Clauss, 'Vergil Eclogues', Bryn Mawr Classical Review 9511
URL = http://hegel.lib.ncsu.edu/stacks/serials/bmcr/bmcr-9511-clauss-vergil
@@@@95.11.6, Clausen, ed., Vergil Eclogues
Wendell Clausen (ed.). Vergil Eclogues. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1994. Pp. xxx, 238. $60.00. ISBN 0-19-814916-6.
Reviewed by James Clauss -- University of Washington
Wendell Clausen was in the early stages of work on his
commentary on the Eclogues in the seventies when I was a
graduate student. Ever since becoming aware of his important
work in Latin poetry in the course of my studies, I have eagerly
awaited this book. The project, as Clausen tells us in the
Preface, originally called for a joint publication with R. A. B.
Mynors' commentary on theGeorgics, but different
timetables and the unfortunate death of Mynors, to whose memory
the book is dedicated, resulted in the earlier publication date
of the latter's work (Virgil: Georgics, Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 1990). In short, the commentary was well worth
the wait.
The Introduction, brief--only sixteen pages--but effective,
consists of three sections: Pastoral Poetry, The Book of
Eclogues, The Composition of a Landscape. In the first
section, different from other editors who often go on at length
on the murky issue of the origin of pastoral verse, Clausen cuts
to the chase: pastoral was invented by Theocritus. He proceeds
to describe the genre quite simply: it is "never simple, though
it affects to be; and in this affectation of simplicity, the
disparity between the meanness of his subject and the refinement
of the poet's art, lies the essence of pastoral" (xv). I have
not found a better definition. And in describing an essential
difference between Theocritus and Vergil, he notes that, while
the former gives little evidence of the intimacy with the
countryside which Vergil evinces, still he is more consistent in
maintaining the pastoral fiction. Vergil, on the other hand,
shows more affection for the country but breaks the idyllic
setting by including "a wider range of experience--politics and
politicians, the ravages of civil war, religion, poetry, literary
criticism ..." (xix-xx).
In the second section, Clausen provides a masterful summary of
the design of the book in only six and one quarter pages. I
found his comparison between Vergil and Catullus particularly
interesting: Catullus wrote his poems first and later published
them together, but Vergil is envisaged as conceiving of his book
first and then writing and rewriting the individual poems until
they conformed to the design of the collection. For this reason,
the order of composition of the individual poems, a time-honored
chestnut, is consigned to a footnote, with the warning that "any
attempt to determine the exact order of their composition will
prove illusory" (xxii). More on this below.
The third section brings us back to a comparison between Greek
and Roman pastoral poets. A pleasing symmetry. Here Clausen
contrasts the landscapes that emerge from the two poets from
which he can draw several conclusions. 1) Vergil's countryside
is heavily, Theoctitus,' sparcely wooded. 2) Because, different
from Theocritus, Vergil did not have a long poetic tradition to
draw on, "the proportion of unliterary to literary plants and
trees in the Eclogues is therefore higher than it is in
the pastoral Idylls" (xxviii), though Theocritus'
shepherds are in general better botanists. 3) Vergil is the more
daring of the two.
While the text used is Mynors' (which he does not hesitate to
emend when necessary; cf. ad 3.102), the commentary, like the
introduction, is vintage Clausen: mollis atque facetus.
The commentary on each Eclogue is preceded by its own
introduction and it is upon these introductions that I shall
focus my attention. Not only does Clausen set the scene for an
informed reading of the poems; more than that, he creates an
atmosphere for each reading through his highly sensitive touch.
In this he reveals what his students have long acknowledged and
admired: Clausen's passion for, and intimacy with, this poet and
ancient poetry in general. As an instance of the editor's
sensitivity and passion for his subject, I cite his description
of the well-known adynaton in the first Eclogue:
"Tityrus' 'impossibility' is a painful reality for Meliboeus; and
thus prompted, he conjures up the most remote and barren regions
of the earth (64-6). Mainly, however, his second speech is
concerned with the pathos of leaving a native place. Will he
ever, he wonders, and after how many long years, see his farm,
his little kingdom, again? He fears, knows he will not; will
never again, stretched at ease in a mossy cavern, watch his goats
hang browsing on some tufted crag; will sing no songs."
Clausen's attenuated style both delights and informs.
In addition to creating a tone for a reading of each
Eclogue, the introductory sections explore the literary
background, in particular the Theocritean and other Greek or
Roman models. For instance, he concludes the introduction to the
Second Eclogue, modelled on Theocritus' Eleventh
Idyll in typical style: "Corydon's song is similarly
disjointed (sc. as that of Polyphemus) ... And yet Corydon seems
different, not so naive, so simply true as Polyphemus, nor so
passionate; he seems self-conscious, as though aware--as Vergil
expected his reader to be aware--of Polyphemus. Corydon's is a
more composed passion" (63). The discussions of models are never
inert. In the introduction to the Third Eclogue, a poem
modelled on the Fifth Idyll, Clausen problematizes a
central issue of the amoebean poem, namely, why one competitor
defeats another. The problem, as he sees it, lies in the
apparent need of the poet to include an inferior creation within
the poem. While the problem does not exist in the Third, Fifth
and Eighth Eclogues, where there are no winners or losers,
it emerges in the Seventh. Clausen argues, quite effectively,
that Thyrsis, the loser, should not be judged as inferior to
Corydon, but subordinate, stating: "No doubt Corydon is the more
musical of the two, yet the voice of Thyrsis is essential to the
harmony of Vergil's composition" (212).
The individual introductions also take up some of the well
known issues that have occupied scholars from the ancient world
on, of which I shall look at a few. For instance, on the Fifth
Eclogue, Clausen prefers to leave open the identification
of Daphnis, setting aside the commonly accepted view that behind
the mythical shepherd lies the deified Julius. His rationale:
Vergil is "never so simple, and such an identification, grotesque
if insisted upon, would be an inadequate response to the
allusiveness and complexity of his poem" (p. 152, n. 4). Vergil
is indeed hard to pin down and so this advice is well taken and
perhaps would have been well applied elsewhere in the commentary.
From late antiquity scholars have gone back and forth on the
identification of the general and tragic poet alluded to in
Ec. 8.6-13--Octavian or Pollio. In his introduction to
the Eighth Eclogue, Clausen, opting for Octavian, follows
the Bowersock line (or rather the Garrod line, since as pointed
out on page 234 (n.5) Bowersock was anticipated in this position
in 1916): inter alia, the river Timavus, past which the
unnamed patron is said to sail, lies 400 miles north of where the
Parthini live, which people Pollio defeated in 39 bc, and closer
to the area where Octavian had a series of campaigns in 35 bc.
Nonetheless, one must keep in mind that Vergil does not name
names here. Are we wrong to insist? After all, the description
of his patron's journey mentions the area of the Timavus as one
of two options (seu magni superas iam saxa Timavi / sive oram
Illyrici legis aequoris, 6-7). The second option, the
Illyrian shore, is surely vague enough to include the area where
Pollio campaigned (cf. Coleman ad Ec. 8.7). Perhaps the
poet's elusiveness is purposeful: since the individual components
of the book, as Clausen states, were constantly being rewritten,
quite possibly failure to specify the general/tragedian--he does
not hesitate to mention contemporaries elsewhere, including
Pollio--arose from an important change that occurred or seemed
likely to occur during the last years spent writing the
Eclogues; namely, the eclipse of Pollio and the emergence
of Octavian. Since cases can be made for both patrons, silence
might be inclusive.
Along a different line, insisting on the exact location of
this river as a significant fact might be dangerous for two
reasons: mention of a large river in the anticipation of
singing the military accomplishments of a general could possess a
secondary, metaliterary sense, that was more important than any
specific river (if so, could there be a pun in the poet's choice
of legis at Ec. 8.7?) and Vergil's geography can
involve a long stretch of the imagination as well as distance
(see Georgics 1.489-492, if Thomas ad loc.
and many others are correct). One final observation on the
introduction to this Eclogue. Clausen provides a map
featuring the Roman Conquest of Dalmatia on page 234 to show the
distances between the two theaters of war. The map, marked with
the various military campaigns held in the area, seems out of
tune with this delicate commentary, like Roman generals in a
pastoral setting.
To return to the issue of silence, Vergil's unwillingness to
name the god in the First Eclogue might derive from the
same change that occurred during the years in which the
collection was completed. The poet did not shy away from naming
Octavian in his next work, and, what is more, describing him as a
god; why does he demure here? While I, like Clausen (cf. pp.
31-32), always think of Octavian when reading the First
Eclogue, it is after all the reader who provides the name,
not the poet. Are we wrong to insist here as well? What then of
the unnamed child of the Fourth Eclogue? On the basis of
the allusion to the Pact of Brundisium, packed into mention of
Pollio's consulship, and to Hercules at Ec. 4.15-17,
Clausen reasonably concludes that the child was the expected
offspring of Anthony and Octavia. Failure to appreciate the
second allusion, given Anthony's claim of descent from Hercules,
it is argued, has caused scholars to miss the point. He states:
"In the year 40 bc ... Anthony, not Octavian, was 'the greatest
prince o' the world', and of this their contemporaries,
specatators of the mighty drama, could be in no doubt. In the
year 40 bc, Octavian was a sickly if determined and ruthless
young man; the future Augustus unimaginable" (p. 125). The
argument is hard to resist. Still I--and I am not alone in
this--find it hard to believe Vergil would have risked investing
such a magnificent poem in a boy who might not--and did
not--exist. If the poet wanted to celebrate an important
political birth, he would have been wiser to follow the example
of Callimachus in the Hymn to Delos and predict the birth
of a dynast after the fact. Instead, I prefer to follow
Clausen's pronouncement that identification can prove to be an
"inadequate response" to so allusive, and I would add mysterious,
a poet. Vergil didn't tell; perhaps we shouldn't ask, or at
least harbor our suspicions without insisting.
I return to the introduction to the Eighth Eclogue.
Clausen argues that Damon's song postdates that of Alphesiboeus
for two reasons. First, the presence of a refrain, necessary for
the latter's composition modelled on Simaetha's incantation in
the Second Idyll, was inappropriate to that of the former,
modelled on the lament of the unnamed goatherd in the Third
Idyll. Second, the metrical technique of Alphesiboeus'
song more closely resembles the technique of the Second and Third
Eclogues. The conclusion: Vergil reused Alphesiboeus'
song, an earlier composition, in a later poem and set it opposite
Damon's song that was in turn given a refrain to respond to it.
"If so, then Damon's song may be among the latest of Virgil's
pastoral compositions, and the Eighth Eclogue, as a whole,
contemporary with the First, which, like the Eighth, honours
Octavian" (p. 239). The logic is clear and convincing in part
(see previous paragraphs). Yet, employing a line of thinking
suggested by the editor, I would have to wonder if this attempt
to determine the exact order of the composition might be illusory
within a holistic view of the Eclogue book. Or perhaps we
might emend the earlier statement and conclude, as Clausen's
discussion on the Eighth Eclogue prompts us to do, that
there is after all something to be learned from an investigation
into the relative chronology of the individual Eclogues,
and that the book can tolerate, even benefit from, two different
perspectives--diachronic and synchronic.
The commentary proper is magisterial without being pedantic,
patronizing, or overly inflated. Clausen covers a range of
topics--diction, grammar, tone, rhetoric, meter, specific
imitations, general parallels, even botany among other
issues--and brings in the views of ancient and modern
commentators appropriately and helpfully. The reader will
discover a treasure of fascinating and informative observations.
Best of all, this long awaited book gives students and scholars
alike the opportunity to encounter Vergil's Eclogues
through the eyes of one of the finest American Latinists of this
century. Regarding Vergil's Arcadia Clausen states: "Rarely, if
ever, can a poetic act be explained satisfactorily ..." (p. 289).
In reading this commentary, I have been satisfied.