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Many recent works on ‘Dante’s Lucan’ emphasize the opposition between Lucan and Virgil in the Divine Comedy.Footnote 1 To different extents, these studies appear informed by 20th-century views of the Bellum Civile as an anti-Aeneid, meant as a parodic subversion of Virgil’s poem and characterized by a turn from mythology to history, an anti-imperial agenda and an anti-providential, ‘nihilistic’ stance. Building on an argument put forth by Ettore Paratore, this article contends that rather than reading Virgil and Lucan in conflict with one another, Dante regards and reuses the figures and works of the two Latin poets as fundamentally consonant with each other.Footnote 2 In keeping with high-medieval Latin commentaries on Lucan, Dante interweaves Lucan’s and Virgil’s texts in his Comedy to evoke the same world of ancient history and magic. In the Monarchia and Epistles, Dante combines the Bellum Civile and the Aeneid to support his philo-monarchic agenda, effacing the contrast between Roman Republican and Imperial values. Furthermore, Dante cites Lucan as a reliable moral–philosophical authority: in the Convivio he appropriates Lucan’s voice and applies to the Bellum Civile the same allegorizing reading he adopts for the Aeneid.
The article demonstrates the difference between Dante’s and slightly later, early-humanist views of Lucan in relation to Virgil. Unlike Dante, Petrarch sponsors a strongly biographical conception of the ancient epic canon: following Suetonius, he highlights the most controversial aspects of Lucan’s life and the concept of his poetic rivalry with Virgil, which are absent in Dante’s works. The elements are also recalled by Boccaccio, who moreover underlines Lucan’s anti-Neronian stance. Therefore, Petrarch and Boccaccio play a historically crucial role in marking the contrast between Lucan’s and Virgil’s poetic personae. However, the concept of Lucan’s anti-Virgilianism, which underlies 20th-century interpretations of the Bellum Civile, is much more nuanced in 14th-century receptions of the poem, where it emerges only gradually and in a very limited, mostly biographical, sense.
Dante’s Mentions of Lucan
Dante’s direct mentions of Lucan unquestionably acknowledge the latter as a canonical poet. Lucan appears in the bella scola of Inf. IV, next to Homer, Virgil, Horace and Ovid:
Lo buon maestro cominciò a dire:
‘Mira colui con quella spada in mano,
che vien dinanzi ai tre sì come sire:
quelli è Omero poeta sovrano;
l’altro è Orazio satiro che vene;
Ovidio è ‘l terzo, e l’ultimo Lucano.’Footnote 3
Scholars have often wondered about Dante’s epithetical characterization of Lucan as ‘the last one’. Critics such as Paratore and Marsili explain this enigmatic phrase as referring to Lucan’s historical–chronological ‘posteriority’ in relation to the Augustan poets, more than as an indicator of Lucan’s subordinate position within a precise taxonomic ranking of ancient poetry.Footnote 4
Indeed, in late antiquity and the Middle Ages, the Bellum Civile had sometimes been classified as the work of a ‘historian’, rather than that of a ‘poet’.Footnote 5 However, Dante explicitly and repeatedly names Lucan as a major poeta, without any suggestion of the Bellum Civile’s generic ambiguity. What is more, throughout Dante’s corpus ancient poetry is classified in an open and plurivocal way. The same four Latin poets who make an appearance in the bella scola are listed in Vita Nova XXV, 9, where Dante provides examples of the various sorts of literary personification. Here the names of Virgil, Lucan, Horace and Ovid are listed in a different order than in Inf. IV:
Che li poete abbiano così parlato come detto è, appare per Virgilio […] Per Lucano parla la cosa animata a la cosa inanimata […] Per Orazio parla l’uomo a la scienzia medesima sì come ad altra persona; e non solamente sono parole d’Orazio, ma dicele quasi recitando lo modo del buono Omero […] Per Ovidio parla Amore, sì come se fosse persona umana, ne lo principio de lo libro c’ha nome Libro di Remedio d’Amore […]Footnote 6
In DVE II, vi, 7, Lucan is mentioned within a different taxonomic scheme, namely, within the traditional medieval canon of four hexametric poets (Virgil, Ovid, Statius, Lucan), whose technique of constructio should, according to Dante, be particularly imitated:
Nec mireris, lector, de tot reductis autoribus ad memoriam; non enim hanc quam suppremam vocamus constructionem nisi per huiusmodi exempla possumus indicare. Et fortassis utilissimum foret ad illam habituandam regulatos vidisse poetas, Virgilium videlicet, Ovidium Metamorfoseos, Statium atque Lucanum […].Footnote 7
The authority of the poetic foursome of DVE II, vi is indirectly reasserted in Conv. IV. Here, Dante’s examples of the four ages of human life (adolescenza, gioventute, senettute and senio) are drawn from Statius, Virgil, Ovid and Lucan. In reusing the story of Cato and Marcia to exemplify senio, Dante significantly calls Lucan a ‘great poet’ (‘quello grande poeta Lucano’).Footnote 8
In Dante’s works Lucan is, thus, repeatedly equated with Virgil as a pre-eminent ancient poeta and an excellent hexametric poet in particular. In all these passages, Dante recalls Lucan as an established literary auctoritas and demonstrates no interest in his controversial biography or in the idea of his possible rivalry with Virgil. As I will show, these biographical elements, unmentioned by Dante, will be emphasized later in the 14th century, by the early humanists Petrarch and Boccaccio.Footnote 9
However, studies on Dante and the classical tradition have often underlined Lucan’s relative subordination and distance from Virgil in Dante’s ‘epic canon’.Footnote 10 In Inf. XXV, 94–9 Dante compares the incredible transformations he is going to describe to the marvels recounted by Lucan and Ovid, in what Marchesi has defined an ‘emulative canon confirmation’Footnote 11:
Taccia Lucano omai là dov’e’ tocca
del misero Sabello e di Nasidio,
e attenda a udir quel ch’or si scocca.
Taccia di Cadmo e d’Aretusa Ovidio,
ché se quello in serpente e quella in fonte
converte poetando, io non lo ‘nvidio;
[…]Footnote 12
Linking these lines with the passage from Inf. IV discussed above, some scholars have claimed that Dante draws an implicit and yet clear distinction within the group of four poetae regulati, representing Virgil and Statius as superior to, and more dignified than, Lucan and Ovid. This thesis is grounded in the fact that in Inf. IV Lucan and Ovid are named last and without remarkable literary epithets and in Inf. XXV they are silenced by Dante with an agonistic attitude which contrasts with the respectful consideration he shows to Virgil and Statius.Footnote 13
I agree that Dante demonstrates a special predilection for Virgil, his maestro and autore (Inf. I, 85): as is well known, the author of the Aeneid stands as Dante’s guide in the first part of the journey described in the Comedy and is elsewhere defined as the major Roman poet.Footnote 14 It is also true that Dante could have perceived numerous affinities between Lucan and Ovid, based on their common engagement with mythic history, as well as with extraordinary marvels. In Inf. XXV Lucan and Ovid are evoked as pre-eminent in describing metamorphoses that violate the integrity of the human body; similarly, in Mon. II, vii, 9–10 they are cited together as the main authors recounting the fight between Antaeus and Hercules.
Nevertheless, in my opinion, the opposition between Lucan and Virgil has been exaggerated by scholars of Dante. The limited textual evidence of Inf. IV and XXV has informed interpretations ultimately based on 20th-century understandings of the Bellum Civile as an anti-Aeneid, characterized by the absence of pietas or providential vision, the choice of history instead of myth and an anti-imperial stance. Montefusco, for instance, underlines the ideological and generic ‘eccentricity’ of Lucan’s poem and suggests that Dante might want to exclude the Cordovan poet from the epic canon he implicitly traces in his Comedy.Footnote 15 Wetherbee, who speaks of ‘Lucan’s fleeting appearance as the last of the “bella scola” in Limbo and the dismissive naming of him in Inferno 25’, similarly insists on the anti-Virgilian character of Lucan’s work and attributes to Dante a conception of the Bellum Civile as ‘mockery’, ‘parody’ and ‘caustic exploitation’ of the Aeneid.Footnote 16 Assumptions of this kind especially inform recent readings of the episodes of Erichtho and Antaeus, in which Virgil the character indirectly cites, or refers to, Lucan’s narration.
Erichtho and Antaeus
The first of these two instances occurs in Inf. IX, where the pilgrims approach the entrance of the City of Dis. Dante, who distrusts Virgil’s experience of the path, asks his guide whether any soul has ever descended from Limbo into lower Hell. Virgil replies that, in fact, he himself did so when Erichtho asked him to bring back a soul from Judas’s circle (Inf. IX, 16–30). This story, which finds no precise literary parallels outside the Comedy, has puzzled ancient and modern commentators, since it is seemingly anachronistic or, at least, presents some chronological difficulties: Virgil was alive at the time Erichtho was active according to Lucan (i.e., around 48 B.C.). Moreover, Virgil’s tale seemingly endorses the belief that black magic can recall the souls of the damned from Hell.Footnote 17
The second episode takes place in the Well of Giants of Inf. XXXI. Wishing to move from the eighth to the ninth circle, Virgil seeks Antaeus’s help through a flattering speech which recalls the giant’s legendary strength and deeds (Inf. XXXI, 112–32). In this passage, the character of Virgil appropriates Lucan’s narration about Antaeus, as confirmed by various textual affinities.Footnote 18 The importance of the Bellum Civile for these lines of the Inferno was noted by 14th-century commentators on the Comedy before modern scholarsFootnote 19; moreover, Dante openly acknowledges Lucan’s role as a source on the Hercules–Antaeus episode in the above-mentioned passage of the Monarchia (Mon. II, vii, 9).
The two passages from Inf. IX and XXXI have often been read as ridiculing the character of Virgil through parodic intertextuality. Barolini and Clogan both point out that Virgil’s supposed familiarity with Erichtho’s nefarious world casts a shadow on him in Inf. IXFootnote 20; other scholars take the argument a step further and read Dante’s allusions to Lucan’s text as intrinsically threatening to Virgil’s authority. According to Butler, Dante juxtaposes Virgil against Lucan and Statius (the later innovators of the epic genre) to expose the former’s fallibility: Virgil’s unacknowledged quotation of Lucan on Erichtho suggests dishonesty and creates an anachronism we are meant to notice, while the Antaeus episode represents a similar ‘intertextual struggle’ with Lucan in which Virgil ‘unknowingly’ affirms ‘the truth presented in Lucan’s text’ and appears unable to produce a reliable response to the Bellum Civile.Footnote 21 Likewise, Hollander argues that Virgil’s reuse of Lucan’s account of Antaeus is comic in that the predecessor ‘steals’ from his imitator, and not vice versa.Footnote 22
Other scholars highlight the inherent contrast between Lucan’s and Virgil’s texts in Dante’s eyes. In his analysis of the Erichtho episode, Quint emphasizes the divergence between the Virgilian descent to the underworld (Aen. VI) and the conjuration scenes described by Lucan and Statius: confronted with the two options, Dante would choose the Virgilian model, by which ‘divine significance enters the poetic universe’.Footnote 23 Wetherbee similarly remarks that the horrific tones and dark humour of Lucan’s poem make it a very apt model for Dante’s Inf. IX, whereas Virgil’s Aeneid appears an inappropriate precedent at this stage, given its very high seriousness.Footnote 24
These readings hint at the structural dissimilarities between Virgil’s and Lucan’s epics. Yet, they are primarily based on 20th-century views of Lucan’s text as anti-Virgilian, in line with an interpretive trend championed by Narducci and other contemporary critics.Footnote 25 The idea of a ‘radical opposition’ between the Aeneid and the Bellum Civile has, however, recently been revisited by scholars who have underlined the complexity of both poems, as well as the problematic nature of Lucan’s supposed anti-Caesarism.Footnote 26
Second, and more importantly, this ‘modern’ interpretation of Lucan’s work as anti-Virgilian hardly corresponds with Dante’s view of the Bellum Civile. Already thirty years ago Marsili suggested that there are fundamental differences between medieval and post-Enlightenment understandings of the Bellum Civile and its ‘ideology’; Paratore similarly pointed out that Dante’s understanding of the relation between Lucan and Virgil is open to question: as a medieval reader, Dante was likely to appreciate the similarity and integration, rather than the opposition, between the most representative texts of the great, ancient Latin epic.Footnote 27 We have already seen that, in the Comedy as well as in the De vulgari eloquentia and the Convivio, Dante often mentions Lucan alongside Virgil, recalling him as a highly serious model and defining him as ‘a great poet’, without any hint to an opposition or rivalry between Lucan and Virgil.
Dante likely interpreted classical texts through methods and categories common to his contemporaries and to the world of late-medieval commentaries and rhetorical schools.Footnote 28 In late-medieval commentaries on the Bellum Civile, Virgil is, in fact, often quoted and mentioned as an important point of reference for Lucan’s narration about Erichtho and Antaeus. Virgil is the most referenced author in the Adnotationes super Lucanum: here the commentary on the two episodes under consideration frequently includes the phrase ‘ut (ait) Vergilius’, followed by Virgilian passages about magic and mythological history. For example, on Lucan. VI, 452 (‘carmine Thessalidum’) we read: ‘exaggeratio magicae potestatis, ut ait Virgilius “carmina vel caelo possunt deducere lunam”’Footnote 29; Lucan. VI, 460 (‘vertigine fili’) is explained thus: ‘ut Virgilius amorem incutiens hoc fieri iubet: “necte tribus nodis ternos, Amarilli, colores”’, etc.Footnote 30
Similar citations of Virgil are present in the Commenta Bernensia – here, for instance, Lucan. IV, 611 (‘magnanimum Alciden’) is explained with a reference to Virgil’s narration about Hercules: ‘Virgilius “attulit et nobis aliquando optantibus aetas/auxilium adventumque dei.”’Footnote 31 The same is true for the glosses gathered by WeberFootnote 32 and for other manuscripts of Lucan, such as Clm 14505 (11th century) and Clm 4593 (12th century), where Lucan’s passages about Erichtho and Antaeus are glossed with these and other quotations of Virgil.Footnote 33
Dante’s juxtaposition of Lucan and Virgil seems to develop from an analogously integrative view of classical antiquity. In her detailed analysis of the Erichtho episode, Sonia Gentili has grounded Dante’s interweaving of Virgil and Lucan in the precedents of medieval manuscripts of Virgil, Lucan and Dracontius – where Erichtho is often compared to the Virgilian Aletto and Sybilla – and medieval legends on Virgil’s katabasis. Gentili has also suggested that already in Lucan’s text Erichtho is not an entirely disruptive force, as she recognizes the supremacy of fate, and that the sorceress comes to play a truly providential role in Dante’s Comedy.Footnote 34
Furthermore, interpretations of Inf. IX should not overlook the fact that Virgil’s puzzling story about Erichtho is, in context, intended principally to reassure Dante. This aspect was noticed already by late-medieval commentators on the Comedy, such as Pietro Alighieri and Benvenuto da Imola; Jacopo della Lana further adds a meta-literary explanation that connects Lucan’s and Virgil’s narrations on nekyia and the underworld.Footnote 35 The strongly contextual function of Virgil’s reference to Erichtho has also been pointed out by many contemporary scholars, among whom is Scott, whose study also remarks that, in general, ‘Dante succeeded in marrying both Vergilian and Lucanian elements in his Comedy.’Footnote 36
As for the Antaeus episode, Virgil’s complimentary address to the giant does have humorous implications. However, Virgil’s knowledge of the ancient mythological story of Hercules and Antaeus is not at all surprising, especially considering that for Dante and the Middle Ages he was an almost omniscient sapiens.Footnote 37 As the medieval commentator of Clm 4593 notices in glossing Lucan. IV, 593, Virgil’s Aeneid includes a mention of another famous giant, Briareus.Footnote 38 Briareus’s name actually appears also in Inf. XXXI, ll. 97–105. Scholars have pointed out that, here, Briareus is defined as ‘immense’ (‘smisurato’, l. 98) following Statius, Theb. II, 596 (‘immensus […] Briareus’), is linked to Antaeus as in Lucan’s text (Lucan. IV, 596) and is described by Virgil with words that are reminiscent of Aen. X, 565–6.Footnote 39 Thus, Dante’s canto XXXI reassembles and rewrites the mythological repertory on giants as transmitted by different ancient epic authors, whose words are often interwoven already in the medieval commentary tradition. Dante, who in the episode is pointed out by Virgil as a poet who can make Antaeus famous, stands as the heir of the ancient epic tradition as a whole.
History and Mythology
While read against the backdrop of late-medieval literary culture, the intertextual strategy of Inf. IX and XXXI suggests that Lucan and Virgil were regarded by Dante as belonging to the same moral–ideological and literary culture, and describing different aspects of essentially the same world of ancient magic and mythological history. Therefore, these canti confirm another fact, namely, that the supposed opposition between Virgil as a writer of mythological epic and Lucan as a writer of ‘historical truth’ and ‘nonfiction’ was probably not a feature of Dante’s literary understanding.Footnote 40
In this regard, it is true that Dante often refers to Lucan as a historical witness,Footnote 41 and as an almost scientific auctoritas. In the De vulgari eloquentia and Convivio, Dante draws from the Bellum Civile some anthropological and geographical concepts,Footnote 42 while in the Comedy he readapts Lucan’s astronomical periphrases.Footnote 43 Dante’s redeployment of Lucan’s scientific notions in the Comedy finds a parallel in the Rime, and especially in the petrose.Footnote 44
However, a distinction between history and mythology, or between science and poetry, seems alien to Dante’s Comedy, which is a profoundly holistic project. In this context, the Bellum Civile is reused in a markedly multifunctional way. In the Comedy, Lucan’s poem is cited as a source about late Republican Roman history as well as about Erichtho’s magic and about mythological creatures like Antaeus and the Furiae.Footnote 45 In fact, and more fundamentally, for Dante the stories of Hercules, the giants and Aeneas himself were not less ‘historical’ than the Caesar–Pompey civil war.Footnote 46 As I will shortly discuss, in the second book of the Monarchia Dante also interlaces quotations of Virgil’s ‘mythological’ epic and of the Bellum Civile to support his thesis about the historically providential role of the Roman Empire.Footnote 47
Republic and Empire
The presumed dichotomy between Lucan’s Republicanism, or anti-imperialism, and Virgil’s imperial faith is equally hard to discern in Dante’s works. Like other medieval authors and unlike later humanists, Dante regarded Caesar as a divinely appointed ruler and did not, in fact, have a full historical understanding of the transition from Roman Republic to Principate.Footnote 48 Paratore, Hollander, Rossi and Scott have noticed that in the Comedy there is no clear-cut opposition between Roman Republic and Empire, but both periods are extolled for their positive values. The characters of Caesar and Cato, whom Dante represents based on Lucan, stand in ‘complementary opposition’ to each other: Cato’s virtus justifies, and is only possible within, the just and divinely ordered Roman Empire.Footnote 49
More specifically, Walde has recently observed that, in the context of Dante’s Comedy, Lucan does not necessarily challenge Virgil’s supremacy, nor is he necessarily seen as an ‘anti-imperial’ writer because of his presumed Republicanism.Footnote 50 This remark, which is in line with my understanding of Dante’s reception of Lucan as explained thus far, finds further confirmation in Dante’s Monarchia and Epistles, where Lucan’s and Virgil’s voices are combined to corroborate Dante’s argument about the providential nature of Roman history and of the Holy Roman Empire.Footnote 51
In the second book of the Monarchia, Dante claims that the Romans rightfully gained the empire of the world (imperium mundi): he always speaks of ‘Roman authority’, without distinguishing between the Roman Republican and Imperial phases. In this rhetorical context, Virgil’s Aeneid is quoted to praise the splendour of both Republican and Imperial Rome. Often combined with Livy, Virgil is cited to recall the courage of the Republican Fabricius, Camillus and Brutus, as well as Anchises’s prophecy about Imperial Rome.Footnote 52 Similarly, Dante reuses the supposedly Republican Lucan – which he also combines with LivyFootnote 53 – to underscore the ‘providential’ character of Rome’s history, from its monarchic origins to its Republican and Imperial developments.
In Mon. II, iv, 4–6, Dante references Lucan alongside Livy to recall the prodigious fall of a shield from the sky while King Numa was officiating at a sacrifice.Footnote 54 Significantly, the example subsequently adduced by Dante is the Campidoglio geese legend as told by Virgil and Livy.Footnote 55 Not only do citations from Lucan and Virgil appear almost interchangeably alongside Livy, but Lucan’s text is used to prove the righteousness of ancient Roman monarchy, while the presumably philo-imperial Virgil is evoked about an event which dates to the Republican stage of Roman history. In Mon. II, viii, 11–2, Dante extolls the final triumph of the Romans as dominators of the world through quotations of Virgil and Lucan.Footnote 56 Dante thus combines the Aeneid and Bellum Civile to underpin his discourse on the providential superiority of the romanum imperium.
A similarly integrative reuse of Virgil’s and Lucan’s texts characterizes Dante’s epistles in support of Henry VII’s Italian expedition.Footnote 57 In Epistles V and VII, the emperor is assimilated to both Caesar and Augustus, namely, the leaders made famous by Lucan and Virgil.Footnote 58Epistle VII, directly addressed to Henry, urges him to move from northern Italy to Tuscany by quoting Curio’s advice to Caesar and Mercury’s exhortation to Aeneas.Footnote 59 Therefore, as a further indicator of Dante’s integration of Lucan and Virgil, the Bellum Civile is once more combined with the Aeneid to substantiate Dante’s philo-imperial claims.Footnote 60
‘Nihilism’ and Morality
Far from being accused of anti-providentialism or nihilism, Lucan is repeatedly recalled by Dante as a moral–philosophical auctoritas. This is particularly evident in book IV of the Convivio (ca. 1307), where Lucan appears as a very important point of reference for Dante’s attempt to discredit the value of wealth in determining nobility. In Conv. IV, xi, 3, Dante aims to show that riches are base and lacking in nobility, and cites Lucan as the first auctoritas in this regard:
E ciò testimonia Lucano quando dice, a quelle parlando: ‘Sanza contenzione periro le leggi; e voi, ricchezze, vilissima parte delle cose, moveste battaglia.’Footnote 61
Lucan’s famous apostrophe to riches (‘pereunt discrimine nullo/amissae leges; sed, pars vilissima rerum,/certamen movistis, opes’)Footnote 62 is translated by Dante into Italian vernacular and becomes part of his argumentative strategy. The voices of the ancient and the medieval philosophers overlap as the latter strives to rectify common definitions of nobility.
In Dante’s treatise, Lucan’s authority intersects with that of Boethius, invoked as the sapiens par excellence. Conv. IV, xiii, 11–13 Dante claims that the possession of riches causes evil: in this passage, Dante combines words by Boethius, ‘lo Savio’, and by LucanFootnote 63:
[…] E però dice lo Savio: ‘Se vòto camminatore entrasse nel cammino, dinanzi alli ladroni canterebbe.’ E ciò vuol dire Lucano nel quinto libro, quando commenda la povertà di sicuranza, dicendo: ‘Oh sicura facultà della povera vita! oh stretti abitaculi e masserizie! oh non ancora intese ricchezze delli Dèi! A quali tempî o a quali muri poteo questo avenire, cioè non temere con alcuno tumulto, bussando la mano di Cesare?’. E quello dice Lucano quando ritrae come Cesare di notte alla casetta del pescatore Amiclas venne, per passare lo mare Adriano. E quanto odio è quello che ciascuno al posseditore della ricchezza porta […] E però Boezio, nel secondo della sua Consolazione dice: ‘Per certo l’avarizia fa li uomini odiosi.’Footnote 64
Embedded in a context of Boethian citationsFootnote 65 is Dante’s translation of Bellum Civile V, 527–31: Lucan’s narration about Amyclas is quoted and translated by Dante to demonstrate the appeal and advantages of poverty.Footnote 66
Dante’s reuse of Lucan in the Convivio is in keeping with the previous medieval Latin tradition as represented by moral and satirical authors like Alain of Lille, John of Hauvilla and Peter the Chanter, who often cite Lucan’s text in their eulogies of poverty.Footnote 67 A similar strategy is observable also in Dante’s Comedy. In Par. XI, 64–72, Amyclas is presented as a predecessor of St. Francis because of his love of poverty. Overall, Lucan’s Stoic dismissal of riches provides a framework for Dante’s advocacy of inborn over hereditary nobility and of Church pauperism.
As has partly emerged, translation plays an important part in Dante’s readaptation of Lucan’s text in the Convivio. At a macro-textual level, Lucan’s poem becomes part of the patrimony of philosophical wisdom made accessible by Dante’s vernacular treatise. Not only does Dante translate passages of the Bellum Civile in his Convivio, he also explains them allegorically. In Conv. III, iii, 5–7, the story of Hercules and Antaeus is reinterpreted philosophically.Footnote 68 Furthermore, Conv. IV, xxviii, 13–19 provides a translation and detailed allegorization of Lucan’s narration about Cato and Marcia (Lucan. II, 326–91), interpreted as signifying that, in old age, the noble soul returns to God, its harbour and blesses the journey it has made.
Dante first provides an allegorizing summary of the events from Marcia’s adolescence and first marriage with Cato to her union with Hortensius and her later return to Cato after Hortensius’s death (Lucan. II, 326–37). Dante explains that Cato signifies God and Marcia stands for the noble soul, who goes back to the Lord at the beginning of old age (Conv. IV, xxviii, 13–15). Dante’s allegorization of the story builds on Lucan’s poem and medieval exegesis on it, where Cato is considered ‘almost divine’,Footnote 69 and yet stretches this tradition still farther, regarding Cato as a figure of God himself. The passage continues with a translation of Marcia’s speech to Cato (Lucan. II, 338–45), which is glossed allegorically by Dante with a rather lengthy, word-by-word explanation (Conv. IV, xxviii, 16–19).
Lucan’s poem is read by Dante as an historical account which also carries profound religious–philosophical meaning in a moral and anagogical sense.Footnote 70 Strikingly, Dante applies to the Bellum Civile the reading and interpretive practices that he otherwise reserves for the most authoritative of texts, such as the Aeneid or the Bible itself. Indeed, Virgil’s narration about Aeneas, which, as has been noted, had a historical value for Dante, is subject to a sustained moral allegorization in the same fourth book of the Convivio. In a passage which is reminiscent of Fulgentius’s Expositio and yet clearly departs from it, Dante interprets books IV–VI of the Aeneid as signifying the virtues of temperance, affection, courtesy and loyalty in the age of gioventù.Footnote 71 Dante’s combination of the Bellum Civile and the Aeneid within the allegorizing discourse of his philosophical treatise is a further indicator of his integrative view of Virgil’s and Lucan’s poems and of his appreciation for the allegedly ‘constructive’ aspects of Lucan’s philosophical thought. Rather than emphasizing the anti-providential implications of the Bellum Civile, the Christian Dante confers upon Lucan the role of an authority on philosophical and religious matters.Footnote 72
Petrarch’s and Boccaccio’s Biographical Approach
Petrarch’s representation of Lucan in relation to Virgil presents continuities with Dante’s view, but also significant differences from it, and is intimately connected with Petrarch’s reception of the figure and work of Dante himself and with his attempt to establish a contemporary literary canon. Indeed, Petrarch re-reads the history of ancient Latin literature through a strongly biographical lens. His depiction of the ancient, as well as contemporary, literary canon is grounded on a notion of rivalry between great authors. Moreover, Petrarch represents Lucan as a historical individual, as well as a literary–philosophical auctoritas, and expresses reservations on his personal moral conduct.Footnote 73
Like Dante, Petrarch also considers Lucan a key literary model, a fundamental source and an important guide on philosophy and ethicsFootnote 74; Petrarch also regards Lucan as a ‘poet’, rather than a historian, as revealed by Petrarch’s recurrent use of the epithet poeta or vates to identify Lucan.Footnote 75 Petrarch’s works, too, present instances of integration of the Bellum Civile with the Aeneid, and of association between the figure of Lucan and that of Virgil.Footnote 76 In his Collatio laureationis, Petrarch names Lucan alongside Virgil, Ovid and Statius, in line with a common medieval tradition and with Dante’s own practice in the De vulgari eloquentia.Footnote 77 Moreover, as Crevatin has noticed, Fam. V, 5, which deals with the faculty of poetic description, presents an implicit ‘formalization’ of the epic triad Homer–Virgil–Lucan.Footnote 78
However, Petrarch also discloses the tensions intrinsic to this epic–poetic canon. He portrays Lucan as talented but overambitious, for he dared to compete with Virgil, the greatest Roman poet. In Sen. V, 2 a letter addressed to Boccaccio, Petrarch praises his addressee’s humility and observes that underestimation of one’s own skills is more commendable than their overevaluation. According to Petrarch, this latter mistake was proper for Lucan, who presumed to challenge Virgil’s supremacyFootnote 79:
Hic me locus admonet Lucani cordubensis qui, ardentis vir ingenii atque animi — que ut ad ascensum sic ad precipitium via est —, cum se adhuc iuvenem et provectum suorum iam prosperum studiorum cerneret, et etatem suam et rerum a se ceptarum reputans initia successusque operum elatus seque ipsum cum Virgilio comparare ausus, libri, quem de civili bello, morte perventus, inexpletum liquit, partem recitans in prefatione quadam dixit: ‘Et quantum restat michi ad Culicem?’ Huic insolenti percontationi an tunc a quoquam amicorum quid ve responsum fuerit incertum habeo; certe ego, ex quo illam legi primum, gloriabundo illi sepe tacitus et indignans hoc respondi: ‘Bone homo, ad Culicem quidem nichil, sed immensum ad Eneyda’. Quidni ergo pluris faciam hu’militatem tuam, me tibi tuo iudicio preferentis, quam illius iactantiam vel preponentis se Virgilio vel equantis?Footnote 80
By retelling, and commenting on, Suetonius’s anecdote on Lucan’s challenge to Virgil, Petrarch sponsors a strongly biographical conception of the ancient epic canon, based on the notion of personal competition between great poetic figures. In Petrarch’s view of this canon, Lucan is firmly subordinated to Virgil among the greatest ancient poets.Footnote 81
Petrarch’s hierarchical classification of the major ancient poets is of relevance for his definition of a contemporary literary canon. In the continuation of Seniles V, 2, Petrarch argues that Boccaccio’s possible intolerance of the second or third place would make him even more haughty than those who yearn for the first place. Indeed, in the hierarchy suggested by Petrarch, Dante (‘the master of our vernacular literature’) and Petrarch himself hold the first two places, while Boccaccio is assigned the third place.Footnote 82 The triad of the ‘modern’ Italian poets (Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio) thus appears to replicate the ancient triad of Homer, Virgil and Lucan. We might argue that Petrarch’s questioning of Dante’s hegemony finds a parallel in his frequent displacement of Homer in favour of Virgil.Footnote 83 More obviously, in this passage of the Seniles, the poetic persona of Boccaccio overlaps with that of Lucan: the author of the Bellum Civile becomes a figure of Boccaccio, or of the kind of poet that Boccaccio both could, and should not, be. Paradoxically enough, in order to avoid Lucan’s iactantia, Boccaccio has to accept Lucan’s place, that is the third position in the ‘modern’ poetic canon established by Petrarch.
As scholars have occasionally noticed, Petrarch’s estimate of Lucan is influenced by moral disapproval of the poet’s suicide. This especially emerges from Fam. XXIV, 11, a poetic letter addressed to Virgil. This epistle opens with a praise of the author of the Aeneid as the most splendid master of eloquence and Rome’s true glory. Petrarch asks which part of Avernus Virgil inhabits, the palace of Hades or the Elysian fields (ll. 4–8). If Virgil is in the Elysian fields, Petrarch continues, he will be in the company of Orpheus and Horace, but surely not alongside Lucan and Lucretius, who killed themselves and have thus been placed in a different region of the underworld (ll. 9–17):
Et simul unanimis tecum spatiatur Homerus
Solivagique canunt Phebum per prata poete,
Orpheus ac reliqui, nisi quos violenta relegat
Mors propria conscita manu sevique ministri
Obsequio, qualis Lucanum in fata volentem
impulit — arterias medico dedit ille cruento
Supplicii graviore metu mortisque pudende —;
Sic sua Lucretium mors abstulit ac ferus ardor
Longe aliis, ut fama, locis habitare coegit.Footnote 84
This opening part of Petrarch’s poetic letter evokes Suetonius’s and the ancient biographers’ account of Lucan’s suicide within a refined web of intertextual allusions.Footnote 85 Petrarch’s lines on Virgil’s and Lucan’s afterlife lend themselves to be read as a correction of Statius’s Genethliacon Lucani (Silvae II, 7), where Lucan’s inspiration is praised as superior to Lucretius’s ‘furor arduus’ (l. 76), the Bellum Civile is extolled as worthy of Virgil’s veneration (ll. 79–80) and Lucan is said to be either in the heavenly paradise or amidst the woods and beaches of Elysium (ll. 107–23).Footnote 86
Petrarch’s passage seems also, and especially, a polemical response to Dante’s grouping of Lucan together with Virgil, Horace and other classical poets in the same region of the underworld (Inf. IV, 85–93). In Petrarch’s opinion, Lucan’s suicide is ethically disqualifying and a distinction must be traced between him and the other spiriti magni. Voluntary death connects Lucan, rather, with Lucretius, with whom he also shares an ‘ardent’ temperament and inordinate ingeniumFootnote 87: Lucan and Lucretius are represented by Petrarch as both poetically and morally inferior to Virgil, ‘the most splendid of bards’.Footnote 88
Following Suetonius, Petrarch states that Lucan killed himself because of his fear of a more severe punishment and a shameful death.Footnote 89 Such a reconstruction denies any heroism in the poet’s death. In this account, it should be noticed that Petrarch’s attitude to Stoic suicide is also much more condemnatory than Dante’s in the case of Cato Uticensis, whose self-inflicted death Petrarch fiercely denounces, in contrast with Dante’s moral absolution and glorification of the character praised by Lucan.Footnote 90
Petrarch’s biographical approach to ancient Latin epic and his emphasis on the dynamics of competition internal to the ancient canon appear to have influenced the reception of the figure of Lucan by later humanists, and by Boccaccio in particular.Footnote 91 Like Petrarch, Boccaccio regards Lucan as a crucial poetic model and yet expresses some misgivings about his moral attitudes.Footnote 92 Drawing upon Suetonius and Tacitus, and under Petrarch’s likely influence, Boccaccio refers to Lucan’s arrogant challenge to Virgil and his violent suicidal demise in the short biography of the Cordovan poet that he provides in his ‘literal exposition’ of Dante’s Inferno IV, dating from late in his life.Footnote 93 Here, Boccaccio concludes that Lucan’s self-comparison to Virgil was seriously misguidedFootnote 94; in fact, in Boccaccio’s as in Petrarch’s opinion, Lucan’s greatness does not make him comparable to Virgil.Footnote 95 In keeping with Suetonius and Petrarch himself, Boccaccio depicts Lucan’s self-inflicted death as strikingly cowardly and anti-heroic.Footnote 96
Boccaccio’s Esposizioni also highlights Lucan’s anti-Neronian sentiments, which are not mentioned explicitly by Petrarch.Footnote 97 In his biography of Lucan, Boccaccio follows Tacitus as well as Suetonius in mentioning Nero’s envy towards the Cordovan poet and the latter’s involvement in Piso’s conspiracy.Footnote 98 This matter is discussed at length in a later passage of the Esposizioni, where Boccaccio attempts to explain and justify Dante’s surprising choice to place in Limbo such sinful ancient characters as Lucan, who claimed for himself the right to punish Nero for his excesses.Footnote 99 Boccaccio thus emphasizes, and condemns, not only Lucan’s inglorious self-murder, but also his choice to violently oppose Nero.Footnote 100 To some extent, Boccaccio’s notion of Lucan’s anti-tyrannical stance might have influenced his reading of the Bellum Civile as an anti-Caesar text: indeed, for Boccaccio, Lucan is clearly the poet of Pompey rather than Caesar.Footnote 101 However, Boccaccio’s re-reading of the Bellum Civile is not a strongly or consistently politicized one, as I hope to show in a future study.Footnote 102 Moreover, Lucan’s possible Republicanism does not seem to make him an anti-Virgil in Boccaccio’s eyes. Also in the Esposizioni, after all, Boccaccio’s rhetorical strategy serves to support Dante’s placing Lucan with Virgil among the great poets of the Limbo, refuting any potential objections concerning Lucan’s inadequacy for the role.Footnote 103
In his Esposizioni, Boccaccio considers some further contrasts between Lucan and Virgil, such as the difference in their styles. However, Boccaccio aims at conciliating, rather than stressing, these oppositions. Boccaccio’s biography of Lucan reports the widespread opinion according to which Lucan’s style was more suitable to metrical historiography than poetry; Boccaccio admits that Lucan’s style is indeed different from Homer’s and Vergil’s heroic style and other poetic styles. Yet, Boccaccio concludes that, whatever style he may have adopted, Lucan was undoubtedly talented (‘ma come ch’e’ si trattasse, maravigliosa eccellenza d’ingegno dimostra’).Footnote 104 As Velli has noted, Boccaccio’s concluding statement is a clear attempt to redeem Lucan from the insinuations made by medieval commentators.Footnote 105 While Boccaccio’s observations speak to his familiarity with late-antique and medieval exegetical debates on Lucan, they do not trace a clear-cut distinction between the Bellum Civile and the Aeneid, which are often combined in Boccaccio’s own works.Footnote 106
To conclude, therefore, Petrarch’s and Boccaccio’s emphasis on Lucan’s biography is an element of discontinuity from Dante, one consonant with their early-humanist interest in the lives and personalities of the great authors of antiquity. Unlike 12th-century scholars, however, Petrarch and Boccaccio underscore Lucan’s ‘anti-Virgilianism’ as a biographical trait more than as an element which become part of ideologically characterized readings of the Bellum Civile as an anti-Aeneid.
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Notes
See W. Wetherbee, The Ancient Flame: Dante and thePoets, Notre Dame, Notre Dame University Press, 2008, pp. 61–95; Id., ‘“Poeta che mi guidi”: Dante, Lucan, Virgil’, in Dante: The Critical Complex, ed. R. Lansing, vol. II, New York, Routledge, 2003, pp. 303–20, at p. 308; D. Quint, ‘Epic Tradition and Inferno IX’, ibid., pp. 71–8; M. Picone, ‘Dante and the Classics’, ibid., pp. 321–44, at p. 337; G. F. Butler, ‘Statius, Lucan, and Dante's Giants. Virgil's Loss of Authority in Inferno XXXI’, Quaderni d'Italianistica, 24, 2003, pp. 5–21; A. Montefusco, ‘La presenza di Lucano nella Comedìa: il fantasma della storia’, Linguistica e Letteratura 35 (2010), pp. 83–108, at pp. 94–6. See also R. Hollander, ‘L'Anteo dantesco (Inferno 31.97-132)’, Annali della Facoltà di lettere e filosofia dell'Università degli studi di Milano, 55, 2002, pp. 3–11; S. Marchesi, ‘Lucan at Last: History, Epic, and Dante's Commedia’, in Brill's Companion to Lucan, ed. P. Asso, Leiden and Boston, Brill, 2011, pp. 481-90, at p. 486. See the sections ‘Dante’s Mentions of Lucan’ and ‘Erichtho and Antaeus’ in this article.
For Paratore's observations on the affinity between Lucan and Virgil in Dante's works (especially in the Comedy), see E. Paratore, ‘Lucano’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. III, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1971, pp. 697–702, at pp. 700–02; Id., Tradizione e struttura in Dante, Florence, Sansoni, 1968, pp. 38–9, 42–4, 70, 82–5; Id., ‘Il canto VI del Paradiso’, Studi Danteschi, 49, 1972, pp. 49–77, at pp. 62–8.
Inf. IV, 85–93 (Dante Alighieri, La Commedia secondo l'antica vulgata, ed. G. Petrocchi, Florence, Le Lettere, 1994 [orig. edn, Milan, Mondadori, 1966–67]). ‘My kindly master then began by saying: “Look well at him who holds that sword in hand, who moves before the other three as lord. That shade is Homer, the consummate poet; the other one is Horace, satirist; the third is Ovid, and the last is Lucan.”’ (transl. A. Mandelbaum, The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri. A Verse Translation with Introduction & Commentary. 3 vols [I. Inferno; II. Purgatorio; III. Paradiso], Berkeley, Los Angeles and London, University of California Press, 1980–82, vol. I, p. 34).
E. Paratore, ‘Lucano e Dante’, L'Alighieri, 2, 1961, pp. 3–24, at pp. 3–4; Id., Dante e Lucano. Lectura Dantis Romana, Turin, S.E.I., 1962, pp. 6–7; A. Marsili, Lucano e Dante, Lucca, Pacini Fazzi, 1986, pp. 5–6.
On the debate of Lucan's standing as a poet or a historian from antiquity to the Middle Ages, see for example E. M. Sanford, ‘Lucan and his Roman Critics’, Classical Philology 26, 1931, pp. 233–57; G. Martellotti, ‘La difesa della poesia nel Boccaccio e un giudizio su Lucano’, Studi sul Boccaccio, 4, 1967, pp. 265–79, at pp. 266–70; P. von Moos, ‘Lucan au Moyen Âge’, in Entre histoire et littérature: Communication et culture au Moyen Âge, Florence, Sismel, 2005, pp. 89–202, at pp. 102–28. In high-medieval literary culture, however, these two possible definitions of Lucan and his work were not necessarily perceived as mutually exclusive. In many instances, the Bellum Civile was described as characterized by a mixture of history and poetic fictio (B. M. Marti, ‘Literary Criticism in the Medieval Commentaries on Lucan’, Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association, 72, 1941, pp. 245–54, at pp. 246–7; Von Moos, ‘Lucan au Moyen Âge’, 116; E. M. Sanford, ‘The Manuscripts of Lucan: Accessus and Marginalia’, Speculum, 9, 1934, pp. 278–95, at pp. 285–6; F. Fontanella, L'impero e la storia di Roma in Dante, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2016, p. 246, n. 106).
Dante Alighieri, Vita nova, ed. D. De Robertis, Milan-Naples, Ricciardi, 1980. ‘That poets have written as I have said above is evident in Vergil […] Through Lucan a thing animate speaks to a thing inanimate […] Through Horace one speaks to one's own poetic faculty as to another person — and not only are they Horace's words, but he speaks them while reciting in the manner of the good Homer […] Through Ovid, Love speaks as if it were a human being, in the beginning of the book entitled The Book of the Remedies of Love […]’ (Transl. D. S. Cervigni and E. Vasta, Vita Nuova; Dante Alighieri. Italian Text with Facing English Translation, Notre Dame and London, The University of Notre Dame Press, 1995, pp. 109–11).
Dante Alighieri, De vulgari eloquentia, ed. P. Rajna, in Le opere di Dante: testo critico della Società Dantesca Italiana, Florence, Società Dantesca Italiana, 1960 [orig. edn 1921]. ‘Nor should you be surprised, reader, if so many authorities are recalled to your memory here; for I could not make clear what I mean by the supreme degree of construction other than by providing examples of this kind. And perhaps it would be most useful, in order to make the practice of such constructions habitual, to read the poets who respect the rules, namely Virgil, the Ovid of the Metamorphoses, Statius, and Lucan […]’ (transl. S. Botterill, Dante: De vulgari eloquentia, Cambridge and New York, Cambridge University Press, 1996, p. 67).
Conv. IV, xxviii, 13–19 (see this article, section ‘“Nihilism” and Morality’).
Suetonius's ‘Life of Lucan’ was included at the beginning of the Commenta Bernensia and other commentaries (e.g., Clm 4593), but does not seem to have played as crucial a role for Dante as it did for Petrarch.
For the sake of simplicity, in this article I use the term ‘epic’ with reference to works such as Virgil's Aeneid and Lucan's Bellum Civile; as it is well known, however, his medieval conception of literary genres was different from ours, and Dante would have probably called these texts ‘tragedies’ (see H. A. Kelly, Ideas and Forms of Tragedy from Aristotle to the MiddleAges, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1993, pp. 144–57).
S. Marchesi, ‘Lucan at Last’ (n. 1 above), p. 486.
‘Let Lucan now be silent, where he sings of sad Sabellus and Nasidius, and wait to hear what flies off from my bow. Let Ovid now be silent, where he tells of Cadmus, Arethusa; if his verse has made of one a serpent, one a fountain, I do not envy him; […]’; transl. Mandelbaum, The Divine Comedy (n. 3 above), vol. I, p. 218.
P. Renucci, Dante, disciple et juge du monde gréco-latin, Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1954, p. 330; T. Barolini, Dante's Poets: Textuality and Truth in the ‘Comedy’, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1984, pp. 194–5 with bibl.; Picone, ‘Dante and the Classics’ (n. 1 above), p. 330; Montefusco, ‘La presenza’ (n. 1 above), pp. 88–97. However, Barolini points out that in Inf. XXV Dante limits criticism to Ovid, excluding Lucan (Dante's Poets, p. 225).
Conv. IV, xxvi, 8: ‘lo maggiore nostro poeta’ (‘our greatest poet’, transl. R. H. Lansing, Dante's Il Convivio [The Banquet], New York and London, Garland, 1990, p. 226).
Montefusco, ‘La presenza’ (n. 1 above), pp. 94–7.
Wetherbee, The Ancient Flame (n. 1 above), pp. 61–95.
Doubts of this sort are raised by Boccaccio, Esp. IX, esp. litt. 17–18 (Esposizioni sopra la ‘Commedia’ di Dante, ed. G. Padoan, in Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, ed. V. Branca, vol. VI, Milan, Mondadori, 1965) and Benvenuto da Imola (Comentum super Dantis Aldigherij Comoediam: nunc primum integre in lucem editum, ed. G. F. Lacaita, 5 vols., Florence, Barbèra, 1887, vol. I, p. 308). But on chronology, see Chiavacci Leonardi: ‘se Eritone viveva nel 48 a.C. (al tempo di Farsalo), poteva benissimo essere ancora in vita l'anno della morte di Virgilio (19 a.C.)’ (Dante Alighieri, La Divina Commedia, ed. A. M. Chiavacci Leonardi, vol. I, Inferno, Milan, Mondadori, 2008, p. 277).
In particular, Dante's association between Hercules's fight with the giant and the later encounter between Scipio and Hannibal (Inf. XXXI, 115–17) is already a feature of Lucan's text (Lucan. V, 656–60) upon which medieval commentators often expanded: Lucani M. Annaei Commenta Bernensia, ed. H. Usener, Leipzig, Teubner, 1869, p. 657; Arnulfi Aurelianensis Glosule super Lucanum, ed. B. M. Marti, Rome, American Academy in Rome, 1958, p. 244.
Guido da Pisa, comm. Inf. XXXI, 100 and 118 (Expositiones et glose: declaratio super Comediam Dantis, ed. M. Rinaldi, 2 vols., Rome, Salerno, 2013, vol. II, pp. 901 and 907–8); Pietro Alighieri, III, Comm. Inf. XXXI, par. 35–40 (Comentum super poema Comedie Dantis: A Critical Edition of the Third and Final Draft of Pietro Alighieri's Commentary on Dante's ‘The Divine Comedy’, ed. M. Chiamenti, Tempe, Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, 2002, p. 261; many references to Lucan characterize also the first and second redactions of Pietro's commentary: Petri Allegherii super Dantis ipsius genitoris Comoediam commentarium, nunc primum in lucem editum consilio et sumtibus G. J. bar. Vernon, ed. V. Nannucci, Florence, G. Piatti, 1845, pp. 260–62; Il ‘Commentarium’ di Pietro Alighieri nelle redazioni ashburnhamiana e ottoboniana, ed. R. Della Vedova and M. T. Silvotti, Florence, Olschki, 1978, pp. 413–17); Guglielmo Maramauro, comm. Inf. 31, 47–65 (Expositione sopra l'Inferno di Dante Alligieri, ed. P. G. Pisoni, Padua, Antenore, 1998, pp. 458–61).
See P. M. Clogan, ‘Dante's Appropriation of Lucan's Cato and Erichtho, Medievalia et Humanistica, n.s., 37, 2011, pp. 111–15, at p. 114; Barolini, Dante's Poets (n. 13 above), p. 205.
Butler, ‘Statius, Lucan’ (n. 1 above), pp. 9f. and 15–17.
Hollander, ‘L'Anteo dantesco’ (n. 1 above).
Quint, ‘Epic Tradition’ (n. 1 above).
Wetherbee, The Ancient Flame (n. 1 above), pp. 62–6.
On Lucan as an ‘anti-Virgil’, see for example A. Thierfelder, ‘Der Dichter Lucan’, Archiv für Kulturgeschichte, 25, 1934, pp. 1–20; E. Burck, Vom römischen Manierismus: von der Dichtung der fruhen römischenKaiserzeit, Darmstadt, Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1971, p. 94; L. Thompson and R. T. Bruère, ‘Lucan's Use of Virgilian Reminiscence’, Classical Philology, 63.1, 1968, pp. 1–21; Id., ‘The Virgilian Background of Lucan's Fourth Book’, Classical Philology 65, 1970, pp. 152–72; E. Narducci, La provvidenza crudele: Lucano e la distruzione dei mitiaugustei, Pisa, Giardini, 1979.
C. Walde, ‘Lucan und Dante’, in Dante Alighieri und sein Werk in Literatur, Musik und Kunst bis zur Postmoderne, ed. K. Ley, Tübingen, Francke, 2011, pp. 57–74, at pp. 60–62; S. Casali, ‘The Bellum Civile as an Anti-Aeneid’, in Brill's Companion to Lucan, ed. P. Asso, Leiden and Boston, Brill, 2011, pp. 81–110. As is well-known, the interpretation of Virgil's Aeneid has been complicated by the so-called ‘Harvard School’; see also C. Kallendorf, The Other Virgil: ‘Pessimistic’ Readings of the Aeneid in Early Modern Culture, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2007. On Lucan, see J. Brisset, Les idées politiques de Lucain, Paris, Les Belles Lettres, 1964, pp. 35–223; J. Masters, Poetry and Civil War in Lucan's ‘Bellum Civile’, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1992, pp. 1–10, 87–9; S. Bartsch, Ideology in Cold Blood: A Reading of Lucan's ‘CivilWar’, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press, 1997, pp. 1–9, 73–100; W. R. Johnson, Momentary Monsters: Lucan and his Heroes, Ithaca and London, Cornell University Press, 1987.
Marsili, Lucano e Dante (n. 4 above), 7–11; for Paratore's studies, see n. 2 above.
On this point, see Paratore, Tradizione e struttura (n. 2 above), p. 70; L. Medeossi, ‘Dante e Lucano’, Sileno, 15, (1989), 219–33, at pp. 222ff.
‘Exaggeration of the power of magic, as Virgil also says: “Enchantments can even bring the moon down from the heavens”’ (Adnotationes super Lucanum, ed. J. Endt, Stuttgart, Teubner, 1909; cfr. Virg. Ecl. 8, 69).
‘So Virgil, inducing love, exhorts to do this: “Twine, Amaryllis, three colours in three knots”’ (cfr. Virg. Ecl. 8, 77). On Lucan. VI, 456 (‘frontis amature subducunt pignora fete’) we read: ‘ut Virgilius “et matris praereptus amor”’ (Virg., Aen. IV, 516); Lucan. VI, 553 (‘expectat siccis’): ‘ut difficilius possit auferre esurientes, addidit lupos, quod ait Virgilius “collecta fatigat edendi/ex longo rabies et siccae sanguine fauces”’ (Virg. Aen. IX, 63–4); Lucan VI, 648 (‘non Taenariis’): ‘et in Tenaro enim fertur ad inferos esse descensus, ut ait Virgilius “Tenarias etiam fauces, alta ostia Ditis”’ (Virg., Georg. IV, 467); Lucan. VI, 663 (‘ignibus’): ‘Phlegethontis, ut Virglius “qua<e>rapidus flammis<ambit>torrentibus amnis Tartareus Phlegethon”’ (Virg., Aen. VI, 550–51); Lucan. VI, 699 (‘matrem perosa’): ‘Proserpinam dicit, quae superos contempsit et matrem; bene ergo perosa, ut ait Virgilus “nec repetita sequi curet Proserpina matrem”’ (Virg., Georg. I, 39); Lucan. VI, 715 (‘licet’): ‘permittitur, ut Virgilius “casta licet patrui servet Proserpina limen”’ (Virg., Aen. VI, 402); Lucan. VI, 730 (‘secura Megera’): ‘hoc cum indignatione dicit, quod vocem suam Megaera audiat et sit secura, ut Virgilius “securi pelagi atque mei”’ (Virg. Aen. VII, 304); Lucan. VI, 743 (‘ruptis titana cavernis’): ‘ut Virgilius “trepident inmisso lumine manes”’ (Virg., Aen. VIII, 246); Lucan. VI, 749 (‘Stygias qui perierat undas’): ‘hic peierat, qui omnibus potior est et non timet Stygiam ut dii alii, ut Virgilius “di cuius iurare timent et fallere numen”’ (Virg., Aen. VI, 324), etc. On Lucan. VI, 584 (‘Curio’): ‘hic est, de quo volunt dixisse Virgilium “vendidit hic auro patriam”’ (Virg., Aen. VI, 621); Lucan. IV, 588 (‘siccae sulcator harenae’): ‘unde et Virgilius: “sitientis ibimus Afros”’ (Virg. Ecl. 1, 64); Lucan. IV, 612 (‘ille Clonaei’): ‘Clonae regio iuxta Nemeam, ubi interimit leonem Hercules, ut ait Virgilius “et vastum Nemeam sub rupe leonem”’ (Virg., Aen. VIII, 295).
‘Virgil says: “finally, time brought the god's arrival and help also to us who were hoping for it”’ (ed. Usener [n. 20 above]; cfr. Virg., Aen. VIII, 200–201). Similarly, on Lucan. IV, 592 (‘cognita permultos docuit rudis incola patres’) we read: ‘antiqui temporibus, antequam annales essent vel historiae, ita fuit ut maiores natu ante acta posteris indicarent. Unde Virgilius: “fama est obscurior annis,/Auruncus ita ferre senes”’ (Virg., Aen. VII, 205–6), etc.
Lucani Pharsalia, vol. III continensscholiastas, ed. K. F. Weber, Leipzig, Gerhard Fleischer, 1831, pp. 466–7, 474, 488 (Virgil is frequently quoted about Lucan's episode of Erichtho).
Clm 4593, f. 51r (on Lucan. IV, 593): ‘Et Virgilius “Centumgeminus Briareus”, id est centies duplex se dum faber ipse esse Egeon’ (Virg, Aen. VI, 287). F. 52r (on Lucan. IV, 640ff.): ‘Virgilius “Ethera mulcebant cantu”’ (Virg., Aen. VII, 34; also in Clm 14505, f. 46v). F. 78v (on Lucan. VI, 450, ‘dura in praecordia […]’):‘Exaggeratio magice potestatis. Ut Virgilius “Carmina (…) deducere lunam”’ (Virg. Ecl. 8, 69; also in Clm 14505, f.: ‘Carmina lunam celo possent deducere’); ibid. (on Lucan. VI, 460): ‘Ut Virgilius “Necte tribus nodi ternos Amarilli colores”’ (Virg. Ecl. 8, 77); f. 79v (on Lucan. VI, 531, ‘mors invita subit’): ‘Virgilius “muroque subibant”’ (Virg., Aen. VII, 161). Clm 14505, f. 72r (on Lucan. VI, 650): ‘quando sol est apud antipodas, ut Virgilius ait: “Aut redit a nobis Aurora diemque reducit”’ (Virg., Georg. I, 249).
S. Gentili, ‘La necromanzia di Eritone da Lucano a Dante’, in Dante e il ‘locus Inferni’. Creazione letteraria e tradizione interpretativa, ed. with S. Foà, Rome, Bulzoni, 2000, pp. 13–43, at pp. 16–32. See also J. T. Schnapp, ‘Lucanian estimations’, in Seminario Dantesco Internazionale. International Dante seminar 1: Atti del primo convegno tenutosi al Chauncey Conference Center, Princeton 21–23 Ottobre 1994, ed. Z. G. Baranski, Florence, Le Lettere, 1997, pp. 111–13, at p. 124.
Pietro Alighieri III, Inf. IX, 4–6, pp. 152–3 ed. Chiamenti (n. 19 above); cfr. Pietro II, p. 166 ed. Della Vedova-Silvotti (n. 19 above); Pietro I, pp. 118–19 ed. Nannucci (n. 19 above). After mentioning the chronological problems entailed by the passage, Benvenuto da Imola also concludes that this is only a tale invented by Virgil to reassure Dante (Ed. Lacaita [n. 17 above], vol. I, pp. 307–8). A similar explanation is also present in the recollectae of the lecture Benvenuto gave in 1375 in Bologna (La ‘Commedia’ di Dante Alighieri col commento inedito di Stefano Talice da Ricaldone, ed. V. Promis and C. Negroni, Turin, Bona, 1886, p. 58). Jacopo della Lana states that this is an allegory meaning that Virgil dealt with the underworld realm in his poem (Comm. Inf. IX, 16; Iacomo della Lana, Commento alla ‘Commedia’, ed. M. Volpi, 4 vols., Rome, Salerno, 2009, vol. I, p. 311). On other similar interpretations by 14th-century commentators, see D. Consoli, ‘Virgilio Marone, Publio’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. V, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1976, pp. 1030–44, at p. 1031.
J. A. Scott, Understanding Dante, Notre Dame, University of Notre Dame Press, 2004, pp. 247, 250–51 with bibl.
Hollander remarks that it was impossible for Virgil to have read Lucan (Hollander, ‘L'Anteo dantesco’, [n. 1 above]), but the story of Hercules and Antaeus was part of the ancient mythological encyclopedia.
F. 51r ‘Et Virgilius “Centumgeminus Briareus”’ (Virg, Aen. VI, 287).
Butler, ‘Statius, Lucan’ (n. 1 above), pp. 11–16; Hollander, ‘L'Anteo dantesco’ (n. 1 above), pp. 5–7.
The idea of such an opposition characterizes, for example, Picone, ‘Dante and the Classics’ (n. 1 above), p. 337; Montefusco, La presenza’ (n. 1 above), pp. 94–6; Marchesi, ‘Lucan at Last’ (n. 1 above), pp. 483–4.
See Mon. II, iv, 4–6 (on Numa's miracle); Mon. II, viii, 7, 9, 12 (on Xerxes, Alexander the Great and Rome); Mon. II, ix, 16–18 (on the Wars against the Sabines), see this article, section “Republic and Empire”. See C. T. Davis, Dante and the Idea of Rome, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1957, pp. 42–4 on Lucan as model for history–writing before Dante.
See DVE I, x, 6 (Lucan. II, 394–438); Conv. III, v, 11–12 (Lucan. IX, 371–949; Lucan. IV, 332).
See Medeossi, ‘Dante e Lucano’ (n. 28 above), pp. 221ff.
Contini has noted the connection between Purg. XXX, 89 and the reference to the Ethiopian wind in the second stanza of ‘Io son venuto’, as well as their common source in a passage by (Lucan. IX, 447ff.) also evoked in Mon. II, iv, 6. Likewise, Singleton noticed the possible derivation of Purg. XXX, 89 from Lucan's description of the solstice (IX, 528–32), which, according to Durling and Martinez, could also be echoed in lines 23–4 of ‘Al poco giorno’ (see R. M. Durling and R. L. Martinez, Time and the Crystal: Studies in Dante's ‘Rime Petrose’, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1990, pp. 421, 375 with bibl.).
On this point, see E. Paratore, ‘Lucano’ (n. 2 above), p. 702; on Lucan's mythological fables, see also Marsili, Lucano e Dante (n. 4 above), p. 41; V. Ussani, Dante e Lucano. Lectura Dantis Fiorentina, Florence, Sansoni, 1917, pp. 8ff. On Dante's and Lucan's Furiae, see S. Gentili, ‘“Ut canes infernales”: Cerbero e le Arpie’, in I ‘monstra’ nell'inferno dantesco. Tradizione e simbologie; atti del XXXIII Convegno Storico Internazionale, Todi, 13 – 16 ottobre 1996, 177–204, Spoleto, Centro Italiano di Studi sull'Alto Medioevo, 1997; Ead., ‘La necromanzia’ (n. 34 above), pp. 32–3; C. Bon, ‘Lucano all'Inferno’, in La divina foresta. Studi danteschi, ed. F. Spera, Naples, D'Auria, 2006, pp. 71–104, at pp. 85–6.).
See g. Padoan, Anteo’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. I, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1970, pp. 296–7, at p. 296; Id., ‘Enea’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. II, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1970, pp. 678–9, at pp. 677–9; Consoli, ‘Virgilio’ (n. 35 above), p. 1033.
See this article, section “Republic and Empire”.
On the difference between Dante's historical understanding and later humanist views of the figure of Caesar, see for example M. McLaughlin, ‘Empire, Eloquence, and Military Genius: Renaissance Italy’, in A Companion to Julius Caesar, ed. M. Griffin, Chichester, Wiley–Blackwell, 2009, pp. 335–55.
Paratore, ‘Lucano’ (n. 30 above), pp. 701–2 with bibl.; R. Hollander and A. L. Rossi, ‘Dante's Republican Treasury’, Dante Studies, 104, 1986, pp. 59–82; J. A. Scott, ‘Cato: a Pagan Suicide in Purgatory’, in Dante's Political Purgatory, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1996, pp. 69–84, at pp. 78–84.
Walde, ‘Lucan und Dante’ (n. 28 above), pp. 60–62. Through a series of preliminary questions on the topic, Schapp also suggests that, in confronting the Virgil/Lucan agon, Dante possibly re-Virgilianize Lucan (Schnapp, ‘Lucanian estimations’ [n. 34 above], pp. 119–20).
On Dante's reuse of Lucan in the Monarchia and political epistles, see B. Facchini, ‘“As Lucan says”: Dante’s Reuse of the Bellum Civile in the Monarchia and the Political Epistles’, forthcoming in Mediaevalia 40 (2019).
Mon. II, v, 11 (Virg. Aen. VI, 844–5); Mon. II, v, 12 (Virg. Aen. VI, 825); Mon. II, v, 13 (Liv. II, 5; Virg. Aen. VI, 820–21); Mon. II, vi, 9–10 (Virg. Aen. VI, 846–53 and IV, 227–30). Cfr. Mon. I, xi, 1, where Dante quotes Virg., Ecl. 4, 6 (‘Iam redit et Virgo, redeunt Saturnia regna’) in the context of his exaltation of monarchy; cfr. Davis, Dante and the Idea (n. 41 above), p. 106, on Dante's reception of Virgil's praise of the splendour of Augustan times.
In addition to the examples mentioned below, see Mon. Mon. II, viii, 8–9 (with a mention of Livy and a quotation of Lucan. VIII, 692–94); Mon. II, ix, 16–17 (with quotations of Liv. I, 24–6; Lucan. II, 135–8).
Lucan. IX, 477–80 (Livy does not actually tell this episode).
Mon. II, iv, 7–8.
Virg. Aen. I, 234–6; Lucan. I, 109–11.
See Davis, Dante and the Idea (n. 41 above), pp. 142ff. on the relation between Epistles V–VII and the Monarchia; pp. 163–9 for an analysis of these epistles.
Ep. V, 2–3: ‘Et Augusts et Caesar’; Ep. VII, 1: ‘Caesaris et Augusti successor’ (Epistole, ed. C. Villa, in Dante Alighieri, Opere, vol. II, ed. M. Santagata, Milan: Mondadori, 2014). As scholars have remarked, Dante's mention of Augustus's expedition to Thessaly in Ep. V intertwines memories of Caesar's and Augustus's battles: the conflation of Pharsalus and Philippi finds precedents in Florus as well as in other ancient sources, including Lucan and Virgil (Villa, ed., Epistole, p. 1543; A. Heil, ‘Dantes “Thessalien”: Pharsalus oder Philippi?’, Mittellateinisches Jahrbuch, 37, 2002, pp. 75–81; Fontanella, L'impero [n. 5 above], pp. 175–6).
Ep. VII, 4; Lucan. I, 280–82 and Virg. Aen. IV, 272–6.
See Paratore, Tradizione e struttura (n. 1 above), p. 70.
Dante Alighieri, Convivio, ed. F. Brambilla Ageno, Florence, Le Lettere, 1995. ‘Lucan attests to this when he addresses them by saying, “Without a fight the laws have perished and you riches, the basest part of things, have led the battle”’; transl. Lansing, Dante's Il Convivio (n. 14 above), p. 179.
Lucan. III, 119–21.
Boethius, who is included among the wise in the heaven of the Sun in Par. X, 124–9, represents one of the most important sources of the fourth book of the Convivio (F. Tateo, ‘Boezio’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. I, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1970, pp. 654–8, at pp. 654–6).
Boeth. Cons. II, pr. V, 34; Lucan. V, 527–31 and 507–27; Boeth. Cons. II, pr. V, 4. ‘[…] Therefore the Sage says, “If a traveler entered upon his journey empty-handed, he would sing in the face of the thieves.” This is what Lucan means in the fifth book when he praises poverty for the security it offers with the words, “O secure ease of the poor man's life! O constricted dwellings and furnishings! oh not yet understood riches of the Gods! In what temples, within what walls could this ever happen without their shaking with fear when the hand of Caesar knocks?” This is said by Lucan when he tells how Caesar came by night to the cottage of the fisherman Amyclas in order to cross the Adriatic Sea. How great is the hate that everyone bears the possessor of riches […] Therefore Boethius says, in the second book of his Consolation, “Truly avarice makes men hateful”’; transl. Lansing, Dante's Il Convivio [n. 14 above], p. 188).
The preceding chapter (Conv. IV, xii, 4–7) also has quotations of Boethius, Cons. III, pr. 3, 2–11 and II, m. II, 1–8.
Martellotti has noticed how Dante's version is more emphatic than the original and especially stresses the concept of ‘riches’ (G. Martellotti, ‘Dante e i classici’, Cultura e Scuola 13–14, 1965, pp. 125–37, at pp. 134–5 with bibl.).
See E. Sanford, ‘Quotations from Lucan in Medieval Latin Authors’, American Journal of Philology, 55, 1934, pp. 1–19, at pp. 11–15; E. D'Angelo, ‘La Pharsalia nell'epica latina medievale’, in Interpretare Lucano: miscellanea di studi, ed. P. Esposito and L. Nicastri, Naples, Arte Tipografica, 1999, pp. 389–453, at pp. 432–6; P. G. Schmidt, ed., John of Hauvilla, Architrenius, Munich, Fink, 1974, pp. 59–61; C. Ratkowitsch, Descriptio picturae. Die literarische Funktion der Beschreibung von Kunstwerk in der lateinische Großdichtung des 12. Jahrhunderts, Vienna, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1991, pp. 269–71; C. Waddell, ‘The Exordium Cistercii, Lucan, and Mother Poverty’, Citeaux. Commentarii Cistercienses, 33, 1982, pp. 379–88.
In this Dantean passage, the story is used to signify the special connection between the human body and the place of its generation. Medieval exegetes give various allegorical interpretations for the story of Hercules and Antaeus. According to Fulgentius (Myth. II, 4) and the third Vatican mythographer (ed. G. H. Bode, Scriptores rerum mythicarum Latini tres Romae nuper reperti, Cellis, Schulze, 1834, myth. III, 13, 2), Antaeus symbolizes lust (libido), ultimately subdued by virtue. In his commentary on Inf. XXI, 118, Guido da Pisa similarly explains that the fight between Hercules and Antaeus signifies the struggle between spirit and flesh (Expositiones, ed. Rinaldi [n. 19 above], pp. 907–8).
Lucan IX, 254–83, 554–86. See V. De Angelis, ‘… e l’ultimo Lucano’, in Dante e la ‘bella scola’ della poesia. Autorità e sfida poetica, ed. A. A. Iannucci, Ravenna, Longo, 1993, pp. 145–202, at pp. 165ff.; Ead., ‘Il testo di Lucano, Dante e Petrarca’, in Seminario Dantesco Internazionale (n. 34 above), pp. 67–109, at pp. 72–6; Fontanella, L'impero (n. 5 above), pp. 270–72 on Cato in medieval commentaries on Lucan. Also in Conv. IV, v, 16; Conv. IV, vi, 10; and Purg. I, Cato's almost–divine aura is described in terms reminiscent of Lucan. On Lucan's importance for these Dantean descriptions of Cato's quasi–divinity, see for example, W. Fischli, Studien zum Fortleben der ‘Pharsalia’ des M. Annaeus Lucanus, Lucerne, Haag, 1944, pp. 37–40; Paratore, ‘Lucano e Dante’ (n. 4 above), pp. 18ff.; Scott, ‘Cato’ (n. 49 above), pp. 70–77; W. Boggione, ‘La custodia, la vera libertà, la colpa, la pena. Ancora sul Catone dantesco’, Giornale Storico della Letteratura Italiana, 189, 2012, pp. 321–53, at pp. 321–3; G. Mazzotta, Dante, Poet of the Desert: History and Allegory in the ‘Divine Comedy’, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 1979, p. 61.
Fioravanti suggests that Dante reads Lucan's text as an ‘allegory of theologians’ (Dante Alighieri, Convivio, ed. G. Fioravanti and C. Giunta, in Dante Alighieri, Opere, vol. II, ed. M. Santagata, Milan, Mondadori, 2014, p. 793). However, Dante's treatment of the concept in Conv. II, 1 seems to imply that the ‘anagogical’ sense could also be part of the ‘allegory of poets’. Nevertheless, the degree of attention that Dante devotes to the word-by-word allegorical reading of Lucan's passage is striking.
Conv. IV, xxvi, 6–15; see Fioravanti, ed., Convivio, (n. 78 above), p. 757; A. Ronconi, ‘Virgilio Marone, Publio’, Enciclopedia Dantesca, vol. V, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1976, pp. 1044–49, at p. 1046. In Conv. IV, xxv, 6–11 Dante refers to Statius, Theb. I, 395–7, 529–39, 671–81 to provide examples of praiseworthy shame in the age of adolescenza. Likewise, in Conv. IV, xxvii, 17–21 Dante turns to Ovid's tale of Cephalus and Aeacus (Met. VII, 490–664) to illustrate the virtues of prudence, justice, largesse and cheerfulness in senettute. However, he defines the story a favola and the reference sounds more like an exemplum than a true and proper allegorization (Fioravanti, ed., Convivio, p. 785).
This also appears from the possibly spurious Epistle to Cangrande, where the Bellum Civile is recalled alongside scriptural texts to confirm the thesis that God is everywhere (Epist. XIII, 22; Sap. 17; Eccl. XLII, 16; Lucan. IX, 580). On the passage, see Marchesi, ‘Lucan at Last’ (n. 1 above), pp. 484–5; E. Fraenkel, ‘Lucan as the Transmitter of Ancient Pathos’, in Lucan, ed. C. Tesoriero, Oxford and New York, Oxford University Press, 2010, pp. 15–45, at p. 36 [Originally published as ‘Lucan als Mittler des Antiken Pathos’, Vorträge der Bibliothek Warburg, 4 (1924), 229–57]; Fischli, Studien (n. 69 above), p. 33.
In this regard, also Petrarch's understanding of the story told by Lucan also differs profoundly from Dante's in that Petrarch fully grasps the historical significance of the Roman civil war, even if he does not necessarily see Lucan as anti-Caesar. See G. Martellotti, ‘Petrarca e Cesare’, in Scritti Petrarcheschi, ed. M. Feo and S. Rizzo, Padua, Antenore, 1983, pp. 77–89; B. Facchini, ‘Petrarch's Lucan and the ambiguities of ancient heroism’, forthcoming in Humanistica 13 (2018).
On Lucan's importance for Petrarch, see R. T. Bruère, ‘Lucan and Petrarch's Africa’, Classical Philology, 66, 1961, pp. 83–99; cf. G. Velli, Petrarca e Boccaccio: Tradizione, memoria, scrittura, Padua, Antenore, 1995, 2nd ed, pp. 95–6, n. 35; M. Leigh, ‘Petrarch's Lucan and the Africa’, in Classical Constructions: Papers in Memory of Don Fowler, Classicist and Epicurean, ed. S. Heyworth, P. G. Fowler, and S. J. Harrison, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2007, pp. 242–57; G. Crevatin, ‘Il pathos nella scrittura storica del Petrarca’, Rinascimento, s. II, 35, 1995, pp. 155–71, at pp. 167–70; Ead., ‘“Stat magni nominis umbra”. La presenza di Lucano nel “De gestis Cesaris” di Petrarca’, in Pervertere. Ästhetik der Verkehrung: Literatur und Kultur neronischer Zeit und ihre Rezeption, ed. L. Castagna and G. Vogt-Spira, Munich, Saur, 2002, pp. 237–52; Facchini, ‘Petrarch's Lucan’ (n. 73 above).
See for example, Petrarch, Fam. II, 2, 3; II, 3, 22; II, 7, 7; XIV, 1, 34 (Le Familiari = Familiarium rerum libri, ed. U. Dotti, Cuneo, Aragno, 2004–9,); Id., Sen. VII, 1, 83 (Le Senili = Rerum senilium libri, ed. U. Dotti, Cuneo: Aragno, 2004–10); Id., Invectiva contra medicum, III, 156–9 and Invectiva contra quendam magni status hominem sed nullius scientie aut virtutis, 96 (ed. F. Bausi, Florence, Le Lettere, 2005). On Petrarch's conception of Lucan as a poet, see for example, Crevatin, ‘Il pathos’ (n. 74 above), pp. 167–8; Ead., ‘La presenza’ (n. 74 above), p. 244.
An example in this regard is provided by the frequent mentions of Lucan in Petrarch's glosses on Virgil: Francesco Petrarca; Le postille del Virgilio Ambrosiano, ed. M. Baglio, A. Nebuloni Testa and M. Petoletti, Rome, Antenore, 2006 (see vol. II, p. 1007).
Coll. laur. 10, 4–8, in F. Petrarca, Opere latine, ed. A. Bufano et al., Turin, U.T.E.T., 1975. On this common late-medieval classification, see for example, M. Pastore Stocchi, ‘Il primo Omero del Boccaccio’, Studi sul Boccaccio, 5, 1969, pp. 99–122, at pp. 101–5.
Fam. V, 5, 2; see Crevatin, ‘La presenza’ (n. 74 above), p. 244.
The anecdote is told by Suetonius, Vita Lucani, 2–5 ed. C. Braidotti, Le vite antiche di M. Anneo Lucano, Bologna, Patron, 1972.
‘This topic reminds me of a passage in Lucan of Corduba [Cordova], a man of lively talent and intelligence, which is the pathway to great heights as well as the precipice. When he felt himself already quite advanced in his studies, though still young considering his age and his initiatives, and elated over the success of his works, he dared compare himself with Virgil. Reciting part of the book about the civil war [Pharsalia], which he left unfinished when he was cut short by death, he said: “What will it take for me to match the Gnat [Culex]?” I am uncertain whether one of his friends then answered this insolent question, or what the answer was, but ever since reading it I often answered that arrogant fellow silently and indignantly as follows: “My good man, nothing prevents you from matching the Gnat but a great deal indeed from equaling the Aeneid”. Why, then, should I not appreciate your humility which prefers me to you in your opinion more than the boasting of that writer who put himself above Virgil or equal to him?’ (Sen. V, 2, 10–11; transl. A. S. Bernardo, S. Levi, R. A. Bernardo, Francesco Petrarch; Letters of Old Age, New York, Italica Press, 2005, vol. I, p. 159).
Petrarch asserts Lucan's poetic inferiority to Virgil also in Contra quendam 96.
Sen. V, 2, 15.
When dealing with the matter of Virgil's possible rivalry with, and superiority over, Homer, Petrarch is either reticent or overtly in favour of the Roman poet (e.g., Fam. VI, 4, 12; XXII, 10, 6; XXIV, 4, 8–10; cfr. Fam. I, 2, 23; XIII, 6, 4; XIII, 7, 12, 17; XXI, 15, 5, where Homer and Virgil are praised in conjunction; see M. Feo, Petrarca, Enciclopedia Virgiliana, vol. VI, Rome, Istituto della Enciclopedia Italiana, 1988, pp. 53–78, at p. 70). An extended account of Petrarch's opinion of Dante is contained in his well-known letter to Boccaccio (Fam. XXI, 15).
‘And does Homer, who was of one mind with you, roam with you? And do Orpheus and the other poets wander alone through the meadows, singing the praises of Phoebus, all but those whom a self-inflicted and violent death and servile homage to a cruel lord have banished to another region? Such was Lucan, who was driven willingly to his death, offering his artery to the doctor out of fear of a more painful and bloody punishment and a shameful death; such was Lucretius, whose death and savage fury, they say, compelled him to dwell in places apart’ (transl. A. S. Bernardo, Francesco Petrarch; Letters on Familiar Matters, New York, Italica Press, 2005, vol. III, p. 340).
Suetonius, Vita Lucani, 23–26; Eusebius-Jerome, Chronicle, ed. Helm, p. 183; see also Vita III, ed. Braidotti, 9–11.
Scholars tend to agree that Statius's Silvae were unknown in the Middle Ages until their rediscovery by Poggio Bracciolini in 1417. However, the Genethliacon Lucani was separately transmitted in Florence, Laur. 29, 32 (9th century); moreover, Billanovich and Brugnoli have suggested that the Paduan protohumanists and Petrarch were familiar with the Silvae. See M. D. Reeve, ‘Statius’, in Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, ed. L. D. Reynolds, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1983, 394–9, at p. 397; C. Caruso, ‘Una nota sulle Silvae di Stazio nel Medioevo’, Italia medioevale e umanistica 44, 2003, pp. 303–7, at p. 303; Gu. Billanovich, ‘“Veterum vestigia vatum” nei carmi dei preumanisti padovani’, Italia Medioevale e Umanistica, 1, 1958, pp. 155–243; G. Brugnoli, ‘Le Siluae di Stazio e Petrarca’, Critica del Testo, 6, 2003, pp. 295–321.
Petrarch's description of Lucan in Sen. V, 2, 10 bears some similarities with the portrayal of Lucretius and his death in Fam. XXIV, 11, 7 and in Sen. V, 5, 18. In Sen. XI, 17, 6 Lucan's and Lucretius's voluntary deaths are contrasted with Virgil's.
Fam. XXIV, 11, 8; transl. Bernardo, Letters on Familiar Matters (n. 84 above), vol. III, p. 340.
Fam. XXIV, 11, 15.
See G. Crevatin, ‘“Fu vera gloria?”. La vanitas di Catone nel De gestis Cesaris del Petrarca’, in Tradizioni patristiche nell'umanesimo: atti del Convegno, Istituto nazionale di studi sul Rinascimento, Biblioteca Medicea Laurenziana, Firenze, 6–8 febbraio 1997, Tavarnuzze, Impruneta, SISMEL Edizioni del Galluzzo, 2000, pp. 3–22. See also D. Carron, ‘Le Comentum super Dantis Aldigherij Comoediam de Benvenuto da Imola et le débat sur Caton dans l'Italie du XIVe siècle’, Rassegna Europea di Letteratura Italiana, 35, 2010, pp. 135–52. As I aim to discuss in a future study, Petrarch's acceptance of Lucan's Stoic views is, in general, more cautious and limited than Dante's. In particular, Petrarch lessens the rigour of Lucan's stance on paupertas and distinguishes his own sober life from Amyclas's extreme poverty: see Fam. XIX, 5, 2–3; Secretum II, 7, 4 (ed. U. Dotti, Rome, Archivio Guido Izzi, 1993): Lucan. IV, 381; cfr. Variae 17, 40–51 (Lettere disperse: varie e miscellanee, ed. A. Pancheri, Parma, Fondazione Pietro Bembo, 1994).
The rivalry between Virgil and Lucan also appears in Politianus, Nutricia, 499–519; Epigr. lat. XXXVII, 15; on Petrarch's influence on Politianus's view of Lucan, see T. Leuker, Angelo Poliziano: Dichter, Redner, Stratege: eine Analyse der Fabula di Orpheo und ausgewählter lateinischer Werke des Florentiner Humanisten, Stuttgart, Teubner, 1997, pp. 220–25.
On Lucan's importance for Boccaccio, see Velli, Petrarca e Boccaccio, 77–113 (n. 74 above) with bibl. (after A. Quaglio, ‘Boccaccio e Lucano: una concordanza e una fonte dal Filocolo all'Amorosa Visione’, Cultura Neolatina 23, 1963, pp. 153–71). Many of Boccaccio's allusions to Lucan are highlighted in the commented editions of Boccaccio's works collected in the series: Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, a cura di Vittore Branca.
Bocc. Esp. IV, esp. litt. 127–33; Suetonius, Vita Lucani, 2–5, 23–6; Tacitus, Annales XV, 49–51, 56–7 (see Padoan, Esposizioni, [n. 17 above], p. 829). A potentially relevant source is also Vacca, Vita II, ed. Braidotti, 29–39.
Esp. IV, esp. litt. 128–9.
Also in Buccolicum Carmen, XII, 197–8, Lucan is indirectly represented as inferior to Virgil, as well as to Petrarch (Buccolicum Carmen, ed. G. Bernardi Perini, in Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, ed. V. Branca, vol. V.2, Milan, Mondadori, 1994).
Esp. IV, esp. litt. 132–3.
In Contra med. IV, 164, Petrarch reuses Lucan's problematic address to Nero (Lucan. I, 52) in a highly ironical way, but does not attribute irony to Lucan himself (in this regard see also Francesco Petrarca; Le postille [n. 76 above], vol. I, pp. 467, 546).
Esp. IV, esp. litt. 130, 132–3.
Esp. IV, esp. litt. 370–78. Boccaccio's commentary adduces two possible explanations for Dante's decision to locate such sinful ancient characters as Lucan in Limbo: he states that, first, the vices defiling these souls are much more evident in others among the damned and, second, that Dante has privileged the virtues of these figures over their faults.
On this passage, see Padoan, Esposizioni, [n. 17 above], p. 850.
On this point, see Facchini, ‘Petrarch's Lucan’ (n. 73 above), n. 81.
In his study of Lucan in the Filocolo, Velli has already pointed out Boccaccio's fundamental indifference (‘disinteresse concettuale’) to the ideological implications of the Bellum Civile (Velli, Petrarca e Boccaccio [n. 74 above], 99–100).
In Esp. IV, esp. all. 49, Boccaccio points out that, unlike earlier classical authors, Lucan and his contemporaries lived in an era in which Christian doctrine was preached everywhere, so that their paganism is inexcusable. However, Boccaccio's commentary also reasserts Lucan's moral and intellectual merit as a master in the liberal arts (see Esp. IV, esp. all. 55–61).
Esp. IV, esp. litt. 130–31.
Velli, Petrarca e Boccaccio (n. 74 above), pp. 93–5; see also Martellotti, ‘La difesa’ (n. 5 above) on Boccaccio's re-elaboration of the controversy on Lucan's identity as a poet or a historian in Gen. XIV, 13, 14. In Esp. IV, esp. litt. 134–5, Boccaccio highlights the differences among the subject matters dealt with by Virgil, Lucan and the various members of the bella scola, explaining that, notwithstanding their diversity, the five ancient authors can all be honoured as ‘poets’.
See for example, Filocolo V, 97, 4–6; Epist. 4, 12; De vita Francisci Petracchi 6 (Filocolo, ed. A. Quaglio, in Tutte le opere di Giovanni Boccaccio, ed. V. Branca, vol. I, Milan, Mondadori, 1967; Epistole e lettere, ed. G. Auzzas; Vite di Petrarca, Pier Damiani e Livio, ed. R. Fabbri, ibidem, vol. V.1, Milan, Mondadori, 1992). In all these passages, Boccaccio mentions Lucan alongside Virgil, as well as Statius, as a great poetic model.
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Facchini, B. Lucan and Virgil: From Dante to Petrarch (and Boccaccio). Int class trad 27, 1–22 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12138-018-0482-x
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12138-018-0482-x