I have been reading books about ancient
Rome recently.
Julius Caesar was a soldier and a politician
in ancient Rome. But he was also an incredible writer. We can buy his works,
“Commentaii de Bello Gallico” and “Commentarii de Bello Civili”, in book
stores. His works have not lost their commercial value for two thousand years.
Of course you can buy Japanese versions in Japan. He must be one of the most
outstanding writers in history.
According to a book I read, he was a late
bloomer as a soldier and as a politician. He started his historical career when
he was over forty years old. During his twenties and thirties he was just a
famous playboy. And apparently he wrote some scripts for the stage. He loved
the theater.
“And you too, Brutus?”
He was
assassinated when he was fifty-five years old. At that time his love letters
and scripts were published and people could read them. But his achievements as
a soldier and a politician took precedence.
His heir was Augustus, the first emperor of
Rome. He deified Julius because his accomplishments were so great. Augustus
banned the publication of Julius’s love letters and scripts because they would
have compromised his deification since they were inappropriate. Unfortunately,
Augustus lived a long life. His was a long and stable administration. The
subsequent emperors maintained his stance towards the scripts. Regrettably, the
scripts written by Julius Caesar have been lost.
The lost scripts could be more interesting
than “Julius Caesar” which was written by William Shakespeare who was younger
than Julius Caesar by one thousand six hundred years. I want to read the
scripts. I want to perform the scripts! Don’t you?
Unfortunately for Julius Caesar the
playwright, he was too great as a soldier and as a politician.
My dear friends, theatrical people! If you are
a theatrical person, you shouldn’t be a soldier or a politician. You will
definitely achieve great things like Julius Caesar. Then somebody will
eliminate your achievements as a theatrical person.
Picture by Ceakus
No comments:
Post a Comment