He squared off against Caesar and was friends with young
Brutus. He advised the legendary Pompey on his somewhat botched
transition from military hero to politician. He lambasted Mark
Antony and was master of the smear campaign, as feared for his wit
as he was for exposing his opponents? sexual peccadilloes.
Brilliant, voluble, cranky, a genius of political manipulation but
also a true patriot and idealist, Cicero was Rome?s most feared
politician, one of the greatest lawyers and statesmen of all times.
Machiavelli, Queen Elizabeth, John Adams and Winston Churchill all
studied his example. No man has loomed larger in the political
history of mankind.
In this dynamic and engaging biography, Anthony Everitt
plunges us into the fascinating, scandal-ridden world of ancient
Rome in its most glorious heyday. Accessible to us through his
legendary speeches but also through an unrivaled collection of
unguarded letters to his close friend Atticus, Cicero comes to life
in these pages as a witty and cunning political operator.
Cicero leapt onto the public stage at twenty-six, came of age
during Spartacus? famous revolt of the gladiators and presided over
Roman law and politics for almost half a century. He foiled the
legendary Catiline conspiracy, advised Pompey, the victorious
general who brought the Middle East under Roman rule, and fought to
mobilize the Senate against Caesar. He witnessed the conquest of
Gaul, the civil war that followed and Caesar?s dictatorship and
assassination. Cicero was a legendary defender of freedom and a
model, later, to French and American revolutionaries who saw
themselves as following in his footsteps in their resistance to
tyranny.
Anthony Everitt?s biography paints a caustic picture of Roman
politics?where Senators were endlessly filibustering legislation,
walking out, rigging the calendar and exposing one another?s sexual
escapades, real or imagined, to discredit their opponents. This was
a time before slander and libel laws, and the stories?about dubious
pardons, campaign finance scandals, widespread corruption, buying
and rigging votes, wife-swapping, and so on?make the Lewinsky
affair and the U.S. Congress seem chaste.
Cicero was a wily political operator. As a lawyer, he knew no
equal. Boastful, often incapable of making up his mind, emotional
enough to wander through the woods weeping when his beloved
daughter died in childbirth, he emerges in these pages as intensely
human, yet he was also the most eloquent and astute witness to the
last days of Republican Rome.
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