FIND JD AT: https://jdswritersblog.wordpress.com/
The DAY Family from Paterson, NJ and Related Families. (THIS Tree Is A Working In Progress)
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What is the history behind the term: Crossing the Rubicon?
So what is the history behind the term: Crossing the Rubicon?

Crossing the Rubicon is used to describe a passing of a figurative restricted boundary in a given situation.

The term comes for the popular General Julius Caesar in 49 BC. Roman law forbade any general to crossing the Rubicon River which separated Rome from the province of Gaul where Caesar was a popular Governor to enter Italy proper with a standing army. To do so was treason.
When he crossed the Rubicon, Caesar said, “The die is cast,” another historical term meaning there is no return. Both crossing the Rubicon and the die is cast would become sayings in later centuries depicting that now you couldn’t go back. This action by Caesar sparked a three-year civil war which left Julius Caesar the ruler of Rome.
Sites to read:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crossing_the_Rubicon
https://education.nationalgeographic.org/resource/caesar-crosses-rubico
Repost: Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to Storytellers, Wordsmiths and everyone!
| Painted by J.D. Holiday (JD AMENTA) |
Writers show readers characters and pictures that keep them and us ‘safe and sometimes warm’ from our only realties.
We are lucky today where stories are brought to life by writers and illustrators and visionaries in the many different ways there are to entertain us. But first, some idea is thought and it usually starts with a writer.
So it really doesn’t matter why they write, it’s just a good thing they do!
So, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year to all everywhere!
Copyright 12-7-08 by J.D. Holiday. All rights reserved.
MY books which I wrote and illustrated under J.D. Holiday.
My books are no longer available.
Simple Things book trailer
My site. Thank you for your interest!
A TRIBUTE TO EDWARD DAY ~ ENGINE 28, LADDER 11 NYC FIRE DEPARTMENT LOST IN THE WTC DISASTER OF 911
Warm Humor, Frozen Shoes Edward Day did not just extinguish fires. He extinguished grouchiness. At Engine Company 28 and Ladder 11 on the Lower East Side, where Mr. Day, 45, was a firefighter, he kept a sharp eye out for grumpy colleagues. They got the Day treatment: smiley face stickers slapped on their helmets. Whenever he stayed at his mother's house in Newport, R.I., he would make the bed when he was ready to leave and then drop a dollar on it with a note, "For the maid." His mother liked to give what she called the last Christmas party of the year, held well into January. Mr. Day had a ritual at the parties: he collected all the bottle caps from exhausted beer bottles and deposited them throughout the house in her plants. His wife, Bridgitte, was a fervent Clint Eastwood fan, so he would sign his cards to her, "Clint Eastwood." "He was always ready to make you laugh," said Tim Day, his brother, "whether he knew you for 20 years or 20 minutes." The first time Eddy Day met Tim's wife, Essie, he asked if she wanted a glass of wine. Sure, she said. He brought it out and handed it to her. "Excuse me," he said, and bent over and slipped off her shoes. As she watched, mystified, he marched into the kitchen and put them in the freezer. Profile published in THE NEW YORK TIMES on October 13, 2001.
