Tiki Tom
My Mail is Forwarded Here
- Messages
- 3,398
- Location
- Oahu, North Polynesia
By day I’m your typical golden era daydreamer: I often wear suits and a trench coat or a fedora, I listen to big bands and jazz, I like to watch old movies, and I love period architecture and art deco. But, by night, I’m very interested in the history of Ancient Greece & Rome. I have a book stand by my night table and even I am surprised by what’s on it: Thucydides, Lucretius, Homer, Herodotus. Also modern histories about the Ancient World. I just read “Sailing the Wine Dark Sea” by Thomas Cahill and, before that, “Confronting the Classics” by Mary Beard. There are a half dozen similar titles, all mass-market histories and analysis for the layman. I loved Steven Pressfield’s “Gates of Fire”, a fictionalized account of the battle of Thermopylae.
I’m trying to figure out what it is about the western civ ancients that so interests me. My mind keeps going back to the book “Full Circle” by Ferdinand Mount. The back of the book has the following blurb: “So much about the society that is now emerging in the twenty-first century bears an astonishing resemblance to the most prominent features of what we call the classical world - its institutions, its priorities, its entertainment, its physics, its sexual morality, its food, its politics, even its religion. The ways in which we live our rich and varied lives correspond - almost eerily so - to the ways in which the Greeks and Romans lived theirs.” The book makes a pretty good argument that you and I have more in common with the ancient Romans than we do with the peoples who lived in the 1,500 years between us and them. Maybe that is what fascinates me. Reading today’s newspapers, I see a lot of things that, it seems, could have happened in the ancient world. Then of course, there is the whole collapse of the classical world and the “dark ages” that followed. Does history repeat itself? or at least, rhyme? Do we have much to learn from the ancient Greeks and Romans? Or are they the tired old white men who need to be shunned because they get in the way of our appreciating the modern, diverse world? Are Latin and Ancient Greek truly dead, or can they yet enrich our lives? (Yes, I have a copy of “Learn Ancient Greek” by Peter Jones at my bedside too. Have only got a few chapters into it, but it is great fun.)
Anyway, just thought I’d reach out to see if there are any other way-far-retro people out there. If so, what attracts you to the ancients? Any special sub-sets that you are into? Any favorite old Latin/Greek quotes that you use to baffle your coworkers and friends? “Come home either with your shield, or on it.”
I’m trying to figure out what it is about the western civ ancients that so interests me. My mind keeps going back to the book “Full Circle” by Ferdinand Mount. The back of the book has the following blurb: “So much about the society that is now emerging in the twenty-first century bears an astonishing resemblance to the most prominent features of what we call the classical world - its institutions, its priorities, its entertainment, its physics, its sexual morality, its food, its politics, even its religion. The ways in which we live our rich and varied lives correspond - almost eerily so - to the ways in which the Greeks and Romans lived theirs.” The book makes a pretty good argument that you and I have more in common with the ancient Romans than we do with the peoples who lived in the 1,500 years between us and them. Maybe that is what fascinates me. Reading today’s newspapers, I see a lot of things that, it seems, could have happened in the ancient world. Then of course, there is the whole collapse of the classical world and the “dark ages” that followed. Does history repeat itself? or at least, rhyme? Do we have much to learn from the ancient Greeks and Romans? Or are they the tired old white men who need to be shunned because they get in the way of our appreciating the modern, diverse world? Are Latin and Ancient Greek truly dead, or can they yet enrich our lives? (Yes, I have a copy of “Learn Ancient Greek” by Peter Jones at my bedside too. Have only got a few chapters into it, but it is great fun.)
Anyway, just thought I’d reach out to see if there are any other way-far-retro people out there. If so, what attracts you to the ancients? Any special sub-sets that you are into? Any favorite old Latin/Greek quotes that you use to baffle your coworkers and friends? “Come home either with your shield, or on it.”