It
has been a long time since I last saw my Mother’s face; I miss her more every
day. It has been nine years, or so they say, since we began this campaign. We
have won many battles, conquered new lands, and seen more people that I ever
thought lived in this world. Maybe the world is getting to the point of being
filled, I do not know. A wise man told me in a city we passed through in Asia Minor
that when Heaven and Hell fill up, that is when Earth will be empty. I do not
think that is quite right, I believe in the Mother Goddess, like that rest of
my village; but some of these people that we have met spit on me and say that I
am cursed with the God’s wrath. But I do not believe in Gods, nor these few who
say that we were not created by something that is not human. I may not believe
in the Gods, but our leader, Alexander, is said to be a half-god. I can almost believe
it; we have done so much in so little time! He leads from the front and shows
no fear, while the rest of us, some shaking with terror, hang back as he charges
forward. That is to be truly great, to have something to believe in, as he
does, and act on it, and to make it work. I am grateful to be here, in this
army, serving the greatest man of our time, but I would still rather be back home.
Maybe soon I will be able to go, maybe.
Anton
the Younger of Macedonia
In this part I break the
narrative.
Alexander
was a planner, a thinker, a warrior, a tyrant, a believer, a leader, and a
worthy historical figure to study. In the past, others have deserved the title
“Great”, and they were mostly military geniuses and leaders. Like, Hitler,
Frederick, and Attila. (Hitler was the Fuhrer of Germany, Frederick was King of
Prussia (And no, not Russia, big difference.), and Attila was from Mongolia, he
lead the “Huns”) Anyway, as we can see, all of these men have ‘ruled’ at one
point or another in their lives. Maybe it is because he was ‘in the know’,
because all of these men were already famous in some way. But then they did
something, they stopped being that guy in jail, or the next in line for the
throne, or some destroyer of villages, somewhere along the way they were recognized
to have this ‘greatness’. They had something they believed in, whether it was
gaining power, wealth, land, for their religion, it does not matter, they had
something that they could chase after. For many it was the gain of land that
made them ascend to ‘the know’, Alexander, Attila, Hitler, Fredrick, they all
pushed new boundaries and strived for more through war. And in war they were successful
(to a certain extent), and that is from where they got most of their power. I
will continue to use Fredrick as an example; he ruled Prussia alone, he
banished his father’s council from the court, and the assembly, he ruled
without advisers After that, due to an unhappy forced marriage of him to an
Austrian approved bride, the young King declared war on Austria. (You can tell
he was not exactly happy to be forced into marriage by another country that had
no business in Prussia) (And I would like to point out that Austrian approved
brides seem to cause trouble for most monarchs, like Marie Antoinette, Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Bevern, and Maria Louisa.) The
King of Prussia took Silesia as a warning to the Austrians, to say, “This is
what we are capable of, now stay out of our business!” When Austria waged war
on Prussia, with allies Hungary, Britain, and Russia, Prussia now fought on a defensive
line instead of an offensive. Soon France turned on Prussia and joined the
fight as Britain left and went back to its home country. Many battles were won
and Prussia stayed intact. This was due to Fredrick the Great’s work with his
soldiers. (He was nicknamed, ‘Old Fritz’ by the military) As for time changing
the opinion of Frederick, yes, some people in Germany after world war two
would not speak his name. It was because Hitler’s role model was the King of
Prussia, Old Fritz. After time progressed, the monument of Frederick (Which had
been taken down after WWII) was returned to its rightful place in Berlin.
Works Cited
McGill, Sarah Ann. “Alexander the Great”. Alexander The Great (2009): 1-5. History Reference Center. Web. 17 Sept. 2013
Carteledge, Paul. “Alexandria the Great” History Today 59.10 (2009): 20-26. History Reference Center. Web. 18 Sept. 2013
Reynolds, Clark. "Alexander the Great." Great lives from History: The Ancient world, Prehistory-476 c.e... Cristina A. Salowy, 19 Sepember 2013. Web. 19 Sep 2013.
Mercer, Charles. Alexander the Great. 1st ed. . New York: Harper & Row, 1962. Print.
Watkins, Thayer. N.p.. Web. 24 Sep 2013.
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ReplyDeleteI like how you really embraced what you thought life in Alexandra was like. You really thought how a citizen there would have thought. There is also such detail in describing your life in Alexandria.
ReplyDeleteI really liked the emotion that you put into it. it makes the blog a-lot more interesting to read, and not as boring.
ReplyDeleteI really liked the emotion that you put into it. it makes the blog a-lot more interesting to read, and not as boring.
ReplyDelete