fbpx
Wikipedia

Satires (Horace)

The Satires (Latin: Saturae or Sermones) is a collection of satirical poems written in Latin dactylic hexameters by the Roman poet Horace. Published probably in 35 BC and at the latest, by 33 BC,[1][2] the first book of Satires represents Horace's first published work. It established him as one of the great poetic talents of the Augustan Age.[citation needed] The second book was published in 30 BC as a sequel.[3]

Satires (Horace)

In the first book of his Sermones (Latin for "conversations") or Saturae (Latin for "miscellaneous poems"), Horace combines Greek philosophy with Roman good sense to convince his readers of the futility and silliness of their ambitions and desires. As an alternative, he proposes a life that is based on the Greek philosophical ideals of autarkeia (Greek for "inner self-sufficiency") and metriotes (Greek for "moderation" or sticking to the Just Mean).[4] In 1.6.110–131, Horace illustrates what he means by describing a typical day in his own simple, but contented life.

The second book also addresses the fundamental question of Greek Hellenistic philosophy, the search for a happy and contented life. In contrast to book I, however, many of this book's poems are dialogues in which the poet allows a series of pseudo-philosophers, such as the bankrupt art-dealer turned Stoic philosopher Damasippus, the peasant Ofellus, the mythical seer Teiresias, and the poet's own slave, Davus, to espouse their philosophy of life, in satiric contrast to that of the narrator.[5]

Although the Satires are sometimes considered to be inferior to the Odes, they have been received positively in recent decades.[6] In the Middle Ages, they were very popular and quoted more frequently than the Odes.

Poetic models edit

Horace's direct predecessor as writer of satires was Lucilius, a poet of the late 2nd century BC who wrote partly in hexameters and partly in the trochaic septenarius metre.[7] Horace inherited from Lucilius the hexameter, the conversational and sometimes even prosaic tone of his poetry, and the tradition of personal attack. In contrast to Lucilius, however, the victims of Horace's mockery are not members of the nobility, but overly ambitious freedmen, anonymous misers, courtesans, street philosophers, hired buffoons, and bad poets. In accordance with the Epicurean principle Lathe biosas (Greek for "Live unnoticed"), Horace consciously does not get involved in the complicated politics of his times, but advocates instead a life that focuses on individual happiness and virtue.

Probably equally important is the influence of Greek diatribe in the tradition of the philosopher Bion of Borysthenes (c. 335–245 BC).[8] Horace's Satires share with this genre some of their themes, typical imagery, and similes, and the fiction of an anonymous interlocutor whose objections the speaker easily refutes.

Another inspiration was the poet Lucretius, whose didactic epic De rerum natura ("On the Nature of Things"), also written in hexameters, popularized Epicurean philosophy in Rome.[9] For example, Horace's comparison of his satires with cookies that a teacher uses to encourage his students to learn their letters,[10] reminds one of Lucretius' more traditional comparison of his poetry with the sugar that sweetens the bitter medicine of philosophy. Moreover, Lucretian stock phrases such as nunc ad rem redeo ("now I return to the matter at hand") give Horace's philosophical "conversations" (sermones) a subtly Lucretian flavor.

Structure edit

Book 1 has ten poems, the same number as Virgil's Eclogues, which were published three or four years earlier.[11] The poems are of differing lengths: 121, 133, 142, 143, 104, 131, 34, 50, 78, and 92 lines respectively (total 1029 lines). Thus there are six relatively long poems (average length 129 lines) followed by four shorter poems (average length 64 lines).

Book 2 has eight poems, with 86, 136, 326, 95, 110, 117, 118, and 95 lines respectively (total 1083 lines).

Unlike the Eclogues, no particular numerical patterns have been discovered in the Satires, except that the first half of book 1 (omitting line 1.2.13) has the same number of lines (643) as the first half of book 2.[12]

As with the Eclogues, the first book of the Satires has been analysed by several scholars as having a triadic structure: 1,2,3 – 4,5,6 – 7,8,9, with 5 at the centre and the 10th poem concluding the whole.[11] In satires 1, 2 and 3, Horace gives general philosophical advice on how to live and what vices to avoid; in 4 and 6 he discusses his reasons for writing satire in the style of Lucilius, with the 5th satire (the Journey to Brundisium) an imitation of one by Lucilius; and satires 7, 8 and 9 (the three shortest satires) are all amusing anecdotes.

But, just as with the Eclogues, the arrangement is also symmetrical, based around poem 5. Thus the 1st and 9th satires describe two sides to an approach to Maecenas; 2 and 8 are linked by their erotic themes and their concern with the less romantic aspects of love (prostitution, witchcraft); 3 and 7 both have jokes on the nature of kingship and both have the word rex "king" in the last line; 4 and 6 tell of Horace's relationship with his father.[12] There are other links also between the poems, for example, the name Fabius occurs in 1.14 and 2.124; the name Tigellius in 2.3 and 3.4; Maecenas is addressed in 1.1. and 3.64; and Crispinus is mentioned in 1.120 and 3.139, linking up 1, 2, and 3.[12]

Book 2 is constructed on a different plan. In this book, in poems 1 and 5 a famous figure gives advice; 2 and 6 praise simple life in the country; 3 and 7 give precepts of Stoic philosophy; and 4 and 8 are concerned with gastronomy and fine dining.

Content of book 1 edit

Satire 1.1, Qui fit, Maecenas ("How come, Maecenas")

This satire targets avarice and greed. Most people, the satirist argues, complain about their lot yet do not really want to change it. Our insatiable greed for material wealth is just as silly. The true basic human needs, food and water, are easily satisfied. A person who recognizes the natural limit (modus) set for our desires, the Just Mean between the extremes, will in the end, leave the Banquet of Life like a satisfied guest, full, and content.

Satire 1.2, Ambubaiarum collegia ("The colleges of Syrian music girls")

This satire deals with adultery and other unreasonable behaviour in sexual matters. Horace claims that there is also a natural mean with regard to sex. Our basic sexual urges are easily satisfied (any partner will do), so it seems silly to run after married noblewomen when freedwomen are available.

Satire 1.3, Omnibus hoc vitium est ("All singers have this vice")

Horace demands fairness when we criticize other people’s flaws. In the case of friends, we should be especially lenient.

Satire 1.4, Eupolis atque Cratinus ("Eupolis and Cratinus")

In a programmatic declaration of Horace's poetic views, he applies these same critical principles to poetry and shows that his own satires follow them.

Satire 1.5, Egressum magna ... Roma ("Having left great Rome")

Horace describes a journey he made from Rome to Brundisium in the spring of 36 BC, in the company of the poet Virgil, his patron Maecenas, and others. Alluding to a famous satire in which Horace’s predecessor Lucilius described a trip to his estates near Tarentum, this poem offers a comic self-portrait of Horace as an insignificant member in the retinue of his powerful friend Maecenas when the latter negotiated one last truce between Antony and Octavian, the Peace of Brundisium (36 BC). A highpoint of the satire is a verbal contest that, as in Satire 1.4, distinguishes scurrility from satire. Here, Horace pitches a ‘’scurra’’ (buffoon) from the capital, the freedman Sarmentus, against his ultimately victorious local challenger, Messius Cicirrus (“the Fighting Cock”).

Satire 1.6, Non quia, Maecenas ("Not because, Maecenas")

With the same modesty with which he just depicted himself in Satire 1.5, Horace explains why he is not interested in a career in politics even though, during the Civil War, he once served as the tribune of a Roman legion (48). People would jeer at him because of his freedman father, and his father taught him to be content with his status in life (85–87) even though he made sure that his son could enjoy the same education as an aristocrat (76–80).

Satire 1.7, Proscripti Regis Rupili pus atque venenum ("The pus and poison of the proscribed Rupilius Rex")

This satire deals with a court case that Persius, a Greek merchant of mixed birth, won against the Roman Rupilius Rex. Following the account of Horace's youth in 1.6, this satire tells a story from his service under Brutus during the Civil War. As in 1.5, it features a verbal contest in which two different kinds of invective are set against each other. Initially, Greek verbosity seems to succumb to Italian acidity, but in the end, the Greek wins with a clever turn of phrase, calling on the presiding judge, Brutus the Liberator, to do his duty as his ancestor had done and dispose of the "king" (Latin rex), Rupilius Rex (33–35).

Satire 1.8, Olim truncus eram ("Once I was a tree trunk")

Priapus, a wooden garden fertility god, narrates the visit of two terrible witches to Maecenas' garden that he is supposed to protect against trespassers and thieves. Maecenas' garden on the Esquiline Hill used to be a cemetery for executed criminals and the poor, and so it attracts witches that dig for magic bones and harmful herbs. The god is powerless until the summer heat makes the figwood that he is made of explode, and this divine "fart" chases the terrified witches away.

Satire 1.9, Ibam forte Via Sacra ("I happened to be walking on the Sacred Way")

Horace is accosted by an ambitious flatterer and would-be poet who hopes that Horace will help him to worm his way into the circle of Maecenas' friends. Horace tries in vain to get rid of the boor. He assures him that this is not how Maecenas and his friends operate. Yet he only manages to get rid of him when finally a creditor of the boor appears and drags him off to court (74–78).

Satire 1.10, Nempe incomposito ("I did indeed say that Lucilius' verses hobble along")

This satire functions as an epilogue to the book. Here Horace clarifies his criticism of his predecessor Lucilius, jokingly explains his choice of the genre ("nothing else was available") in a way that groups him and his Satires among the foremost poets of Rome, and lists Maecenas and his circle as his desired audience.

Content of book 2 edit

Satire 2.1, Sunt quibus in satira ("There are those to whom I seem too harsh in satire")

Horace, who is anxious his satires are making him unpopular, pretends to consult the famous jurist Gaius Trebatius Testa, who advises him to give up writing, or else to write an epic poem in honour of Augustus. Horace replies that epic is beyond him, and that just like his predecessor Lucilius he can still enjoy the friendship of great men while writing satire.

Satire 2.2, Quae virtus et quanta ("How great a virtue it is to live on little")

Horace writes about the virtues of living on simple fare. He claims to be quoting a certain Ofellus, who lost his land in the confiscations following the civil war.

Satire 2.3, Si raro scribes ("If you write so rarely")

A certain Damasippus,[13] a follower of Stoicism, criticises Horace for being lazy and writing so little. Damasippus explains that he used to make a living buying and selling, but lost all his money and went mad, until a philosopher called Stertinius rescued him. Damasippus describes various different kinds of mad people: creditors, misers, insane spenders, over-ambitious people, prodigals, spendthrifts, infatuated lovers, superstitious people. He says Horace is mad too, writing poetry in a bad temper, and living beyond his means.

Satire 2.4, Unde et quo Catius? ("Where from and where to, Catius?")

Horace meets a certain Catius, who is hurrying home to write down some precepts about food, wine and cookery which he has heard from a certain expert on gastronomy. Catius stops to tell Horace what he has heard. At the end Horace begs him to allow him to meet the expert himself.

According to Palmer this Catius is a thinly disguised version of Gaius Matius, a friend of Julius Caesar, Octavian, Cicero, and Trebatius, who wrote three books on gastronomy. The unnamed expert was most probably Matius himself. A letter written to Cicero from Matius and Trebatius jointly is preserved among Cicero's letters (Att. 9.15.A).[14]

Satire 2.5, Hoc quoque, Tiresia ("Tell me this too, Tiresias")

Ulysses (Odysseus), when consulting the prophet Tiresias in the Underworld, asks him for advice on how to repair his broken fortunes. Tiresias advises him to become a toady to some rich man, in the hope of getting a legacy from the man when he dies. (The setting is imagined as a continuation of the famous scene in Homer's Odyssey 11.149, where Odysseus converses with the souls of various deceased people.)

Satire 2.6, Hoc erat in votis ("This was in my prayers")

Horace begins by expressing his delight with life on the country villa, which he has recently been given by his patron Maecenas. He contrasts life in the city, which he finds disagreeable, apart from his opportunities to converse with Maecenas; even then people jostle and sneer at him when he is on his way there. He returns to a description of his pleasant life on his farm, with books, simple fare, pleasant neighbours, and sensible conversation.[15] The satire ends with a retelling of the famous tale of The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse, based on one of Aesop's fables.

Satire 2.7, Iamdudum ausculto ("I've been listening for a while")

A slave called Davus asks permission to speak. Since it is December Horace gives him permission. He tells Horace some philosophical truths he has learnt from another slave, Crispinus's doorkeeper, and argues the Stoic principle that none but the wise are free. He shows that Horace, who is always criticising other people for being inconsistent, is inconsistent himself. Horace criticises his slave for vices – desire for sex, picture-mania, gluttony, restlessness – but is just as bad himself! At the end Horace has had enough and tells the slave to make himself scarce or he will join the other eight slaves working on the farm.

Satire 2.8, Ut Nasidieni ("How was dinner with Nasidienus?")

Horace says he's heard that Fundanius, a comic poet, was at a banquet at Nasidienus house and asks him to describe. Fundanius describes a lavish banquet, at which he and Maecenas were present, with expensive food, wine, and slaves. The host got alarmed when two guests called for more wine. While the host was boasting about the quality of the food, a wall-hanging suddenly fell into the dishes and he burst into tears. The next course came and the food would have been delightful if the host hadn't been praising it so much.

According to Palmer, Nasidienus is possibly to be identified with a certain general Quintus Salvius Salvidienus Rufus, who was put to death by Octavian in 40 BC, about ten years before these satires were written.[16]

Literary success edit

Both in antiquity and in the Middle Ages, Horace was much better known for his Satires and the thematically-related Epistles than for his lyric poetry. In the century after his death, he finds immediate successors in Persius and Juvenal, and even Dante still refers to him simply as "Orazio satiro" (Inferno 4.89). Conte (1994: 318) writes, "Over 1,000 medieval quotations from his Satires and Epistles have been traced, only about 250 from his Carmina."

See also edit

Selected bibliography edit

Critical editions of the Latin text edit

  • Borzsák, Stephan. Q. Horati Flacci Opera. Leipzig: Teubner, 1984.
  • Shackleton Bailey, D. R. Q. Horati Flacci Opera. Stuttgart: Teubner, 1995. ISBN 3-519-21436-9. Makes more use of conjectural emendation than Borzsák.

On-line editions of Horace's Satires, Latin edit

  • Sermones (Horatius), Wikisource (Latin).
  • All satires book I and II, in Latin. (With notes, also in Latin) Orelli rev. Baiter 5th ed. 1868. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  • Satirae, Peerlkamp 1863.
  • Carminum, Satirarum I et II, Epodon, Epistolarum, Ars poetica, etc., Long and MacLeane 1853.
  • Satirarum Liber I & II , Desprez 1828 in usum Delphini.
  • Sermonum Liber I , Zeune 1825 in usum Delphini.
  • Satires 1.5, 1.6, and 1.9 (in Latin) with vocabulary lists (in English). 'The Dickinson College Wiki', Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  • Bibliotheca Augustana [1]
  • The Latin Library (Latin) [2]
  • IntraText (Latin) [3]
  • Perseus Project (Latin) [4]

Horace's Satires, in English translation edit

  • Satires, Epistles, and Art of Poetry (Engl.). Translated into English verse by John Conington, m.a. corpus professor of Latin at the University of Oxford. Project Gutenberg. Retrieved 20 September 2010. N.B. Satire I-2 is excluded.
  • First book of Satires, with notes (all in English). R. M. Millington 1869. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  • Epodes, Satires and Epistles, in English. Also an introduction (of 5 pages). Rev. Francis Howes 1845. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
  • Alexander, Sidney. The complete Odes and Satires of Horace. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1999. ISBN 0-691-00428-5.
  • Juster, A.M. The Satires of Horace. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008. ISBN 978-0-8122-4090-0.
  • Rudd, Niall. Horace, Satires and Epistles; Persius, Satires. London : Penguin, 2005. ISBN 0-14-045508-6 (verse translation with introduction and notes).

Commentaries edit

  • Brown, P. Michael. Horace, Satires I. Warminster, England: Aris & Phillips, 1993. ISBN 0-85668-530-5 (introduction, text, translation and commentary)
  • Gowers, Emily. Satires. Book 1. Cambridge University Press, 2012. ISBN 978-0521458511 (introduction, text and commentary)
  • Law, Andy. A Translation and Interpretation of Horace’s Sermones, Book I. Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2021. ISBN 978-1527565838 (introduction, text, translation and interpretation)
  • Muecke, Frances. Horace, Satires II. Warminster, England: Aris & Phillips, 1993, repr. with corr. 1997. ISBN 0-85668-531-3 (hb). ISBN 0-85668-532-1 (pb) (introduction, text, translation and extensive scholarly commentary)

Short surveys edit

  • Conte, Gian Biagio. Latin Literature. A History. Translated by Joseph Solodow. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994. ISBN 0-8018-4638-2.
  • Braund, Susan H. Roman Verse Satire. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. ISBN 0-19-922072-7.
  • Freudenburg, Kirk. Satires of Rome: Threatening Poses from Lucilius to Juvenal. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. ISBN 0-521-00621-X.
  • Hooley, Daniel M. Roman Satire. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub., 2007. ISBN 1-4051-0689-1.

More specialized literature edit

  • Anderson, William S. "Ironic Preambles and Satiric Self-Definition in Horace Satire 2.1." Pacific Coast Philology 19 (1984) 36–42.
  • Bernstein, Michael André. "O Totiens Servus: Saturnalia and Servitude in Augustan Rome." Critical Inquiry 13 (1986–1987) 450–74.
  • Braund, Susan H. "City and Country in Roman Satire." In: Braund, S. H., ed. Satire and Society in Ancient Rome. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 1989, 23–47.
  • Clauss, James J. "Allusion and structure in Horace Satire 2.1. The Callimachean response." Transactions of the American Philological Association 115 (1985) 197–206.
  • Classen, Carl Joachim. "Horace – A Cook?" Classical Quarterly 72 (1978) 333–48.
  • Cucchiarelli, Andrea. La satira e il poeta : Orazio tra Epodi e Sermones. Pisa: Giardini, 2001. ISBN 88-427-0300-1.
  • Freudenburg, Kirk. "Horace's Satiric Program and the Language of Contemporary Theory in Satires 2.1." American Journal of Philology 111 (1990) 187–203.
  • Freudenburg, Kirk. The Walking Muse: Horace on the Theory of Satire. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-691-03166-5.
  • Freudenburg, Kirk. The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2005. ISBN 978-0-521-00627-9.
  • Hudson, Nicola A. "Food in Roman Satire," in: Braund, Susan H., ed. Satire and Society in Ancient Rome. Exeter: University of Exeter Press, 1989, 69–87.
  • Knorr, Ortwin. Verborgene Kunst : Argumentationsstruktur und Buchaufbau in den Satiren des Horaz. Hildesheim: Olms-Weidmann, 2004. ISBN 3-487-12539-0.
  • Lowrie, Michèle, “Slander and Horse Law in Horace, Sermones 2.1,” Law and Literature 17 (2005) 405-31.
  • Muecke, Frances. "Law, Rhetoric, and Genre in Horace, Satires 2.1." In: Harrison, Stephen J., ed. Homage to Horace. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1995, 203–218.
  • Rudd, Niall. The Satires of Horace. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1966 (2nd. ed., 1982). ISBN 0-520-04718-4.
  • Roberts, Michael. "Horace Satires 2.5: Restrained Indignation," American Journal of Philology 105 (1984) 426–33.
  • Rothaus Caston, Ruth. "The Fall of the Curtain (Horace S. 2.8)." Transactions of the American Philological Association 127 (1997) 233–56.
  • Sallmann, Klaus. "Satirische Technik in Horaz' Erbschleichersatire (s. 2, 5)." Hermes 98 (1970) 178–203.
  • Schlegel, Catherine. Satire and the Threat of Speech: Horace's Satires, Book 1. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2005. ISBN 0-299-20950-4.

References edit

  1. ^ Brown 1993: 3
  2. ^ Gowers 2012: 4 (note 22) gives 36/35 for book 1, citing DuQuesnay 1984: 20–21.
  3. ^ Brown 1993: 3; Muecke 1997: 1
  4. ^ Horace himself later coins the phrase aurea mediocritas (Latin for the "Golden Mean" in Odes 2.10.5.)
  5. ^ Muecke 1997: 6-7
  6. ^ Sharland, Suzanne (2003). "Priapus' Magic Marker: Literary Aspects of Horace, "Satire" 1.8". Acta Classica. 46: 97–109. JSTOR 24595344.
  7. ^ Brown 1993: 7-8; Muecke 1997: 2-5
  8. ^ Brown 1993: 4–5; Muecke 1997: 6
  9. ^ Brown 1993: 91–92
  10. ^ Satire 1.1.14–25; elementa can refer both to the letters of the ABC and to the beginnings of philosophy.
  11. ^ a b Leach, E. W. (1978). "Vergil, Horace, Tibullus: three collections of ten". Ramus, 7(2), 79–105.
  12. ^ a b c Zetzel, J. E. (1980). "Horace's Liber Sermonum: The Structure of Ambiguity". Arethusa, 13(1), 59–77: p. 76; p. 67.
  13. ^ Damasippus is mentioned in Cicero's letters (Att. 12.19.2, 33.1; Fam. 7.23.3): Palmer, A. (1905). The Satires of Horace, p. 277.
  14. ^ Palmer, A. (1905). The Satires of Horace. Macmillan, pp. 314–315.
  15. ^ The remains of a villa, believed to be Horace's, can still be visited today near Licenza, some 30 miles NE of Rome.
  16. ^ Palmer, A. (1905). The Satires of Horace. Macmillan, pp. 388–369.

External links edit

  • (in German), Munich, archived from the original on 2008-04-10

satires, horace, satires, latin, saturae, sermones, collection, satirical, poems, written, latin, dactylic, hexameters, roman, poet, horace, published, probably, latest, first, book, satires, represents, horace, first, published, work, established, great, poet. The Satires Latin Saturae or Sermones is a collection of satirical poems written in Latin dactylic hexameters by the Roman poet Horace Published probably in 35 BC and at the latest by 33 BC 1 2 the first book of Satires represents Horace s first published work It established him as one of the great poetic talents of the Augustan Age citation needed The second book was published in 30 BC as a sequel 3 Satires Horace In the first book of his Sermones Latin for conversations or Saturae Latin for miscellaneous poems Horace combines Greek philosophy with Roman good sense to convince his readers of the futility and silliness of their ambitions and desires As an alternative he proposes a life that is based on the Greek philosophical ideals of autarkeia Greek for inner self sufficiency and metriotes Greek for moderation or sticking to the Just Mean 4 In 1 6 110 131 Horace illustrates what he means by describing a typical day in his own simple but contented life The second book also addresses the fundamental question of Greek Hellenistic philosophy the search for a happy and contented life In contrast to book I however many of this book s poems are dialogues in which the poet allows a series of pseudo philosophers such as the bankrupt art dealer turned Stoic philosopher Damasippus the peasant Ofellus the mythical seer Teiresias and the poet s own slave Davus to espouse their philosophy of life in satiric contrast to that of the narrator 5 Although the Satires are sometimes considered to be inferior to the Odes they have been received positively in recent decades 6 In the Middle Ages they were very popular and quoted more frequently than the Odes Contents 1 Poetic models 2 Structure 3 Content of book 1 4 Content of book 2 5 Literary success 6 See also 7 Selected bibliography 7 1 Critical editions of the Latin text 7 2 On line editions of Horace s Satires Latin 7 3 Horace s Satires in English translation 7 4 Commentaries 7 5 Short surveys 7 6 More specialized literature 8 References 9 External linksPoetic models editHorace s direct predecessor as writer of satires was Lucilius a poet of the late 2nd century BC who wrote partly in hexameters and partly in the trochaic septenarius metre 7 Horace inherited from Lucilius the hexameter the conversational and sometimes even prosaic tone of his poetry and the tradition of personal attack In contrast to Lucilius however the victims of Horace s mockery are not members of the nobility but overly ambitious freedmen anonymous misers courtesans street philosophers hired buffoons and bad poets In accordance with the Epicurean principle Lathe biosas Greek for Live unnoticed Horace consciously does not get involved in the complicated politics of his times but advocates instead a life that focuses on individual happiness and virtue Probably equally important is the influence of Greek diatribe in the tradition of the philosopher Bion of Borysthenes c 335 245 BC 8 Horace s Satires share with this genre some of their themes typical imagery and similes and the fiction of an anonymous interlocutor whose objections the speaker easily refutes Another inspiration was the poet Lucretius whose didactic epic De rerum natura On the Nature of Things also written in hexameters popularized Epicurean philosophy in Rome 9 For example Horace s comparison of his satires with cookies that a teacher uses to encourage his students to learn their letters 10 reminds one of Lucretius more traditional comparison of his poetry with the sugar that sweetens the bitter medicine of philosophy Moreover Lucretian stock phrases such as nunc ad rem redeo now I return to the matter at hand give Horace s philosophical conversations sermones a subtly Lucretian flavor Structure editBook 1 has ten poems the same number as Virgil s Eclogues which were published three or four years earlier 11 The poems are of differing lengths 121 133 142 143 104 131 34 50 78 and 92 lines respectively total 1029 lines Thus there are six relatively long poems average length 129 lines followed by four shorter poems average length 64 lines Book 2 has eight poems with 86 136 326 95 110 117 118 and 95 lines respectively total 1083 lines Unlike the Eclogues no particular numerical patterns have been discovered in the Satires except that the first half of book 1 omitting line 1 2 13 has the same number of lines 643 as the first half of book 2 12 As with the Eclogues the first book of the Satires has been analysed by several scholars as having a triadic structure 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 with 5 at the centre and the 10th poem concluding the whole 11 In satires 1 2 and 3 Horace gives general philosophical advice on how to live and what vices to avoid in 4 and 6 he discusses his reasons for writing satire in the style of Lucilius with the 5th satire the Journey to Brundisium an imitation of one by Lucilius and satires 7 8 and 9 the three shortest satires are all amusing anecdotes But just as with the Eclogues the arrangement is also symmetrical based around poem 5 Thus the 1st and 9th satires describe two sides to an approach to Maecenas 2 and 8 are linked by their erotic themes and their concern with the less romantic aspects of love prostitution witchcraft 3 and 7 both have jokes on the nature of kingship and both have the word rex king in the last line 4 and 6 tell of Horace s relationship with his father 12 There are other links also between the poems for example the name Fabius occurs in 1 14 and 2 124 the name Tigellius in 2 3 and 3 4 Maecenas is addressed in 1 1 and 3 64 and Crispinus is mentioned in 1 120 and 3 139 linking up 1 2 and 3 12 Book 2 is constructed on a different plan In this book in poems 1 and 5 a famous figure gives advice 2 and 6 praise simple life in the country 3 and 7 give precepts of Stoic philosophy and 4 and 8 are concerned with gastronomy and fine dining Content of book 1 editSatire 1 1 Qui fit Maecenas How come Maecenas This satire targets avarice and greed Most people the satirist argues complain about their lot yet do not really want to change it Our insatiable greed for material wealth is just as silly The true basic human needs food and water are easily satisfied A person who recognizes the natural limit modus set for our desires the Just Mean between the extremes will in the end leave the Banquet of Life like a satisfied guest full and content Satire 1 2 Ambubaiarum collegia The colleges of Syrian music girls This satire deals with adultery and other unreasonable behaviour in sexual matters Horace claims that there is also a natural mean with regard to sex Our basic sexual urges are easily satisfied any partner will do so it seems silly to run after married noblewomen when freedwomen are available Satire 1 3 Omnibus hoc vitium est All singers have this vice Horace demands fairness when we criticize other people s flaws In the case of friends we should be especially lenient Satire 1 4 Eupolis atque Cratinus Eupolis and Cratinus In a programmatic declaration of Horace s poetic views he applies these same critical principles to poetry and shows that his own satires follow them Satire 1 5 Egressum magna Roma Having left great Rome Horace describes a journey he made from Rome to Brundisium in the spring of 36 BC in the company of the poet Virgil his patron Maecenas and others Alluding to a famous satire in which Horace s predecessor Lucilius described a trip to his estates near Tarentum this poem offers a comic self portrait of Horace as an insignificant member in the retinue of his powerful friend Maecenas when the latter negotiated one last truce between Antony and Octavian the Peace of Brundisium 36 BC A highpoint of the satire is a verbal contest that as in Satire 1 4 distinguishes scurrility from satire Here Horace pitches a scurra buffoon from the capital the freedman Sarmentus against his ultimately victorious local challenger Messius Cicirrus the Fighting Cock Satire 1 6 Non quia Maecenas Not because Maecenas With the same modesty with which he just depicted himself in Satire 1 5 Horace explains why he is not interested in a career in politics even though during the Civil War he once served as the tribune of a Roman legion 48 People would jeer at him because of his freedman father and his father taught him to be content with his status in life 85 87 even though he made sure that his son could enjoy the same education as an aristocrat 76 80 Satire 1 7 Proscripti Regis Rupili pus atque venenum The pus and poison of the proscribed Rupilius Rex This satire deals with a court case that Persius a Greek merchant of mixed birth won against the Roman Rupilius Rex Following the account of Horace s youth in 1 6 this satire tells a story from his service under Brutus during the Civil War As in 1 5 it features a verbal contest in which two different kinds of invective are set against each other Initially Greek verbosity seems to succumb to Italian acidity but in the end the Greek wins with a clever turn of phrase calling on the presiding judge Brutus the Liberator to do his duty as his ancestor had done and dispose of the king Latin rex Rupilius Rex 33 35 Satire 1 8 Olim truncus eram Once I was a tree trunk Priapus a wooden garden fertility god narrates the visit of two terrible witches to Maecenas garden that he is supposed to protect against trespassers and thieves Maecenas garden on the Esquiline Hill used to be a cemetery for executed criminals and the poor and so it attracts witches that dig for magic bones and harmful herbs The god is powerless until the summer heat makes the figwood that he is made of explode and this divine fart chases the terrified witches away Satire 1 9 Ibam forte Via Sacra I happened to be walking on the Sacred Way Horace is accosted by an ambitious flatterer and would be poet who hopes that Horace will help him to worm his way into the circle of Maecenas friends Horace tries in vain to get rid of the boor He assures him that this is not how Maecenas and his friends operate Yet he only manages to get rid of him when finally a creditor of the boor appears and drags him off to court 74 78 Satire 1 10 Nempe incomposito I did indeed say that Lucilius verses hobble along This satire functions as an epilogue to the book Here Horace clarifies his criticism of his predecessor Lucilius jokingly explains his choice of the genre nothing else was available in a way that groups him and his Satires among the foremost poets of Rome and lists Maecenas and his circle as his desired audience Content of book 2 editSatire 2 1 Sunt quibus in satira There are those to whom I seem too harsh in satire Horace who is anxious his satires are making him unpopular pretends to consult the famous jurist Gaius Trebatius Testa who advises him to give up writing or else to write an epic poem in honour of Augustus Horace replies that epic is beyond him and that just like his predecessor Lucilius he can still enjoy the friendship of great men while writing satire Satire 2 2 Quae virtus et quanta How great a virtue it is to live on little Horace writes about the virtues of living on simple fare He claims to be quoting a certain Ofellus who lost his land in the confiscations following the civil war Satire 2 3 Si raro scribes If you write so rarely A certain Damasippus 13 a follower of Stoicism criticises Horace for being lazy and writing so little Damasippus explains that he used to make a living buying and selling but lost all his money and went mad until a philosopher called Stertinius rescued him Damasippus describes various different kinds of mad people creditors misers insane spenders over ambitious people prodigals spendthrifts infatuated lovers superstitious people He says Horace is mad too writing poetry in a bad temper and living beyond his means Satire 2 4 Unde et quo Catius Where from and where to Catius Horace meets a certain Catius who is hurrying home to write down some precepts about food wine and cookery which he has heard from a certain expert on gastronomy Catius stops to tell Horace what he has heard At the end Horace begs him to allow him to meet the expert himself According to Palmer this Catius is a thinly disguised version of Gaius Matius a friend of Julius Caesar Octavian Cicero and Trebatius who wrote three books on gastronomy The unnamed expert was most probably Matius himself A letter written to Cicero from Matius and Trebatius jointly is preserved among Cicero s letters Att 9 15 A 14 Satire 2 5 Hoc quoque Tiresia Tell me this too Tiresias Ulysses Odysseus when consulting the prophet Tiresias in the Underworld asks him for advice on how to repair his broken fortunes Tiresias advises him to become a toady to some rich man in the hope of getting a legacy from the man when he dies The setting is imagined as a continuation of the famous scene in Homer s Odyssey 11 149 where Odysseus converses with the souls of various deceased people Satire 2 6 Hoc erat in votis This was in my prayers Horace begins by expressing his delight with life on the country villa which he has recently been given by his patron Maecenas He contrasts life in the city which he finds disagreeable apart from his opportunities to converse with Maecenas even then people jostle and sneer at him when he is on his way there He returns to a description of his pleasant life on his farm with books simple fare pleasant neighbours and sensible conversation 15 The satire ends with a retelling of the famous tale of The Town Mouse and the Country Mouse based on one of Aesop s fables Satire 2 7 Iamdudum ausculto I ve been listening for a while A slave called Davus asks permission to speak Since it is December Horace gives him permission He tells Horace some philosophical truths he has learnt from another slave Crispinus s doorkeeper and argues the Stoic principle that none but the wise are free He shows that Horace who is always criticising other people for being inconsistent is inconsistent himself Horace criticises his slave for vices desire for sex picture mania gluttony restlessness but is just as bad himself At the end Horace has had enough and tells the slave to make himself scarce or he will join the other eight slaves working on the farm Satire 2 8 Ut Nasidieni How was dinner with Nasidienus Horace says he s heard that Fundanius a comic poet was at a banquet at Nasidienus house and asks him to describe Fundanius describes a lavish banquet at which he and Maecenas were present with expensive food wine and slaves The host got alarmed when two guests called for more wine While the host was boasting about the quality of the food a wall hanging suddenly fell into the dishes and he burst into tears The next course came and the food would have been delightful if the host hadn t been praising it so much According to Palmer Nasidienus is possibly to be identified with a certain general Quintus Salvius Salvidienus Rufus who was put to death by Octavian in 40 BC about ten years before these satires were written 16 Literary success editBoth in antiquity and in the Middle Ages Horace was much better known for his Satires and the thematically related Epistles than for his lyric poetry In the century after his death he finds immediate successors in Persius and Juvenal and even Dante still refers to him simply as Orazio satiro Inferno 4 89 Conte 1994 318 writes Over 1 000 medieval quotations from his Satires and Epistles have been traced only about 250 from his Carmina See also editSatires 2 5 Horace Selected bibliography editCritical editions of the Latin text edit Borzsak Stephan Q Horati Flacci Opera Leipzig Teubner 1984 Shackleton Bailey D R Q Horati Flacci Opera Stuttgart Teubner 1995 ISBN 3 519 21436 9 Makes more use of conjectural emendation than Borzsak On line editions of Horace s Satires Latin edit Sermones Horatius Wikisource Latin All satires book I and II in Latin With notes also in Latin Orelli rev Baiter 5th ed 1868 Retrieved 20 September 2010 Satirae Peerlkamp 1863 Carminum Satirarum I et II Epodon Epistolarum Ars poetica etc Long and MacLeane 1853 Satirarum Liber I amp II Desprez 1828 in usum Delphini Sermonum Liber I Zeune 1825 in usum Delphini Satires 1 5 1 6 and 1 9 in Latin with vocabulary lists in English The Dickinson College Wiki Retrieved 20 September 2010 Bibliotheca Augustana 1 The Latin Library Latin 2 IntraText Latin 3 Perseus Project Latin 4 Horace s Satires in English translation edit Satires Epistles and Art of Poetry Engl Translated into English verse by John Conington m a corpus professor of Latin at the University of Oxford Project Gutenberg Retrieved 20 September 2010 N B Satire I 2 is excluded First book of Satires with notes all in English R M Millington 1869 Retrieved 20 September 2010 Epodes Satires and Epistles in English Also an introduction of 5 pages Rev Francis Howes 1845 Retrieved 20 September 2010 Alexander Sidney The complete Odes and Satires of Horace Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1999 ISBN 0 691 00428 5 Juster A M The Satires of Horace Philadelphia PA University of Pennsylvania Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 8122 4090 0 Rudd Niall Horace Satires and Epistles Persius Satires London Penguin 2005 ISBN 0 14 045508 6 verse translation with introduction and notes Commentaries edit Brown P Michael Horace Satires I Warminster England Aris amp Phillips 1993 ISBN 0 85668 530 5 introduction text translation and commentary Gowers Emily Satires Book 1 Cambridge University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0521458511 introduction text and commentary Law Andy A Translation and Interpretation of Horace s Sermones Book I Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2021 ISBN 978 1527565838 introduction text translation and interpretation Muecke Frances Horace Satires II Warminster England Aris amp Phillips 1993 repr with corr 1997 ISBN 0 85668 531 3 hb ISBN 0 85668 532 1 pb introduction text translation and extensive scholarly commentary Short surveys edit Conte Gian Biagio Latin Literature A History Translated by Joseph Solodow Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1994 ISBN 0 8018 4638 2 Braund Susan H Roman Verse Satire Oxford Oxford University Press 1992 ISBN 0 19 922072 7 Freudenburg Kirk Satires of Rome Threatening Poses from Lucilius to Juvenal Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0 521 00621 X Hooley Daniel M Roman Satire Malden MA Blackwell Pub 2007 ISBN 1 4051 0689 1 More specialized literature edit Anderson William S Ironic Preambles and Satiric Self Definition in Horace Satire 2 1 Pacific Coast Philology 19 1984 36 42 Bernstein Michael Andre O Totiens Servus Saturnalia and Servitude in Augustan Rome Critical Inquiry 13 1986 1987 450 74 Braund Susan H City and Country in Roman Satire In Braund S H ed Satire and Society in Ancient Rome Exeter University of Exeter Press 1989 23 47 Clauss James J Allusion and structure in Horace Satire 2 1 The Callimachean response Transactions of the American Philological Association 115 1985 197 206 Classen Carl Joachim Horace A Cook Classical Quarterly 72 1978 333 48 Cucchiarelli Andrea La satira e il poeta Orazio tra Epodi e Sermones Pisa Giardini 2001 ISBN 88 427 0300 1 Freudenburg Kirk Horace s Satiric Program and the Language of Contemporary Theory in Satires 2 1 American Journal of Philology 111 1990 187 203 Freudenburg Kirk The Walking Muse Horace on the Theory of Satire Princeton N J Princeton University Press 1993 ISBN 0 691 03166 5 Freudenburg Kirk The Cambridge Companion to Roman Satire Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 521 00627 9 Hudson Nicola A Food in Roman Satire in Braund Susan H ed Satire and Society in Ancient Rome Exeter University of Exeter Press 1989 69 87 Knorr Ortwin Verborgene Kunst Argumentationsstruktur und Buchaufbau in den Satiren des Horaz Hildesheim Olms Weidmann 2004 ISBN 3 487 12539 0 Lowrie Michele Slander and Horse Law in Horace Sermones 2 1 Law and Literature 17 2005 405 31 Muecke Frances Law Rhetoric and Genre in Horace Satires 2 1 In Harrison Stephen J ed Homage to Horace Oxford Oxford University Press 1995 203 218 Rudd Niall The Satires of Horace Berkeley University of California Press 1966 2nd ed 1982 ISBN 0 520 04718 4 Roberts Michael Horace Satires 2 5 Restrained Indignation American Journal of Philology 105 1984 426 33 Rothaus Caston Ruth The Fall of the Curtain Horace S 2 8 Transactions of the American Philological Association 127 1997 233 56 Sallmann Klaus Satirische Technik in Horaz Erbschleichersatire s 2 5 Hermes 98 1970 178 203 Schlegel Catherine Satire and the Threat of Speech Horace s Satires Book 1 Madison University of Wisconsin Press 2005 ISBN 0 299 20950 4 References edit Brown 1993 3 Gowers 2012 4 note 22 gives 36 35 for book 1 citing DuQuesnay 1984 20 21 Brown 1993 3 Muecke 1997 1 Horace himself later coins the phrase aurea mediocritas Latin for the Golden Mean in Odes 2 10 5 Muecke 1997 6 7 Sharland Suzanne 2003 Priapus Magic Marker Literary Aspects of Horace Satire 1 8 Acta Classica 46 97 109 JSTOR 24595344 Brown 1993 7 8 Muecke 1997 2 5 Brown 1993 4 5 Muecke 1997 6 Brown 1993 91 92 Satire 1 1 14 25 elementa can refer both to the letters of the ABC and to the beginnings of philosophy a b Leach E W 1978 Vergil Horace Tibullus three collections of ten Ramus 7 2 79 105 a b c Zetzel J E 1980 Horace s Liber Sermonum The Structure of Ambiguity Arethusa 13 1 59 77 p 76 p 67 Damasippus is mentioned in Cicero s letters Att 12 19 2 33 1 Fam 7 23 3 Palmer A 1905 The Satires of Horace p 277 Palmer A 1905 The Satires of Horace Macmillan pp 314 315 The remains of a villa believed to be Horace s can still be visited today near Licenza some 30 miles NE of Rome Palmer A 1905 The Satires of Horace Macmillan pp 388 369 External links edit nbsp Latin Wikisource has original text related to this article Sermones Scholarly bibliography selected by Wilfried Stroh in German Munich archived from the original on 2008 04 10 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Satires Horace amp oldid 1221837257, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.