<div>Oh, the abuses of art....<BR><BR>'Three and a half centuries after Euripides' death the Roman<BR>multimillionaire Crassus led a Roman army into Syria, was defeated by <BR>the Parthians, and killed. When the messenger arrived at the Parthian <BR>capital with his head, the court was watching a Greek company perform the <BR>Bacchae. They had reached the scene in which Pentheus' mother Agave, still in<BR>Dionysiac frenzy, comes on stage carrying her son's severed head. The <BR>head of Crassus was thrown on the floor; Jason, the actor playing Agave,<BR>substituted it for the prop he had been carrying and resumed the<BR>performance, singing the famous aria "I bring from the mountain, this <BR>bough fresh-cut…." The audience went wild.'<BR><BR>Bernard Knox<BR><BR>For those of you who don't know Marcus Licinius Crassus was at the time <BR>the richest man in (late) Republican Rome. He had defeated Spartacus and <BR>was one of the members of the First Triumvirate along
with Julius Caesar <BR>and Pompey. The death of Crassus changed the balance of power among the <BR>three competitors for political power in Rome and made it impossible for <BR>Caesar and Pompey to maintain a political alliance.<BR><BR>Is there a moral in all this? Probably not.<BR><BR>Jerry<BR>***************************************************************************</div> <div> </div> <div>The Parthians were dope smokers. Let the rich republicans be wary. :P</div> <div> </div> <div>Avenge Spartacus!</div> <div>Mike B)</div><BR><BR>Read "Penguins in Bondage":<br>http://happystiletto.blogspot.com/<p> 
        
        
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