for grammatical remarks and criticisms on art, for
incidents of his own life, visits, dinners, journeys,
as well as for anecdotes which he has heard.
Caustic, capricious, thoroughly individual, the Lucilian
poetry has yet the distinct stamp of an oppositional
and, so far, didactic aim in literature as well as
in morals and politics; there is in it something of
the revolt of the country against the capital; the
Suessan’s sense of his own purity of speech
and honesty of life asserts itself in antagonism to
the great Babel of mingled tongues and corrupt morals.
The aspiration of the Scipionic circle after literary
correctness, especially in point of language, finds
critically its most finished and most clever representative
in Lucilius. He dedicated his very first book
to Lucius Stilo, the founder of Roman philology,(20)
and designated as the public for which he wrote not
the cultivated circles of pure and classical speech,
but the Tarentines, the Bruttians, the Siculi, or
in other words the half-Greeks of Italy, whose Latin
certainly might well require a corrective. Whole
books of his poems are occupied with the settlement
of Latin orthography and prosody, with the combating
of Praenestine, Sabine, Etruscan provincialisms, with
the exposure of current solecisms; along with which,
however, the poet by no means forgets to ridicule the
insipidly systematic Isocratean purism of words and
phrases,(21) and even to reproach his friend Scipio
in right earnest jest with the exclusive fineness
of his language.(22) But the poet inculcates purity
of morals in public and private life far more earnestly
than he preaches pure and simple Latinity. For
this his position gave him peculiar advantages.
Although by descent, estate, and culture on a level
with the genteel Romans of his time and possessor
of a handsome house in the capital, he was yet not
a Roman burgess, but a Latin; even his position towards
Scipio, under whom he had served in his early youth
during the Numantine war, and in whose house he was
a frequent visitor, may be connected with the fact,
that Scipio stood in varied relations to the Latins
and was their patron in the political feuds of the
time.(23) He was thus precluded from a public life,
and he disdained the career of a speculator—he
had no desire, as he once said, to “cease to
be Lucilius in order to become an Asiatic revenue-farmer.”
So he lived in the sultry age of the Gracchan reforms
and the agitations preceding the Social war, frequenting
the palaces and villas of the Roman grandees and yet
not exactly their client, at once in the midst of
the strife of political coteries and parties and yet
not directly taking part with one or another; in a
way similar to Beranger, of whom there is much that
reminds us in the political and poetical position
of Lucilius. From this position he uttered his
comments on public life with a sound common sense
that was not to be shaken, with a good humour that
was inexhaustible, and with a wit perpetually gushing: