ancient epos and no ancient drama, and poetry knows
no substitutes. With greater moderation and good
sense Cato left poetry proper, as a thing irremediably
lost, to the party opposed to him; although his attempt
to create a didactic poetry in national measure after
the model of the earlier Roman productions —the
Appian poem on Morals and the poem on Agriculture—remains
significant and deserving of respect, in point if not
of success, at least of intention. Prose afforded
him a more favourable field, and accordingly he applied
the whole varied power and energy peculiar to him
to the creation of a prose literature in his native
tongue. This effort was all the more Roman and
all the more deserving of respect, that the public
which he primarily addressed was the family circle,
and that in such an effort he stood almost alone in
his time. Thus arose his “Origines,”
his remarkable state-speeches, his treatises on special
branches of science. They are certainly pervaded
by a national spirit, and turn on national subjects;
but they are far from anti-Hellenic: in fact
they originated essentially under Greek influence,
although in a different sense from that in which the
writings of the opposite party so originated.
The idea and even the title of his chief work were
borrowed from the Greek “foundation-histories”
(—ktoeis—). The same is
true of his oratorical authorship; he ridiculed Isocrates,
but he tried to learn from Thucydides and Demosthenes.
His encyclopaedia is essentially the result of his
study of Greek literature. Of all the undertakings
of that active and patriotic man none was more fruitful
of results and none more useful to his country than
this literary activity, little esteemed in comparison
as it probably was by himself. He found numerous
and worthy successors in oratorical and scientific
authorship; and though his original historical treatise,
which of its kind may be compared with the Greek logography,
was not followed by any Herodotus or Thucydides, yet
by and through him the principle was established that
literary occupation in connection with the useful
sciences as well as with history was not merely becoming
but honourable in a Roman.
Architecture
Let us glance, in conclusion, at the state of the
arts of architecture, sculpture, and painting.
So far as concerns the former, the traces of incipient
luxury were less observable in public than in private
buildings. It was not till towards the close
of this period, and especially from the time of the
censorship of Cato (570), that the Romans began in
the case of the former to have respect to the convenience
as well as to the bare wants of the public; to line
with stone the basins (-lacus-) supplied from the
aqueducts, (570); to erect colonnades (575, 580);
and above all to transfer to Rome the Attic halls
for courts and business—the -basilicae-
as they were called. The first of these buildings,
somewhat corresponding to our modern bazaars—the