Grice e Trasea: la ragione conversazionale della morale romana e l’implicatura
conversazionale del diritto romano -- Roma antica – filosofia italiana – Grice
italico -- Luigi Speranza, pel Gruppo di Gioco di H. P. Grice, The
Swimming-Pool Library, Villa Speranza (Padova). Filosofo
italiano. Padova, Veneto. Nato da una famiglia illustre e agiata. Mantenne
stretti legami con Padova, come dimostra la partecipazione ai festeggiamenti in
onore del fondatore, Antenore. Nulla è degli inizi della carriera politica
tranne contrasse matrimonio colla figlia di CECINA PETO, console suffetto. Il suocero
è implicato nella rivolta di Lucio Arrunzio Camillo Scriboniano che mira ad
eliminare Claudio e a RESTAURARE LA REPUBBLICA e pertanto e costretto al
suicidio. Lo segue, sebbene T. avesse cercato di impedirlo, anche la
moglie. Probabilmente, dopo la morte del suocero, T. aggiunse il suo nome
al proprio, prassi inconsueta per un genero, che può essere letta come un segno
di opposizione al principato. Non abbiamo informazioni sulla cronologia
della progressione di Trasea tra i ranghi più bassi del cursus honorum ed è
possibile, ma non è affatto certo, che la sua carriera politica fosse ad un
punto morto. A seguito della morte di Claudio e l'ascesa di NERONE,
l'influenza del precettore del nuovo principe, il filosofo Seneca, del Portico,
gli permise T. a di divenire console suffetto acquistando nel frattempo
l'importante amicizia del genero ELVIDIO PRISCO. Dopo il consolato, T. ottenne
il prestigioso incarico di quindecim-vir sacris faciundis. Tale ascesa e,
forse, aiutata dall'attività svolta presso le corti di giustizia né è da
escludere una sua nomina come governatore provinciale in accordo alla
testimonianza di PERSIO, amico e parente di T., il quale scrive di aver
viaggiato con lui. Sostenne in senato la causa di concussione avanzata dai
cilici contro il loro ex-governatore, COSSUZIANO CAPITONE, vicino al principe,
che e condannato probabilmente proprio per l'influenza e la capacità oratoria
mostrata da T.Si oppose ad una mozione con cui i siracusani chiedevano di
superare il numero legale di gladiatori per i loro giochi censurando di fatto
l'irrilevanza cui e giunto il senato. Quando, poi, NERONE invia al senato
una lettera – scritta da Seneca -- in cui giustifica l'appena compiuto omicidio
della madre, T. e il solo ad uscire dall'aula affermando di non poter dire ciò
che voleva e che non avrebbe detto quel che poteva, mentre molti dei suoi
colleghi si congratulavano bassamente con Nerone. Il pretore ANTISTIO SOSIANO, che
scrive poesie diffamatorie su Nerone, a accusato da Cossuziano Capitone,
recentemente riabilitato in Senato su impulso del suocero di questi, TIGELLINO,
di maiestatis. T. dissente dalla proposta di imporre la pena di morte sostenne
la più lieve sanzione dell'esilio, conforme per il reato. La proposta è approvata
con larga maggioranza nonostante il parere contrario di Nerone consultato prima
della votazione ed il principe e costretto ad aderirvi per far mostra di
clemenza. Al processo contro il pro-console di Creta, CLAUDIO TIMARCO, accusato
dai provinciali di continui abusi, avendoli costretti a compiere frequenti voti
di ringraziamento, T. censura il comportamento del pro-console. Fa approvare a
maggioranza un senatoconsulto che però dove aspettare il placet del principe. E
dispensato dal principe dal portargli i ringraziamenti, insieme alla
delegazione del senato, per la nascita di una figlia. Tale gesto e,
probabilmente, il preludio della fine anche perché TIGELLINO, tra i più
influenti cortigiani di Nerone e ostile a T. essendo il suocero di Cossuziano
Capitone, fatto condannare da T. stesso. Tuttavia, è noto che Nerone dice a
Seneca di essersi riconciliato con T. e che Seneca si fosse congratulato perché
recupera un'amicizia piuttosto che averlo costretto a chiedere clemenza. Dopo
tale vicenda, T. si ritira dalla vita politica. Non sappiamo esattamente quando
è presa la decisione ma TACITO fa dire a Capitone, in occasione del processo,
che T. ha da oltre III anni disertato tutte le sedute del senato ma, occorre
ricordare che la fonte è polemica e quindi poco affidabile. Non è noto neppure
quale sia stato il catalizzatore di una tale decisione che contrasta
apertamente con la sua vita precedente. Forse è la sua ultima forma di protesta
al principe. In questo lasso di tempo, T. continua a curare gl’interessi
dei suoi clienti e probabilmente compose anche la sua “Vita di CATONE [si
veda]”, in cui loda il sostenitore della libertà senatoriale contro GIULIO
CESARE (si veda) con il quale condivide la filosofia del portico. Tale opera,
oggi perduta, e una fonte importante per la biografia di Plutarco. Nerone, dopo
aver violentemente represso la congiura dei Pisoni, decide di sbarazzarsi di
chiunque sospettava ostile, e tra questi anche T. e Barea Sorano che da tempo
detesta. Spinto da Cossuziano Capitone, decide di agire durante la visita del
re Tiridate I di Armenia a Roma, come scrive sarcasticamente Tacito "quasi
fosse atto da re", affinché passassero inosservate le vicende di due così
illustri cittadini. L'accusa contro T. e assunta da Cossuziano Capitone e
Marcello Eprio, mentre Ostorio Sabino si occupa di Barea Sorano. Dapprima
Nerone esclude T. dal ricevimento in onore di Tiridate ma questi, anziché farsi
prendere dal timore, chiede che gli fossero notificati i capi d'accusa e che
gli fosse dato tempo di difendersi. Nerone accolge la risposta di T. con
agitata premura e come mai prima d'ora comincia a temere la presenza,
l'ardimento e lo spirito di libertà della sua vittima e pertanto comanda di
convocare il senato. L'imputato, dopo aver consultato gl’amici, decise di non
partecipare al processo per evitare che Nerone si incrudelisse anche con la
moglie e la figlia e per non prestare orecchio all’ingiurie degl’accusatori. In
tale occasione, inoltre, impede al tribuno ARULENO RUSTICO di porre il veto al decreto
del senato affermando che una siffatta azione mette in pericolo la vita del
tribuno senza salvare la sua. Il giorno del processo, il tempio di Venere
Genitrice, luogo di raduno del Senato, e circondato da due coorti della guardia
pretoriana. Iniziata la seduta, il questore legge una lettera del principe che,
senza far nomi, accusa alcuni senatori di trascurare da tempo i loro doveri e
di essere, pertanto, cattivo esempio anche per i cavalieri. Gl’accusatori
accolsero tali affermazioni come un dardo pronto per essere scagliato e subito
Cossuziano si scaglia contro T. per essere seguito poi da Marcello Eprio il
quale, con maggiore energia, grida che si tratta di LA SALVEZZA DELLO STATO
ROMANO e che la longanimità del principe sarebbe venuta meno di fronte
all'arroganza dei sottoposti e che fino ad ora troppo indulgenti sono stati i
senatori nei confronti di T., di Barea Sorano, definiti faziosi ribelli. Non si
ricordano discorsi della difesa ed in ogni caso i senatori, nel più profondo
terrore per i reparti armati, non hanno altra alternativa che votare la
condanna a morte nella forma del liberum mortis arbitrium ovvero l'ordine di
suicidarsi. T. e ovviamente condannato a morte, il genero Elvidio Prisco e
esiliato insieme agl’amici Paconio Agrippino e Curzio Montano. Gl’altri
imputati, Barea Sorano e la figlia di lui, processati separatamente, seguirono
lo stesso destino di T.. Al crepuscolo, T. intento ad intrattenere numerosi
ospiti e ad ascoltare con molta attenzione il filosofo Demetrio, del CINARGO, con
il quale discute della natura dell'anima e della separazione dello spirito dal
corpo, riceve da uno dei suoi intimi, DOMIZIO CECILIANO, la notizia della
condanna. A tal punto, esorta i più a non disperarsi e a ritirarsi in gran
fretta per evitare di compromettere le loro sorti con la sua, poi persuase la
moglie che, memore della madre, si prepara a seguire nella morte il marito, a
restare in vita e a non privare la figlia dell'unico sostegno. Poco dopo,
mentre T. si avvia al portico con un'espressione lieta, avendo saputo che il
genero, Elvidio Prisco, è stato solo esiliato, giunse il questore a
comunicargli ufficialmente la condanna. Si ritira, quindi, accompagnato da
Demetrio e dal genero, nelle proprie camere, porse ad uno schiavo le vene di
entrambe le braccia e, come il sangue scorse, lo sparse a terra libando a Giove
liberatore sempre alla presenza del questore. Infine, dopo molte sofferenze, muore.
In Prato della Valle, Padova, è presente una statua che lo raffigura, opera d’
Andreosi ed eretta a cura della associazione padovana Excisa Civitas. T. è
rappresentato in abito consolare, ai suoi piedi un piedistallo, simbolo della
costanza con cui sostenne la sua impari lotta contro Nerone. È menzionato nel
romanzo Quo Vadis di Sienkiewicz. È menzionato nel romanzo Memorie di Adriano
di Yourcenar. Dione Cassio. Tacito. Plinio. Tacito, Historiae. Plutarco Moralia.
Geiger. Statua di T. su digilander.libero. Cassio Dione Cocceiano, Historia
Romana, libri LXVI-LXVII. Plinio
il Giovane, Epistulae. Tacito, Annales. Brunt, Stoicism and the Principate,
PBSR, Devillers, Le rôle des passages relatifs à Thrasea Paetus dans les
Annales de Tacite, Neronia, Bruxelles, Collection Latomus Geiger, Munatius
Rufus and T. on Cato the Younger, Athenaeum. Rudich, Political Dissidence under
Nero, Londra, (Strunk, Saving the life of a foolish poet: Tacitus on Marcus
Lepidus, T., and political action under the principate, Syllecta Classica, Syme,
A Political Group, Roman Papers, Turpin, Tacitus, stoic exempla, and the
praecipuum munus annalium, Classical Antiquity, Wirszubski, Libertas as a
political idea in Rome in the late republic and early principate, Cambridge. T., su Enciclopedia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. MPortale
Antica Roma Portale Biografie Categorie: Retori romaniFilosofi
romaniScrittori romaniFilosofi del I secoloScrittori del I secolo Romani Nati a
Padova Morti a Roma Filosofi giustiziati Stoici Morti per suicidio. The wide circulation of the philosophy of the
Porch among Romans of the upper class from the time of Panaetius to the reign
of Marcus Aurelius is a familiar fact. Few Romans of note can indeed be marked
down as committed ‘filosofi del portico’, and even those, like Seneca, who
avowedly belongs to the school borrows ideas from other philosophies. Still,
even if eclecticism is the mode, the ‘Porch’ element is dominant. The PORTICO
permeates the writings of ‘filosofi’ like Virgil and Horace who professed no
formal allegiance to the sect, and became part of the culture that men absorb
in their early education. One might think that the Porch exercises an influence
comparable, at Oxford, at in some degree with that which Christianity has often
had on men ignorant or careless of the nicer points of systematic theology. It
has often been supposed that it did much to humanise Roman law and government.
That is a contention of which I should be rather sceptical, but it is not my
present theme. I propose to examine the effects that The Porch had on men's
attitudes to the Principate, the essentially monarchical form of government
created by Ottavianus. Prima facie we might expect these effects to have been
significant, yet it is not easy to discern exactly what they are. At the very
outset an apparent contradiction confronts us. The Porch seems to be both
upholders and opponents of the regime. The Stoic Atenodoro is an honoured
counsellor of Ottaviano; Seneca the preceptor of Nerone and then one of his
chief ministers, Marcus Aurelius Antonino a philosopher on the throne. Seneca
exalts the autocratic power of the Princeps. Under Nerone, a ruler vigilant for
the safety of each and all of his subjects, anxious to secure their consent,
and protected by their affection, Rome (Seneca claims) enjoyed the happiest
form of constitution, in which nothing is lacking to our complete freedom but
the license to destroy ourselves. We may always suspect Seneca of insincere
rhetoric and special pleading. But Seneca’s approval of monarchy in principle is
shared by the honest Musonius, and Antonino clearly assumed that it was by
divine providence that he had been called to exercise absolute power. And yet
that perfect philosopher of the Porch, as Seneca calls him (Const. Sap.), Catone,
died in defence of the old Republic, which Giulio Cesare had overthrown and Ottaviano
had replaced. Cato’s conduct was still viewed as exemplary by philosophers of
the Porch during the Principate. T. writes Catone’s life, and he is the centre
of a circle, including ELVIDIO PRISCO and ARULENO RUSTICO, which offers the
most intractable opposition to certain princes, opposition which was certainly
ascribed to the teaching of the Porch. Nerone’s suspicions of RUBELLIO PLAUTO,
a kinsman and potential pretender to the Principate, are enhanced by the
allegation that he had adopted the Porch’s presumptuous creed, which made men
turbulent and avid for power. Writing soon afterwards, Seneca himself admits
that some thought, though erroneously, that the votaries of philosophy were
'defiant and stubborn, men who held in contempt magistrates, kings and all
engaged in government', and he advises Lucilius to devote himself to
philosophy, but not to boast of it, since philosophy itself, associated with
arrogance and defiance, has brought many men into danger. Let it remove your
faults and not reproach those of others, and let it not recoil from social
conventions ('publicis moribus"), nor produce the appearance of condemning
what it does not practise'? Though Seneca speaks of 'philosophy' in general,
the context shows that he has in mind only that philosophy in which he thought
the truth resided, the Porch. The second passage indeed may suggest that what
endangers the Porch was not so much resistance to authority as censure of the
behaviour common in the world, which made the Porch generally unpopular. Seneca
had also admitted earlier that The Porch had the reputation, in his view
undeserved, of excessive harshness, which was held to make it incapable of
giving wise advice to rulers. It was under Gaius, Nero, Vespasian and Domitian
that the Porch certainly suffered persecution. The last two princes actually
expelled professional philosophers from Rome and Italy; Epictetus was among the
exiles. Yet he too repudiates the charge that the Porch is opposed to
authority. By reconciling the interests of the individual, truly conceived,
with those of society, the Porch, Epitteto claims, produced concord in a state
and peace among peoples. The Porch teaches men to obey the laws, but not to
despise the authority of 'kings', though in his view neither laws nor kings
could give or take away anything essential to a man's blessedness. On the other
hand, the Stoic would not comply with the orders of 'tyrants', which conflicted
with his own moral purpose. We might then infer that it was not political
authority, nor monarchy as such, that the Porch rejects, but those rulers whose
vile conduct made them 'tyrants',"' and that what the Porch – in a figure
like T. -- admires in Catone is not his fight for the Republic but his
rectitude and constancy. However, Vespasian was never reproached with tyranny,
and ELVIDIO PRISCO, at least, whom Dio called a Republican, and whom Vespasian
puts to death, must have had convictions by which an emperor could be judged in
political as well as moral terms. The apparent inconsistency in the Porch’s
attitude to monarchy is not the only ambiguity in their relations to the state.
Seneca meets the charge of political defiance by replying that none are more
grateful to rulers who preserve peace than philosophers who have retired from
public life to the nobler activity of tranquil contemplation and teaching. Much
writing of the Porch suggests that their teaching tended to promote not active
resistance to government but entire withdrawal from political activity. Quintilian
speaks of philosophers as men prone to neglect their civic duties. P. Suillius
had contemptuously referred to Seneca's own 'studia inertia'. In the very
passage in which Tacitus marks out ELVIDIO PRISCO as a Stoic he says that 'from
early youth he devoted his brilliant mind to deeper studies, not as so many
(plerique') do, to make the high-sounding name of philosophy a screen for
indolent retirement ('segne otium'), but in order to undertake public duties,
while fortified against the strokes of fortune. Evidently, in his judgement,
the general tendency of philosophic training was to render men unfit for public
careers by making them prefer the life of contemplation. Hence an ambitious
mother, like Agricola's, would restrain her son from drinking too deeply at the
philosophic spring. Indeed all writings of the Porch illustrate a certain
tension between the claims of public activity and those of study and meditation
(injra). We must, of course, distinguish sharply between Stoics who
deliberately chose 'segne otium' from the start and those, like T., who retires
from politics in such a way as to manifest their disapprobation of the
government, even though such retirement could be justified by arguments that
might rather have persuaded the believer never to enter the political arena.
The former might by their indifference to the state deprive it of useful
talent, but they constituted no danger to the regime. But we may wonder how a
creed which encouraged such quietism could also be accused of making men
turbulent enemies of the Princeps. To understand these apparent contradictions
in the political attitudes of Stoics under the Principate, we must look more
closely than historians generally do at the moral principles they embraced. All
I can attempt here is naturally no more than a rather impressionistic sketch of
those aspects of Stoic teaching which seem to me most relevant to their actual
political behaviour, in office, opposition or retirement. This is no place for
a systematic exposition of the logical and physical presuppositions of their
moral creed, and indeed the Stoics of our period evinced no keen interest in
the dialectical subtleties and doctrinal coherence of the system the earlier
masters of their school had evolved. Rhetoric and devotion had largely replaced
inquiry and argument. None the less their moral convictions continued to rest
on metaphysical dogmata, however uncritically accepted. Like other philosophers,
the Stoics assume that each man does and must pursue his individual happiness.
This he can secure only if he conforms his life to nature, his own nature and
that of the universe, of which his own is of necessity a part. In the impulses
of animals and of children we can see how Nature herself directs living beings
to seek what is conducive to life and to avoid what is contrary. Life itself
and all that assists the proper functioning of the living creature belong to
the category of things that are natural and therefore can be described as
things of value. They include wealth, health and nearly all that men generally
make their objects of endeavour. Now, man is endowed with reason, and reason
shows that he cannot live in isolation. We are born for one another, and it is
proper to our nature to prefer things of value for our fellows as well as for
ourselves. However, experience teaches us that such things may not be in our
power. If, then our happiness, or that of our fellows, were to depend at all on
their possession, it would not necessarily be within our grasp, our minds would
be filled with anxiety, and our failures to obtain what we desire would seem to
be limitations on our freedom. But no man can be happy if he is not secure from
anxiety and free. Now Nature must have designed our happiness, for all being is
permeated by a substance the Stoics described as reason or the divine. This
ruling element in the world, which causes all things to work together for good,
is also present in our souls, and it is its presence that enables us in some
measure to apprehend the providential order of the Universe. Our reason should
also be the ruling element in our own nature, as it must be capable of
directing us to that true happiness, security and freedom which nature impels
us to seek, and which, given the rationality and beneficence of nature, it must
be in our power to attain. Hence the so-called things of value cannot be truly
good, simply because they are not always and necessarily in our reach. By
contrast nothing can ever prevent us from constantly willing to do what is
right, even though the resultant actions may fail to produce the effects
intended; these effects are external to ourselves and do not or should not
affect that permanent disposition of the soul in which our blessedness,
security and freedom are to be found. The only true good, which reason
prescribes, lies then in a virtuous disposition and in the activity that flows
from it, and the only true evil is the lack of such a disposition, while the
things of value and their contraries must alike be classed, to use the
technical term, as things indifferent to us. Yet this leaves no criterion for
identifying the particular acts the good or wise man will perform, and that
criterion has still to be supplied by the things of value. Is The acts which
were termed in Greek “KaOkovaand” in Latin “officia”, acts incumbent on men,
which we may render as duties, even though the word has perhaps excessively
Kantian overtones, consist in promoting states of affairs which will contain as
much as possible of such secondary goods as health or wealth, and as little as
possible of their contraries. We are bound to make the best calculations we can
on the consequences of our acts, and to exert ourselves to the utmost in
performing them. But we should always act with the reservation in our minds
that what we seek may not be attainable and that its actual attainment is not
per se good. A father will jump into deep water to rescue his child. But the
goodness of his act is not enhanced if the child is saved, nor diminished if it
drowns. Indeed, since the universe is providentially ordered, the death of the
child, if it occurs, must be for the best. Chrysippus is quoted by Epictetus as
saying that, so long as the consequences are not clear to me, I cling to what
is best adapted to securing things that accord with nature; for the divine has
created me such that I shall choose these things; but if I actually knew that
it was now ordained for me to be ill, I would aim at being ill. Victrix causa
deis placuit, sed victa Catoni. As a good Stoic, Catone should not have fought
against Caesar, if he could have foreseen Caesar's victory. But lacking this
foresight, he could still be subjectively right; and the admiration a Stoic
could express for Cato is not in itself incompatible with acceptance of the
regime for which Caesar's victory had prepared the way. For the Stoics only the
wise man has an understanding of nature so complete and a disposition so
unchangeable that he will never do what is not right, and only his actions are
truly successful or good. Others may perform the same actions, but in a way
that is somehow flawed. However, the wise man, as Seneca remarked, is as rare
as the phoenix. Not even the great Stoic teachers pretended to the title. Most
of their statements about his conduct may then be understood as the
presentation of a model for others, and in fact the Stoics did not hesitate
from the first to lay down rules for the guidance of ordinary beings. In such
prescriptions they continued to attach value only to the purpose of moral
activity, and not to success in performance. The fullest discussion we possess
of their teaching on men's duties is to be found in Cicero's “de officiis,” the
first two books of which are avowedly based on a treatise of Panaetius. But
though Panaetius, who departed in various ways from the doctrines of his
predecessors, did not care to describe the ideal sage and expressly turned to
the duties of men in whom perfect wisdom was not to be found but whose conduct
might still manifest the semblances of virtue ('similitudines honesti'), his
concern with this topic was certainly not new. Moreover, there are some
indications that Stoics extrapolated the concept of perfect virtue from the
conduct of ordinary men which commanded universal approval. Orazio on the
bridge could not be called truly brave, because he was no sage. Yet, his
heroism gives an idea, by analogy, of what tcourage is. Thus Stoic practical
morality was founded on commonly received opinions. While every man is bound to
be of service to his fellows, the particular services he should render vary
with his special relationships to them. From the first orthodox Stoic thinkers
enjoined specific duties on the husband, father, slave-owner and so forth. Tacitus
alludes to this practice when he describes ELVIDIO PRISCO as steady in
performing all the duties of life, as citizen, senator, husband, son-in-law and
friend. Epictetus and others conceive such duties as arising from the place in
the world, the station or military post (Tá§is, statio) to which each
individual is appointed, and which may limit, as it always defines, the kinds
of action incumbent on him; though a life of virtue is open to all, even to
slaves, what a man can do determines what he ought to do; for instance, if he
is poor, he cannot hold office or endow his city with fine buildings (Ench.). But
how do we identify these specific duties, which are given to us by our place in
the world? If you are a town-councillor, says Epictetus, remember that you are
one; if you are young, that you are young, if old, that you are old, if a
father, that you are a father; on reflection each name invariably suggests the
appropriate tasks. These tasks can, I think, only have been regarded as obvious
if they were those conventionally expected from the persons so designated, and
in fact Stoics seldom recommend acts that would have violated conventions. All
that Epictetus himself tells a provincial governor is to render just decisions,
to keep his hands off others' property, and to see no beauty in another man's
wife or a boy or a piece of gold or silver plate. Epictetus does not go far
beyond the maxims of abstinentia and integritas, always accepted, if often
infringed, by the Roman ruling class. In fact he adds that we ought to look for
doctrines that agree with but give additional strength to such common notions
of duty. The great mind, as Seneca puts it, is intent on honourable and
industrious conduct in that station in which it is placed. The good man does
not change the rules, but obeys them more strictly. In another metaphor the
Stoics employed the world was viewed as a stage in which each man had to play a
part (persona, mpóocov). Panaetius exploited this metaphor in connexion with a
doctrine he himself seems to have transferred from aesthetic to ethical theory,
that there is a kind of moral beauty, called in Greek pétrov and in Latin
decorum, which 'shines out' in virtuous activity, even in that of the man still
imperfect in wisdom. It would not be germane to my theme to attempt to expound
this doctrine in full, but two points are important. First, just as the
physical beauty of a living creature must be attributed to the due relation of
all the parts to the whole, so the moral beauty of a man's activity lies in the
order and coherence of all his words and deeds, and just as the correct
delineation of a figure in a drama depends on the suitability to his character
of what he does and says, so in real life men must aim at maintaining the
consistency, 'constantia'' or 'aequabilitas, of their conduct. But while the
dramatist may properly portray the wicked man, on the stage of life we are all
bound to play the role of rational beings subject to the moral law. None the
less, the manner of the performance must vary from man to man." Besides
the role which is common to all Panatius distinguished three others. The first
arises from the individual's special inborn endowments, which he must develop
to the full, so far as they are compatible with virtue, and his natural
disabilities, which limit what he can do, the second from his position in the
world, the third from the choice of a vocation that he is bound to make on the
basis of his capacity and of the resources at his disposal, but which tends to
commit him for the future. Thus a Roman of rank might choose to be a
philosopher or a jurist, an orator or a soldier; having made his decision, he
should normally carry it out to the end. For Panaetius it is only by
recognizing the potentialities and limitations imposed by his own personality
and circumstances that the individual can avoid those inconsistencies in
conduct which would mar the moral beauty of his life. 'It is of no avail to
contend with nature or to pursue an end you cannot reach'. Similarly in
Epictetus' view, 'if you assume a role beyond your ability, the result is that
you perform it disgracefully (hoxnuóvndas) and neglect the role you were able
to fill. To thine own self be true, And it must follow, as the night the day,
Thou canst not then be false to any man. Secondly, according to Panaetius,
moral beauty, like physical, attracts the approval and love of other men.
Indeed that approval comes to be regarded as a criterion for determining
whether particular actions really do manifest 'decorum'. We ought to respect
the opinions and feelings of others. Hence deportment, polite conversation and
other matters of social etiquette become the subjects of moral precepts. Manual
labour is condemned as unbefitting the free man. Even the liberal professions
are pronounced below the dignity of an aristocrat. In general the conventions
of the upper class society to which both Panaetius and Cicero belonged are
unquestioningly accepted. We are told that for actions to be performed in
accordance with custom and civic practices no rules need be prescribed. These
practices are the rules, and no one should make the mistake of thinking that he
has the same license as Socrates or Aristippus to transgress them. It was only
their great and superhuman virtue that gave that privilege to them. This
teaching justified Romans in treating their own traditions as equivalent to
moral laws. It is no accident that the Stoic RUBELLIO PLAUTO 'respected the
maxims of old generations' in the strictness of his household, or that Seneca
admires the mores antiqui in which Romans had always tended to find the secret
of Rome's greatness. The very use of the term “officium” to render Kankov had a
similar effect. In common speech “officum” could mean both the kind of service
which social conventions expected one man to render another, and the function
of a magistrate, for example, or a senator. Its use in ethical theory suggested
that such a service or such a function constitutes a moral obligation. Cicero
illustrates Panaetius' doctrine of the special duties imposed by a man's
individual personality from the suicide of Cato. Not every one would have been
right to kill himself in such circumstances. Cato was justified because he had
always held that it was better to die than to set eyes on a tyrant;
his'constantia' left him no choice. Plutarch, who drew directly or indirectly
on a firsthand account, shows that Catone consciously acted on this view. For Catone,
death is the only way out. His son might live, but being also a Catone, should
not serve Caesar. Others might make their peace with the victor and incur no
blame. An anecdote in Plutarch's life of Cicero tells us that Catone also held
in that while he himself could not honourably have abandoned his consistent
opposition to Caesar, Cicero, whose past conduct had been very different, would
have done better to remain neutral in the civil war. Catone’s conceptions are
certainly known to the circle of T., whose own life of the hero may be
Plutarch's immediate source. When they debate whether T. should appear in the
senate to answer the capital charges against him, the question is essentially
what course it is fitting – “deceret” -- for him to take, if he were to be true
to the course of behaviour he had pursued without a break for so many years. Another
man even within his circle is not bound to the same intransigence. Similarly,
his friend, PACONIO, says that any one who so much as thought of going to
Nero's games should go, but his own 'persona' did not allow him to consider the
possibility. ELVIDIO PRISCO is for Epictetus the shining example of a man who
was true to his persona. This sort of conception is indeed ascribed to men who
are not known to have embraced the Stoic creed, just as the word 'persona' is
sometimes used unphilosophically in a way compatible with Panaetius' doctrine
but not derived from it. These are further indications that his doctrine
corresponded closely with the thought and behaviour natural to traditional
Romans. The concept is found in ORAZIO as well as in all the later Stoic
writers, Seneca, Musonius, Epictetus and Marcus (and indeed elsewhere); though
sometimes they think more of the special duties that were imposed on the
individual by his place in the world or his vocation than of those which flow
from his inborn propensities and disabilities, a few texts show that that part
of Panaetius' doctrine was not wholly forgotten. The idea of decorum also
survives in the attention still devoted to etiquette, to seemly ways of
walking, talking, laughing, dressing, behaviour at the table and even in bed,
for all such behaviour was considered an outward manifestation of the disposition
of the soul. It is characteristic that Epictetus would rather have died than
shaved off the beard that symbolized his role as a philosopher. In all these
precepts we find the assumption that the moral law required performance of
traditionally accepted duties and respect for conventions. After telling his
readers that the poet can discover how to treat his personae appropriately by
learning the duties that belong to the citizen, friend, father, brother, host,
senator, judge and general, Horace adds: respicere exemplar vitae morumque
iubebo doctum imitatorem et vivas hinc ducere voces. For the Stoics a virtuous
disposition necessarily issued in virtuous activity. All had to perform their
duties within that City of Gods and men which was not a city in any ordinary
sense, nor a world-state that might one day be brought into being, but the
providentially ordered Universe in which all live here and now. However,
political activity could certainly be included among these duties. From the
first the Stoic fathers had taught that the wise man would take part in public
affairs, if there were no hindrance. Indeed it was a famous Stoic paradox that
only the wise man was a king or statesman; he alone possessed the art of
ruling, whether or not he had any subjects, just as only the doctor has the art
of healing, even if he has no patients. His principal aim in politics would be
to restrain vice and encourage virtue, ' although he would also necessarily be
concerned with the 'things of value' and would treat wealth, fame, health etc.
as if they were goods. But it could hardly fail to influence his attitude to
such objects of endeavour that he was always to remember that his efforts to
promote them might fail, and that failure or success was unimportant; they were
not truly goods. As Epictetus observed, 'Caesar seems to provide us with
profound peace... but can he give us peace from love or sorrow or envy? He
cannot'. And yet blessedness comes only from such spiritual peace. In the real
world, according to Chrysippus, all laws and constitutions were faulty. He once
despairingly said that if the wise statesman pursued a bad policy he would
displease the gods, if a good policy, he would displease men. So too Seneca
could suggest that there was no state which could tolerate the wise man or
secure his toleration. However, such pessimism did not represent the final
judgement of the Stoa. It was recognized, most emphatically by Panaetius, that
the state answered human material needs and fulfilled men's natural and
reasonable impulse for co-operation." It would hardly have been consistent
with the Stoics' faith in providence if all or most existing states had been
irremediably evil. Did not the mere existence of any given form of institutions
perhaps imply that those institutions served a worthy purpose in the divine
economy? At any rate there is no evidence that Stoics condemned any political
system as such; for instance what they disapproved of in the tyrant was not his
absolute power but his abuse of it. We are told that it was particularly
(though not exclusively) in states that exhibited some progress towards
perfection that the wise man would be active. Progress must here be construed
in a moral sense, of states that tended to imbue their citizens with virtue. Old
Sparta apparently evoked Stoic admiration, because of the strict and simple
life prescribed by Lycurgus. Sparta was also most often cited as an instance of
that mixed or balanced constitution which won the approval of many ancient
thinkers, perhaps above all for its stability. In the individual stability of
purpose was for Seneca a mark of moral progress, s and perhaps stability was
also a Stoic criterion for judging constitutions. Certainly we are told,
without explanation, that the old Stoics preferred a mixed constitution. 6
Panaetius is often held, with no certain proof, to have commended the
Republican system at Rome for its balance,' and the historical work of his
illustrious successor, Posidonius, was probably biased in favour of the Roman
aristocracy. At Sparta Cleomenes I, who professed to be re-establishing both
the old austerities and the old political balance, enjoyed the assistance of a
Stoic counsellor. Cato could probably have cited Stoic texts to justify his
struggle to preserve the Republic. On the other hand Stoics did not condemn
monarchy in theory. Some scholars even suppose that they gave it their special
approbation. No doubt rule by a Stoic sage would have been in their eyes the
best form of government. That may be one reason why several of the early Stoic
masters wrote treatises on kingship. Yet, given the rarity of the sage, it must
have seemed a remote possibility that if he emerged at all, he would also
happen to obtain sovereign authority. Probably these treatises were intended to
depict the perfect ruler as a model for contemporary kings. Conceivably, like
Seneca in the de clementia, their authors did not insist over much on the gulf
that divided actual rulers from their ideal. Moreover, a philosopher had the
best hope, so it might seem, of effecting what he thought right as the minister
of an autocrat, and since kings enjoyed great power in the Hellenistic world,
Stoics who were ready to engage in political activity entered their service;
this was only natural. However, once the aristocratic Roman Republic had become
dominant, they were no less prepared to attend and advise men of influence at
Rome. Panaetius was an intimate of Scipio Aemilianus, and Tiberius Gracchus and
Cato had their Stoic counsellors. Only after Augustus did monarchy become the
one system towards which for practical purposes a Stoic needed to define his
attitude. The precepts and examples of the early masters of the school did not
require him to reject it on doctrinal grounds; how indeed could he have done
so, without impugning the dispensations of Providence? At a merely empirical
level Tacitus reluctantly conceded that it was in the interest of peace that
all power should be conferred on one man; he had been anticipated, a century
earlier, by Strabo, who was an avowed Stoic. Seneca argued that the struggle
for Republican freedom had been futile, and not only his career but those of T.
and Helvidius, men of firmer resolution, indicate that their principles did not
lead these Stoics to condemn the Principate as such. The wise man would not be
hindered from participating in public life by any form of government, yet under
any form he might conceive that he had a higher duty to a vocation of
philosophic investigation and teaching his fellows by precept and example,
besides fulfilling the obligations of private life." And under any form he
might also see that he had no opportunity for effective political action,
because of the wickedness of those in high places at the time. The doctrine
that the goodness of every act lay in the disposition from which it was
performed and not in its results did not require Stoics to engage in an
undertaking doomed to fail ab initio; the wise man would not take a leaking
ship to sea, nor, if unfit to fight, enlist in the army. Under a tyranny he
simply could not do any service. As for the ordinary man, there were reasons
why he might abstain from public affairs which did not apply to the sage. By
definition the latter had already attained to that perfect understanding and
virtue to which others at best aspired. But the pre-occupations of a busy
public career might be sufficient of themselves to prevent imperfect men from
ever reaching that goal. Seneca could hold at times that it was justifiable for
a man to retire from long public service to private duties and to care of his
own soul, at times that the whole of his life was not too long for this task,
all the more because his example could be beneficial to others. The sage too
was impregnable in his virtue, which he could hardly lose, but in other men
moral progress might be impeded by what St. Paul calls 'evil communications' (I
Cor.). Moreover, even when arguing that a man should normally undertake public
duties, Seneca concedes, in a way reminiscent of Panaetius' emphasis on
individual endowments, that he might be debarred not only by his physical,
intellectual or pecuniary resources but also by his temperament; he might be
too sensitive or insufficiently pliable for life at court, too prone to
indignation, or to untimely witticisms that showed high spirit and freedom of
speech but would only do the speaker harm. Again, as Panaetius had also held,
he might be suited only to contemplation, not to public affairs; and
'reluctante natura, irritus labor est'. None of these considerations applied to
the sage, who was omnicompetent and impervious to what others would regard as
insults or injuries. Seneca's views on the propriety of a political career are
self-contradictory, but the assumption that these contradictions can be
explained simply by the hypothesis that he recommended otium only when his own
political prospects were impaired and political activity only when himself
engaged in public affairs, hardly fits the fact that we find the same antinomy
in the sermons of Epictetus and the Meditations of Marcus. Seneca's advocacy of
quietism reflects one important aspect of Stoic influence. Epictetus recognizes
of course that men are bound to perform the duties that arise from their social
relationships, but he is much more insistent on the ultimate worthlessness of
all those secondary goods to which activity in the world is inevitably
directed. A man of a certain station should take office, but it is wrong for
him to set his heart either on holding it or on freedom from its cares; it is significant
that he should think it necessary to warn his pupils against yielding to both
these kinds of pestic Ofeis i a is les kiy Fallivan my police it cno doubt
because no good man would submit to the humiliations on which advancement
depends;? the few whose aim is to bring themselves into a right relation with
the divine earn the mockery of the crowd, and they can hardly pursue their aim
as procurators of Caesar. Epictetus was himself a former slave with no chance
of a public career, but it is plain that his audiences were mainly drawn from
the upper class, some of them aspirants to a career at Rome, like the young
Arrian who took down his words.' In fact Epictetus' own low social station and
the academic character of his way of life may have made him less conscious of
the dangers of evil communications than Seneca had been, even though two of his
diatribes are devoted to the theme (n. 69). We also find a greater serenity in
his teaching than in Marcus' reflections. When Marcus looked back to the time
of Vespasian or of Trajan, he saw a world in which men were engaged in flattery
and boasting, suspicions and plots, praying for the death of others, murmuring
at their own lot, given to sexual passions, avarice and political ambition. It
was the same in his own court. More than once he dwells with loathing on the
dark qualities of those who surrounded him, the emptiness of their aims, their
longing for the death of 'the schoolmaster', though he had so greatly toiled,
prayed and thought on their behalf; indeed death would be a release, the more
merciful, the earlier it came. However, Marcus had his duty to perform; he was
set over mankind as the ram over the flock or the bull over the herd (ibid). No
other vocation (inó®ois) is so suited to philosophy, that is to say, to the
exercise of a reason which has accurately established the rationality of nature
and of all that life contains. But it is evidently by a conscious effort that
Marcus reconciles himself to the place Providence has assigned him, and he can
also say that his role impedes him in the pursuit of philosophy." The
general character of his Meditations shows that his inclination was to ponder
on the divine order and his own relation to it rather than to consume his
energies in 'the daily round, the trivial task' which, nonetheless, furnished
him on his own principles with all his reason required him to ask. Those
principles taught him that the wise man would serve the state, if there were no
external hindrance. But an autocrat could plead no hindrance, so long at least
as his natural capacities permitted him to render good service. All the same we
can see how a man of Marcus' temperament, set in some lower station, must have
preferred that life of contemplation which in the end Seneca had pronounced the
best. Thus the more seriously Stoic teaching was accepted, the more ardent in
some minds must have been the desire for retirement and meditation, at most
combined with the performance of inescapable private duties. Whether Stoics commonly
yielded to this desire, as some of their critics averred (p. 9), we cannot say;
our records can hardly be expected to commemorate lives of quiet seclusion;
Sextius is a rare example, known by name (n. 10). It is with others that we
must henceforth be concerned, men who thought themselves bound by their
principles to enter public life, who believed what Seneca once said (ep. 96,
5),'vivere militare est', and who tried to play the part, or to occupy the
station, to which they had been called by birth and ability. This Stoic concept
of the individual's station was applied, as Koestermann showed long ago, to the
emperor himself. Augustus seems consciously to have adopted it, probably under
the influence of the Stoic Athenodorus; this was known to such panegyrical
writers of the time as Ovid and Velleius. Claudius too appears to have spoken
of his station, and in his reign and Nero's the notion is found in Seneca and
Lucan. Tacitus referred to Vespasian's station, Pliny to Trajan's. Pius himself
also employed the term. It survived into the fourth century.? Curiously,
Koestermann failed to observe that the idea is implicit in Marcus' Meditations.
Pius, according to Marcus, always acted in the way which had been appointed for
him. He exhorts himself to let the god within him be lord of a living being,
who is a male, a Roman, a ruler, who has taken up his post, as one who awaits
the signal for retirement from life, fully prepared. He has to carry out the
task set him like a soldier storming the breach. Similarly he speaks of his
'place' in the world, or of his 'vocation'; like all men, he has tasks to
perform, proper to his own constitution and nature, and 'as Antoninus, my city
and fatherland is Rome'; he must be strenuous in doing his duty, acts of piety
and benefit to men, like Pius before him. He is a sort of priest and servant of
the gods, and this makes him, rather like the Pope, a servant of men; he
regards his life as a 'liturgy' or as 'servitude'. Long before, Antigonus
Gonatas under Stoic influence had described kingship as 'noble servitude', and
Seneca had applied this to Nero's position. But what were the particular duties
that Stoics attached to the station or role of the emperor? According to Seneca
he is to be 'vigilant for the safety of each and all'. He belongs to the state,
not the state to him.® Seneca recommends Nero to win his subjects' consent,
respecting public opinion 3 and freedom of speech,* and to observe the laws. Under
the good ruler justice, peace, morality ('pudicitia'), security and the
hierarchical social order ('dignitas') will be upheld, and economic prosperity
will be assured.& The greatest stress is of course laid, for reasons not
hard to discern, on clementia. But it is everywhere implicit that the emperor
should be guided by traditional standards and objectives accepted by his
subjects. Marcus accepted similar criteria. Marcus adjures himself to do
everything as a pupil of Pius, to emulate his justice, beneficence, clemency,
piety, frugality, his respect for the opinions of others combined with firmness
and foresight in making his own decisions, the purity of his sexual life, his
mildness and cheerfulness, his civilitas, and so forth. Marcus himself
continually reflects on two themes, the providential order of the world and the
duty incumbent on all men to perform acts of fellowship (praxeis koinônikai), a
duty that springs from man's place in that order." This creed undoubtedly supplied
him with a deeper sense of the value of the virtues that Pius had exemplified,
not least his untiring devotion to work. 'Rejoice and take thy rest in one
thing, proceeding from one social act to another, with God in mind' (VI 7). There
was no novelty in all this. For instance, Hadrian's procurators had proclaimed
the 'indefatigable care with which he is unceasingly vigilant for the interests
of men'. Fergus Millar has illustrated at length the standard of personal
industry which was expected of emperors, though (I suspect) not as often
reached as his more unwary readers might suppose. Dio tells us that Marcus
himself was a hard worker who applied himself diligently to all the duties of
his office, who never said or wrote or did anything as if it were of small
account, but who would spend whole days, without hurrying, on the slightest point,
believing that it would bring reproach on all his actions, if he neglected any
detail. The assiduity always expected of an emperor was now grounded in Marcus'
own philosophic convictions. Recently a scholar has censured Marcus for
speaking of the obligations we have in the universal city of gods and men
without telling us what they are.? But for Marcus each man has his own station
in that city: his was that of Rome's ruler. He was not writing a treatise to
instruct others, but meditating privately on his own duties, and he could have
learned these, in conformity with Epictetus' teaching, by merely considering
the name of emperor which he bore; it told him that his task was to do what was
expected of an emperor. Numerous principles of government are in fact implicit
in his account of Pius, for instance in his allusion to Pius' husbandry of
financial resources. The same critic rightly observes that Marcus' policy and
legislation were largely traditional, and concludes that he was basically a
Roman rather than a Stoic. But the antithesis is false. I suppose that it rests
on a presupposition that Stoic teaching on the kinship of all men as such ought
to have made genuine believers critical of the existing order and ready, when
they had the power, to reform it. But at least after Zeno and Chrysippus (n.
37) no Stoic thinker drew any such practical implications from the doctrines of
the school: their aim was to amend the spiritual condition of individuals, not
their material lot, nor the social structure. Epictetus held that it was man's
task not to change the constitution of things - 'for this is neither vouchsafed
us nor is it better that it should be' - but to make his will conform with what
happens." So too Marcus, vested with autocratic power, tells himself 'not
to look for a Utopia, but to be content if the least thing goes forward, and
even in this case to count its outcome a small matter. "3 Marcus' portrait
of Pius has special value for two reasons. First, as the product of intimate
familiarity and perfect sincerity, it shows us both what Pius was in the eyes
of one who had long worked with him closely and what Marcus himself sought to
be." It is thus infinitely more authoritative testimony to the practice of
Pius and to the ideals of Marcus than we possess for any other ruler in the
judgements of historians or in the propaganda of panegyrics and coins. But, in
the second place, if we leave on one side a few merely personal traits and
anecdotes, it presents a model that corresponds to the conventional view of the
good emperor that we can construct from such evidence. The qualities that
Marcus imputes to Pius are precisely those for which other emperors take credit
themselves or which are lauded by their admirers or flatterers, and the
judgements of later historians such as Tacitus and Dio reflect the extent to
which they considered these claims justified. Augustus himself provided the
prototype.'5 There is thus no sign that Marcus recognized any objectives that
had not been pursued by those among his predecessors who had earned the
approval of the upper classes, or that his doctrines either led him to question
the established principles of imperial policy or offered him any guidance in
determining the objective content of his actions. His philosophy inspired him
to do what he thought to be right, but what he thought to be right was fixed by
tradition. His convictions made him give the most conscientious attention to
even trivial tasks, but that very absorption can have left him the less time to
re-examine the content of his duties; probably it never occurred to him that
such re-examination could be needed. The principles and virtues he admired in
Pius are almost the same as, for instance, Pliny had ascribed to Trajan, and
Pliny admits that they had been attributed to all earlier rulers, Domitian
included, though with less sincerity and truth.? To take one example of the
traditional character of the ideal, Pius' firmness of purpose, his
self-consistency, recalls the 'constantia' of the Stoic wise man," but it
was Tiberius who had proclaimed to the senate his wish to be 'far-sighted in
your affairs, constant in dangers, fearless of giving offence for the public
interest'. And in this same speech Tiberius re-asserted his policy of treating
all Augustus' words and deeds as having the force of law. That was known even
to a provincial contemporary; Strabo remarked that he had made Augustus the
standard for his administration and commands.' It was by that standard that
each of peror our or prided, a deo which the syst a uration of y ravis a adjustments
had from time to time to be made, but it developed slowly and almost
imperceptibly from a sequence of new expedients rather than from any deliberate
pursuit of reform. Deliberate innovation was characteristic only of those
emperors whose policy was reversed after they had been overthrown. There are
certain features in Marcus' imperial ideal which are highly relevant to the
attitudes that Romans of rank might be expected to adopt towards the emperor
and his service. Pius had disliked pomp and adulation and treated his friends
as one gentleman treats another; Marcus warned himself not to be 'Caesarified'.
This civilitas may seem to be no more than a matter of etiquette, but Panaetius
had already elevated sensibility for the feelings of others into a moral
obligation (n. 35), and the more indes-tructibly absolute the real power of the
emperor appeared, the more the upper class at Rome prized the semblance of his
being no more than the first citizen. Perhaps nothing in Domitian's conduct so
enraged them as his claim to be 'God and Master' and the behaviour that went
with this claim. Moreover, civilitas generally accompanied and conduced to
something of more political significance, the emperor's readiness to tolerate
free expressions of opinion and to listen to advice. Both Pius and Marcus were
notable for respecting such 'libertas' (even though there is no good reason to
think that Marcus did not reserve the final decision to himself). 1a Such
respect was demanded of emperors by senators, and it could be seen as an
indispensable condition of their performing their own role in the service of
the state. In name at least the imperial senate retained the highest
responsibilities. Augustus had pretended to restore the old Republic, and it
could even be said of him and of Tiberius that they had revived the maiestas of
the senate. On Republican principles, as stated by Cicero, that should have
meant that the senate was once again the ruling organ of the state with the
magistrates as its servants;1°4 of these the princeps could no doubt be regarded
as the first. In theory he was to be the public choice ('vocatus electusque a
re publica'), and Tiberius expressly acknowledged that it was the senate which
had entrusted him with his wide powers; like Augustus, he would not allow
himself to be styled dominus, but actually addressed the senators as his 'bonos
et aequos et faventes dominos', 105 In outward appearance the majesty of the senate
had been enhanced by new judicial, electoral and legislative prerogatives, and
the privileges of its members were sedulously preserved or extended. At his
accession Tiberius had professed to desire that the functions of government
discharged by Augustus should be more widely shared; later he censured the
senate for casting the whole burden on the emperor; he disliked flattery, and
at least pretended that senators should speak their minds; in his reign, as
under Augustus, 108 there remained what Tacitus calls vestiges of free speech
in the senate. Tiberius began by consulting it on all matters, however weighty;''°
it was still expected to be the great council of state. Gnaeus Piso, renowned
for his free speaking, urged that it would be proper ('decorum') for the senate
and Equites to show that they could assume the burdens of government in the
absence of the emperor.!" The reigns of terror in Tiberius' later years
and under several of his successors in the first century cowed most members,
but the emperors continued, however insincerely, to treat their constitutional
rights as unchanged. Claudius could tell the senate that it was 'minime decorum
maiestati huius ordinis' that its members should not all give their considered
opinions. Pliny tells how Trajan exhorted them to resume their liberty and
'capessere quasi communis imperii curas'; we may be sure that 'quasi' was
inserted as discreetly by Pliny as it had tactfully been omitted by Trajan.
This was not new, as he remarks; every emperor had said the same, though none
had been believed before. Thus in theory the senate remains the great council
of state, and just as a conscientious emperor could conceive that he was bound
to perform the traditional duties of his station as ruler, so conscientious
senators could take seriously the fulfilment of the responsibilities that the
emperors themselves continued to recognise as constitutionally belonging to
their order. Under Nero T. saw it as his duty 'agere senatorem' , to play the
role of a senator. At the outset of his reign in Nero declares that the senate
should retain its ancient functions, lis and, until the conspiracy of Piso, most senators are free from the terror that
hardly abates in the previous generation. Nero's victims in these years
consisted almost wholly of the few who stood too near the throne. T. has some
ground for hope, not least in the influence of Seneca, that there is now a
place for senatorial freedom. T.’s first recorded initiative consists in
unsuccessful opposition to a motion permitting Syracuse to exceed the appointed
number of gladiators for a show. T. is standing for the old order. T’s critics
urge that an advocate of senatorial liberty should devote himself rather to
great questions of state. T. replies that, by attention to the smallest matters,
the senate shows its competence to deal with the greatest. To T., virtue is
manifest in EVERY ACTIVITY ALIKE. We may recall Marcus' attention to detail and
insistence that it was of value if the least thing went forward. T. also shows
his care for good government by assisting the Cilicians to obtain the
conviction of an oppressive governor. Yet T. is to inveigh against the 'novam
provincialium superbiam', manifested in the power some subjects possessed, to
secure or prevent votes of thanks to governors in provincial councils. It is shameful that 'nunc colimus externos et
adulamur'. This solicitude for the superior dignity of a senator is no more
inconsistent with T’s belief in the common humanity of all men, irrespective of
their status, than their failure to challenge the institution of slavery, or
indeed to promote strict equality before the law among free men. They never
expressed disapproval of degree, priority and place', which were such marked
features of the Roman social structure and which they could not have regarded
as incompatible with the providential order of the Universe. Not that T. is showing
indifference to the true interests of the provincials. It is the 'praevalidi
provincialium et opibus nimiis ad iniurias minorum elati' whom T seeks to
check. Tacitus makes T. aver his care for good government on this very occasion.
T.’s sincerity need not be doubted. And, in all probability, T.’s motion, which
was approved after reference to Nero, is beneficial. Once again it only
extended the principle of a senatus consultum of Augustus' time. Already T. walks
out of the senate rather than assent to the congratulations it proffers to Nero
on Agrippina's murder. T. also shows less enthusiasm than Nero desired for the
ludi luvenales. T.’s enemies suggested that it is inconsistent that T. himself
performs in the garb of a tragic actor in his home town of Padova. But the ludi
cetasti which T so honours are of ancient institution, ascribed to Antenor, and
it is very possible that T. does no more than tradition requires. By contrast,
Nero's histrionic performances are a hated novelty. Ordinary Romans came to
detest Nero no less for his breaches of convention than for his crimes; 'I began
to hate you' Subrius Flavus told him: 'once you appeared as the murderer of
your mother and wife, as charioteer, actor and incendiary' It was typical of a
Stoic to disapprove of departures from the old mores. Yet T. still does not
despair. What Seneca could excuse, T. overlooks. T. advocates a mild penalty
for the praetor, Antistius, accused of treason because he had published poems
libellous of the emperor. The senate should not impose sentence of death
'egregio sub principe', when it was free to make its own decision and could opt
for clemency. Even flattery of Nero was justified in a good cause, and in fact
Seneca's old pupil was not yet ready to disregard the maxims of his master.
Long assiduous in attending the senate, T. at last withdraws, though he still
performs private duties to his clients in the courts, in the manner Seneca
recommends. There is no vestige of evidence that T. conspires. But T.’s
retirement implies that, in his view, the regime is irretrievably corrupt,
since his previous devotion to public affairs showed that it could not be set
down to 'ipsius inertiae dulcedo.’ It may seem strange that his friends,
Arulenus Rusticus, tribune, and Helvidius Priscus, did not retire with T. But
each Stoic had to make his own decision, true to his own persona. T.’s conduct
marks Nero as a tyrant. It may be construed, and genuinely felt, as a threat.
Tyrannicide was esteemed in antiquity as not a crime but a noble deed. In an
extreme case, according to Seneca, it was an act of mercy to the tyrant
himself. The poet, Lucan, who was tinged with Stoicism, had been implicated in
Piso's conspiracy,and that was the occasion for the banishment of Musonius,
though there was apparently no evidence of his guilt. 12 In general, there is
no ground for thinking that Stoics turned to plotting against the emperors of
whom they most profoundly disapproved. Epictetus merely insists that no
commands of the tyrant can affect true freedom; a man can always choose to obey
God rather than Caesar. Thus he only contemplates passive resistance. T. goes
no further, and perishes on that ground alone. Under DOMIZIANO too Arulenus
Rusticus, called an ape of the Stoics, is said to have suffered death merely
for his laudation of T., Herennius Senecio for his biography of the elder
Helvidius and for failing to pursue the normal senatorial career, and
Helvidius' own son for his withdrawal from politics and for alleged libels on
the emperor; by what they did not do, and sometimes by what they said, these
men had indicated that Domitian was a tyrant, no more, but that was sufficient
offence. The elder Helvidius, T.'s son-in-law, undoubtedly went further. Exiled
by Nero and recalled by Galba, he was encouraged by Vitellius' practice of
consulting the senate even on minor matters to controvert the emperor's
proposals, and new hope was brought by the accession of Vespasian, a friend of T..
At first Helvidius spoke of T. with honour but without insincere adulation. He
judged that the time had come for independent action. The senate should indeed
'capessere rem publicam', all the more, as Gnaeus Piso had once held because
the emperor was absent. Helvidius proposed that the senate should take
immediate measures to remedy the deficiencies of the treasury and to restore
the Capitol, a task in which Vespasian might merely be asked to assist. By
selecting deputies to congratulate the new ruler it should mark out the men on
whom Vespasian should rely for advice. Equally the great delators of Nero's
reign, such as T.’s accuser, Eprius Marcellus, should be punished. Perhaps the
motives for this demand made by Helvidius' friends as well as by himself were
vindictive; we cannot read their minds. But we may see a justification that
went beyond rancour, one of the same kind that lay behind the impeachments and
Acts of Attainder that served to promote the development of a constitutional
monarchy in our own country; the punishment of wicked ministers of the past
might deter their like in the future. Helvidius' aim was surely to ensure that
Vespasian and his successors should rule by the advice and consent of the senate
and of those it trusted. His initiatives found insufficient support. 136 It was
in the same year after Vespasian's return that the fatal conflict began.
According to Dio Helvidius incurred Vespasian's hatred partly for abusing his
friends - that is easy to understand, for Eprius was again in high favour - and
still more for turbulence in rousing the people with denunciations of monarchy
and praise of a Republican system. 138 That is not to be believed. Long ago
Helvidius had consented to serve the Principate; he had recently approved of
Vespasian's accession, and rabble-rousing was as alien to Stoic practice as it
was futile. Probably Dio confused Helvidius' attachment to libertas, an
ambiguous word, with Republican allegiance. 139 But the breach was serious: it
led first to Helvidius' arrest and then to his banishment and execution, of
which Vespasian himself is said to have repented. He must in the emperor's view
have been guilty of treason. But in what way?Dio, in making out that Helvidius
appealed to the rabble, probably associates his opposition with the expulsion
of Stoic and Cynic philosophers that occurred about the same time. It is highly
probably that some Cynics under the Principate did assail monarchy and the
whole social order. This view indeed hardly fits the notion that there was a
'Cynic-Stoic' theory of kingship, but that notion should surely be discarded.
Just as the Cynic 'citizen of the world' was a man who rejected the ties of
citizenship in any particular state, so the Cynic 'king' was one who truly
possessed the unfettered freedom that was falsely ascribed to autocrats; both
conceptions were moral, not political.140 In any case Cynics and Stoics ought
not to be confused, though some Stoics, notably Epictetus, undoubtedly admired
the true Cynic's indifference to worldly goods; but not even Epictetus held
that it was right, except for a few persons with a special vocation, to neglect
ordinary social and political obligations. 14 But just because there was a
certain measure of agreement between Stoics and Cynics, and because there were
a few Stoics who could be called 'paene Cynici' (n. 37), it was easy for the
enemies of aristocratic Stoics to resort to malicious misrepresentation of
their attitudes. Thus the accusers of T. had suggested that his attachment to
liberty was a mere pretence that concealed anarchic designs inimical to the
Roman peace. Tacitus' detailed account of his actions disposes of this calumny.
Unfortunately, Tacitus' evidence of Helvidius' quarrel with Vespasian is lacking, and Dio,
usually unsympathetic to philosophers, probably adopted uncritically somewhat
similar allegations against him. '43 It is not in the least likely that a man
of mature age whohad sought to uphold the authority of the senate and had
previously been ready to serve emperors now threw over all his past convictions
and engaged in attacks on the whole established order. Epictetus (n. 152) and
Tacitus (n. 22) depict him as true to the last to his own role as a senator. We
must then look for another explanation. Dio's epitomator collocates Helvidius'
quarrel with Vespasian with an incident in which Vespasian left the senate in
tears, saying that either his sons would succeed him or no one would. It is an
old conjecture, which I would endorse, that Helvidius objected to Vespasian's
manifest intention to pass on his power to his sons. 145 Once Titus had
actually been invested with imperial power as his father's colleague in 71,
Helvidius' protests could plausibly have been construed as treason. If this
explanation be true, we can see that there was right on both sides.
Constitutionally the choice of a princeps lay with the senate, and a man was to
be chosen in the public interest as the person best fitted for the task. There
was no reason to think that Titus or Domitian fulfilled this criterion. I* In
practice the succession had been dynastic from the first, and it had given Rome
a series of rulers, every one of whom in senatorial opinion had proved a
tyrant. The crimes and follies of Nero had resulted in civil war that
imperilled the very fabric of the empire. Galba (having no heir in his family)
had allegedly proclaimed a very different principle: the adoption of the best
man to be marked out by consent. 147 Yet from the first Flavian supporters had
seen in the fact that Vespasian had two grown sons a guarantee of stability.
148 Dynastic sentiment might count for little in the senate, but it made a
powerful appeal to the armies and the provinces. '4) Not one of Vespasian's
successors could afford to disregard this factor. Marcus Aurelius admired
Helvidius as well as Thrasea; from them he had learned, he says, the conception
of a state with one law for all, adminstered by the principles of equality and
free speech for all alike, and of a monarchy that valued most highly the
liberty of the subjects;150 yet he too made a worthless son his successor. We
need not think that this must be explained by Aristotle's dry observation that
it would be an act above human virtue for an absolute king to disinherit
his own son:151 dynastic succession was part of the tradition that Marcus could
think it right to accept.Epictetus illustrates his thesis that every man has
his own individual role to play by dramatizing a confrontation between
Helvidius and Vespasian. 'When Vespasian forbade him to attend the senate,
Helvidius replied, "It lies with you to exclude me from the senate, but
while I am a senator, I must attend". "Then attend, but say
nothing." "Do not ask my opinion and I will say nothing." "But
I am bound to ask your opinion." "And I am bound to say what I think
right." "But if you speak, I shall put you to death." "When
then did I tell you that I was immortal: You will do your part and I mine. It
is your part to put me to death, mine to die without trembling, your part to banish
me, mine to depart without repining.'" What good did Helvidius do, asks
Epictetus, as he stood alone? 'What good does the red stripe do the mantle?
What but this? It shines out (iopÉTTE!) as red, and is there as a fine (koóv)
example to the rest. Anyone but Helvidius would simply have thanked Vespasian
for excusing his attendance, but then Vespasian would not have had to issue any
prohibition; any one else would have sat in the senate, inanimate as a jug, or
have heaped on the emperor the flatteries he wished to hear. '152 Helvidius had
assumed a role, conscious of what his personality required, had prepared
himself to play it, and was resolved to play it to the last. And his conception
of that role was determined by constitutional principles, to which indeed most
men now rendered only lip service. His stand was unsuccesstul. lo a Stoic that
was of no consequence. Similarly it is no valid criticism of T. that, in
disapproving of Agrippina's murder, he imperils himself without promoting the
freedom of the rest. Not all men have the same duties, and in any case you
could not prescribe another's conduct, nor could it affect your own
blessedness. If my contentions are correct, Stoics as such had no theoretical
preference for any particular form of government, monarchical or Republican.
They acknowledged the value of the state, and they accepted that an individual
whose position in the world and natural endowments permitted him to render the
state some service had a duty to take part in public life, but only under
certain conditions. His preoccupation with political activity must not be such
as to impair his spiritual welfare, and even though the value of every action
derived wholly from the agent's state of mind and not at all from the external
consequences of the action, it was senseless for a man to involve himself in
public cares, if it were certain from the start that he could achieve nothing
so long as he acted as a good man should. Thus Stoic teaching may have tended
to induce many of its devotees never to emerge from a quiet course of
philosophic study and private duties: it certainly led others to retire from
public life, or to manifest their opposition to the government, under rulers
whose conduct violated moral rules. These rules were, for the Stoics, those
which were endorsed by their society. It did not occur to them that the
political principles that rulers were commonly expected to observe might need
to be reviewed. Each man had a role to perform, a station to fill, the duties
of which were fixed by general consent. The good emperor, and the good senator,
were bound to carry out these duties conscientiously. It was this way of
thinking that united Stoics in power and Stoics in opposition. Hence, as the
good ruler, Marcus could easily recognize the merits of good subjects such as
Thrasea and Helvidius, who had done their best to play their own, different,
parts in public affairs. If in politics success is the standard of judgment,
there was little to commend in men who did not identify outward defeat with
sheer futility, who admired above all the 'iustum et tenacem propositi virum'
and would have thought it praise enough to say that si fractus illabatur orbis impavidum
ferient ruinae, without even admitting that there might be something unwelcome
in the ruin of the world. Moralists may find some comfort that history
occasionally reveals men in high places ready to do or endure anything for what
they suppose to be right. The historian can note that what the Stoics supposed
to be right, what they could conscientiously devote or sacrifice their lives to
doing, was largely settled by the ideas and practices current in their society,
and that a Helvidius or a Marcus was inspired by his beliefs not to revalue or
reform the established order, but to fulfil his place within that order, in
conformity with notions that men of their time and class usually accepted, at
least in name, but with unusual resolution, zeal and fortitude. T. was thus a Roman
politician of the Porch persuasion. As a member of the Senate, he fearlessly
follows an independent line, and in the process antagonised with Nerone, who
eventually pressurises the Senate into condemning him to death. T. duly commits
suicide by opening his veins in the presence of his son-in-law, Elvidio Prisco
and Demetrio di Roma. He was a great admirer of Catone Minore and wrote a
biography of him. Publio Clodio Tràsea Peto. Keywords: portico,
suicidio, vita pubblica, vita privata, virtute, ius, principe, principato,
reppublica, senato, morale, diritto e moral. Roma antica. Per H. P. Grice’s Play-Group, The Swimming-Pool Library,
Villa Speranza. Trasea.
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