Monday, February 13, 2023

 

Presidential Reading

Theodore Roosevelt, letter to Nicholas Murray Butler (November 4, 1903):
You remember speaking to me about reading and especially about the kind of books one ought to read. On my way back from Oyster Bay on Election day I tried to jot down the books I have been reading for the past two years, and they run as follows.

[....]

Parts of Herodotus; the first and seventh books of Thucydides; all of Polybius; a little of Plutarch; Aeschylus' Orestean Trilogy; Sophocles' Seven against Thebes; Euripides' Hippolytus and Bacchae; and Aristophanes' Frogs. Parts of the Politics of Aristotle; (all of these were in translation); Ridgeway's Early Age of Greece; Wheeler's Life of Alexander; some six volumes of Mahaffy's Studies of the Greek World — of which I only read chapters here and there...
The list goes on and on. Of course Sophocles didn't write Seven Against Thebes (Aeschylus did), but nevertheless the list is impressive.



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