Thunder and Lament by Timothy A. Joseph;
Author:Timothy A. Joseph;
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: OUP Premium
Published: 2022-06-15T00:00:00+00:00
4.2. âWell-known spotsâ revisited and reversed
A concurrent and equally cataclysmic arc of Roman reversal runs through Books 4 and 9, where Lucan crafts the failures of Curio and Cato in Africa into stories of the undoing of Roman maritime reach and prowess. As Italy and Rome on one side of the Mediterranean are lost to Hannibal in the person of Caesar, earlier Roman successes in expeditions to Africa are dashed and undone in Curioâs and Catoâs ventures there.
Let us recall that Naeviusâs Bellum Punicum and Enniusâs Annales both narrated Romeâs launch across the Mediterranean. From surviving fragments we can determine that each poem zeroed in on primal moments of launch, contact, and conflict. The Bellum Punicum, covering the first conflict with Carthage and the corresponding debut of Romeâs fleet, naturally had an authoritative claim to the narration of this âfirst-ness.â52 Though Cicero (Brut. 76) tells us that the Annales did not treat the First Punic War with narrative fullness,53 Ennius does seem to give close attention to the warâs beginnings (Ann. 216â19) and in particular the emerging Roman navyâs exercises (Ann. 218â19). In a fragment that editors have placed in Book 9 at the time of Romeâs successful direction of the Hannibalic War across the sea, Ennius writes artfully of the Straits of Gibraltar: Europam Libyamque rapax ubi diuidit unda (âwhere the rapacious sea divides Europe and Libya,â Ann. 302 = Cic., Tusc. 1.45 and Nat. D. 3.24).54 The Annales charted this uncertain and perilous crossing into the land described elsewhere as âAfrica, rough land, trembling with terrible tumultâ (Africa terribili tremit horrida terra tumultu, Ann. 309 = Cic., De or. 3.167). Integral to Enniusâs narrative was, to be sure, the figure of Scipio Africanus, who crossed over the sea and defeated Hannibal at Zama. Though no surviving fragments of the Annales make specific mention of him, Cicero speaks in the Pro Archia (22) of the personal closeness between the general and the poet and of the belief that a marble image of Ennius was included on the Tomb of the Scipios.55 Moreover, the surviving fragments of Enniusâs Scipio (fr. 29â34 Courtney) make clear the workâs laudatory quality.56 Scipio the sea-crosser and conqueror of Africa was surely a central figure in the Annales.
The Roman launches overseas in the Bellum Punicum and Annales, though bold and uncertain enterprises, are ultimately successful: the Rome of Naeviusâs and Enniusâs poems wins, Africa horrida terra is defeated. When Caesarâs ally Curio and, later, Cato retrace these expeditions to Africa in the Pharsalia, the outcome is just the opposite. And these episodes of reversal include cues toward landings on African terrain in earlier Latin epic. The passages have the quality of palimpsests, with the narratives of successful Roman arrivals made to lie beneathâbe replaced byâLucanâs tales of faltering and failed landings. The fundamental precariousness and fragility, indeed erasability, of those earlier maritime and poetic ventures are realized in the Pharsaliaâs disastrous reversals in these palimpsestic geographical and textual spots.
The first of these comes at the outset of Lucanâs African narrative in Book 4.
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