Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-skm99 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T18:37:07.356Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Poets and Patrons at Rome

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Extract

The relation of poet to patron is one which we today find rather difficult to understand. In our present society the theory, and to a considerable degree the practice, is that everyone has an equal opportunity and owes his position to his merits. It was not always so. The old way of doing things was by influence and interest and patronage. It was thought only right to do the best for your relations and friends and those who had done you some service, and those without wealth and power could only get on with the help of the wealthy and powerful. And as talent does not always go with wealth and power, men of talent such as writers often found themselves in a position of dependence. The invention of printing, the spread of literacy, and the establishment of a system of copyright, have now made it possible for a writer to be independent—dependent, that is, on the general public instead of on individuals. In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries no one would have had any difficulty in understanding Virgil's and Horace's relation to Maecenas.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1978

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

NOTES

1. There was also plenty of opportunity for the exercise of patronage in the church, but here it was learning rather than literature that was rewarded. The language of patronage still survives in the church; the incumbent of a parish is presented to it by the patron, and it is called, or can be called, a benefice—a beneficium or favour conferred by the patron. Similarly a lawyer, or other professional man, speaks of his clients, as if he was a Roman patronus doing a favour to his dependants without expecting a fee. The Oxford English Dictionary paradoxically defines ‘client’ as ‘employer’.

2. Martial, 10.19.Google Scholar

3. Pliny, .Epp. 3.21.Google Scholar

4. Statius, , Silv. 3.1 61–4Google Scholar; Martial, 2.92, 3.95, 9.97.Google Scholar

5. Suetonius, , Vit. Verg. 1213.Google Scholar

6. Martial, 11.18.Google Scholar

7. Aristotle, , Eth. Nic. 8. 6.4–5.Google Scholar

8. Cicero, Pro Archia 19.Google Scholar

9. Ibid. 23.

10. Ibid. 19, 21; Cicero, , Ad Atticum 1.16.15.Google Scholar

11. Cicero, , Pro Archia 25.Google Scholar

12. Two prose works may be mentioned. Vitruvius' work on architecture is dedicated to Augustus, who had previously given the author a post in connection with the supervision of siege engines. He owed the post to his support of Augustus (and presumably to some professional competence) and he repays his obligation by presenting him with his book. Quintilian's Institutio was dedicated to his friend Marcellus Victorius, but while he was writing it he was entrusted with the education of the emperor's great-nephews. He therefore thought himself obliged to insert in the preface of Book 4 some adulatory references to Domitian, with apologies for not having mentioned him before.

13. Horace, , Sat. 2. 1.10–15Google Scholar, Epp. 2. 1.250–9Google Scholar; Odes 1.6, 4. 2.33–40.

14. Propertius 2.1.17–36, 3.9.47–58.

15. Pan. Mess. 179Google Scholar

16. Virgil, , Ecl. 6.9, 8.11–12Google Scholar, Georg. 3.41.

17. Suetonius, , Vit. Hor.Google Scholar

18. Statius, , Silv. 1. pref.Google Scholar

19. Horace, , Epp. 2.1.219–28Google Scholar; Suetonius, , Aug. 89.3.Google Scholar

20. Horace, , Epp. 2.1.245–7.Google Scholar

21. Suetonius, , Vit. Hor.Google Scholar

22. Suetonius, , Vit. Verg. 37.Google Scholar

23. Tacitus, , Agr. 41.1.Google Scholar

24. Martial, 10.72.Google Scholar

25. Horace, , Sat. 1.6.63–4.Google Scholar

26. Laus Pisonis 112–17Google Scholar (PLM i. p. 230).Google Scholar

27. Gellius, 12.4.Google Scholar

28. A Commentary on Horace Odes i (Oxford, 1970), p. xxii.Google Scholar

29. Aristotle, , Eth. Nic. 8.8.5.Google Scholar

30. Ibid.

31. Horace, , Epp. 2.1.237–41.Google Scholar

32. Theocritus, , Id. 17.Google Scholar