CLAS 353
November 5, 2024

Examination #2 Study Guide
Civil War 8 summary: Pompey's flight from Thessaly to Lesbos; reunion with Cornelia ("If only I'd married Caesar. Now twice I've ruined / The world", 8.95-6); rejection of Pompey’s plan (Parthia, Lentulus's Orientalist speech; Libya rejected); sailing to Egypt & Pompey's death
- plotting in Egypt: Ptolemy XIII, boy-king (62-47 BCE) & brother of Cleopatra VII (69-30 BCE), Pothinus (eunuch advisor), assassins Achillas (Ptolemy's general) & Septimius (Roman mercenary)

Pompey (70-60 BCE)
- Pompey's tragedy ("This is how outliving success breaks the spirit", 8.28) & Stoic rehabilitation in defeat/death
Civil War 8.669-77 (stabbed Pompey's final thoughts)
"But people won't know
If you can handle adversity, unless you prove it
With your death . . .
They can rend
And scatter my limbs, but still—gods!—I'm happy.
And no
deity can ever take this away from me.
Life changes prosperity, but death can't make
Men wretched."
Civil War 8.711-25 (Pompey's beheading & final violation of body politic)
But as the sword-stroke rang against the back
And breast of Magnus, his reverent features' sacred
Beauty never faltered. And though he grimaced
At the gods, death's last moment changed nothing
Of the man's noble bearing—or say those
Who saw the severed head. For brutal Septimius,
Committing the crime, invented a crime much worse.
Ripping back the cloak, he laid bare the holy face
Of half-dead Magnus. He seized his breathing head
And stretched its drooping neck
across a bench.
Then he cut the veins and muscles, hacking long
And hard at knotted bones. To spin heads quickly
Was not yet an art. But after the severed neck
Broke free from the trunk, Achillas claimed the right
To carry it in hand.
death of Pompey in Rome
- Pompey's head embalmed ("brutal shores batter Pompey, a headless / Trunk tossed here and there in shallow waters", 8.750-1); Cordus's pyre & meager monument/epitaph, hic situs est Magnus ("HERE LIES MAGNUS"); narrator chastises Rome for not retrieving Pompey's ashes (8.895ff.)
- Lucan's/poem's motivations – nostalgia & lament for lost liberty, revolutionary icon?
Civil War 9 summary: Pompey’s soul's journey across cosmos and into Brutus & Cato (Stoic speculation: ". . . demigods, gathered as soul / For eternal spheres, dwell in open distances / Between the earth and moon. Fiery virtue / From pure lives enables them to endure the low heavens", 9.7-10); shift to Libya (Cato, Cornelia, Pompey's sons); emergence of Cato as Republican leader with principled cause; Cato's march in Libya & Lucan's excursuses (Sandbars, poisonous snakes, inhospitable climate); Caesar the tourist in Troy, Caesar in Egypt

Guillon-Lethière, The Death of Cato (1795)
- Cato, reluctant Stoic superhero: un-centered hero of unheroic epic or Stoic parody (cf. Cicero, Letters to Atticus 2.1.8, "Cato speaks as if he's in Plato's Republic, not Romulus' cesspool")?
- Cato's ambiguous eulogy of Pompey (9.194ff.) – praise/blame, e.g. "Though he ruled the Senate, the Senate still ruled", "now that Pompey's gone, even freedom's fiction / Has perished", "Knowing when to die / Is man's best lot, but second best is being murdered"
- Cato as idealized Stoic & leader of lost cause – Lucan's day?
Civil War 9.25-9 (Republican & Stoic cause after Pompey's defeat)
He revived the nation's trembling limbs,
Restoring swords abandoned by cowardly hands
And waging civil war without lust for power
Or fear of slavery. He attempted nothing for himself:
After Magnus' end all men fought for freedom.
Civil War 9.618-22 (Cato as martyr-god)
Here's the real father of the fatherland, Rome
A man more worthy of your altars. To swear by him
Would cause no shame. And if you ever rise up,
Now or later, and break the yoke from your neck,
You'll make him a god.


L: Chrysopelea ornata ("flying/gliding snake"): R: Böcklin, Medusa (1878)
- Cato's Libyan march/test = Lucan's gothic epic of horror: narrative delays, e.g. Medusa & Perseus > parodic epic catalogue of grotesque snakes & spectacular battles, e.g.:
iaculus ("flying snake"), "Straight into Paulus' head and out his temples. / Poison played no part, for death was in the wound" (9.839-40)
Aulus bitten by the dipsas ("thirst snake"), "Opens his swelling veins to swill his own blood" (9.774)
Sabellus putrefied by seps ("rotting snake"), "Boiled his organs into a corrupt broth / Of concentrated death" (9.791-2)
, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons, Right, The Suicide of Porcia by Pierre Mignard (1612–1695), [Public Domain] via Creative Commons.jpg)
Le Brun, The Suicide of Cato the Younger (ca. 1660)
Civil War 9.577ff. (rationalist Cato rejects Ammon's prophecy)
Cato unleashed from his breast a response worthy
Of the oracle: "What, Labienus, do you bid me ask?
Whether I'd rather die free in arms or look on tyranny?
Whether it matters one bit if our life is short or long?
Whether violence can ever harm a good man?
Or if virtue can withstand the threats of Fortune?
Or if noble intentions are themselves enough?
Or if man's integrity ever increases with success?
We know these things already, and Ammon can't plant
The answers deeper inside us . . .
. . .
Real divinity
Needs no words. Our Creator told us at birth
Everything we're permitted to know. Did he choose
Barren sands to sing to the few? Did he bury his truth
In the desert? Is there any
seat of god besides
The earth and sea and air and aether and virtue?
Why do we seek heavenly powers beyond these
When everything you see and do is Jupiter?
Oracles are for men who always doubt, afraid
Of unknown futures, but death's certainty, not prophecy,
Makes me certain. Both the timid and the brave
Must die. This is Jove's word—and it's enough."

Silver denarius minted by Julius Caesar (47-46 BCE) [L: Venus; R: Aeneas & Anchises]
- Caesar, tourist @ Troy ("he sought . . . the dead who owe so much to former poets", 9.985ff.; “Now nothing more than a memorable name", 9.990; "Even the ruins have perished", 9.995); Lucan's invention; Caesar's behavior? (empty promise to gods to build a "Roman Troy", 9.1026)
Civil War 9.1006-12 (poet’s "pledge" of immortality, the power of poetry)
O great
and holy work of poets!
You rob death of everything, granting eternity
To mortal men—but don't envy their sacred fame,
Caesar. For if Roman Muses can promise anything,
As long as honor endures for Smyrna's Homer,
The future will read you and me, and our Pharsalia
Will live, not damned to darkness by any age.

Tiepolo, Caesar Contemplating Head of Pompey (ca. 1740)
- Caesar's crocodile tears in Egypt; devious demagogue pardons Ptolemy & orders tomb for head; performance of grief & mercy fails to convince Egyptians (9.1142-6)
Civil War 9.1071-80 (presentation of head by Pothinus)
But once he trusted the crime
And thought it safe to play the loving kinsman,
He poured false tears, forcing fake lamentations
From his happy breast. He could hide his delight
No other way, and so demolished the king's
Monstrous favor, preferring to mourn a severed head
To owing a debt.
This man had trampled
The Senate's limbs with a slate-blank face,
And stared dry-eyed at Pharsalia's carnage,
Yet you alone, Magnus, he didn't dare not grieve.
display of Pompey's head in Rome

Cleopatra VII (ca. 40-30 BCE)
Civil War 10: imperiled Caesar in Egypt; Orientalism (Egypt an inverted Rome of eunuchs, incest, powerful women, decadence, etc.); lost 2+ books of epic (Lucan's forced suicide, 65 CE)
- Caesar honors tomb of Alexander the Great: narrator's tirade (10.21ff.), "an indiscriminate thunderbolt", "If Liberty ever returned to the world, he'd provide / A no-good example", "Nature alone / Imposed limits on the mad king"


- Cleopatra: exile in Egyptian civil war; alliance with Caesar ("He let routed enemies regroup in distant Libya / While he shamefully lusted . . ., 10.83ff.); ekphrasis of Cleopatra's luxurious royal dining hall (10.119ff.) & banquet – cf. Dido/Carthage ("Tyrian purple", "Her breasts shined in Sidonian thread"; Acoreus on the Nile, 10.201ff.; cf. Iopas's astronomical song, Aeneid 1.740-7) at Caesar's prompting ("like countless tyrants / And kings before you", 10.280-1)
- plotting of Pothinus: Caesar on defensive ("Now this man hides for safety inside a house— / Like a captive woman or a helpless boy", 10.456ff.)

- Scaeva (cf. Civil War 6) reappears (late 48 BCE, Alexandrine War)
)
Civil War 10.556-64 (Caesar hemmed in at Pharos)
. . . Then and there,
Without routed armies or massive heaps of carnage,
Without bloodshed at all, Caesar could have fallen.
Trapped in place, he hesitates, stalls, uncertain
Whether to fear or pray for death, then catches sight
Of Scaeva in the tight throng—fierce Scaeva,
Who'd earned eternal glory on your fields, Epidamnus,
Where all alone, with the battlements breached,
He guarded the ramparts being trampled by Magnus.

Camuccini, The Death of Caesar (1804)
- possible ending of Lucan's Civil War
(1) Cato as nostalgic martyr of lost Republic & libertas—suicide of Cato @Battle of Thapsus (N. Africa, 46 BCE)?
(2) Battle of Munda (Spain, 45 BCE)?
(3) Caesar named Dictator in perpetuum & assassinated in Rome (Ides of March, 44 BCE)?