The Roman Way
C**G
The Roman "Say"
I never studied Latin formally and my orientation to the Roman classics comes down to a 101 World Lit survey course in college that galloped through the antiquities faster than you can say "Virgil." It was time to fill in some gaps and I was pleased to see that Edith Hamilton, whose books were the wallpaper of school units on mythology in my baby boomer public schooling, had also written this book. I'd forgotten what a bright, unmannered voice she brings to the table, how lucidly she orders her information and how she can make it matter.For Hamilton, the Romans moved into the center of western culture, usurping the Greeks' place, from the 2nd century BC to the 2nd AD. In The Roman Way she looks at the exemplary writers and forms who have had a lasting impact on western culture, and she never wavers from the view that understanding the Romans is key to making sense of modern public and private life. Her purpose is to palpate the Romans themselves--their values and social systems--believing the best way to understand them is through their writing. She helpfully compares and contrasts Roman romanticism with Greek classicism throughout the book. Obviously, in an introductory text like this, not every writer can have his due; those to whom she pays the most attention are Plautus, Terence, Cicero, Horace, Catallus, Juvenal, Virgil and Seneca. Through them, she reveals the Caesars, the Claudii, the Stoics, the art, the bloody warfare, the greed, the corruption, gender relations, class structure, the political intrigues and paradoxes, and the empire's demise.Is this a complete concordance to the Roman canon? No. A comprehensive history? No. It's about getting a feel for who the Romans were and what mattered to them in their own words and why they continue to matter. It is a compelling overview made lively by Hamilton who does not look upon her topic as dead but rather quite vital.
C**R
Read It Again
I was first exposed to this classic in high school, but, of course, lacked the experience and maturity to appreciate it. I am glad I was exposed to it anyway because I was indeed impressed by it and remembered it in spite of my immaturity. I picked it up again and re-read it and was delighted. Hamilton is a voice from another time, a time not just of ancient Romans but a time when educated people in the modern West were really educated in what really matters and will always matter: the best that has been written and thought about the drama of human life throughout the ages. With that classic outlook, the reader cannot but help to recapture some of the balance, insight, sensitivity, and maturity that are the best fruits of a classical education. Now, more than ever, we need the classic restraint and equanimity that comes from the best of classical civilization. Reading Hamilton is a great tonic for a society increasingly fragmenting into more and more lunatic and decadent dead ends. The classics mature our personalities--and we need that in a time when egotism and undisciplined emotionalism are so rampant.
P**A
Recommended to anyone interested in Roman literature
In order to support her position on the Roman mind, Ms. Hamilton offers a lucid explanation of realism, romanticism and the virtue of Stoicism. Thanks to her ability to express such topics in writing, she does a wonderful job in presenting the perspectives held in the ancient Rome.The Roman Way is an exquisitely well-written book that I recommend to anyone interested in Roman literature.The above is an excerpt from the book review published by www.SportsInAntuiquity.com. For the full review, access www.SportsInAntuiquity.com and scroll down to the essay "Sports? What Frivolity! Part 2". Note that the book review was written from a sports and entertainment perspective.
S**S
Marvelous book
This book and The Greek Way are both great. I wish Edith Hamilton had been around in the days of video so we'd have lectures and talks from this remarkable person.
N**J
Stunningly perceptive
I can’t believe I never heard of her before, as this really gives you an intimate feel for the Romans and Greeks — the underpinning for our national cultural craziness... it’s all happened before.Mike Duncan’s podcasts the History of Rome turned me on to this. I urge you to drink this in.
P**E
A Roman Synthesis
Coupled with its sister volume 'The Greek Way' these overviews have been most enlightening.They should be on the course for all who wish to understand the nature of the western minid and outlook.These are seminal works should not be allowed to languish on the top shelves of Librariesbut should be the subject-matter of tutorials, or study groups!
P**N
School book
Not exactly a page turner but it was for school so what choice do we have. We buy the books they tell us to and then we pretend to be interested in them..lol
J**Y
Five Stars
VERY SATISFIED WITH BOOK AND SERVICE. THANK YOU
J**N
More about their world of ideas, than daily life
Just be warned that this focuses more about the writers, and reference to the times they lived in, but a love for it's source material shines through.I had hoped to learn about daily life and what it was like to live in the various kinds of Roman family. Some of it is in there.A good companion to The History Of Rome podcast that reccomended it to me.
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