MASTER NEGATIVE NO. 92-80497-10 MICROFILMED 1992 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES/NEW YORK as part of the . ^ "Foundations of Western Civilization Preservation Project Funded bv the NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES Reproductions may not be made without permission from Columbia University Library COPYRIGHT STATEMENT The copyright law of the United States -- Title 17, United States Code -- concerns the making_ of photocopies or omer reproductions of copyrighted material... Columbia University Library reserves the right to refuse to accepTa copy order if, in its Vdgement fulfillment of the order would involve violation of the copynght law. AUTHOR: KNAPP, CHARLES TITLE: REFERENCES TO PAIN TING IN PLAUTUS PLACE: [NEW YORK] DA TE : [1917?] COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES PRESERVATION DEPARTMENT Master Negative it M BIBLIOGRAPHIC MICROFORM TARGET Original Material as Filmed - Existing Bibliographic Record Restrictions 3n Use: MS: EL CON ILC EML AD:02-il-92 UD:02-12-92 7V7 '??7'? 11:? GEN: B3t iiKS/Ck'OD Hooks f UL/BIB NYLU92-BV/^4 Acquisitions NYCG-PT FIN ID NYca92-B9/44 - Record 1 of 1 - Record updated today I- II) : \'\'iiAV/y HV /i^) R I Yl' : a 3 I : p I- RN : CC:966J^ Bi Irani UCE:? C3C:? MOD: SNR: CP : II yu L : en q - [ N F : '? (iPC : ? BIO:? i- 1 C : V P(::s PD:19J.// RtP:? CPl:? ESJ:? iihl): OR: POL: DM: RR: COL: 040 NNCt-cNNC iOO i Knapp, Charles. 245 io References to painting in Plautus and 1 erencerh[inicrof orm J . ^cBy Charle s K n a f) r- . 260 lilew Yor K,{-hiJoiuinbia Univers i ty , |cl9i /? J 300 p. 143-15/. LDQ OR 10 QD 02-11-92 TECHNICAL MICROFORM DATA FILM SIZE: ^^^^Iho^l IMAGE PLACEMENT: lA Cb/^ IB DATE FiLMED:„/V/vJ55 REDUCTION RATIO: // ^ IIB INITIALS ^(y FILMED BY: RESEARCH PUBLICATIONS. INC WOODBRIDGE. CT \ r V Association for information and image iManagement 1100 Wayne Avenue, Suite 1100 Silver Spring. Maryland 20910 301/587-8202 Centimeter 1 2 3 iiiiliiiiliiiiliinliiiiln u Inches 4 \ 5 I 1 1 I n 1 8 10 [|j||||j||||||m|j ||II[I|II|I|I 1.0 I.I 1.25 1^ ■ 56 |63 la |ao 2.8 12. 36 40 1.4 t$mmf^ 2.5 2.2 2.0 1.8 1.6 n 12 13 14 15 mm Mljmimjlm^^ MflNUFfiCTURED TO PIIM STONDfiRDS BY fiPPLIED IMAGE, INC. I Reprinted for private circulation from Classical Philology, Vol. XII, No. 2, April 1917 REFERENCES TO PAINTING IN PLAUTUS AND TERENCE By Charles Knapp As the starting-point of this paper I have selected the famous cave canem passage in Mo. 832-52, which I have abeady twice dis- cussed in print,' though less fully than in the present article. Theopropides has but lately returned from a long trading-voyage (431) He finds the front door of his house closed and locked in the daytime (444 f explained by 404, 425-26). Before he has time to wonder much at this, Tranio, his slave, appears (446) and tells Theopropides that, since ghosts had begun to walk in their one-time home, Philolaches, Theopropides' son, had been obliged to move and to buy a house elsewhere (454 ff., especially 479 ff.). Pressed to tell whose house had been bought, Tranio, using the first lie that comes to mind, declares that Philolaches has bought the house of Simo, neighbor of Theopropides (659 ff.). Theopropides then wishes to inspect the new house in detail, without and within (674 ff.). He sends Tranio to ask permission of Simo to make such inspection (683 ff ) Simo presently appears (690), and after a long soliloquy (690-710), and a talk with Tranio (711-74), meets Theopropides (805) and bids him go where he will in his (Simo's) house (809). After Theopropides has carefully examined the vesUbulum, the amhidacrum, and the pastes (817-31), the following dialogue ensues (832 ff.) :' Tr Videnptctemubiludificat una comix volturios duos? Th Non edepol video. Tr. At ego video, nam inter voltunos duos comix astat: ea volturios duo vicissim vellicat. Quaeso hue ad me specta cornicem ut conspicere possies. lam vides ? Th. Profecto nuUam equidem ilhc cormcem intuor. ■ See the Classical Review. XX, 395 ff.; the Latin Leaflet. No. 136, January 8. "°^^ In a Princeton University dissertation, entitled The House-Door on the Ancient Sta^e LltL": 1914), pp. 12-14, Mr. W. W. Mooney holds that the houe.door on th7Roman stage was kept closed during the day (as m actual lite), ^nd that in Mo. 444; Z lOls! and St^ch. 308, surprise is expressed, "not because the door .s shut (inthcdaytimel, but because it is locked" (p. 13). j „„„;,»H7ation . Unless otherwise stated, I give Lindsay's text; the punctuation and capitalization are my own. ^ [Classical Philology XII, April, 1917J 143 144 Charles Knapp Tr. At tu isto ad vos optuere, quoniam cornicem nequis conspicari, si volturios forte possis contui. Th. Omnino, ut te apsolvam, nullam pidam conspicio hie avem. Here, plainly, we have reference to painting in somewhat elabo- rate form, a representation of a raven assailing two vultures. Where are we to locate this painting ? If anywhere at all, on the outside of the house. In 817-28 Theopropides and Tranio were examining the vestibulum, the ambulacrum, and the pastes; in 829-31 they were looking at coagmenta in foribus. They do not enter the house till 858. They then remain within till 904. We need to remember, however, that the Mostellaria is in many respects a veritable extravaganza, a lively and energetic, but, at times, wholly improbable, farce, in places difficult, I should say, of represen- tation in any age, unless no regard is paid to verisimilitude of illu- sion.^ The spirit of riotous burlesque is especially marked in the whole passage under review and in the description of the house in general. Cf . particularly 907-14, where Theopropides and Tranio, having come forth from Simo's house, talk enthusiastically of what they have seen 1 For example, in 682 Tranio is sent to interview Simo, to get permission for Theo- propides to inspect Simo's house. For 100 verses Theopropides stands about doing nothing- Tranio indeed seems to be out of his sight, for at 721a he calls out to Tranio to return, and at 784, when Tranio at last does return and address his master, the latter exclaims. "Hem. quis hie nominat me ? " Again, in 785, he asks L nde is ? Tranio's question to Simo in 774. "Eon. voco hue hominem." though not in itself significant, seems in this context to indicate that Simo and Tranio had not been in sight of Theopropides. Professor Fay seems to think that at 687 Tranio stepped into the alley (angiportum) to call on Simo, by a side door (see his note on 785). But was it usual to call on gentlemen via the side door ? Yet how else could Tranio have been out of his master's sight ? In the Trinummus, to be sure, Lesbonicus adulescens lives in a posticulum, which recepit, quom aedis vendidit (Trin. 194) in his father s absence. To this he gained access, no doubt, through an angiportum (though no mention is made of an angiportum in the play). But the situation in the Trinummus is unique in Roman comedy. Professor Sonnenschein (2d ed., 1907) makes Tranio step into the angiportum at 687 and Simo "enter from his house at the back of the stage (see his notes on 687, 689), but he says nothing at all of the place of the actual confer- ence between the two, or of the difficulties raised in the earlier part of this note Professor Morris, in his edition (1886), p. 124, made the meeting take place m front of Simo's house. If the two really met before Simo's front door, to answer the diffi- culties raised above we shall have to fall back on the great breadth of the Roman stage, though this ever-ready crutch seems none too good a support here. Such questions as these, however. Plautus probably did not ask himself nor did his audience ask them of him. References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 145 within. Note that the most extravagant idea of the whole passage (909)1 is suggested by Theopropides senex himself. In view of all this we need not trouble ourselves because decora- tion of the exterior walls of private houses representing definite and elaborate scenes appears not to have been common at any time, either at Athens or at Pompeii, or, we may infer, at Rome itself, particularly at the time of the production of the Mostellaria.^ 1 Tr. Quoiusmodi gynaeceum ? quid porticum ? Th. Insanum bonam. Non equidcm uUam in publico esse maiorem hac existumo. 2 Mr. Stevens, in Fowler-Wheeler, Greek Archaeology, p. 189, is, by his silence, against such decoration of Greek private houses. Nor do I find evidence of it in the following discussions of the Greek and the Roman house: Smith, Dictionary of Antiq- uities', I, 659 B, 660 A, 664 B. 666-67; II, 345 B-347 A; Mau-Kelsey. Pompeii: Its Life and Art, p. 456; Baumeister, I, 627 B; Gercke-Norden, Einleitung xn die Altcrtumswissenschaft^ (1913), II, 27; the article "Romisches Haus," by Fiechter. in Pauly-Wissowa, Zweite Reihe, Erste Halbband (1914); the article "Haus," in Fr. Lijbker, Rcallexikon des klassischen Altertums^ (1914). In Mau-Kelsey, p. 456, the following statement appears: "Previous to the time of Augustus the stucco coating of outer walls ordinarily remained uncolored. Afterwards color was employed, but only to a limited extent, as in the addition of a dark base to a wall the rest of which remained white." Bertha Carr Rider, The Greek House: Its History and Development from the Neolithic Period to the Hellenistic Age (1916), is not concerned at all with the decoration of houses. H. R. Hall, Aegean Archaeology (1915), pp. 178-98, throws no light on our problem. External decoration of public buildings was of course not unknown; cf. e.g., the decorations in the Stoa, by Polygnotus. Athenian spectators, familiar with these decorations, would have no difficulty in catching the idea which the author in Plautus original wished them to grasp at the point corresponding to Mo. 832 ff. The phrase "ullam in publico .... maiorem (porticum)" in Mo. 909, in view of the whole context since 832, irievitably makes one think of paintings like those in the Stoa at Athens; it should be carefully noted, however, that the porticus in Plautus' descrip- tion (908) is within doors, and that nothing is said of paintings in that porticus. Mr J J. Robinson, of the Hotchkiss School, has been kind enough to call my attention to a passage in the Digest, Pompon. D. I. 15. 1. Pomponius, speaking of servitutes, i.e., restricting rights or burdens which lie against property, says: ber- vitutium non ea natura est ut aliquid faciat quis, veluti viridia tollat aut amoeniorem prospectum praestet, aut in hoc ut in suo pingat, sed ut aliquid patiatur aut non faciat "the essence of servitutes does not lie in the necessity of doing something, for example removing bushes or furnishing a more pleasing view, or painting ["displaying pictures. says Mr. Robinson] on his own property for the purpose [ = making a pleasantei view ?], but rather in putting up with something or in refraining from doing something. Mr. Robinson's impression was that this passage bears testimony to the decoration ol external walls. In his Selections from the Public and Private Law of the Romans (1905), p. 189 Mr. Robinson, in a note on the passage just cited, writes: "/n suo pingat refers to the practice of decorating walls or other surfaces with paintings and frescoes for the purpose of beautifying the landscape. This practice is referred to by Juv. Sat 8. 157 Cf also Dig. 43. 17. 3, 9. Such 'coverings' of paint and fresco were called tectoria." Now Juvenal 8. 157 has nothing at aU to do wi^h paintings on the outside 146 Charles Knapp It might indeed be argued that the very use of this kind of joke by Tranio proves that paintings on the outside of buildings (houses) were not unknown at Rome in Plautus' time. But the argument is not convincing. The passages given below as referring to paintings (portraits) and frescoes (cf. Men. 141 ff.; Merc, 313 ff.; Eun. 584-90) show clearly that the idea of frescoes or paintings within houses was to the Roman audience not an impossible or a difficult conception, whether the actual thing was familiar in their experience or not. Given this point, we may say at once that it would be no great strain on the audience to grasp a joke turning on a reference to similar (imaginary) paintings outside a house. The joke is surely better if such paintings did not exist at all in actual experience.^ of buildings. There Juvenal, writing of Lateranus, the horse-loving consul, says (155-57): Interea, dum lanatas robumque luvencum more Numae caedit, lovis ante altaria iurat ^ solam Eponam et facies olida ad praesepia pictas. Here we are not dealing with a house at all. Several editors of Juvenal did not think it worth while to comment on the facies; others rightly make them pictures within the stables (so Lewis, Duff, Mayor, Hardy, Simcox, Pearson-Strong). Lewis reminds us that in Apuleius Met. 3. 27 (Helm, 1907), when Lucius, transformed into an ass, first goes into the stable, he finds "pilae mediae quae stabuli trabes sustinebat in ipso fere medituUo Eponae deae simulacrum residens aediculae." In reality, in the passage cited above from the Digest there is nothing to show whether the paintings referred to were to be on an exterior wall or on an interior wall of a house. In any case, the testimony of the Diyest would be to a time much later than that of Plautus and Terence. On a priori grounds, however, we may argue that to a Roman of Plautus' day paintings on the outside of a house were not unthinkable. We may recall, as possibly helpful here, the graffiti of various sorts, the caricatures, election notices, etc., that appear so often on walls at Pompeii (see Mau-Kelsey, Pompeii, p. 486). In Mau- Kelsey, p. 234, we have reference to a painting of "the Lares, with their offerings," on an exterior street wall above a shrine. It must be confessed, however, that all these things combined fall far short of a definite composition on the exterior of a private house such as our Mostellaria passage seems to imply. We come closer to that in the account given in the American Journal of Archaeology, Second Series, XVII (1913), 115, of four blocks of stone found at Pompeii, which formed the architrave of a passageway. The blocks were ornamented with paintings of Sol, Jupiter, Mercury, and Luna. See Notizie degli Scavi, IX (1912), 102-20. At the sides of the passageway were pilasters, decorated with paintings: one represents a sacred procession, the other a large female figure identified as Venus Pompeiana. See further Notizie, IX, 174-92, 216-24, 246-59, 281-89. In the American Journal of Archaeology, Second Series, XVII (1913),' 114-15, is an account of a shrine at Pompeii, with a painted frieze repre- senting the Dei Consentes or Penates Publici of Pompeii; the frieze is figured on p. 115. In 1914, again, on external pilasters at Pompeii were found fine paintings, one of which represents Aeneas with Ascanius and Anchises, the other a Roman warrior. See American Journal of Archaeology, XVIII (1914), 398. 1 One more argument is possible, that, had paintings on exteriors been unknown, Theopropides would have exhibited far more mystification and surprise at 833 than References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 147 But let us return to the passage from which we started. After the verses already quoted there is further by-play, till at last in 849 ff. we have this dialogue: Th. Ibo intro igitur. Tr. Mane sis, videamne canes— Th. Agedumvide. Tr, St! abi, canes! St! abin dierecta ? abin hinc inmalam crucem ? At etiam restas? St! Abi istinc! Si. Nil pericH est, age* * Tarn placidast quam feta quaevis. Eire intro audacter Hcet. Eg ego hinc ad forum. Th. Fecisti commode : bene ambula. Tranio, | age, canem | istanc a foribus abducant face, etsi non metuenda est. Tr. Quin tu illam aspice ut placide accubat! nisi molestum vis videri te atque ignavom. Th. lam,^ ut lubet. Sequere me hac igitur. I am convinced that Plautus meant his audience to think of the dog in our passage as a painted dog, somewhere within the house, let us say on a side wall of the entrance-passage. Of course when the play was acted there need not have been a dog of any kind, painted, mosaic, or stuffed (see below), within the house. Decidedly in favor of the suggestion that Plautus meant his audience to think of a painted dog is the elaborate reference made in 832 ff. to painting. One who can imagine the speed with which 832-56 would be acted on the Roman stage will appreciate how impossible it would have been for the spectators to lose the suggestion of paintings conveyed by 832 ff. If I am right in my theory that Plautus meant his audience to think of a painted dog, then the cave canem incident in Petronius 29 is an illuminating parallel. In his note on Mo. 850 (1st ed., 1884) Professor Sonnenschein said: ''But perhaps the fun of this passage consisted in having not a real dog, but the figure of a dog represented on the threshold, hke that in the house of the Tragic Poet at Pompeii.'' I have shown above that I had in part reached the same conclusions as Professor he does. See below, p. 148, the quotation from Mr. Thompson's paper in the Classical Review and the comments made thereon. But Theopropides may well enough have shown his surprise by gesture and bearing rather than by words; there is abundant evidence of the vigorous stage-business of the Roman theater, e.g., in the Terentian miniatures and in Quintilian, to go no farther afield. Theopropides is impatient enough even in words at 836, 839. So at 851 Simo's amusement is to be depicted by his acting. 1 Plautus has got all possible fun out of the situation and at last (iam) lets Theo- propides wake up. v 148 Charles Knapp Sonnenschein— in so far, I mean, as I had concluded that there was no need to think of a real dog. But, in view of pidum (832), and pidam (839), his suggestion that we are to think of a mosaic dog seems to me in itself far less natural and effective than the view I have already urged. Further, there is no (other) passage in Plautus or Terence in which there is reference to mosaic work, and for good reasons. Mosaic work seems not to have been introduced into Greece till the close of the fourth century or the beginning of the third century B.C.: it was not known at Rome till the time of Sulla.^ The editor of the Classical Review, in a note to my paper (XX, 397), pointed out that in the Classical Review, IV, 381, Mr. E. S. Thompson had argued for a stuffed dog. He wrote thus: ''That Theopropides should be frightened at the mosaic figure of a dog on the threshold .... seems rather far-fetched, and it seems strange that no allusion to so absurd a mistake should be made by the other actors." On this argument see above, p. 146, n. 1. Further, for the purposes of this scene a mosaic or a painted dog^ is no more absurd than a stuffed dog and about equally fear-inspiring. Indeed, ab- surdity, riotous burlesque, is exactly what we want here, as in 829. Finally, the surprise and amusement of the other actors are clearly enough, if rather subtly, indicated by Plautus (p. 146, n. 1).^ One passes with pleasure from these rather minute speculations to consider other passages which refer beyond question to painting- frescoes within a house, and portraits done by the encaustic process. In As. 127 ff. Argyrippus adulescens,^ standing outside the house of Cleareta lena, from which he has just been ejected, voices his iSee Mr. Cecil Smith in Smith. Dictionary of Antiquities^ II, 397; Professor J R Wheeler in Fowler-Wheeler, Greek Archaeology, p. 538; A. S. Murray in Ency- ciopaedia Britannica\ II, 367 A; the article "Mosaik," in Liibker, Reallexikon des klassischen Altertums^, II, 681 (1914). 2 Encolpius, in Petronius 28, was frightened severely enough by a painted dog! 3 There is no room here to discuss Professor G. D. Kellogg's intricate explanation of our passage in his paper, "The Painting of the Crow and Two Vultures in Plautus, Mostellaria, 832 ff.," in PAPA, XLI (1910), xlii-xlv, especially since I cannot accept his view. 4 1 give commonly the r61e played by the speaker, that the reader may see what kinds of personages speak the passages that fall within the scope of this paper. This sort of information may well be important. Long after the present paper had taken form I noted Professor Abbott's very brief discussion, in his Society and Politics m ■ I References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 149 feelings against the lena. The latter appears at 153; the ensuing dialogue culminates, for our purposes, at 173 ff . : Arg. Male agis mecum. CI Quid me accusas, si facio officium meum? nam neque fietumi usquamst neque pictum neque scriptum in poe- matis^ ubi lena bene agat cum quiquam amante, quae frugi esse volt. Ancient Rome, pp. 178-79, in which he sought to infer the intellectual interests and capacities of Plautus' audiences by noting what Greek myths appear in his plays. So Professor J. S. Reid, in his edition of the Academica, p. 20, uses the allusions to philosophy and philosophical reflections in the fragments of the Roman drama, tragic and comic, as a means of determining the measure of Roman acquaintance with philosophic matters. Strange to say, however, he makes no reference at all in this connection to Plautus. »For another reference to statuary in our poets compare Cap. 950-52: "i/e. Interibi ego ex hac statua verberea volo erogitare meo minore quid sit factum filio." For literal less figurative expressions see Ru. 560, 648, 673, 689 (all four passages refer to a signum Veneris which forms part of the stage-setting: the speakers are a senex, a servus, a young mulier, an ancilla) ; Ba. 954; Ps. 1064 (in one of the last two passages a servus in the other a senex refers to the Palladium, a bookish reference entirely). Similar to Cap. 950-52 is Ru. 821 ff., where, after Daemones senex has stationed two slaves with clubs to prevent Labrax leno from molesting the girls, Labrax cries: "Heu hercle! ne istic fana mutantur cito: iam hoc Herculi fit Veneris fanum quod fuit; ita duo destituit signa hie cum clavis senex." See finally Fragg. 31-33. 2 Here, since poematis is set in contrast to pictum and fictum, it must mean "poems," "literary creations," as opposed to the two forms of the plastic art. In AJP XXVI, 4-5, however, Professor Sihler seeks to show that, in As. 746 ff.; Cas. 860 f- Ps 401-5, poeta does not mean "poet," but rather scriba, "a writer in the widest sense " Yet in As. and Cas. loc. cit., he also inclines to interpret poeta as a kind of shyster lawyer, "a notary or composer of current forms of civil law." He does not allow however, for the burlesque tone in all these passages. Nor had he any concep- tion of the role played in Plautus by literature. In this connection see my paper, "References to Painting and Literature in Plautus and Terence," PAPA, XLI (1911), xlvii-liii. _ ,. ^ .» vu I feel sure, then, that in Cas. 857-61 and As. 746-47 poeta means poet, with burlesque or mock-heroic effect ("maker." the Old English word for "poet, or "composer" would serve very well as a rendering; "creator" would even better give the mock-heroic effect). In Cas. 860-61, "nee fallaciam astutiorem ullu' fecit poeta atque haec est fabre facta ab nobis," we may note the repetition of the /octo root. Thinking of regum rex regalior, applied by ErgasUus parasitus to himself in Cap. 825. we may say that, in the Casina, to the mind of Myrrina ancilla the deviser of the scheme that so pleases her is poeta poetarum (to borrow a form of expression from Petronius). "maker of makers." "constructor of constructors." "composer of com- posers." Even clearer is Ps. 394 ff. There Pseudolus servus knows not yet how he is to trick his master, yet he is confident that he will succeed in his purpose (401 ff.). There to some extent the etymological force of poeta is again in Plautus mind. Clearer still are Cur. 592-93 and Cap. 1033. , xt • » a .^r.u It is really impossible to divorce Plautus' use of poeta from Naevius proud appli- cation of the term to himself. May there be in the Plautine passages parody o that application? According to the well-known tradition, the Metelli had ^^own clearly enough in the famous "Dabunt malum Metelli Naevio poetae" the way to effective 150 Charles Knapp Akin to As. 173 ff. is Cap. 998-1000. The avayv6)piv, which sometimes, according to LiddeU and Scott, denotes "a small or bad picture." The name is thus a " redende Namen." In this very play Plautus shows how alive he was to the value of such names, for at 174 ff. he makes Gelasimus explam his own name, and at 242 Gelasimus again says "Nunc Miccotrogus nomine e vero vocor Other places of similar character, noted by me years ago, ^^^^s follows: Ba. 240. 283-85, 362. 687-88. 704; Cap. 724-26; Cur. 414 ff.; Ct^. 466; ^f^; 289, 330. 494. Per. 120, 506. 624-25; Poen. 886; Ps. 229. 585 (see Morris note), 6o3-55. 712. /3b Ru. 657 (if Sonnenschein's note is right) ; St. 630-31 ; True. 77-78a. For a discussion of these passages I may now refer to Dr. C. J. Mendelsohn^ s Studies ^r^ tne ^ord-^-V in Plautus, pp. 8 ff. (Publications of the University of Pennsylvama. Series in Philology and Literature, Vol. XII, No. 2, Philadelphia, 1907). References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 153 Alexandrian innovation, which, by Plautus' time, ''nach der Antwort des Peniculus zu schUessen [145], welche die genannten Stoffe als gelaufige bezeichnet, eine auf italischem Bode weit verbreitete Decorationsweise war.^i Brix-Niemeyer then knew of but^ one representation of the story of Ganymede, on a Praenestine Spiegel- kapsel, ^^wahrend die Entfuhrung des Adonis durch Venus bis jetzt auf erhaltenen Kunstwerken noch nicht nachgewiesen ist." Dumm- ler, in Pauly-Wissowa, s.v. '^ Adonis," I (1894), 391 if., gave no hint of any picture representing the rape of Adonis by Venus. Nor do I see in his account any hint of a confusion of Adonis and Ganymede.^ In the fifth edition of Brix's commentary (1912), Niemeyer reduces the direct comment on Men. 143 to four short lines, as follows: "einfach 'Gemalde an der Wand.' Das etwa, wie Helbig {Rhein. Mus., XXV, 218) glaubt, ein Freskogemalde gemeint ist, liegt nicht in Ausdruck." Now, in point of fact, how can anyone decide whether such an expression as tabulam pidam in pariete refers to ^'Gemalde an der Wand" or to frescoes ? So far as language goes, either could be meant. Fortunately, for the purposes of our discussion, it matters not which Plautus had in mind. I note, finally, that in the last edi- tion Niemeyer completes his note by citing, without discussion, Terence Eu7i. 584 ff., and Plautus Merc. 315, as giving references to paintings— a rather inadequate list of references! Plautus seems, then, here merely to have blundered, whether by accident or design. A deliberate perversion or confusion would be sufficiently humorous. In the Eunuchus we have an exceptionally good passage. Chaerea adulescens, the supposed eunuchus, is describing to Antipho what happened while he was in the house of Thais meretrix. Thais had gone out to dine, taking with her some ancillae (580). Note now 581-89: abducit secum ancillas; paucae, quae circum illam essent, manent noviciae puellae. Continuo haec adornant ut lavet. ^ Adhortor properent. Dum adparatur, virgo in concla\a sedet suspectans tabulam quandam pidam: ibi inerat pictura haec, lovem quo pacto Danaae misisse aiunt quondam in gremium imbrem aureum. 1 On wall-paintings and easel-pictures see Mr. Cecil Smith in Smith, Dictionary of Antiquities^ II, 391. 2 For Venus' love of Adonis see especially Diimmler, in Pauly-Wissowa. I, 391-9^. 154 Charles Knapp Egomet quoque id spectare coepi, et quia consimilem luserat iam olim ille ludum, inpendio magis animus gaudebat mihi, deum sese in hominem convortisse atque in alienas tegulas venisse clanculum per inpluvium fucum factum mulieri. Here the poet himself gives the motive for his reference to the painting. I come now to a particularly interesting passage, As. 746 fP., especially 761 ff.^ Diabolus adulescens has contracted with Cleareta lena for her daughter Philaenium for a year. He has dictated to his parasitus a formal contract, in which, among other things, he has put down leges to govern the girl's conduct. Cf. 756-67: Pa. Alienum | hominem | intro mittat neminem. Quod ilia aut amicum | aut patronum nominet, aut quod ilia amicai amatorem praedicet, fores occlusae | omnibus sint nisi tibi. In foribui^ scribat occupatam | esse se. Aut quod ilia dicat peregre allatam epistulam, ne epistula quidem uUa sit in aedibus nee cerata adeo tabula; et si qua inutilis pictura sit, eam vendat: ni in quadriduo abalienarit, quo aps te argent um acceperit, tuos arbitratus sit, comburas, si velis, ne illi sit cera ubi facere possit litteras. Cerata .... tabula in 763 need mean only a wax tablet for letter- writing; ne epistula .... iabi^^a would then mean " let her not have any letter (received from anyone else) at all in the house or any wax tablet on which to write to another.'' With this cf. vs. 6 of Naevius' account of the flirt: ''cum aho cantat, at tamen alii suo dat digito litteras." But in ''et si qua inutilis .... litteras," 763-67, we clearly have reference to a picture on which there is wax. The reference may be to wax laid over a picture to preserve it or to encaustic painting. For the protection of frescoes from damage by sun or air through the laying on of a mixture of oHve-oil and "Punic wax," see Mr. Cecil Smith, in Smith, Didionanj of Antiquities^ I, 393 A (second full paragraph). Pertinent, too, is the statement in the Encyclopaedia Britannica\ VIII, 186, and that by W. Cave Thomas, Encyclopaedia Britannica'\ IX (1910), 367, that the Greeks used wax to protect their sculptures. See also A. P. Laurie, Greek and Roman Methods of Painting (1910), pp. 105-7. 1 For a discussion of part of this passage, with reference to the word poeta, 748, Bee above, p. 149, n. 2. References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 155 For encaustic painting see Mr. Smith again in Smith, Dictionary of Antiquities^ II, 392 ff., s.v. "pictura," especially the following: The Egyptians made use of preparations of wax at least as early as the 18th dynasty for preserving paintings We find a mention of the encaustic process in Greece in the Ode, of doubtful date, falsely ascribed to Anacreon (6th century B.C.): "Paint me my mistress with her soft black tresses and, if the wax can do it, breathing myrrh!" Otherwise encaustic painting does not seem to have been mentioned in Hterature till the con- quests of Alexander had opened closer communication between the East and the West. The time indicated in these closing words is precisely the time of the New Attic Comedy, the time, in a word, of the plays of Plautus and Terence, except where those plays reflect Roman rather than Greek ideas and conditions.^ Mr. G. B. Brown, in the article "Painting," in the Encyclopaedia Britannica'\ XX, 483, also dates encaustic (in true paintings) from the time of Alexander. On p. 490 he reminds us that "it is known from the evidence of the Erechtheum inscription that the encaustic process was employed for the painting of orna- mental patterns on architectural features of marble buildings " For further discussion of encaustic painting, see A. P. Laurie, Greek and Roman Methods of Painting, pp. 54-68. In neither case, whether Diabolus adulescens had reference to a protective coating of wax or to encaustic painting, could Philaenium have had access to much wax: therein lies the joke.^ We are now ready to sum up. The passages cited show that to the Romans of Plautus' day references to fresco-painting and portrait-painting were intelligible. We may remember that before Plautus' time Q. Fabius had been called Pictor, though in a spirit different from that which animates some of the passages cited in this paper (see Cic. Tusc. i. 4). See above p. 151, n. 2. One other point may be noted. We see that, aside from the references to portrait-painting and to Apelles and Zeuxis, the themes of the paintings, in so far as we have definite themes at 1 For striking evidence of the extent to which the plays of Plautus and Terence do reflect, in some fields at least, the times of Menander, see my paper on Travel in Ancient Times as seen in Plautus and Terence." Classical Philology, II. ^04. 2 Two other passages, less clear than those already treated, may be cited from F\kutu8-Vid. 30-36 and Fragg. 31 ff. (an incomplete passage). In the latter piace painting and sculpture are mentioned together (see above p. 149, n. 1). , 156 Charles Knapp all, come from mythology; we have Venus and Adonis, Jupiter and Danae, Ganymede and the eagle, and scenes from the underworld. The themes are, in a word, exactly what we should associate with Greece, particularly from the time of Alexander. The themes recur in the frescoes of Pompeii, which have been traced back in large part to Alexandria; see Mau-Kelsey, Pompeii, p. 474, and the fine discus- sion, based on Helbig, in Boissier's Rome and Pompeii, as translated by Fisher, pp. 370-419. The themes, once more, are those of certain departments of literature, as represented, e.g., by Ovid; see Boissier, lac, cit} We note further that there is but one passage in Terence bearing directly and unmistakably upon our theme; that passage is, however, one of the best of all those cited in this paper. Here again^ Terence is true to his art ; he will not allow extraneous matter or matter not very clearly connected with his play to work itself into what he writes. The passage in the Eunuchus helps the play wonderfully; it is a sophistical extenuation, by an appeal to the example set by Jupiter himself, of the wrong done by Chaerea adulescens to the girl, a civis Attica.^ In Plautus, again, the specific allusions to painting come from a few plays: from the Asinaria (two passages: 174 ff., 762 ff.), Captivi, Epidicus, Menaechrni, Mercator, Poenulus, and Stichus. The original of the Asinaria was written by Demophilus {As, Prol. 10-12); that of the Mercator by Philemon {Merc. 9-10); that of the Stichus by Menander (see the Didascalia). Some confirmatory evidence can be got from a study of certain words, e.g. {describo), pingo, depingo, pictor, pictura. In some passages given above, notably Poen. 1271, pictor means *' painter" in the highest sense of the term; so, ibid., pingo is used literally of painting as a fine art. So again in As. 174; Ep. 624, 626 (sarcastic) ; 1 For one important meaning of these facts see my paper, "The Originality of Latin Literature," the Classical Journal, III, 306-7. » In writing "again" I have in mind my comment in Classical Philology, II, 5, note, on the scrupulousness of Terence's geography. » As I remarked, in Classical Philology, II, 286, n. 1, end, since in the dvayvil^piffcs the girl in the play usually proves to be ingenua, in fact a civis, the playwrights take paina to assuie us that she has remained casta. References to Painting in Plautus and Terence 157 Men. 143; Merc. 313 (sarcastic), 315 (sarcastic); Vid. 36. Cf. As, 399-402: Me. Qua facie voster Saurea est? si is est, iam scire potero. Li. Macilentis malis, rufulus aliquantum, ventriosus, truculentis oculis, commoda statura, tristi fronte. Me. Non potuit pictor rectius describere ciius formam. Compare Poen. 1111-14 (by itself a less distinctive passage): Ha. Sed earum nutrix qua sit facie mi expedi. Mi. Statura hau magna, corpcre aquilo. Ha. Ipsa east. Mi. Specie venusta, ore atque oculis pernigris. Ha. Formam quidem hercle verbis depinxti probe.^ Other examples of these words show them in more distinctly figurative senses, so that they have no more significance for our purposes than figurative uses of ^' paint," '' portray" would have in such a discussion in connection with any English author. In Mi. 1175 ff. Palaestrio servus is instructing Pleusicles adules- cens to pose as a nauclericus and to come after Philocomasium. Cf. now 1183 ff.: PI. Quid ? ubi ero exornatus quin tu dicis quid facturu' sim ? Pa. Hue venito et matris verbis Philocomasium arcessito, ut, si itura siet Athenas, eat tecum ad portum cito, atque ut iubeat ferri in navem si quid imponi velit: nisi eat, te soluturum esse navim: ventum operam dare. PI. Sati' placet pictura. Mo. 261-62 (the speakers are Philematium meretrix and Scapha nutrix anus) does not help much : Philem. Turn tu igitur cedo purpurissum. So. Non do. Scita tu es quidem. Nova pictura interpolare^ vis opus lepidissimum. Nor does St. 354. Still less important is Poen. 221. In Ps. 146 pingo is used of embroidery or the like. Columbia University 1 Cf. Terence Phor. 268, "Probe honim facta inprudens depinxit senex." 2 See Sonnenschein, ad loc. If interpolis in Mo. 274, and interpolare in Mo. 262. can be connected, through polio, with lino (see lino in Walde^), these two passages become of value for our purposes.