LETTERS GAIUS PLINIUS CAECILIUS SECUNDUS
I
— To SEPTITTUSYOU
have frequently pressed me to make a select collection of my
Letters
(if there really be any deserving of a special preference) and give
them to the public. I have selected them accordingly; not, indeed,
in
their proper order of time, for I was not compiling a history; but
just as each came to hand. And now I have only to wish that you may
have no reason to repent of your advice, nor I of my compliance: in
that case, I may probably enquire after the rest, which at present
be
neglected, and preserve those I shall hereafter write.
Farewell.II
— To ARRIANUSI
FORESEE your journey in my direction is likely to be delayed, and
therefore send you the speech which I promised in my former;
requesting you, as usual, to revise and correct it. I desire this
the
more earnestly as I never, I think, wrote with the same empressment
in any of my former speeches; for I have endeavoured to imitate
your
old favourite Demosthenes and Calvus, who is lately become mine, at
least in the rhetorical forms of the speech; for to catch their
sublime spirit, is given, alone, to the "inspired few." My
subject, indeed, seemed naturally to lend itself to this (may I
venture to call it?) emulation; consisting, as it did, almost
entirely in a vehement style of address, even to a degree
sufficient
to have awakened me (if only I am capable of being awakened) out of
that indolence in which I have long reposed. I have not however
altogether neglected the flowers of rhetoric of my favourite
Marc-Tully, wherever I could with propriety step out of my direct
road, to enjoy a more flowery path: for it was energy, not
austerity,
at which I aimed. I would not have you imagine by this that I am
bespeaking your indulgence: on the contrary, to make your
correcting
pen more vigorous, I will confess that neither my friends nor
myself
are averse from the publication of this piece, if only you should
join in the approval of what is perhaps my folly. The truth is, as
I
must publish something, I, wish it might be this performance rather
than any other, because it is already finished: (you hear the wish
of
laziness.) At all events, however, something I must publish, and
for
many reasons; chiefly because of the tracts which I have already
sent
in to the world, though they have long since lost all their
recommendation from novelty, are still, I am told, in request; if,
after all, the booksellers are not tickling my ears. And let them;
since, by that innocent deceit, I am encouraged to pursue my
studies.
Farewell.III
— To VOCONIUS ROMANUSDID
YOU ever meet with a more abject and mean-spirited creature than
Marcus Regulus since the death of Domitian, during whose reign his
conduct was no less infamous, though more concealed, than under
Nero's? He began to be afraid I was angry with him, and his
apprehensions were perfectly correct; I was angry. He had not only
done his best to increase the peril of the position in which
Rusticus
Arulenus[1]
stood, but had exulted in his death; insomuch that he actually
recited and published a libel upon his memory, in which he styles
him
"The Stoics' Ape": adding, "stigmated[2]
with the Vitellian scar."[3]
You recognize Regulus' eloquent strain!
[4][5][6]He
fell with such fury upon the character of Herennius Senecio that
Metius Carus said to him, one day, "What business have you with
my dead? Did I ever interfere in the affair of Crassus' or
Camerinus'?" Victims, you know, to Regulus, in Nero's time. For
these reasons he imagined I was highly exasperated, and so at the
recitation of his last piece, I got no invitation. Besides, he had
not forgotten, it seems, with what deadly purpose he had once
attacked me in the Court of the Hundred. Rusticus had desired me to
act as counsel for Arionilla, Titnon's wife: Regulus was engaged
against me. In one part of the case I was strongly insisting upon a
particular judgment given by Metius Modestus, an excellent man, at
that time in banishment by Domitian's order. Now then for Regulus.
"Pray," says he, "what is your opinion of Modestus?"
You see what a risk I should have run had I answered that I had a
high opinion of him, how I should have disgraced myself on the
other
hand if I had replied that I had a bad opinion of him. But some
guardian power, I am persuaded, must have stood by me to assist me
in
this emergency. "I will tell you my opinion," I said, "if
that is a matter to be brought before the court." "I ask
you," he repeated, "what is your opinion of Modestus?"
I replied that it was customary to examine witnesses to the
character
of an accused man, not to the character of one on whom sentence had
already been passed. He pressed me a third time. "I do not now
enquire," said he, "your opinion of Modestus in general, I
only ask your opinion of his loyalty." "Since you will have
my opinion then," I rejoined, "I think it illegal even to
ask a question concerning a person who stands convicted." He sat
down at this, completely silenced; and I received applause and
congratulation on all sides, that without injuring my reputation by
an advantageous, perhaps, though ungenerous answer, I had not
entangled myself in the toils of so insidious a catch-question.
Thoroughly frightened upon this then, he first seizes upon
Caecilius
Celer, next he goes and begs of Fabius Justus, that they would use
their joint interest to bring about a reconciliation between us.
And
lest this should not be sufficient, he sets off to Spurinnz as
well;
to whom he came in the humblest way (for he is the most abject
creature alive, where he has anything to be afraid of) and says to
him, "Do, I entreat of you, call on Pliny to-morrow morning,
certainly in the morning, no later (for I cannot endure this
anxiety
of mind longer), and endeavour by any means in your power to soften
his resentment." I was already up, the next day, when a message
arrived from Spurinna, "I am coming to call on you." I sent
word back, "Nay, I will wait upon you;" however, both of us
setting out to pay this visit, we met under Livia's portico. He
acquainted me with the commission he had received from Regulus, and
interceded for him as became so worthy a man in behalf of one so
totally dissimilar, without greatly pressing the thing. "I will
leave it to you," was my reply, "to consider what answer to
return Regulus; you ought not to be deceived by me. I am waiting
for
Mauricus'[7]
return" (for he had not yet come back out of exile), "so
that I cannot give you any definite answer either way, as I mean to
be guided entirely by his decision, for he ought to be my leader
here, and I simply to do as he says." Well, a few days after
this, Regulus met me as I was at the praetor's; he kept close to me
there and begged a word in private, when he said he was afraid I
deeply resented an expression he had once made use of in his reply
to
Satrius and myself, before the Court of the Hundred, to this
effect,
"Satrius Rufus, who does not endeavour to rival Cicero, and who
is content with the eloquence of our own day." I answered, now I
perceived indeed, upon his own confession, that he had meant it
ill-naturedly; otherwise it might have passed for a compliment.
"For
I am free to own," I said, "that I do endeavour to rival
Cicero, and am not content with the eloquence of our own day. For I
consider it the very height of folly not to copy the best models of
every kind. But, how happens it that you, who have so good a
recollection of what passed upon this occasion, should have
forgotten
that other, when you asked me my opinion of the loyalty of
Modestus?"
Pale as he always is, he turned simply pallid at this, and
stammered
out, "I did not intend to hurt you when I asked this question,
but Modestus." Observe the vindictive cruelty of the fellow, who
made no concealment of his willingness to injure a banished man.
But
the reason he alleged in justification of his conduct is pleasant.
Modestus, he explained, in a letter of his, which was read to
Domitian, had used the following expression, "Regulus, the
biggest rascal that walks upon two feet:" and what Modestus had
written was the simple truth, beyond all manner of controversy.
Here,
about, our conversation came to an end, for I did not wish to
proceed
further, being desirous to keep matters open until Mauricus
returns.
It is no easy matter, I am well aware of that, to destroy Regulus;
he
is rich, and at the head of a party; courted[8]
by many, feared by more: a passion that will sometimes prevail even
beyond friendship itself. But, after all, ties of this sort are not
so strong but they may be loosened; for a bad man's credit is as
shifty as himself. However (to repeat), I am waiting until Mauricus
comes back. He is a man of sound judgment and great sagacity formed
upon long experience, and who, from his observations of the past,
well knows how to judge of the future. I shall talk the matter over
with him, and consider myself justified either in pursuing or
dropping this affair, as he shall advise. Meanwhile I thought I
owed
this account to our mutual friendship, which gives you an undoubted
right to know about not only all my actions but all my plans as
well.
Farewell.IV
— To CORNELIUS TACITUSYou
will laugh (and you are quite welcome) when I tell you that your
old
acquaintance is turned sportsman, and has taken three noble boars.
"What!" you exclaim, "Pliny!"—Even he. However,
I indulged at the same time my beloved inactivity; and, whilst I
sat
at my nets, you would have found me, not with boar spear or
javelin,
but pencil and tablet, by my side. I mused and wrote, being
determined to return, if with all my hands empty, at least with my
memorandums full. Believe me, this way of studying is not to be
despised: it is wonderful how the mind is stirred and quickened
into
activity by brisk bodily exercise. There is something, too, in the
solemnity of the venerable woods with which one is surrounded,
together with that profound silence which is observed on these
occasions, that forcibly disposes the mind to meditation. So for
the
future, let me advise you, whenever you hunt, to take your tablets
along with you, as well as your basket and bottle, for be assured
you
will find Minerva no less fond of traversing the hills than Diana.
Farewell.V
— To POMPEIUS SATURNINUSNOTHING
could be more seasonable than the letter which I received from you,
in which you so earnestly beg me to send you some of my literary
efforts: the very thing I was intending to do. So you have only put
spurs into a willing horse and at once saved yourself the excuse of
refusing the trouble, and me the awkwardness of asking the favour.
Without hesitation then I avail myself of your offer; as you must
now
take the consequence of it without reluctance. But you are not to
expect anything new from a lazy fellow, for I am going to ask you
to
revise again the speech I made to my fellow-townsmen when I
dedicated
the public library to their use. You have already, I remember,
obliged me with some annotations upon this piece, but only in a
general way; and so I now beg of you not only to take a general
view
of the whole speech, but, as you usually do, to go over it in
detail.
When you have corrected it, I shall still be at liberty to publish
or
suppress it: and the delay in the meantime will be attended with
one
of these alternatives; for, while we are deliberating whether it is
fit for publishing, a frequent revision will either make it so, or
convince me that it is not. Though indeed my principal difficulty
respecting the publication of this harangue arises not so much from
the composition as out of the subject itself, which has something
in
it, I am afraid, that will look too like ostentation and
self-conceit. For, be the style ever so plain and unassuming, yet,
as
the occasion necessarily led me to speak not only of the
munificence
of my ancestors, but of my own as well, my modesty will be
seriously
embarrassed. A dangerous and slippery situation this, even when one
is led into it by plea of necessity! For, if mankind are not very
favourable to panegyric, even when bestowed upon others, how much
more difficult is it to reconcile them to it when it is a tribute
which we pay to ourselves or to our ancestors? Virtue, by herself,
is
generally the object of envy, but particularly so when glory and
distinction attend her; and the world is never so little disposed
to
detract from the rectitude of your conduct as when it passes
unobserved and unapplauded. For these reasons, I frequently ask
myself whether I composed this harangue, such as it is, merely from
a
personal consideration, or with a view to the public as well; and I
am sensible that what may be exceedingly useful and proper in the
prosecution of any affair may lose all its grace and fitness the
moment the business is completed: for instance, in the case before
us, what could be more to my purpose than to explain at large the
motives of my intended bounty? For, first, it engaged my mind in
good
and ennobling thoughts; next, it enabled me, by frequent dwelling
upon them, to receive a perfect impression of their loveliness,
while
it guarded at the same time against that repentance which is sure
to
follow on an impulsive act of generosity. There arose also a
further
advantage from this method, as it fixed in me a certain habitual
contempt of money. For, while mankind seem to be universally
governed
by an innate passion to accumulate wealth, the cultivation of a
more
generous affection in my own breast taught me to emancipate myself
from the slavery of so predominant a principle: and I thought that
my
honest intentions would be the more meritorious as they should
appear
to proceed, not from sudden impulse, but from the dictates of cool
and deliberate reflection. I considered, besides, that I was not
engaging myself to exhibit public games or gladiatorial combats,
but
to establish an annual fund for the support and education of young
men of good families but scanty means. The pleasures of the senses
are so far from wanting the oratorical arts to recommend them that
we
stand in need of all the powers of eloquence to moderate and
restrain
rather than stir up their influence. But the work of getting
anybody
to cheerfully undertake the monotony and drudgery of education must
be effected not by pay merely, but by a skilfully worked-up appeal
to
the emotions as well. If physicians find it expedient to use the
most
insinuating address in recommending to their patients a wholesome
though, perhaps, unpleasant regimen, how much more occasion had he
to
exert all the powers of persuasion who, out of regard to the public
welfare, was endeavouring to reconcile it to a most useful though
not
equally popular benefaction? Particularly, as my aim was to
recommend
an institution, calculated solely for the benefit of those who were
parents to men who, at present, had no children; and to persuade
the
greater number to wait patiently until they should be entitled to
an
honour of which a few only could immediately partake. But as at
that
time, when I attempted to explain and enforce the general design
and
benefit of my institution, I considered more the general good of my
countrymen, than any reputation which might result to myself; so I
am
apprehensive lest, if I publish that piece, it may perhaps look as
if
I had a view rather to my own personal credit than the benefit of
others, Besides, I am very sensible how much nobler it is to place
the reward of virtue in the silent approbation of one's own breast
than in the applause of the world. Glory ought to be the
consequence,
not the motive, of our actions; and although it happen not to
attend
the worthy deed, yet it is by no means the less fair for having
missed the applause it deserved. But the world is apt to suspect
that
those who celebrate their own beneficent acts performed them for no
other motive than to have the pleasure of extolling them. Thus, the
splendour of an action which would have been deemed illustrious if
related by another is totally extinguished when it becomes the
subject of one's own applause. Such is the disposition of mankind,
if
they cannot blast the action, they will censure its display; and
whether you do what does not deserve particular notice, or set
forth
yourself what does, either way you incur reproach. In my own case
there is a peculiar circumstance that weighs much with me: this
speech was delivered not before the people, but the Decurii;[9]
not in the forum, but the senate; I am afraid therefore it will
look
inconsistent that I, who, when I delivered it, seemed to avoid
popular applause, should now, by publishing this performance,
appear
to court it: that I, who was so scrupulous as not to admit even
these
persons to be present when I delivered this speech, who were
interested in my benefaction, lest it, might be suspected I was
actuated in this affair by any ambitious views, should now seem to
solicit admiration, by forwardly displaying it to such as have no
other concern in my munificence than the benefit of example. These
are the scruples which have occasioned my delay in giving this
piece
to the public; but I submit them entirely to your judgment, which I
shall ever esteem as a sufficient sanction of my conduct.
Farewell.
VI — To ATRIUS CLEMENS
IF
ever polite literature flourished at Rome, it certainly flourishes
now; and I could give you many eminent instances: I will content
myself, however, with naming only Euphrates[10]
the philosopher. I first became acquainted with this excellent
person
in my youth, when I served in the army in Syria. I had an
opportunity
of conversing with him familiarly, and took some pains to gain his
affection: though that, indeed, was not very difficult, for he is
easy of access, unreserved, and actuated by those social principles
he professes to teach. I should think myself extremely happy if I
had
as fully answered the expectations he, at that time, conceived of
me,
as he exceeds everything I had imagined of him. But, perhaps, I
admire his excellencies more now than I did then, because I know
better how to appreciate them; not that I sufficiently appreciate
them even now. For as none but those who are skilled in painting,
statuary, or the plastic art, can form a right judgment of any
performance in those respective modes of representation, so a man
must, himself, have made great advances in philosophy before he is
capable of forming a just opinion of a philosopher. However, as far
as I am qualified to determine, Euphrates is possessed of so many
shining talents that he cannot fail to attract and impress the most
ordinarily educated observer. He reasons with much force,
acuteness,
and elegance; and frequently rises into all the sublime and
luxuriant
eloquence of Plato. His style is varied and flowing, and at the
same
time so wonderfully captivating that he forces the reluctant
attention of the most unwilling hearer. For the rest, a fine
stature,
a comely aspect, long hair, and a large silver beard; circumstances
which, though they may probably be thought trifling and accidental,
contribute, however, to gain him much reverence. There is no
affected
negligence in his dress and appearance; his countenance is grave
but
not austere; and his approach commands respect without creating
awe.
Distinguished as he is by the perfect blamelessness of his life, he
is no less so by the courtesy and engaging sweetness of his manner.
He attacks vices, not persons, and, without severity, reclaims the
wanderer from the paths of virtue. You follow his exhortations with
rapt attention, hanging, as it were, upon his lips; and even after
the heart is convinced, the ear still wishes to listen to the
harmonious reasoner. His family consists of three children (two of
which are sons), whom he educates with the utmost care. His
father-in-law, Pompeius Julianus, as he greatly distinguished
himself
in every other part of his life, so particularly in this, that
though
he was himself of the highest rank in his province, yet, among many
considerable matches, he preferred Euphrates for his son-in-law, as
first in merit, though not in dignity. But why do I dwell any
longer
upon the virtues of a man whose conversation I am so unfortunate as
not to have time sufficiently to enjoy? Is it to increase my regret
and vexation that I cannot enjoy it? My time is wholly taken up in
the execution of a very honourable, indeed, but equally
troublesome,
employment; in hearing cases, signing petitions, making up
accounts,
and writing a vast amount of the most illiterate literature. I
sometimes complain to Euphrates (for I have leisure at least to
complain) of these unpleasing occupations. He endeavours to console
me, by affirming that, to be engaged in the public service, to hear
and determine cases, to explain the laws, and administer justice,
is
a part, and the noblest part, too, of philosophy; as it is reducing
to practice what her professors teach in speculation. But even his
rhetoric will never be able to convince me that it is better to be
at
this sort of work than to spend whole days in attending his
lectures
and learning his precepts. I cannot therefore but strongly
recommend
it to you, who have the time for it, when next you come to town
(and
you will come, I daresay, so much the sooner for this), to take the
benefit of his elegant and refined instructions. For I do not (as
many do) envy others the happiness I cannot share with them myself:
on the contrary, it is a very sensible pleasure to me when I find
my
friends in possession of an enjoyment from which I have the
misfortune to be excluded. Farewell.VII
— To FABIUS JUSTUSIT
is a long time since I have had a letter from you, "There is
nothing to write about," you say: well then write and let me
know just this, that "there is nothing to write about," or
tell me in the good old style, If you are well that's right, I am
quite well. This will do for me, for it implies everything. You
think
I am joking? Let me assure you I am in sober earnest. Do let me
know
how you are; for I cannot remain ignorant any longer without
growing
exceedingly anxious about you. Farewell.VIII
— To CALESTRIUS TIROI
HAVE suffered the heaviest loss; if that word be sufficiently
strong
to express the misfortune which has deprived me of so excellent a
man. Corellius Rufus is dead; and dead, too, by his own act! A
circumstance of great aggravation to my affliction: as that sort of
death which we cannot impute either to the course of nature, or the
hand of Providence, is, of all others, the most to be lamented. It
affords some consolation in the loss of those friends whom disease
snatches from us that they fall by the general destiny of mankind;
but those who destroy themselves leave us under the inconsolable
reflection, that they had it in their power to have lived longer.
It
is true, Corellius had many inducements to be fond of life; a
blameless conscience, high reputation, and great dignity of
character, besides a daughter, a wife, a grandson, and sisters;
and,
amidst these numerous pledges of happiness, faithful friends.
Still,
it must be owned he had the highest motive (which to a wise man
will
always have the force of destiny), urging him to this resolution.
He
had long been tortured by so tedious and painful a complaint that
even these inducements to living on, considerable as they are, were
over-balanced by the reasons on the other side. In his thirty-third
year (as I have frequently heard him say) he was seized with the
gout
in his feet. This was hereditary; for diseases, as well as
possessions, are sometimes handed down by a sort of inheritance. A
life of sobriety and continence had enabled him to conquer and keep
down the disease while he was still young, latterly as it grew upon
him with advancing years, he had to manfully bear it, suffering
meanwhile the most incredible and undeserved agonies; for the gout
was now not only in his feet, but had spread itself over his whole
body. I remember, in Domitian's reign, paying him a visit at his
villa, near Rome. As soon as I entered his chamber, his servants
went
out: for it was his rule, never to allow them to be in the room
when
any intimate friend was with him; nay, even his own wife, though
she
could have kept any secret, used to go too. Casting his eyes round
the room, "Why," he exclaimed, "do you suppose I
endure life so long under these cruel agonies? It is with the hope
that I may outlive, at least for one day, that villain." Had his
bodily strength been equal to his resolution, he would have carried
his desire into practical effect. God heard and answered his
prayer;
and when he felt that he should now die a free, un-enslaved, Roman,
he broke through those other great, but now less forcible,
attachments to the world. His malady increased; and, as it now grew
too violent to admit of any relief from temperance, he resolutely
determined to put an end to its uninterrupted attacks, by an effort
of heroism. He had refused all sustenance during four days when his
wife Hispulla sent our common friend Geminius to me, with the
melancholy news, that Corellius was resolved to die; and that
neither
her own entreaties nor her daughter's could move him from his
purpose; I was the only person left who could reconcile him to
life.
I ran to his house with the utmost precipitation. As I approached
it,
I met a second messenger from Hispulla, Julius Atticus, who
informed
me there was nothing to be hoped for now, even from me, as he
seemed
more hardened than ever in his purpose. He had said, indeed to his
physician, who pressed him to take some nourishment, "'Tis
resolved": an expression which, as it raised my admiration of
the greatness of his soul, so it does my grief for the loss of him.
I
keep thinking what a friend, what a man, I am deprived of. That he
had reached his sixty-seventh year, an age which even the strongest
seldom exceed, I well know; that he is released from a life of
continual pain; that he has left his dearest friends behind him,
and
(what was dearer to him than all these) the state in a prosperous
condition: all this I know. Still I cannot forbear to lament him,
as
if he had been in the prime and vigour of his days; and I lament
him
(shall I own my weakness?) on my account. And—to confess to you as
I did to Calvisius, in the first transport of my grief—I sadly
fear, now that I am no longer under his eye, I shall not keep so
strict a guard over my conduct. Speak comfort to me then, not that
he
was old, he was infirm; all this I know: but by supplying me with
some reflections that are new and resistless, which I have never
heard, never read, anywhere else. For all that I have heard, and
all
that I have read, occur to me of themselves; but all these are by
far
too weak to support me under so severe an affliction.
Farewell.IX
— To SOCIUS SENECIOTHIs
year has produced a plentiful crop of poets: during the whole month
of April scarcely a day has passed on which we have not been
entertained with the recital of some poem. It is a pleasure to me
to
find that a taste for polite literature still exists, and that men
of
genius do come forward and make themselves known, notwithstanding
the
lazy attendance they got for their pains. The greater part of the
audience sit in the lounging-places, gossip away their time there,
and are perpetually sending to enquire whether the author has made
his entrance yet, whether he has got through the preface, or
whether
he has almost finished the piece. Then at length they saunter in
with
an air of the greatest indifference, nor do they condescend to stay
through the recital, but go out before it is over, some slyly and
stealthily, others again with perfect freedom and unconcern. And
yet
our fathers can remember how Claudius Cæsar walking one day in the
palace, and hearing a great shouting, enquired the cause: and being
informed that Nonianus[11]
was reciting a composition of his, went immediately to the place,
and
agreeably surprised the author with his presence. But now, were one
to bespeak the attendance of the idlest man living, and remind him
of
the appointment ever so often, or ever so long beforehand; either
he
would not come at all, or if he did would grumble about having
"lost
a day!" for no other reason but because he had not lost it. So
much the more do those authors deserve our encouragement and
applause
who have resolution to persevere in their studies, and to read out
their compositions in spite of this apathy or arrogance on the part
of their audience. Myself indeed, I scarcely ever miss being
present
upon any occasion; though, to tell the truth, the authors have
generally been friends of mine, as indeed there are few men of
literary tastes who are not. It is this which has kept me in town
longer than I had intended. I am now, however, at liberty to go
back
into the country, and write something myself; which I do not intend
reciting, lest I should seem rather to have lent than given my
attendance to these recitations of my friends, for in these, as in
all other good offices, the obligation ceases the moment you seem
to
expect a return. Farewell.X
— To JUNSUS MAURICUSYou
desire me to look out a proper husband for your niece: it is with
justice you enjoin me that office. You know the high esteem and
affection I bore that great man her father, and with what noble
instructions he nurtured my youth, and taught me to deserve those
praises he was pleased to bestow upon me. You could not give me,
then, a more important, or more agreeable, commission; nor could I
be
employed in an office of higher honour, than that of choosing a
young
man worthy of being father of the grandchildren of Rusticus
Arulenus;
a choice I should be long in determining, were I not acquainted
with
Minutius Aemilianus, who seems formed for our purpose. He loves me
with all that warmth of affection which is usual between young men
of
equal years (as indeed I have the advance of him but by a very
few),
and reveres me at the same time, with all the deference due to age;
and, in a word, he is no less desirous to model himself by my
instructions than I was by those of yourself and your
brother.He
is a native of Brixia, one of those provinces in Italy which still
retain much of the old modesty, frugal simplicity, and even
rusticity, of manner. He is the son of Minutius Macrinus, whose
humble desires were satisfied with standing at the head of the
equestrian order: for though he was nominated by Vespasian in the
number of those whom that prince dignified with the praetorian
office, yet, with an inflexible greatness of mind, he resolutely
preferred an honourable repose, to the ambitious, shall I call
them,
or exalted, pursuits, in which we public men are engaged. His
grandmother, on the mother's side, is Serrana Procula, of
Patavium:[12]
you are no stranger to the character of its citizens; yet Serrana
is
looked upon, even among these correct people, as an exemplary
instance of strict virtue, Acilius, his uncle, is a man of almost
exceptional gravity, wisdom, and integrity. In short, you will find
nothing throughout his family unworthy of yours. Minutius himself
has
plenty of vivacity, as well as application, together with a most
amiable and becoming modesty. He has already, with considerable
credit, passed through the offices of quaestor, tribune, and
praetor;
so that you will be spared the trouble of soliciting for him those
honourable employments. He has a fine, well-bred, countenance, with
a
ruddy, healthy complexion, while his whole person is elegant and
comely and his mien graceful and senatorian: advantages, I think,
by
no means to be slighted, and which I consider as the proper tribute
to virgin innocence. I think I may add that his father is very
rich.
When I contemplate the character of those who require a husband of
my
choosing, I know it is unnecessary to mention wealth; but when I
reflect upon the prevailing manners of the age, and even the laws
of
Rome, which rank a man according to his possessions, it certainly
claims some regard; and, indeed, in establishments of this nature,
where children and many other circumstances are to be duly weighed,
it is an article that well deserves to be taken into the account.
You
will be inclined, perhaps, to suspect that affection has had too
great a share in the character I have been drawing, and that I have
heightened it beyond the truth: but I will stake all my credit, you
will find everything far beyond what I have represented. I love the
young fellow indeed (as he justly deserves) with all the warmth of
a
most ardent affection; but for that very reason I would not ascribe
more to his merit than I know it will bear. Farewell.XI
— To SEPTITIUS CLARUSAh!
you are a pretty fellow! You make an engagement to come to supper
and
then never appear. Justice shall be exacted;—you shall reimburse me
to the very last penny the expense I went to on your account; no
small sum, let me tell you. I had prepared, you must know, a
lettuce
a-piece, three snails, two eggs, and a barley cake, with some sweet
wine and snow, (the snow most certainly I shall charge to your
account, as a rarity that will not keep.) Olives, beet-root,
gourds,
onions, and a thousand other dainties equally sumptuous. You should
likewise have been entertained either with an interlude, the
rehearsal of a poem, or a piece of music, whichever you preferred;
or
(such was my liberality) with all three. But the oysters,
sows'-bellies, sea-urchins, and dancers from Cadiz of a certain—I
know not who, were, it seems, more to your taste. You shall give
satisfaction, how, shall at present be a secret.Oh!
you have behaved cruelly, grudging your friend,—had almost said
yourself;—and upon second thoughts I do say so;—in this way: for
how agreeably should we have spent the evening, in laughing,
trifling, and literary amusements! You may sup, I confess, at many
places more splendidly; but nowhere with more unconstrained mirth,
simplicity, and freedom: only make the experiment, and if you do
not
ever after excuse yourself to your other friends, to come to me,
always put me off to go to them. Farewell.XII
— To SUETONIUS TRANQUILLUSYou
tell me in your letter that you are extremely alarmed by a dream;
apprehending that it forebodes some ill success to you in the case
you have undertaken to defend; and, therefore, desire that I would
get it adjourned for a few days, or, at least, to the next. This
will
be no easy matter, but I will try:"For
dreams descend from Jove."Meanwhile,
it is very material for you to recollect whether your dreams
generally represent things as they afterwards fall out, or quite
the
reverse. But if I may judge of yours by one that happened to
myself,
this dream that alarms you seems to portend that you will acquit
yourself with great success. I had promised to stand counsel for
Junius Pastor; when I fancied in my sleep that my mother-in-law
came
to me, and, throwing herself at my feet, earnestly entreated me not
to plead. I was at that time a very young man; the case was to be
argued in the four centumviral courts; my adversaries were some of
the most important personages in Rome, and particular favourites of
Cæsar;[13]
any of which circumstances were sufficient, after such an
inauspicious dream, to have discouraged me. Notwithstanding this, I
engaged in the cause, reflecting that,"Without
a sign, his sword the brave man draws,
And asks no omen but his country's cause."[14]for
I looked upon the promise I had given to be as sacred to me as my
country, or, if that were possible, more so. The event happened as
I
wished; and it was that very case which first procured me the
favourable attention of the public, and threw open to me the gates
of
Fame. Consider then whether your dream, like this one I have
related,
may not pre-signify success. But, after all, perhaps you will think
it safer to pursue this cautious maxim: "Never do a thing
concerning the rectitude of which you are in doubt;" if so,
write me word. In the interval, I will consider of some excuse, and
will so plead your cause that you may be able to plead it your self
any day you like best. In this respect, you are in a better
situation
than I was: the court of the centumviri, where I was to plead,
admits
of no adjournment: whereas, in that where your case is to be heard,
though no easy matter to procure one, still, however, it is
possible.
Farewell.XIII
— To ROMANUS FIRMUSAs
you are my towns-man, my school-fellow, and the earliest companion
of
my youth; as there was the strictest friendship between my mother
and
uncle and your father (a happiness which I also enjoyed as far as
the
great inequality of our ages would admit); can I fail (thus biassed
as I am by so many and weighty considerations) to contribute all in
my power to the advancement of your honours? The rank you bear in
our
province, as decurio, is a proof that you are possessed, at least,
of
an hundred thousand sesterces;[15]
but that we may also have the satisfaction of seeing you a Roman
Knight,[16]
I present you with three hundred thousand, in order to make up the
sum requisite to entitle you to that dignity. The long acquaintance
we have had leaves me no room to apprehend you will ever be
forgetful
of this instance of my friendship. And I know your disposition too
well to think it necessary to advise you to enjoy this honour with
the modesty that becomes a person who receives it from me; for the
advanced rank we possess through a friend's kindness is a sort of
sacred trust, in which we have his judgment, as well as our own
character, to maintain, and therefore to be guarded with the
greater
caution. Fared well.XIV
— TO CORNELIUS TACITUSI
HAVE frequent debates with a certain acquaintance of mine, a man of
skill and learning, who admires nothing so much in the eloquence of
the bar as conciseness. I agree with him, that where the case will
admit of this precision, it may with propriety be adopted; but
insist
that, to leave out what is material to be mentioned,—or only
briefly and cursorily to touch upon those points which should be
inculcated, impressed, and urged well home upon the minds of the
audience, is a downright fraud upon one's client. In many cases, to
deal with the subject at greater length adds strength and weight to
our ideas, which frequently produce their impression upon the mind,
as iron does upon solid bodies, rather by repeated strokes than a
single blow. In answer to this, he usually has recourse to
authorities, and produces Lysias[17]
amongst the Grecians, together with Cato and the two Gracchi, among
our own countrymen, many of whose speeches certainly are brief and
curtailed. In return, I name Demosthenes, Aeschines,
Hyperides,[18]
and many others, in opposition to Lysias; while I confront Cato and
the Gracchi with Cæsar, Pollio,[19]
Caelius,[20]
but, above all, Cicero, whose longest speech is generally
considered
his best. Why, no doubt about it, in good compositions, as in
everything else that is valuable, the more there is of them, the
better. You may observe in statues, basso-relievos, pictures, and
the
human form, and even in animals and trees, that nothing is more
graceful than magnitude, if accompanied with proportion. The same
holds true in pleading; and even in books a large volume carries a
certain beauty and authority in its very size. My antagonist, who
is
extremely dexterous at evading an argument, eludes all this, and
much
more, which I usually urge to the same purpose, by insisting that
those very individuals, upon whose works I found my opinion, made
considerable additions to their speeches when they published them.
This I deny; and appeal to the harangues of numberless orators,
particularly to those of Cicero, for Murena and Varenus, in which a
short, bare notification of certain charges is expressed under mere
heads. Whence it appears that many things which he enlarged upon at
the time he delivered those speeches were retrenched when he gave
them to the public. The same excellent orator informs us that,
agreeably to the ancient custom, which allowed only of one counsel
on
a side, Cluentius had no other advocate than himself; and he tells
us
further that he employed four whole days in defence of Cornelius;
by
which it plainly appears that those speeches which, when delivered
at
their full length, had necessarily taken up so much time at the bar
were considerably cut down and pruned when he afterwards compressed
them into a single volume, though, I must confess, indeed, a large
one. But good pleading, it is objected, is one thing, just
composition another. This objection, I am aware, has had some
favourers; nevertheless, I am persuaded (though I may, perhaps, be
mistaken) that, as it is possible you may have a good pleading
which
is not a good speech, so a good speech cannot be a bad pleading;
for
the speech on paper is the model and, as it were, the archetype of
the speech that was delivered. It is for this reason we find, in
many
of the best speeches extant, numberless extemporaneous turns of
expression; and even in those which we are sure were never spoken;
as, for instance, in the following passage from the speech against
Verres: —"A certain mechanic—what's his name? Oh, thank you
for helping me to it: yes, I mean Polyclitus." It follows, then,
that the nearer approach a speaker makes to the rules of just
composition, the more perfect will he be in his art; always
supposing, however, that he has his due share of time allowed him;
for, if he be limited of that article, no blame can justly be fixed
upon the advocate, though much certainly upon the judge. The sense
of
the laws, I am sure, is on my side, which are by no means sparing
of
the orator's time; it is not conciseness, but fulness, a complete
representation of every material circumstance, which they
recommend.
Now conciseness cannot effect this, unless in the most
insignificant
cases. Let me add what experience, that unerring guide, has taught
me: it has frequently been my province to act both as an advocate
and
a judge; and I have often also attended as an assessor.[21]
Upon those occasions, I have ever found the judgments of mankind
are
to be influenced by different modes of application, and that the
slightest circumstances frequently produce the most important
consequences. The dispositions and understandings of men vary to
such
an extent that they seldom agree in their opinions concerning any
one
point in debate before them; or, if they do, it is generally from
different motives. Besides, as every man is naturally partial to
his
own discoveries, when he hears an argument urged which had
previously
occurred to himself, he will be sure to embrace it as extremely
convincing. The orator, therefore, should so adapt himself to his
audience as to throw out something which every one of them, in
turn,
may receive and approve as agreeable to his own particular views. I
recollect, once when Regulus and I were engaged on the same side,
his
remarking to me, "You seem to think it necessary to go into
every single circumstance: whereas I always take aim at once at my
adversary's throat, and there I press him closely." ('Tis true,
he keeps a tight hold of whatever part he has once fixed upon; but
the misfortune is, he is extremely apt to fix upon the wrong
place.)
I replied, it might possibly happen that what he called the throat
was, in reality, the knee or the ankle. As for myself, said I, who
do
not pretend to direct my aim with so much precision, I test every
part, I probe every opening; in short, to use a vulgar proverb, I
leave no stone unturned. And as in agriculture, it is not my
vineyards or my woods only, but my fields as well, that I look
after
and cultivate, and (to carry on the metaphor) as I do not content
myself with sowing those fields simply with corn or white wheat,
but
sprinkle in barley, pulse, and the other kinds of grain; so, in my
pleadings at the bar, I scatter broadcast various arguments like so
many kinds of seed, in order to reap whatever may happen to come
up.
For the disposition of your judges is as hard to fathom as
uncertain,
and as little to be relied on as that of soils and seasons. The
comic
writer Eupolis,[22]
I remember, mentions it in praise of that excellent orator
Pericles,
that"On
his lips Persuasion hung,
And powerful Reason rul'd his tongue:
Thus he alone could boast the art
To charm at once, and pierce the heart."[23]
But could Pericles, without the richest variety of expression, and
merely by the force of the concise or the rapid style, or both (for
they are very different), have thus charmed and pierced the heart.
To
delight and to persuade requires time and great command of
language;
and to leave a sting in the minds of the audience is an effect not
to
be expected from an orator who merely pinks, but from him, and him
only, who thrusts in. Another comic poet,[24]
speaking of the same orator, says:"His
mighty words like Jove's own thunder roll;
Greece hears, and trembles to her inmost soul."But
it is not the close and reserved; it is the copious, the majestic,
and the sublime orator, who thunders, who lightens, who, in short,
bears all before him in a confused whirl. There is, undeniably, a
just mean in everything; but he equally misses the mark who falls
short of it, as he who goes beyond it; he who is too limited as he
who is too unrestrained. Hence it is as common a thing to hear our
orators condemned for being too jejune and feeble as too excessive
and redundant. One is said to have exceeded the bounds of his
subject, the other not to have reached them. Both, no doubt, are
equally in fault, with this difference, however, that in the one
the
fault arises from an abundance, in the other, from a deficiency; an
error, in the former case, which, if it be not the sign of a more
correct, is certainly of a more fertile genius. When I say this, I
would not be understood to approve that everlasting talker[25]
mentioned in Homer, but that other' described in the following
lines:"Frequent
and soft, as falls the winter snow,
Thus from his lips the copious periods flow."Not
but that I extremely admire him,[26]
too, of whom the poet says,"Few
were his words, but wonderfully strong."Yet,
if the choice were given me, I should give the preference to that
style resembling winter snow, that is, to the full, uninterrupted,
and diffusive; in short, to that pomp of eloquence which seems all
heavenly and divine. But (it is replied) the harangue of a more
moderate length is most generally admired. It is:—but only by
indolent people; and to fix the standard by their laziness and
false
delicacy would be simply ridiculous. Were you to consult persons of
this cast, they would tell you, not only that it is best to say
little, but that it is best to say nothing at all. Thus, my friend,
I
have laid before you my opinions upon this subject, and I am
willing
to change them if not agreeable to yours. But should you disagree
with me, pray let me know clearly your reasons why. For, though I
ought to yield in this case to your more enlightened judgment, yet,
in a point of such consequence, I had rather be convinced by
argument
than by authority. So if I don't seem to you very wide of the mark,
a
line or two from you in return, intimating your concurrence, will
be
sufficient to confirm me in my opinion: on the other hand, if you
should think me mistaken, let me have your objections at full
length.
Does it not look rather like bribery, my requiring only a short
letter, if you agree with me; but a very long one if you should be
of
a different opinion. Farewell.XV
— To PATERNUSAs
I rely very much upon the soundness of your judgment, so I do upon
the goodness of your eyes: not because I think your discernment
very
great (for I don't want to make you conceited), but because I think
it as good as mine: which, it must be confessed, is saying a great
deal. Joking apart, I like the look of the slaves which were
purchased for me on your recommendation very well; all I further
care
about is, that they be honest: and for this I must depend upon
their
characters more than their countenances. Farewell.XVI
— To CATILIUS SEVERUS
[27]I
AM at present (and have been a considerable time) detained in Rome,
under the most stunning apprehensions. Titus Aristo,[28]