Extensive Definition
Publius Papinius Statius (ca. 45-96) was a Roman poet of the
Silver Age of Latin literature, born in Naples, Italy. Besides his
poetry, he is best known for his appearance as a major character in
the Purgatory
section of Dante's
epic poem The
Divine Comedy.
Life
He was born to a family of Graeco-Campanian origin, impoverished, but not without political distinctions. The poet's father taught with marked success at Naples and Rome, and from boyhood to adulthood he proved himself a champion in the poetic tournaments which formed an important part of the amusements of the early empire. The younger Statius declares that his father was in his time equal to any literary task, whether in prose or verse. He mentioned Mevania, and may have spent time there, or been impressed by the confrontation of Vitellius and Vespasian in 69. Probably, the poet inherited a modest competence and was not beneath begging his bread from wealthy patrons. He certainly wrote poems to order (as Silvae, i.1, 2, ii.7, and iii.4), but there is no indication that the material return for them was important to him, in spite of an allusion in Juvenal's seventh satire.Little is known of the events in his life. From
his boyhood he was victorious in poetic contests many times at his
native Naples, three times at Alba, where he
received the golden crown from the hand of the emperor Domitian.
At the great Capitoline
competition, probably on its third celebration in 94, Statius failed to
win the coveted chaplet of oak leaves. No doubt the extraordinary
popularity of his Thebaid had led him to regard himself as the
supreme poet of the age, and when he could not sustain this
reputation in the face of rivals from all parts of the empire he
accepted the judges' verdict as a sign that his day was past, and
retired to Naples, the home of his ancestors and of his own young
years. We still possess the poem he addressed to his wife on this
occasion (Silv. iii.5). There are hints in this poem which
naturally lead to the surmise that Statius was suffering from a
loss of the emperor's favour. In the preface to book iv of the
Silvae there is mention of detractors who hated his style, and
these may have succeeded in inducing a new fashion in poetry at
court. Such an eclipse, if it happened, must have cut Statius to
the heart.
He appears to have relished thoroughly the role
of court-poet. Statius lauds the emperor, not to discharge a debt,
but to create an obligation. His flattery is as far removed from
the gentle propitiatory tone of Quintilian as it
is from the coarse and crawling humiliation of Martial. It is in
the large extravagant style of a nature in itself healthy and
generous, which has accepted the theme and left scruples
behind.
In one of his prefatory epistles Statius declares
that he never allowed any work of his to go forth without invoking
the godhead of the divine emperor. Statius had taken the full
measure of Domitian's gross taste, and, presenting him with the
rodomontade which he
loved, puts conscience and sincerity out of view, lest some uneasy
twinge should mar his master's enjoyment. But in one poem, that in
which the poet pays his due for an invitation to the Imperial
table, we have sincerity enough. Statius clearly feels all the
raptures he expresses. He longs for the power of him who told the
tale of Dido's
banquet, and for the voice of him who sang the feast of Alcinous, that he
may give forth utterance worthy of the lofty theme. The poet
seemed, he says, to dine with great Jove
himself and to receive nectar from Ganymede
the cupbearer (an odious reference to the imperial favourite
Earinus).
All his life hitherto has been barren and
profitless. Now only has he begun to live in truth. The palace
struck on the poet's fancy like the very hall of heaven; nay, Jove
himself marvels at its beauty, but is glad that the emperor should
possess such an earthly habitation; he will thus feel less desire
to seek his destined abode among the immortals in the skies. Yet
even so gorgeous a palace is all too mean for his greatness and too
small for his vast presence. "But it is himself, himself, that my
eager eye has alone time to scan. He is like a resting Mars or
Bacchus or
Alcides."
Martial and Statius
were no doubt supreme among the imperial flatterers. Each was the
other's only serious rival. It is therefore not surprising that
neither should breathe the other's name. Even if we could by any
stretch excuse the bearing of Statius towards Domitian, he could
never be forgiven the poem entitled "The Hair of Flavius Earinus,"
Domitian's Ganymede (Silv. 3.4), a poem than which it would be hard
to find a more repulsive example of real poetical talent defiled
for personal ends. Everything points to the conclusion that Statius
did not survive his emperor — that he died, in fact, a
short time after leaving Rome to settle in Naples. Apart from the
emperor and his minions, the friendships of Statius with men of
high station seem to have been maintained on fairly equal terms. He
was clearly the poet of society in his day as well as the poet of
the court.
Works
As a poet, Statius unquestionably shines in many respects when compared to most other post-Augustans. He was born with exceptional talent, and his poetic expression is, with all its faults, richer on the whole and less forced, more buoyant and more felicitous, than is to be found generally in the Silver Age of Latin poetry. Statius is at his best in his occasional verses, the Silvae, which have a character of their own, and in their best parts a charm of their own. The title was proper to verses of rapid workmanship, on everyday themes.Statius prided himself on his powers of improvisation, and he
seems to have been quite equal to the feat, which Horace describes, of
dictating two hundred lines in an hour while standing on one leg.
The improvisatore was in high honour among the later Greeks, as
Cicero's
speech for the poet Archias indicates; and the poetic contests
common in the early empire did much to stimulate ability of the
kind. It is to their velocity that the poems owe their comparative
freshness and freedom, along with their loose texture and their
inequality. There are thirty-two poems, divided into five books,
each with a dedicatory epistle. Of nearly four thousand lines which
the books contain, more than five-sixths are hexameters. Four of the pieces
(containing about 450 lines) are written in the hendecasyllabic
metre, the "tiny metre of Catullus," and there is one Alcaic and one
Sapphic
ode.
Silvae
The subjects of the Silvae vary widely. Five poems are devoted to flattery of the emperor and his favourites; but of these enough has already been said. Six are lamentations for deaths, or consolations to survivors. Statius seems to have felt a special pride in this class of his productions; and certainly, notwithstanding the excessive and conventional employment of pretty mythological pictures, with other affectations, he sounds notes of pathos such as only come from the true poet.There are often traits of an almost modern
domesticity in these verses, and Statius, the childless, has here
and there touched on the charm of childhood in lines for a parallel
to which, among the ancients, we must go, strange to say, to his
rival Martial. One of the epicedia, that on Priscilla the wife of
Abascantus, Domitian's freedman, is full of interest for the
picture it presents of the official activity of a high officer of
state.
Another group of the Silvae give picturesque
descriptions of the villas and gardens of the poet's friends. In
these we have a more vivid representation than elsewhere of the
surroundings amid which the grandees of the early empire lived when
they took up their abode in the country.
As to the rest of the Silvae, the congratulatory
addresses to friends are graceful but commonplace, nor do the
jocose pieces call for special mention.
In the Kalendae decembres we have a striking
description of the gifts and amusements provided by the emperor for
the Roman population on the occasion of the Saturnalia. In
his attempt at an epithalamium (Silv. i.2)
Statius is forced and unhappy.
His birthday ode in Lucan's
honour has, along with the accustomed exaggeration, many powerful
lines, and shows, high appreciation of preceding Latin poets. Some
phrases, such as "the untaught muse of high-souled Ennius" and "the
lofty passion of sage Lucretius," are
familiar words with all scholars. The ode ends with a great picture
of Lucan's spirit rising after death on wings of fame to regions
whither only powerful souls can ascend, scornfully surveying earth
and smiling at the tomb, or reclining in Elysium and singing a
noble strain to the Pompeys and the
Catos
and all the "Pharsalian host," or with proud tread exploring
Tartarus
and listening to the wailings of the guilty, and gazing at Nero, pale with agony
as his mother's avenging torch glitters before his eyes. It is
singular to observe how thoroughly Nero had been struck out of the
imperial succession as recognized at court, so that the "bald Nero"
took no umbrage when his flatterer-in‑chief profanely dealt with
his predecessor's name.
Epic poems
The epic poems of Statius are less interesting because they are cast in a more common mould, but they deserve study in many respects. They are the product of long elaboration.The Thebaid,
which the poet says took twelve years to compose, is in twelve
books, and has for its theme the old "tale of Thebes"
— the deadly strife of the Theban
brothers. There is also preserved a fragment of an Achilleis—
the Achilleid—
consisting of one book and part of another, "a more varied and
charming work than readers of the Thebaid could ever have imagined
and is perhaps the most attractive approach to the imitative and
professional poet." The best text is provided by the ninth-century
Codex Puteaneus, from the Abbey of
Corbie, a manuscript in the
Bibliothèque National (BN 8051) that was once the property of
the humanist Claude
Dupuy.
In the weary length of these epics there are many
flowers of pathos and many little finished gem-pictures, but the
trammels of tradition, the fashionable taste and the narrow bars of
education check continually the poet's flight.Citation
needed Not merely were the materials for his epics prescribed
to him by rigid custom, but also to a great extent the method by
which they were to be treated. All he could do was to sound the old
notes with a distinctive timbre of his own. The gods must needs
wage their wonted epic strife, and the men, their puppets, must
dance at their nod; there most needs be heavenly messengers,
portents, dreams, miracles, single combats, similes, Homeric and Virgilian echoes,
and all the other paraphernalia of the conventional epic.
But Statius treats his subjects with a boldness
and freedom which contrast pleasingly with the timid traditionalism
of Silius
Italicus and the stiff scholasticism of Gaius
Valerius Flaccus. The vocabulary of Statius is conspicuously
rich, and he shows audacity, often successful, in the use of words
and metaphors. At the
same time he carried certain literary tricks to an aggravating
pitch, in particular the excessive use of alliteration, and the
misuse of mythological allusion. The best-known persons and places
are described by epithets or periphrases derived from some very
remote connection with mythology, so that many passages are as dark
as Heraclitus.
In later literature
Dante mentions Statius in De vulgari eloquentia along with Ovid, Virgil and Lucan as one of the four regulati poetae (ii, vi, 7).In the
Divine Comedy, Dante and Virgil meet Statius in Purgatory, on
the level reserved for the avaricious and the prodigal, where his
spirit, having completed his atonement for the sin of prodigality,
accompanies the poets through the remainder of Purgatory proper up
to the Earthly Paradise at the summit of the holy mountain. Dante
claims that Statius was a secret convert to Christianity as a
result of his reading of Virgil, although his conversion is not
attested in any historical source.
Notes
References
External links
Further reading
- Fantham, E. "Chironis Exemplum: on teachers and surrogate fathers in Achilleid and Silvae", Hermathena 167 (1999, pp59-70).
- Feeney, D. "Tenui... latens discrimine: spottign the differences in Statius' Achilleid, Materiali e discussioni per l'analisi dei testi classici 52 (2004, pp85-106).
- Hardie, A. Statius and the Silvae (Liverpool) 1983.
- Heslin, P.J. The Transvestite Achilles: Gender and Genre in Statius' Achilleid (Cambridge) 2005.
- Lewis, C.S. "Dante's Statius." Studies in Medieval and Renaissance Literature (Cambridge) 1966.
- Mendelsohn, D. "Empty Nest, Abandoned Cave: maternal anxiety in Achilleid 1", ClAnt 9.2'' (1990, pp295-308).
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