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D. A. (Donald Andrew) Criticism in amiquity Bibliography: p. Includes index. 1. Classical literature- H istory and criticism. 2. Criticism. I . Title. PA30 13· R82 801 ' .95'0938 IS BN 0-5 2(}-04466-5
Contents Preface [
11
Prologue Narrative: from the Beginnings. to
••
'ill
,
Arjstotle
ill ill ;L
:Ill
Narrative: the Hellenistic Age from ArislOtle to H orace Narrative; the Roman Empire The Poet and his I nspiralion The Poet as Teacher
V II
Mimesis
V II I
R hetoric
IX Theories of Style X Classification of Literature Xl Literary History X II
Epilogue Appendix Bibliography In dex
31 5"
(ig
& 99 "A ~
~ '.'i'l «ig '2l
""9 "'1
Preface I [lAVE tried to <.:oml>inc a personal im p ression orlhe complex ph enom e no n ofGn::co-Roman ' literary criticism' wilh a measure of detailed information su fficient to guide the reader towards further illquiry. I have had in mind the need, of lit erary Sludcnts who>.., Gree k an d Latin il perhaps vestigial, though [ am well awarc that the y are fa\:cd wilh special difficulti!:" in approa(:hing a ~ubj<:<;! which is mainly abo ut wo rd s. Wh erever poossihle, I have refe rred to the collection of translations puh1islu~ by Dr M. Wintcrhollom and rn yselfi n 1972 (A"cirnll.iIUQ,)' Crilicism , Oxford Universit y Press) ; an appendi x 10 the present volume offers a supplem ent to this, in wh ich I have lri~-d to gath n somt' \('X IS which were nor in the earli er wllcnion hu t which I haH felt the need to citc in thc prt"{'nt discussio n. T his kind of book ncccs)a ril), rC$1-' On tcaching ; and l owe a great dea l to the undergraduates who ha ve from time to time pa tientl), li sten ed and produ ced commcnts and ideas. [ sho uld lik e also to reco rd a special d e bt to Dr D. C. Jnn e!. who ide nt;· lied and helped me to correct man)' weak nesses and obscurities. D AR.
C " A PTER ONE
Prologue
THE surviving literary remains of classical antiquity in cl ude a g reat deal or comment on literature iL<;clf T heory, scholarl y interpn:tation and evaluative judgment are all to be found , and in some ahundance. T here is cvCn a liule literary hiSlOry. The class ical scholar approacbes this material from hi s study of th e ancient poets and prose-w riters them selves; the modern literary critic turns 10 the ancients as precurso rs, in some sense, of hi s own arl. Bolh have occasion 10 Ix: Ix:wildered, disconcerted, pe rhaps disappoint ed. The sc holars of eourse rclOgnisc in the liler"ry Ih ~"()ries of PlatonislS, Peri p"INks or Stoics minor works of the grea t ph ilosophical sebools, shaped by their general metaphysical, logi c.. 1 or moral positions. It is the recorded critical judg ments Ihat lire puzzling. \\'e find Ihem often inad ~-qu;n" and un s;nisfactory, if we com pa re them with our own responses to th e same l"'x1.~. But al Ihe sa me lime we ca nnot help reasoning Ihat the Greeks and Ro mans must afle r all know beSt, since Ihe language and the culture wue their own. As for the modern critic, he to<) is likely 10 he divided in mind. On the one hand , he knows thallhere would h.. ve been nothing li ke the a rl he professes without the foundations l.. id by ArislOde. 'Longinus·. Horare and Ill<' rcs," On Ihe oth .... r. he senSe$ that it is .. 11 "ery differe nt from what he is used to. There l!Cems, for exampl e, to be little or no attempt to delimit Ihe cri tic's field , 10 [",nee it off aga inst his three n",ighhoul1l: th e scholar, the moral is t and th" teacher of rhetoric. I nde<:d, these three between them , it may reasonably appear, occ upy the whole are ...
,
Criticism ill Antiquity
Not Ihal il is difficult to assign historical reasons for this phenomenon. Greek literature became 'classical' al an early period, be· c ause the earli es t poetry to be r ecorded, the epic, ..,t" standard never surpassed, and was never, in practice, rejected as the core of educatio n. 1I.hny words in H om", were unimdligible, even to fifth-century speakers; yel everyone ",ad him , many knew him by hear!. Scholarly interpretation was thusa ne<:essily from quite early limes. Again , philosophers and educators habitually attac ked or defended literature on moral or social grounds, or sought \0 tum i( to good account in their ad"ocacy of virtue. This again is connected wilh the prestige of the epic. And, finaliy, by the end of th e fifth century, the prac tical teaching of rhetoric, the 'art of per.!uasio n', had also become a dominant feature of education. Th is led to a fae! which strikes e\"(:ryono: who studies this material, nameiy, that a very great deal of the detailed interpretation and criticism we possess has a clearly rhetorical purpose. It aims at drawing out isolable and imitable features which may be of service to the potential orator. "Let us consider, says 'Longinus", typically, "whether there is anything in OUT ohservations . .. useful to puhlic men."
, Now the ethical bias of much of our material is something to whic h the modern reader may faidy easily be<:ume reeoneilL-d. There are, after all, many contemporary versions or(he moral_ ising sort of criticism, in which literary excellence is judged by ilS contribu tion to the 'good life"" however that may be concei,·ed. But he may find the d ominant rhetorical element harder to bear. Yet this is of crucial importance. One essential rea t ure of it is that the address is always to potential practitioners, not me rely !O reader.! Of connoisseurs. This is so not on ly in
a"',,,,;".
, 0. sMb!ift/il1"~ ' 8 m b)' ""Ii/it.is 'public ",~n·. the am llor .. ~ks 10 define hi. audience not a. ]>ublic a. o]>p"'ed 10 pri"ale perwn•. hut .. ora ' o,", ,,·ho u"" .hei r cloquen« ror prac,ical purl""'<" .... opposed 10 ·>o~h; ... · ,..ho m~ .. ly t~ach and uhibit their . kil".
3
Prologue
overtly rhetorical works like 0" $~blimity, hut in tht: classical worh On poe,ry a lso. Horace's ATs ptKlico assumes- whether as fact or as conveniem fiction - that the two young Piso brothe rs are about to sit down and writ e plays. Aristotle in th e PlJtlics works o ut th e consequences of his d efinition of traged y in the form of statemen ts of how one ought 10 manage plot, charac ter and language. \\'ould-J.e orato.-s w,"re naturally an import a nt t:ducatio nal market both in the Greek cities and in Rom e, since political and private sueeelo.\ and even safely could well depend on skill in public speaking. Wou ld-be poeLI on th c o ther hand arc relativel y few in a ny age , certainl y fewer than those whoapprecia le Ihe art without wishing 10 praclise it . It is therefore natural to suppose that the prC'lc riptive emphasis whi ch we find in works on pox:try is due 10 the example of rhe torical tea ching. T here are in fact good reasons why rheto ric sho uld have seemed a relevant model. For one thing , poel ry was believed to h;we preceded prose as a "ehide of instruc tion a nd re .-s nasio n," and could dillS be seen 10 have fulfilled man y of the sa me funclio ns. Ag ain , the rhetorical analysis of the elemenls of discourse into invention, arrangement and verbal choke was clearly ap, propriatc also to poetry. In the fifth CCntury, whe n lea c he~ of rh elOri~' began to d evelo p th eir craft, the y natu rally mad e use of the epic poetry which wa s paft of their pupils' Iraditio nal education. And so 'poetics', as formulated by ;\rlstOlle'$ succClsors- though not , it is importa nt w reme mber, by Aristotl e himself- turned into a spec ialised branch of rhe tori c. Poetry \,'as th ought of as an a n aimed at producing certain elkc," On the audi ence. T rue, th ese were nOI the sam e effects as the o rator's; they were pleasure a tid wonder, tlOt convictio n or an emotional stimulus 10 aClion. J Both arll wcre clcarl y ·audie",;c-orieIlH;d'. T Iu;ophrasIUS. in a famou" formula, gro oped Ihem togedwr for just thi s reason . ' He ",cant (0 ' Cf. S(raoo ,-~ .6 (ALC 3<»); PI " . M ••. ~ o6c-f: j;iodor' t :f)'ImJI0I ;M '- 38 (from Varro) ; L.u~i a n 1» ,.,.",i~.dtJ ~ist., jd 46 ; a "d , i" Norden A.,itt Kustp •• ", 32 If. > I t """-I of CO Ul""" rccogni.scd .h". mu.ie. and", lyric J>O"try, might mo.'. men 10 action : lio race A" t o t-j . • t'r . 6, Wimmer (I>
g<:"."t.
Criticism in Anliqui!J 4 contrast them with philosophy and mathematics, in which, as he thought. 'the facl$' alone determined the manner of expression. I n pUlling it like this, he also exprt:ssed in epigrammatic form something which Greek and R oman poets seem 10 have taken for granted: namely, that we alway! writ'" for an audience, proem or future. It would ~ to deny the essential conditions orthe poet's craft, as antiqu ity saw it, ifonc were to write only for on~lr, nOI ca ring if th.., work done werc [or ever hidden from the sight of man. 3
We shall look later in more detail at the nature of rhetorical teaching and its effect on the understanding of literature.' But it is so important and so central a matter that a little more should perhaps be said at the outset. Rhetoric bad two large consequences for the development of criticism. The first is this. An orator always faces a real and definite situati on. What he asks of his technique is that it should show him how to deal with it: what to say and how to say it. A process of 'invention' precedes the process of expression, and there is thus a sharp distinction b.::tween content (to legommon ) and verbal form (Iexis). With some hazy and uncertain exceptions, ancient writers on poetry also adhered firmly to this distinction. Secondly: we observed that the rhetor's pupil is assumed to be a potential composer. One consequence of this is that the teacher distances ooth himself and his pupil from the hearers or readers, conspirtll with the pupil against them, and so views them from above and perhaps wi th some disdain. Their moral attitudes, emotional susceptibili ti t::S , weaknesses, bad laste and gullibili ty are to be studied and used. We have to convince and please people whose faults we can see more clearly than we see our own, and whOSl': characters we study in ord er to find out where they are most vulnerable. This disdain of the ordinary audi",nc", is kno wn to Aristotle in the cont"'x\ not only of rheloric 6 b ut of poetry: il is !h", ' inf"'riorily • Chpl~r VIII. • Rkfr.riI: II gi,"o a
d~(ail.-d
ucoon! of ·cha,,"c' ,,· from Ihis point of ,·in..
Prologue
5 of the spe<: tato ro' whi ch mak es them prefer ha ppy endings in traged)', though the principles of the art ma ke it clea r that these are really sig l15 of inferior workm a nship. ' In sho rt: th e rhetorical critic is concerncG with mean. to a predetermined end , and that end is th e po: rouasio n or ente rtainment of an audien ce whom he thinks of as infe rior in intelligence a nd sensibilit y to himself and his pupil . This may well seem a stran ge basis for adequate critical theory o r practice. Ye t it isjust this pragmati c bias ofso much an cie nt criticism that has strength ened a b<:lief which mos t class ical s.;ho lan- except those who have lain most completely und er the influ ence of nine teenth-eentury Ro manticism have been inclined to hold in some fo rm or other : nam el y, that Ihis material provides a special insight into th e attitudes and pres uppo. i.io n~ of lhe creativ e ",ri.c n. of a ntiq 11i t y. \ \'e seem to glimpse the insid e of the workshop. T here is obvious ly something in this. The de ta iled ill ustra tiol15 of techniq ue are th ere, in OUT tex IS, patie ntl y and oft en intellige ntly discussed from th c rhetOT 's standpoint. Moreover, there i. no d o ubt th a t the pri nc iples underl ying these discuss ions represe nt a ttitud es {O th e func tions and cxcellences of litenllure whic h "'cre generally held , ind eed ta ke n fur grant ed , and which il is necessary for students of dass ical literuture to underotand . No r is Ihere any dou bl thai , a t any rate in th e Helle ni stic and Ro man periods, a rh eturi ca l training of th e kind implied by the works of Q uill Iil ian , Dio n ~i u s or ' Long in us', was pa rt o f the e~ pe ri ence of everyone who u ied to wri te ; an d that in cl ud es Virgil, as well as th e count less ado lescen ts o f mod es t a bi lit y who 'gave ad vice to Sulla' in a sua,aria,· o r exho rt ed the Three Hundred (0 di e bravel y a t Th cnno pylac. But it is important not to exaggera te. I t scems reasonable to ask wh ethe r the view of li te ra ture con veyed by ' Longinus', Quin tilian o r H ermoge nes, with its del icate classifica tions of sty le and ana lyses or struc ture a nd ex pression, alfords a n adequate descriptio n of wha t one o bserves u neself. It is, after all , still possi ble to read G reek a nd La tin litera tu re with sensit iv ity, ' PIN'i" ' H 3' - Sr. IIOW J. F. ~ t "I",. CQ '>9 1'!!791 n If. o j m-,nal " ,6. On , •• ,..iM- fie'i ' i",,, d~tib
rompos«l ,,,
6
Criticism in Antiquity
iro ne takes the troubl e 10 learn the languages as well as one can . The limit ations imposed by the remoteness and by the lack of spea kers of th e two languages are not so great that a mod",rn reader need fed il impossible to form a valid impressio n o f h is o wn. For my own pa rI, I am fairly ce rtain thaI this ancient
rhetorical 'criticism', though undoubtedly useful in sugges ting princi p les ofjudgment and helping to elucidate authors' inten ti ons, is fundamentally not equal to th e tas k of appraising classicallitcra ture. IfprCSlwlo say why, I should be obl iged
to fall hack on an impressionistic way of prese nting the problem, and should base myself on Ihe following consideration. Th e most distinctive feature in the pagan lilcralun: of Crcttc and Rom" . ta ken a. it whole, se" ms 10 rn ~ to k !IOm~lhing only rarely hinted a t in anci~nI criti ca l t~xts: a cn:a tiv~ t~nsion betw~en directness of thought and vis ion on the one hand , and sophisticated imagery and verbal formality on the other. This is something to be see n not on ly in Theocritus or Virgil, hut in HOIll~T, Aesch ylus and Pindar too. Some such eon fii ct, I m igh t say. elevates tragedy and epic a bove th e level of th e sensational and the viole nt , and gives piquancy and elegance to satire and comedy. It is thi s tension that fashio ns for us a spe1:iai world, in which emotion, amusement and understanding an: combined in a way d iSli nct from th e ways in which such co mb ina tions arc effected in o th er lit eratures, even those most closely modelled on th e an tique. This crea tive conflict, howeve r, cannot be take n into account if we accept the commo n ancient doctrine that big words suit b ig things and litt le words little things, wilh the corollary tha t Ihere are two mut uall y exclusive Iypa of literature, the serio us or idealistic and Ih e realistic o r comic. No do ubt th e resonance. and ironies Ihat I ch eri sh CQuld not arise unless the two elemen ts of th e co nflict were apprehe nded se paralely; bu t to erect Ihis sepa rat e apprehens ion into a principle of the classificat io n of literature is 10 surrend er judgm ent to insensitive dogma. Yet this o ften h appcn~ . It i~ typica l o f the c rit ical consensus of ant iq u ity when Longinus complains of impropriety in an evid entl y piquant a nd highly coloured passage of Theopo mpus' hislory.o It is typica l too when S<-rvius tdls us that the style of Am.iel I V is 'comic'. be• 0. ,kb/i,..i
Prologue
7
cause the subject is love, no normal epic theme. 'o And it is an excep tiona l recognition of Ont: form of the teminn I have tried to deline when Demelri us commends Xenophun fur wri ting lightly of a grim and fearsome cha racter, and sagely co mm ents on the effect achieved by saying that 'one may be cooled by wa rmth and wa rmed by cold'." It is perha ps worth remembering, howe\"er, Ih al the /irs t ev id ence we have lor th is 'consensus dichotomy' of types of writing i. in a CUnlext wh i.:h does nOt encourage US to la ke it too serious ly: the de bate between Euripides and Aeschy lus in Aristophancs' Frogs. 11 is reasonable to believe that sensitive readers in antiquity, had th ey chosen to make their responses a rticulate, would have secmed wiser and more soph istica ted than thei r teac hers and theorists.
Wh en we speak of a 'nitic' , we du of cuurse use a Greek word. The krili/;.QS i$ the man who is capable o r judging (kr'ntin ) . What sorts of 'judgment' of literature were enl'isaged by the Gr~ ks themselves? Some H ellenistic litera ry scholars actually used the name. According to Crates of "",allus, " a h i/ito! was a superior grammali/;'os, who nceded to have a comple te grasp of a ll know_ ledge concerned wilh logos, no t merely lexicography an d metre. He was concerned primarily with the interpretation a nd aut hentic it y of older books, especially the Home ri c epics. H is main role was thus to decide historical questions, not 10 ma ke val ue-j udgmenlS; but he might well lise interna l c rileria of style a nd cont Cnt, or e\"en mural considerations, in Ih ~ cOUl~e of his work. In Horace," howeve r, we lind lfilid classing En nius as a 'second H omer', a nd thi. seems to he a judgment un his importance an d \laltle. The grouping, o rdering and labelling L. S« App
P.rdu,,,,·,, OJ
195~ .
E/>iJllts
' .1.,50 (AU.: p. 'n).
8
CritidHIl ill Allliqui!J
of authors read in school was indeed a CommOn activity of the
grammarian or krilikos, and ~metimes of the teacher of rhelOric also.!· It falb short of anything we could call criticism or reasoned judgment. A more hopeful approach to the question is suggnled by a n:m ark of'Longinus': Th t question we must put 10 OUI"$(h"es for diS(ussion is how \0 avoid th t fauhs which are 50 closely oound up with sublimity. The answer, my friend, is Ihis: by first of all achieving a genuine understanding and appreciation oftrue sublimity. Til;' is difficuh : li terary judgment (logOn k,;,iJ ) come< only .... th e final product (1.1tI4/4;on .pigtnnim4) of long experience."
This prompts two reflections. (i) The function of hilis in this passag'" is to distinguish the good quality, 'sublimit y', from errors which su~rficiall y resemble it and arc incurred in the search for it. Now this is an idca which is also familiar in ethics. Ari.totl,,', theory of virtue envioag« .imi!ar risks of error. Demetrius actually makes the parallel between morals ane sty les explicit: Just as certain bad qu al ities are adjacent to certain good ones-~ audacity to confidence, or shame to modesty- so, adjacent to our types ofstyk, there are cenain mistaken types . .. " But 'Longinus' goes funher than Demetrius. His d esired quality of sublimity is not simply analogous to the mora! quality of a noble mind, it is an expression of this, and thejudgmen\ to be made aoom it rests therefore on a moral as well as an aest hetic sensibility. (ii ) The power to make such a decision comes not from the application of rules hut as a kind of bonus (tpigmnimll ) oflong ex~rience. Thi. i. a common point. It was gen"rally und"rstood in antiquity that rul", (prMClpla, para~g,lmala) had their limitations. The notion of an irrational cri terion (alogos niMh/sis, 'non-rational sensibility' ) is common enough in Greek "Moot notably in Ireati!le:l on 'imitation': 1)"10",, Chapter VI [ 9. " 6. ',. O. JIJI. "4 (ALe 194)-
5tt
np. Quintilian
10_' ,
and
Prologue
9
criticism of literature and the art5. Dion ysius" seems to have believed that the: 'pleasantness' or 'unpleasantn ess' of a picre of lit e:ralllre is judged by such irrationa l sensibilit y, but its ' bea ut y' and 'excellence' as a speci men of the craft by rat ion a l princ ipl e<. 'Longinus' on ce again goes furth er. For him. the essential facult y ofjudg melll is bo th mo ra l, as we ha ve seen, a nd at th e samc lim e dcpendent On cxpcrience rather Ihan On precept. He thus re presellis a point of v iew distinct fro m that ofDionysius. Pres umabl y it differ; a lso from Ihat of hi s nominal opponent, Caecilius ofCa leacte, who was, it seems, a friend of Dion ysius. For the co mplaint levelled against Caecilius at th e beginning of the boo k is p recisely that he struggled to d efine 'sublimity' at inordinate leng th - in other words, to give a ra lional account of it - wilho ul e xplaini ng how it is to be achi eved. ' Lo nginus' . we should infer. would disa pprove of a ny cla im (() t~ach kri$i$, 'jud gment ', by me"n.' of rules. Like mos t Grcr k critks, he works largely by drawing a lle ntion to fea tu res in p"ni cular cxampks. To find a SlalCment of rul e. which purport to mak e possible a systema tic ev alua tion of a work orJiurature we ha \"(~ to look elsewhere, and at a lower level of wri ting altoge t ha. T wo sho rt trea li sc:s, attributed to Dionysi us, and p robabl y da lin g from the second or third century A. D ., prov id e so mething of wh"t we walli. Th ese treatises ls d eal os ten.libl y with the 'examination' (txtlasis ) of declamation a nd with mista kes (plimmt/oumcna) commonly made in such exe rcises. Now declamations (mdt/a!) were forensic or d el iberative speec hes wriuen fo r fi ctional or hi storical occasion£, int cnded to cxcrcise Ih c futun: ora lOr in th e invention a nd selection or lila te ria! lInd in stylistic ingenuity. They wue a natural pari of rhetorical educat ion, as il d e. veloped in Hellenistic tim es. On th e on e ha nd, th ey re nce t th e desire of stud ents for somelhing less humdrum Ih"n strictly vocatiOt"'! tea ching ; o n Ihe other, the y show Ihe lend ency of teachers 10 give th eir instru ction a more liber"l a nd imagin ;, ;n 1::,*,/;,., H Ol d/' 5 (' 979), 1' 3 ff.
Criticism in Antiquity loo k. They maintained their popularity down to the last age of clasoical antiquity, and indeed throughout the Byzantine period.l~ Their fictional content and the freedo m of in,·ention which they demanded ma ke the m a bridge betw~"/riJli" .d. G. W. Bowcrwck
.'it,"""
( '9H ), '7A"·
'" to.,·69 (" I.e 390)·
Prologue
"
embellishments of rhe torical skill ; and finaJl )' ..... he ther the langu age is clear, pure and elegantl y diversifi ed. T his pedagogic synthesis reaches no great depth ofill5ighl. It ..... ou ld bc foolish to ma ke much ofil. BUI it does- and in Ihis it seems 10 be unique in an cient criticism - attem pt to state a comprehensive se t of rules for c rit ical j udgm ent , uniting bo th rhelOrical and moral standpoints. i1s presuppositions, ho ..... eve r, are by no means unique. T hey are typical of the consensus ach ieved in the imperial period by classieisi ng critics a nd readers whose primary interest lay in the old Attic literature and the ways in wh ich it could still be imi_ tated and reproduced. Taken with what we have Sten of Dion ysius a nd 'Longinus' , it e nables us to filrm some view of wh at lite rary judgment (krisis logon ) was supposed to entail, a t any ra te in the f.'lirl y stable cultural conditions of the fi rs t three centuries of th e Ro man Empire. The hilikoJ in this sense, the man good a t ma ki ng such judgments. would need a t least three qualiti C!l. He would have to have a keen sense- a trained sensi bilit y rather than articulatc prinl:ipk-s- of linguisti<.: and sty listic fo rm , an aware n= of th e moral aspects of lite ra ture, and a realisatio n thaI th e writ er is a membe r of a com munit y of le ttcrs which 'tn~ t c h es back into the past and indudes the great classics themsel ves. Wo ul d he also need schol ars hi p? Onl y, it seems, as an aid to mora l and rhetorical discrimination. Plutarch may hel p uS here. It is scho la rly (philologon), he tells 115,21 to und er.lt and th e hard word. in the old po<:t$. \\' hal is a bso. lutel y essential, ho wever, is something dilfe r~,n! - a n under_ stand ing of 'how the JlO<"ts uM the nam es of the goos a nd of good and bad, and what they mean by Fortune an d Fatc'. For Plutarch, the old poet ry is a means of mora l education , and its stud y can be defended fo r this reason. Scholarly knowledge is th us ~o ug ht nOllor il5 Own sa k ~ but in SO far as it ~u bscrvo:s th e moral purpose by preventing misinte rpretatio ns which might lead to dangerous misconceptio ns about matte,..., of ethics and religion. A similar a tti tud e prevailed about historical know. ledge. Wha t is call ed hiSlaria in the Greek of thi s period CO\'ers nut only histo ry in the modern sense, bu t many kinds of schola rl y and scient ifi c fa CIS. All this too i$ ancillary - if not to " .\lc,.li. ~"C (AlL ~~O r.)
Criticism in Anliqlli!J moral education, then to rhetoric. A certain knowledge of the hi-torieal background of Demosthenes' .~ches is clearly necessary to unde rstand the text and appreciate the rhetorical techniques. But that knowledge falls far short of a proper narrative history oflhe period . For all the drort that the ancient schools put into the slUdy of the classical Orators, no true historical commentary on their works was ever put together. The consequen<xs of this for modern understanding offourthcentury Greece have been serious. The Romans perhaps did rather better: Astonius' commentaries on Cicero go somewhat deeper than th eir Greek equivalents. 5
'Longinus' spoke of tri.ris lagon, 'Dionysius' of txt laiis [Pgofl. We have seen something of wh at this 'judging' or 'ellamining' involved. But what about the object of the process? What is meant by logo;? Though 'Dionysius' is writing about declamation, we have seen that what he says is not limited 10 that kind of composition; indeed his doctrine of ;thOl seems actually more appropriate to dialogue and drama than to speeches. And in the passage of'Longinus'. the word is an embarrassment 10 the translator. No one English word suffices: 'words" 'speeches', 'discourse', 'literature', all mislead. Behind the verba l question lies one of substance. What kinds of discourse dna ' Longinus' believe to be the appropriate subject of the trisis which he envisages? H is own practice, and that of the other 'criti cs', make the range fairly dear. It includes poetry of all kinds, oratory, history and the ph ilosophical dialoguc. Treatises and letters ofa certain formality could safely be added. Bu t it does $ttm as th ough evidence of conscious art was required; no one in antiquity ever propounded the view that every use of language, however ephemeral or cas ual, oould be subjected to formal or moral examination of this kind. Yet there is no general term, either in Gr~k or in Latin, for the whol e body of 'critic-worthy' literature. It is usually described by meam of an enumerat ion; 'poets, orators and pJ"()Se, writcrs' or the like. Ciccro in his Oralo~l uses five categories:
"O.a"" 6, -~. Sa I><Jow, Chap'u X 6.
Proiogul
'3
orator, sophist, philosopher, historian and poe t. The only thinke r who tried to establish a classification of the formal uoa of language which was not b"""d merely on the superficial di fference between verse and prose o r on habitual descriptions of genm; which aC1UOIlly existm. was Aristotle. In thi s excursion into literary theory he was unique. Nothing wrin"'n aft",r him <:quailed Ihe precision and suggestiveness of Ihe opening chapters of the Pottits, where the scope alld claMification of IX'Ctry arc con.idcrcd. l l According 10 the view SCI fort h here. fHJiiliki, which covered in common usage th e composition of epic, drama, elegy and lyric, belonged to a ge nus of' mimetic' arts employing speuh, rhythm and harmony -any or all of them - in the representation ofhuman (Character, emotion (or 'suffcrin g' )l' and action. It differed from in_ st rumental music OInd dOln cing in being uIIOIhlc to do withou t speech. But it was not unahle to do without melfe ; Aristotle reckons as po!iliki the composition of such prose works as Sac r,,,ic dialogues, because they imiulle people doing SOmething, while at Ihe same tim e exeluding verse written for the purposes of $(;ientifi~ expos ition, such a s the philosophical poems of Empedocles. Jt follows th at had Aristotle known any developed form of the novel, he would have reckoned it as poii.is. Indeed , in much later times, when Greek novels had come into being, I:x:come respecta]}l", and finally achieved Ihe stat us of classics, BV7.antine .<;<; holars used AriSl
t
~8 ) .
'e<:" I. U('" "" /0<. " E.ampl<:> or Ilj'umine ,,,,,·d ..er;';(;. ,,, ma y be found In .\\. I'.dlu,· critiques "n Achill ... Taliu, (A(~IH<.! T.rill>, nl . E. Viloorg, ,W f.) and Hdiodocu. ( lid"""" A(1h;op"4, nl . A. Colomta, 364 f.J. ,. Ari. totte (fr. i" R"",) did ;n fac t ad"';re ""r ta;n """ms of ~:ml"'dod.,.;
but those mcntior>eII<>. and ·traged;..·.
'4
Crilirum in Anliquiv
narrower concept than what we usually mean by 'poetry'; a
jorliori ie is narrower than the 'literature' we are seeking, if by that we mean the whole proper subject of moral and formal Cr,Uclsm.
This must of course indude oratory. And this isone thing that Aristotle strictly ududcd. In his view 'rhetori.;' was a wholly dist inct art from 'poetic', and Wa5 not ' mimetic' at all. The orator uses language primarily for penua"ion, and he uses it as a parI of his real activity in life, not ill play or prete nce. This diffe rence is fundamental. It was however not felt in early tim~: in He:siod,21 the Muse.. help the king as well as the poet, the persuader as well as the channer; and Solon and other earl y poets appear 10 have used both iambic and elegiac poetry for the practka[ ends of public policy. But Aristotle n:garded the difference as vital. PIal(), from a more moralistic standpo int, had stressed both common featun:s 18 and (man: seriously ) differences. Both arts, in his view, were dangerous: rhetoric, be<:auSt: ,he deee; v,," people into ac ting on fa!.e informadon
and 'prefers the probable to the true'; poetry, beca use th e prac· tice of imitation corrupts the mind , and the corruption extends to real·life activitics. The grounds of objec tion are different , because the things the mselvcs are different. Of course, any 'rhetorical' use of speech can be 'imitated', but the imitation-a work of fxJiiliki-~ no din:cl power of persuasion, but only the capacity inhen:nt in all poetry to induce habits of mind, good or bad, which may subSCC)uently be shown in our own actions. Poetry thus contains much 'imitation' rhetoric, and this is especially true of Home r and the dramatists, on the observation of whose practice moot Greek poetic theory in fact rested. Simil arly, oratory might wdl involve mimiJis of words and actions which the speaker needs tl.l describe in order to further his case. Again, an orator may pretend to doubts or attitudes he doa not really fed; his studied speech then becomes an 'imitation' of reality.:!9 Yet these overlaps are superficial. Essentially, Aristotle was surely n T .....I"'lJ' 80 If.;...,r ,\ 1. L. West 4<1/(1(. ,. C"'tu" ~.,.c If.
,. s..- thr po ....g. from Al.xand.,·, ,.. ,,,t.,od in App
, ..... ,;" 'on figut<'''.
Sp
3."
ff.:
Prologue
'5
right: rhe toric and poctic~ arc different , even opposed, arts, the one d ea ling in reality, however ignoble, th e other in illusion, however splendid. Yet the mutual influence and inlcrdependence of lhesc lwo b rancht."S o f lheory, and of oratory and poetry thcmsel\"ts, are "ery great. It is no t ha rd to see why this shou ld be so. For One thing, there is th e ovedapofpurpme which we have already obsen-cd. Both oratory and poetry a im to affect lheir hearers, Ihough with different goals and in somewha t different wa ys. Both th erefore need similar psyc hological tec hniqu es and understanding. Seco ndly, Ihe skills of language a re much th e ""me for both. Aris(O\le's own discu$sion of IHIS ('diction' ) in the third book of hi. Hllt/oriC'" refers hack to th e Pot/ic$. H~ sees the differences: poetic vocabu lilry must avoid the lower registers whi ch are in place in prose. Bill Ihe essential precepts a re commo n. \Ve have already to uched on, and shall have occasion to di sc uss later,31 th e com mo n a ncient view that words are th e ou tward dress of th ought and th at even in poetry the underlying ' thing silid' Cilll bc distinguished from its clothing of words and , ifnet.x\ m:, paraphrased in others. This is certainly part of the reason for th e linh between th e discu ssions of styJe in rhetoric and in poetics. jI,'lorcover, Aris totle trea ted drama a.o; the central poetic form, and the construction of a plot (mulhos, 's tory ') as the poet's fi rs t task. The pl ot, like th" orators case. needed a doth ing of words- the most appropriate, of course, and SO whollyde tnmined by the prior choice of content. T he comic poe t M enander, reproached wi th not having written his pby for an imminent fest ival, is sa id to have replied that it was all iinished really - the plot was made, he onl y had to write the lines. J ' T hi s was to speak both as a good pupil of the Peripatos, and as a man with a rhetorical mind. In view of these considerations, it is perhaps not surprising that th e sharp Platonic and Aristotelian distinction belween poe try as a 'mimetic ' art and rhetor ic a.o; 'non-mimetic', should have had comparatively lillie influ ence on later classifica ti ons and eva lu a tions ofJ ite rature. Critical theory, as o{t"n, did not have mu ch power over criti ca l prac ti c". In fact , the vcry .. 1404" If. (ALe 136 fr. ). "Chap"" tX . " pt utarch . .II... 3478 (ALe 3).
,6
Crificism ill Antiquity
classification which Aristotle regarded as [he most superficial, that by metre, remained the most u5ua! for all practical purposes; it is clearly ~en, for example, in the lists of authors commended by Quintilian as useful n:~ading for the budding orator.lJ Mor"'o'"cr, the qualities of style in poe try ca me incn:asingly 10 be regarded a$ different o nly in degree from those evident in prose,,l4 and the elaborate systems of stylistic discriminations which were the pride oflate r rhetoric we re based On observation of the poets as well as the o rators, and were held 10 apply equally to both. It i. easy to see historical reasons for this. One is the rise of a Greek dassi cising literature by th e first ce ntury B.C. , with standards of language and thought based on the whole corpus of approved olde r writing, poetry as well as prose. Anothe r factor, closely related 10 this, is the retreat of rhetoric from public (ife to the classroom, with the consequent indulgence in fantasy and fun and divorce from the sterner needs of vocational training. All this tended 10 minimise the differen""" between the twO arts. I ndeed, metre a part, the essential difference (for practical purposes) came \0 be thought to be one ofsubjecl-maller, not of type of activity. Poetry had greater licence (Jianlia, txousia ) both in language and in fantasy, whereas oratory had the closer (inks with reality and act ion. 'L.lnginus'JS expres<es this dearly in conn ~ tion with what he eaJls phanlasia, the imaginative visualisation of a scene or a mood: The j:>O(:tical examples ... have a quality of exaggera tion which be. longs to fable and goes far beyond cr.-dibility. I n a n orator's visualisa tion., 011 the other hand, it is the clement of fact and t!"\lth ...·hieh makes for sueeea. Lucian makes a similar point: 36 Poetry enjoys unqualified freedom. l u oole law is the pod. will. He i. possessed and inspirul by the Muses. lfhe wants to harnea a team
of winged horses, or make people run on water or o,"er the top oftlte corn, nobody grumbles ... '" Quin'ilian '0.' (Al.C:J80 If.) . .. Se~ btlow. Ch~pl" X 6. on Proch. > .<<<Jun' ur,he><" rna"", . .. ' .'i ·H. cr. I><-Iow. Cha[ll.r V II 7. )0 n, {MH<,i","", hu""i. 6 (ALe ~37) .
Prolog~{
,7
6 Let us, in conclusion, Iry to formula te some ass umptions On which the 'critks' of the imperial agc worked . 1 am thinking especially of ' LQ ngin"~'; a propt'r inl<;rpn: tation of On !Ublimi!)' is al the heart ort he whole subject. Fo ur poinls come to mind: (i) The 'crit k' is concerned wilh all poetry and formal prose, which furm a unified (tho ugh nUl very well defined ) corpus of lileral ure, (ii ) He fcd; bound IOdiscuss it in both eth ical and rhe to rical tcrms, and to minim ise the confli ct octween th ese twO I)Oints "fview. (iii ) On Ihe rh elOrical side, stylistic diflerellliat ion has occomc the single most important topic. (i") Poetry and prose differ in degree of realism, and lhe difference is a wide one; but lhe Ari stotelian insight that imaginative literature uses di'l<;ounoe in a rundamentall y diffe rent ('mimetic') way rro m o ratory is either forgotten or set aside as nO! relevant to (he busint:$li ofreading,j udgillg and reproducing the d as.~ica l texts. How did suc:h a Set of
CIIJlPTER TWO
Narrative: from the Beginnings to Aristotle TilE earli~ t literature of Gre<:ce, the heroic epic, mark.'! abo the beginning of literary self-conscious ness. T he poet of the OdYH~Y has bards among his characters and praises their trade. A good poet, we are told, brings events vivid ly to life. H e learns his w ~}"' of $ong from the Mu.e, and with he r help beeoITle. a valued and r~pected visitor in princely houses.' T he epic poet is e"idenlly expected to make pronouncements abou t his arl the hard is a part nfthe heroic socie ty whieh he represents- and 10 di splay his profCSllion as one of SUITle co nsequ ence. The stories that Homer was a child of a scr"ant of the schoolrnastcr Phcmios, ami that he became hlind and begged his h read, a re later romancing. 2 BUlthcre is no ovnt criti<:i'm in Ih ee pic, no sugges tion tha t some talcs are untrue or that some predecessors have gone wrong. T heTC may of conrse have been suppression or expurgation, hut that is unprovable.' HesioJ, it is true, inlriguingly ma kes the [I.·l uses say that 'they know how to tcll many lies thaI resemble the Irul h. and also, when they wish, to lell thc tTlllh itsclr ; but he mak.,;, no specific charge, ;",d it is an uncertain conjeClUre Ihat he i~ thinking of the mylhs in Homer.' Nevertheless, cri ti cism of th e absurdity or moral offcnsive, OJ.1~,,-r '.366 tf. , A·Hi If.• ' ~ · 34~ If.; AI.e ,- . ; Lan ata ' - '9 · 'See the 'Life ofllomer by Herodotu" (cd. T . W . Allen in O. C . T. Homer, w>1. v), "work or,he latc Hdlc wa. startOd hy G . M urra)", • n~~.")· 26 ff. (ALC. ). s.-e btlo,.,.. Ch.ptcr VI 4.
n.
'9 ness orthe my thology ens hrined in the tradit ional poc':ms began, it seems, in the sixth century with the Ionian philosopher Xcnuphan 05;' defcnc\: by allegory-i .e. the discovery of acceptahle concealed meanings undcmcath the unacc",ptable
surface- is sa id aJ'IQ 10 have begun about the same time, with Thcagcno of Rhcgium, 'the first man to write about H omer'.6
Even at this early period, the epics, already obsolete and puzzling in language and (Olllent, wen: beginning to attract the inlcrpn:talivc activities which have nevcr ccased since, and which contributed immensely to the dc"elopmcrH of articulate "iews about Ihe !latun: and qualities ufpoetry.
Lyric poe ts- induding the compo>;ersof choral lyric, whospcak through the dlOruseS they ha\'c lrain~d - can corne forward in their own persons much mo~e easily than epic bards. The Iy~ie poet is not primarily a narrator, though he may of courn: tdl sto ri es, as did Slcsichorus and Pindar, and it is noticeable that both Plato and Aristo tl e emphasised th is aspec t of his wor k. It is tllU~ not SO violent a breach of continuity or of illusion if he steps forward with personal commen!. I n Pindar indeed this is common enough to look like an established convention. His ow n rdation 10 the M use as her prophet or spokesman, his rival , ' plodding incompetence, Home r' s seductive falsifications, the improp rieties ofrnylh, are alilhemes which he takes up, olien touching briefly and allusively on them, as thin gs exj>ected and well understood.' It would appear also tha i it was Ihe ly ric poets who counter-att ac ked moral critics like XenophHnes. At any r~te. when Plalo· gives examples of ,,·hat he ca lls the 'ancknt quarrel lx:twecn philosophy and poetry", it is from lyric that he quotes, though the provenance oflhe lines is un known, sharp phrases like 't h e bitch that harks 011 mastn' , ' L.n;". "3 Jr. 5<-,. at", hel",,'. C~.p'~r VJ ~ • • Lana'a "'4 If.
, I'indar fro '50, 01. ~ .fI)-9'J. N"". , . 12; AIL" 3- 4; Lanala 74-<;17; C . M. 80,,·.... /'i""« •. ch. I ; "1a~hJcr, ch. 6; M. R. [..rlO"·;I~ in IISCI' 67 ( 1963) '77f., and CQ,8 ('978) 461 f. • R,p. 6o(ic-[I [ALe H ).
'0
Criticism in Antiqui!;y
' mighty among the vain words of fools', 'the dainty thinkers starve', and so on. The late r comic attacks on Socrates and the sophistS perhaps only echoed and vulgarised this apparently .:arlier tradition of invective.
3
Drama and its attendant critical response are connected with somewhat different social and political conditions rrom epic and lyric. Plays were JXlpular entertainments al great festivals, the dramatists competed normally under the auspices of the Athenian demos. Thejudges altho:: Oionysia, who had 10 rank the plays in order, were not a panel of th eatre (;ritics. 9 They were a jury chosen by lOt, and they must have be",n expected to give dedsions in tunc with popular taste. No doubt their sphere was much limited by the fact that the archon had aln:ady selec ted the three oomf'Ctitol1l. No doubt topicality, .entiment and ~pcc tade had weight. But we . hou ld surely belie"" 1hat they looh..:l also, and with some degree of connoisseurship, at the poetry and the plot-oonstruction. The hes t evidence for this is th " prevaknceof parody and caricature in Atti c comedy. The various Euripi d"an scenes of Ackarniall.l, Tlusmopkllrio()is(U and P.ac., nOI to .peak of th" b rilliant lyrical pastiches and debates of the frogs, are full of.hrewd observations on tragic technique. Th e function of Aristophanic parody is of coum: nOI strictly cri tical. Its primary object is not to show how someth ing is good or ba d - still less to teach t"chnique or point a moral-b", to "xaggerate recognisable feaw...,. so as to make them funny. Nevertheless, histories of criticism rightly give a promineIl\ place to Aristophanes. 10 M any of Ih e terms that constitute the standard vocabula ry orIaler Greek criticism an; firlll found SO used in his p la y•. P~uchr(}s is laler the regular lerm lor failures caused b y misguided ingenuit y or grandeur; asttio~ r urbane' ) • For the evidence rdating to the j~dg,,", ,ee A. Pkkard .Camt.ridg<:, DM"""iE Ftlli,ols Df Alh... , ( td.~. (968), 951f. I. Som
Narrali,'~: flom
1M Btgznnings 10 Arislollt
"
is AriSlOtle's word for successful wit ; /i/I)$ and /,P10$ are vague expressions for deli cacy and daintiness in Alexandrian and Ani<;isl WriICT'!l. II Moreover, I he general ideas expressed in Ihe debate (agon) belween Aeschylus and Euripides in Ihe Frogs, whether original o r not, were clearly influential in shaping later stylistic theory. 111e essence of Ihe a1:on is Ihe contrast: grandiloq uence confront s wit, virili ly confronts d ecaden<:e. The Greeks loved such antitheses; and the elfect of ArislOphanes' formulation of this one was 10 sel a pattern for later stylistic d escri ptions. We shall see much more of th is pattern; I have already suggested tha t it was unfortunate, hut its influence and importanc(, are beyond question. The same debate a l!;O co ntains ideas abou t the moral and prac tical value of llOCtry whic h arc of considerable signifi cance. Aeschylus (1030 fr. ) is made to enumerate the useful services of Ihe early pOl: L~ : O,.pheus for religion, ,,-! U'\:leus fi)r healing and oracles, Hesiod for (arming, Homer for the art of war. The juke, which i. aimed al a no torious 'bad soldier' ca lled Pan _ todes, who tried to pu t on his hdmet first and his plume afterwards, derives wholly from the reference to Ho mer. T he resl of the passage makcs nv contribu tion 10 the humorous poim, except in so far as it builds up expectation. Now Horace's A,s PIM/i(Q'l contains a very similar ar)l;ument. The value of poetry is here demonSlrated by ,..,f,:rence 10 Orpheus, Am_ ph ion, the soc ial functions ofpoctry in carly limcs, and fina!!y the martial ins piration of Homer and T yrtaclIs. Though Horace ha.l elements which are n(>1 in Ari.~lophanl.o; - he allegorises the myths of Orpheus and Amphion - there is enough similarity to make some historic"l conncc tion likely. Morrov"r, it ma y be ;nfcrrro from 1'1,,10\ Pro/agoras (3,6D) that some wphists claimed lhal Ih.ir ar, was the great ("ivi liscr of mankind, and thaI Orpheus, Hcsiod alld Musaeus were, in their sense, 'sophists'. Th e hislorical possi bilities are two. Either Ari5 tophancs takes up a defence of poe try already current; Or else he modifies what was origina!!y a dcf"nce of sopko;, 'wise men ', gcner;,!!y, for the particular purpose of his debate. [n either case, it is intr.n,:1Iing 10 speculate on what happelled III:XI. Is
"J. D. Dcnn ;'I<m. CQ'"
('9"7) "3--'l1. U A " "..'i(. 39' It cr. Brink 38~ If.. Pohlen., " p. cit.
Critici=
i~
Antiqui!J
H orace's ultimate 'source' no other than Aristophanes? Or did some more serious sophistic apologia of poetry reach the Peripatetics and their Roman adapter independently of comedy? Rudolf pfeiffer, in hi. classic account of the develop_ ment of ancient scholarship, U reasonably suggests that Calli_ machus owed the expression of hi. literary id eal - the delicacy and li"'tis of the Alexandrians - precisely 10 Aristophancs' formulation of the qualities of Euripides. If this is true, il is an inSlanCe of a habit we can dete<:1 even in Plato: the habit of taking Old Comedy too seriously, either a. a historical source or as a quarry for ideas.
• We are told by Plu tarch'" that the description of Aeschylus ' &~"'n againsl ThM.s as 'a drama full of the God of War' comes from th e famous orator and teacher Corgia! of Leontini. It occurs in fact in Aristophanes, at Frogs 10ZI. Much has been built on this; it has been supposed that Aristophanes reproduces Corgia.· theory. But the bu ilding is shaky, for Plutarch may simply be mistak en. Th ere can be no doubt, however, that, of all the sophists and teachers of rhetoric of his day , Corgias had mQSt to do with the beginnings of crilicalthcory. Three propositions which he appears to put forward in his Difmct of Htiln are cruciaL" Th e first is that poetry ill logos uho~ m",ro~ , 'spec<:h having (i. e. 'with' ) metre ', This is opcn to the interpretation that all that is needed to convert prose into poetry is metrical fonn. Such a view was common enough later. It was rejected by Aristotle in the opening chapter of the Pl#'lics. It wa. abo rejected by Horace :1& if you brea k up the metre of semWnts like Lucilius' o r Horace's own, of course there is no poetry left; but do the same with some splendid pie<:e of Enniu., and th e disiuli m(mbTa pt)(lal are recognisable enough. But did Gorgias " Ifi"• .., ~ C/DSii«l/ Sdwl."h;p i. "tll".11•• _ 7'5., Ij.an .. a ".-,/;). t.~, fJll> (;t>IIIJ (ALC ~67 ).
" Ex ,ract> in A.LC 6--8;
grneral, V, Buchhrit. ,. s"lim '-i-56 fr,
in Radermacher , A..Ii ... Sc.ipw,<J; itpilti( liM>I. 30 fr,
5«
in
]{arratit't: jrom tht Btginllings to Aristotle
'3
really mean that metre alone turned prose into poetry~ It is natural 10 ask whether he conceives the relationship between IOgM and me/ron as an inte rna l one between wholly integrated e1emcnts of a whole, or an external one in which ' poetl)" is simply the sum of the two. The safest way of amwering this question is br looking closelr at the context. Gorgias is 'defending· or 'excusing' Helen. One defence is that she was deceived by logos. Now for this to be an dTective argument, logos should be represented as something she could not possibly be expected to resi<1. [I ha., 10 be ered il ed wit h Ihe greatesl possible emo_ tional power. Now Ihe emOlion:!1 imp:!et ofpoctl)'- its power to terroriseand sweep us off our feet - is, as Gorgias make~ clear, universally acknuwledged. I~gos in general must then be see n to ha\"e the same force. Th e spo:cial charactcristicsofpoetry and its dill',;:rc nce from pmse ha\"e the refore \() be minim ised. Iflhis is best dune, as it would seem, by t.eating metron as an r,xtcrnal ornamelll. 'H)I affc<:ting Ihe intrim i<: qualities of the whole, then this is how we should condude Gorgias wishl"
dilT
,·i~w,"""
E,".!,,,,,, 5, , !.
'4
CriliciJm in Antiquity
perceive
5 Thu s, by Ih e end of the fifth century, the foundations both of interpretative schula r:s hip "ud urliterary theory had been laid. The first had emerged mainly from concern with Homer, the second from reflection on the impact of Attic drama. But poetry was not the only art to invite rcfkction and discussion. The lalter part of the fifth century was also the age in which the skills of pcnluasive speec h were first systematically taught, by Gorgias him~lf among others. Thi., as we have ~en and shall see again, was of decisive importance for all future lit erary understanding. Al the same time, music, paiming and sculpture flourished, all potential topics for the new spi tit of q uesuoning. Damon ofOa,'~ who is assoc iated both with Prodicus and with Pnicles, is said to have written - supposedly as early as the +los - a fictitious Addms 101M ArtfJPagRJ in which he discussed the psychological e ffect of music and the way" in which it co uld repro:scnt various states of charactn (11M). This remained a prime interest of musi callheory: the different instrum ents, and still more the different 'modes', were held to have various powers over the emotions of the hearer. But music, though II M",..li.. 3~8c (AI.C 6). A limilar .rgum~nl in anOlh..,. ""phi.I;C l~xt Diu.; hpj 3. I D. ,. t·, La...,,, •. PIMUlN,,,,·1It I.. "'lIJiq",·, Lau ... nn. '954,54 If., Wil .. mowitz, G.inItiJ
./I'arratiu: fro m tkt BrginningI to Aristotlt
'5
closely allied with poetry in many situations, was only inci dCllIall}' a represelllatio nal art, and did not offer a model of m;mi$is in \he way \bat painting dearly did. If SimonidL"S realiy said that 'p"inting is silem poetry, poetry is pain ting that talks',l<:hoolmasler, look this up_ 'Of coun;e, Sophucles, you are an eX~rl in poetry. But Phrynichus ,,·"s surely wmng in calling the boy's chee ks "red"_ Ifa painter were w uSe;, red colour for them, the boy ,,-uuld,,', he a heauty any more, ,.' Sophocles laughed, 'Then I lake iI, 8ir,' he said, 'thaI you don't appl'Q\'e eilher of Simonide!!' much-admired line, "Ihe maid from red lips spuking"- or of Homer', "gold-h:lir"') Apoll"'" For if the painter had made Ihe god's hair gold and not black, the painting would ha,-e t..:.:n worse, And whal about "r<.»y_ti ng ercd"? If you dipped your finge", in rOSe colour, Ihe resuh would be a dye_worker'~ hands, nOt th.,..., of a heautiful woman. '2l The dill~rence belween ~tical and graphic represenlation was not made so dearly again in anti(luity,
6 It has always seemed shocking that Plato, Il Ihe grealest literal)' genius of (he fourth century, Ihe effective im'cntor and ,. Plu\a«h, M(}I, 346y (ALC 3), " hm of Chioo f' , 8 '"On Bt""'~lllbal (39' .'6 J~coby; ALC 4- 3), "P. ViC3ir~, Plalc~ : "ili"", lilli'ai". i. lh~ moot u...rut 'ur,,~y, but \he lileralure u immw",. 1\ ..""'" """'y of diuincti"n i. h i> Murdoch, Til< F;" aod rJu S~o ( ~on h~r Roman .. U t' ''''' or 1976), Scoc al"' J, .... oordcric. 11 lJialCl "' pl.leoi.;,.
Criticifm in Anti'luilJ unequalled pr..ctitioncr of a highly M>ph istieated genre, the philosophical dialogue, which may properly be regarded as the literary sy mool of free inquiry, shou ld at the same time have consistently advocated the most rigid and doctrinaire moral censorship of the arts. Clearly aware that exccllo:nce and correc tness in poctry were distinct from excellence and correctness in other activities, he drew the conclusion that they must a lways give way to moral considera tions. Poets could han: no claim to knowlo:dge j they peddled illusion and dece it. The bener pocts they were, the more likely they were to deprave. It is easier to ~ympathise with his parallel rejection of rhetoric. \Ve readily range ourse lves against those who 'honour the probable above the truth', Ihe 'flatterers' (kolaktj ) who cynically exploit (he " 'eakness or their fellow men. We enjoy it therefore when Plato shows us how absurd are the pretentions of the rhetoricians, how facile and easily parodied the tricks of thcir trade, how ridiculous th eir tec hni calt erms.llit is when iLl in his Gorgias- he cxtends his condemnation to all sucial and political systems which rest on public persuasion that unease returns. The ancient debate over Plato's attaek on rhetoric continu<:d int o the last ages or the ancien t world . AeEus Ari~tid es, summiug up the rhetors' answer in the late second century A.V., produces the clinching argument: RhelOrie . . " .«.\ itl\"en ted ... as a defence of righleousnC'lS and a bond of life for mankind,"" that matters mighl be decided nO( by strength of arm or by W(aptHlS, not by number. and si~e; in plau:..,f all Ihis, Reason ..... ,., I.., dClCTTIl;nc ju.( 5<)lu(;oos in peacc and quicl. 1' T h~-se
Platonic altitudes, and our rC$ponse to thcm , take us a long way from the ordinary levels ofliterary judgment. They represent the working-out of certain extrclll e positions. The R~/JWbli( appears to lustain IwO proposit ions: that only ' knowledge of the Forms' possesses real validity, nlher kinds orhuman ulld eT! tanding heing inferior in varying tlegrees; and that the principles of political life shou ld be established on Ihe assump-tio n thai we can find or create rulers ..... ho do in fa<;1 have both
/'h,,"' .. , .,66". "0, ./;•• If. (There i. a" t:"gti, h Ira.,,!. by C . A. IIo!hr in Ihe Loeb U
f..g.
~.~IO
cl r;"iJu. ,"(O!. i
1'9731.)
N arra/ivt : jrIJm /Ilt Btgillnings /0 A ris/Pllt
'7
true knowledge and the ability to apply it to practical problems. The difficulty inherent in interpreting statements made in this context and as par! of this modd is that of assessing the clement offanta.'lY and irony in it all. T he more litcrally wc take Plato's attack on the poet.>, the mOre plainly we have to confess that his polit ical despair, in its search for scapegna ts, led him to a total, one might almos t say hyster ica l, rejectiun of a large dement in the culture in which he was brought up. But this seems absurd. Perhaps it is only the lip-rejection common in radical thinkers. I rony abounds in the dialogues; perhaps it is hue too. Something like th is is P. Vicair~--s conclusion, at the end ofa very careful and methodi ca l study. The irony , he says, touche!; other writers and the am they practice, but turns back 011 to the philosopher himself, insofa r as he consents 10 write; it i$ then the daily s."Jeguard, 'he ind ispc:nsah1e re>o:rva,ion , 'he mea", of freeing on""elf from a uni,"~rsal w~aknos; mure dea<-sigh\cd than the rest, ron~ious of the danger.! he mns hi,meJr, 'he philosophe< set< up ,hi, smiling, sometim,," uther melancholy, defence, wh ich allow. him always (0 keep his distance ." I' la(o's theoretical arguments, neve n heless, will «)lItem us in the ir place, as will the replies and discussionj which they excited. They touch on great issues: the poe t's nature and commitment, and the quality and condition~ of h is mimisis of the world. But Plato'S own understanding oflherawre appears far more dearly in his pastiche than in his theory: in the speeches ill (he S)'mposium, especially Agathon's; in t he mock funer al speeeh of the AftntxUlUS; and in the Lysias parody in the Phatdrus. In most uf thtse p laces, (he overt criticism is of content; but content and treatment go together, and much of the fun i., at the expense of styl istic manneri sms. All these passages- indeed, almos t all Plato's parodies relate to what iscalled 'cpidcictic' or;ttory. T hi,;'1 an important but amb iguous tcrlll .26 It is sometimes used (0 denote all or atory designed to provid. cit., 4'0- " . Su~h amhivalcnc~ and iron)" could ",ell havc hem ramili"r 10 Plalo', original reade,,; ,,'e rna)" "<>mparc hi. "<>n'cmpurary Alcidarna, ' written attack 0" written ""ml""ilio" ( Radermacher, AS , 3S ff. ) ,. On ,!o i, ~mbiguily,...., M~nalld e< Rheto<, cd. I) . A . Ru .. dl and K G. Wil><>n ( '!)S' ), [>. xx .
,8
Criticism in Antiquity
powers, no! for any practical
pll~;
but sometimes abo-~
by Aristotle-e xclus ively for the oratory of prai5c and blame, d esigned as it is 10 'display' the good or bad qualiti es afits subject. The first definition , the wider of the two, is the commoner and the more useful as a historical description; the second, probably th e earlier, has a dearer logkal character. In any case, this kind of work was a development of th e sophistic period. Its imJXlrtance for our theme lies in the fact that it is in some wa)"l a half_way hou$C betweo:n oratory and JX'Ctry. Its most obvious functions, praise and blame, werc the traditional
sp heres of the poet, which the orator now claimed to take over. Its subjects were naturally taken from a wider range than th ose of forensic or deliberative oratory. Gorgias and his pupils Polycrates and 1socrates used mythical an d fanciful thcmes. To show how Helen or PalameIIigni()~ ) was also large; encomia ofSah, Fever and Ikath were written primarily to display ingenuity and give the pleasure of paradox." All such speccht"S are meant to have a pennanen!. not just an ephemeral, value. H ence they had to possess the a ccu racy of written ~ty l e, >0 that the di~tant or fU1ure reader could not mistake the writer's meaning. And finally, many speeches a re in Aristotle's sen"" 'mimetic'. bt:<:ause they may deal with imaginary situations and imply the construction of a plot. This is true partkularly of dedamat ions. which. though not 'epideictie' in the striCter sense, arc works intended for exercise and amusement rather than for real usc. There are thus many I"easons fUI" I"cgarding 'epideictie' o ratory as of special interesl. We have seen how consideration of the conditions of declamation led ' pseudn-Oionysius' losome SOrt of general literary theory; we ~ hall ""e later how other lat e rhetoricians embraced history, philosophy and allwrtsofprose writing under the head of the 'epideictie' or, as they somctimes called it, the 'panegyric' kind." "Sc<: A. S. P~""'" 'Thing> with .. u, hUmlur" CP 2t ( '926) 27- 42. "&c H c""og~n ... De it.;, 3iI9. 7 Rat.e ; t.etow, Chapter X.
Narralit'e: ir9m Ihe Beginnings 10 AriJ/olle
'9
7 Plalo did nOI lea ch rhe lorie or r"'gard it as a proper subject o f study, His great cst pupil paid it gn :at anemion. Aristo tle not only collected and studied carliu rhetori cal lu hnai, but himself wrote a Rhetoric wh ieh had an en ormous inAuenee on all subsequent work.20 In its time, it was a high ly original hook, as we ca n see by comparing it with the onl y extant luht/iofthe older Iradilion, Ihe RIte/on'(Q Qd A/aat/drum, whose surviva l is do ubtless due to its bei ng attrihnt",d to Aristo tl e him selfinslead of to his co ntemllOrary, Aoaxime nes of La mpsac us, whom the re is g()(J(] ground to consider its author. T he hasis o r thi s boo k, as o f carly ledmai in general, is Ih e hrea kdowll of speec hes illln their co nstituclll 'parlS'- proocmiull\, na rrative, argument and confirm a tio n, epi logue-and th e prov isio n of appropriate precepts for each of these. Th is is a procedure which Plato ridi c uled in the Phaedrus, and which Aristo tl e clearl y thought unimpo rtant. The ir object ion to il was sound and of wide application: knowkd ge of parts was only 'Ihe preliminary to the art ' (10. pro liJ lubis), fo r Ihe an itself lay in knowing how to pUI the pieces together to form a coherent whok. Th is was as true of tragedy as of o ratory; and the rea lisa tiun uf it is no duubt the reason why Arislolk in Ih<: P",Ii<S shows SO link inlt:rcsl in Ihe analogous 'q uantitative' division of tragedy into prolog lle, <: pioodes, choral parts ;lI1d am/9S.JIJ At any ra,,:, I,,; o rga nised hi~ Own Rh£/..,r;con a difrere nt plan. Box,k I dt:ah fi rst with the kinds of argu mr nt "s~d in pcrsua~iv" spea king, and the diffe rence between these and the arguments valid in dialectic- i. e, logical forms a p propriate to philosophy and scie ncc. Jt then proceeds to d L'Scri be the three main types uf ora \ory-d clibcrati",:, fore nsic and epidcietic- and the topics appropriatl'l y handkd Iw Nch _ Hook II is (OtH:erncd mai nly with a psychological study of th e emo tio ns a nd cha rac ters of th e spea ker's a ud ico(e; it i~ n<:ct'SSitry, "ri_l lm le hold .., fo r thc 10 A c",,,"c,, ie,,, an.ly,i, of the RIvMU in K•• med)'. A" of I'",,,,uu,,., H2_ ' '4j'",lie, .~. " 'he." th"", par" arc di>0
x,.
Criticism ill Allliquiry
3"
spca ku 10 und erstand how and why ~ople feel certain emotions, and what the obj e<:: ts o f these emo tions are. Particularly important arc anger, pity and fear. Books I and n thus roughly fulfil the requirement for a 'scientifi c' rhe to ric, ou tlined by Pla to in the PhatdruJ, II and an: firmly based on the ethic< of the Academy. Book m is about diction and arrangement; and il is the section on diction which is m uch the most sign ifica nt part o f th e whole wor k from th e point of view of criticism in gencral. 32 Aristo tle gives an 3COO Unt orthe development of prose style, and his views on what is good and what is bad be<:ome apparent. Detailed cri ticism is con centrated mos tly on cpidcic ti c oratory, on Gorgias, lsocrates and Alddamas. The great forensic and political orators-Lysias, b aeus, Demosthenes- are less p rominent. Though the earlier pari a t least of De most henes' career must ha ve bun known to Aristotle wh"n th e RlulOr;c was COml>06ed, he alludes to him only once ..!3 Politically, they were on opposi ng sid es, And it seems to be late r- with th e second -gene ration I'cripatctic Humippus -that the story of Demos the nes' havi ng been a pupil of Plato be<:omcs cu rrent;,\oI and later still, perhaps not till the first cen tu ry B, C " that he comes to be regarded as ' the ora tor' par txctlltnct ,
The genera l plan of Aristotle's Rhtlorie beca me in fact the paHern for mos t latu handbook$. To its basic themes of in,-entio n, arrangemen t and slyle were add ed delivery (hupotrim ), which Aristo tl e had mentioned, and th e pscudoscience of mncmonics,ll A system which began in a p h ilosophical school, and in conscious opposition 10 the p ractice of rlu/ortS, thus came to d ominate th e rhetorical educa tion of all later antiquity, The sha rp oppositio n be tween the Academy JI 27' -~
(..1 /£ 7g-80),
., ALC ' 34 If. ... 140 7' .1_ .. Plu'~rOUd, lrid~n '976, ' 3~- Tha, Dcmoo,hen", I~arntd from A ri'tOlI~ is a n ab$u,-d ;,y rightly ",fu,td b)' (}j'my.iu. of llalicama ..", in his L..:"~r Ammaeu._ M The h~.ic luI> for ,hi, a , e Ad Il"",~i.", 3 -~1I-4o, Cice", lh ",.1".. ~ . 35,,-60, and par" of Quinlili.n 11.'_ Stt II . Blu m, Di. •• liA, M ...... I"..... il (Spudaomala '5) ; and, fo, Ihe I.,c, dc,-elopmenl!, Francco A . Yalco, TAl A " oif .\f"''''~ ( '!j66),
'0
.Narratiu : from tnr Btgilmillg5 to Ari5M/'
3'
and the schools of Gorgias and isocrates, wllich had charac. terised fourth.century educational debate in Athens, was later muc h modified; in the end, AristOtle', successors <ecm to ha"e om:red a type of training in general argumenta tion and invcntion not so very different from that of lsocrates himself.
The I'o,t,cs- appan::ntly earlier than the Rhetoric in its present form - had no such spectacular fortunt: in ancient timt:S. It did not come into its own till the Renai ssance ; indeed, Greek and Roman critics fairly consistently Il,isu nderstood or neglected many of its essl·ntial d oct rine!!. This short, uniq ue and vc ry diffi c ult hook touc hes on many topics. It hegins with the general theor~' of poetry as a ~pcdes of mim etic a rt , and develops some of the (ons~"luenccs of this. We arc made to sec how the grow th of poetry from 'nalUral' demands of human nalUre may be reconstructed, how its princ ipal genres arose, and in panicular how tragedy began and d eveloped to the point where it fulfils its ' nawrt:' , A la rge pan of the book is then taken up with Aristotle's a nalysis of th e clements of tragedy, the pre-cm inellee "f plOt, the . " lIofd in'lIe but still important pans played by cha ra cter and ideas, and so o n. Chapters t9 - 27, which deal with diction , includ e a good d ea l of Whal we onding I<> prcdcccssorson the one hand, soph ists a nd grammari,,,,s: On the uthn, PIal<>. His brief, and not ye t cOllll'letdy unde"' ood, allusion 10 the tragic ";ia,', l:io;I"" b 16 rdlh.,,;, 1,.,iq., ,u,IU An',It>U, Sofia 19iO.
3'
Criticism
i~
Anliquil)'
emotional impact of tragedy was psyc hologically destructive. His aMenionll that poetry is about 'generaliti es' (Ia kalho/uu ), while history is about panicular a cts of individual people, implies a n:bultal of Plato's denial of the poetS' claim 10 possess or imparl knowledge. Plato had also proclaimed the superiority of epic, which he held 10 be less mentally disturbing than
drama; Aristotle uses aesthdic crit cria-tsp!:cially the criterio n of unity - to determint the c ase in fa\'our of trage
or
)"1'45,'6 . .. Exlremely 'r""'u tali," is L.a pe Cooper,
A~ An,k>kIia~
Tiuw.!
~fC<mUti.!
For 'M 'Tracla'us eo;.linianus·. on ,,·hich 'hio is ha>«l. ! « belo... Q,"p'~' X 5. "'i,h Appmdi~. p. 203 . ( '9U) .
,II,,,,,,,,,,,,.
.. EI~. ).it. 4.'4. On thi . ...·oolc topic, I t t W . C . Amott. PloulI<J and T"ntU r C.cc<e and Rom. Su ..." Y" ) '4 If. and Po""s .flN L;.",PHi t...lin Sn..i •• , 2 ('979). 343 If.; F. H. Sandhach, G...... 39 (,g(i7) 218 If. .. T h. moo ••..,en' anno.".<:<1 «Iilio", or Theoph .... lu.· C/w,tu/n' a..., b~ P. Sleinmc," ( ,g60--2 ) and R. G. U.. hcr (,g\io).
.Narraliu(: from Ihe Btgimtillgs tQ Aristotle
33
Aristotlc's contrihution 10 the study of literaturc. When Dio Chrysostom"l obse rved lhat kriliU and grammatiki began with Aristotle he was refnring to the dialogucs in which the philos_ opher praised Homer, and ~"'peciHlly 10 On /I.~ poets, Hsubstantial work in three boo ks, which not o nl y covered some of the same ground as the imroduetory dl;lpte~ of the Pot'l;cs, hut contained a good deal of h i~ toriral an d biographical fact and legend. Again, Ari!tolle's an li(l'.m rian st udies wnc extremely impon am:"l they ineluded records of victories at festiva ls, didtllkaliai in which the names of archons, poets, plays and chi ef aClors Wl'1'e carefully registered. No one hefore Aristotle had allempted such documelllation in ~nything relating to Ii terary history. His resea rchl'S hecame t he basis of the official inscribed records that the t\th enians erected in th is period, and inspired similar records in later lime. In th is field , e,-en more than in poctie~ and rhetoric. he opened up the way for Alex. andrian and l~ter scholars. Di rect influence is less cenain. Demetrius of Phaleron, a pupi l of Aristotle and su bseq uently governor of Athens under i\-Iacedoni an rule Irom 317 to 307, lil'ed in exile at A lexa nd ria, and was concaned with Ptolemy I's foundation of the lI.-lous.:ion;4J but what sL holarly mClhods and approaches he, or anyone else, brought from the Lyceum to the new celHre of learning in Egypt, mmt remain mailer lur conjectu re.
" Oral;"" 36 .1 . "Pfeiffer , 11;,10..,. i . 79-114: 1I,';"w" 66 If. •, F ra",., PI.I,,,,.;' .~I(~."J';a,
l'icka.-d.C.mbrid~~,
31 ~
If.
Drd,"a,i< FtSli",/,
oj
CHAPTER THReE
Narrative: the Hellenistic Age from Aristotle to Horace , ARISTOTL E believed that tragedy can atlain its proper effect simply by being read.' T his is entirely consistent with his view of the predominance of plot over the other elements of a play. It is also, like his preferen<:;e for .... ritlen o\"er ~ I)Oken oratory/ cha ractcristic of h is age. I n the H ellenist ie. age, a generat ion or t ....o ancr Aristotle, the ualance between speech and writ ing seems vnydi ffcrelll from what il wa.< in Ihe fifth or early fourth CCnlury. It is perhaps no gr(,:aI exaggeration to say that people Slopped thinking of writing as simply the record 01" speech or song, and ocgan ra lhcr to think of speech as a mode of per. formancc, an actualisation of a writt en composi ti on alread y existing in its own right and waiting for the performer. A pair uf examples may help to point the comTast. In thesixlh eemury, the ]">Of:t Th(':Ognis promiM:d his heloved Cy n lllS an immurtality which consisted of innumerable repeli lions of his !-Ong «I dinner through linure ages.' On the other hand, the i",mOrlal. it)" of the H ellen istic poet, according \0 Horace , f(:S\S on poems that dese rve 'prcscrving .... ith cedar..<)il and keeping safc in I Pottu, '4 ~' 18, ' 453' 4, '46~' I~ . , Il/vt. ,;( '4 ' 3' 3· ' T hfflgni. ~37 ff. ( Al.e 3) ,
.Na"ali~: Ih~
HrllmiJlic Ago/ram AriSWllo/a lIarace
35
smoolh cypress'" The singer di es, th e book p rese rvCl; : '$ tilJ are Ihy pleasant \'oi ces, thy Nightingales, awake.' s It seems na tural that this way ofl<X}ki ng al the written word should gi ve new life to non-
s.."".,
( ,!j66). , Me,"ono' , /{)"'. to Ho~ cou ld Ix a " ,"a rn ' ped one", E. D iehl, tI"l~ log;4 L),i(8 (;'0"0 3.3 ' J f. ; C. M . IInwn in ] RS ' 9~ 7. 2 , If. Bu, .he pn<'m may Ix o f im perial d ale. and il> .on. wo uld ... i, Ihe second (cn luri A.O.: "'" M . I.. Wa l, A)-U~, : G'u(hi;d,~, 0. ' B)~."lj"i"",,: R.'olj K
Critirum ill Antiquity
with allusive learning and civilised wit, were essentially new. I t was natural that they should proclaim this, and adapt to fresh purposes the traditional statements of poetic intent that they found in Hesiod a nd Pindar. Callimachus was the greatest of th ese men. His immense scholarly activity of classifying and authenticating texts extended over the whole range of literature, oratory as well as poetry. It is interesting that the greatest oflater connoiloSeun of rhetorical style, D ionysiu! of Halicarnassus, judged him incompete nt in Ihis ficld.~ He was not a follower of Arislotl e, but rather an opponent. He wrote 'against' th e Peripatetic Praxiphane:s. '0 a work in which he also praised the didactic poetry of Aralus' Phatncmtlltl. H e was in facl clearly opposed 10 much thaI Aristotle had advocated. Unity and size (mtglllun) were not, for him, q ualitie:s of literary significance; variety and perfec ti un uf fin ish wne more imponant. The ideal cam e ncar to the portrait of E uripides' qualilies that had been given by Aristophane:s. Callimaehus' main programmatic statements were seminal not only in Grc£k literature bUI even mOTe in Roman. The image of the 'river of As.~yria' bearing filth on its water, cont rasted with the undefikd !Tickle of the holy spring, passed into the language of criticism." ' Longinus' uses il in reverse to reject the whole ideal ofperfeetionisl delicacy: it is not the little spring we admire, however userul its drinking water, hut the mighty Rhine a nd Danube and the still mightier O(ean. 11 Other potent images appear in the prologue of Callimaehus' Ai/;aY It is th e gods' business to thunder! not th e poe!"s. Apollo' s advice is to keep th e poem 'slim' - fatness is OIl! right for sacrificial animals, bUI not a desirable quality in poetry. It is the untrodden path, not the highway, which the poe!"s c hariot must travel. A touchstone oftasle in H ellenislic times seems to have been {Iwsc bird, of {h~ Musa "').., Lobou. in ,·ain by trying '0 ero ..· down (he Bam of Chi".." • See CaU;machm fro « 6- 7 Pfeiffer. ,. C O. Brink CQ. 40 (' 9.\6), I ' -<>6. " Hy"," ~ ·''''5 If. (AI'I"'"dix . p. 'flo): n . 1'<01"''';u, 3.3 (..-i,h M. E. H uhbard. l'rop
a Q>oumain. and
lik~",i",
Nana/it'! : Ihe Hr/lmiJ/it Age f rom .'Iris/oil! /Q Horact
37
th e late classical (fifih_eentury) e pic poet Antimac hus of Co!ophon, who wrote both lo\'c poetry and an epic Tlubaid. He had appa renlly been a favourite of Pla to, p<:rhaps bl:cause of his high moral tone ; later he was judged severe and chaste (ausliros, Jophron ) by admirers, turgid and o bscure by opponents." These incl nded the CaHimaehean , and , later, their Roman imitators. Am ong those whu eo ncc rn ed th cmse lvell with Amimachu s was Agatharchid es of Cnidos, a his torian a nd critic who nuurished in the fir.sl half of the second cenlu ry a nd is of considc rabk interes t in the histo ry of taslc.' ! Agatharchid es wro te a syn opsis (rpilfJ11ul of Antimac hus' Ly dt, whi ch was a n elegiac poem in several Ix:>oks, co nt aining appa rent ly a series uf roma nt ic and myt hological stories. So pres umabl}' he admired this. He also made a severe aHack o n th e oralOr a nd historian Hegesias of Magnesia,16 who was la ter muc h allacked by dassids ing crit iC'! lik e Dionysin.< (a mi even ' l .onginu5'), Ihongh he had himself daimed 10 bt an imita to r or th e simples l of the Allie o rato rs, Lysias. The bnrdtll of Agatharc hides' a llack is in fact very like thaI of these later writers : H eg~'S ias' co mm ents on th e sack of The bes are said 10 be frivol ous ;lnd nnreal , thOSt: of Stratoclcs a nd De mosthc ncs dig nifi ed , serious and far wo rthi er of the occasion. [I loo ks as if a ccrtain strain in rn etori ..... 1 cri ticism witn whi ch 'Longi nu s' and D;on ys;u, mak,' us fami lia r in fac t goes back m uch ea rlie r. Hut we ha rdl y know enuug h a bout Aga tha rd, id,;s tu mak e a cohe rent picture of his allit udes and their rela tion 10 thost; of his contcm po ra ries. H ellenistic poe try, ho weve r, has ~ noth cr <;ha ractc ristic importa ll1 fo r our th eme, in addilio n to its cmphasis on craft~m an ~ h i [l a nd on th e avoida nce of the wel l-t rod den way. The poss ibilit y of some kind of vernacula r poel ry wa s alive in the fo unh ccntury, for th e gap betwee n Ihe la ng uage or New Comt-d y and " II. I\"y"" Anli",,,,hi Rdiip
~- '3 .
Pa,'i~"tart )· in'~rc>'in~ ",faenc.. a<e (;.""11,,, 9~.9, [);(}n . ~b t . C. .." . V....b. ~~. ,\ n,imadlU ' and PIa,,, : i\ . S. Rigin".. l'ldl.";<~ ('976 ), ,67"""9 - .hough
,he may wdl l", ,a king 'ou a edulo u. ~ ,'jew of'h"'" anced",,,, , ,h~ ... ur~c of " 'hjch (a, I.as' in f""' ) ""en,, ' (} I", lIerad id ... P.... "'jcn •. ., l'l""in' ru d Agalharchjd .. (Bibl!'I/I
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that of ordinary s~cch does nOl1ook large. The metre of comic dialogue imposes few constraints on speec h rhythms. Not only is the iambic, as Aristotle sa)lll,11 the nearest of all metres to speech, bUl lhe variety and freedom wil h which it was used by M enander demonstrate an exceptional ability to combine
metrical regularit), with the rhythms and intonations of ordinary speech. New Comedy does n01 read as though it was meant to be dl-.:laimoo. At a somewhat lalcr period, the criti.:: Demetrius drew a distinction between the pla)lll of Philemon, whi ch were good to read, and those of Menander, which were better acted; he had in mind the frequent lack of conne<:ling conjunctions in Mellander, which, he thought , ·stimulated drama ti c delivery' .'8 Frequency of connection makes for a foolproof written style; (h e opposite for (h e bener reproduction of natural speech. M"'nandc r'~ lingu istic realism was very mu ch a temJXlrary phenomenon of fourth-century Athens. T he literary conditions of th e following period ruled out its continuanc..,. Even humorou. and satirical poe. ry was now composed in dialects based on older lile rary models and was not meanl as a reproduclion of anyone's actua l speech. The reasons for this are complex. T o the old tradition of the special language of poetry was added Ihe need for a lite rary language understood by all persons ofa certain cultu re, whatever their origin. An d the origins of JXllential readers were now very various; Gree k lilerary education was spreading rapidly through the newly Hc!lenised regions of Asia Minor, Sy ria and Egypt. The forces Ihal e ncouraged the growth of a k.oini for e\·eryday needs oflrade or administration also strengthe ned the tendency to distance poetry from verna.;ular forms of expression altoget her.
The unp hilusophical 'craftsmanlike' attilude of Callimachus, to whom no distinct literary theory can be allributt:d, ran counter 10 some important tendencies of the Hellenistic world. ~'I orc and more educated men were undergoing lraining in " POIlu; '+l9' "O~
phi lO5Ophy- in Pl a to 'Hense ruh er than in lsocra tes' - a nd be· comi ng adherents of o ne o r othe r o f the g reat schools. Such adhe rem:e might - especialJy with Epicureans- in\'ol\<e a rommitm ent bot" to a ""a), of life and to grouJlS of li ke-mi nded penons. Acoordi n,l: to Ciee ro. 19 a man' s c hoice o f philO5Ophieal school e",en affect(.d his oratorical slyle. Th e Stoics were 100 much con cern ed wi th dr)' logic, Epi cu reans were (j ui te unsuila ble reading for an ora lor, Ihc Acadcmr and L)'ceum had Ihe adva nta ge ufmaking their membc~ read Plato ilnd Aristolle, write~ whose style was good to imit ate. Now th ellc philosophical sc hools- with the cxceptio n of the ea rl ier a nd more wholehearted followe rs of t: picu rus, who had brusqud~' rejccted the whole traditio nal paid/ill - concerned thelllsch'es, not onl y with log ic. eth ics a nd ph ysica l science, but wj lh the p ri nciples o f rhetoric and ])()Clics. h is th us here Ihal we h iwc 10 loo k lOr d e\'c!0 plllcllt5 in c ritiea l theory, as distinc t from mO\'cmc n tll o f tasle, in t his pe riod . The al mOSI IOtal loss of the prose litera lure of Ih e a ge- it loss di rcc:II ~' du e to a subsequent re\'olul ion in laslc, Ihe class iciz ing 1IIo\"eme11l ofl he Ii rsl cen Iur)' H.C. - ma kes the sc ilrdl h"rd ; hUI so me faclS are deilr. Our greal es t los.. is probahly tha I of the lil era ry works of Aristotle's immediate successor, Thcoplmlstus. lO H is p arI in th e transrorma lion o f t\ ristOIIe' s theory of d ie!io n illlo Ihc COIllmo n 'Ihree -style' Iheory of later .... rilers is uncertain ; but he cuti, inl y .... To tc o n thi s suhject, as hc did 0 11 Olhe r topi cs o f rheto ric and 0 11 history. Another ea rl y I'crip" ICtio:, t\ ris lOxe nus o fTa relll um . .... ml c On music, a nd co n ti nued a line of thought f.·unil iar from Pla tO a nd from Aristotle's I'olilics, according to .... hich c ha nges in musica l and lil crarr taste a rc close ly lin ked wilh I he d edi lie of moral \"a luC$ a nd $OCi,,1 ir)!;ti l Ulio n5. Somcwh a t lat er. Nco plOlcm us of Pariu m. f;ull o lls as Ihc alleged 'iOurccofli on.cc's .'l ,S (l«li(o , seems to ha \<e wrilte n a ha ndbook of poe ti cs .... h ic h IranSlllilt~-d man y of Ih e simpler a nd mo re faclual pilns of l\ riSlOllt··S tn:il l i~.· wilh an "dl1lixlurc of .. III.i" , I I11 n. .. f r~~lllr nl ",rTh"' l'h ...<w, 'nll dic. ion· wcrC<"" lI rcl« t. "Cf)' "" rri . ir. II )·. t,) A. ~b "'r r . ,, 00). St,· O. R .~~nl"'@:"" . R f: SUPI,I. Vlt . • ~~~-p; F. W, h,li. f)" ,1.;" ..,/". ·Rik khl...k·. '~ I If. On ·th.........)I~ 1"'"'''"]0··...... bel"" . Ch op •..,. IX G.
St_.I, ""
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4"
CriliciJm in Antiquity
rhetorical dO(!rine about invention and style. " Bul in the lat~ Hellenistic period, the school evidently declined. Some of the antiquarian and biographical work which is a sso<:ia u!d wilh it is of a low level. gossipy and credulous: Salyrus' Lif~ of Euripidrs, a dialogue in which Eu ripides ' charac ler and acliviti~ are for the most part inferred from passag~~ in [he plays, is a revealing example of low-grade popularisa\ion.'l We shou ld remember that the texts of Aristotle's esoteric worh were al any rate nOI commonly available or n:ad umillhe finn century B.C.t) However, (me of the few surviving classics of Greek criticism ~rhaps fits inlo our narrative somewhere here. The Demetrius who is the author of th e t1'f!alise 0" Ityle is certainly not Demetrius of P haleron, Aristotle's pupil, to whom it is traditionally atuibmed: it is later than the third-century poet Sotades ( 189). On the other hand, the Peripatetic co nnec tion is fairly clear: Aristotl e, Theophrastus and Praxi phanes are mentioned, and the diso;ussion of th e periodic sentence, as well as the .cheme offour ba..ie styles with the ir perversions, ,uggQ ts an indepe ndent elaboration of Aristotle and Theophrastus. Unlike Dion}'5 ius, 'Longinus' and all the late r rhetoTS, the author draws particularly heavily on fourth-centu ry writers, including some who are fairly obscure, and givQ no special place to Dcm0:5thcnes among the orators. z< The first half of the first century B. C. perhaps fits the facts best; at an y rate, the book seems independent of Dionysius, an d yet is sufficiently backward-looking or 'classicising' in tendency to contrast the 'rid icuious' lack ortaSt" in 'present-day orators' with the taste and su reness of touc h exhibitcG, for "xampl", by Plato. 2J
" Evidence and d;.cu .. ion in C. O . Brink, P,.t-IO_ •• , 9'>"" ':;<" " Ed . G. Arrigh~ni ('96. ). t·ot Sat~TU" place in 'he h;",ory of Ih~ bi~ .... ph;c:ol ..... di.;on. _ now M. R . Lclkowitz GRBS.., (1979) 1117 r " How far ' hey . hen be<:am. comlnonly kno"'n ;" , ..,)' doubtful. Know_ IMge of Ari"OIle in ,,·ri ..... "f the Roman p
"
p~SIl s.~'PU""I:) ur'p'!IU:;Inuu! OSI " ;>J~," .{.Ipod JO S,";>!,\ :>!OIS '~uo IU"loiodw! II" " IP;>lqIlOpUIl '-'J;>." '\:;>'11 lIl'I - ·'''M :;IW\lS ;> 'P P;> PU;> I IU,)Wn ~.I"c "! fiuup""1 ""!P'OIS!JV '''011 U;>:;><; " IW"JI" ".\C'I ;>." -S!lll II! JOPEl '~ I UO ;llP SUI!;>W OU ,\(1 ;>.1:>,\\ s;)P"\! llP. ;>'<JIS ~l'SUUOU 11::l!,WP JO lU:>UHIS!ltpns;>-;>., pue SUO!IISI] ;>!)~!U;>II;> H .)O UOI\Nf -JJ .SIl!S.'UO! O U! U"JiOI S .\J~ I' OSI" pU" 'lO\C.IO I"C ;>P! '-'III )1l ()(1" lIU !~"!4) l":>! IJ '!JU ,\l;>'\ -S.""!I!!"!110 ';>1"1 P"" - S,OJ;l:>!:) .10 S!S"q ;lIp .JWP..lJ'1 .)!lO\;ll[J .ll!;>t ljdosOlllld. ';lI'1I' ld;>:>.)l! punoJ ';)lI"l ;)'11 'I:>!'l-" '01;>4' ;)'11 ,,0 S" O!!'P"O:> p;,.;oo,,,, )';'1"'0'" :n u _ '1).1.\I()S:"I,' :)11 $"'[1 Pln<);) p:>;>n l'(~1(1 P"\! SU"P!'OP'P uo Pl!ll\! s,o Il'ld 'P!4''I l:>! lJUO) ;HU -l;>~";x{ S ;>l[lJO lIoo]lno P'lOUI PUI! l;:lPl!J l!lP ;)l(1 P;l,'(OAUI )\ I!J P'SS;);>;l11 I! ~ SV!Jl JO J:>ll "UI Jl;)W ":>II l OU PI"OJ ' !JOI;> 'P '."J!'\JO lu!od wp U'Olj ·.\\IIP l;>dOld" .)0 III;>w ll)l'lj ;)IP 0) SU".llU "s" ')!JOI;>I..I' ;>lI"l Il O)" ;> ",'M" U! P!P .\:)'11 - ~ll P"Il '-'J OJ;}J!:) S" \ <jUIn P jjU!lUO');}'lJO u". U" - 'OH"O ;>l(1 01 ;l5U OU JO ""'" J JO;llp J l;ll!! !1~1l0411" 'oS' HII.Ux} 'pump snlloq ~!.I '''lnwlOJ ucwo ll :llp U! ' 0(':) "! ;)'1 0) "\I'1"JI10UOll J!JOOL[l :lIn 01 :l.I0p.' :llP I"I'-' ':lJ!1 '!I'lnd 1I~ " )Ill' ~!'I op 01 1).1P:>IIx" W'" .lld!Js!p ,l!OIS ,)11) ::>I{I!,sod JJ,\" ."olj '),1->." 1"·lP! "'I' 01 sum) -elu!xrudd" 'lju,,;> uo pJ)::>;>dx;>:)(1 JJ,\;>U PI'l():) oq." SO I{r/Of ]::>;>.) -l:xl '""[1 U! I';>S!I"'"";'(I 01 " luo IUJm'I $!ldwo~;>~ U" $".\\ ~!'[J pu!' ' . l[J11l1 ~ '[J lIII" ,,:)d~ JO ~}jP"I·"OIl~, U"'Il SS:)I Oil lUlI:)\u .b 'll .IP'" lIu Il{C;x:I, .10 ~lIP~l." OUl!, _\ '1 ~ J'1 01 IllJJuo I! H!t[." .10 ,\\:)!,\ lSIJoll!J AlIeJP S!.!;>P"J"'p I' PPlj plI" ':>!Jo);>']-I 0 ) UO!)U.)llC P!"d oslc ,bIll. '1I0 !)I1J!dsu! J !OI SJO S! '.I) Lt u F "! .\.');>od O)"! ~J )1l IU~UI1.11 nl1lo H IJJ! 'I'" .\JI'III(I>!JoO,\ "! 1I0!jl1,\OI"'! [lu II :)liu",p JO llo!".n -s! P ;>'Ll :.1-~;>.In 81) I'll" ~;>do.!) JO lCI":)! iJ"d II! pu" ';,j'h:nSucl JO IU;)wdol;)AJp pUl! U!jjlJo Jlj I JO S:>IJOOl[ I P"4 .\;)'1.1. on 'S;>I)S! ulIu!l pu" leluw",:5 lelu.l0J JO S.!JPunoJ ;>'11 ;>J;)." Q !OlS ,)11.1. ·~,\C'" 1""l;).lJ!P 1"11,":;''''''' U! U' S!""!'" ,,!> s:):ii"!UtU! )j,,!'I"!'P :;I!'"S
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Criliri$m in AlIliquiry
vc r-sc, as in his fa muus H)'I'''' /0 ~rus, to convey philusoph i<:at tca ching, adapting the mytho logical d etail of the god wielding Ih e thund erbolt w expr ..""', alm ost without concea lm ent , the protounrl doctrine of th e universal crea live fire. [n their d es ire bolh 10 mainta in lhe tradidon of reading the old poets, 'Illd \0 u.;e poetry as a propa edcuti c for philosoph y, the Swics nalUra ll y inclined to favo ur allegorical interpretations. Man y la tcr allegoriS:ltions o f Home r, both moral and scie ntific, are o f Stoic or igin. SI rabo, in a passage o f ob viousl y Stoic colouri ng,Jl argues for the fac t ual basis o f Ho mer's geog raph y ag ainst th e astrono m e r a nd poet Erato sthe nes, who t reated POCtl"y as
'a musemen t' , and thoug ht y Oll could as soon identify th e scenes of Odysse us' wa nderi n~ a s 'find th e cobbler who stitc hed up the b ag of the wind s' , The Stoics the refore expectoo poetry to have a moral or fac tual significa nce - in Posidonius' d efi nil ionll it i nvol\'oo 'imi ta t ion of th i ngs di vine and human' , in o lher word s Ih e 3l;\ivil i(.'S of all th e rationa l beings in the un,,'cl'S<' a nd , p"c, ,,m,,hl y, rcganl cd ven ifi Ollion a nd e uph on y as means to this end, Acco rding to Ariston of Ch ios, as rep rese nted b )' I'hi lod emus, a poem mig ht be good in content , h ut had in 'l;ompositio n' (,ulllh"i5) o r viec \'CtO" , d efici ency in cill,,:r heing enough to co nd emn the whole! ' 'Il,is suggcs ts a sharp dislin<'lion o f limn a nd conte nt , like Pla lO'S dislinl;lion betwee n 'what is said ' a nd ' how it is said ' , Form would he judged by th e ear, contelll by reason. But il is no t at all certain that I his was the un; veTS.11 Stoic v iew. BOIh Ariston hi msdf and , bIer, Cra les of ;\hllos att ached g reat im porta nce 10 e upho ny. Moreovc r, Sto ic Ihrori es oflanguage emphasised th e imilative " 1" .1'"9 (ALC 300 ff.). » Diog. LtcTl. 7.60 ( ~ .'H, I::dd stci n_Kidd): 'A f><>"m (po;;"'_), a. Posi· donim 5a}" in hi. I nt roduct ion "on dictitm" (b>is ), i•• I"ateri al <)t' rll )·th",i_ cal dic tion, with oma",<»' (bid' !"", <xccroing the bou nd. '" p.-....c (/0 /~K"'id.. ) ; " rhyth mical" , . , i" ror .. ampl~, " 0 mighty earl h and heaven or Z<", " :\ ~,,;, is ~ .i~llific.llt ";;""', em",,"cing an imitation or thing> di" inc a lld human' . Th i, p" .... gc ha. wn muc h di>cu...,.!; see ~ , g , C. 0 , llri nk, l/"rI,a ". (''''Iry, ('t(!l'8fmU"" , 6;,. (The difficult;'" arc .,,,;.,"'. A. it .. and" (i) Po;idoniuo apparent l}' CJ- dit GtJirhlt, Fiilljl" H.,k, ed , C. J .n",n ( t9~3) , 3' If,
Na n-alit't: Iht Hdltn;SI;, Agt/,Qm IIriSlolit 10 Horau
43
relationship between won:h an d th e things Ihe)' were inventt"d 10 repre~nl. It would seem to follo w that, in a good poem, verh a l li>nn must he appTOl'ria\(; to eont ent , and the j udgment whether this is so is one which ca nnot he ell tirdy depend ent on the irrat iona! c ri te ria of se nse. But how far an y in dividua I Stoic thco risL\ wenl in produeing a theory of Ihis killd is quile uncertain. Qur difficu lties over thi s are bound up with the problems raised by Philodem us' book 0'1fiMlIIS, of whidl extensive frag ment s survive.:lccn a prc()("ell p3tion of sc hola rs since Ih e carll' ninctf'Ctllh ccntury. On porm;, Book v. like ",an y Epicurca n Ir(>atiscs. ro ntains a greal deal of polemic aga inst oppon ents, mos tl y IInl"ir, but (o mpuralivdy litt le pos ili",,, dor. t rin~. There a re, howe\'er, point. of grea t interes t. Ph il odemus rt>jects ;lny expectation that poetry shou ld have a mo ral or faclUal CO nle nt , 3nd any allegori sa tion des igned to produce this result. For him , it wo ul d appear, it is not possibk for a poem to be bOlh good in Ihought and bad in com position; thc two go logether. Nor call composition be judged on irra lional cri teria. In lcrpreta lion of th is IcxI ;" difficult ; we ca n perhap" only say, in very general terms. Ihal I'hilodcmu s held thil t " poem should Ix:ju dged as a whole, a nd nOI Oil I wo se p" ral Cco unts o f form a lid ,·omen! ; ,,,,d I h is mH kes a sharp contrast wil h criti c.\ of other schools. It happen s tha t I'h ilodcmus was him self a pOCI . H is urh"nc un.! humo rous epigrams arc in a notkea h ly simple slyle - certain ly if we co mpare Ihe", with th e exuberan ce of hi" fell ow G ad a rene, ""deage r - and it is lemptin g 10 sec in lh is " rcn eclion o f hi. tlK..., r)' , [I is'lII intriguin g lhoug h l th a t Vi rgil and hi s friends moved in th e circl es around I'hilodelll us, even if we cannO I possibly '" Grulx· '9:1 n. g;v<> a ,,"""""y "f II,,· ma ;" IX';""; I"" wo,k 0" PI,;t, ~ dl he regarded a, pm. ,.;,;"'",<1.
44
Criticism in Allliquiry
know what influence such instruction had. It is prudent to recall th at Horace, who sometimes called him'!Clf an Epicurean, presents in the , Irs /!rHI/ica an orthodox Peripatetic sys tem, drawing (we are told ) un that !amc Neoptolcmus of Parium whom Philodcmus treat~d as a spt:cially vulnerable and in compete n t opponent.
4 Philodemus, in es tabli shing himself in haly among R oman patrons and pupi ls, was following a tradition established for mure than a c"mury. Rome had become not only the political, hUl1hc lite rary centre of the Gree k_spea king world. We must go back to see how this had come about. The finn development of Latin poctry took plact in the laiC tbird and early second centuries, a lill!c after the time of Callimachus and his <:ontem poraries, but sti ll in the great A1c" "ndri;t" age of..:iencc an d .cholarship.•'rom the lime of E\lnius, at least, the metre and linguistic habi ts of Latin poetry were formed on Greek models, These models - Ho mer, the tragedians and the poets of New Comedy- were known and studied in the form in which Hellenistic sc holarship presented them. There was Ihns no pre-scholarly epoch in Latin literature, as there had been in Greek. Criticism went .ide by side with crea tion from the slart, and it was a scholarly criticism, in\'olving close attention to linguistic and forma l oorrectncss. Crates of Ma llus, the Stoic thoorist and grammarian, visited Rome , as an ambassador fmm K ing Attalus of Pergamum, in 1&).Jl He was forced to stay longer than he meant because he broke his leg in a drain; he lectured , it seems, to audiences who appreciated his scholarship. Crates was an allegorist - he ap_ pears to have ~en intcreSied in the allegorical interpretation oCthe Shield of ,\chi11 es as the koomoo l6-and it may be that the serious and philosophical tone of h is teaching appealed to Roman gravity. Certainly, his pupil Panactius, a generation laler, won great '''ccess and inHuen ee primaril y by hi, mnral '" Suct ,,'as a naturat , ubject for allegory : Suffit"" ' 55 If,
J,'a nali"c Iht Hdltnislic Age fro m Aristo llt to lJoraee
45
teaching. 8U1 CrdtcS will havc found grammatical and scholarl)· interests already flourishing. The f>OCts Livius and Enni us, bo th bilingudl, had interpre ted nOl only the G re.:k poetS hUl their own Latin compositions. Od,n early grammalici revi<;ed and commented on Naeviu); and Ennius the mselves. A tradition of d ose lin ks betwee n poets and schola rs was esta blished , and was always to be ~n important feature in the history of Latin liu;ra lure. AI a latr,!" period, Cawllus and the cQteriu of fashio na ble poets in th e late Rc public had elose linb with gram matici. T heir allusive and diflkuh poems dema nd ed interpre tatio n ; the poet co uld h~rd l y ma ke his way without the s..: holar. A hostile niti..: wrote of Val erius Caw- himself a pOCt - as 'the La tin Sirell, whu alun..: both reads poets an d makes them·." C inn a's Sm)·ma, a noto riOliS piece of perfectionist elaboration, was ~nnot ated by L. Crassici us, hi s I'roprmptirOiI by Aug u,lus' fr~-.;d man, th.; Palati ne Iihr~rian Hyginus. Parthcnius of Nicaea, a Greek wh o had reached Ital y as a prisoner of war in the seventies, was an influence o n the generation uf Cornelius Gallus and Virgil. ... H is colleuio n of 10ve-slOri~"S fo r the usc of poets survives : th ey arc leamed, roma ntic, somet i messcnsa t ion~l, usu~lly b~sed on locallcgcnds Of folk-tales. Also connected with Gallus-~nd incidentally with Cicero·s friend Alti<;us. whosc frc"dman II<; was - is Q . Caecilius Epiro ta, the firs t grammaticlI' to give public lecwres On Virgil..l\I An e\"e nt , perha ps, of so me signifi ca nce: it ~ h ows how scholarly c:riti<::ism operated in ma king new po<:try known and understood, and it opens the long association be twee n scholarship and the natio nal poet of imperial Rome wh ich dominated La lin J>O<"ieal niti ei,m in later periods. But th is esse nt ia ll y Alexandrian tr adi tion of scholars and po<:ts in close ,o/nits is nOt the o nly ""mifestati on of Rom an literary st udy in this period. The grc'lI polymath M. T crc ntills Varro'" had, it seems, no such links. He fo ll owed many paths of H ellenistic Ic~rning. and adap1ed Ihem 10 L~li n use , "Su~'on;", IN ~'"m""'I;NJ " . ,. g.. • . ,...... ),,1. £. H ubh"rd . P'.""I;,,:,. '0. L J . P. Bo"ch... C. C.""H., C.II",·. ("fiG). 74' w. v. Ct"u"". (.RBS S ( ,<j6~1 ,s, If. .. Su<'on;us IN l,.mmalid, ,6 . .. ENI"I,,,,, lI.rdl 9 ( ,g6o>j, "Varron· , cnn,~in; COSd)"' on ,·ar;"", ,;d.. of Varm·, act; ,·;t)". A hricfacwunt;n G ru1><:. ,60 If.
Crilicism in Antiquity
following in the footsteps of his tea cher, the first great Latin philologist, L Aelius Stilo." Stoic lin gui stic theory was applied to Latin Greek st ylistic discriminations to the classical poets of early Rom e. Varro wrote li ve\ of poets and discussed genres. He did this not only in his learned works blll in his sa tires. Though we have o nl y small fragme nts to go on, it is d ear that , like his predecessor Lu cilius a nd his successors Horace and Persius, he rega rded literary comm cnt as a na tural part of thc sa tirist's field. But whereas both Lucilius- wh o criticised the omate tra gic d ic tio n of Accius a nd perhaps in clin ed to simpler, morc Atti c tastcs'l-a nd Horace, who seems to have fo und Va rro's placid accepta nce of the old poets un crit ica l and unhelpful, took up di ltin et poi n!! of view in the litera,)' contruve rsies of th eir time, Va rro see ms outsid e them : idiosy ncra ti c, oldfashio ned , a ma n oflearning and humour, not a n adhere nt of a ny p" ny. The use of satire is sig nific,ml. Thi~ WlL! a genre in whic h the Rom a ns rightl y helieved th ey ow~cl linle clirtttl y 10 G reek models. It was the form in whi ch Horace, the poet-crit ic, chose 10 set out his authorit a tive refl ections un th e sta te of li terature and th e a pplication of theory to practice. And we can perha ps now see, in the light of the history we have ske tched , what it was th a t he inhe rit ed. On th e Greek sid e, th e background of th e AT, potlica was principall y a n Aristo teli a n legacy. This i.~ the o rigin of Ho ra ce's interes t in the history a nd develo pme nt of traged y- althuugh his th l"(),)' was nOt the sa me as Aristotle's a nd St"eIllS based on different ev id e nce a bo ut 'sa tyric' d rama. 11 is also th e o~igin of hi. trea tm e nt uf th e lo nn a! fcalUl"e\ of a pl" y, and of cha racter a nd la nguage. But he re again, as we have alread y observed , there is a diverge nce: Horace has no interes t in plo t-construc ti on, ' neccssit y and probabilit y' , suspense or surprise. There was also, of co urse, an Al exand rian clement in hi, emphasis on perfectio n in tedltliq uo:. U nliko: Va rro, Horace was not mm:h interes ted in earl y Latin litc ratu ro:, a nd tho ught its popula rit y mistaken. H e certainly learned much from the a! tit ud es OfCaIUJlu S, CaJvus and their fri ends; bu t he combined .. C;
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., G rube 1:.9: E . H . W ann illgloll . R,..".i., of Old Loli. '" (Loeb
tragmOIl" of ]."cil;" 'I. p. ,,·i. wi, h m<:T
roo
of
)P.ana/it't: Ihr Hrl/t llislic Agt from Aris/(}Ilr /() HM(la
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{heir i ",isle nu:: on triOlism,lUsh ip wi I h a degr<:e of serio usnes, and co mmillllen( to publ ic moralily whit:h they ",ould have found at variance wilh Iheir whole oUl look. Th e , Irs p<Jrliw rel)rcseilts a hala nce helween Rome and Grec..:e. Calli mar.hcan perfeclionism and concern with the mor,d duty ofthc poel.
5 1I:lc,mwhile, Greek rhetoric had eSlablished itself as a part of Ro man education. though not without opposition, As late as 92 B.C., the rhetol'S were condem ned by the e<; nsor.; as cor rupters of you lh." Roman pu hli,; mcn rrefl ucm cd rl"'lorical <e hoo ls in Rhodes. A!h~ IIS "nil Asia 10 gai n skill s they wen: dcnied al home; yet h)' Ciceru's tillie, nOllong after the prohihition of92, it was possible 10 "<;q uir(> a very full rI"'lori",,[ cducalion Wil h. 0111 going a"'
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turgid, flabhy :md thin writing (sujJIa/a, di$S(J/ula, exilisfiguTa ), Crudt" as they are, these exam ples give us a ckarer pictuft'" of what was actually in1~ndro by th.: common lcrm~ of ~ty lis ti .. des<:ription than we call otherwise o btain." Caricature gives at
any nut'" a son of undenaanding.
Cicero's later theoretical works aTe
nOl
school textbooks, but
aduh, Oflt"11 highly personal, discU'l.~ ions , and highl y wrought (if hasty ) literary compositions. Th ey are among uur main sour<:es for many rhe torical and critical themes. The earliest- De ora/oTt of 55 B.c. - is also Ihe longest and fullest. Th e key ooncept in this elaoorate dialogue is that of the 'pe rfect Orawr', educated in philosophy and the liberal arts, and the antithesis of the vulgaris ora/or of ordinary practice, whose s ucccs.~ rests on talent , dilig en ce, imitation and some knowled ge of rhetorical techniques. Cicero himself, i" his earliest great speech . Pro Ro>no AmerillO, clearly contrasts himself in this way with the hack prosecutor, Erucius. In De ora/Ofe, both in hi~ Ow" pe r5()n. and in lh~ ~pe<::chcs of C"u.• u~ and Antonius, Cicero, now at the heigh t of his own oratorical caree r, sketc hes a very personal and individual view of the whok subjN": t. EIOl"ulio occupies a good deal of Book Ill: and the treatment is broad e nough to indude a number of topics outside Ihe range of earlier handbooks - ithos and fHJthos, humour, prose-rh r lhm. The two lalcr wo rks - Brutus and Orator- show Cicero involved in a cnntmvcrsy which has wide_reaching, though un_ certain, implications." Some mid-cent ury spea kers, notably C. Licinius Calvu., the friend of Call1llus, saw the ideal of ·AlIic' oratory in the plain style ufLysias and H ypc rid es. This is a point uf view which i. associa ted with Caecilius of Cakactc, whom ·Longinus· criticises for his excessive admiration of Lysias; but it is not dear from what .uurce th e idea came to a .. Puticularl), amu,in~ M< t . 15 (frigid manner) and t.16 (trivial man_ "",,) . .. A gt><>d introduction to 'hi$ topic_. i.~ _ to th~ problems of ' A,ianism ' and · ... ttici. m' , i. R. G. "'W!tin', nOt< On Quintili.n to . lo.161f. Wilam ... wit. d ....'lic "-"05) . See also A. Dihle, "Der Beginn d", At1ilismu,,, An/iA, ond AI>t.d16.d ~3 ( , !ln 1 1 &1- 71' lind T Gd""r in En,,,'it~l if.,tll ' S (1979). 1 ![