which amidst the amplest development of scenic resources
kept the stage, so in Rome at the time of Cicero the
tragedies of Ennius, Pacuvius, and Accius, and the
comedies of Plautus were those chiefly produced.
While the latter had been in the previous period
supplanted by the more tasteful but in point of comic
vigour far inferior Terence, Roscius and Varro, or
in other words the theatre and philology, co-operated
to procure for him a resurrection similar to that
which Shakespeare experienced at the hands of Garrick
and Johnson; but even Plautus had to suffer from the
degenerate susceptibility and the impatient haste
of an audience spoilt by the short and slovenly farces,
so that the managers found themselves compelled to
excuse the length of the Plautine comedies and even
perhaps to make omissions and alterations. The
more limited the stock of plays, the more the activity
of the managing and executive staff as well as the
interest of the public was directed to the scenic representation
of the pieces. There was hardly any more lucrative
trade in Rome than that of the actor and the dancing-girl
of the first rank. The princely estate of the
tragic actor Aesopus has been already mentioned;(13)
his still more celebrated contemporary Roscius(14)
estimated his annual income at 600,000 sesterces (6000
pounds)(15) and Dionysia the dancer estimated hers
at 200,000 sesterces (2000 pounds). At the same
time immense sums were expended on decorations and
costume; now and then trains of six hundred mules
in harness crossed the stage, and the Trojan theatrical
army was employed to present to the public a tableau
of the nations vanquished by Pompeius in Asia.
The music which accompanied the delivery of the inserted
choruses likewise obtained a greater and more independent
importance; as the wind sways the waves, says Varro,
so the skilful flute-player sways the minds of the
listeners with every modulation of melody. It
accustomed itself to the use of quicker time, and
thereby compelled the player to more lively action.
Musical and dramatic connoisseurship was developed;
the -habitue-recognized every tune by the first note,
and knew the texts by heart; every fault in the music
or recitation was severely censured by the audience.
The state of the Roman stage in the time of Cicero
vividly reminds us of the modern French theatre.
As the Roman mime corresponds to the loose tableaux
of the pieces of the day, nothing being too good and
nothing too bad for either the one or the other, so
we find in both the same traditionally classic tragedy
and comedy, which the man of culture is in duty bound
to admire or at least to applaud. The multitude
is satisfied, when it meets its own reflection in
the farce, and admires the decorative pomp and receives
the general impression of an ideal world in the drama;
the man of higher culture concerns himself at the theatre
not with the piece, but only with its artistic representation.
Moreover the Roman histrionic art oscillated in its
different spheres, just like the French, between the
cottage and the drawing-room. It was nothing
unusual for the Roman dancing-girls to throw off at
the finale the upper robe and to give a dance in undress
for the benefit of the public; but on the other hand
in the eyes of the Roman Talma the supreme law of
his art was, not the truth of nature, but symmetry.