"Page0049" - читать интересную книгу автора (Bloom Howard - The Lucifer Principle (htm))11 11 11 o f a number of wives.23 And like Effie, Livia was mated to the dominant male in the pack. Specifically, Livia had managed to inveigle into matrimony a man named Augustus Caesar--the leader who had grabbed the reins of Rome from his rivals and stabilized the Empire in a time of turbulence. In the process, Augustus had become the most powerful man the world had ever known. Gorillas manage to keep a whole gaggle of wives trailing behind them simultaneously. Augustus didn't have that privilege. The law forced him to possess his official mates one at a time. Livia was Augustus' third wife. She had won him when she was a tender seventeen. Well, maybe not so tender. According to Graves, the teenage beauty had grown contemptuous of a previous husband because the unlucky gentleman believed in such outlandish principles as liberty for Rome's citizens. Livia had no patience with these notions. She was convinced that all power should be centered in the hands of one man--preferably a man under her direct control. So she had divorced her soft idealist and sought out a harder husband whose possibilities were more in line with her own aspirations. At the time, Augustus was married to someone else. In fact, he'd had a number of children by the woman at his side. And he seemed reasonably pleased with his old wife's ways. But that didn't stop the ambitious young Livia. She managed to tarnish the reputation of the existing spouse and to drive additional wedges between the unfortunate lady and her husband. Then she inserted herself into the gap, making her presence the only logical consolation for Augustus' distress over his wife's disgrace. Livia quickly consolidated her hold over Augustus. Soon, he would not make a major decision without her. Like Effie the gorilla, Livia had struggled to become the first lady in the band. And like Effie, Livia was ambitious for more than just herself. She was ambitious for her children. Rome had been run in the past by a democratic Senate. But Augustus was shifting power into the hands of a one-man emperorship. Livia wanted the newly established imperial throne to go to her own brood. 11 11 11 o f a number of wives.23 And like Effie, Livia was mated to the dominant male in the pack. Specifically, Livia had managed to inveigle into matrimony a man named Augustus Caesar--the leader who had grabbed the reins of Rome from his rivals and stabilized the Empire in a time of turbulence. In the process, Augustus had become the most powerful man the world had ever known. Gorillas manage to keep a whole gaggle of wives trailing behind them simultaneously. Augustus didn't have that privilege. The law forced him to possess his official mates one at a time. Livia was Augustus' third wife. She had won him when she was a tender seventeen. Well, maybe not so tender. According to Graves, the teenage beauty had grown contemptuous of a previous husband because the unlucky gentleman believed in such outlandish principles as liberty for Rome's citizens. Livia had no patience with these notions. She was convinced that all power should be centered in the hands of one man--preferably a man under her direct control. So she had divorced her soft idealist and sought out a harder husband whose possibilities were more in line with her own aspirations. At the time, Augustus was married to someone else. In fact, he'd had a number of children by the woman at his side. And he seemed reasonably pleased with his old wife's ways. But that didn't stop the ambitious young Livia. She managed to tarnish the reputation of the existing spouse and to drive additional wedges between the unfortunate lady and her husband. Then she inserted herself into the gap, making her presence the only logical consolation for Augustus' distress over his wife's disgrace. Livia quickly consolidated her hold over Augustus. Soon, he would not make a major decision without her. Like Effie the gorilla, Livia had struggled to become the first lady in the band. And like Effie, Livia was ambitious for more than just herself. She was ambitious for her children. Rome had been run in the past by a democratic Senate. But Augustus was shifting power into the hands of a one-man emperorship. Livia wanted the newly established imperial throne to go to her own brood. |
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