promising career so far.
00:08:11Some great stories already have happened from early in his youth.
00:08:15He's a questor, which is not nothing.
00:08:18He's got the Roman Medal of Honor equivalent, the civic crown for risking his life to save
00:08:24a fellow citizen.
00:08:25But he's kind of looking back on his 20s, and he's thinking, I've just been screwing
00:08:33around the whole time.
00:08:35This is what I have to do.
00:08:37He's like, he's realizing in this moment, what his destiny is, or if you want to not use the
00:08:45word destiny, he's realizing like what he should be doing.
00:08:49And that's the moment where it kind of hits him, it's painful to realize that you haven't
00:08:53been living the life to the full extent of what you should be doing and are capable of
00:09:00doing.
00:09:01And I think that's a really powerful moment for, and it kind of like encapsulates how,
00:09:08is why I think it resonates with me so much.
00:09:12That's how we need to be approaching history.
00:09:14That's how we need to be approaching the greats.
00:09:16You need to be looking for that moment of resonance with somebody that just like cracks you open
00:09:22like, ah, I realize it.
00:09:24Now personally, I don't have that with Julius Caesar himself.
00:09:27I'm not trying to do the Julius Caesar thing.
00:09:29And it's not every Roman who's great who had that kind of thing with Alexander the Great.
00:09:35I mean, that says a lot about a man that he really sees himself as somebody who needs to
00:09:41emulate Alexander.
00:09:44But you can definitely learn from that lesson of trying to find that unique resonance with
00:09:49somebody who kind of tells you what you're supposed to be like, and I think that Caesar
00:09:52had this like depth to him that illustrates also.
00:09:58What does that tell us about Caesar's ambition, level of ambition?
00:10:02Yeah.
00:10:03Well, off the charts for sure.
00:10:05But I think that you can also understand a lot about Caesar's ambition from looking earlier
00:10:12in his childhood.
00:10:16And there's a great story on this, but I kind of give the context, laying out Caesar's world.
00:10:25So he grows up in Rome, and he's from this great family on the one hand.
00:10:31So he's got on his mom's side, the Anki Markii go back to the King Ancus Markius.
00:10:40It's the Markii family that go back to the King Ancus Markius.
00:10:43Quasi-mythical Roman king from the 6th century BC, you know, 500 years of history on his
00:10:50mom's side.
00:10:52And then his dad's side, they're the Julius clan, and they go all the way back to the mythic
00:10:58founder of Rome, Aeneas, who was the son of Venus and a mortal.
00:11:04And so they, you know, 1200 years on that side, so they've got some real blue blood.
00:11:11But they're kind of, they haven't really accomplished a lot in the past few generations.
00:11:15They're not one of the like power elite families.
00:11:20Like the Metelli or the Cornigli, there's like other families that are a lot more prominent
00:11:25than the Julius family.
00:11:26And they live in a kind of seedy part of Rome, the subura.
00:11:31And he grows up in this kind of dirty part of town.
00:11:35I mean, I know you worked in the kind of event in the nightclub world.
00:11:39Like Caesar would have been like a kid hanging out in the street, playing dice with his buddies
00:11:44outside of a bar.
00:11:46The subura was a kind of place that you didn't really want to live if you had a better option.
00:11:54But you know, every young aristocrat on a summer night liked to go visit, there's like brothels.
00:12:00And so he's in contact with the underbelly of Rome.
00:12:05And his family is aligned on what you call the Roman left of politics.
00:12:14There's two main, you can call them factions or kind of political styles, but there's two
00:12:18kind of main poles in Roman politics.
00:12:22And on the one hand, there are the optimates, the kind of oligarchic or aristocratic faction
00:12:28who stand for the ancient prerogatives of the Senate and the tradition, they tend to monopolize
00:12:37the priesthoods.
00:12:38They're all about what family are you from, who are you marrying, and so-and-so's great-great
00:12:44grandfather was a consul, who were you, that whole attitude.
00:12:49And they're very much for the status quo.
00:12:54And on the other hand, you have the populists who are about things like land reform, redistributing
00:13:00public lands, they're really into merit and promoting talented outsiders.
00:13:08And Caesar has really strong connections there because his aunt is married to one of the greatest
00:13:18populist figureheads in Roman history, this guy Gaius Marius, who was an outsider himself
00:13:23to the Roman power elite, but kind of forced his way in by talents.
00:13:27He wins a number of wars for them.
00:13:31And so he grows up with Gaius Marius as his uncle.
00:13:34And Marius made a big fortune in his career from starting very low, and then he kind of
00:13:41married into respectability, which Caesar's family represents kind of poor respectability.
00:13:47And then there is, Caesar loses his dad when he's a teenager, his dad like drops dead tying
00:13:59his shoes one day, kind of a freak thing, maybe he had a heart attack, and Caesar's probably
00:14:04early teens at that point, and his dad actually looked like he was on a good track.
00:14:10He'd been a praetor, hadn't been consul, praetor's the second highest office, consul's the highest,
00:14:16and he died just before he got a shot to run for consul.
00:14:20So Caesar had a father figure, but lost him.
00:14:25And then, so I imagine Gaius Marius might have been kind of like a father figure to Julius
00:14:31Caesar.
00:14:32We don't know a lot about that.
00:14:33But what ended up happening is, Caesar, promising young man, 16 years old, he gets a great opportunity
00:14:50to marry the daughter of one of the most powerful men in Rome, who is Marius's colleague, his
00:14:57associate, this guy Cinna, who has a run for, he's consul for like three years, and also
00:15:03a populist, also kind of against the oligarchic establishment.
00:15:09And right around the time that this is happening, this incredibly bloody war breaks out, civil
00:15:16war, between the optimates and the populists.
00:15:19And it's very complicated, we can go into the details if you want, but essentially Marius
00:15:22dies toward the beginning of the war, Cinna dies a little further in, and the optimates
00:15:30led by a man named Lucius Cornelius Sulla, win this war, just like blood running through
00:15:37the whole, like every valley in Italy, I mean, tens of thousands, maybe more than a hundred
00:15:42thousand Roman citizens, Roman allies killed, it's just horrific.
00:15:46It's probably worse than the civil war that he ends up fighting later in his life.
00:15:52But so Caesar is married to Cinna's daughter, and when Sulla comes, like marches into Rome
00:16:02after winning the civil war, he was, you know, invaded Italy from a foreign campaign, he comes
00:16:07into Rome and he gets elected dictator, he kind of forces himself to be elected dictator,
00:16:13which is like a temporary office at Rome, and he's kind of mopping up.
00:16:18He does famously the, this campaign called the proscriptions, which is basically a purge
00:16:28of all of his enemies, it's never been done in Roman history, they'd never had a civil
00:16:32war before, for 400 years they'd had civic, more or less civic concord, and there'd been
00:16:39some incidents in the previous generation, but nothing like this, Sulla posts the names
00:16:45of all the people from the leadership classes of Rome, the rich, some of the richest men,
00:16:53the most influential, well-connected grand family men from the populace faction that he
00:16:58blames for picking this fight and starting the war.
00:17:05And if your name is on that list in the proscriptions, you know, he posts them in the Senate, you
00:17:10have a bounty on your head, and your entire estate is confiscated, state property now,
00:17:18and there's more than a thousand names that end up getting put up in those proscription
00:17:22lists, so heads roll, people are tossing heads in front of the feet of Sulla as he's sitting
00:17:28in his, like, consular throne, they're collecting their reward, it's just this reign of terror
00:17:35for a few months, and Sulla is also calling other kinds of stocks, I mean, he's rewriting
00:17:41the constitution as a dictator, he's trying to make sure that the populace could just keep
00:17:45their head underwater for generations, that nothing like this war could ever happen again
00:17:51because his enemies and the kind of principles that they represent will just be so hamstrung
00:17:56and handcuffed, but one of the things that he does is he approaches younger men in Rome
00:18:05and kind of tests their loyalty by making them get divorces.
00:18:12Pompey is another promising young man around this time who ends up being Caesar's friend
00:18:17and rival, he's a few years older, and he goes to Pompey, Sulla, and he says, Pompey,
00:18:22you know, you've been a loyal servant, you brought me a legion in the civil war, you sided
00:18:28with me early, I'm very grateful for that, but you know what, you're married to the wrong
00:18:32woman, I have a better one for you, and Pompey says, yes, sir, and he divorces his former
00:18:39wife and he marries whoever Sulla picks for him, and then Sulla, remember, this is a guy
00:18:46who, okay, a subordinate of Sulla, a friend of his, wanted to run for consul after Sulla
00:18:54becomes the dictator, you know, there's still elections going on, there's still offices that
00:18:58need filling, this guy comes to Sulla and he says, hey, Sulla, I wanna, you know, we won
00:19:03the war, I wanna run for consul, and Sulla's like, you know, you haven't even been praetor,
00:19:10this would be a bad look, I don't think this is your year, you should stand down, and the
00:19:15guy says, thank you for your advice, I'm gonna run anyway. And so one day, Sulla is sitting
00:19:22in like one of his curule chairs there in one of the public buildings, looking out over
00:19:26the forum, and watches as the men that he ordered to do the deed go up to this guy and
00:19:33murder him in broad daylight in the forum, because he defied Sulla, and he tried to, you
00:19:41know, run for office when Sulla said no. So this is the kind of guy you're dealing with.
00:19:45Now Sulla comes to Caesar. Caesar's 18 years old, and he says, Caesar, you're married to
00:19:53the daughter of one of my late worst enemies, Cinna. He's, you know, and you can understand
00:20:01his perspective, you know, Cinna was a symbol of everything that Sulla wanted to crush. And
00:20:08he says, you need to divorce her. And Caesar says, thank you very much for your advice,
00:20:15you know, go screw yourself, and he skips town. He says no. And so Caesar is running through
00:20:24the mountains of central Italy, he's on the run, Sulla's got guys hunting him down, this
00:20:31goes on for several weeks, Caesar gets dysentery, and you know, Oregon Trail style, and he just,
00:20:37he gets caught, and manages to bribe the people who catch him, to not bring him back to Sulla,
00:20:45but to bring him back to his family, to like his relatives and friends. And then they go,
00:20:50and they go and plead with the dictator, Sulla, geez, you know, this was really out of line
00:20:56on the part of Caesar, he's a young hothead, you understand, you know, he'll be good, we'll
00:21:02make sure that he behaves himself, he's only a kid, don't worry, please, can you please
00:21:06spare him, you know, because Sulla wants to execute him, obviously, I mean, he's got an
00:21:11image to uphold, right, like, and Sulla relents, and he says, very well, but you are fools if
00:21:19you don't see many Amarius in that boy. And so Caesar gets off. Now, why did he do that?
00:21:30What does that say about him and what he's got in mind for his future? All right, one
00:21:37explanation is, Caesar's a showman, he's a natural showman, he knows if he can defy the
00:21:43dictator and get away with it, people are going to be talking about this for his entire life,
00:21:49they're going to talk about it all around town, and sure enough, you know, we're still talking
00:21:53about it today, like it worked as a kind of PR stunt. On the other hand, he knows that
00:22:04this girl is a symbol of all of his populist connections that have mostly been decapitated,
00:22:15like everything that Caesar had like aspired to, you know, you think as a teenager, you
00:22:20know, you've got a great career ahead of you, you know, you're, you know, the top guys in
00:22:23this party, like the trajectory is clear. It's all just been like liquidated, turned to blood.
00:22:31And she's like one of the last living symbols of that. And he knows that if he, he knows
00:22:37the kind of like, he's kind of calling his shot in a way. He's, he's, he's, he's seeing
00:22:43a career for himself on the populist side on the kind of revolutionary, if you will, side
00:22:49of Roman politics. And he's sort of building, building a career with this clairvoyance about
00:22:55where he's headed for the rest of his life already there at age 18. And I think that one
00:23:00final piece of this is it had a lot to do with just family, you know, and who he was.
00:23:05And he didn't want to be pushed around by anybody. And he was willing to die rather than to let
00:23:10that happen. And the fact that he, I think one of the final things that this illustrates
00:23:16about Cesar is Cesar was, for all that you could criticize about the guy, he was incredibly
00:23:21loyal to the people that, that were close to him, to his friends, loyal to a fault. And
00:23:29he was loyal to this, to this wife, Cornelia, all the way up to her death. I can't prove
00:23:37this and I wouldn't even try, but Cesar was famously good with the ladies and, you know,
00:23:44slept with a lot of senators' wives and so forth and had a lot of girlfriends on the
00:23:49side. But we don't know of any specific cases where he did that with, while he was married
00:23:54to his first wife, Cornelia. And she ends up being the mother of his only daughter, his
00:24:00only child up until the very end, Julia. But I think that it was, it was something about
00:24:06proving loyalty to that woman. But I think you see in that, you know, to answer your question
00:24:10about, you know, what are his ambitions? Like, they're grand already. You can see that in
00:24:15him as a young man. He like, he knows he's destined for, for something big. He's smart,
00:24:21talented, handsome, and so forth. And, and he was just going to, he was going to ride
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00:25:43drinkag1.com/modernwisdom. What was that story about Caesar and the pirates? That was when
00:25:50he was young, right? Yeah, yeah, that's another great story. Another kind of like flash of
00:25:54his brilliance. So he's off cavorting in Asia. Asia Minor is a young man. And this is before
00:26:01Pompey cleans up the seas for the pirates. And so he gets captured by pirates as one
00:26:08does during those times. And he, I think he's like on a study trip actually at the time.
00:26:17So it's, he's very young, like 20, 23. And the pirates want to ransom him. And Caesar
00:26:30says, what you're asking is insulting. Like you're asking 20 million sesterces. You need
00:26:36to double it. Like you don't know what you've got on your hands here. Because I think partly
00:26:42because to kind of troll them, partly because he is, he knows that if he gets ransomed for
00:26:49more money, it's going to make a better story. And people are going to think more of him because
00:26:53like, you know, the Greek word for honor is, is Tima. It means price. You know, it's, it's
00:27:00the price, it's literally the price that you, your comrades would be willing to ransom you
00:27:07for if you got captured. Like, it's quantifiable. It's very quantifiable. Like in Homer, you
00:27:13know, it's, we think of honor as this abstract thing, but it's like, how much are you really
00:27:18worth? You know, you can put a number on that. So Caesar kind of gets that. He basically bids
00:27:22on his own auction. Yeah, right. And the funny thing about that story is, well, there's a
00:27:29lot of funny things, but you know, while he's there with the pirates, Plutarch, who's his
00:27:34greatest biographer, says, you know, Caesar would sort of, he would joke around with them
00:27:41and he would write compositions. He's like, you know, rocking around in the hole there,
00:27:47writing speeches, and he would, he would declaim them in front of the pirates and he'd make
00:27:51them laugh and cry. And then he would just say, you people have no taste. I can't believe
00:27:56that I'm hanging out with you. And they would say, oh, Caesar. And then he said, you know,
00:28:01someday I'm going to come back after, after you ransom me and I'm going to execute every
00:28:06single one of you. And they said, oh, see this kid, we love this kid, pour him another drink,
00:28:14you know, and then that's exactly what he does. Right. He gets ransomed and he, the local
00:28:22governor that, that is responsible for that part of the sea is, I think he, no, he raises
00:28:31a fleet with his own funds and he goes and he, you know, he knows where these guys hide
00:28:36out their little cove and he captures the pirates and he brings them to the governor and the
00:28:42governor is sort of dawdling. He doesn't really have a great plan for these pirates. And so
00:28:46he, Caesar goes and he crucifies all of them to make a statement. But, you know, because
00:28:52they were such a kindly host to them, he does them the, the courtesy of having their throat
00:28:58slit before they get crucified. So they don't, you know, have to be there in agony for several
00:29:03days dying. He gives them a short death. So no, I think, you know, perfect combination
00:29:07of his, his winning charm, his deep sense for the political stakes of every single thing
00:29:14that he does, you know, raising his price, making a scene and making a statement by, you
00:29:20know, fulfilling his promise to, in the most cold blooded way possible. Why did he become
00:29:26so popular? What was, what were the levers that he was pulling on? Well, before he becomes
00:29:32a commander, at least Caesar is just a really stylish guy. He, he has a flair for fashion.
00:29:40You know, he wears his, his toga a little differently than, than everybody else. It's a little looser.
00:29:46You know, it's kind of like, you know, when I was in high school, a lot of, a lot of kids
00:29:51was like, let their pants sag down. It was like the cool look. Yeah, the Caesar's doing
00:29:56that. Like let's, let's let our toga sag a little bit. But it, but it was, it was like,
00:30:00you know, it was stylish and classy and, and kind of, and, and, you know, the older men
00:30:06at Rome would say, oh, that's effeminate. But Caesar knew that it would draw, draw attention,
00:30:14that he could pull it off. And one of the ways that he attracts attention is by prosecuting
00:30:21corrupt governors when he's just in his twenties. You know, he, he does these sort of, sort of
00:30:28publicity stunt DA, like young DA prosecuting the whatever city councilmen. And he, he loses,
00:30:37I think most of these, but he makes a statement of what he stands for. And, and I think he
00:30:42knows from a very early age that he's kind of an anti-establishment figure. Sala has dies
00:30:48soon after he becomes a dictator. And, and like in his youth, Sala basically firmly established
00:30:56the Optimate oligarchy. And everybody in power now in Rome was like a buddy of Sala and they
00:31:02have no serious challengers. They're corrupt, they're fat, they're slow, they're plundering
00:31:08the provincials and Caesar kind of takes a stand for justice, like throughout his early
00:31:12career. And, you know, one of these, one of these cases, he, there was a, there was a riot
00:31:2130 years earlier. This is funny. And, and, and some populous leaders, you know, people
00:31:27from Caesar's faction got murdered. Saturninus was the, the most, well, there was a riot in
00:31:33the forum and then they, they arrested the guys, they put them in the Senate house and
00:31:37then people snuck up to the roof in the night. They, they removed the roof tiles and they
00:31:42like hurled these like roof tiles down on Saturninus and his buddies and they killed them. So there
00:31:49was some violence in the streets in Rome that the generation before. And so Caesar picks
00:31:55one of the last surviving men to have been vaguely implicated in this riot as somebody
00:32:03with, you know, blood on his hands, metaphorically for the, for the death of Saturninus and his
00:32:08associates. And the guy is like this emaciated old, old gentleman, Riberius. And he says, you know,
00:32:19we're gonna, we're gonna hold you responsible for your crimes 30 years ago. Like Rome is,
00:32:24Rome is a place of justice. And they basically, you know, long story short, they get, they
00:32:29get him convicted. And in the special court that they call, the punishment is crucifixion.
00:32:38Like so they're going to publicly execute this like 80 year old man who probably doesn't
00:32:44even know what day it is. And there's some last minute political shenanigans by Riberius's
00:32:52friends. They like raise this flag and they, you know, there's a kind of like political
00:32:58chicanery where you can say the omens are bad and it kind of calls off the whole thing.
00:33:02And Caesar, I think it kind of expected them to do that. But the point was about the statement,
00:33:08you know, that oligarchs, aristocrats from the establishment can't get away with murder
00:33:15anymore. Not in this town anymore. I think that was a big piece of why he was popular
00:33:20before he ever led an army. Now when he started leading armies, that's a whole different
00:33:24story. Like he was a master at getting, like winning the respect of his soldiers. He's
00:33:31always fighting in the front lines. There's many stories about this, the incredible loyalty
00:33:37that his soldiers in particular had for him. But you know, he's kind of a playboy in his,
00:33:43in his youth. And he just was, was a fun guy to be around. He's always giving gifts. He's,
00:33:50he's in debt all the time up to his ears and he somehow always finds a way to pay off his
00:33:56creditors. He was just a really magnetic guy to be around.
00:34:02What was the loyalty that he generated? Just how loyal were his followers?
00:34:06Well, so one instance of this is in the Civil War that illustrates this is this guy Granius
00:34:14Petro is a guy we wouldn't know his name otherwise, but he's a quaestor in Caesar's army and gets
00:34:26he's a ship captain, gets, gets his ship captured by Caesar's enemies in the Civil War. And,
00:34:35and so he's brought aboard the ship with his fellow sailors and, and the enemy commander,
00:34:44the Optimate Commander says, "Granius Petro, you know, we're going to, we're going to be
00:34:49nice to you guys. Now normally since you, you all are traitors, what we should do is slit
00:34:55your throats and throw you overboard, but we're going to be very kind. You know, Caesar's a
00:34:59kind man. We know he's the enemy of the state and tyrant and lawless, but we're going to,
00:35:04we're going to not let him morally outclass us. We're just going to sell you in the slave
00:35:08market, all of you. And hopefully you'll get ransomed maybe, but Granius Petro, you, however,
00:35:15may go free. He's the, he's their leader. And, but you have to go and tell Caesar what we did
00:35:22here and tell him that his war effort is futile, that he should surrender to the lawful government
00:35:27of the Republic. And Granius Petro says, "It is the custom of Caesar's soldiers to give mercy,
00:35:35but not to receive it." Then he pulls out a dagger and he stabs himself to death right in front of
00:35:41the enemy consul. That's the kind of loyalty that Caesar had. Like this guy would rather die than,
00:35:48you know, be ashamed by letting his enemy spare him. Another great instance, I mean,
00:35:57the Caesar soldiers had this incredible endurance throughout all of his campaigns. They're willing
00:36:03to fight for him to the, to the death. You know, stories about soldiers getting shot in the eye,
00:36:10shot in the arm, shot in the leg, taking hundreds of blows, and then they don't leave the fight. They
00:36:14just have to be dragged away by their companions. One instance, again, later from Caesar's career,
00:36:20his, he's fighting this, this great kind of trench war, siege war with, with Pompey. There's like a
00:36:2917-mile wall that he's built around Pompey's camp to wall him into the coast in Greece. And Pompey's
00:36:36built another counter wall. So that is this dragging, dragging long siege warfare and the
00:36:41supplies are getting choked. Caesar cuts off the water to Pompey. The animals are starving and
00:36:46dying in Pompey's camp, but Caesar is even in worse straits because they've eaten. He's got a
00:36:5020,000, 30,000 men. They're, they're eating the, all the food in the area. They're like running out
00:36:57of food and they're having to go and collect weeds and bake them into these horrible, disgusting cakes
00:37:05and just eat them. And, and at some point Pompey's guys having a food and water, personally, even
00:37:12though the animals are dying, they call over to Caesar's men across the wall. They say, you know,
00:37:17"Hey Roman, getting hungry over there?" And Caesar's soldiers catapult over some of these horrible
00:37:25loaves of nasty food that they're eating, just to show what they're willing to eat. They're willing
00:37:31to like starve to death before giving up the fight. And one of these, these cakes, you know, imagine
00:37:39like a cow patty. One of these cakes is brought to Pompey, you know, his enemy, the commander. And he
00:37:45says, "Good God, we are fighting with beasts." And, and, and they go to Caesar and they say,
00:37:53"We would rather eat tree bark than surrender." And how was he able to generate that? He fights
00:38:00in the front lines with them all the time. He's, he risks his life right up, right up there with
00:38:08the centurions. He knows all the centurions in his army by name. There's like one centurion for
00:38:13every 80 men. And he's got an army of 30,000. He remembers their names. He like takes the time to
00:38:20do that. He, he also is, he's very generous with, with gifts. And what he'll do is he'll eat the
00:38:34same food that they eat. I don't know if he ate those cow patties, but I imagine he did because
00:38:38he had this habit of like, if, if the, if the olive oil was rancid and there was good olive oil, but
00:38:45the troops were eating the bad olive oil, he would eat the bad olive oil. If his, if his troops are
00:38:49sleeping in the, on the ground, if his officer corps there, you know, he's always going around
00:38:54like lightning speed, blitzing around campaigns. And often they have to stay in weird places. You
00:39:01know, if his officers are sleeping on the ground, he'll sleep on the ground. He'll give a good one
00:39:05bed. We'll give it to the weakest of us, which is not me, you know? So he's, he's always there with
00:39:11them. But he's also, he's very lavish with these guys too. Like he, his, his, what he does, he does
00:39:24amass a lot of money when he's conquering Gaul, for example, but it's always only to give it to his
00:39:32friends, to give it to the people of Rome, to do something with it. It's all, he always sees money
00:39:36as a tool and riches as a tool and gift as a tool to, to, to like win, to bind people closer to
00:39:45himself. Cause this is, this is where his real power lies. And this is what, where I think in general,
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00:40:57What was the relationship between him and Pompey? Because you said previously they were sort of
00:41:03loosely affiliated and then they do the triumvirate. So instead of trying to beat them, he actually
00:41:09decides to do that thing with Crassus and Pompey. What's the arc of his big enemies across his life?
00:41:17Yeah. So Pompey is, they're friendly for most of their career. And Pompey is a kind of moderate
00:41:26populist. Pompey mostly wants to, in his early career, he fights for Sulla, but soon after Sulla
00:41:35dies, Pompey doesn't, he's not really into politics that much. He mostly wants to just get himself sent
00:41:43off as commander of Rome's armies to fight all kinds of wars. Because I think that's his happy
00:41:49place. Pompey is an excellent administrator. He's great at logistics. I think he's kind of a big guy
00:41:57too. And so Caesar helps him a lot in his early career to get these extraordinary commands is what
00:42:04they call them. Like Pompey doesn't hold office until he's 35. And usually to become consul,
00:42:11which is what he becomes, you would have to have like, you know, a whole sequence of offices. But
00:42:16Pompey's just, he's just the golden boy. Pompey is, he's got this combination of charm and he's
00:42:26got this boyish look. He's got this little quiff in his hair. He kind of looks like Alexander and
00:42:31he kind of models himself off of Alexander the Great. I mean, Caesar and Pompey both are like
00:42:35Alexander, Alexander stands. But he's also got this ruthlessness to him too. They called him the kid
00:42:46butcher when he was younger. And the Romans just love this combination of cold-blooded forcefulness,
00:42:54brutality even, you know, in a controlled way, and then boyish charm, which Pompey had. But the way
00:43:02that they really get into cahoots in the first triumvirate is, so even though Caesar's kind of
00:43:12friendly with Pompey, helps him out here and there, he's not like really tight with Pompey. Who he is
00:43:22tight with is Crassus, the richest man in Rome, another fascinating figure that I did a biography
00:43:29on on the cost of glory. Crassus finances Caesar's career. He's basically the one holding the note
00:43:39for all of Caesar's colossal political debts. And there comes a point when Caesar is ready to run
00:43:46for consul that Crassus has a problem and Pompey has a lot of problems that they can't get solved
00:43:53in the Senate and in politics. Pompey's just come back from this glorious Eastern campaign. He's
00:43:59defeated this general Mithridates. He's essentially conquered Judea, and he's defiled the temple in
00:44:09Jerusalem. But he's come back glorious with a bunch of soldiers that need rewards. He wants to settle
00:44:16his soldiers. He wants the Senate to ratify all of the arrangements, the treaties that he made,
00:44:24appointing a client king here, getting a city constitution ratified there. And he's got a lot
00:44:31of interest in that materially. People sending him money and promising to support him in war or
00:44:39politics. So Pompey has a lot of needs, and it's all getting blocked by the Senate. He's just not
00:44:44that great at the political game. And by this point Pompey is sort of an outsider from the optimates,
00:44:52from the establishment conservatives who are blocking Pompey. They think he's getting too
00:44:58powerful. Caesar is nobody at this point. I mean, yeah, he's a promising young politician,
00:45:03but he's not a powerful man. So we talk about the triumvirate, but it's Caesar brokering a deal with
00:45:10Pompey. And then Crassus on the other hand has some tax breaks he wants for basically his portfolio
00:45:17companies who are equestrian tax collectors. And they can't get it through the Senate. Both Pompey
00:45:24and Crassus are outsiders to the optimum establishment. The main guy who's the kind
00:45:32of figurehead of the conservatives is this young guy Cato, who's the stoic, famously becomes Caesar's
00:45:39worst nemesis. And Caesar basically comes to these two big shots, the two big fish in Rome,
00:45:46Pompey and Crassus, richest man and then the most glorious general. He says, "You guys hate each
00:45:52other. You've hated each other for a long time. You've always been trying to smile in public when
00:45:58you're next to each other, but then stab each other in the back behind the scenes. But look,
00:46:02you both have needs. I can fix them. I can fix this. I can get your legislation passed Pompey.
00:46:09I can get your legislation passed Crassus. Support me in the consulship. And I'm going to ask for a
00:46:15favor down the line, but let's not worry about that right now." And they say, "All right."
00:46:20And so it's basically, the triumvirate is Caesar brokering this deal between these two top guys,
00:46:25which is a great, that's a great strategy I think. If you're down here and there's
00:46:30men up here that have a need to help find a way to help them out. And the biggest thing that's
00:46:35blocking each of them really is each other. Crassus is pushing the Senate to not ratify
00:46:43Pompey's legislation. Pompey is going to use his clients to push against Crassus. So making peace
00:46:48between the two of them. And it was a pretty good relationship for a long time. And once Caesar gets
00:46:54elected consul, his dear, dear daughter, Julia, his one child up to that point, he marries her off
00:47:04to Pompey the Great. And he becomes Pompey's father-in-law, even though he's a younger man
00:47:09somewhat. And by all accounts, that marriage was not just a political marriage, but it became
00:47:15a very loving relationship. And so, you know, they had this long connection,
00:47:23long before the Civil War, that made them mortal enemies of each other, which I think is what makes
00:47:28it kind of even more tragic and bitter. And then how do Pompey and Caesar end up at war?
00:47:36Well, that's a long story, I guess. But in sum, when Caesar, how it all happens, how this breakdown
00:47:47happens is when Caesar goes off, when he finishes his consulship, he gets Pompey and Crassus to
00:47:57support him, to have himself sent off to Gaul. So far, you know, Caesar hasn't had his Alexander
00:48:05moment. This is his chance to do some real world-changing conquest. And he spends the years,
00:48:15'59 is the first triumvirate, so he spends the years '58 through '52 conquering Gaul. And Rome
00:48:24controls a little strip along the coast. Gaul is France, of course. But the Gauls, the Celts,
00:48:31is the other name for them. They are not just a kind of, you know, peaceable farmer,
00:48:39unsuspecting society of, you know, we just want to live our peaceful lives. Why are these Romans
00:48:45coming and conquering us? I mean, this is a confederation of incredibly warlike tribes
00:48:52who have threatened Rome on many occasions. And just in the previous generation, there was a great
00:48:58Gallic invasion that stopped by Gaius Marius. And several centuries earlier, the Gauls actually
00:49:09sacked the city of Rome, taken the only time that ever happened up to that point. So there's a real
00:49:14threat there, arguably. And we could get into how Caesar conquered Gaul, but how Pompey and Caesar
00:49:23fell out with each other. It's a long story that basically, while Caesar's away, he's absent from
00:49:31the city of Rome and from Italy for seven years, well really eight years, before the conflict
00:49:42between them breaks out. And while he's away, Crassus dies. And Crassus was a kind of fulcrum,
00:49:50balancing out Caesar and Pompey. He dies on this great Persian expedition, this campaign to invade
00:49:58not Iran, but Iraq, where the Persians were in charge. So that was the kind of like last...
00:50:06When you have three men, they can kind of balance each other out. But when it becomes two men,
00:50:11there's a polarity there that can really be inflamed. And this is exactly what
00:50:19the establishment people see, people like Cato see. Caesar has always been a revolutionary,
00:50:25in their opinion. He's always been trying to make a grab at supreme power. They had their eye on him
00:50:31since he was a young man. Sulla was right about this kid. There are as many Marius's in him.
00:50:36Pompey has been an outsider, but they see sort of late in the game after Crassus dies that if they
00:50:45can kind of court Pompey into the establishment, he's always wanted their approval. Pompey has
00:50:51always just wanted to be this glorious general, welcomed by the blue bloods, the great families,
00:50:57and they've never really had it. And so they see their chance, Cato and company.
00:51:03Let's make Pompey a respectable man. Let's make him our shield, our shield against Caesar. Because
00:51:09Caesar's going to come back at some point, and he's going to come back richer and more powerful and
00:51:14more glorious than ever, and he's going to just push us around in politics. And maybe, maybe,
00:51:20maybe he's going to try to take over the thing and make himself a monarch, which I think was a
00:51:24self-fulfilling prophecy. That wasn't really his intent at that point. But basically they say,
00:51:28Caesar, it's like 51 BC at this point. Caesar's been in Gaul for eight years. He's got so many
00:51:39well-trained legions. And basically his enemies are saying, we're not going to let you come back
00:51:49except under circumstances where you will face accountability, prosecution potentially,
00:51:58for all of the bad things you did in your earlier career, including when you were consul.
00:52:03And they basically, long story short, they kind of play Pompey and see, especially kind of get into
00:52:10Pompey's head and play him off of Caesar in this gradual shift of alliances. And importantly,
00:52:17Caesar's daughter, Julia, Pompey's, the love of Pompey's life by all accounts, she dies in
00:52:26childbirth in '54. And that was like the link that held the final tether that held them together.
00:52:35And after that, the civil war. Because otherwise there would have been
00:52:39some leverage over Caesar. We have your daughter. Oh yeah. I hadn't thought about that, but I think
00:52:45they couldn't have gotten Pompey's head because, you know, they would have had a Caesar's grandson,
00:52:51Pompey's son would have bound them together. It was a boy that was born, that died soon after
00:52:56his mother died. So I think that it wasn't an obvious fit for Pompey to be their shield,
00:53:05their man. He'd always been an outsider and Caesar could have kind of kept him loyal. It's very hard
00:53:12when you're in France and this is all happening in Rome, but Caesar has a lot of lieutenants,
00:53:17really, you know, men of letters trying to kind of keep the peace and keep up his contacts in Rome.
00:53:22But if he had been able to be there in person, he believed he could have settled the seas and
00:53:28won Pompey back over. And this is one of the things after the war broke out that he kept trying over
00:53:33and over again, like, let's just meet Pompey. The civil war?
00:53:35Yeah, the civil war. Let's just meet. Let's work this all out.
00:53:39But he didn't want to? Yeah, Pompey didn't want to at that point.
00:53:42He'd already hardened his heart. He was supposed to be, Pompey was supposed to be one of the
00:53:45greatest generals ever, right? And he did not outnumber Caesar as well?
00:53:50Yeah, he greatly did. Pompey was brilliant in the civil war. He defeated Sertorius. He conquered the
00:53:58pirates in like three months earlier in his career. I mean, he's a brilliant administrator.
00:54:04Some people think he's overrated as a general. I mean, he was really good, but I think Caesar
00:54:09was a better general. Evidently. Evidently. But he definitely had, by the look of it,
00:54:17all the advantages. When Caesar invades Italy, he crosses the Rubicon. You know, Pompey has
00:54:23a lot of legions on paper, but they're fresh recruits.
00:54:28What's the story of crossing the Rubicon? Yeah.
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00:55:34join.whoop.com/modernwisdom. That's join.whoop.com/modernwisdom. I mean, it's something that I've
00:55:43heard people say all the time. It's a Rubicon moment, crossing of the Rubicon. I have no idea
00:55:48what that means. I don't know the story. I don't understand why it's significant. I don't know what
00:55:53it's supposed to symbolize. Yeah. So there's a kind of a complicated buildup, a standoff, you know,
00:56:01everybody's always kind of ratcheting up their demands as Caesar's like, I want to come back to
00:56:05Rome without prosecution. And the Senate's like over our dead bodies. You know, concessions going
00:56:13back and forth, being rejected. And so as this is all going on, Caesar's getting his armies ready.
00:56:21He doesn't want to fight a civil war. I think he's, you know, and he always said that. And I think it's
00:56:25right. Because he's just come back from Gaul. Yeah. He's just come back from Gaul. His seven-year
00:56:30campaign, eight-year campaign, straight into a civil war. Right. Basically, he's at war from 58 BC until
00:56:3745 BC, almost constantly. I mean, the energy of the man. And he's got two advantages. So basically,
00:56:48he's got, I think he's got 10 legions at this point, something like 40,000. But they're all
00:56:52kind of strung out over Gaul and forts. They're not close. He's got one legion with him on the border,
00:56:58the legal border between Italy and basically Northern Italy. What we call Northern Italy
00:57:05today was what they would call Cisalpine Gaul. It's not like Italy proper. And if you
00:57:13lead an army into Italy without disbanding it, it's like technically an act of war. Like,
00:57:22consuls are supposed to disband their armies before they re-enter Italy. And so the border between
00:57:29Cisalpine Gaul and Italy proper is the Rubicon River. It's this insignificant stream near Ravenna
00:57:37in Northern Italy on the Adriatic coast. And so Caesar's camped at Ravenna and he
00:57:49is negotiating with the Senate, envoys going back and forth, back and forth. It's not looking good.
00:57:55Caesar doesn't want to fight a war, but he's going to be ready. He's not about to pretend like this
00:58:00couldn't happen. I think Pompey wasn't really ready for it. So he's got one legion there with him at
00:58:08Ravenna. Not a lot of men. 400, 4,500 men or so. And at this final moment the negotiations break
00:58:20down and the Senate declares him a public enemy. They say Caesar is, you know, he's not responding
00:58:28to our demands. We've had enough. And they officially basically declare war on him. And the
00:58:34moment he gets that advice, the very next day, actually he was, he knew what he was going to do
00:58:42the next day, but he pretends like nothing's happening on that day. He's going to go about
00:58:48his business in Ravenna. He goes to the gladiatorial shows. He inspects his troops. He has dinner with
00:58:53his friends. It's just a normal day. No big deal. But he secretly sends the order out to his troops
00:58:59to muster. And he finds his way to the Rubicon. He apparently like gets lost in the woods because
00:59:06it's dark. I mean there's all these kind of elaborate tales about this. And one of the
00:59:11ancient sources, not Plutarch who's a little bit more sober, one of the ancient sources Suetonius
00:59:17I think it is says, you know, as he stood there before the Rubicon he saw a great winged figure
00:59:25blowing a trumpet. It's like the gods are like calling him to war. It's like the Valkyries or
00:59:30something. But what he says is he's there with his officers. And he knows if he crosses that river
00:59:40that he's declaring war back on the Senate. And so he says let the die be cast.
00:59:53And the famous words, there's actually a quote from one of his favorite dramas or a comedy from
01:00:00Menander, like let the die be cast. As one does when one is entering upon a highly risky thing
01:00:07with uncertain results as Plutarch says. And so he crosses the Rubicon very quickly and within a day
01:00:15he has just blitzed down and captured a city in Italy proper. And he just he has one of his
01:00:24advantages as I was saying is he loves to be underestimated. And he's really good at getting
01:00:30himself underestimated. And they didn't think he would do it. And he only goes into Italy with
01:00:40one legion. And the Senate has like 10 legions in Italy. I mean he's vastly outnumbered. But
01:00:46everybody else arrives really quickly. The other advantage is he's really fast. And so he blitzes
01:00:51through Italy and pretty soon Pompey and the Senate decide they've got to get out of there. They've got
01:00:57to rethink their grand strategy. And they go to Greece to basically muster up and collect a bunch
01:01:05of ships and a bunch of troops in the east to come back and reinvade Italy and destroy Caesar. But it
01:01:10doesn't work out that way. Why? Well they were hoping, they knew that Caesar didn't have any
01:01:17ships. Basically he doesn't have troop transports. So he's not able to cross over and catch them and
01:01:24take the war to Greece. He's not able to draw on his great advantage which is speed. And they're
01:01:30hoping to essentially kind of blockade Italy and starve him out. Rome, if you blockade Rome,
01:01:37the people will starve quickly because they're getting the majority of their grain from places
01:01:43like Sicily, North Africa, not yet Egypt. But it's the biggest city in the world at that point,
01:01:51at least in the west. A million people maybe. And you can't get that much grain in from the
01:01:56countryside on carts. So they bring it in on ships. So they're hoping to basically starve
01:02:01the people of Rome and make Caesar really unpopular. And so he doesn't have ships. He
01:02:08can't go catch them. So there's also Pompey's got guys in Spain that start up holding out against
01:02:17Caesar. And Caesar only controls Italy and Gaul. And so he has to go fight a war in Spain first
01:02:24before he can go catch Pompey in Greece. And basically by leaving Italy rather than settling
01:02:32it then and there, his enemies are essentially saying they're willing to make this a world war.
01:02:38Which is exactly what happens. There's a war fought in Spain first. Caesar comes and he
01:02:45defeats them in Greece. Then he goes to Egypt. There's another war there. Then there's another
01:02:53war in Asia Minor. Then there's another war in North Africa. And then there's the final kind of
01:02:57embers of the war in Spain. I mean, he visits every single province in the Roman Empire and carries
01:03:03war to almost all of them. Wow. Yeah. You mentioned Egypt there. What's the story of Caesar and
01:03:10Cleopatra? Yeah. Well, so fast forward, you know, Caesar's first campaign is in Spain. His second
01:03:20campaign in the civil war is in Greece where he defeats Pompey at the battle of Pharsalus,
01:03:27which is the really should have been the last battle, should have been the decisive battle.
01:03:32And Pompey flees and makes his way to Egypt. They don't know where he went for a while. But
01:03:42Caesar finally figures out he's gone to Egypt because Pompey has friends there. And as soon
01:03:49as he gets on shore, actually doesn't ever reach the shore, he basically comes up with his warships
01:03:56and the Egyptians say, oh, yes, we're really glad to see you, Pompey. Come ashore. We've got the
01:04:03whole reception ready for you. Just get in this little boat. And, you know, there's reefs that a
01:04:10big ship like yours would probably founder on. So just trust us. We're going to get you in this
01:04:14little boat and take you to shore. And, you know, Pompey gets on the boat. He probably knows what's
01:04:24going to happen, but he has no hope at this point. He's just crestfallen. He's dispirited. He thought
01:04:30he was going to win against Caesar. It was an upset victory at Pharsalus. And I think it just kind of
01:04:36shattered him. And I think there's, I'm trying to remember exactly how they frame it. There's a
01:04:41moment where the boat captain is like, come on Pompey. There's nothing to be worried about. You
01:04:45can trust us. And Pompey said, you know, if I were worried about my life, I would not get in this boat.
01:04:55Like, I mean, I think he knew because on that boat, they murdered him. In front of the eyes of his son,
01:05:09in front of the eyes of his wife, in front of the eyes of all of his friends. Once they get a little
01:05:12away from the warship, he never makes it to shore. They murder him. Who's they? The Egyptians. So who
01:05:19is they? What's going on in Egypt right now is there's a civil war happening. Egypt is ruled
01:05:27at this point by the Ptolemies, who are a Greco-Macedonian ruling class.
01:05:34Their capital is Alexandria, which is a great Greek city founded by Alexander the Great.
01:05:39He's everywhere, isn't he? And so there's a conflict going on between these two, like,
01:05:47teenage, one is a teenager, one's a 20-year-old, like, siblings of the pharaoh who died. You know,
01:05:55it's funny to think of these Greeks as pharaohs, but that's what they would have called them in Egypt.
01:05:59And Pompey was hoping that all the favors he did for them earlier would ingratiate
01:06:06him to the Egyptian regime, but they basically saw Caesar won at Pharsalus. He's probably going
01:06:15to be the winner in this war, even though it might go on for a while. What would make Caesar really
01:06:20happy is if we just killed Pompey and presented Caesar with Pompey's head and said, "Hey, we did
01:06:27you a favor. And if we did that, you know, if we let Pompey live, he's probably going to try to raise
01:06:35an army and try to use Egypt as a base and drag on the war. And we're going to have Roman troops just
01:06:41ripping this place apart." In the middle of our own war. "In the middle of our own war,
01:06:45it's going to be just a total mess." So they kind of nip it in the bud. And it kind of made sense.
01:06:54I think what would have made more sense is for them to just arrest Pompey because Caesar wanted
01:06:58Pompey alive, actually. He kept on pardoning his enemies during the civil war. Yes, he wanted to
01:07:04pardon Pompey. He pardoned enemy after enemy. Demetrius, Patreus. I mean, you could list names
01:07:13and names. He's always sparing his enemies. Some would say that he was too kind to his enemies
01:07:18because they end up assassinating him. We'll get to that maybe. And Caesar also knows that if Pompey,
01:07:26if he captures Pompey and spares him, if he could just get in the same room face to face with this
01:07:32man that he hasn't seen in the better part of 10 years, that they could work something out. He could
01:07:39convince Pompey to get the troops to stand down, to get everybody to stand down. There's no way that
01:07:45this war could carry on if Pompey and Caesar come to an agreement finally. That's what he really
01:07:51wanted. He wanted to make peace. He didn't want to fight this war, but he was willing to fight it
01:07:57if they wanted to fight it with him. And so when he lands ashore, they present him with the signet
01:08:03ring of Pompey. This has a great, I think it had a lion on it. It was unmistakable. And then they
01:08:10give him the head of Pompey. Here you are. Just in case you weren't sure whose ring that is.
01:08:15Came from the hand of the head. Do you know whose ring that is? Do you know? Do you want to guess?
01:08:21There it is. And that's the second time that he's said to have cried. He was a consul of Rome.
01:08:31I think he cried because this was his friend. It really was his friend. And
01:08:40well, the cynics will say that there were crocodile tears, that Caesar was secretly happy.
01:08:48But I think that's totally false. He really wanted Pompey alive. And I think he did still kind of
01:08:53hold out hope that they would be able to come to an agreement. Of course, Caesar would be the
01:08:57big man now and Pompey would be kind of, his career would be over, let's be frank,
01:09:01after losing the Civil War. Maybe he could go into a dignified exile. But this was the father of his
01:09:08son before his son died. This was the man who took care of his daughter. They had this really
01:09:14personal relationship. And so Caesar was actually quite pissed. And he ended up killing all the men
01:09:24who called the hit on Pompey. Why? Because they were basically the sibling of the rival Ptolemies
01:09:35that's controlling Alexandria is this kid Ptolemy. Ptolemy the 13th, I think. He's like 15.
01:09:44And it's actually, he's being kind of ruled by this general that he has and this court eunuch,
01:09:57as one has in Egypt. One needs eunuchs to do things. And one of them was the kind of
01:10:04Chamberlain and was kind of pushing the kid around and calling the shots. And so
01:10:11the way that the war goes, basically Ptolemy and Cleopatra are, Cleopatra is the other sibling,
01:10:21I forgot to mention that. She's off in the wilderness, who knows where she is when Caesar
01:10:27arrives. Caesar is welcomed with kind of, you know, fake smiles by the Egyptians who just want
01:10:33the Romans gone. Egypt has been, it's not a Roman province, it's important to understand.
01:10:40It's a Roman client kingdom. They're independent. They have their own tradition. They want to keep
01:10:47it that way. Alexandria is the most glorious city in the Mediterranean. Rome might be bigger, but
01:10:53it's a dirty place. Alexandria is a city of marble and culture. They've got the library. They've got,
01:10:59you know, Alexander's tomb there. And they just want the Romans to kind of leave them to their
01:11:04own devices, maybe be allies, but basically they want Caesar gone as soon as possible.
01:11:09And Ptolemy represents the kind of more Egyptian independence party in Egypt and Alexandria. He's
01:11:23loved by the people actually. Cleopatra is actually the unpopular one. And that's exactly the kind of
01:11:28person that Caesar likes to support. Because the story is, he's been there for a couple of weeks.
01:11:37This is after he went to go and find Pompey. Yeah. Finds head and hand. Yeah. And sticks about.
01:11:45Yeah. He's sticking around in Egypt and Alexandria, trying to figure out what he's going to do.
01:11:50There's a war going on there. And anytime the Romans see a war amongst people on the fringes,
01:11:57they see an opportunity to come in and intervene. And that's a way to kind of extend your power and
01:12:03maybe end up controlling the place directly. Egypt is the most, by far the richest
01:12:07kingdom, land, area in all of the Mediterranean. Why? What have they got? So for one thing,
01:12:15they've got the Nile, which, you know, you can like eat an apple and spit the seeds on the ground and
01:12:19just get wonderful fruit. I mean, it's incredibly fertile because of the flooding of the Nile.
01:12:24They've also got very, very rich mines, like mineral resources in the Eastern desert,
01:12:32especially. So, you know, exotic marble, porphyry, gems, you know, agate, amethyst, emerald. I don't
01:12:39know what the difference between any of these things is, frankly. And they've got a lot of gold
01:12:44too in those mines. There's still gold in Egypt. They're still mining gold there. So it's incredibly
01:12:50rich. Alexandria is a city of marble and gold. And it ends up later becoming Rome's breadbasket.
01:12:57You know, just you can feed the entire, you can feed a lot of people from the Nile.
01:13:03So, and Romans have kind of like wanted, there's, you know, Pompey wanted to intervene in Egypt.
01:13:11There was another conflict with the fat king that died, the father of Cleopatra and Ptolemy.
01:13:19And people were hoping to pluck that cherry, but it just never worked out. Like, Egypt is kind of,
01:13:25despite, it's kind of incredible that Egypt was still independent at that point because Rome,
01:13:30the Roman, kind of greedy Roman governors had just been circling it like vultures and they just hadn't
01:13:37had their chance yet. Now Caesar has a chance, you know. But they don't want that to happen.
01:13:42So Cleopatra enters the story at this point. Caesar's in the royal palace.
01:13:50And I don't know if you've seen that movie with Elizabeth Taylor, the Cleopatra movie.
01:13:56So the way that they portray it in the movie is not that far off, but basically Caesar's there in
01:14:04a study in the library or in the palace. And a servant comes in with a rug and he's like,
01:14:13"Caesar, we have a gift for you." And he says, "All right, well, what's in the rug?" And he tries to
01:14:19threatens to poke at it. But basically, Cleopatra sneaks herself in on a little raft and is carried
01:14:29in as though she's a mattress, as like a rolled up mattress is what Plutarch says.
01:14:34Someone's got a yoga mat under their arm, but it's secretly Cleopatra.
01:14:37Yeah, yeah. And then, you know, it's presented to Caesar as a gift.
01:14:42Jared, chat chippy to this image. I want to see what it looks like.
01:14:45Yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a great scene from the Cleopatra. It's a rug in the movie,
01:14:51which is a great movie. And the most expensive movie ever when it was made.
01:14:55No way.
01:14:56Actually, yeah.
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01:16:12Okay, so she gets carried in. So she gets carried in and, you know, she knows how to make an interest
01:16:19too. From that moment, Caesar sees like, all right, this is another show person like myself.
01:16:27She's 20 years old. She's the oldest of the siblings. Speaks all kinds of languages.
01:16:35Obviously she knows, she's a native Greek speaker. She speaks Egyptian and Latin and, you know,
01:16:41Syrian and on and on. She's very, very charming and clever. She might not have led with her looks,
01:16:50but you'll hear stories that Cleopatra was actually kind of ugly and she was, you know, more of a great
01:16:57conversation part. But she was, she was beautiful. Like she, maybe she wasn't like a 10, but she was
01:17:02an eight at least. Yeah, that's a great image. See if you can do Cleopatra, Elizabeth Taylor rug scene.
01:17:11See if that turns up some results. And she had a knack for power. Like she knows how to play the
01:17:23heartstrings of a man. She's, she's got, she knows Caesar's weakness. Caesar has his weakness for
01:17:33smart high status women. He's on his third wife now, but she's back in Rome. Yeah,
01:17:39yeah. You want to play it? Yeah, yeah, yeah. The rug is such a delicate weave.
01:17:43If I may untie it for you. Turn it over first. But the rug is now right tied up. I understand,
01:17:51but I wanted the wrong side up. Or should I flip it over with my sword? No, no.
01:17:55I find one can tell more about the quality of merchandise by examining the backside first.
01:18:08All hail Cleopatra, kindred of Horus and Ra, beloved of the moon and sun, daughter to Isis,
01:18:19and of upper and lower Egypt, queen.
01:18:21A damsel.
01:18:29So yeah, she knows how to make an entrance, right? It was something like that. That's not far off.
01:18:41And she also knows how to play the kind of wound. I mean, I think Elizabeth Taylor does that really
01:18:48well. Oh, my back. Oh, oh, let me help you up, madam. And so basically Cleopatra wins him over
01:18:58very quickly. And because she does this, she's sort of on the losing side of the war currently.
01:19:04But Caesar says, we can reconcile you guys. I'll be your mediator. And you know, Ptolemy
01:19:15hates this idea or rather his eunuch and his general hate this idea because they know.
01:19:20It's nice that the eunuch has got such say here. Let's listen to the guy that chopped his dick off.
01:19:27Yeah. Well, he's a very learned man. You know, he has other talents.
01:19:30Well, he's got nothing else to do.
01:19:31Right. And you know, I think, I don't know how they did this in Egypt, but often like
01:19:38it would be the parents that did it to like.
01:19:40To an offering.
01:19:41Yeah. Promote the kid. And yeah, there's something really.
01:19:46You got to do it with the second one. If you do it with the first one, you're like,
01:19:48we don't have another one. That's the end of the bloodline.
01:19:50Yeah. Yeah.
01:19:51Okay.
01:19:51But if he does well, you know, he could do great things for his nephews at least.
01:19:57Yeah, yeah, yeah.
01:20:00There's no way to make that a good deal. So anyway, Caesar basically offers to moderate between them
01:20:10and the offer is rejected. And long story short, he ends up picking Cleopatra. And Ptolemy ends up.
01:20:20Who's the younger brother.
01:20:22The younger brother.
01:20:23Yep.
01:20:23Yeah. He ends up sort of getting his hand forced by his general Achillas and the eunuch. And they try
01:20:34to have another like coup attempt against Caesar. Caesar defeats them and the boy is apparently
01:20:43drowned in the Nile in a boating.
01:20:45The younger brother.
01:20:45Yeah, yeah. Like not, not like he's murdered, but there was a battle and he was just not found.
01:20:51Probably drowned in the Nile. It was.
01:20:55Tight family with the Ptolemies then.
01:20:56I mean, they are always trying to murder each other and one up each other. And sure enough,
01:21:02like Cleopatra has his younger sister too, Arsinoe. And she tries to revolt and Caesar
01:21:09crushes her as well and actually captures her and takes her back to Rome and marches her in the
01:21:14triumph.
01:21:14Was there any suggestion that Cleopatra and Caesar got it on?
01:21:17Oh, more than a suggestion. Like they become lovers, like for real. And they have a kid too,
01:21:25which is fascinating to think about the ramifications of this. But so yeah, basically
01:21:33Caesar's never going to turn down a good offer from a high status woman. And you know, she's
01:21:40a living goddess by Egyptian tradition.
01:21:43Daughter of Isis.
01:21:44Daughter of Isis. Not just daughter of Isis, but living embodiment of Isis. Just like she
01:21:50said, there's a kind of, you know, fully God, fully human sort of thing going on with the
01:21:58pharaohs. Son and kind of like divine avatar of Amun-Ra. Or is it Osiris with the pharaohs?
01:22:08So anyway, she's worshiped as a divinity while she's alive. There's great reliefs. So she
01:22:16gets portrayed as a Greek to her Greek subjects, as the Ptolemies do. Like, you know, looks
01:22:21like a normal human, kind of classical statue face. And then there are reliefs of her portrayed
01:22:26as like an Egyptian hieroglyphic lady too. Might be worth pulling out.
01:22:30Jared, I want to see this.
01:22:32Cleopatra, Egyptian relief, something like that. Really interesting place. You know, Ptolemaic
01:22:40Alexandria.
01:22:43It's blending two things together. It feels like the phasing out of the old world and the
01:22:47phasing in of what would sort of become. It's what then would be more cosmopolitan, what
01:22:51then would be built more around rhetoric, philosophy, what then would have been seen as modern, and
01:22:58sort of this sort of passing off. But you've got the, both of them are happening at the
01:23:01same time. And I guess it...
01:23:03There you go. That's her, and I think that's her and her brother. Oh, that's her son,
01:23:07Cesarean. So there's Cleopatra on the left. And the other one is the son of Julius Caesar.
01:23:16That's their kid, Cesarean.
01:23:17No way. The image on the left. Open that up, Jared.
01:23:20There you go.
01:23:21Wow. Yeah. So that's proper 3000 BC luck in...
01:23:28Right. Like that you could, that could be like, scratched into a pyramid. You wouldn't know
01:23:32the difference.
01:23:33Yeah, yeah, yeah. Oh, God. And there's a guy in the bottom corner. Look at how huge that
01:23:37is.
01:23:37Really big.
01:23:38Holy shit. And that's the son...
01:23:40That's the, you know, illegitimate son of Cleopatra.
01:23:44Not that illegitimate. I mean, he's 15 feet tall.
01:23:47Looks pretty legit to me.
01:23:47Yeah, exactly. What was he called?
01:23:49Cesarean was his nickname, Little Caesar. Yeah. Yes. He started a great pizza chain and didn't
01:23:57go so well.
01:23:57And then he became a pizza magnate.
01:24:00Saw where the real money was.
01:24:02Yeah, yeah, yeah. But his official name was, I think, like, Ptolemy XIV. You know, like,
01:24:10every single frickin' person in that dynasty is named Ptolemy, if they're a boy, or either
01:24:17Cleopatra or Arsinoe. And there's not a lot of names. I think that might have something
01:24:21to do with this idea that, like, you continue to be the embodiment of the same god through
01:24:26the generations. So you, like, have to take on that dynastic.
01:24:29You know Dali's story? Salvador Dali?
01:24:31I don't know if I do.
01:24:32So his parents had a son about a year or so, a year and a half before Dali was born. No,
01:24:40sorry, two years before Dali was born, who was also called Salvador. And that son died.
01:24:47And then they had another son and called him the same name. And when he was age two, took
01:24:54him to his dead brother's grave and said, "This is who you are. This is you. You are the
01:24:59reincarnation of your dead brother."
01:25:01Wow.
01:25:02It's just you. It's you again. So that was the start of his life. Dali's fucking fascinating.
01:25:07But yeah, that was how he was sort of brought into the world as this weird recreation of
01:25:15a dead baby.
01:25:16That is amazing.
01:25:18Yeah, cool, eh? All right, so what was Caesar's last night like? You mentioned he's accumulated
01:25:24a bunch of enemies, but maybe not shaken the Etch-A-Sketch enough to actually get rid of
01:25:28them all. He keeps pardoning them. He's maybe erroneously deciding to be forgiving. What
01:25:36does the final day of Caesar's life look like?
01:25:39So the lead up to this is important because Caesar is, you know, he knows that there are
01:25:51assassination plots. There were even assassination plots 18 months earlier when he got back to
01:25:56Rome finally from the African campaign where he defeated Cato and friends. And Cicero mentions
01:26:05this in his speech. He gives a speech in front of Caesar. He's like, "Caesar, I have heard
01:26:11it has been said that you tell people I have lived long enough either for nature or for
01:26:17glory," because he knows about assassination attempts and he dismisses them. He says, "You
01:26:22know what? If they want to kill me, I've had a good run."
01:26:26How old is he at this point?
01:26:27He is, so this is 46 when he gets back, so he would be 54, born in 100 BC. And 44 is the
01:26:36ides of March when he dies. So that's how old he ends up being. But I mean, you know,
01:26:42that's pretty old for a Roman. He's had a pretty good run so far. But he dismisses these plots.
01:26:55And you know, the information just keeps coming in. Sure and sure, people are trying to kill
01:27:00you, Caesar. Can you please up your security detail? Can you please give yourself a bodyguard?
01:27:08Like, we're begging you. His friends are begging him. And he says, "Not going to do that."
01:27:14That's what tyrants do. And sure enough, this is the kind of classic mold of how tyrants seize power
01:27:21by sisterhoods at Athens. I mean, you can multiply a lot of examples. You get a bodyguard first. You
01:27:25say, "Oh no, there's threats against my life. I need a bodyguard, citizens. I just want to be
01:27:29your servant." And then that's how you seize power. And Caesar knows that that's the pattern. He's not
01:27:34going to do it. And it comes to the point where people are continuing to bring in names of
01:27:40potential conspirators. And Caesar says, "I've had it. Anybody bringing me more talk about an
01:27:49assassination plot is going to face consequences." He's like, "You're going to get fired if I hear
01:27:54another about you bringing me an assassination plot." He doesn't want to hear it. I think that's because
01:28:00he didn't want to rule over a subjugated, you know, cowed populace. He wanted to rule over free Romans.
01:28:12And he didn't want a police state. He wanted people to feel free to say whatever they
01:28:19wanted to say. This is clearly demonstrated by a lot of his actions. You know, people are
01:28:24criticizing him. They're making jokes about that Caesar's expense. You know, there's certain lines
01:28:28that you don't cross, but he doesn't want to up his security detail. The very last night,
01:28:36the 14th of March, he, you know, it's a normal day of business, busy day at work. He's got this
01:28:47incredible crushing burden of, you know, cases to hear and petitions and laws needing passing. And
01:28:55he's also preparing for this great expedition to Parthia. He's going to avenge Crassus. Crassus
01:29:02was killed by the Parthians. They captured Roman eagles about 10 years earlier. So he's just trying
01:29:08to get through the next three days to get out of town and go back to, I mean, Caesar was good at
01:29:16politics, but I think better at war. I think he's better at war. He's equally as good at war. It's
01:29:22probably a happier place for him. Even in BC times, people were still drowning in admin is what you're
01:29:27saying. Oh yeah. I mean, like the load that he's carrying. Yeah. It's a universal problem. Once they
01:29:35invent writing, you know, it's over. Fucking game over. Yeah. It's the email inbox of ancient Rome.
01:29:40Yeah. And it's funny you should mention email. So, on the last night, Caesar is having dinner.
01:29:49As you know, he has a like formal dinner every night. There's like nine seats of the typical
01:29:54Roman feast. You circle around on couches around the central table and everybody kind of lies down.
01:30:00It's weird, but that's how they did it. Horrible for the digestion. It's horrible for the digestion,
01:30:06but one advantage is everybody has to have the same conversation because you're all pointed
01:30:11toward the center of the circle. Yeah. As opposed to an elongated table where this group over there
01:30:16is speaking like that and this group. Yeah. That's interesting. I remember, was it, who is it that
01:30:23suggested that the size of glasses of wine were getting too big around the table? Was it maybe
01:30:30Aristotle? And he made a special kind of cup. And if you overfilled the cup, the entire thing drained.
01:30:37Oh yeah. Basically his problem was that he wanted to have these really interesting conversations
01:30:42at dinner and people were just getting too drunk. This is before coffee came around. And there's
01:30:47this interesting story. Before Newtonic. Before Newtonic. I mean, they should have had the
01:30:50nootropic toothpicks. There's that big transition was in sort of the middle ages in the UK where
01:31:01Britain started to go from just having ale houses to having coffee shops as well. And this is a boon
01:31:08in innovation because people aren't just pissed all the time. They're just not drunk as much.
01:31:15They're stimulated and they're going and getting stuff done. Anyway, I think it's Aristotle that
01:31:18had this issue. And his problem was I want to go to dinner and have all of these interesting
01:31:23conversations, but everybody drinks their wine so fast that the conversation degenerates into
01:31:30nothingness. So his suggestion was to his host to make the cup smaller. He says people will
01:31:36drink the same number, but they'll not realize that they're having less. And it's supposed to be,
01:31:40I think it's like an Aristotelian cup. Jared, do a Chachupy tea search. What was the ancient cup
01:31:48that was made to ensure people didn't overfill it? Maybe Aristotle. And it's this interesting point
01:31:58that, okay, well, if we reduce it down, it means that the conversational quality will be a bit
01:32:01better. But I suppose if you're sat in a, you're probably thinking of the Pythagorean cup. Pythagoras.
01:32:06Yeah. Also called the cup of greed or greedy cup. It's a special drinking cup from ancient Greece
01:32:10design so that if you fill it past a certain level, it empties completely. Isn't that cool?
01:32:15That's brilliant. Oh, because it's a siphon. Yes. It's got a hidden siphon inside the central
01:32:19column. If you pour wine below the mark line, the cup works normally. If you pour above the line,
01:32:23the siphon activates and the entire cup drains out through the bottom of the stem. For someone who
01:32:27tries to take more than their fair share, they end up with nothing. Legend says Pythagoras used it to
01:32:33teach moderation and fairness among workers or students. And the lesson is greed causes you to
01:32:37lose everything. Isn't that fucking cool? That's so Greek. Isn't that sick? Moderation. Yeah.
01:32:43Wise man Pythagoras. Well, you know, it's funny because, I mean, in Plato's symposium that
01:32:49they decide to pour the wine, they pour water in the wine often for moderation so that
01:32:55you drink less. But they wanted to pour the wine really, really light that night because they
01:33:00all got smashed the night before and they want to have like a chill conversation that night. But Cato,
01:33:04Caesar's nemesis, was actually known to be a bit of a tippler. Like he would,
01:33:11he would often show up to the Senate kind of smelling of wine. Yep. And, but that would be
01:33:18because he liked to drink for a long time having philosophical conversations. And it was, it was
01:33:24this kind of conversation that, that was happening, Caesar's last night. So Caesar is at the house of
01:33:33Lepidus and he invites a number of people to be among the nine. Lepidus is a good, good trusted
01:33:42friend of his. And one of them is Decimus Brutus. This is not the Brutus that appears in Shakespeare's
01:33:49play Julius Caesar, you know, and you too Brutus. It's a different Brutus, but actually was a Brutus
01:33:54that was closer to Caesar in point of fact, historically, funny enough. So does Shakespeare
01:33:58get that confused, or does he amalgamate the two on purpose? Plutarch gets it confused. This is like
01:34:03one of the, one of the kind of flaws of Plutarch's biography of Caesar. He thinks that Marcus Brutus,
01:34:12who is actually not, I mean, close to Caesar, he is, because he's the son of Caesar's favorite
01:34:19girlfriend, Servilia. But Decimus Brutus was a lot closer to him because he was a lieutenant of his in
01:34:27Gaul. I mean, they're distantly related, these two Brutuses, but they're not close or anything. But
01:34:32Decimus was like naval commander against the Veneti. He's been brilliant in the civil war,
01:34:38crucial in the Battle of Marseilles. And in fact, Decimus Brutus was in his will as a second.
01:34:46Decimus is one of the men who stabbed him the very next day. He's sitting there with him at dinner the
01:34:52night before. And they're sitting there having their conversation as one does. As you know, a lot
01:35:02of final night scenes of, you know, great Romans and great Greeks are like these like philosophical
01:35:10conversations. And I think that's because they had them a lot, actually. It was very normal. And so-
01:35:16Like the last supper for Jesus, that's, I mean, there were maybe a few additions, but he was
01:35:20probably speaking like that mostly. Yeah, he was like, all right, here we go again.
01:35:24Just a Tuesday.
01:35:25So Caesar is sitting there as the conversation's going on. I find this really fascinating.
01:35:31He's doing his, clearing his inbox, actually. Because he's a busy guy, one has to. And his
01:35:41secretary is sitting there kind of feeding him letters that need to go out that he needs to sign.
01:35:46And so he's writing sincerely on them, you know, signing his name. But the way you do that in Latin,
01:35:51the custom is you write "vale," farewell. So all through the night, he's writing farewell,
01:35:59farewell, farewell on these letters. And that's what you would have done typically?
01:36:05That's what you would have done to say goodbye. But I mean, the fact that he's like filling out
01:36:09letters during dinner, I mean, this guy has got a shit ton of work to do. And he's just trying to
01:36:15get, it's brainless. He's just kind of, yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever. Yes. And go on, Cassius, yes.
01:36:20And I find that striking. But at some point in the night, he proposes a theme for the philosophical
01:36:30conversation that's going on. Decimus is sitting right there. What is the best kind of death?
01:36:35And the conversation goes this way and that way. Somebody brings up the example of Cyrus
01:36:44the Great, the great king of Persia who founded the Persian Empire. Xenophon says, doesn't he,
01:36:50that Cyrus made all these arrangements before his death that he wanted to be buried in this way and
01:36:56this should happen and so forth after he was gone. And of course, Caesar had read this book,
01:37:02Xenophon's "Cyropaedia." And Caesar's turn comes to him and he says, "That sounds horrible.
01:37:09I don't want a long, slow death. The best kind of death is one that comes sudden, swift, and
01:37:17unexpected." You know, what is Decimus thinking at that moment? But that's well attested. That's what
01:37:26the conversation was about at some point that night. Prophetic. Yeah, man. And then, you know,
01:37:31he goes home late and bad dreams is, you know, if you've heard the, read the Shakespeare play,
01:37:38there's all these omens. You know, his wife has this dream that she's, she gets him up in the
01:37:42middle of the night, that like wind blows open the shutters and, you know, he has to get up and
01:37:47shut them and calm down Calpurnia. And she had this dream that she was like holding the bloody Caesar
01:37:54and like looking at their house as it's like burning and collapsing. There's all these, you know,
01:37:59birds are acting weird. So the story goes, I mean, a lot of these omens typically happen around great
01:38:06events in the ancient sources, but, you know, who knows? I mean, I mean, the, the, the murder of a
01:38:11guy like Julius Caesar really is a kind of, like if ever a death is a rip in the fabric of reality,
01:38:17you know, like that, that comes pretty close. So that was how he spent his last night. Very
01:38:23unsettled night. And what about the next day? So it's, I think Caesar was, he has a reputation for
01:38:35dismissing omens. He did this when he was consul. You know, his enemies are trying to obstruct him
01:38:41in the, in the assemblies. And they're saying, oh, I saw a bird flying the wrong way. And I heard
01:38:50thunder. I heard thunder. It's a blue sky. And he's like, I didn't hear you though. Let's get on with
01:38:56business. You know, he's just ignores omens for most of his career. Sometimes the omens are bad.
01:39:00And he's like, let's fight the battle anyway. And he wins. But all these, you know, his wife is
01:39:07saying, I had a bad dream. I don't have a good feeling about this. And ancient omens, I think,
01:39:12are often kind of, it's a system that's in place. So before you, you go into a campaign,
01:39:21you, or before you go into battle, you sacrifice to the god, you know, you cut open a piglet or a
01:39:30whatever it is, and you read the entrails, or you get the sacred chickens out, and you see,
01:39:35or do the sacred chickens want to eat their, their, their feed? Or are they staying in their cage?
01:39:40You know, what does this mean? It's kind of like opening up a space for intuition.
01:39:44The generals often have to make decisions. Leaders often have to make decisions.
01:39:50That could be the right decision, but to have to explain why you're making that decision is,
01:40:01would, would, would undermine the project somehow. Like, you don't, you want to have a way of
01:40:05explaining intuition. That's, that's how a lot of anthropologists explain. I think that's really
01:40:09compelling. But, so I think his wife had a bad feeling. I think he had a bad feeling at some
01:40:15point. He was apparently kind of un-, like stomach issues. It's unspecified, but he felt like out of
01:40:24sorts that morning. And he was supposed to go to the Senate. There was some business, some important
01:40:30business at hand. They did a dispute between Mark Antony and Dola Bella, blah, blah, blah. And he's
01:40:38like, maybe I don't want to go to the Senate today. I'm feeling out of sorts. My wife is telling me to
01:40:42stay home. He goes, you know, down the street. He, he lives in the Forum, the Senate's meeting about
01:40:50a mile away. He goes down the street to a buddy's house and to say hi. And they, they do a little
01:40:56sacrifice. And that sacrifice contains bad omens. You don't know the details, but like he's,
01:41:02this is really striking. So he, he decides to just stay home that day. And who shows up at his door,
01:41:09but Decimus Brutus, the guy he was having dinner with last night. He says, Caesar, I heard that you
01:41:17are listening to the, the ravings of a woman. I mean, I've never heard Caesar to be
01:41:24bothered by omens in his career. Think of all the battles that we've won after bad omens. Like,
01:41:30come on, Caesar, let's, you know, the Senate's counting on you. They, they all cleared their
01:41:33schedules. They're busy men. And, you know, you're really trying to make them feel like
01:41:38Rome is the same Rome. This is a whole other issue that, you know, he is kind of becoming this
01:41:43monarchic figure in Rome. He's getting, getting accused of wanting to make himself king. He's
01:41:49getting accused of wanting to make himself a god, which is not entirely off base. We could get to
01:41:54that, but so, you know, Decimus makes some good arguments. Come on, soldier up. He's a fellow
01:42:02soldier. And so Caesar reluctantly at first, but you know, he kind of allows himself to be persuaded
01:42:09by Decimus. And it's funny, you know, I mean, whenever Caesar goes anywhere in Rome, the crowds,
01:42:14the throngs, people are saying Caesar, kiss my baby, or can you, you know, cancel my debt,
01:42:21blah, blah, blah. But, and this is again, well attested. This happens in Shakespeare's play,
01:42:27but you know, apparently he had a client, like a friend of his whose house he had stayed at in Asia
01:42:33once. And the young man, the son of the house was in Rome studying philosophy and probably was
01:42:44connected with the other Brutus, Marcus Brutus, who was one of the ringleaders of the assassination.
01:42:48And this kid, I forget what his name is, comes up to Caesar and like, Caesar knows him and he passes
01:42:57a letter to Caesar. He says, Caesar, you have to read this urgently. Caesar's probably being
01:43:02carried on a litter, but he gets the letter to Caesar. And apparently Caesar has this in his hand
01:43:07and plans to read it, but this would have been,
01:43:10basically the guy was trying to tell him about the plot. That was very much
01:43:16in action that day. Underway. That was underway that he was walking right into.
01:43:21So Brutus went to try and encourage Caesar to leave the home to sort of question his agency and
01:43:27sovereignty and belief in himself, to remind him of what he'd done in the past in an attempt to get
01:43:32him out of the house so that he could be carried through, so that he could arrive at the place for
01:43:37the assassination. Well put. Yeah. So that was the Senate meeting that they ended up doing the deed
01:43:45at, murdering him in the Senate. And the two Brutuses, the one that he was with dinner with the
01:43:53night before was the guy who got him to come. The guy that's in his will. Incredible. And so yeah,
01:44:03he gets to the Senate house. Once again, the omens are bad. You know, as you always sacrifice and do
01:44:10some whatever you do before going into the Senate to kind of inaugurate the meeting. Consuls usually
01:44:16do this. I think Caesar's consul that year. Omens are bad, but he goes in anyway. And he's in the
01:44:27Senate house. And it's his throne as dictator is right under the statue of Pompey the Great.
01:44:39Because the place that they're actually meeting is not the old Senate house, which burned down
01:44:45a couple of years earlier. It's this new complex that Pompey built with the spoils of his war in
01:44:51the East. And it's like a little basement, not basement, it's like a room off the complex that
01:44:58Pompey built for the Senate to meet in. In the forum? So it's outside the pomerium. It's in
01:45:03the Campus Martius now. So it's, I forget what that part of Rome is called. But basically,
01:45:11it was an area that wasn't very built up. So you could plant this massive stone complex with
01:45:16multiple buildings pretty easily in this unclaimed land. So he had to actually walk from the forum.
01:45:23It was probably a 20-minute walk. But that is where the Senate is now officially meeting.
01:45:30And of course, there was a statue of Pompey as conqueror in this prominent place in the
01:45:37Senate house. And it's in front of the statue of Pompey the Great that the petitioners come up,
01:45:42or that the assassins come up, pretending to have some urgent business. Please, my brother
01:45:49is in exile. Caesar, can you get him pardoned? No, this is not the time. Please, Caesar. And Brutus
01:45:55comes up, and Decimus comes up, the other Brutus and Cassius comes up. Caesar, this is a worthy
01:46:01friend of yours. We beg you, please, you must spare... And then that's when they have him
01:46:07distracted. They grab his robe. And at some point before he actually gets stabbed, they're grabbing
01:46:13him. He's like, what's going on here? This is violence. And that's, I think, when he realizes,
01:46:18at least when the first blow struck, every man that's surrounding him. It's 15 or 20 guys,
01:46:25probably. There were more people in on the plot, but some are holding the doors, keeping the
01:46:31perimeter to make sure. But yeah. And then they did the deed. And you know, after they kill him,
01:46:44after they stab him, there is that moment. That is in Plutarch, where he turns to Brutus,
01:46:52the more famous one. And this is, remember, he's the son of Caesar's top girlfriend.
01:47:01Servilia. And he had a relationship with this kid. He was looking out for his career.
01:47:07He was promoting him. The kid fought on Pompey's side in the Civil War for some family reasons,
01:47:12but he spared him. So many of these men, he's spared. And some of them are his trusted
01:47:19long-term loyalists. It's not just former enemies that were spared, that were resentful. It's former
01:47:26loyalists. And he says to Brutus, "You too, child. Kaisuteknon. Et tu, Brute?" as Shakespeare says.
01:47:37And then he bleeds out. Who knows how long it takes. But amazingly, the Senate clears out
01:47:47pandemonium. I mean, to kill Julius Caesar. This is a horrifying idea because it really
01:47:57threatens to plunge the Republic back into Civil War again. He's the lid holding it all down. This
01:48:02is why Cicero told him that he needs to have a bodyguard, because so much is at stake. If you
01:48:07get killed now, we're all screwed. That's what Cicero was saying 18 months earlier. And he was
01:48:14very much correct. But the Senate House clears out and he's just there alone on the floor. And nobody
01:48:24wants to approach him and draw close because they're afraid that one of the assassins will see them.
01:48:31Nobody knows what is the potential risk of me tending to Caesar's body. And so he just lies
01:48:39there for hours. And then eventually some of Caesar's slaves go in there. They can only find
01:48:47three men. It takes four men to hold a litter. They can only find three guys to carry Caesar's body
01:48:54back to his house. And it starts to rain on their way back. And the streets are lined. People see
01:49:01his arm hanging out. He's brought back to Calpurnia. So it still gets me. I think that
01:49:11you could say a lot about Caesar, but I do think that he managed to identify his own success,
01:49:24his own legacy with what he saw as the flourishing of Rome. It wasn't just about his own glory. Or it
01:49:33was, but to the extent that he felt like he was the man most responsible for whether the state
01:49:40survived and flourished. But that's not how his enemy saw it, was it?
01:49:49What convinced them that you needed to go?
01:49:53Well, they saw that after the Civil War, Caesar was unquestionably
01:50:03not just the first among equals, not just the first man in Rome, but like something was changing.
01:50:11Caesar had fought all of his career to end corruption and the stranglehold of the
01:50:20establishment oligarchy over offices. I mean, there was incredible wealth inequality.
01:50:25And there's this kind of like tight click of people that control everything. And they get to
01:50:32abuse the provincials at will. The typical way that you rise up in Rome is by winning elections
01:50:40and then going out and being governor. And usually it's very expensive to get elected.
01:50:47And then you have to go into debt and you recoup your money by robbing the Greeks or
01:50:53the Gauls or the Spaniards and taking bribes and stuff. It's a system that highly incentivizes
01:50:59corruption. And Caesar wanted to change that, among other things. And I think he eventually decided
01:51:11that this whole game that we've been playing at Rome for 450 years since the Republic was founded,
01:51:20since they drove out the kings. You've got to remember, the Romans have been inoculated
01:51:24against kings much in the same way we are as Americans. America was founded by us rejecting
01:51:29King George III. The Republic was founded by driving out Tarquin the Proud, who was this brutal,
01:51:38you know, corrupt tyrant in their eyes. And then it was a collective government. You have elections
01:51:44for office, you know, you have assemblies to vote on laws and all this stuff. That's what
01:51:49the Republic is to them. That's what Rome is to them. And this is also the game that people like
01:51:57Decimus Brutus, his friend Brutus, the other Brutus, Cassius, basically everybody in the
01:52:05Republic, everybody in the leadership classes had been playing, had been expecting to play for their
01:52:11whole lives. Which is, no, this is how you get honor. You get honor by service to the Republic,
01:52:17you get honor by winning elections, you get honor by winning wars. But now,
01:52:21Caesar is basically trying to kind of transition the political system into
01:52:31something resembling a monarchy. He doesn't want to call it a king, a kingship. He doesn't want
01:52:37to call himself king. But he's really deliberately taking all the authority into himself because I
01:52:44think he sees that his legacy depends on. If he releases power, he's kind of a control freak,
01:52:53you might say. If he lets go, then it's all going to kind of dissolve again. That people are going to
01:52:59undo his legislation and they're going to go back to revert to the way that things were. And this is
01:53:06one of the reasons why he just feels like he has to hold on to power. But what it puts him in this
01:53:12uncomfortable position for is every honor in the past used to be given by the Roman people.
01:53:26You used to have supreme responsibility as a consul. If you're going to command Rome's armies,
01:53:31you are the guy who wins the victory. If you win the consulship, it's because the people of Rome
01:53:38elected you consul, and so on and so on. Honor is granted by the state. And now it seems clear,
01:53:47Caesar's been handing out offices basically. He's been picking the consuls, he's been picking the
01:53:52praetors, he's been drafting the laws and getting the senate to rubber stamp them. All the honor
01:54:00flows from this one man. And how is that not slavery in the eyes of a proud Roman? The most
01:54:09Aristotle talked about, the most difficult thing that a politician has to do, their most important
01:54:15duty of a statesman is to correctly, wisely distribute honors. Because this is, for a guy
01:54:23like Caesar and for a guy like Decimus, for any of these super Chad Roman statesman aspirants,
01:54:33the prize that you're playing for is not wealth, at least it shouldn't be. It's not pleasure. It's
01:54:43not like fame as such, or status as such, it's honor. That's what Aristotle would say, that the
01:54:49highest form of the statesman, the great-souled man, is one who desires great things, considers
01:54:58himself worthy of them, and is correct in that judgment. And that means being worthy of great
01:55:08things. But what are the greatest things to desire? This is a question that's perplexed philosophers.
01:55:13- What is a good life? - What is a good life? What is worthy of desire?
01:55:17What does it mean to be worthy of something? And Aristotle says the highest thing that you
01:55:25can desire of external goods is honor. - The price that you would be paid for a ransom note.
01:55:32- Yeah, yeah, essentially. And you can desire virtue, you can desire inner peace, you can desire
01:55:40wholeness, you can desire wisdom, but those are all internal goods. But of the things that you can
01:55:47kind of strive for, it's honor. And so this is the highest prize that an ambitious man could like,
01:55:57you know, make a career on. Pursue virtue, you need to be virtuous to be really worthy of honor,
01:56:04et cetera. And you know, for a great-souled man, even honor is maybe a small prize because, like,
01:56:13honor can be corrupted, right? Corrupt people get voted honors all the time. So I don't think that's
01:56:21a problem Caesar had solved. He's a brilliant, brilliant statesman, legislator, politician,
01:56:25brilliant with people, but like to get a whole political class of ambitious young men. I mean,
01:56:34all the guys that kill them are like late 30s, early 40s. They're like in their prime
01:56:39and they still got a lot of gas left and they're seeing the whole game has been just screwed. Like
01:56:47I was raised to want honor and honor is what the people of Rome give you. And now I'm supposed to
01:56:56do all of this stuff that I was going to do, command armies, you know, pass laws. I'm going
01:57:04to all do it as Caesar's employee, right? Never a boss, never a patron, always a client. I think
01:57:13that was intolerable. It was like a meaning crisis for them. But the situation that they did put
01:57:17themselves into is that for the rest of time, they would be seen as an assassin. Yeah. I mean,
01:57:22I guess maybe it's preferable to be a powerful assassin than a peaceful subordinate maybe in
01:57:31Roman times, or at least in their version of this philosophy. Yeah. You know, it was an interesting
01:57:38blend to think that it would be better to be mutinous and a rebel against somebody that was
01:57:46a great leader, but may have pushed the power too far compared with being a part of an existing
01:57:56structure that had sort of raised Rome up to be a really great empire. Yeah. At the very least,
01:58:02they saw more meaning in that path than the other path at the time. There was more self-determination.
01:58:08Yeah. Which is super important. They had a lot more agency. I mean, it's very understandable.
01:58:13Dante still puts them in the ninth circle of hell, betraying a friend. Fuck. Yeah. Alex,
01:58:23you absolutely rule, dude. This has been so much fun. So great. And there's, you know,
01:58:29literally 2,000 years of history that we could go through. Before we close, I got you a little gift.
01:58:34Oh, thank you. You know, I don't know how much of a Roman empire fan you are, Chris, but I'm trying
01:58:41to make you one. Okay. So this is a coin that I got from Kinser Coins, which I recommend. It's
01:58:49Hadrian. You're a Northern Brit, right? Yep. I've been to Hadrian's Wall many a time. I figured.
01:58:56I figured. And you know, if you look at this, he's got a nice little beard. I mean, I see a little
01:59:02resemblance there as a matter of fact. It says on there Hadrianus Augustus, Hadrian Augustus.
01:59:11And, um. Dude, this is so cool. It says COS on the other side. That means console. So it was
01:59:17minted when he was a console. And is that, are those stars? I think they're stars. On the,
01:59:23what would be the bottom? The, yeah, this is a. What is on the back? That someone stood in a toga?
01:59:30Yeah. I think that this is Roma. Who's Roma? Like she's the, the goddess that embodies,
01:59:40like the divine tutelary goddess of Rome. I can't believe you got me there. Yeah. Dude,
01:59:44that is so fucking cool. Hadrian is, is the last, um, emperor that Plutarch lived under. He was,
01:59:51um, so he's kind of special to me. Not to be emulated in everything, you know, Hadrian had a,
01:59:57you know, he did, he did a lot of things Greek style, but he was a great, he was a great fan of
02:00:02the Greeks, the patron of the Greeks. So, um. This is so good. Thank you so much. This honestly is,
02:00:08I could have sat and listened to you for the rest of the month. Uh, where should people go?
02:00:13You've got so much stuff going on. Yeah. Cost of glory podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts,
02:00:19um, Spotify. I'm on YouTube too. We're trying to make more videos to the audio content and you can
02:00:25go to costofglory.com and I'm, I do other stuff beside the podcast. You have retreats and stuff,
02:00:30right? Yeah. Yeah. We run retreats, um, in Greece and Rome. Do men go and reenact? Is this lapping?
02:00:35Are they reenacting? We haven't, we haven't done a LARP battle yet. Uh, we've gotten some demand
02:00:41from that and we've got really tapping into the, uh, men think about the Roman empire once every
02:00:4530 minutes thing. Yeah. We're trying to crank that up. That's not enough. I want to get it up to every
02:00:4915. Never enough. Yeah. Can you ever forget it? Oh man. This is so good. Dude. Today's been unreal.
02:00:55I appreciate you. I can't wait to have you back on. Yeah. Anytime.

Key Takeaway

Roman history serves as a 'monumental' source for achievement when individuals seek resonance with the greats, illustrated by Julius Caesar's transition from a weeping questor inspired by Alexander the Great to a world-conquering dictator who prioritized loyalty and calculated risk.

Highlights

Julius Caesar achieved the rank of questor and the civic crown—Rome's equivalent of the Medal of Honor—by his early 30s.

Caesar's lineage claimed descent from the King Ancus Marcius on his mother's side and the goddess Venus on his father's side.

During a ransom negotiation with pirates, Caesar demanded they double his price to 50 talents because the original 20 talents insulted his status.

As a young man, Caesar defied the dictator Sulla's order to divorce his wife Cornelia, choosing to flee Rome and risk execution instead.

Caesar's legendary speed allowed him to conquer Gaul over an eight-year period from 58 BC to 52 BC.

The Roman state faced a massive supply crisis during the civil war, forcing soldiers to bake and eat cakes made of weeds to avoid surrender.

Caesar was assassinated on the Ides of March in 44 BC by a group of approximately 20 conspirators, including his trusted lieutenant Decimus Brutus.

Timeline

The Monumental Approach to History

  • History functions as a tool for quickening and enlivening the present self rather than just a collection of facts.
  • Plutarch's 'monumental' method focuses on finding examples of greatness that represent a person's highest potential.
  • The ancient world possessed a deep sense of tradition, with late antiquity figures like Plutarch studying heroes from 700 years prior.

Nietzsche argues that history can either drain life through over-intellectualization or empower it through inspiration. The monumental approach seeks resonance with past achievers to uncover one's true identity. This is exemplified by Julius Caesar's reaction to a statue of Alexander the Great, where he recognized a gap between his own achievements and his destiny.

Caesar's Early Career and the Statue of Alexander

  • Caesar wept in front of a statue of Alexander the Great while serving as a questor in Spain.
  • A sense of urgency stems from comparing one's current output to the world-conquering feats others achieved by the same age.
  • Romans valued emotional restraint, making Caesar's public display of grief a significant turning point in his self-conception.

While touring a temple in Spain, Caesar realized Alexander had conquered the known world by age 33, whereas Caesar had only managed a standard political career. This realization caused a painful internal shift, focusing his ambition on achieving renown worthy of his lineage. This moment illustrates how historical figures serve as mirrors for personal ambition and capability.

The Political Divide and Defiance of Sulla

  • Roman politics consisted of two primary poles: the oligarchic Optimates and the merit-based Populists.
  • Caesar maintained strong Populist ties through his uncle Gaius Marius and his marriage to the daughter of the consul Cinna.
  • At age 18, Caesar refused the dictator Sulla's command to divorce his wife, a move that established his lifelong reputation for loyalty.

Caesar grew up in the Subura, a seedy district of Rome, despite his high-born ancestry. When Sulla won the civil war and initiated the proscriptions—a bloody purge of enemies—he demanded young aristocrats prove loyalty through divorce. While others complied, Caesar chose the life of a fugitive in the mountains, eventually bribing his captors and securing a pardon through influential relatives.

Pirate Captivity and the Price of Honor

  • Caesar mocked his pirate captors by writing speeches for them and promising to return and execute them.
  • The Greek concept of 'Tima' or honor was a quantifiable value represented by a ransom price.
  • After his release, Caesar personally raised a fleet to capture and crucify his former captors as a matter of principle.

Captured by pirates in his early 20s, Caesar displayed extreme confidence by insisting his ransom be increased. He spent his captivity treating the pirates as subordinates, reading poetry to them and dismissing them as illiterate when they failed to appreciate it. Fulfilling his earlier threats, he later captured the pirates and granted them the 'mercy' of slitting their throats before crucifixion to shorten their agony.

Winning the Loyalty of the Legions

  • Caesar cultivated a public image as an anti-establishment figure by prosecuting corrupt governors in his 20s.
  • Extreme soldier loyalty was forged by Caesar fighting on the front lines and remembering thousands of centurions by name.
  • Soldiers demonstrated devotion by choosing death or starvation over the shame of surrendering Caesar's cause.

Caesar used his personal style and legal battles to draw attention and frame himself as a champion of justice against the fat, slow oligarchy. He shared the hardships of his men, eating rancid oil when they did and sleeping on the ground. This created a culture of 'beastly' endurance, where soldiers would rather eat tree bark than betray their commander.

The Triumvirate and the Fall of Pompey

  • The First Triumvirate was a strategic alliance between Caesar, the wealthy Crassus, and the general Pompey the Great.
  • Caesar brokered the deal by promising to pass stalled legislation for both men in exchange for support of his consulship.
  • The death of Caesar's daughter Julia, who was married to Pompey, severed the final personal link between the two rivals.

Caesar acted as the political broker between Crassus and Pompey, two men who mutually loathed each other but had complementary needs. After Caesar conquered Gaul, the balance of power shifted. The establishment Optimates eventually courted Pompey to serve as their shield against Caesar, leading to a global civil war that spanned Spain, Greece, Egypt, and North Africa.

Crossing the Rubicon and the Egyptian Campaign

  • Crossing the Rubicon River with a single legion signaled an irreversible declaration of war against the Senate.
  • Egypt was the richest territory in the Mediterranean due to the fertile Nile, mineral mines, and gold resources.
  • Cleopatra secured Caesar's support by smuggling herself into his palace inside a rolled-up mattress.

Caesar's decision to cross the Rubicon was a high-risk gamble predicated on his speed and the Senate's lack of preparation. After defeating Pompey at Pharsalus, Caesar followed him to Egypt, where he was presented with Pompey's severed head. Caesar subsequently intervened in the Egyptian civil war, backing Cleopatra over her brother Ptolemy XIII and fathering a son named Caesarion.

The Last Night and the Ides of March

  • Caesar dismissed all assassination warnings, stating that he preferred a sudden, swift death over a long life under a bodyguard.
  • On his final night, Caesar sat at dinner with Decimus Brutus, one of his primary assassins and a beneficiary in his will.
  • The conspirators' primary motivation was the restoration of their own political agency and honor, which had been eclipsed by Caesar's near-monarchic power.

During his last dinner, Caesar spent his time signing 'vale' (farewell) on letters while debating the best way to die. The next morning, despite bad omens and his wife's pleas, Decimus Brutus persuaded him to attend the Senate. Caesar was stabbed to death at the base of a statue of his former rival, Pompey, leaving his body alone for hours before three slaves carried him home in the rain.

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