The Student's Companion to Latin Authors. Thomas Ross Mills

The Student's Companion to Latin Authors - Thomas Ross Mills


Скачать книгу
uno volumine et continenti scriptura expositum, divisit in septem libros.’

      Books i. and ii. contained the mythical origin of Rome and Carthage, Aeneas’ flight from Troy and his sojourn at the court of Dido in Carthage. In Book iii. the history of the First Punic War commenced. The work was imitated by Ennius and Virgil, sometimes closely by the latter. Cf. Servius on Aen. i. 198–207, ‘O socii,’ etc. ‘Et totus hic locus de Naevio belli Punici libro translatus est.’ Ibid. i. 273, ‘Naevius et Ennius Aeneae ex filia nepotem Romulum conditorem urbis tradunt.’

      Macrob. Saturn. vi. 2, 31, ‘In principio Aeneidos tempestas describitur et Venus apud Iovem queritur. … Hic locus totus sumptus a Naevio est ex primo libro belli Punici.’

       Table of Contents

      (1) LIFE.

      Plautus’ full name, T. Maccius Plautus, was discovered by Ritschl in the Ambrosian (Milan) palimpsest, which gives, e.g. after the two plays named: ‘T. Macci Plauti Casina explicit’: ‘Macci Plauti Epidicus explicit.’ In Plaut. Merc. l. 6, the MS. reading Mactici was emended by Ritschl to Macci Titi; and in Asin. prol. l. 11, Maccius is the right reading. The MSS. read Maccus, which Bücheler (Rhein. Mus. 41, 12) takes to mean ‘buffoon,’ or ‘writer of comedies,’ from which Plautus took his family name, Maccius, on becoming a Roman citizen. ‘M. Accius,’ formerly supposed to be the name, is found in no MS., but ‘Accius’ is found in Epitome Festi, p. 239, which gives us the poet’s birthplace, Sarsina in Umbria, and suggests another derivation for his name: ‘Ploti appellantur, qui sunt planis pedibus, unde et poeta Accius, quia Umber Sarsinas erat, a pedum planitie initio Plotus, postea Plautus est dictus.’

      In the corresponding passage of Festus, we have only ‘… us poeta, quia Umber,’ etc. The name of the poet is lost, and the epitomizer has doubtless made a mistake.

      Sarsina is mentioned once by Plautus, Mostell. 770,

      ‘Quid? Sarsinatis ecquast, si Umbram non habes?’

      The year of his birth can only be conjectured; he died B.C. 184.

      Cic. Brut. 60, ‘Plautus P. Claudio L. Porcio coss. mortuus est.’

      Jerome erroneously assigns Plautus’ death to yr. Abr. 1817 = B.C. 200, ‘Plautus ex Umbria Sarsinas Romae moritur, qui propter annonae difficultatem ad molas manuarias pistori se locaverat; ibi quotiens ab opere vacaret, scribere fabulas et vendere sollicitius consueverat.’

      From this notice, and from the passage of Gellius below, we learn that Plautus lost in foreign trade the money he had made as an assistant to scenic artists, and had to work for his living in a flour mill at Rome, during which time he wrote plays, and continued to do so afterwards.

      Gell. iii. 3, 14, ‘Saturionem et Addictum et tertiam quamdam, cuius nunc mihi nomen non subpetit, in pistrino eum scripsisse, Varro et plerique alii memoriae tradiderunt cum, pecunia omni, quam in operis artificum scaenicorum pepererat, in mercatibus perdita inops Romam redisset et ob quaerendum victum ad circumagendas molas, quae “trusatiles” appellantur, operam pistori locasset.’

      Plautus is said to have written his own epitaph.

      Gell. i. 24, 3, ‘Epigramma Plauti, quod dubitassemus an Plauti foret, nisi a M. Varrone positum esset in libro de poetis primo:

      “Postquam est mortem aptus Plautus, Comoedia luget,

       Scaena est deserta, ac dein Risus, Ludus Iocusque,

       et Numeri innumeri simul omnes conlacrimarunt.” ’

      (2) WORKS.

      Plautus’ plays were early criticized as to their genuineness. Gell. iii. 3, 1–3, after mentioning the canons of Aelius Stilo, Sedigitus, etc., says that Varro admitted twenty-one plays which were given by all the canons, and added some more. ‘Nam praeter illas unam et viginti, quae Varronianae vocantur, quas idcirco a ceteris segregavit, quoniam dubiosae non erant, set consensu omnium Plauti esse censebantur, quasdam item alias probavit adductus filo atque facetia sermonis Plauto congruentis easque iam nominibus aliorum occupatas Plauto vindicavit.’

      About one hundred and thirty plays were current under the name of Plautus; the theory of Varro (Gell. iii. 3, 10) that these were written by a certain Plautius is improbable.

      Gell. iii. 3, 11, ‘Feruntur sub Plauti nomine comoediae circiter centum atque triginta.’

      There is little doubt that the ‘fabulae Varronianae’ are those which have come down to us with the addition of the Vidularia, which was lost between the sixth and the eleventh centuries. The number of Varro’s second class, consisting of those pieces that stood in most of the indices and exhibited Plautine features, Ritschl has fixed at nineteen, from citations in Varro de lingua Latina. Besides the genuine plays the names of thirty-two others are known.

      The extant plays[6] are as follows:

      1. Amphitruo, a tragicomoedia, the only play of Plautus of the kind. Prol. 59,

      ‘Faciam ut conmixta sit haec tragicomoedia.’

      The original and the date are unknown. The play shows the features of the Sicilian Rhinthonica.[7] About three hundred lines have been lost after Act. iv., Scene 2. The scene is Thebes, which, with Roman carelessness or ignorance, is made a harbour; cf. ll. 629 sqq.

      2. Asinaria (sc. fabula), from the ᾽Οναγός of Demophilus, supposed to have been a writer of the New Comedy. Prol. 10–12,

      ‘Huic nomen Graece Onagost fabulae;

       Demophilus scripsit, Maccius vortit barbare.

       Asinariam volt esse, si per vos licet.’

      Authorities assign the play to about B.C. 194. The scene is Athens.

      3. Aulularia (from aulula, ‘a little pot.’)—Neither the original nor the exact time of composition is known. From Megadorus’ tirade against the luxury of women, ll. 478 sqq., it has been inferred that the play was written after the repeal of the Oppian Law in B.C. 195. The end of the play is lost. The scene is Athens.

      4. Captivi, a piece without active interest (stataria), without female characters, and claiming a moral purpose; l. 1029,

      ‘Spectatores, ad pudicos mores facta haec fabulast.’

      Some authorities think that the parasite (Ergasilus) is an addition to the original play, which may have belonged to the New Comedy. The scene is in Aetolia.

      5. Curculio, so called from the name of the parasite. The Greek original is unknown; but ll. 462–86 contain a speech from the Choragus, in the style of the παράβασις of the Old Comedy. In l. 509,

      ‘Rogitationes


Скачать книгу