Vergil - A Biography by Tenney Frank
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page 17 of 156 (10%)
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gained predominance in the schools. Later, in 46, Cicero in several
remarkable essays again took up the cudgels for an elaborate prose, but then his cause was already lost. Caesar's victory had demonstrated that Rome desired deeds, not words. [Footnote 2: Octavius was drawn to the Atticistic principles by the great master Apollodorus.] When Virgil, therefore, turned to rhetoric, probably under Epidius, he received the training which was still considered orthodox. His farewell[3] to rhetoric--written probably in 48--shows unmistakably the nature of the stuff on which he had been fed. It is the bombast and the futile rules of the Asianic creed against which he flings his unsparing scazons. [Footnote 3: _Catalepton_ V (Edition, Vollmer). Birt, _Jugendverse und Heimatpoesie Vergils_, 1910, has provided a useful commentary on the _Catalepton_.] Begone ye useless paint-pots of the school; Your phrases reek, but not with Attic scent, Tarquitius' and Selius' and Varro's drool: A witless crew, with learning temulent. And ye begone, ye tinkling cymbals vain, That call the youths to drivelings insane. Epidius, to be sure, is not mentioned, but we happen to know that Varro--if this be the erudite friend of Cicero--was devoted to the Asianic principles. And Epidius, the teacher of the flowery Mark Antony, may well be concealed in Vergil's list of names even if mention of him |
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