Vergil eBook

Tenney Frank
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Vergil.

Vergil eBook

Tenney Frank
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 150 pages of information about Vergil.
various kinds of cases, demonstrativum, deliberativum and judiciale; he must know the proportionate value to the orator of inventio, dispositio, elocutio, memoria, and pronuntiatio, and how to manage each; he must know how to apply inventio in each of the six divisions of the speech:  exordium, narratio, divisio, confirmatio, confutatio, conclusio.  On the subject of adornment of style a relatively small task lay in memorizing illustrations of some sixty figures of speech—­and so on ad infinitum. Inane cymbalon juventutis is indeed a fitting commentary on such memory tasks.  The end of the poem cited betrays the fact that the poet had not been able to keep his attention upon his task.  He had been writing verses; who would not?

Quite apart, however, from the unattractive content of the course, the gradual change in political life must have disclosed to the observant that the free exercise of talents in a public career could not continue long.  The triumvirate was rapidly suppressing the free republic.  Even in 52, when Pompey became sole consul, the trial of Milo was conducted under military guard, and no advocate dared speak freely.  During the next two years every one saw that Caesar and Pompey must come to blows and that the resulting war could only lead to autocracy.

The crisis came in January of 49 B.C. when Vergil was twenty years old.  Pompey with the consuls and most of the senators fled southward in dismay, and in sixty days, hotly pursued by Caesar, was forced to evacuate Italy.  Caesar, eager to make short work of the war, to attack Spain and Africa while holding the Alpine passes and pressing in pursuit of Pompey, began to levy new recruits throughout Italy.[4] Vergil also seems to have been drawn in this draft, since this is apparently the circumstance mentioned in his thirteenth Catalepton.  “Draft,” however, may not be the right word, for we do not know whether Caesar at this time claimed the right to enforce the rules of conscription.  In any case, it is clear from all of Vergil’s references to Caesar that the great general always retained a strong hold upon his imagination.  Like most youths who had beheld Caesar’s work in the province close at hand, he was probably ready to respond to a general appeal for troops, and Labienus’ words to Pompey on the battlefield of Pharsalia make it clear that Caesar’s army was largely composed of Cisalpines.  The accounting they gave of themselves at that battle is evidence enough of the spirit which pervaded Vergil’s fellow provincials.  Nor is it unlikely that Vergil himself took part, for one of the most poignant passages in all his work is the picture of the dead who lay strewn over the battlefield of Pharsalia.

[Footnote 4:  Cic. Ad Att.  IX. 19, in March.]

It is also probable that Vergil had had some share in the cruises on the Adriatic conducted by Antony the summer and winter before Pharsalia.  Not only does this poem speak of service on the seas, but his poems throughout reveal a remarkable acquaintance with Adriatic geography.  If he took part in the work of that stormy winter’s campaigns, when more than one fleet was wrecked, we can comprehend the intimate touches in the description of Aeneas’ encounters with the storms.

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Vergil from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.