in the Atellana, on the portraiture of the manners
of common and low life; in which rural pictures are
laid aside for those of the life and doings of the
capital, and the sweet rabble of Rome—
just as in the similar Greek pieces the rabble of Alexandria—
is summoned to applaud its own likeness. Many
subjects are taken from the life of tradesmen; there
appear the— here also inevitable—“Fuller,”
then the “Ropemaker,” the “Dyer,”
the “Salt-man,” the “Female Weavers,”
the “Rascal”; other pieces give sketches
of character, as the “Forgetful,” the “Braggart,”
the “Man of 100,000 sesterces";(10) or pictures
of other lands, the “Etruscan Woman,”
the “Gauls,” the “Cretan,”
“Alexandria”; or descriptions of popular
festivals, as the “Compitalia,” the “Saturnalia,”
“Anna Perenna,” the “Hot Baths”;
or parodies of mythology, as the “Voyage to
the Underworld,” the “Arvernian Lake.”
Apt nicknames and short commonplaces which were easily
retained and applied were welcome; but every piece
of nonsense was of itself privileged; in this preposterous
world Bacchus is applied to for water and the fountain-nymph
for wine. Isolated examples even of the political
allusions formerly so strictly prohibited in the Roman
theatre are found in these mimes.(11) As regards metrical
form, these poets gave themselves, as they tell us,
“but moderate trouble with the versification”;
the language abounded, even in the pieces prepared
for publication, with vulgar expressions and low newly-coined
words. The mime was, it is plain, in substance
nothing but the former farce; with this exception,
that the character-masks and the standing scenery of
Atella as well as the rustic impress are dropped,
and in their room the life of the capital in its boundless
liberty and licence is brought on the stage.
Most pieces of this sort were doubtless of a very
fugitive nature and made no pretension to a place
in literature; but the mimes of Laberius, full of pungent
delineation of character and in point of language and
metre exhibiting the hand of a master, maintained
their ground in it; and even the historian must regret
that we are no longer permitted to compare the drama
of the republican death-struggle in Rome with its
great Attic counterpart.
Dramatic Spectacles
With the worthlessness of dramatic literature the
increase of scenic spectacles and of scenic pomp went
hand in hand. Dramatic representations obtained
their regular place in the public life not only of
the capital but also of the country towns; the former
also now at length acquired by means of Pompeius a
permanent theatre (699;(12)), and the Campanian custom
of stretching canvas over the theatre for the protection
of the actors and spectators during the performance,
which in ancient times always took place in the open
air, now likewise found admission to Rome (676).
As at that time in Greece it was not the—more
than pale-Pleiad of the Alexandrian dramatists, but
the classic drama, above all the tragedies of Euripides,