The Emperor's Club
29.971
Is everything okay, sir?|- Fine. Thank you.
Here. Let me, uh--|- That's not necessary, sir.
As I've gotten older, I realize|I'm certain of only two things.
Days that begin with rowing on a lake|are better than days that do not.
Second,|a man 's character is his fate.
And, as a student of history,,|I find this hard to refute.
For most of us, our stories can|be written long before we die.
There are exceptions among|the great men of history,...
but they are rare,|and I am not one of them.
I am a teacher... simply that.
I taught for 34 years.
One day I stopped teaching.
Those were the facts|ofmy life's chronicle.
The last chapter had been written.|My book was closed.
Hello?
Hello. Hello?
Mr. Hundert?|- Yes. Hello.
Can you hear me, sir?|- I can.
Hello. Mr. Bell wanted to make sure|you were comfortable.
I'm quite comfortable.|Thank you. And-And, please,...
thank Mr. Bell|for the beautiful fruit basket.
It's quite... comprehensive.|Yes, sir.
Mr. Bell also wanted me|to tell you he's added an event...
on the morning|following the competition...
a breakfast in your honor.
Mr. Hundert?|- Yes... Yes.
Th-Thank you.|Thank you.
The others will be heading down|to the bar in 20 minutes, sir.
Uh, very well.|Twenty minutes.
In the bar.|I'll be there.
I couldn't tell you exactly|why I had agreed to come.
I'm not sure I knew.|It had something to do with hope.
The young men that were|gathering here were among...
the most successful and influential|of their generation.
But I knew them|before any of that.
I knew them as my students...
at Saint Benedict's|School for Boys.
ooking closer, under the bishop's miter,|are the words, "Non sibi'"...
or "Not for oneself."
This embodies ourphilosophy|at Saint Benedict's.
The wisdom gained here|should be used for others...
as well as for oneself.
And finally,|"Finis origine pendet."
These three words are emblazoned|across your hearts...
under the great seal|of Saint Benedict's.
It is our academy's motto.|Simply:
"The end depends upon|the beginning."
The end...
depends upon the beginning.
Hey, Greg.|How are you doin'?
Hi, Mr. Hundert.|Mr. Ericks.
Ex-Excuse me.|Huh? What me?
Yes, sir. What is your name?|- Uh, Louis.
Just Louis?|- Louis Masoudi, sir.
Mr. Masoudi, could you define|the word "path" for me?
Well, there are several|definitions, I suppose.
Would "a route along which someone|or something moves" be among them?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah. No. Yeah.|I'm sorry, sir.
Follow the path, Mr. Masoudi. Walk|where the great men before you have walked.
Yes, sir. It's, uh...|It's better for the grass.
It's better for you.
Mr. Hundert.|Mr. Ellerby.
I wanted to thank you.|- For what?
Mr. Woodbridge let slip that you were|instrumental in my procuring this job.
Bene exeat, sir.|Bene meritus.
It's always good to have|another friend of the classics.
I'll tell you,|the way he talks about you...
"Just listen to Mr. Hundert.|He'll be running the place one day."
Your name, sir?|- Robert Brewster, sir.
Very good. And you?|- Deepak Mehta, sir.
And your name?|Eugene Field, sir.
Field. And you?|Martin Blythe, sir?
Is that a question?|- Uh, no, sir.
Uh, my name|is Martin Blythe, sir.
Very good.|You all know your own names.
Question is, do I?
Mister... Blythe.|- Me, sir?
Yes, you.|Not Mr. Field to your right...
or Mr. Grey to your left|or Mr. Diebel behind you.
You, sir. Will you do me a favor|and walk to the back of this classroom...
and read for us the plaque which|you see hanging over that door?
"I am Sh-Shu--"'
"I am Sh-Shutruk-Nahhunte"?|- Very good. A little louder, please.
Yes, sir. "I am Shutruk-Nahhunte,|King of Ansham and Susa,...
"sovereign of the land of Elam.
I destroyed Sippar and took the|'stel-ah' of... "Stele."
"Took the stele of Naram-Sin|and brought it back to Elam,
"where I erect edit as|an offering to my god.
Shutruk-Nahhunte, 1158 B.C."
Well done, Mr. Blythe.|Thank you. You may be seated.
"Shutruk-Nahhunte."|Is anyone familiar with this fellow?
Texts are permissible.
But you won't find it there.
Shutruk-Nahhunte! King!
Sovereign of the land of Elam!|Destroyer of Sippar!
Behold, his accomplishments cannot be|found in any history book. Why?
Because great ambition|and conquest...
without contribution...
is without significance.
What will your contribution be?
How will history remember you?
Shutruk-Nahhunte...|utterly forgotten.
Unlike the great men you see|around you... Aristotle,...
Caesar,...
Augustus,...
Plato, Cicero, Socrates...
giants of history,|men of profound character.
Men whose accomplishments|surpassed their own lifetime...
and survive|even into our own.
Their story,...
is our story.
My name is Mr. Hundert.
Welcome|to Western Civilization:
The Greeks and the Romans.
Welcome|to Saint Benedict's!
Lights out in five minutes,|gentlemen.
It's awfully loud, Mr.Jones.|Please turn it down.
Did you... Her titties are so...|After that, though...
No. After that, I was walking|back to get my books.
And I was walking along the grass,|and Hundert comes up to me and says,
"Mr. Masoudi" and I turned around but I took care ofit.|- Yeah, I know. Yeah.
And then, he's like,|"Follow the path, Mr. Masoudi.
Walkwhere the great men|before you have walked."
Very,good, Mr. Masoudi.|- I was just lettin' him know. That's why I was tellin' him.
To bed.
Yeah. Right.|See you tomorrow.
Lights out in five minutes,|gentlemen.
Just why am I...|Huh? No. I'm going.
Goodnight, Mr. Bllythe.|Yeah. Good night. Good night.
Jesus Christ.|I am such an a**hole.
Carthaginians.
Yes, sir.
Hamilcar Barca seems like|an outstanding commander.
Yes, who had the misfortune|of being on the losingside.
You do realize that|Hamilcar Barca is not part|of the course reading list?
Yes, sir.
Very good.
Lights out.
9:
00, gentlemen.Good night.
Hi.
Hello.|- Oh, hi.
Welcome back.
It's great to see you!|You too. How are you?
I'm fine.|You sure you're all right?
Ye-Yeah.
What did you think of Athens?|- Oh. I loved it.
I knew you would.|Tony hated it, but you know the British.
"Too many Greeks."
Tony's Tony.|Here.
I told the man in the store|I wanted something...
for a very serious scholar|of antiquity.
The Parthenon.
It's smaller than I remember it.
I don't have one of these.|Thank you.
I found it in the agora.
Tony couldn't understand why I wanted to|go there. It's a little touristy now,...
but I kept hearing|your voice in my head.
And I kept seeing it exactly|the way you described it,
with Socrates teaching|right in front ofme.
And... there was Tony, falling|asleep from the heat and ouzo,...
and me eating|my shish kabob.
I thought about you a lot.
I wished you were there.|- It would've been a little odd though...
with you and me and Socrates...
and your sleeping husband.
Yeah. A little.
And with the monarchy's demise,|two new systems...
of government... the first,|ruled by the few, known as?
Mr. Brewster.|Uh, tyranny?
In spirit, perhaps,|but etymologically, no.
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"The Emperor's Club" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 22 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/the_emperor's_club_20144>.
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