Some slight memoir and critical
estimate of the author of this collection of Letters may perhaps be acceptable
to those who are unfamiliar with the circumstances of the times in which he
lived.
Moreover, few have studied the
Letters themselves without feeling a warm affection for the writer of them. He
discloses his character therein so completely, and, in spite of his glaring
fault of vanity and his endless love of adulation, that character is in the
main so charming, that one can easily understand the high esteem in which Pliny
was held by the wide circle of his friends, by the Emperor Trajan, and by the
public at large.
The correspondence of Pliny the
Younger depicts for us the everyday life of a Roman gentleman in the best sense
of the term. We see him practising at the Bar; we see him engaged in the civil
magistracies at Rome, and in the governorship of the important province of
Bithynia; we see him consulted by the Emperor on affairs of state, and
occupying a definite place among the "Amici Caesaris." Best of all,
perhaps, we see him in his daily life, a devoted scholar, never so happy as
when he is in his study, laboriously seeking to perfect his style, whether in
verse or prose, by the models of the great writers of the past and the
criticisms of the friends whom he has summoned, in a friendly way, to hear his
compositions read or recited.
Or again we find him at one of his
country villas, enjoying a well-earned leisure after the courts have risen at
Rome and all the best society has betaken itself into the country to escape the
heats and fevers of the capital. We see him managing his estates, listening to
the complaints of his tenants, making abatements of rent, and grumbling at the
agricultural depression and the havoc that the bad seasons have made with his
crops.
Or he spends a day in the open air
hunting, yet never omits to take with him a book to read or tablets on which to
write, in case the scent is cold and game is not plentiful. In short, the
Letters of Pliny the Younger give us a picture of social life as it was in the
closing years of the first, and the opening years of the second century of the
Christian era, which is as fascinating as it is absolutely unique.
Pliny was born either in 61 or 62
A.D. at Comum on Lake Larius. His father, Lucius Caecilius Cilo, had been
aedile of the colony, and, dying young, left a widow, who with her two sons,
sought protection with her brother, Caius Plinius Secundus, the famous author
of the Natural History. The elder Pliny in his will adopted the younger of the
two boys, and so Publius Caecilius Secundus -- as he was originally called --
took thenceforth the name of Caius Plinius, L.F. Caecilius Secundus. Though
later usage has assigned him the name of Pliny the Younger, he was known to his
contemporaries and usually addressed as Secundus. But in his early years Pliny
was placed under the guardianship of Virginius Rufus, one of the most
distinguished Romans of his day, a successful and brilliant general who had
twice refused the purple, when offered to him by his legionaries, and who lived
to a ripe old age -- the Wellington of his generation. So it was at Comum that
he spent his early boyhood, and his affection for his birthplace led him in
later years to provide for the educational needs of the youth of the district,
who had previously been obliged to go to Mediolanum (Milan) to obtain their
schooling. What can be better, he asks, than for children to be educated where
they are born, so that they may grow to love their native place by residing in
it? Pliny was fortunate in having so distinguished an uncle. On the accession
of Vespasian, the elder Pliny was called to Rome by the Emperor, and when his
nephew -- vixdum adolescentus -- joined him in the capital, he took charge of
his studies. At the age of fourteen the young student had composed a Greek
tragedy, to which he playfully refers in one of his letters, and in Rome he had
the benefit of attending the lectures of the great Quintilian and Nicetes
Sacerdos, and of making literary friendships which were to prove of the utmost
value to him in after years. Pliny tells us that his uncle looked to him for
assistance in his literary work, and he was thus engaged when his uncle lost
his life in the eruption of Vesuvius in 79, so graphically described in the two
famous letters to Tacitus. That Pliny deeply felt the loss of his relative and
patron is shown by the eloquent tribute he paid to his memory, and doubtless,
as his death occurred just at his own entry into public life, he was deprived
of an influence which might have helped him greatly in his career. Domitian was
on the throne, when, in 82, Pliny joined the 3rd Gallic legion, stationed in
Syria, as military tribune. Service in the field, however, was not to his
liking, and, as soon as his period of soldiering was over, he hurried back to
Rome to win his spurs at the Bar and climb the ladder of civic distinction. He
became Quaestor in 89 on the recommendation of the Emperor, Tribune in 91, and
Praetor in 93.
So far his advancement had been
rapid, but evil times succeeded. Domitian went from bad to worse. Always moody,
suspicious, and revengeful, he began to imitate the worst vices of his
predecessors of the line of Augustus. His hand fell heavily upon the Senatorial
order, and another era of proscription began, in which the dreaded delatores
again became the "terror" of Rome. It was a time of spoliation and
murder, and Pliny writes of it with a shudder. Contrasting with the happy
regime of Trajan that which prevailed in his youth and early manhood, he
declares that virtue was regarded with suspicion and a premium set upon
idleness, that in the camps the generals lacked authority and the soldiers had
no sense of obedience, while, when he entered the Senate, he found it a craven
and tongueless assembly (Curiam trepidam et elinguem), only convened to
perpetrate some piece of villainy for the Emperor, or to humiliate the Senators
by the sense of their own impotence. Pliny was not the man to make a bold stand
against tyranny, and, during those perilous years, one can well believe that he
did his best to avoid compromising himself, though his sympathies were wholly
on the side of his proscribed friends. He was a typical official, suave and
polished in manner, yet without that perilous enthusiasm which would simply
have marked him for destruction. For two years he was Prefect of the Military
Treasury, an office directly in the gift of the Emperor, and it would seem,
therefore, that his character for uprightness stood him in good stead with the
tyrant even in his worst years. He did not, like so many of the Roman nobles,
retire from public life and enter into the sullen opposition which enraged the
Emperors even more than active and declared antagonism.
In one passage, indeed, Pliny
declares that he, too, was on the black list of the Emperor, but the words must
not be taken too literally. He was given to boasting, and he may easily have
represented, when the danger was past, that the peril in which he had stood was
greater than it really was. No doubt he felt keenly the judicial murder of his
friends Senecio, Rusticus, and Helvidius, and the banishment of Mauricus,
Gratilla, Arria, and Fannia -- for women were not spared in the general
proscription; but, after all, the fact that he held office during the closing
years of Domitian's life is ample proof that he knew how to walk circumspectly,
and did not allow his detestation of the informers to compromise his safety.
When at length, in 96, the Emperor was assassinated in the palace, and the
Senate raised Nerva to the purple, Pliny stepped forward as the champion of the
oppressed, and impeached Publicius Certus for compassing the death of Helvidius
Priscus, though he was only so far successful that he prevented Certus from
enjoying the consulship which had been promised him. Pliny revised the speech and
published it in book form, and Certus died a few days after it appeared,
haunted, so Pliny tells us, by the vision of his prosecutor pursuing him, sword
in hand. Nerva's reign was short, but he was succeeded by one of the best of
the Roman Emperors, Trajan, a prince under whose just, impartial and strong
rule, a man of Pliny's character was bound to thrive and pass from office to
office. In 98 he had been appointed by Nerva Prefect of the Treasury of Saturn,
and in 100 he held the Consulship for two months, while still retaining his
post at the Treasury, and delivered his well-known Panegyric on the 1st of
September in that year. Either in 103 or 104 he was advanced to the Augurate,
and two years later was appointed Curator of the Tiber. Then in 111 or 112 --
according to Mommsen's Chronology -- Trajan bestowed upon him a signal mark of
his esteem by selecting him for the Governorship of the province of Pontus and
Bithynia, which he had transferred from the list of senatorial to that of
imperial provinces. Pliny was given the special title of Legate Propraetor with
full Consular powers, and he remained in his province for at least fifteen
months. After that the curtain falls. Whether he died in Bithynia, or shortly
after his return to Rome, or whether he lived on to enjoy the ripe old age of
which he writes so pleasantly in his letters, we do not know. Certainly the
probabilities are that, if he had lived, he would have continued to correspond
with his friends, and the absence of further letters makes for the probability
that he died in about his fiftieth year.
In judging these letters for their
literary value, the first thing which strikes the reader is that Pliny did not
write for his friends alone. Whatever the subject of the epistle, whether it
was an invitation to dinner, a description of the charms of the country, an
account of a visit to a friend, or an expression of condolence with some one in
his or her bereavement, he never allowed his pen to run on carelessly. He
scarcely ever prattles in his letters or lets himself go. One always sees in
the writer the literary man, who knows that his correspondence is being passed
round from hand to hand, and who hopes that it will find readers among
posterity. Consequently there is an air of studied artificiality about many of
the letters, which was more to the taste of the eighteenth than the nineteenth
century. They remind one in many ways of Richardson and Mackenzie, and Pliny
would have been recognised by those two writers, and by the latter in
particular, as a thorough "man of sentiment." Herein they differ
greatly from the other important collection which has come down to us from
classical times, the Letters of Cicero. Pliny, indeed, -- and in this he was a
true disciple of his old teacher Quintilian, -- took the great Roman orator as
his model. Nothing pleased him more than for his friends to tell him that he
was the Cicero of his time. Like Marcus Tullius, he was the foremost pleader of
his day; like him again he dabbled in poetry, and his verses, so far as we know
them, were sorry stuff. Yet again like his master, he fondly believed that he
enjoyed the special inspiration of the Muses. Pliny, unfortunately for his
reputation, gives us a few samples, which are quite as lame and jingling as the
famous "O fortunatam natam, me Consule, Romam!" which had made
generations of Romans smile. And so, as Cicero was in all things his master,
Pliny too wrote letters, excellent in their way, but lacking the vivacity and
directness of his model, and, of course, wholly deficient in the political
interest which makes Cicero's correspondence one of the most important
authorities for the history of his troublous time. Pliny's Letters cover the
period from the accession of Nerva down to 113 A.D. None precede the death of
Domitian in September 96. That is to say, they were written in an era of
profound political peace, and most of them in the reign of Trajan, whose rule
Pliny accepted with enthusiastic admiration. One certainly could have wished
that he had written freely to his friends during the last years of Domitian's
tyranny, for the value of such contemporary documents would have been enormous.
But he would only have risked his life by so doing, and that he had no desire
to do. It was not until the tyrant had fallen under the sword of Stephanus that
he felt it safe to trust his thoughts to paper. The new era which was
inaugurated loosened his tongue and made him breathe more freely. He exulted
that at last an honest man could venture to hold his head high without drawing
down upon himself the vengeance of the vile informers who throve upon the
misfortunes of the State.
Two of Pliny's correspondents and
friends were Cornelius Tacitus and Suetonius Tranquillus. Yet no one can read
either the Histories and Annals of Tacitus or the Lives of the Caesars and then
pass to a reading of Pliny's Letters without being struck by the enormous
difference in their tone and spirit. It is almost impossible to believe that
their respective authors were contemporaries. When turning over the pages of
Tacitus one feels that the vices and despotism of the Emperors and the Empire
had crushed all spirit out of the world, had made quiet family life impossible,
and had stamped out every trace of justice and clean living. It is a remarkable
fact that the great writers of the first century, as soon as the Augustan era
had closed, should have been masters of a merciless satire, which has rarely
been equaled in the history of the world, and never excelled. When we think of
Roman society, as it was in the early Empire, our thoughts recur to the lurid
canvases which have been painted for us by Juvenal, by Tacitus, by Lucan, by
Seneca, and by Petronius -- pictures which have made the world shudder, and
have led even careful historians astray. Pliny supplies the needful corrective
and gives us the reverse side of the medal. Like the authors we have mentioned,
he too writes of the evil days which he himself has passed through, as of a
horrid nightmare from which he has just awakened; but from his letters,
artificial and stilted as they are in some respects, we learn that there were
still to be found those who had not bowed the knee to Baal.
And so, with this volume in our
hands, we obtain a personal introduction to a number of distinguished Romans
and Roman matrons, whose names have been preserved for all time by the Younger
Pliny. His circle of friends was a large one. Let us mention a few of them. We
have already spoken of Virginius Rufus, the grand old soldier and patriot, who,
dying at the age of eighty-four, was awarded a public funeral, while Cornelius
Tacitus, then Consul, delivered the panegyric in his honour. Vestricius
Spurinna was another distinguished general of the old school, and Pliny relates
with enthusiasm how he paid a visit to him in his country-house when Spurinna
was seventy-seven years of age and had retired from public office. He tells us
how his friend spent his day, how he drove and walked and played tennis to keep
himself in health, wrote Greek and Latin lyrics, and maintained a keen interest
in all that went on in the capital. Corellius Rufus is another of the older men
of whom Pliny writes with sincere affection, and he helped to pay the debt of
gratitude he owed him by numerous acts of kindness to his daughter Crellia.
Voconius Romanus is another of his closest friends, and Pliny tells us that he
wrote such admirable letters that you would think the Muses themselves must
speak in Latin. His literary associates numbered among them Caius Cornelius
Tacitus, Silius Italicus the poet -- whose veneration for Virgil was so great
that he kept his master's birthday with more solemnity than his own, and
visited his tomb on the Bay of Naples with as much respect as worshippers pay
to a temple, -- Martial the epigrammatist, Suetonius Tranquillus the historian,
and others such as Passennus Paullus, Caninius Rufus, Virgilius Romanus, and
Caius Fannius, whose works have not survived the wreck of time, though Pliny
showers upon all of them enthusiastic and indiscriminate praise. Again, he
enjoyed the friendship of a number of distinguished foreigners, professional
rhetoricians and philosophers, who came back to Rome after their sentence of
banishment, passed by Domitian, had been revoked by Nerva and Trajan.
Euphrates, Artemidorus, and Isaeus were the three most famous, and their
respective styles are carefully described by Pliny. Even more interesting
perhaps is the gallery of Roman ladies, whose portraits are limned with so fine
and discriminating a touch. Juvenal again is responsible for much misconception
as to the part the women of Rome played in Roman society. The appalling Sixth
Satire, in which he unhesitatingly declares that most women -- if not all --
are bad, and that virtue and chastity are so rare as to be almost unknown, in
which he roundly accuses them of all the vices known to human depravity, reads
like a monstrous and disgraceful libel on the sex when one turns to Pliny and
makes the acquaintance of Arria, Fannia, Corellia, and Calpurnia. The
characters of Arria and Fannia are well known; they are among the heroines of
history. But in Pliny there are numerous references to women whose names are
not even known to us, but the terms in which they are referred to prove what
sweet, womanly lives they led. For example, he writes to Geminus: "Our friend
Macrinus has suffered a grievous wound. He has lost his wife, who would have
been regarded as a model of all the virtues even if she had lived in the good
old days. He lived with her for thirty-nine years, without so much as a single
quarrel or disagreement." "Vixit cum hac triginta novem annis sine
jurgio, sine offensa. One is reminded of the fine line of Propertius, in which
Cornelia boasts of the blameless union of herself and her husband, Paullus --
"Viximus insignes inter
utramque facem."
This is no isolated example. One of
the most pathetic letters is that in which Pliny writes of the death of the
younger daughter of his friend Fundanus, a girl in her fifteenth year, who had
already "the prudence of age, the gravity of a matron, and all the
maidenly modesty and sweetness of a girl." Pliny tells us how it cut him
to the quick to hear her father give directions that the money he had meant to
lay out on dresses and pearls and jewels for her betrothal should be spent on
incense, unguents, and spices for her bier. What a different picture from
anything we find in Juvenal, who would fain have us believe that Messalina was
the type of the average Roman matron of his day!
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