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Wednesday, June 24, 2026

Grex

 The Roman whose life—alongside his entire trapped army—was temporarily saved by this contradictory parental advice is the consul Tiberius Veturius Calvinus (alongside his co-consul Spurius Postumius Albinus). [1]

The famous interaction occurred at the Battle of the Caudine Forks (321 BC) during the Second Samnite War. The Samnite general, Gaius Pontius, had completely encircled and trapped the Roman legions in a narrow mountain pass, leaving them entirely helpless. Unsure of how to handle such a monumental victory, Pontius sent a message to his father, the revered elder statesman Herennius Pontius, seeking operational guidance. [1234]

The Caudine Forks Advisory Dyad
The dialogue functions as a structural warning against contextual compromise. Gaius Pontius seeks a diplomatic method to leverage his hostages. Herennius responds with two absolute, mutually exclusive options, warning that any middle path would guarantee Rome's ultimate vengeance. [12]
          [ Gaius Pontius's Initial Inquiry ]
        "The Roman legions are trapped. What do I do?"
                           │
                           ▼
          [ Herennius's First Message/Turn ]
         "Omnes inviolatos demittendos censeo."
          (Release them all immediately unharmed)
                           │
                           ▼
          [ Herennius's Second Message/Turn ]
         "Ad unum omnes interficiendos censeo."
               (Slaughter them all)
                           │
                           ▼
             [ The Speranzian Implicature ]
 "Sovereignty is absolute. Either buy an eternal peace 
  through total mercy, or buy safety through total genocide."
1. L'enunciazione di Herennius (The Two Extremes)
When the messenger first returns from the elder, he delivers the baseline instruction of total mercy: [1]
"Omnes Romanos quam primum inviolatos demittendos esse censeo."
(I consider that all the Romans must be sent away unharmed as quickly as possible.) [12]
When the stunned Samnites reject this and ask a second time, believing the old man has lost his mind, the courier returns with the exact opposite mandate: [1]
"Interficiendos esse ad unum omnes censeo."
(I consider that every single one of them, down to the last man, must be put to death.) [1]

Implicature Analysis via Grice & Speranza
Through a Gricean lens, Herennius’s seemingly erratic, contradictory communication is a masterful flouting of the Maxim of Quantity (Consistency of Information) designed to generate a profound geopolitical implicature. [1]
1. Flouting the Maxim of Quantity
  • The Informational Contradiction: By offering two completely opposite answers successively ("Release them unharmed" vs. "Kill them all"), Herennius flagrantly violates the expectation of a coherent, singular strategic plan. He acts like a broken oracle.
  • The Structural Meaning: He forces his son to bypass the surface contradiction to decode the deeper Conversational Implicature. [1]
2. The Conversational Implicature (The English Decoding)
When Gaius Pontius finally brings his father to the camp to explain his logic in person, the elder explicitly spells out the two implicatures embedded in his previous turns: [1]
  • The Implicature of Total Mercy: He implies that unconditional, extreme generosity breaks the generational cycle of war. He communicates: "If you open the pass and let Veturius Calvinus and his 50,000 men go home without demanding a single coin or a strip of territory, you will stun the Roman psyche. You will bind them to an unshakeable bond of gratitude and secure a permanent peace through honor." [1234]
  • The Implicature of Total Genocide: He implies that if peace is impossible, the only rational alternative is the absolute eradication of the enemy's military capital. He communicates: "If you choose war, you must wipe them out to the last man. By slaughtering two entire consular armies, you will break the back of Roman manpower so severely that they will not pose a threat to Samnium for generations." [123]
3. The Speranzian Synthesis: The Failure of the Middle Path
Speranza focuses on the catastrophic failure of the audience to act on a speaker's correct M-Intention. Gaius Pontius rejected both options as too extreme. Instead, he chose a "middle path": he spared the lives of Veturius Calvinus and his legions, but forced them to undergo the ultimate public humiliation of marching stripped of their weapons "under the yoke" (sub iugum) of Samnite spears. [123]
Herennius’s ultimate warning was tragically validated:
"Ista sententia nec amicos parat nec inimicos tollit!"
(That middle course neither wins you friends nor rids you of your enemies!) [1]
By allowing Veturius Calvinus to survive while burning him with an unforgivable stain of shame, Pontius left the Romans with their military strength intact but their hearts burning for absolute revenge. The moment the humiliated legions returned to Rome, the Senate rejected the peace terms, rebuilt their armies, and launched a relentless war of extermination that completely crushed the Samnites within a generation. [12345]
Speranza notes the immortal pragmatic lesson of the Caudine Forks: Herennius’s contradictory messages were never the signs of a senile mind, but the perfect, binary diagnostic of Roman psychology—proving that when you trap a Roman army, you must either conquer them with total mercy or bury them in the earth, because if you merely humiliate them, you are simply signing your own death warrant. [12]

If you wish to keep exploring these historic Roman dialogues under the guidance of Grice and Speranza, we can turn next to the highly calculated parable of the "Belly and the Limbs" delivered by Menenius Agrippa to end the first Plebeian Secession, or investigate the legalistic, confrontational dialogue between Coriolanus and his mother Veturia outside the gates of Rome. Where should our pragmatic investigation proceed?

Grex

 The legendary silent communication between the sixth king of Rome, Lucius Tarquinius Superbus (Tarquinio il Superbo), and his son Sesto Tarquinio stands as the ancient world’s supreme masterpiece of non-linguistic, cryptographically insulated messaging.

As recorded by Livy in Ab Urbe Condita (Book I, 54), Sesto has successfully infiltrated the rival city of Gabii, worming his way into absolute command of their military forces. Desperate for instructions on how to deliver the city to his father, Sesto sends a secret messenger to Rome to ask the King for his definitive command. Tarquinio, deeply suspicious of the messenger’s loyalty and fearing interception, refuses to utter a single word. Instead, he walks the messenger into his palace garden, draws his sword, and performs a silent physical routine among his flower beds.

The Silent Poppy Garden Dyad
The interaction operates on a profound split-level audience matrix. The Messaggero (the physical conduit) is left completely blind to the meaning of the turn, interpreting the King’s silence as a failure to communicate. Sesto Tarquinio (the intended addressee in absentia) instantly decodes the reported physical sign, translating a gardening act into a ruthless political execution order.
            [ Sesto's Messenger's Utterance ]
        "Quid vis filium tuum facere in Gabiis?"
             (Demands Explicit Verbal Order)
                           │
                           ▼
          [ Tarquinio's Non-Linguistic Move ]
      He walks the garden, decapitating the tallest poppies.
            (Flouts Maxims of Quality & Manner)
                           │
                           ▼
         [ Sesto's Long-Distance Decoding ]
       "Interfice primores civitatis..."
                           │
                           ▼
             [ The Speranzian Implicature ]
 "True power is absolute pruning. Eliminate the elite, 
  and the headless multitude will surrender without a fight."
1. L'enunciazione del messaggero (The Utterance by the Messenger)
Arriving from Gabii, the courier stands before the King, demanding an explicit, informative brief to take back to the prince:
"Pater, filius tuus Sestus scire postulat quid eum in Gabiis facere iubeas. Quae sunt mandata tua?"
(Father, your son Sextus demands to know what you command him to do in Gabii. What are your orders?)
2. Il silenzio e l'atto di Tarquinio (The Response by the King)
Tarquinio utters absolutely nothing. He turns his back, walks into the palace garden, and repeatedly strikes the air with his stick or sword:
(Rex, velut deliberabundus, in hortum aedium transit sequente nuntio; ibi inambulans tacitus summa papaverum capita baculo decutit.) [1]
(The king, as if deep in thought, passed into the garden of the house with the messenger following; walking there in silence, he struck off the highest heads of the poppies with his stick.) [1]
3. Il grido del messaggero a Sesto (The Report back to Gabii)
Returning to Gabii empty-handed and frustrated, the messenger reports the apparent failure of the conversation to Sesto:
"Nihil mihi dixit pater tuus! Iratus aut amens videbatur; tacitus tantum altissima papavera in horto cecidit."
(Your father said absolutely nothing to me! He seemed angry or mad; in total silence, he merely cut down the tallest poppies in his garden.)

Implicature Analysis via Grice & Speranza
Through a Gricean lens, Tarquinio’s total refusal to speak is an aggressive, brilliant flouting of the Maxim of Quantity (Be as informative as required) and Manner (Avoid obscurity).
1. The Manipulation of Cryptographic Manner
  • The Informational Zero Point: Under the standard Maxim of Quantity, a general or king sending an operational war directive is expected to provide clear, detailed, and actionable verbal steps ("Arrest x," "Execute y"). Tarquinio supplies a quantity of zero words.
  • The "Ignoro" Shield for the Courier: Tarquinio intentionally flouts the Maxim of Manner to keep the messenger entirely ignorant of the code. For Grice, a speaker implies something when they intend the ultimate target to recognize their state of mind. Tarquinio calculates his move so that the messenger serves as a purely mechanical recorder of a physical image, completely unequipped to decode its lethal data.
2. The Conversational Implicature Decoded by Sesto (The English Decoding)
The moment Sesto hears the visual description of his father decapitating the tallest, most prominent flowers ("altissima papavera"), he bypasses the surface silence and decodes three massive, structural implicatures:
  • The Primary Implicature (The Purge of the Elite): Tarquinio implies that the political landscape of an enemy city must be aggressively and uniformly flattened. He communicates to his son: "You cannot rule Gabii while its native aristocracy remains standing. The 'tallest poppies' are the local magistrates, wealthy nobles, and influential generals. You must systematically decapitate the leadership of the city, executing them or driving them into exile on fabricated charges."
  • The Mechanical Implicature of Governance: By utilizing the metaphor of pruning, he implies that tyranny is an exercise in routine, unemotional maintenance. He signals that removing political opposition is as natural and necessary to a king as a gardener clearing weeds to protect his own domain.
  • The Strategy of the Headless Multitude: He implies that once the top tier of an elite is eliminated, the common populace becomes a harmless, headless mass. Stripped of their champions and directors, the citizens of Gabii will comfortably surrender their sovereignty to the remaining Julian/Tarquinian infrastructure.
3. The Speranzian Synthesis: The Permanent Visual Token
Speranza focuses on how a non-linguistic sign, once successfully executed and recognized by its intended recipient, completely rewrites historical reality. Sesto followed his father's implicit script to the letter. He launched a series of false accusations against the prominent men of Gabii, executing some publicly and poisoning others in secret, until the entire upper class was completely erased. With the "tallest poppies" successfully pruned, the city of Gabii fell into Tarquin's hands without a single drop of Roman blood being spilled in battle.
Speranza notes the ultimate, profound pragmatic lesson of the garden duel: Tarquinio proved that a supreme dictator does not need ink or voice to project his absolute command across miles of enemy territory. He turned the literal anatomy of a flower into an immortal, conventionalized semantic token for a political purge—proving that in the cold dialogue of autocracy, the most terrifying and effective speech act is the one that is delivered with a silent sweep of a blade.

To continue this thorough investigation of Rome's historical dialogues under the guidance of Grice and Speranza, we can turn next to:
  • The highly calculated parable of the "Belly and the Limbs" delivered by Menenius Agrippa to talk the plebeians off the Sacred Mount.
  • The legalistic, confrontational dialogue between Coriolanus and his mother Veturia outside the gates of Rome, where a mother's reprimand saves the city from her own son.
Which pathway of pragmatic investigation would you like to map out next?