Reading Cicero's Final Years
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Reading Cicero's Final Years

Receptions of the Post-Caesarian Works up to the Sixteenth Century – with two Epilogues

Christoph Pieper, Bram van der Velden, Christoph Pieper, Bram van der Velden

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eBook - ePub

Reading Cicero's Final Years

Receptions of the Post-Caesarian Works up to the Sixteenth Century – with two Epilogues

Christoph Pieper, Bram van der Velden, Christoph Pieper, Bram van der Velden

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About This Book

In der Reihe CICERO – Studies on Roman Thought and Its Reception erscheinen Monographien, Sammelbände, Editionen oder Kommentare zu allen Aspekten der römischen Philosophie, Geschichte, Rhetorik, Politik, Rechts- und Kulturgeschichte sowie deren Rezeption, einschließlich der Patristik und christlichen Philosophie.

M. Tullius Cicero, der Namensgeber der Reihe, steht mit seinem Wirken nicht nur als Politiker, sondern auch als Redner und Philosoph für die thematische Vielseitigkeit und Interdisziplinarität dieses Publikationsorgans.

Die Basler Stiftung Patrum Lumen Sustine ist die herausgebende Institution der einem Peer-Review-Prozess unterliegenden Reihe, die wissenschaftliche Aufsicht liegt bei der Société Internationale des Amis de Cicéron (SIAC, Paris).

Reihenherausgeber

Ermanno Malaspina

Wissenschaftlicher Beirat

Mireille Armisen-Marchetti, Francesca Romana Berno, Carmen Codoner, Perrine Galand, Henriette Harich-Schwarzbauer, Robert Kaster, David Konstan, Carlos Lévy, Sabine Luciani, Rita Pierini, Mortimer Sellers, Jula Wildberger

Redaktion (für Fragen und/oder Einreichungen von Manuskripten)

Veronica Revello ( [email protected])

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Information

Publisher
De Gruyter
Year
2020
ISBN
9783110716399
Edition
1

Second Epilogue

Scholarly Appraisals of Cicero’s Final Years
Christoph Pieper
Bram van der Velden
The following pages are by no means meant to give a full account of scholarly debates on Cicero’s final years between the Renaissance and the 20th century.1 What they want to offer are specimens of evaluations of Cicero’s political and moral behaviour in order to sketch a general tendency in scholarship, but even more in order to show that the final years of Cicero’s life have continued to interest readers far beyond the early modern period.2

The sixteenth century: Erasmus and Lipsius

Erasmus’ Ciceronianus, mentioned in the previous two chapters, contains a view of Cicero’s character and life which is not purely hagiographical. As others had done before him, Erasmus chides Cicero’s frequent self-praise, his poetry, and his frequent mistakes of facts, but he does not stop there. Bulephorus, Erasmus’ spokesperson, remarks for example:
Fatebor eloquentem, qui Ciceronem feliciter expresserit: sed qui totum, exceptis uiciis: et ne sim iniquior, una cum ipsis uiciis, modo totum. Feremus illud subinane, feremus mentum leua demulceri, feremus et collum oblongum atque exilius, feremus perpetuam uocis contentionem, feremus indecoram parumque uirilem in initio dicendi trepidationem, feremus iocorum intemperantiam: et si qua sunt alia, in quibus M. Tullius uel sibi, uel aliis displicuit, modo simul et illa exprimant, quibus ista uel texit ille, uel pensauit.3
I will acknowledge him eloquent who copies Cicero successfully; but he must copy him as a whole and his very faults too. I will put up with that suggestion of emptiness, that stroking of the chin with the left hand, the long and thin neck, the continual straining of the voice, the unbecoming and unmanly nervousness as he begins to speak, the excessive number of jokes, and everything else which in Cicero is displeasing to himself or to others, provided only he copy those other traits too by which he concealed these or compensated for them.
Cicero’s behaviour during his final years, however, has no place in his harangue. Bulephorus even suggests that Cicero’s faults became less conspicuous towards the end of his career, as he claims that Cicero’s eloquence in the Philippics is that “of an older man, […] less redundant and less boastful”,4 and that during his last year he “spoke freely before the Senate and the Roman People, laying aside the fear of death”.5 This is perhaps not unexpected given Erasmus’ positive estimation of ‘Cicero’s’ contempt for death found in the Epistula ad Octauianum, as mentioned by Van der Velden in this volume (cf. p. 131).
Erasmus’ treatise sparked many further contributions by scholars all over Europe, some of which aimed to defend Cicero against the aspersions cast over his character.6 One of these was Julius Caesar Scaliger, who even reacted to the relatively minor incriminations found in the above-mentioned quotation.7 Justus Lipsius, although stylistically by no means a Ciceronian, also took up the task of defending Cicero’s character. He did so in an Oratio pro defendendo Cicerone in criminibus ei objectis, held between 1564 and 1568, when he was still a student in Leuven.8 In this speech,9 he discusses the criticism of Cicero’s character found in Erasmus separate from the question of the imitatio of Cicero: he would tackle that in a different speech, the Oratio utrum a solo Cicerone petenda sit eloquentia.10
In the beginning of his oratio, Lipsius draws a distinction between the reception of Cicero’s oratorical prowess and the reception of his life and career:
Non laudatur ab omnibus Cicero? Fateor, sed sic, ut eloquens, ut facundus, ut disertus patronus; quae laudes ejusmodi sunt, ut uel de Catilina, uel de Clodio, perditis ciuibus, et quos ipsos ualuisse dicendo accepimus, ne inimici quidem jejunius dixerint. […] Cujus [sc. Ciceronis] tamen, si recte consideremus, non minorem gloriam integerrima uita quam laudem eloquentia meruit.11
Is Cicero not praised by everyone? Yes, I admit it, but he is praised as an eloquent, articulate and well-spoken advocate. Praise of this kind might also be bestowed on Catiline or Clodius, wretched citizens of whom we learn that they too were good at speaking. […] But if we judged the matter rightly, we would discover that Cicero’s most blameless life makes him worthy of as much renown as his eloquence makes him worthy of praise.
Lipsius then sets out to refute two points of criticism against Cicero’s integerrima uita, which we have encountered many times over in this volume:12 Cicero’s leuitas and inconstantia in his political career, and his arrogantia and a puerilis gloriae cupiditas in political life. To the first charge, Lipsius responds that it was only normal for Cicero’s opinions and allegiances to fluctuate, given that he was living in such a tumultuous period.13 To the second, he objects that Cicer...

Table of contents

  1. Title Page
  2. Copyright
  3. Contents
  4. Summary of the Chapters
  5. Introduction Caesar’s death: a new beginning of history?
  6. Were Cicero’s Philippics the Cause of his Death?
  7. The Thrill of Defeat Classicism and the Ancient Reception of Cicero’s and Demosthenes’ Philippics
  8. Ille regit dictis animos Virgil’s Perspective on Cicero’s Final Years
  9. Man of Peace? Cicero’s Last Fight for the Republic in Greek and Roman Historical ‘Fictions’
  10. Libera uoluntas The Political Origins of the Free Will Argument in Cicero’s De fato and Augustine's Confessions
  11. Ciceronian Reception in the Epistula ad Octauianum
  12. Can it Ever be Wise to Kill the Tyrant? Insights from Cicero in the Debate on Rightful Government during the Middle Ages (Especially in the 13th–14th Centuries)
  13. Bruni, Cicero, and their Manifesto for Republicanism
  14. Multilayered Appropriation(s) Josse Bade’s Edition of Cicero’s Philippicae tribus commentariis illustratae
  15. Marc-Antoine Muret and his Lectures on Cicero’s De officiis
  16. First Epilogue Dramatic Representations of the Final Years of Cicero’s Life
  17. Second Epilogue Scholarly Appraisals of Cicero’s Final Years
  18. Index Locorum
  19. Index Nominum
Citation styles for Reading Cicero's Final Years

APA 6 Citation

[author missing]. (2020). Reading Cicero’s Final Years (1st ed.). De Gruyter. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/2818719/reading-ciceros-final-years-receptions-of-the-postcaesarian-works-up-to-the-sixteenth-century-with-two-epilogues-pdf (Original work published 2020)

Chicago Citation

[author missing]. (2020) 2020. Reading Cicero’s Final Years. 1st ed. De Gruyter. https://www.perlego.com/book/2818719/reading-ciceros-final-years-receptions-of-the-postcaesarian-works-up-to-the-sixteenth-century-with-two-epilogues-pdf.

Harvard Citation

[author missing] (2020) Reading Cicero’s Final Years. 1st edn. De Gruyter. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/2818719/reading-ciceros-final-years-receptions-of-the-postcaesarian-works-up-to-the-sixteenth-century-with-two-epilogues-pdf (Accessed: 15 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

[author missing]. Reading Cicero’s Final Years. 1st ed. De Gruyter, 2020. Web. 15 Oct. 2022.