A Roman life : Rutilius Gallicus on paper & in stone

書誌事項

A Roman life : Rutilius Gallicus on paper & in stone

John Henderson

(Exeter studies in history)

University of Exeter Press, c1998

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注記

Bibliography: p. 143-151

Includes indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Rutilius Gallicus was chief of police, poet and courtier of the Roman Emperor Domitian. He is a unique figure in that he can be studied in detail through both text and inscription, thereby fusing literature with history, and linking poetry with epigraphy. His recovery from a critical illness was celebrated in a sparkling poem by Statius, the poet laureate whose work is currently being read with new interest. As well as taking the reader on a tour across the city of Rome and the provinces, and through Flavian history and culture, Gallicus is by turns a sternly formal public servant, a delicate amateur poet and speaker, a workaholic chasing an early grave, the darling of his people, the strong-man of his tyrant Emperor, the miraculously resurrected patient of Apollo and a soldier-hero of the empire. How long could his luck last?

目次

  • The words in the stone Co-ordinates for a cv Playing a second fiddle Sand-bagging the Danube Thank heaven for that - vv 1-8 Dancing in the street - vv 9-14 Saecular fun and games - vv 15-18 You sing it, I'll play it - vv 19-37 You had us all worried there - vv 38-49 At death's door - vv 50-57 Translation of Statius "siluae "1.4
  • he's in God's hands now - vv 58-62,106 The VIP treatment - vv 61-8, 94-7
  • "A Roman life", on paper - vv 68-93 Apollo's pharmacy - vv 98-105 Take up thy bed, and walk - vv 106-14 It takes a worried man to sing a worried song - vv 115-22 Many happy returns - vv 123-31 It's the thought that counts - "Siluae" 1.4 and the preface The sacred wood - Statius' book of etiquette ("Siluae I")

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