HBO. Its not TV... its HBO.
SERIES | MOVIES | SPORTS | DOCUMENTARIES | HBO FILMS | SCHEDULE | ON DEMAND | SHOP HBO | GET HBO
Rome: Home
Full Schedule
Home

About the Show

Episode Guide

Cast and Crew

Community

News

Downloads

Behind the Scenes

HBO Mobile

Shop Rome

PREVIOUS Previous Next NEXT
Episode   "These Being the Words of Marcus Tullius Cicero"
Summary   Rome Watch   Watch the Video   Bulletin Boards
The Consul is a Whore
Inside the Episode
With Jonathan Stamp


Cicero, eh? Brave man for a coward.

He finally got it together to stick it to Antony, even if he wasn't quite able to deliver his brilliantly eloquent attack in person.

Cicero really hated Antony, I mean really hated him. In the letters we still have written after the assassination of Caesar there is one theme that keeps returning. Brutus and Cassius made a mistake in not getting rid of Antony when they had the chance.

In reality Cicero ran away. He sailed from Italy on July 17th, from the port of Pompeii, some four months after Caesar's death. He was headed for Greece where he could see how things developed and stay out of harm's way.

But the gods conspired against him, specifically the weather gods. Terrible, unseasonable storms struck in the Straits of Messina off Sicily and he had to turn back. And once back in Italy, he decided that he wasn't going to run any more.

He returned to Rome and wrote a series of speeches aimed against Antony. He called them the Philippics. This was after a Greek orator called Demosthenes who wrote a series of fabulously insulting speeches directed against Philip of Macedon, the father of Alexander the Great. They were all warnings against the threat of tyranny posed by the Kingdom of Macedon. Of course no one listened and within a decade Alexander had overrun the whole of Greece.

Cicero fared better, although he was to pay a high price, (watch Episode Six for that one). His invective did wake Rome up to Antony's excesses and no wonder, it's great stuff.

The gibes in last night's episode are all taken directly from the second of the speeches, the so-called Second Philippic. Here's another example that we didn't include:

"Let's consider your behavior from boyhood onwards...a bankrupt before you came of age, you then graduated to man's clothing, except it wasn't the toga virilis that you put on, but a woman's dress. Your first civic job? As a public prostitute, with a fixed price. Not cheap either. But then your Sugar Daddy intervened and took you off the market: a promotion you could call it. He made a sound, steady married woman of you".

Now that's the kind of stuff we should be looking out for in the next presidential campaign.


Documentarian and historian Jonathan Stamp is a former Executive Producer in the BBC History Department and acted as Consultant and Co-Producer on Rome.

Summary - Select a Page:
Season 1 Episodes
Season 2 Episodes
13 Passover

14 Son of Hades

15 These Being the Words of Marcus Tullius Cicero

16 Testudo et Lepus (The Tortoise and the Hare)

17 Heroes of the Republic

18 Philippi

19 Death Mask

20 A Necessary Fiction

21 Deus Impeditio Esuritori Nullus

22 De Patre Vostro

Inside Rome
Rome newsletter
Sign up now to get insider information, and exclusive emails about Rome.
Store
Rome Logo Tee
An HBO SHOP(SM) exclusive features a soft cotton construction with the Rome logo across the front.
Rome Fact

If a slave was called upon to give evidence in a Roman court, by law he had to be tortured first.
HBO INFO       JOBS AT HBO       CONTACT US      TAKE CONTROL      SITE INDEX      SCHEDULE PDF      REGISTER/SIGN IN
> Privacy Policy   > Terms of Use
© Home Box Office, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This website is intended for viewing solely in the United States. This website may contain adult content.