Ancient Literacies

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

IV. MONUMENTUM AERE PERENNIUS


We can now finally turn to the poets. Here is what Catullus wrote in a


book (36.1): ‘‘Annales Volusi cacata charta.’’ Notice, not ‘‘a waste of


an afternoon, having to listen to someone read it,’’ not ‘‘displeasing to


the ear,’’ not ‘‘poorly performed,’’ but ‘‘shittysheets.’’ Catullus read (not


heard) the poets he then loved or hated. Calvus sends him a horrible


book (libellum), in revenge Catullus will send him the full content of the


bookshops (librariorum...scrina) containing Caesus, Aquinus, Suffenus


(14). ‘‘Aurelius and Furius hadreadthe kiss poems (16.13,legisti). Of


course; Catullus was a poet, and wrote to be read.’’
137
Suffenus writes bad


books, which you, alas, must read (22). Caecilius’s girlfriend has read the


draft of his epic (35). Catullus read the speech of Sestius and so caught


cold; he will never pick up another in his hands (recepso) (44).
138
Cinna’s


Zmyrnais now published (edita), and as a written book it will travel the


entire world (95), a book so complex that it soon acquired a commentary


by Crassicius Pansa (Suet.Gramm. 18). The writing of commentaries


is impossible to reconcile with a supposed primacy of oral performance
(see nn. 95, 107).


Going to recitations seems to play remarkably little part in the poets’


literary life, though they write much about that part of their existence.


Catullus, as Wiseman notes, never tells us of a single one. Though Horace


is forced to go to some recitations out of duty (Ep. 2.2.67, 95, 105), and to


give some himself (Sat. 1.4.73–74,Ep. 1.19.35–49, 2.1.214–17), they


have no part in his ideal life in Rome (Ep. 2.2.2.67, 105). Instead he prefers


to read (Sat. 1.6.122). Propertius reads a lot of poets (2.34.85–92); he goes


to a lot of parties, but never mentions a recitation. Ovid heard the poets in


his youth (Trist. 4.10.44–50), but writes about recitations mostly to say


that he cannot give them in exile (Trist. 3.14.39–40, 4.1.89–90, 4.10.113,


5.12.53,Pont. 4.2.35–38). In short, though recitations undoubtedly oc-


curred, they were of little interest to the poets who flourished around the


turn of the millennium.



  1. Wiseman 1985, 124, his emphasis. But so strong is the stranglehold of Quinn 1982
    (cited in support of this statement), that on the same page he claims for Catullus, ‘‘What
    mattered artistically was the oral performance.’’ These two statements are irreconcilable.
    Two pages later Wiseman is surprised to find that ‘‘Catullus has plenty to say about poetry,
    his own and that of his friends and enemies. It is striking that he never refers to public
    performance or an audience of listeners, but only to poems written down on writing tablets,
    to be read.’’ Nor does Cicero refer to recitations of poetry (Off. 1.147 refers to public
    approval). One might get by with claiming that Catullus and Cicero were before the age of
    the recitation (see n. 7, on the chronological difficulties), appealing to the Elder Seneca’s
    testimony (Cont. 4 praef. 2) that Pollio was the first to give recitations, which, however, is
    incorrect; see Dalzell 1955; Rawson 1985, 52.

  2. See Quinn 1973, ad Cat. 44.12 onlegi.


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