Weekday funny: Caesar on the unicorn, and Roosevelt on the moose
By Julius Caesar (with Gordon Rugg)
First, the bad news: This is Caesar writing on the subject of the unicorn, rather than Caesar riding on a unicorn.
XXVI.–There is an ox of the shape of a stag, between whose ears a horn rises from the middle of the forehead, higher and straighter than those horns which are known to us. From the top of this, branches, like palms, stretch out a considerable distance. The shape of the female and of the male is the same; the appearance and the size of the horns is the same.
(From De Bello Gallico.)
Quite what he was describing, if anything, is anyone’s guess.
What with that and his stories about elk hunting, you start to wonder how much trust you can put in his accounts of subduing the Gauls…
http://hydeandrugg.wordpress.com/2014/05/02/friday-funny-elk-hunting-101/
So that was Caesar on the unicorn. Not quite as exciting as you might have hoped.
By way of consolation, here’s Theodore Roosevelt on the moose. As far as I know, it’s real, not Photoshopped; it presumably relates to his connection with the Bull Moose Party, in American politics.
I hope this image lives up to your wildest expectations, and brightens your day.
http://www.pinterest.com/pin/356347389235275615/
Notes
The Caesar quote is from Caesar, C.J. De Bello Gallico. Project Gutenberg; Everyman’s Library version, 1915 edition, translated by W.A. MacDevitt.
I’ve corrected one minor typo in the original.
I’m using the Roosevelt photo under “fair use” terms, since it’s being used here non-commercially, and is a low-resolution copy of an image that has already been widely circulated on the Internet.


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