Imperial Purple

audiobook

Imperial Purple

by Edgar Saltus

EN·~2 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

IMPERIAL PURPLE

0:01
2

By - EDGAR SALTUS

0:01
3

CONTENTS

0:00
4

I. THAT WOMAN

14:24
5

II. CONJECTURAL ROME

14:04
6

III. FABULOUS FIELDS

10:37
7

IV. THE PURSUIT OF THE IMPOSSIBLE

19:32
8

V. NERO

25:06
9

VI. THE HOUSE OF FLAVIA

23:26
10

VII. THE POISON IN THE PURPLE

21:20

Description

When the streets of Rome erupted with the heralds’ cries announcing Caesar’s triumph, the city stood at a crossroads between a crumbling republic and an emerging empire. The narrative opens on that tumultuous moment, painting a portrait of a leader whose magnetic charm and audacious confidence turned him into a legend even as the Senate trembled. Through vivid scenes of public adulation and whispered intrigue, listeners are drawn into the fevered atmosphere that surrounded his ascent.

Beyond the battlefield, the story delves into the paradoxes that defined Caesar: a brilliant strategist who could command legions with a single glance, yet a man whose personal excesses and relentless ambition sparked both devotion and dread. His relationships, his daring exploits against pirates, and his uncanny ability to blend poetry with conquest reveal a figure who reshaped Rome’s destiny while remaining undeniably human. The first act sets the stage for a complex saga of power, charisma, and the fragile line between hero and tyrant.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~2 hours (155K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Robert Rowe, Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. HTML version by Al Haines.

Release date

2003-07-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Edgar Saltus

Edgar Saltus

1855–1921

Known for his polished style and taste for the decadent and unconventional, this American writer moved easily between novels, biographies, essays, and sharp reflections on philosophy. His work often blended elegance, wit, and a fascination with skepticism and world-weary ideas.

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