Suetonius - The Life of Persius, translated by Alexander
Thomson and Thomas Forester
Aulus
Persius Flaccus -- known in English as Persius -- was one of the major
Roman writers of satire.
The Life of
Persius.
Aulus Persius Flaccus was born the day before the Nones of
December [4th Dec.] [952], in the consulship of
Fabius Persicus and L. Vitellius. He died on the eighth of the calends of
December [24th Nov.] [953] in the consulship of
Rubrius Marius and Asinius Gallus. Though born at Volterra, in Etruria, he
was a Roman knight, allied both by blood and marriage to persons of the
highest rank [954]. He ended his days at an estate he
had at the eighth milestone on the Appian Way. His father, Flaccus, who
died when he was barely six years old, left him under the care of
guardians, and his mother, Fulvia Silenna, who afterwards married Fusius,
a Roman knight, buried him also in a very few years. Persius Flaccus
pursued his studies at Volterra till he was twelve years old, and then
continued them at Rome, under Remmius Palaemon, the grammarian, and
Verginius Flaccus, the rhetorician. Arriving at the age of twenty-one, he
formed a friendship with Annaeus Cornutus [955],
which lasted through life; and from him he learned the rudiments of
philosophy. Among his earliest friends were Caesius Bassus
[956], and Calpurnius Statura; the latter of whom
died while Persius himself was yet in his youth. Servilius (539) Numanus
[957], he reverenced as a father. Through Cornutus he
was introduced to Annaeus, as well as to Lucan, who was of his own age,
and also a disciple of Cornutus. At that time Cornutus was a tragic
writer; he belonged to the sect of the Stoics, and left behind him some
philosophical works. Lucan was so delighted with the writings of Persius
Flaccus, that he could scarcely refrain from giving loud tokens of
applause while the author was reciting them, and declared that they had
the true spirit of poetry. It was late before Persius made the
acquaintance of Seneca, and then he was not much struck with his natural
endowments. At the house of Cornutus he enjoyed the society of two very
learned and excellent men, who were then zealously devoting themselves to
philosophical enquiries, namely, Claudius Agaternus, a physician from
Lacedaemon, and Petronius Aristocrates, of Magnesia, men whom he held in
the highest esteem, and with whom he vied in their studies, as they were
of his own age, being younger than Cornutus. During nearly the last ten
years of his life he was much beloved by Thraseas, so that he sometimes
travelled abroad in his company; and his cousin Arria was married to him.
Persius was remarkable for gentle manners, for a modesty amounting to
bashfulness, a handsome form, and an attachment to his mother, sister, and
aunt, which was most exemplary. He was frugal and chaste. He left his
mother and sister twenty thousand sesterces, requesting his mother, in a
written codicil, to present to Cornutus, as some say, one hundred
sesterces, or as others, twenty pounds of wrought silver
[958], besides about seven hundred books, which, indeed, included his
whole library. Cornutus, however, would only take the books, and gave up
the legacy to the sisters, whom his brother had constituted his heirs.
He wrote [959] seldom, and not very fast; even the
work we possess he left incomplete. Some verses are wanting at the end of
the book [960], but Cornutus thoughtlessly recited
it, as if (540) it was finished; and on Caesius Bassus requesting to be
allowed to publish it, he delivered it to him for that purpose., In his
younger days, Persius had written a play, as well as an Itinerary, with
several copies of verses on Thraseas' father-in-law, and Arria's
[961] mother, who had made away with herself before
her husband. But Cornutus used his whole influence with the mother of
Persius to prevail upon her to destroy these compositions. As soon as his
book of Satires was published, all the world began to admire it, and were
eager to buy it up. He died of a disease in the stomach, in the thirtieth
year of his age [962]. But no sooner had he left
school and his masters, than he set to work with great vehemence to
compose satires, from having read the tenth book of Lucilius; and made the
beginning of that book his model; presently launching his invectives all
around with so little scruple, that he did not spare cotemporary poets and
orators, and even lashed Nero himself, who was then the reigning prince.
The verse ran as follows:
Auriculas asini Mida rex habet;
King Midas has an ass's ears;
but Cornutus altered it thus;
Auriculas asini quis non hahet?
Who has not an ass's ears?
in order that it might not be supposed that it was meant to apply to Nero.
Footnotes to
Suetonius - The Life of Persius
[952] A.U.C. 786,
A.D. 34.
[953] A.U.C. 814, A.D. 62.
[954] Persius was one of the few men of rank and
affluence among the Romans, who acquired distinction as writers; the
greater part of them having been freedmen, as appears not only from these
lives of the poets, but from our author's notices of the grammarians and
rhetoricians. A Caius Persius is mentioned with distinction by Livy in the
second Punic war, Hist. xxvi. 39; and another of the same name by Cicero,
de Orat. ii. 6, and by Pliny; but whether the poet was descended from
either of them, we have no means of ascertaining.
[955] Persius addressed his fifth satire to Annaeus
Cornutus. He was a native of Leptis, in Africa, and lived at Rome in the
time of Nero, by whom he was banished.
[956] Caesius Bassus, a lyric poet, flourished during
the reigns of Nero and Galba. Persius dedicated his sixth Satire to him.
[957] "Numanus." It should be Servilius Nonianus, who
is mentioned by Pliny, xxviii. 2, and xxxvii. 6.
[958] Commentators are not agreed about these sums,
the text varying both in the manuscripts and editions.
[959] See Dr. Thomson's remarks on Persius, before, p.
398.
[960] There is no appearance of any want of finish in
the sixth Satire of Persius, as it has come down to us; but it has been
conjectured that it was followed by another, which was left imperfect.
[961] There were two Arrias, mother and daughter,
Tacit. Annal. xvi. 34. 3.
[962] Persius died about nine days before he completed
his twenty-ninth year.
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