Professional Documents
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Also available from Bloomsbury
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An Introduction to Silius Italicus
and the Punica
John Jacobs
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BLOOMSBURY ACADEMIC
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iv
FILIO CARISSIMO
v
vi
Contents
List of Maps ix
Preface x
Acknowledgments xii
Note on Text/Translation xiii
Note on Bibliography xiv
List of Abbreviations xv
vii
viii Contents
Notes 183
Bibliography 209
Index 257
Maps
ix
Preface
The present volume represents the first of two books on the Roman senator,
consul, orator, and poet Silius Italicus and his Latin historical epic, the Punica,
which I will be publishing with Bloomsbury Academic. In this book, I offer the
first comprehensive introduction in any language to the poet and his poem; in
the companion book, I will likewise offer the first comprehensive introduction in
any language to their reception and their place in the Classical tradition. This
first volume has its (distant) origins in my 2009 Ph.D. dissertation, but also
reflects how my thinking about Silius and the Punica has (I hope) evolved over
the course of the past decade. As Flavian literature and, in particular, Flavian epic
continue to attract more and more attention among both students and scholars,
there is a real need for an accessible overview of the poet and his poem. I hope
that, in attempting to meet that need, I am at least able to garner the epic even
more readers.
I have many students, colleagues, and friends to thank for their advice and
support during the past two decades, especially from the many years spent with
the Punica. First and foremost, I would like to thank my dissertation advisor at
Yale, Chris Kraus, as well as my two readers, Kurt Freudenburg and Bob Cowan.
More recently, I would like to thank the many students, parents, and colleagues
at the Montclair Kimberley Academy who have sustained me as I completed this
project over the past several years. In particular, I would like to thank my
Headmaster, Tom Nammack, as well as my Upper School Head of Campus, Dave
Flocco. Steve Valentine, Upper School Assistant Head of Campus, offered
welcome advice and support at a number of critical junctures. Among other
members of the MKA community, I would especially like to thank my colleagues
David Hessler and Ron Wolfson; Ron, Carole, and David Reading; and my
advisee, Luca Winters. I completed some of the research for this project, and
much of the research for the second project, through the generous assistance
provided by a PAMKA Faculty Trust Grant.
I would not have written this book if my first department chair, trusted
colleague, and valued friend Fred Booth had not invited me to deliver the tenth
annual Father Cotter Memorial Lecture at Seton Hall University in April 2016.
Having the opportunity to speak about single combat in the Punica that
x
Preface xi
afternoon rekindled my desire to write about the epic and to argue for its
importance not only for Flavian literature but also for Classical literature as a
whole. Around the same time, I happened to make contact with Alice Wright at
Bloomsbury. She has supported both books enthusiastically from the beginning,
and I would especially like to thank her, as well as Lily Mac Mahon and Georgina
Leighton, for guiding me through the publishing process. I would also like to
thank the anonymous readers for the press, as well as my copyeditor, Ben Harris,
all of whom made a number of useful and helpful suggestions. Any remaining
errors and infelicities are, of course, my own. I am deeply grateful to my friends
(and first Latin teachers) Hartley and Susan Schearer, as well as to Steve Elgart,
and to my family—to my brother, Michael, and, most of all, to my wife, Kerry—
for their love, for their unflagging interest in my work, and for helping me to
bring this project to fruition.
Acknowledgments
Maps 1–4 are reprinted from Hoyos 2015: xiii–xvi with permission of Oxford
Publishing Limited through PLSclear.
Map 6 is reprinted from Greenhalgh 1975: 141. Every effort has been made to
trace the copyright holders and obtain permission to reproduce this material.
xii
Note on Text/Translation
All Greek and Latin texts are printed as in the relevant volume of the Bibliotheca
Teubneriana or the Oxford Classical Texts unless otherwise noted, apart from
minor changes in orthography. Likewise, all translations of these texts into
English are my own unless otherwise noted.
xiii
Note on Bibliography
xiv
Abbreviations
All abbreviations of Greek authors and titles are those found in LSJ; likewise,
all abbreviations of Latin authors and titles are those found in OLD . All other
abbreviations are those found either in APh or else in OCD 4. I have, in a few
cases, simply used the full title for a periodical.
xv
1 Italy: Third Century bc (Hoyos 2015: xiii).
xvi
2 North Africa during the Punic Wars (Hoyos 2015: xiv).
xvii
xviii
xix
xx
5 Theaters and Major Battles of the Second Punic War (Gabriel 2008: 29).
6 The Theatre of Civil War in ad 69 (Greenhalgh 1975: 141).
xxi
xxii
Introduction: Why Silius?
Just over six hundred years ago, the early Renaissance humanist Poggio
Bracciolini (1380–1459) rediscovered a treasure trove of lost Classical Latin
literature, including, perhaps most famously, Lucretius’ De rerum natura, during
his manuscript-hunting travels while serving as a member of the Roman Curia
at the Council of Constance (1414–18).1 In 1416 or 1417, perhaps at the Abbey
Library of St. Gall, Poggio rediscovered a manuscript containing an historical
epic about the Second Punic War (218–201 bc ) called the Punica, by one Silius
Italicus (c. ad 25–100), a Roman senator, consul, orator, and poet who flourished
under Nero and the Flavians.2 Although this early exemplar, now known as the
codex Sangallensis, has again been lost, two copies of it appear to have been
made, from which derive all of the thirty-two surviving manuscripts.3 There is
also indirect evidence for the existence of a second early exemplar, now known
as the codex Coloniensis, at the Cologne Cathedral Library.4 Louis Carrio
(1547–95) and François Modius (1556–97) report various readings which they
claim to have found in this latter manuscript, but, unfortunately, the original has
yet again been lost.5 In the initial decades following Poggio’s rediscovery, the
Punica attracted the attention of several prominent scholars at the Studium
Urbis in Rome, including Pietro Odo (c. 1420–63), Pomponio Leto (1428–98),
and, perhaps most importantly, Domizio Calderini (1446–78). After having been
lost for more than a millennium, the epic was already well on its way to being
rediscovered by critics as a worthy object of study.6
The editio princeps of the Punica was published in Rome on April 5, 1471,
with a second Roman edition appearing only three weeks later, on April 26.7 By
the end of the century, at least seven more editions had been published, including
that with the first complete commentary, by Pietro Marso (1442–1512).8 Many
more editions, with and without commentary, were published during the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, including an Aldine in 1523, as well as the
1
2 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
the Punica’s structure, language, and themes, in the form of a generally optimistic
reading of the poem as a celebration of Roman triumphalism. The work heralded
the beginning of modern criticism on the epic and remains a touchstone for all
of the scholarship which has followed in its wake. In a wide-ranging and thought-
provoking 1986 article, Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy proposed a more balanced
interpretation which acknowledges both the optimistic and the pessimistic
aspects of the Punica, and which accordingly accounts for its tragedy as well as
its apparent triumphalism.19 In a deceptively brief but profoundly impactful
study published shortly thereafter, in 1993, Hardie advanced a sophisticated and
nuanced reading of the post-Vergilian epics as a whole which reignited critical
interest in Flavian epic, as well as in Flavian literature and the Flavians in
general.20 McGuire’s 1997 monograph on the themes of civil war, tyranny, and
suicide in the Flavian epics has proven particularly influential, especially in the
past decade or so, as more and more scholars have come to listen for both the
positive and the negative voices which speak so powerfully in and through these
poems.21 In another pivotal book, published in 2005, Marks argued for the
immediate relevance of the Punica for its Flavian context and, more specifically,
argued that Silius fashions the Roman hero Scipio as a role model for the emperor
Domitian.22 Tipping has complicated this attractive historicizing interpretation
by examining both the positive and the negative aspects of the Carthaginian
hero Hannibal and his Roman counterparts, Fabius and Scipio, while Stocks has
offered a study devoted exclusively to Hannibal as an intentional counterweight
to the focus on Scipio in Marks.23 Last but certainly not least, a plethora of recent
essay collections on both the Punica and Flavian epic as a whole has played a
leading role in bringing all of these works to the attention of a much wider
audience, especially the many volumes edited by Augoustakis.24 In this book, I
strive to demonstrate how a sustained engagement with this ever-growing body
of scholarship can shape and inform our understanding of Silius Italicus and his
Punica on their own terms and in their various contexts.25
There are three essential questions which lay at the core of this scholarship and,
accordingly, this book: who is Silius Italicus, what is the Punica, and what is the
Punica about? As we will see below in more detail, Chapter 1 addresses the first
of these three questions, Chapter 2 the second, and Chapters 3–6 the third. In
4 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
presents the Second Punic War as a total war for hegemony in the Mediterranean
Sea, a multigenerational cosmic conflict in which Rome proves its virtus in order
to emerge victorious over Carthage.29 Von Albrecht identifies “the walls of Rome”
(moenia Romae) as the central theme and, in particular, Hannibal’s mission to
scale the walls and sack the city.30 The specter of Hannibal looms large throughout
the epic and remains ingrained in the Roman psyche forever after.31 Eventually,
however, Roman fides triumphs over Carthaginian perfidia in an affirmation of
the existing order.32 At its core, the Punica is about competing (re)constructions
of collective memory, about the commemoration of the Second Punic War and
its implications for the subsequent course of Roman history and Roman culture,
especially for the fraught transition from Republic to Empire and the concomitant
shift from foreign war (bellum externum) to civil war (bellum internum).33 Silius
“looks back” (respicio) to the fall of the Republic in order to make sense of the
rise of the Empire, and, in doing so, he transforms his narrative of the Second
Punic War into a totalizing vision of Romanitas which transcends the boundaries
of space and time, of an imperium sine fine (Verg. Aen. 1.279), and yet also of an
empire always on the brink of (self-)destruction.34 Silius strives not simply to
bridge the gap between the Aeneid and the Bellum civile, but even to outdo his
predecessors in epic (as well as in historiography) by presenting the Second
Punic War as a synecdoche for everything between the fall of Troy and the future
fall of Rome. The Punica is about Flavian Rome as much as it is about the Second
Punic War, and Silius stocks his narrative with characters drawn from all eras of
Roman history.35 Above and beyond that, the rise and fall of the Scipiones
(Rome’s Republican “dynasty”) look ahead to the later rise and fall of the Julio-
Claudians and the Flavians. By transforming the Second Punic War into this
synecdoche for the idea of Rome as a whole, Silius makes the conflict and, in
particular, the battle of Cannae, the defining moment in Roman history and
Roman culture. The poet identifies Cannae as the turning point of both the war
and the narrative, and the poet uses Cannae to connect the siege of Saguntum
and the battle of Zama, as well as to connect the fates of Carthage and Rome.
More generally, the Punica is about the relationship between the individual and
the community, about the place of the individual in the family, the city, and even
the cosmos. Silius invites the reader to contemplate the fate of all individuals and
all communities by associating the falls of Carthage and Rome with various
mythological and historical archetypes, as well as by problematizing the status of
the epic’s hero(es). Put simply, Silius challenges the reader to make sense of
Rome’s past, present, and future, and the Punica poses far more questions than it
ever seeks to answer.
Introduction 7
As we have seen, the Punica has found many willing readers in the six hundred
years since the epic was first rediscovered in manuscript by Poggio, and this
audience of supportive critics has diligently labored to reintegrate the poem into
mainstream Classical scholarship. As we have also seen, Silius himself read quite
voraciously, far beyond the generic boundaries of historiography and epic.36 It is
only fitting that he has, in turn, been read by a host of writers and artists beyond
the disciplinary boundaries of the Classics: where scholars of an earlier
generation might have referred to this phenomenon as Silius’ place in the
Classical “tradition,” most scholars today would prefer to describe it as Silius’
place in Classical “reception.” (I myself see great value in retaining both terms,
with “tradition” placing more emphasis on the role of the “source” and “reception”
more emphasis on the role of the “target” in the shared construction of meaning.)
In what follows, I briefly introduce three very different (and virtually unstudied)
examples of this complex phenomenon which powerfully illustrate the profound
and pervasive influence which Silius Italicus and his Punica have had in a variety
of ways on literature and the arts in general.37
First and foremost, we find traces (and very often much more than traces) of
the Punica throughout the epics of the Renaissance and Early Modern Europe,
both those written in Latin and those written in the vernacular languages. One
such epic, the R(h)aeteis (c. 1550), by Simon Lemm (c. 1511–50), was composed
(in Latin) less than a century after the initial publication of the Punica and,
interestingly enough, not far at all from St. Gall, where Poggio may have made
his initial rediscovery of the epic.38 The structure, language, and themes of the
R(h)aeteis reflect a deep and meaningful engagement with those of the Punica, a
clear indication that the Punica had already regained its rightful place in the
canon. Like the Punica, the R(h)aeteis furnishes a selective account of the major
events of a pivotal conflict: in this case, nine books on the Swiss or Swabian War
of 1499 (fought between the Old Swiss Confederation and the Swabian League),
from the outbreak of hostilities, inspired by Juno, to the Peace of Basel (September
22, 1499), when the Swiss effectively won their independence from the Holy
Roman Empire.39 On the one hand, Lemm grounds his narrative in that of
the contemporary chronicles (much like Silius uses Livy); on the other, Lemm
transforms history into epic by incorporating traditional elements like the
extended description of the shield of the epic’s hero, Benedikt Fontana (c. 1450–
99), who sacrificed himself in order to ensure victory for his men at the climactic
8 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
battle of Calven (May 22, 1499). In the only extended study of the poem’s many
sources, Michel rightly underscores the importance of the Punica and catalogs a
number of parallel passages.40 Nevertheless, much work remains to be done both
in charting the obvious influence of the Punica on the R(h)aeteis and in analyzing
why Lemm looks to Silius so often throughout his epic. Indeed, the R(h)aeteis
offers compelling evidence for how later poets were able to transfer an optimistic
reading of the Punica and, in particular, of Scipio to their own celebration of
virtually any other ascendant hero in any other major (or even minor) conflict.
As such, the R(h)aeteis instantiates a process of poetic reappropriation which
plays out time and again elsewhere in the Neo-Latin historical epics written both
before and after Lemm.41
The Punica has exerted an even more wide-ranging and long-lasting influence
in Spain, especially on the literary tradition on the fall of Saguntum, the event
which marked the beginning of the Second Punic War. Together with the accounts
in the ancient historiographers, Silius’ narrative of the tragic fall of Saguntum in
Punica 1–2, by far the longest ancient account of the siege, has inspired several
creative interpretations of this defining moment in the city’s history over the
course of the past five hundred years.42 Fittingly, amid the opulence and luxury of
the Spanish Golden Age, the image of Saguntum lying in ruins served as a topos,
especially in lyric poetry, for the mortality both of heroes and of the cities for
which they stand and fall.43 Two very different epics composed during this same
era likewise attest to the prominence of the Saguntum theme. One, La Saguntina
(1589), written in Spanish by Lorenzo de Zamora (d. 1614), consists of nineteen
cantos on the siege which read very much like other Renaissance romance epics,
with their elegant interweaving of the seemingly antithetical concepts of love
and war.44 The other, the Saguntineida (c. 1702), written in Latin by José Manuel
Miñana (1671–1730), consists of a mere 415 verses in dactylic hexameter,
suffused with the language and atmosphere of the Punica, in which we can
discern the bare outline of the poem which might have been, if it had not been
left unfinished at the time of its author’s death.45 Together with the many
references in lyric, these two epics furnish intriguing evidence for how later poets
were attracted not only to an optimistic reading of the Punica, but also to a
pessimistic one, with its poignant emphasis on the common fate which awaits
both the victors and the vanquished in the end. Indeed, two plays entitled La
destrucción de Sagunto (one, by Gaspar Zavala y Zamora (b. 1762), premiered in
1787 and was later published in 1800; the other, by Enrique Palos y Navarro
(1749–1814), was staged c. 1785 but only published in 2015) both read as if they
had been written to commemorate the decline of Spain which inevitably followed
Introduction 9
the peak of the Golden Age.46 The image of Saguntum lying in ruins, especially as
depicted in the Punica, continued to hold the Spanish imagination, as we can see
most vividly in two historical novels of the following century, Las ruinas de
Sagunto (1845), by Isidoro Villarroya (1800–55), and Sónnica la cortesana (1901),
by Vicente Blasco Ibáñez (1867–1928).47 More recently, a scholar and a poet,
Francisco Sánchez-Castañer and José María Pemán, collaborated on a new
tragedy entitled La destrucción de Sagunto which was staged in the ruins of the
ancient theater of Saguntum itself on June 8, 1954, long before the controversial
restoration work of the 1980s and 1990s, and then published later that same
year.48 Through all these many iterations of the Saguntum theme, the narrative of
the fall of the city in the Punica has figured prominently, imbued with the pathos
of this climactic moment in history and myth.
The Punica has remained immediately relevant to literature and the arts in
general even just in the last decade, but perhaps in something of an unexpected
manifestation. In La Seconda Guerra Tritonide (2012), Salvatore Conte transforms
the worldview of the Punica into a vision of a dystopian future in the form of a
feminist science fantasy novel.49 As its name implies, the term “science fantasy”
refers to a mixed genre which combines elements of science fiction and fantasy,
two genres which themselves can be difficult to distinguish from each other.
Scholars have recently shown great interest in the reception of the Greek and
Latin Classics in these two parent genres, but La Seconda Guerra Tritonide has,
to my knowledge, not yet garnered any attention.50 The novel depicts the final,
desperate confrontation between a sterile and corrupt Earth of the not-too-
distant future and the recrudescence of the (Jungian) feminine principle, the
feminine anima to the masculine animus, incarnate in the three women who
drive the action: Zenobia, Imilce, and Asbite, the latter two of whom (in Latin,
Imilce and Asbyte) appear in the Punica and nowhere else in ancient literature.
The back blurb explicitly describes La Seconda Guerra Tritonide as an epic novel
inspired by the Punica, and scholars have, indeed, offered feminist readings of
the ancient epic, making this an interesting case of scholarship and reception
complementing each other.51 Furthermore, as we will see, Silius has a certain
predilection for all types of virtual history, from counterfactual history to
alternate history to future history, and so the Punica, perhaps surprisingly, lends
itself well to such a treatment as science fantasy.52 As this final example makes
especially clear, the Punica has found far more readers both inside and outside
the Classics than most scholars have realized, and all of these readings contribute
to our reading of the epic on its own, in its various contemporary contexts, and
in its later reception.
10 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
By this point, I hope that I have offered a convincing argument for why Silius
Italicus and his Punica matter, why others have found the epic worth their time
and energy, and why we should want to know the poet and his poem, too. In
order to give some sense of what the experience of reading the Punica can be
like, I want to begin with a thought experiment which is designed to illustrate
how the epic might have been received among its contemporaries in Flavian
Rome.53
Imagine a man born of a well-to-do but non-patrician family in New York
City in 1938, right before Hitler’s invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939 and
the outbreak of World War II (1939–45). The man grows up during the war and
its aftermath (that is, the beginning of the Cold War), goes on to college, earns
his law degree, and is elected to the United States Senate during the turbulent
year of 1968 at the earliest possible age of 30. Never a war hero (he was too young
to have served in the Korean War (1950–3), too old to serve in Vietnam) the man
commits himself instead to a life of politics, rising to the height of his power and
prestige during the Watergate Affair (1972–4) and thereafter remaining in office
until 1980. Not without scandals of his own, the man retires from politics in
order to pursue a literary life and eventually leaves the turmoil of Washington,
DC behind altogether for the self-indulgent pleasures of a well-appointed
country retreat. The ex-senator becomes a committed writer in retirement and
labors unremittingly for the next forty years or so on his magnum opus, an
historical epic novel, in the manner of James Michener, about the American
Revolutionary War (1775–83). Meanwhile, the rest of the country endeavors to
navigate the troubled waters of the following two decades (including the
supposed end of the Cold War), before suffering the devastating losses in the
terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 which set the course for the War on
Terror, the defining conflict of the twenty-first century. After a long and celebrated
life in politics and literature, the man dies in 2018 as the last surviving ex-senator
who had been in office during Watergate. The man’s novel, entitled Britannica,
although left incomplete at the time of its author’s death, is published to relatively
little fanfare and meets with a tepid reception among critics. At one level, the ex-
senator offers a traditional narrative of the conflict with the usual people, places,
and events, albeit with a few surprises and a few idiosyncrasies, perhaps even
a few real or apparent inconsistencies in comparison with historical records
(themselves subject to debate, of course). At another level, he endows both the
war and the narrative with a heightened significance by introducing God Himself
Introduction 11
into the novel as a direct participant in the affairs of mortals. At yet another level,
the ex-senator transforms his account of the American Revolutionary War into
an account of the entirety of the country’s history (past, present, and future) by
incorporating many references and allusions to the three English Civil Wars
(1642–51) and the French and Indian War (1754–63), as well as to the War of
1812 (1812–15) and the American Civil War (1861–5), among other conflicts.
Perhaps most intriguingly of all, the ex-senator devotes special attention to
the three Yankee-Pennamite Wars (1769–99), fought between settlers from
Connecticut (the “Yankees”) and Pennsylvania (the “Pennamites”), even going so
far as to make the infamous battle of Wyoming, fought on July 3, 1778 and the
aftermath of the battle, on July 4, two years to the day after the signing of the
Declaration of Independence, the turning point of the American Revolutionary
War. In elaborating this totalizing interpretation of the war and its place in
American history, the ex-senator appears to argue that the seeds of all future
strife were sown at the time of the country’s birth. The resulting product is a
densely packed literary tour de force of extraordinary breadth and vision which
makes great demands even on the ideal reader who possesses a complete mastery
of American (and British) history, culture, and literature.
Now, I certainly do not intend to advance the claim that this thought
experiment provides anything more than a rough approximation to the
circumstances surrounding the composition, publication, and contemporary
reception of the Punica, so far removed from us in both time and place, since
both the times and the places have changed so much in the past two thousand
years. I have not sought to map all of the details of the life of my imaginary
author onto the details of the life of the real Silius Italicus (insofar as we think we
know them), nor have I sought to represent the imaginary Britannica as some
sort of translation or even adaptation of the Punica. Instead, I have sought to
suggest a number of loose parallels between the two authors and their respective
works in order to provide a new angle from which to approach a reading,
especially a first-time reading, of the ancient epic. I have described the three
narrative levels of the Britannica as such in order to give a better sense of the
three comparable narrative levels of the Punica. So, at one level, Silius offers a
traditional narrative of the Second Punic War with the usual people, places, and
events, albeit with some apparent innovations on that existing tradition. At
another level, he elevates the importance of both the war and the narrative by
reintroducing the traditional divine machinery so crucial to the theology and
theodicy of Vergil’s Aeneid, but also so notably absent from Lucan’s Bellum civile
(perhaps replaced by Julius Caesar as the one true god). Finally, at yet another
12 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
level, Silius transforms his account of the Second Punic War into an account of
Rome in toto (Monarchy, Republic, and Empire) by incorporating many
references and allusions to people, places, and events from across the entire
breadth of the city’s rich history, culture, and literature, from the civil wars
between Marius (and his son) and Sulla (88–81 bc ) and Caesar and Pompey
(49–45 bc ), to the civil war of ad 68–9 and the fall of Jerusalem in ad 70. Silius
appears to construct this unique version, and unique vision, of the Second Punic
War in order to argue for the centrality of the battle of Cannae as the turning
point not only of the war and the narrative, but also of Roman history and
Roman culture in general, as well as to argue for the importance of the subsequent
fall of Carthage for the anticipated future fall of Rome through civil war. All of
that can be frankly quite disorienting for a reader of the Punica to process, much
less comprehend, especially a first-time reader, since the epic searches for an
ideal reader even further removed from the here and now, one who possesses a
complete mastery not of American (and British) but of ancient Roman (and
Carthaginian, and Greek) history, culture, and literature.
So, then, how do we approach a reading, especially a first-time reading, of the
Punica once we recognize and accept the reality of the spatial and temporal
chasm which separates us from the circumstances of its composition, publication,
and contemporary reception? On the one hand, whether we read the poem in
the original Latin or in translation, we are more likely than not to read the work
silently to ourselves, whereas we know for a fact that Silius gave public and
private recitations of his work-in-progress in order to solicit feedback from
friends and fellow poets.54 On the other hand, even if we simulate the
circumstances of this original performance (in many ways, the ancient equivalent
of modern publication) by reading the poem aloud, we are likely to stumble at
various points depending on our relative familiarity or lack thereof with the text
on its own (that is, as Latin, if we are reading the original) and with the text in its
various historical, cultural, and literary contexts.55 Indeed, with each rereading of
the Punica, the reader is bound to discover something new which is at least
potentially relevant to an understanding and an appreciation of the work as a
whole. This process of reading and rereading the Punica, as well as the rest of the
ancient literary canon to which it belongs, entails grappling with the productive
tension between tradition and originality. This tension between old and new
lies at the very heart of contemporary literary theory about intratextuality,
extratextuality, and intertextuality, and it will accordingly loom large in my close
reading of the Punica across Chapters 3 and 4.56 As the prefixes of these three
terms imply, the first is concerned with what is inside the text, the second with
Introduction 13
what is outside the text, and the third with the relationship between two or more
texts (for example, the relationship between the Punica and Livy’s Ab urbe
condita or Vergil’s Aeneid). More broadly speaking, given its astute literary and
historical self-consciousness, the Punica seemingly invites a close examination
through the lens of New Historicism, Cultural Poetics, and Cultural Materialism,
that is, a reading grounded in “the historicity of texts and the textuality of
history.”57 Classicists have certainly made a number of contributions to this
particular strand of theory, but much work remains to be done, especially in
applying more recent developments in the theory to the evaluation of both
historiographical texts and works in other major genres like epic, and so this
theoretical framework will largely inform the extended treatment of the themes
of the Punica which spans Chapters 5 and 6.58 Ultimately, by applying this
selected set of critical perspectives to Silius Italicus and his Punica, I hope to
guide the reader, especially the first-time reader, of the epic through an informed
and informative engagement with the poet and his poem.
This book consists of the present introduction, six chapters, and a conclusion. I
have written the volume to be read linearly from beginning to end, but there are
certainly ways one might engage with its contents in a non-linear fashion. First
and foremost, this introduction can be read as a stand-alone chapter which
provides the reader with the essential information about Silius Italicus and
his Punica. A reader already familiar with the poet and his poem can read this
introduction along with the conclusion in order to understand how I approach
my own reading of the epic and then see that process of reading and interpretation
in action. I have written the six chapters which constitute the core of the book in
three two-chapter pairs. Chapters 1 and 2 offer a more in-depth presentation of
the essential information about Silius Italicus and his Punica; Chapters 3 and 4
present a linear reading of the epic itself book-by-book; Chapters 5 and 6
examine the thematic infrastructure of the text in its various historical, cultural,
and literary contexts. A reader who is unfamiliar with the poet and his poem can
profitably read the epic itself (whether in the original Latin or in translation)
either before or after reading Chapters 3 and 4. I think of the conclusion as an
invitation to read the Punica (preferably in Latin) and then to integrate that
reading (and, I hope, subsequent rereadings) into an overall understanding and
appreciation of the work’s place in the Classical canon. To conclude this
14 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
introduction, I outline in greater detail the contents of the six core chapters of
the book in order to prepare the reader for the journey which lies ahead.
Chapters 1 and 2 tackle the interrelated questions “Who is Tiberius Catius
Asconius Silius Italicus?” (Chapter 1) and “What is the Punica?” (Chapter 2).
Both chapters are intended to offer the reader comprehensive presentations of
the existing evidence in light of current trends in Classical scholarship, along
with some new interpretive ideas and suggestions. In Chapter 1, I begin with an
overview of the historical, cultural, and literary context for Silius Italicus, namely,
the reigns of the Julio-Claudians and the Flavians (31 bc –ad 96), Rome’s first
two Imperial dynasties. I continue with an analysis of the various epigraphic,
numismatic, and archeological, as well as literary, testimonia, with a special focus
on the evidence in Martial, Pliny the Younger, and Tacitus. I conclude with a new
reading of Pliny Epistula 3.7 (on the death of Silius Italicus) as itself a reading
of the Punica, and, in particular, a reading of Silius Italicus as a Xerxes-like
or Hannibal-like figure who outlived, and outlasted, his peers. In Chapter 2, I
similarly begin with an overview of the historical, cultural, and literary context
for the Punica, namely, the era of the three Punic Wars (264–146 bc ), the defining
conflicts of the Middle Republic. I continue with a discussion about the
commemoration of the Second Punic War in Classical literature and, more
specifically, about the relationship of the Punica to the historiographical and epic
traditions about the conflict. I devote particular attention to the relationship
between the Punica and Livy’s Ab urbe condita, as well as to that between the
Punica and Vergil’s Aeneid. I conclude with a brief analysis of the language and
style of the Punica, especially Silius’ expert manipulation of sound and sense in
service of structure and theme. Together, these two opening chapters equip a
reader new to the poet and his poem with everything needed for a first-time
reading of the epic.
Chapters 3 and 4 undertake a sustained close reading of the Punica book-by-
book, with Chapter 3 covering the narrative of the war from the siege of
Saguntum to the battle of Cannae (Punica 1–10), and chapter 4, the narrative
from the aftermath of Cannae to the battle of Zama (Punica 11–17). In
Chapter 3, I begin with an overview of the various structural models which
scholars have proposed for the Punica, and I suggest a few new ways to group
together the books of the poem. I continue with a close reading of the epic’s
proem (Punica 1.1–20) as an example for how to read and interpret the work as
a whole. Thereafter, I proceed through Punica 1–5, the narrative from the siege
of Saguntum to the battle of Lake Trasimene, and then through Punica 6–10, the
narrative from the aftermath of Lake Trasimene to the battle of Cannae. For each
Introduction 15
book, I provide a detailed summary of its contents; then, for each group of books,
I provide a sense of its place in the epic. I conclude with a close reading of the
epic’s famous turning point (Punica 10.657–8), a mere two verses which, in the
eyes of many scholars, essentially summarize the work as a whole. In Chapter 4,
I similarly begin with a close reading of the epic’s medial proem (Punica
11.1–27) as an example for how to read and interpret the beginnings and ends of
books in the poem, as well as for how to assess the thorny question of the poem’s
middle(s). Thereafter, I continue with the reading of Punica 11–15, from the
aftermath of Cannae to the battle of the Metaurus River, followed by the reading
of Punica 16–17, from the aftermath of the Metaurus River to the battle of Zama.
In particular, I linger over the closing verses of the epic with a close reading of
Scipio’s triumph (Punica 17.625–54), in which I argue that Silius manipulates
any sense of closure by transforming this climactic moment into the (apparent)
end of both the war and the narrative, as well as, at the same time, the beginning
of the end, the beginning of Rome’s march from foreign war to civil war. I
conclude with a brief narratological analysis of the Punica through which I strive
to give the reader some idea of what the process of reading the epic is like.
Chapters 5 and 6 address the difficult, and ultimately unanswerable, question
“What is the Punica about?” and, accordingly, build on the reading of the epic
elaborated across Chapters 3 and 4. In Chapter 5, I begin with a contextualizing
discussion about the fraught relationship in both history and myth between
heroes and the cities for which they stand and fall, and I offer some initial
thoughts on how this all plays out in the Punica. I explore how Silius interweaves
the themes of single combat and decapitation across the arc of the poem, all in
preparation for the long-anticipated single combat between Hannibal and Scipio
. . . which never happens. I then examine how Silius casts the Second Punic War
as a new Gigantomachy, a new Trojan War, and a new Gallic sack, all in order to
universalize his narrative of the conflict as well as to transform it into a broader
meditation on the relationship between the fall of Carthage and the anticipated
future fall of Rome. Thereafter, I conclude by considering the special case of
Marcellus, the counterfactual hero who, had he not died prematurely, might have
brought both the war and the narrative to a (different) close before Scipio’s rise
to power. In Chapter 6, I similarly begin with a contextualizing discussion about
how Silius connects the era of the Second Punic War with that of the Flavians in
the Punica. I then undertake an analysis of the epic’s two major organizing
themes, the curse of Dido and the metus hostilis, which together define the terms
of the grand cultural narrative behind the transition from Republic to Empire,
from foreign war to civil war, around the turning point of Cannae. I trace the
16 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
evolution of the curse of Dido theme, and I argue that Silius seeks to “correct” the
existing tradition by claiming that Hannibal does, indeed, fulfill the curse
through his own suicide a generation after the end of the Second Punic War in
183 bc . I likewise trace the evolution of the metus hostilis theme, and I argue that
Silius also seeks to “correct” the existing tradition by moving the turning point
back from the fall of Carthage in 146 bc to the battle of Cannae in 216 bc .
Thereafter, I explore how Silius ties these themes together in order to advance his
overall claim about the role of the Second Punic War in the fraught transition
from Republic to Empire, from foreign war to civil war, by presenting the conflict
as a synecdoche for everything between the fall of Troy and the future fall of
Rome. I conclude with a comparison between Scipio’s triumph after his victory
at Zama and three related events from the era of the Flavians: the fall of the
Capitol and the destruction of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus during
the civil war of ad 68–9; the fall of the Temple of Jerusalem and Titus’ triumph
in ad 70; and Domitian’s triumphs over the Chatti in ad 83 and the Dacians in
ad 86. Together, these two closing chapters provide both a balanced overview of
existing readings of the Punica and a new reading aimed at pushing scholarship
in a new direction through a more holistic interpretation of the epic.
1
Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus1 was born c. ad 25, likely in northern
Italy, and died c. ad 100, likely at one of his villas on the Bay of Naples. Silius was
a Roman senator, consul, orator, and poet who lived during the final stages of the
fraught transition from the Republic to the Empire: from the middle of the reign
of the Julio-Claudian emperors (31 bc –ad 68) to the Year of the Four Emperors
(ad 68–9), and then, after that long year of civil war, from the reign of the Flavian
emperors (ad 69–96) to the beginning of the reign of the Five Good Emperors
(ad 96–180). This was undoubtedly one of the most tumultuous periods in
Roman history and a time of great change in Rome, as well as in the Roman
world at large. The violent and ultimately irrevocable transition from Republic to
Empire manifested itself most visibly in the concomitant shift from foreign war
(bellum externum) to civil war (bellum internum). Indeed, many later Romans,
and many modern scholars, have located the beginning of this process in the end
of the three Punic Wars (264–146 bc ) and, specifically, in the fall of Carthage (as
well as Corinth) in the fateful year of 146 bc . Rome’s rise to hegemony over the
Mediterranean put the city not only on the path to empire, but also on the path
to Empire, the imperium Romanum in both senses of the term.2 Various internal
conflicts, from the agitations of the Gracchi (133–121 bc ) to the Social War (91–
88 bc ), culminated in three rounds of full-scale civil war, between Marius (and
his son) and Sulla (88–81 bc ), Caesar and Pompey (49–45 bc ), and Octavian
(the future Augustus) and Mark Antony (42–31 bc ). These three gladiatorial
bouts between rival claimants to a nonexistent throne marked successive stages
in the steady degradation of the consulship and the seemingly inevitable return
to monarchy. Fittingly, Caesar’s conquest of Gaul (58–50 bc ) during this century
of civil war likewise marked the last great foreign war of the Republic, when the
17
18 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Romans exorcised their Gallic demons only to turn their swords against each
other and then themselves in the suicide of civil war which followed Caesar
across the Rubicon.
The assassination of Caesar on the Ides of March (March 15) in 44 bc
inaugurated the final phase of this transition from Republic to Empire,
culminating in Octavian’s victory over Antony and Cleopatra at the battle of
Actium in 31 bc . The transition from Caesar to Octavian functioned as a
homology for the larger shift from Republic to Empire and laid the foundation
for the dynastic principle in Rome.3 Through the progressive consolidation of
various traditional, and non-traditional, powers, Octavian gradually strengthened
his position as the princeps (first citizen), rather than making any bold, and
potentially unsuccessful, claim to outright supremacy. That said, by adopting the
new name of Imperator Caesar Divi filius Augustus (Emperor Caesar son of the
Divine [Julius Caesar] Augustus), he also transformed himself from a mere
mortal into an abstract idea(l) and, ultimately, into a divine being (divus) in his
own right.4 By the time of his death in ad 14, Augustus had likewise transformed
Rome and the rest of the Roman world by sparking a cultural revolution which,
primarily through literature and the arts, radically redefined what it meant to be
Roman and, in doing so, paved the way for the progressive consolidation of both
the empire and, once again, the Empire.5 The line of Julio-Claudian emperors,
Rome’s first imperial dynasty, thereafter continued with the reigns of Tiberius
(r. 14–37), Caligula (r. 37–41), Claudius (r. 41–54), and Nero (r. 54–68). With
each successive emperor, the Republic and, in particular, the circumstances
surrounding the fall of the Republic faded further and further into the past, as
the Empire became entrenched in every aspect of Roman culture. At the same
time, the specters of Caesar and Augustus continued to loom large long after
their res gestae (deeds and accomplishments) had made the fraught transition
from history to memory. In many ways, the reign of Nero marked a return to the
heady days of the reign of Augustus: like Augustus, Nero patronized literature
and the arts in support of the ongoing cultural revolution.6 All of this came to an
abrupt end, however, when Nero, faced with growing opposition both in Rome
and in the provinces, committed suicide in ad 68, thereby unleashing a new
wave of civil strife. This was the world of Silius, who was born and raised during
the reigns of Tiberius and Caligula, and who entered the Senate and held the
consulship during the reigns of Claudius and Nero. In fact, Silius was the last
consul appointed by Nero, and so there is no doubt that Nero’s suicide had a
profound impact on Silius and on the subsequent course of both his public and
his private life.
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 19
The Year of the Four Emperors (ad 68–9) marked perhaps the most important
turning point in the history of the Empire, when Rome faced a stark choice
between seemingly incessant civil war and the apparent stability of monarchical
rule.7 In relatively quick succession, four rival claimants (Galba, Otho, Vitellius,
and Vespasian) were proclaimed emperor, whether by their soldiers, the Senate,
or both, and all, except Vespasian, marched on Rome to validate their claim.
Galba was the first to be recognized as emperor, on June 9, 68: he ruled for seven
months, until he was assassinated in the Roman Forum and then decapitated on
January 15, 69 by supporters of Otho in the Praetorian Guard (the emperor’s
personal bodyguard). After a brief reign of only three months, Otho committed
suicide on April 17, 69, following his loss to Vitellius’ forces at the first battle of
Bedriacum. Vitellius was subsequently recognized as emperor: he ruled for eight
months, until he lost to Vespasian’s forces under the command of M. Antonius
Primus at the second battle of Bedriacum and was later assassinated (and
perhaps decapitated) in Rome. A war-weary Senate hailed Vespasian as emperor
on December 21, 69, although Vespasian himself backdated his accession to July
1, when he was initially proclaimed emperor by the legions in Egypt under Ti.
Julius Alexander, followed soon thereafter by the legions in Judaea. Through it
all, the events of ad 68–9 had left an indelible mark not only on the Roman
psyche but also on the physical city. At the climax of the fighting between the
supporters of Vitellius and those of Vespasian, the Capitol itself was set ablaze,
and the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus burned to the ground. The image
of Roman soldiers trekking over the Alps into Italy, marching on the walls of
their own city, and ascending the heights of the Capitol resurrected memories of
the Gallic sack of 390 bc and of Hannibal’s march(es) on Rome during the
Second Punic War, not to mention the many marches on the city during the civil
wars of the Late Republic. In a sense, the self-inflicted defeats of the civil wars
subverted the hard-fought triumphs of the foreign wars. Silius himself witnessed
all of the destruction firsthand, since he played a pivotal role in the negotiations
which eventually brought the fighting to an end and evidently ingratiated himself
with the new emperor, Vespasian, despite having been an ally of Vitellius earlier
in the conflict.
Vespasian (r. 69–79) arrived in Rome the following year, in ad 70, and
inaugurated a series of reforms aimed at restoring stability and improving public
morals. In doing so, Vespasian intentionally cast himself in the mold of Augustus
in order to establish what would later become Rome’s second imperial dynasty.8
That same year, his older son, Titus, captured Jerusalem after a lengthy siege and
razed the Second Temple to the ground, marking a turning point in the Jewish
20 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
War (ad 66–74), the first of three such conflicts.9 Titus subsequently entered
Rome in triumph in ad 71, a moment commemorated by the construction of
the Temple of Peace and, later, the Arch of Titus.10 For Romans eager to put the
Year of the Four Emperors behind them, the fall of Jerusalem and, especially, the
fall of the Second Temple inspired hopes of other future conquests; in reality,
however, the war continued until the fall of Masada through mass suicide in ad
73. Regardless, Vespasian wisely capitalized on the zeal for peace at home through
war abroad by crafting the narrative of this new “Pax Flavia” in imitation of the
earlier Pax Augusta. At his death in ad 79, Vespasian bestowed the Empire upon
Titus. The brief reign of Titus (r. 79–81) was punctuated by two major events in
Roman history: the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in ad 79, which destroyed Pompeii,
Herculaneum, and other settlements in the vicinity; and the opening of the
Flavian Amphitheater, better known as the Colosseum, in ad 80, which, in many
ways, became the symbol of the Roman Empire. At his death in ad 81, Titus was
succeeded by his younger brother, Domitian, the third and final emperor of the
dynasty. While Domitian (r. 81–96) continued many of the policies of his father
and brother (both now divi), he also strengthened his grip on power by
transforming the principate into a divine monarchy with himself at its head as
(perhaps) dominus et deus (lord and god).11 Accordingly, Domitian promoted
the imperial cult and restored the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus. In an
attempt at recapturing the ancient glory of the Republic, Domitian embarked on
a number of foreign military campaigns, against the Chatti, in Britain, and
against the Dacians, but with varying levels of success. Much like Nero, the final
Julio-Claudian emperor, Domitian patronized literature and the arts; also much
like Nero, Domitian faced growing opposition to his rule, ultimately leading to
his assassination.12 Through it all, Silius continued to advance his remarkable
career, serving as proconsul in Asia during the reign of Vespasian (probably ad
77/8) and afterwards returning to Rome as one of the city’s leading senators.
Around this time, if not before, Silius also began his career as a poet and became
a regular fixture at recitationes, perhaps as a part of Domitian’s cultural program.
Like the death of Nero, the death of Domitian marked another important
turning point in the Early Empire, when Rome teetered on the brink of another
round of civil war.13 Accordingly, the Senate immediately declared the aged and
childless Nerva (r. 96–8) emperor in an attempt at averting the threat of another
relapse into internecine conflict by handing over the reins of power to someone
who would rule with a steady hand. As the first of a series of rulers who would
later be called the Five Good Emperors, Nerva established a new dynastic
principle with his adoption of Trajan as his designated successor upon his
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 21
(natural) death. Casting himself in the mold of Augustus and Vespasian, Trajan
(r. 98–117), hailed as optimus princeps (best emperor) by the Senate, inaugurated
an ambitious program in his domestic and foreign policy which brought the
imperium Romanum to the height of its peace and prosperity. This complex
process of expansion and consolidation, politically and economically, as well as
socially and culturally, continued during the reigns of Hadrian (r. 117–38),
Antoninus Pius (r. 138–61), and Marcus Aurelius (r. 161–80). Although the cycle
of foreign war and civil war continued during this transition from the Early
Empire to the High Empire (and, of course, beyond that), Rome was simply
different after the death of Marcus Aurelius: the fraught transition from Republic
to Empire, once a highly charged moment in Roman history, had essentially
become a fixed memory, a faded piece of the larger cultural fabric. After a long
and distinguished public life, Silius retired to Campania in the aftermath of the
death of Domitian and did not return to Rome again; suffering from an unknown
terminal illness, he committed suicide by starvation early in the reign of Trajan.
Silius’ passing marked the end of an era since, as the last of the Neronian
consulars to die, he stood, Janus-like, poised between (Late) Republic and (High)
Empire, looking both back to the Greek and Latin origins of Roman (literary)
culture and ahead to Antonine archaism and the Second Sophistic.14
The extant ancient testimonia for Silius and his epic, the Punica, include
epigraphic, numismatic, and archeological material, as well as relatively abundant
literary evidence in passages from the works of Martial, Pliny the Younger,
and Tacitus, among others.15 Taken together, the epigraphic, numismatic, and
archeological testimonia provide important information about Silius’ name, his
consulship, and his proconsulship in Asia, while the literary testimonia round out
the picture with interesting details about Silius’ public and private life, including
his checkered career as a poet. First and foremost, Silius appears as consul
ordinarius (ordinary consul, i.e., a consul at the start of the year after whom the
year was named) for the year ad 68, with P. Galerius Trachalus as his colleague,
in a number of inscriptions. These inscriptions include the fasti consulares
(official list of consuls) for ad 68,16 as well as a number of other records in which
Silius is named as a consul: the fasti sodalium Augustalium Claudialium (official
acts of an Imperial priesthood) for ad 68 (CIL 6.1984 = ILS 5025); municipal
22 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
fasti for that same year, in which Silius’ name may have appeared in what is now
a lacuna (CIL 10.5405 = ILS 6125); and a later military document dated to July
1, ad 94 (CIL 16, p. 146.12 = ILS 9059). In addition, a fragment of an amphora
handle has been unearthed at Pompeii bearing the name of “T. Catius”: perhaps
simply an error for “Ti. Catius”?17 A likewise fragmentary Greek inscription
found just outside Aphrodisias (MAMA 8.76, no. 411 = IAph2007 13.609)
records a decree promulgated by Silius during his proconsulship in which he
appears to strengthen existing prohibitions regarding the sacred doves of
Aphrodite, the city’s titulary goddess.18 Unlike the Latin inscriptions, which only
record the name “Ti. Catius Silius Italicus” (or some portion thereof), the decree
records what appears to be his true full name, “Ti. Catius Asconius Silius Italicus”
(i.e., with the nomen “Asconius”). In addition, the name “Italicus” appears on the
coinage of Blaundus, Dorylaeum, and Smyrna, all of which are likely to have been
minted during Silius’ proconsulship.19 Finally, the “Silius Italicus” mentioned in a
second-century ad sepulchral inscription for a slave named Crescens may refer
either to the Silius Italicus or, perhaps, to a son (CIL 14.2653).20 Either way, taken
together, this inscriptional material confirms Silius’ name and his tenure of the
consulship and proconsulship, thereby establishing his status as a powerful and
successful senator during very turbulent times.
All the same, Silius and his epic, the Punica, are perhaps best known to
Classicists from various references in the epigrams of Martial, published during
the reigns of Domitian, Nerva, and Trajan, as well as from the letter which Pliny
the Younger addressed to Caninius Rufus shortly after Silius’ death (3.7). Tacitus
mentions Silius by name in the Historiae (3.65.2) and may allude to him in the
Annales (4.33.4), both of which works were published during the early second
century ad. From Martial and Pliny, as we will see in greater detail below, we
learn much more about Silius’ public and private life, about his relationships with
the emperors and his literary ambitions, as well as about his two sons and the
circumstances surrounding his death. From Tacitus’ Historiae, we learn about
Silius’ pivotal role in bringing the civil war of ad 68–9 to an end: along with the
historiographer Cluvius Rufus, Silius served as a witness to the agreement struck
between Vitellius and Flavius Sabinus, Vespasian’s older brother, at the Temple of
Apollo Palatinus (3.65.2).21 From his Annales, we learn about contemporary
indifference (so Tacitus would have us believe) towards the competing memories
of the Punic Wars (4.33.4):22
Then, there is the fact that virtually no one is a critic of ancient writers, nor does
it matter to anyone whether you more happily praise the ranks of the
Carthaginians or those of the Romans.
Here, too, scholars have debated whether or not to identify this “Italicus” as Silius,
although more scholars have been willing to see the presence of Silius in this
passage than in the previous one.25 Both the vocative o poeta and the reference to
that poet’s exemplum at least strengthen the identification of this “Italicus” as
Silius, and indicate that, if we do equate them once again, Silius was deeply
engaged in the study of the Aeneid long before composing his own epic.
Apart from these reasonably secure “Italicus” testimonia, the literary record
includes four other works which may contain distant traces of Silius and his
Punica. The so-called Colloquium Celtis (perhaps fourth century ad ), a Greek–
Latin bilingual text for ancient language learners, offers a charming and revealing
glimpse of daily life at school (30–42) which includes a lengthy reading list in
both languages (37–8).26 Among such famous authors as Cicero and Vergil, the
author refers, somewhat cryptically, to φωτίδιον <. . .>, δύο μάχη / Lucanum,
Statium, duo bella (“Lucan, Statius, two wars,” 38a–b). While the “two wars” in
question could be those recounted by Lucan and Statius in their epics (or perhaps
simply two different wars altogether), emending Statium to Silium would make
it possible to interpret the “two wars” as the civil war between Caesar and
Pompey, and the Second Punic War, an equally possible combination. Likewise,
the praefatio to the second book of the Disticha Catonis (also perhaps fourth
century ad ) presents a reading list which begins with Vergil and includes a
couplet which may conceal a reference to Silius: si Romana cupis et Punica
noscere bella, / Lucanum quaeres, qui Martis praelia dixit (“If you want to learn
about the Roman and the Punic wars, / then you will seek out Lucan, who has
sung about the wars of Mars,” praef. 2.4–5). Since Lucan did not write about the
Punic Wars per se, although he did, of course, refer to them throughout his epic,
scholars have emended Punica to civica.27 If, however, we retain the reading
Punica, then we may be able to discern a second garbled reference to Silius.28
Sidonius Apollinaris (fifth century ad ) incorporates yet another list of canonical
authors which may contain a reference to Silius into a lengthy poem addressed
to his boyhood friend Magnus Felix. The poem offers a negative priamel which
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 25
covers all of the famous topics in Greek and Latin literature which Sidonius will
not write about as a display of his profound knowledge of the Classics: non
Gaetulicus hic tibi legetur, / non Marsus, Pedo, Silius, Tibullus (“Here, you will not
read Gaetulicus, / nor Marsus, Pedo, Silius, or Tibullus,” carm. 9.259–60). This
passage clearly recalls a similar list of the canonical writers of epigram in Martial:
sic scribit Catullus, sic Marsus, sic Pedo, sic Gaetulicus, sic quicumque perlegitur
(“Thus writes Catullus, Marsus, Pedo, Gaetulicus, whoever is read,” 1 praef. 10–
12). Truth be told, however, Silius seems somewhat out of place in such a list:
in fact, Silius is the vulgate reading for Silvius (the consensus reading of the
manuscripts), and so perhaps we ought not to place too much hope in the idea
that Sidonius refers to the Punica in this passage. Last but not least, Vibius
Sequester (also fifth century ad ) evidently relies on the Punica and, in particular,
the relatively self-contained book 14, in a number of passages scattered across
his geographical treatise De fluminibus, fontibus, lacubus, nemoribus, paludibus,
montibus, gentibus per litteras libellus (15–18, 47–8, 82–5, 115, 124, 150–2, 174,
177, 186, 220). Bursian first mooted the idea that Vibius may have known the
Punica, but few scholars have expressed much enthusiasm for the suggestion.29
Nevertheless, Silius alone names seven of the rivers mentioned by Vibius in his
substantial section on flumina (1–162), and so perhaps Vibius did know the
Punica, or, at the very least, Punica 14, which could have circulated independently.
Altogether, these four dubious testimonia may reflect, whether individually or
collectively, a continued awareness of Silius and his epic long after his death, or
they may simply create a mirage of continuity.
In the absence of any definitive evidence, scholars have long debated where
Silius was born, with arguments based primarily on onomastic evidence.30 The
Renaissance vitae generally claim that Silius was born either in Italica (in Spain)
or Corfinium (in Italy, which was renamed Italica during the Social War) because
of his cognomen “Italicus.” Modern scholars, however, have noted that, if Silius
were from either of these two locales, then the form of the cognomen should be
“Italicensis” rather than “Italicus.”31 Following the discovery of the inscription
outside Aphrodisias, which added the nomen Asconius to Silius’ name, scholars
ventured the suggestion that he may have been born in Patavium, where,
according to Silius himself (Pun. 12.212–52), the gens Asconia originated, or
perhaps nearby.32 Most recently, though, still other scholars have proposed that
Silius may have been born in Capua, or perhaps elsewhere in Campania.33 Each
of these proposals reflects its own interpretation of Silius’ life and, by extension,
his epic. If Silius were from Italica, that would connect him with Scipio Africanus,
who founded the city during the Second Punic War, in 206 bc , as well as with
26 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Trajan, who was also born there. Silius would then join the ranks of the Spanish
Latin writers, too, including both Senecas, Lucan, and Martial: scholars regularly
note, however, that Martial says nothing about Silius being a fellow kinsman. If
Silius were from Corfinium, that would associate him with the city which
emerged as Rome’s greatest rival in the Social War. If Silius were from Patavium,
the most likely candidate, then he would share his birthplace with Livy, although
it is curious that Pliny likewise says nothing about Silius being a fellow kinsman.
If Silius were from Capua, that would associate him with the city which emerged
as Rome’s greatest rival, and Hannibal’s greatest Italian ally, in the Second Punic
War. In many ways, the debate about where Silius was born functions as a
homology for the larger debate about the significance and the impact of his life
and his epic, something of great concern both to Silius himself and to his
contemporaries, especially Martial and Pliny.
Martial consoles Silius on the death of his son by once again praising him as a
second Cicero and a second Vergil, then he directs his lament to Apollo and the
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 31
Muses (1–3); Apollo gently reminds Martial that he and the Muse Calliope lost
their own sons Linus and Orpheus (4–6); Martial, in turn, gently reminds Silius
that even Jupiter lost Sarpedon and even Domitian lost his young son, proof that
even the gods are subject to the dictates of fate (7–10). The poem hinges on the
literal and metaphorical implications of verse-initial respexit in line 5, which
transforms the moment when Apollo gazes back upon Calliope into a
reminiscence of the moment when Orpheus gazes back upon Eurydice, only to
lose her forever. In this poignant meditation on the ineluctability of death,
Martial skillfully balances praise and consolation on the heels of 8.66.
Across a series of poems in the later books of the epigrams, 11.48 and
11.50(49) (ad 96), as well as 12.67 (ad 101), Martial returns to the theme of
Silius’ literary status:
Across these three poems, Martial appears to offer Silius undiluted praise as a
second Cicero and a second Vergil, in recognition of his many accomplishments in
both prose and poetry. In 11.48 and 11.50(49), Martial explicitly names Silius as
custodian for the memory of his famous literary predecessors; in 12.67, while he
does not name Silius explicitly, the linguistic resonance between 12.67.5 and
11.48.1 leaves the reader in no doubt as to the poem’s addressee. Likewise, much of
the language in these three later epigrams resonates with that of the references to
Silius earlier in the collection(s), from the mentions of Maro, i.e., Vergil (4.14.14,
7.63.5, 11.48.1, 4, 11.50(49).1, 12.67.3, 5) and Cicero (7.63.6, 11.48.2, 4) to the
repetition of relative clauses (4.14.2, 7.63.2, 11.48.2, 11.50(49).2, 12.67.5) and forms
of key terms like celebrare (7.63.12, 11.48.1, 12.67.5). Taken together, these linguistic
resonances furnish an illuminating example of a type of literary interaction which
straddles the boundary between intratextuality and intertextuality, depending on
whether we use the individual book of epigrams or the collection as a whole as our
unit of measurement. Either way, through his references to Silius across these
poems, Martial elaborates a clear and coherent image of a Roman senator, consul,
orator, and poet who zealously followed in the footsteps of Cicero and Vergil in
order to pursue his goal of literary fame and immortality.
Pliny the Younger (c. ad 60–115) was born in Novum Comum, in the province
of Gallia Cisalpina, and came to Rome as a teenager for his education. He was
the biological nephew (and, later, the adopted son by will) of Pliny the Elder, who
is likely best known for his encyclopedia, the Historia naturalis, and for his fatal
heroics during the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in ad 79. Pliny the Younger enjoyed
a long and distinguished career during the reigns of Domitian, Nerva, and Trajan
by adapting to the changing times, much like his close friend Tacitus. Pliny’s
extant writings include a Panegyricus addressed to Trajan and ten books of
letters, including the two famous letters, 6.16 and 6.20, which he composed for
Tacitus on the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius, as well as the correspondence with
Trajan which constitutes the final book of the collection. In the third book (c. ad
100), Pliny includes exitus (death) letters for Silius (3.7) and Martial (3.21), along
with related letters on T. Vestricius Spurinna (3.1) and Pliny the Elder (3.5).38 As
in his other obituaries, Pliny uses the missive as a means both of conveying the
news to his addressee (here, Caninius Rufus) and of meditating on a related
broader theme (here, the brevity of life):39
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 33
1. modo nuntiatus est Silius Italicus in Neapolitano suo inedia finisse vitam. 2.
causa mortis valetudo. erat illi natus insanabilis clavus, cuius taedio ad mortem
inrevocabili constantia decucurrit usque ad supremum diem beatus et felix, nisi
quod minorem ex liberis duobus amisit, sed maiorem melioremque florentem
atque etiam consularem reliquit. 3. laeserat famam suam sub Nerone (credebatur
sponte accusasse), sed in Vitelli amicitia sapienter se et comiter gesserat, ex
proconsulatu Asiae gloriam reportaverat, maculam veteris industriae laudabili
otio abluerat. 4. fuit inter principes civitatis sine potentia, sine invidia: salutabatur
colebatur, multumque in lectulo iacens cubiculo semper, non ex fortuna
frequenti, doctissimis sermonibus dies transigebat, cum a scribendo vacaret. 5.
scribebat carmina maiore cura quam ingenio, non numquam iudicia hominum
recitationibus experiebatur.
6. novissime ita suadentibus annis ab urbe secessit, seque in Campania tenuit,
ac ne adventu quidem novi principis inde commotus est: 7. magna Caesaris laus
sub quo hoc liberum fuit, magna illius qui hac libertate ausus est uti. 8. erat
φιλόκαλος usque ad emacitatis reprehensionem. plures isdem in locis villas
possidebat, adamatisque novis priores neglegebat. multum ubique librorum,
multum statuarum, multum imaginum, quas non habebat modo, verum etiam
venerabatur, Vergili ante omnes, cuius natalem religiosius quam suum celebrabat,
Neapoli maxime, ubi monimentum eius adire ut templum solebat. 9. in hac
tranquillitate annum quintum et septuagensimum excessit, delicato magis
corpore quam infirmo; utque novissimus a Nerone factus est consul, ita
postremus ex omnibus, quos Nero consules fecerat, decessit.
10. illud etiam notabile: ultimus ex Neronianis consularibus obiit, quo consule
Nero periit. quod me recordantem fragilitatis humanae miseratio subit. 11. quid
enim tam circumcisum tam breve quam hominis vita longissima? an non videtur
tibi Nero modo modo fuisse? cum interim ex iis, qui sub illo gesserant consulatum,
nemo iam superest. 12. quamquam quid hoc miror? nuper L. Piso, pater Pisonis
illius, qui a Valerio Festo per summum facinus in Africa occisus est, dicere solebat
neminem se videre in senatu, quem consul ipse sententiam rogavisset. 13. tam
angustis terminis tantae multitudinis vivacitas ipsa concluditur, ut mihi non venia
solum dignae, verum etiam laude videantur illae regiae lacrimae; nam ferunt
Xersen, cum immensum exercitum oculis obisset, inlacrimasse, quod tot milibus
tam brevis immineret occasus. 14. sed tanto magis hoc, quidquid est temporis futilis
et caduci, si non datur factis (nam horum materia in aliena manu), certe studiis
proferamus, et quatenus nobis denegatur diu vivere, relinquamus aliquid, quo nos
vixisse testemur. 15. scio te stimulis non egere: me tamen tui caritas evocat, ut
currentem quoque instigem, sicut tu soles me. ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις cum invicem se mutuis
exhortationibus amici ad amorem immortalitatis exacuunt. vale.
34 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
by such narrow limits that those famous royal tears seem worthy not only of
forgiveness but even of praise; for, they say that Xerxes, when he had reviewed
his massive army, began to weep, because such a swift fall loomed over so many
thousands. 14. This is all the more reason why, if every passing moment is not
given over to deeds (for, the opportunity for these lies in the hands of another),
then let us at least advance in our studies, and, insofar as a long life is denied to
us, let us at least leave something behind through which we may bear witness to
the fact that we have lived. 15. I know that you do not need any goading: all the
same, my affection for you prompts me to spur you on like a willing horse, just
as you so often do for me. “Rivalry is good” when friends motivate each other
through mutual encouragement to strive for immortal fame. Goodbye.
In terms of structure, the letter can be divided into three roughly equal sections:
first, 3.7.1–5 announces Silius’ suicide and recounts his life until his retirement
from politics; then, 3.7.6–9 (introduced by the narrative transition novissime)
covers his later years and death in Campania; finally, 3.7.10–15 relates Silius’
recent passing to the larger subject of the transitory nature of human existence.
The first two sections exhibit an elegant ring structure (especially 3.7.1–2 ∼
3.7.9), and this structural effect somewhat separates the narrative of Silius’ life
and death from the third and final section, in which Pliny reflects on his own
mortality and then expounds the moral of his story. Throughout the letter, Pliny
interweaves Silius’ politics and poetry much like Martial does in his epigrams:
generally speaking, scholars ascribe a positive tone to Martial’s epigrams (apart
from the slight jab in perpetuus) and a negative tone to Pliny’s letter, but such a
binary contrast ultimately breaks down. Even if lacking somewhat in specific
detail, Pliny’s letter offers a wealth of evidence for Silius’ public and private life.
Pliny confirms that Silius had two sons and that the older son held the consulship,
while the younger died prematurely (3.7.2); Pliny likewise confirms that Silius
enjoyed a long tenure of service which spanned the Julio-Claudians and the
Flavians, although he also does not fail to pass along the rumor that Silius might
have served as a delator (informer) under Nero (3.7.3).40 According to Pliny, at
least, Silius retired from politics in order to pursue a literary career after his
governorship of Asia, and not, as a strict interpretation of Martial (7.63.9–12)
would seem to imply, after his consulship (3.7.4–5).
Pliny also provides new details about Silius’ final departure from Rome for
Campania, including his momentous decision not to return to Rome for the
accession of the new emperor, whether Nerva or, more likely, Trajan (3.7.6–7), as
well as the vivid image of Silius as an artistic connoisseur hoarding his antiquarian
wares in his many lavish villas and even worshipping at the tomb of Vergil
36 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
(3.7.8).41 Fittingly enough, it was at his Neapolitan villa where Silius, no longer
able to bear the affliction of an unidentified insanabilis clavus (incurable tumor),
committed suicide by starving himself to death at the age of 75, both the last
consul appointed by Nero, and the last of the Neronian consulars to die (3.7.1–2,
9).42 Prompted to reflect on Silius’ remarkable longevity, Pliny ends the letter
with a meditation on the brevity of life (3.7.10–15). All readings of the letter
ultimately hinge on Pliny’s famous bon mot about Silius as a poet: scribebat
carmina maiore cura quam ingenio (“He wrote poetry with greater care than
natural talent,” 3.7.5).43 Most scholars have interpreted Pliny’s remark as a clear
condemnation of Silius’ meager talent, while others have argued for a more
neutral reading: interestingly enough, Pliny himself aspired to be a poet, and so
perhaps we ought to interpret such remarks as an expression of literary rivalry.44
In the same vein, there is something distinctly disingenuous about Pliny
criticizing Silius for being a political chameleon given the course of his own
career under the Flavians and thereafter: in this regard, at least, Tacitus speaks
rather more openly and honestly at the beginning of his Historiae (1.1).45 All in
all, Pliny certainly provides the most complete and, therefore, the most important
account of Silius’ life, work, and death, but we are not necessarily constrained to
agree with his assessment, nor should his verdict cast a pall over our own reading
and interpretation of the epic.
Taken together, the extant ancient testimonia for Silius and his epic, the Punica,
especially those passages from Martial, Pliny, and Tacitus, provide interesting
and informative perspectives not only on the poet but also on his poem.
Unfortunately, it is impossible to determine exactly what version of the epic
any of these ancient witnesses may have read or, even more likely, heard at a
recitatio, since it is impossible to determine exactly when Silius wrote, (inevitably)
revised, and “published” his work, and especially since Silius appears to have
left the Punica incomplete at the time of his death. Most scholars tend to
claim that Silius began to compose his epic sometime during the reign of Titus
and that he continued to labor on the poem until his death, while others have
asserted that he began right after his consulship or perhaps even before that,
under Nero.46 Regardless, in their references to Silius and the Punica, Martial,
Pliny, and Tacitus all prove themselves to be adept readers of both the poet and
his poem; moreover, Pliny proves himself to be an adept reader of Martial, and
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 37
Tacitus proves himself to be an adept reader of both Martial and Pliny, all as part
of an extended literary conversation both with and about one of the most
important figures in Neronian, Flavian, and even post-Flavian Rome. So, for
example, if Tacitus does have Silius in mind in the passage from the Annales
(4.33.4) mentioned above, then perhaps his use of extuleris is intended to recall
Silius’ use of forms of (at)tollere in the same sense at various pivotal moments in
the poem, beginning with the proem.47 Martial and Pliny furnish even clearer
evidence of direct knowledge of the epic. In lines written to accompany a gift of
fine wine during the Saturnalia, Xenia 118, Martial quotes virtually an entire
verse from the Punica:
Tarraconense
Tarraco, Campano tantum cessura Lyaeo,
haec genuit Tuscis aemula vina cadis.
Tarragonese wine
The first line here essentially repeats what Silius writes in the catalog of troops
who march with Hannibal over the Alps: dat Tarraco pubem / vitifera et Latio
tantum cessura Lyaeo (“Tarragon, vine-bearing / and yielding only to Latian
Lyaeus, gives her young men,” 3.369–70). Pliny cleverly tropes this complex
literary dialogue in his letter about Silius’ death when he alludes to Martial’s
many references to Silius at the tomb of Vergil, cuius natalem religiosius quam
suum celebrabat, Neapoli maxime, ubi monimentum eius adire ut templum solebat
(3.7.8). Indeed, the tomb serves as both a literal and a metaphorical locus for
literary exchange, from Pliny’s use of a relative clause (cf. Mart. 4.14.2, 7.63.2,
11.48.2, 11.50(49).2, 12.67.5) to his use of the key terms celebrare (cf. Mart.
7.63.12, 11.48.1, 12.67.5) and monimentum (cf. Mart. 11.48.1), and suggests that
a dense web of allusions, quotations, and other phenomena remains to be
explored further.
In the final third of his letter (3.7.10–15), Pliny relates Silius’ death to the
broader theme of the brevity of life. Pliny dwells on the fact that Nero died
during Silius’ consulship, and so the latter’s passing truly marks the end of the
Julio-Claudian era. Pliny turns this observation into a prompt for reflection on
the brevity of even the longest of human lives and then juxtaposes a relatively
recent exemplum with one from the (much) more distant past to illustrate his
argument. The fraught choice of the L. Calpurnius Piso who, like Silius, held the
38 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
consulship (ad 27) and then outlived the rest of his generation inevitably evokes
memories of this man’s father, the Cn. Calpurnius Piso (consul 7 bc ) who, as
governor of Syria, killed Germanicus by poisoning him (Tac. Ann. 2.43–84, 3.1–
19), as well as of his son, the L. Calpurnius Piso (consul ad 57) who, as governor
of Africa, was killed for his Vitellian sympathies by Valerius Festus in order to
hand the province over to Vespasian (Tac. Hist. 4.48–50). Such a checkered
family past complicates the import of the comparison with Silius, especially
given his own charged relationship with both Vitellius and Vespasian. To this
recent exemplum Pliny juxtaposes that of Xerxes, who broke into tears during
his review of the forces assembled at Abydus as he contemplated how all of his
men would be dead within a century (Hdt. 7.44–6). At one level, this image of
Xerxes bears a strong superficial resemblance to that of Piso contemplating his
own mortality and suggestively likens Silius to the Persian king.48 At another
level, however, this image also evokes other moments when great men (or else
gods) break into tears upon recognizing their own (or else another’s) imminent
demise, from Scipio Aemilianus in tears at the fall of Carthage (Plb. 38.22.2, cited
by D.S. 32.24; App. Pun. 132) to Hercules in tears at the fall of Saguntum in
Punica 2.475–525.49 Through this deft combination of exempla, Pliny tropes
Silius’ own approach to exemplarity (cf. the words of Cornutus cited by Charisius
in GLK 1.125.16 = 157.27 Barwick mentioned above) in order to juxtapose past
and present: more specifically, Pliny demonstrates his skill at forging connections
between seemingly disparate exempla in order to suggest varying, even
conflicting, interpretive trajectories, a literary move which Silius uses to great
effect throughout his epic.
Fittingly enough, Pliny concludes his letter with an exhortation both to
himself and to his addressee to continue to devote themselves to their literary
labors in pursuit of (at least, literary) immortality. The Hesiodic gnome reads in
full as ἀγαθὴ δ’ ἔρις ἥδε βροτοῖσιν (“Rivalry is good, among mortals, at least,”
Op. 24) and perhaps alludes to Hannibal’s invocation of aemula virtus (“rivaling
manliness,” Pun. 1.511) in his prayer to Hercules at the beginning of his single
combat with Murrus before the walls of Saguntum.50 Regardless, the
accompanying specter of imminent death here at the letter’s close brings the
missive full circle by taking the reader back to the news about the death of Silius
with which it opens. The fact that Silius dies by suicide and, more specifically, by
starving himself to death could connect him with the tradition of Stoic suicides,
including those of Seneca the Younger, Lucan, Petronius, and Thrasea Paetus
(Tac. Ann. 15–16), though this could also be an example of an Epicurean suicide,
considering how untheatrical an end Silius chose for himself, comparatively
Who Is Tiberius Catius Asconius Silius Italicus? 39
speaking. Either way, how we “read” Silius’ death has profound implications for
how we “read” his life, as well as how we “read” his epic. This is especially so if we
read his death, his life, and his epic through the lens of Stoicism, as many (if not
all) scholars do,51 and if we consider contemporary Stoic attitudes towards Rome
and the emperor, even the purported existence of a so-called Stoic opposition in
the Roman Senate.52 Suicide plays a major role in the Punica in a way which both
reflects the existing traditions about the Second Punic War and yet also greatly
amplifies its importance, perhaps as a reflection of contemporary concerns. Of
the large number of individual and collective suicides (both real and imagined)
which punctuate the narrative, two contrasting moments powerfully link suicide
and food in a way which evokes the manner and the means of Silius’ own demise:
the famine which precedes the mass suicide at Saguntum in Punica 2, and the
feasting which precedes the mass suicide at Capua in Punica 13. Perhaps most
importantly of all, however, again and again over the course of the epic (2.696–
707, 3.705–12, 13.874–5, 892–3), Silius looks ahead to the suicide of Hannibal,
who died some twenty years after the war by ingesting poison, as if the poet were
contemplating not only the general theme but perhaps even his own imminent
death.53
40
2
The story of the rise and fall of Rome is inextricably linked with the story of the
rise and fall of Carthage, her great nemesis and yet, at the same time, also her
great sister city.1 Both cities trace their origins back to a double foundation myth
which connects a later “historical” legend with an earlier “mythical” legend dated
to the era of the fall of Troy (traditionally, 1184 bc , for what it is worth). In the
case of Rome, the double foundation myth links the exile of Aeneas from Troy
with Romulus, Remus, and the “official” founding in 753 bc ; in the case of
Carthage, it links Azoros, Carchedon, and an early settlement before the Trojan
War with the exile of Dido from Tyre and the “official” founding in 814 bc . Put
simply, two of the greatest cities in the Western Mediterranean trace their roots
back to two of the greatest cities in the Eastern Mediterranean, a powerful
testament to the region’s fraught interconnectedness in terms of history, culture,
and literature. Indeed, it is precisely this fraught interconnectedness and, in
particular, the complex relationship between Rome and Carthage which Livy
and Vergil codify, and, at the same time, interrogate, in the Ab urbe condita and
the Aeneid. As an indication of their growing power, the two cities are reported
to have signed a number of treaties regarding their respective spheres of
influence, beginning with an agreement dated to 509 bc , the first year of the
Republic, but not all scholars support the historicity of these accords.2 Ultimately,
Carthage and Rome clashed on three separate occasions between 264 and 146
bc , the First (264–241), Second (218–201), and Third (149–146) Punic Wars, but
it was the Second Punic War, otherwise known as the Hannibalic War, which had
the greatest impact on Roman history, Roman culture, and Roman literature.3
The Punic Wars were the defining conflicts of the Middle Republic: in 264,
Carthage was at her peak, and Rome was about to embark on her first overseas
military expedition; in 146, Carthage was razed to the ground, and Rome was
41
42 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
the conflict which could be said to elide the boundary between history and myth.
Regardless of the oath’s (dubious) historicity, Hannibal eventually succeeded his
father as commander of the Carthaginian forces in Spain and shortly thereafter
besieged Saguntum, whose fall marked the beginning of the Second Punic War
(281–201 bc ).6 In time, the war was remembered not only as a clash of cultures
(Carthaginian and Roman), but also as a clash of two transcendent leaders, the
Carthaginian Hannibal and the Roman P. Cornelius Scipio (the future
Africanus).7 After the fall of Saguntum, Hannibal embarked on his famous
march from Spain over the Alps into Italy,8 where he conquered the Romans in
three battles in quick succession, at the Ticinus River (218), the Trebia River
(218), and Lake Trasimene (217). A panicked Senate back in Rome appointed Q.
Fabius Maximus dictator to address the emergency, with M. Minucius Rufus as
his magister equitum (master of the horse). Fabius was renowned for his policy
of avoiding open combat with Hannibal in order to impede his progress, so
much so that Fabius earned the moniker Cunctator (Delayer), a clever nickname
with both positive and negative connotations. Eventually, however, Hannibal
brought the Romans to battle at Cannae (216), where he scored his greatest
victory in the entire war.9 After the engagement, rather than press his advantage
by marching on the city of Rome itself, Hannibal chose to celebrate a triumph of
sorts in Capua, which had defected from its long-standing alliance with Rome.
After a period of some five years of relatively inconclusive fighting, both in
southern Italy and elsewhere in the Mediterranean, the Romans besieged Capua.
Hannibal tried to draw the Romans away from the siege by belatedly making his
long-delayed march on their own city, but ultimately to no avail, as Capua fell
while Rome stood strong (211). Thereafter, the course of the war changed
dramatically. Scipio assumed command of the Roman forces in Spain, captured
Carthago Nova (209), and scored decisive victories at Baecula (208) and Ilipa
(206). Meanwhile, back in Italy, the Romans defeated Hannibal’s brother
Hasdrubal at the Metaurus River (207). With the Carthaginians now reeling,
Scipio invaded Africa, compelled Hannibal to return home to defend his
fatherland, and brought the war to an end with his victory at Zama (202).
According to the terms of the peace treaty, Carthage agreed to cede control over
Spain and to pay yet another massive indemnity, as well as to severely limit the
size of her armed forces, but Hannibal lived on after the war, and so the enmity
between the two cities did, too.
The events of the Second Punic War had forever changed both Carthage and
Rome. Now that the Carthaginians had lost their hegemony over the Western
Mediterranean, Rome pursued her imperial agenda with a renewed vigor in both
44 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
the west and the east by waging wars across the Mediterranean world, from
Spain to Asia Minor. Like Hannibal, Scipio survived the war and remained a
fixture in Roman history, culture, and literature: fittingly, they both died in 183
bc , first Scipio, either through natural causes or else by suicide, and then
Hannibal, by ingesting poison in order to elude capture. Their joint passing
heralded the end of the era of the Second Punic War and the beginning of that
of the Third Punic War (149–146 bc ), the beginning of the end for Carthage.
Indeed, the aged Roman senator M. Porcius Cato (Cato the Elder) insisted that,
for the good of Rome, “Carthage must be destroyed” (Carthago delenda est), and
ultimately he carried the day. Once again, a Roman fleet landed in Africa, and
Scipio Aemilianus, the adoptive grandson of Scipio Africanus, eventually
assumed command of the forces much like his adoptive grandfather before him
during the previous conflict.10 After a long siege, Carthage succumbed to the
Roman onslaught and suffered complete destruction: the city itself is said to
have burned for seventeen days; its inhabitants were either killed or sold into
slavery; and, so the much later story goes, the city was sown with salt.11 Without
a doubt, this was a full-scale genocide.12 Rome took control of the region and
organized it as the province of Africa; meanwhile, the city of Carthage itself was
settled as a Roman colony, first under C. Gracchus (Colonia Iunonia, in 122 bc )
and then later under the future Augustus (Colonia Iulia Carthago, in 29 bc ). By
the first century ad, Carthage had in fact regained its status as the second city of
the Western Mediterranean.
In the grandest of terms, like the Persian Wars, the Punic Wars represent an
instantiation of the perennial conflict between East (Carthage) and West (Rome),
notwithstanding the fact that Carthage actually lies further to the west than
Rome. The two cities were interconnected at multiple levels (history, culture, and
literature), and both sides wrestled with the fact that they recognized similarities
as well as differences between themselves and their inveterate enemy. In many
ways, just as Athenian culture and, in particular, Athenian literature flourished
after the victory over the Persians at the battle of Salamis (480 bc ), so, too,
Roman culture and, in particular, Roman literature flourished after the victory
over the Carthaginians at the battle of Zama (202 bc ).13 Indeed, the Second
Punic War became and remained perhaps the single most important subject in
Roman literature, especially in the high genres of historiography and epic.14
Over time, memories of the Second Punic War inevitably changed, influencing
narratives of the First Punic War and influenced by narratives, as well as the
actual events, of the Third Punic War. Ultimately, recording for posterity what
actually happened during the Punic Wars mattered far less than transforming
What Is the Punica? 45
these conflicts into moralizing exempla on such universal themes as the rise and
fall of empires, and the merits and flaws of monarchical rule. While ancient
authors acknowledged and respected the fact that there was a core of verifiable
historical fact at the root of their divergent, sometimes outright conflicting,
narratives, they evaluated any individual narrative for its degree of plausibility
(not to say probability) along the spectrum from fact to fiction. As a result, we
cannot use this material in order to reconstruct the Second Punic War: instead,
we have to evaluate each account on its own terms in order to understand why
the war and, in particular, the battle of Cannae emerged as the pivotal moment
in the transition from Republic to Empire in Roman history, culture, and
literature, especially in the Punica.
Silius composed his Punica, at 12,204 verses in dactylic hexameter, the longest
surviving Latin poem, under the Flavians, some three hundred years after the
Second Punic War itself. The extant work spans seventeen books, but may have
been originally composed or, at the very least, planned in eighteen. It is uncertain
whether Silius left the poem incomplete at the time of his death, whether
accidentally or intentionally, and it is also uncertain whether the poem suffered
mutilation at some point(s) in its manuscript transmission, or whether both of
these took place. The title of the epic is, in form, the neuter plural substantive
adjective of a racial-ethnic identity group, i.e., Punica = “Punic (Carthaginian) /
Phoenician things” ∼ “ethnography of the Punics (Carthaginians) / Phoenicians”
(where “ethnography” suggests a focus on culture above all else). As such, the title
Punica not only stresses the link between the genres of epic and historiography,
where this form of title is common, but also, more specifically, suggests that the
poem will focus on the Carthaginian as much as, if not more than, the Roman
perspective concerning the events of the Second Punic War and their impact on
the two cultures.15 Accordingly, the epic furnishes a selective account of the
major action of the war, beginning with Hannibal’s oath of eternal hatred against
Rome and ending with Scipio’s triumph in Rome after his victory at Zama.
Between these twin narrative poles, Silius retells the fall of Saguntum (books
1–2); Hannibal’s march from Spain to Italy, including his trek over the Alps
(book 3); his victories over the Romans at the battles of the Ticinus River, the
Trebia River, and Lake Trasimene (books 4–6); the stalemate between Hannibal
and Fabius (book 7); the Roman disaster at the battle of Cannae (books 8–10);
46 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Hannibal’s winter at Capua and subsequent failed march on Rome (books 11–
12); the falls of Capua and Syracuse (books 13–14); the Roman victory at the
battle of the Metaurus River (book 15); and Scipio’s successful campaigns in
Spain and Africa, culminating in his victories at the battles of Ilipa and Zama
(books 16–17). Over the course of the epic, Silius integrates allusions to the First
and Third Punic Wars into this expansive narrative of the Second Punic War.
Above and beyond that, as we will see in greater detail in the subsequent chapters
of this book, Silius incorporates allusions to peoples, places, and events from
throughout Roman culture, from the Trojan War to the Flavians, in order to
transform the Second Punic War into a universal history. The following book-
by-book summary provides an overview of the main content of the poem.16
Book 1: Following the proem (1–20), Silius recounts the rise of Hannibal,
who swears an oath of eternal hatred against Rome in the Temple of
Dido in Carthage, after which his father, Hamilcar, marches to Spain,
where he soon dies in battle; following the death of his successor
(Hasdrubal, son-in-law of Hamilcar and brother-in-law of Hannibal),
Hannibal himself assumes command (21–270). Hannibal begins the
siege of Saguntum, defeating the Saguntine Murrus in single combat,
but then receiving a wound from Jupiter in his thigh which forces
him to retreat from the fighting (271–583). Envoys sail from
Saguntum to Rome, where they successfully plead for assistance
from the Roman Senate (584–694).
Book 2: The siege of Saguntum continues, as envoys sail from Rome to
Hannibal and then from Hannibal on to Carthage (1–55), the
Saguntine Theron defeats the Amazon Asbyte in single combat and is
then himself killed by Hannibal (56–269), and the envoys from Rome
arrive at Carthage, where they are given a hostile reception by the
Carthaginian Senate, and so Fabius formally declares war (270–390).
Silius offers an ecphrasis on the shield of Hannibal (391–456); then,
Hercules convinces Fides to descend from Mt. Olympus in order to
ennoble the besieged Saguntines at their impending death (457–525);
Juno, however, convinces the Fury Tisiphone to drive the Saguntines
to mass suicide, delivering the city to Hannibal (526–707).
Book 3: After the fall of Saguntum, Hannibal travels to Gades in order to visit
the Temple of Hercules, while his envoy Bostar travels to the Siwa
Oasis in order to visit the Temple of Jupiter Ammon (1–60). Hannibal
sends his wife, Imilce, and their infant son back to Carthage (61–
What Is the Punica? 47
dying warriors (1–61). Among the few survivors, Serranus, the son
of Regulus, escapes to the humble abode of Marus, who had served
under Regulus, near Perugia: Marus recognizes Serranus, welcomes
him into his hut for the night, and tends to the wounded soldier
(62–100). The next morning, Marus recounts the brave and noble
deeds of Regulus during the First Punic War, culminating with his
torture and death in Carthage (101–551). Serranus returns to Rome
(552–99); Jupiter turns Hannibal away from Rome and instructs the
Senate to name Q. Fabius Maximus dictator (600–40). Hannibal
instead burns down a temple at Liternum (641–716).
Book 7: Hannibal learns about Fabius from Cilnius, an Etruscan captive (1–
73), while the Romans offer propitiatory sacrifices at temples
throughout the city (74–89). Fabius leads the army into the field, but
he avoids battle with Hannibal, who retaliates by burning down the
vineyards of Falernum (90–211); Fabius, in response, defends his
policy of delay to his men, nearly traps Hannibal and his men, and
then entrusts the army to his magister equitum, M. Minucius Rufus,
so that he can return to Rome to fulfill a family religious obligation
(212–408). The Nereids, terrified by the arrival of a Carthaginian
fleet, consult Proteus, who tells them about Rome’s ultimate victory
over Carthage (409–93). After the Roman Senate divides the army
between Fabius and Minucius, Minucius leads his men into battle
against Hannibal at Gereonium; Fabius rescues the Romans from
defeat; and Minucius hails Fabius as his savior (494–750).
Book 8: After his setback at Gereonium (1–24), Juno sends Anna down to
Hannibal in a dream in order to encourage him to march to Cannae;
Silius recounts the earlier history of Anna (Perenna) and Dido; and
Anna completes her mission (25–241). With Hannibal on the march
to Cannae, C. Terentius Varro, one of the two consuls for the year,
rouses the Roman people against the invader, while Fabius advises L.
Aemilius Paullus, the other of the two consuls, on how best to
restrain his rash colleague in order to avert disaster (242–348); with
the two consuls likewise on the march to Cannae, Silius offers an
extended catalog of the Roman and Italian troops and their respective
commanders (349–621). Once the Romans arrive at Cannae, they
witness a host of evil omens and hear the dire predictions about the
forthcoming engagement uttered by an unnamed soldier (622–76).
What Is the Punica? 49
As even this book-by-book summary of the epic well illustrates, Silius furnishes
far more than a mere versified history of the Second Punic War. Rather, he crafts
a version and a vision of the war which transforms historiography into epic,
history into myth, and the Second Punic War into a new Trojan War, a defining
conflict for Roman, as well as Carthaginian, identity. In doing so, Silius
thoughtfully and skillfully integrates his Punica into the traditions of both
historiography (especially Livy’s history Ab urbe condita) and epic (especially
Vergil’s Aeneid), as well as many other genres. Even more particularly, he crafts
his poem as the previously missing link between Vergil’s Aeneid and Lucan’s
Bellum civile, historical epics which recount the rise of Rome from the ashes of
Troy and then the fall of Rome into civil war at the end of the Republic. The
product of this literary engagement is perhaps the most intertextual, as well as
the most intratextual, epic composed in the ancient world. This literary
engagement operates on three interconnected levels: first and foremost, Silius
evinces a close and careful consideration of the existing traditions about the
What Is the Punica? 53
history, in its original full form, and nearly every verse of the Punica demonstrates
Livy’s deep and abiding influence on Silius’ own (re)presentation of Romanitas.
Accordingly, scholars have long studied the relationship between the two texts,
primarily through the lens of Quellenforschung, but also, more recently, through
that of intertextuality. In his engagement with Livy’s third decade, Silius regularly
expands and, far more often, contracts the narrative of events, rigorously
simplifies the cast of characters, and, most importantly of all, universalizes the
thematic import of the conflict for Rome’s, as well as Carthage’s, past, present,
and future. Put simply, Silius transforms prose historiography into epic poetry.
As a result, while the narrative of the Second Punic War in the Punica powerfully
resonates with that in the third decade of the Ab urbe condita, Silius does not
seek to slavishly versify Livy, nor does he confine himself to the third decade.
Instead, as a part of his mission to transform his narrative of the war into a
totalizing vision of Romanitas, Silius looks beyond the boundaries of the third
decade to incorporate into his epic other key moments in Roman history and
Roman culture from elsewhere in Livy’s history, e.g., the narrative of the battle of
the Allia River and the Gallic sack of Rome (traditionally, 390 bc ) in book 5.
Through Livy, Silius engages with the rest of the rich historiographical
tradition on the Second Punic War, indeed, with the Roman historiographical
tradition in general, and scholars have long studied Silius’ relationship to this
tradition through a Livian lens.20 The tradition on the Second Punic War, as well
as the tradition on the three Punic Wars as a whole, itself plays a central role in
the general tradition, as the era of the Punic Wars marks not only the beginning
of Rome’s history as a (ultimately, the) Mediterranean superpower, but also the
beginning of the historiographical tradition about the city.21 The Punic Wars,
especially the Second Punic War, accordingly dominate in the first works written
in both Greek and Latin, by Fabius Pictor and Cato the Elder, respectively, as well
as in later works by various annalistic (year-by-year) writers, Coelius Antipater
(who composed a monograph on the Second Punic War), the Greek historians
Diodorus Siculus and Dionysius of Halicarnassus, and Velleius Paterculus.22
Silius demonstrates his direct knowledge of this tradition at various points in the
Punica, but he engages most often and most meaningfully with the narrative of
the conflict in Polybius (c. 200–c. 118 bc ). In his forty-book universal history, of
which only books 1–5 are extant in their entirety, Polybius analyzes how Rome
rose to prominence so swiftly and so decisively during the era of the Punic Wars
(1.1, esp. 1.1.5–6); Silius likewise identifies this era as the turning point in the rise
of the imperium Romanum.23 Naturally, the Punic War tradition continues (long)
after Silius in the works of the Greek historians Appian and Cassius Dio
What Is the Punica? 55
believe its impact was on the rise and fall of the imperium Romanum. Apart from
Livy, Cicero (106–43 bc ) exerts the most profound and most pervasive influence
on Silius’ engagement with the Roman historiographical tradition and, by
extension, the prose tradition in general, especially in rhetoric, philosophy, and
oratory, but also his engagement with the epic tradition.29 Silius even goes so far
as to include an encomium of Cicero in the midst of his catalog of Roman troops
before the battle of Cannae (8.404–11; for similar encomia, see Vell. 2.66; Val.
Max. 5.3.4; Sen. Suas. 6, esp. 26 [Cornelius Severus], 27 [Sextilius Ena]; Plin. Nat.
7.116–17).30 Although he did not compose a sustained narrative of the Second
Punic War, Cicero does make regular reference to key people, places, and events
from the conflict across his oeuvre. Silius owes perhaps his greatest debt to the
Somnium Scipionis, from book 6 of the fragmentarily preserved De re publica.
Cicero recounts a (fictional) dream in which Scipio Africanus visits his adoptive
grandson, Scipio Aemilianus, shortly before the latter captures Carthage at the
end of the Third Punic War in 146 bc and provides him with a vision of Rome’s
(relatively insignificant) place in the world and in the universe. Elements of this
dream resonate with various dreams in the Punica and, in particular, with Scipio’s
visit to the Underworld in book 13. During that visit, Scipio briefly converses
with the ghost of Alexander the Great (13.762–77). In many ways, the evolving
historical and cultural memory about the Macedonian world conqueror offers
the best analogy for understanding Silius’ approach to Hannibal, Scipio, and the
Second Punic War in the Punica, especially the conflation of history and myth in
the Alexander Romance tradition (e.g., Curtius Rufus and Julius Valerius).31
Aeneas’ role in the future of Rome; and books 9–12 recount the war in Italy from
the attack on the Trojan camp to the death of Turnus. In the bipartite division,
books 1–6 cover Aeneas’ journey from Troy to Italy, while books 7–12 cover the
war in Italy: many scholars accordingly view the first half of the epic as Vergil’s
“Odyssey” and the second half as his “Iliad.” Even during Vergil’s lifetime, the
Aeneid was already on its way to establishing itself as Rome’s (new) national epic,
supplanting Ennius’ Annales (for which, see below), and so it remains to this day.
In the poem, Vergil consistently casts Carthage as Rome’s “Other.”32 As a part of
his meditation on the fraught relationship between Dido and Aeneas, and,
therefore, by extension, on that between Carthage and Rome, Vergil includes
many references and allusions to the people, places, and events of the Punic Wars
and, in particular, the Second Punic War, from Hannibal (A. 4.622–9, 10.11–15)
to P. and Cn. Cornelii Scipiones (6.841–4), Fabius (6.845–6), and Marcellus
(6.855–9), all in the Parade of Heroes during Aeneas’ visit to the Underworld.
Silius undoubtedly knew every verse of the Aeneid by heart, and scholars have
again long studied the relationship between the two texts. Silius cues his debt to
Vergil with an allusion to the poet himself in the midst of his catalog of Roman
troops before the battle of Cannae (8.591–4), as well as by including Roman
warriors named Maro (Vergil’s cognomen) and Vergilius who slay their
Carthaginian opponents in single combat during the battles of Baecula (15.447–
9) and Zama (17.441–2), respectively. Above all else, however, Silius gestures
toward Vergil in his choice of name for Marus (~ Maro), the aged veteran from
the First Punic War who had served with Regulus and who recounts his great
deeds to his son Serranus in book 6. In his engagement with the Aeneid, Silius
incorporates elements of Vergilian plot, character, and theme in order to effect
the transformation of prose historiography into epic poetry, especially the theme
of single combat, culminating in that between Aeneas and Turnus, as the
canonical expression of heroic (and, therefore, specifically Roman) masculinity.
Through Vergil, Silius engages with the rest of the epic tradition, and scholars
have again long studied Silius’ relationship to this tradition through a Vergilian
lens.33 First and foremost, of course, Silius directly engages with various passages
from both the Iliad and the Odyssey, and, as elsewhere, he gestures towards this
intertextual relationship by including Homer as a character in the Punica, during
Scipio’s visit to the Underworld (13.778–805).34 Like the historiographical
tradition, the Latin epic tradition emerges during the era of the Punic Wars
against this Greek background, beginning with the (fragmentarily preserved)
epics in the native Saturnian meter by Livius Andronicus (Odusia, a translation
of the Odyssey) and Naevius (Bellum Punicum, from Aeneas to the First Punic
58 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
War). Together, these two epics not only distinguish the mythological and
historical strands of the tradition, but also illustrate their inherent
interconnectedness, forging a thematic link between the Trojan War and the
Punic Wars.35 Ennius’ Annales, likewise only fragmentarily preserved, marks the
next major phase in this interweaving of history and myth by recounting events
from the fall of Troy through the aftermath of the Second Punic War across
fifteen books (later expanded to eighteen); composed not in Saturnians but in
the dactylic hexameter of the Homeric poems, the Annales quickly established
itself as Rome’s national epic. Silius yet again signals his debt by including Ennius
as a character in the Punica (12.387–414): if we possessed more of the poem
today, we would undoubtedly recognize the full extent of that debt.36 Among the
many epics written during the era of the transition from Republic to Empire,
including many (lost) historical epics, Silius demonstrates his direct knowledge
of Lucretius’ De rerum natura and Catullus 64, both important influences on
Vergil.37 Apart from Vergil, Ovid (43 bc –ad 17/18) exerts the most profound
and most pervasive influence on Silius’ engagement with the epic tradition and,
by extension, the poetic tradition in general, through his reception of Vergil in
the Metamorphoses, a fifteen-book epic of transformations (mythological,
historical, and cultural).38 Among his (relative) contemporaries, Silius evinces a
careful study of Lucan’s Bellum civile (on the civil war between Caesar and
Pompey),39 as well as the other major Flavian epics, Valerius Flaccus’ Argonautica
(on Jason and the Golden Fleece) and Statius’ Thebaid (on the civil war between
Eteocles and Polynices), and perhaps even Domitian’s (lost) Bellum Capitolinum
(on the fall of the Capitol in ad 69).40 Whereas it is difficult to gauge Silius’
specific impact on the subsequent historiographical tradition, his impact on the
epic tradition is all-pervasive, from the panegyrical epics of Claudian and
Sidonius Apollinaris to the works of the North African poets Dracontius and
Corippus (in the Iohannis),41 from Prudentius’ Psychomachia to Juvencus,
Sedulius, and Arator, the Latin epic poets of the New Testament.42 Scholars have
even identified traces of the Punica in two medieval Latin epics, the Waltharius
and the Alexandreis,43 as well as in various Renaissance Latin epics written both
before and after the rediscovery of the poem.
Apart from epic, Silius also draws on a wide range of authors and texts in
other poetic traditions, including satire, lyric, and elegiac, but especially drama.
Among the satirists, Lucilius, Horace, and Persius all leave their mark on Silius,
and Silius, in turn, leaves his mark on Juvenal, e.g., in the famous apostrophe of
Hannibal in 10.147–67 (cf. 6.170–1, 287–91, 7.158–66, 12.102–10).44 Likewise,
various passages in the Punica reflect Silius’ engagement with the lyric poetry of
What Is the Punica? 59
Catullus and Horace, e.g., the civil war Epodes 7 and 16, as well as Odes 3.5, the
Regulus ode, and 4.4, with its verses on the battle of the Metaurus River. Among
the elegiac poets, Silius draws on the work of Tibullus, Propertius, and, once
again, Ovid, especially his Fasti, an (incomplete) poem in six books on the
Roman calendar.45 Above all else, Silius displays an especially close affinity with
various types of Roman drama, from Plautine comedy to Senecan tragedy.
Plautine comedy, with its stereotyped portrayal of Carthaginian identity (esp. in
the Poenulus), offers an idea of contemporary Roman views about themselves
vis-à-vis their foreign nemesis.46 Senecan tragedy, with its sustained focus on the
theme of multigenerational familial revenge, offers a roadmap for navigating
the many twists and turns of the fraught ethical terrain of the Punica, including
the relationships between Hannibal and his father, Hamilcar, on the one hand,
and between Scipio and his father and uncle, P. and Cn. Cornelii Scipiones, on
the other.47 The fabula praetexta (Roman historical drama) tradition, which
begins with (essentially lost) plays by Naevius and Ennius and continues into the
Early Empire with the (extant) Octavia, may have also influenced Silius’ approach
to his material in the Punica, e.g., Ennius’ Scipio (if it is a fabula praetexta, that is),
but we simply do not have enough available evidence to assess the extent of that
(possible) influence.48 Regardless, it is clear that Silius engages not only with a
great variety of authors and texts across an impressive array of literary traditions
on the Second Punic War in both prose and poetry, but also with an equally
broad range of cultural traditions on the conflict. As a result, the Punica functions
as a pivotal contribution to the evolving collective memory of the war and, in
particular, the battle of Cannae as the turning point in Roman history.
Scholarship on the language and style of the Punica has long concentrated on
issues central to textual criticism, from the establishment of authoritative
readings to the elucidation of obscure passages: only (relatively) recently has
scholarship expanded its focus to embrace issues central to literary, historical,
and other forms of criticism, as well.49 Rightly so, textual criticism has long
provided the foundation for study of the epic, beginning with the scholarship
which culminated in the Teubner edited by Bauer at the end of the nineteenth
century, followed by that which culminated in the Teubner edited by Delz at the
end of the twentieth century, and continuing with the scholarship (today, using
the tools of the Digital Humanities) which will undoubtedly lead to the
60 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
perfidia. Accordingly, Silius likewise alludes to the king and his perfidy by using
forms of Laomedonteus and Laomedontiades six times in the Punica: 1.541–7
(Laomedonteae . . . flammae [= flame of the Vestal Virgins], 543); 7.437–42
(Laomedonteus . . . / pastor [= Paris], 437–8); 8.171–2 (Laomedonteae . . . telluris
[= Troy], 172); 10.626–9 (Laomedontiadum . . . urbi [= Rome], 629); 13.54–5
(Laomedonteae . . . Minervae [= Trojan Minerva], 55); 17.1–4 (Laomedonteae . . .
urbis [= Rome], 4). In 10.626–9, in particular, Silius severely undercuts the
positive message that Varro “did not lose hope” (non desperaverit, 629) when he
fled ignominiously from Cannae by describing Rome as “the city of the
descendants of Laomedon” (which suggests that the city may not ultimately
avert disaster). As this single example powerfully illustrates, learned epithets play
a pivotal role in the development of plot, character, and theme across Latin
historical epic and, more particularly, introduce a wide variety of historical,
cultural, and literary resonances, especially between the Aeneid and the Punica.
3
The extant manuscripts of the Punica transmit an epic which spans seventeen
books, but which may have been originally composed or, at the very least,
planned in eighteen. We simply do not know whether or not Silius completed the
poem before his death, as well as whether or not any verses were subsequently
lost in transmission. Accordingly, all analyses of the macrostructure of the
Punica (the structure of the epic across all of its seventeen or eighteen books) as
well as all analyses of its microstructure (the structure of the epic within each of
its seventeen or eighteen books) remain, at least to some degree, provisional.
Further complicating matters, the extant verses appear to include (at least?) two
major lacunae. The first possible lacuna stands between those verses now
numbered 8.143 and 8.224, a gap in the text which interrupts the narrative of
Hannibal’s dream before the battle of Cannae (8.25–241). Marso first identified
the lacuna in the commentary to his 1483 edition of the poem, but it was not
until 1508 that Giacomo Costanzi (1473–c. 1517) first published what he claimed
were the recovered verses, those now numbered 144–223/224a.1 Thereafter, Gian
Francesco Torresano (d’Asola) (c. 1480–1546) included the supplement, in a
slightly different version, in his 1523 Aldine edition of the poem, and so, since
then, these contested verses have been known to scholars as the additamentum
Aldinum.2 The second possible lacuna stands either after the verse now numbered
17.290 or else after that now numbered 17.291, a gap in the text which interrupts
the narrative of Hannibal’s return to Africa and the seemingly abrupt transition
to the battle of Zama.3 In this instance, scholars have long debated whether or
not there is a lacuna at this point in the epic and, if so, where to mark it, as well
as how long it might be.4 More recently, scholars have devoted considerable
attention to the structural and thematic significance of how ancient works,
63
64 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
especially large-scale productions like historiography and epic, begin, end, and
mark (or not) their middle(s).5 In the case of the Punica, the debate about the
poem’s middle, its περιπέτεια (“turning point”), generally centers on two possible
candidates: Hannibal’s decision not to march immediately on Rome after his
victory at Cannae (book 10, 216 bc ), or else his belated, and ultimately
unsuccessful, march on the city five years later (book 12, 211 bc ).6 Scholars have
proposed a number of (often quite elaborate) structural models in support of
their respective arguments regarding the middle of the epic, as well as the
relationship between that middle and both the beginning and the end of the
poem.7
Bickel first mooted the idea that Silius may have originally composed or, at
least, planned an epic in eighteen, rather than seventeen, books. He associated
this proposal with the additional suggestion that Silius may have conceived of
the Punica as consisting of three hexads or even six triads in imitation of the
similar six-book structure of Ennius’ Annales and Vergil’s Aeneid.8 A generation
later, Martin developed this idea by identifying the Regulus episode in book 6,
“die Peripetie” before the walls of Rome in book 12, and Scipio’s triumph in book
17 (originally 18) as the pivot points in this hexadic structure: in particular, his
recognition of Hannibal’s march on Rome as “den Höhepunkt des ganzen
Krieges” essentially initiated the debate about what event marks the “middle” of
the poem.9 A decade after that, Wallace offered a complementary analysis of the
structure of the epic as consisting of two enneads, with the battle of Cannae
marking the turning point across books 9 and 10.10 Burck subsequently bolstered
the argument in favor of the eighteen-book hypothesis, opting for Martin’s
hexads over Wallace’s enneads, by examining the structural relationship between
the Punica and the third decade of Livy’s Ab urbe condita. Whereas Livy evenly
divides his decade into two pentads, with one each focusing on Hannibal (21–5)
and Scipio (26–30) as the central figure, Silius unevenly divides his material into
three hexads, with two for Hannibal (1–6 and 7–12), but only one for Scipio
(13–17, originally 18). As a result, although both Livy and Silius center their
accounts of the war on Hannibal’s failed march on Rome in 211 bc (the
chronological midpoint in the war), only the historiographer correspondingly
places that event at the midpoint in his narrative, while the poet places it at the
two-thirds point in his.11 In the same year, Kißel independently elaborated a
much more complex hexadic model according to which he assigned the three
phases of the epic to Hannibal (1–6), Fabius (7–12), and Scipio (13–17, originally
18): in particular, his recognition of Fabius as the central figure of the middle
hexad represented a major innovation.12 Most recently, Delarue sought to
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 65
In this analysis, Hannibal once again dominates books 1–12, while Scipio
dominates books 13–17[–18], but we also find a great many other resonances both
within and between these two unequal halves of the epic. Each half forms the
chiasmus siege–battle–battle–siege: across books 1–12, the fall of Saguntum (1–2)
balances the triumphs in Capua and Carthage (11) followed by the unsuccessful
sieges of Nola and Rome (12), while the battles of the Ticinus River, the Trebia
River, and Lake Trasimene (3–6) balance the battle of Cannae (7–10); across books
13–17[–18], the falls of Capua and Syracuse (13–14) balance the battle of Zama
(transformed by Silius into a narrative of the fall of Carthage: see 17.618–24) and
the triumph back in Rome (17[–18]), while the fall of New Carthage (likewise
transformed into a battle narrative) and the battles of Baecula and the Metaurus
River (15) balance the battle of Ilipa (16). Between the two halves of the poem, the
fall of Saguntum (1–2) balances those of Capua and Syracuse (13–14); the three
engagements of books 3–6 balance those of book 15; the battle of Cannae balances
that of Ilipa (16); and, most importantly of all, the triumphs in Capua and Carthage,
followed by the unsuccessful sieges of Nola and Rome (11–12) balance (foreshadow)
the fall of Carthage after the battle of Zama and the triumph back in Rome (17[–
18]). A significant number of intratextual cues appear to support this particular
structural analysis of the epic, especially the grouping together of books 3–6 and
7–10 (see, e.g., 1.45–54) and the overall demarcation between books 1–12 and
13–17[–18] (see, e.g., 1.125–39). In thematic terms, Silius casts the poem as a
struggle between narrative delay and narrative speed, between the aging Hannibal,
symbol of a decrepit Carthaginian empire on the decline, and the youthful Scipio,
symbol of a precocious Roman empire on the rise.
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 67
The second (pentadic) model divides the epic into similar groups of books as
follows:
strength and power as these; and they brought arts of war not unknown to each
other, but instead tried and tested during the First Punic War, and so variable
was the fortune of the war and so uncertain the outcome that those who won
were closer to destruction. 3. Also, they strove against each other with hatreds
almost greater than their strength, with the Romans indignant about the fact
that the Carthaginians attacked them of their own accord, the conquered against
the conquerors, and with the Carthaginians indignant about the fact that they
believed that, as the conquered, they were ruled by the Romans with arrogance
and greed.
Liv. 21.1.1–3
Livy opens the third decade of his Ab urbe condita with a candid acknowledgment
of his use of the familiar, but, in this case, easily defensible, claim that he is
embarking upon a narrative of “the most memorable war of all of the wars which
have ever been fought” (bellum maxime omnium memorabile quae unquam gesta
sint, 21.1.1). In describing the Second Punic War as such, Livy not only affirms
the unique historical and cultural importance of the conflict, but also highlights
its enduring impact on Roman collective memory. Ever the astute reader of Livy,
Silius echoes this assessment of the war’s significance when he calls upon the
Muse to grant him the power “to remember” (memorare, Pun. 1.3) his own
version of events in the Punica. More generally, Silius carefully structures his
proem in response to Livy’s preface, which can similarly be divided into three
major sections: both texts begin by narrowing down their focus to the Second
Punic War (Pun. 1.1–11 ∼ Liv. 21.1.1); then, both explain why the Second Punic
War was the greatest war ever fought (Pun. 1.12–16 ∼ Liv. 21.1.2, esp. sed, Pun.
1.12 ∼ nam, Liv. 21.1.2); and, finally, both end by tracing the origins of the current
conflict back to the implacable hatred between the two cities (Pun. 1.17–20 ∼ Liv.
21.1.3, esp. odium, Pun. 1.17 ∼ odiis, Liv. 21.1.3). Both Livy and Silius place the
blame for the outbreak of hostilities squarely on the Carthaginians: bellum . . .
quod Hannibale duce Carthaginienses cum populo Romano gessere (Liv. 21.1.1) ∼
sacri cum perfida pacti / gens Cadmea super regno certamina movit (Pun. 1.5–6).
Both likewise stress the uncertainty of the outcome right up until the end of the
war: adeo varia fortuna belli ancepsque Mars fuit ut propius periculum fuerint qui
vicerunt (Liv. 21.1.2) ∼ quaesitumque diu, qua tandem poneret arce / terrarum
Fortuna caput and propiusque fuere periclo, / quis superare datum (Pun. 1.7–8,
13–14). Interestingly, however, whereas Livy explicitly identifies Hannibal as the
leader of the Carthaginians (note especially the word order in Hannibale duce
Carthaginienses, 21.1.1) and specifically locates the origins of the Second Punic
War in the outcome of the First War (note especially victoribus victi and victis,
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 71
21.1.3), Silius transforms his narrative into a story of much wider significance by
broadening his engagement with the existing tradition beyond the bounds of
historiography to include epic.
We continue with Vergil’s proem to the Aeneid, the epic core of the Punica:
Vergil famously begins his epic with a simple but yet powerful declaration of his
theme (arma virumque cano, 1.1), followed by the itinerary for the poetic journey
from the fall of Troy to the rise of Rome. By focusing on both war in general and
one man, one hero, in particular, Vergil harkens back to the Iliad and the Odyssey
as his prime exemplars. Silius likewise signals his debt to Vergil in his incipit
(ordior arma, Pun. 1.1, which one might almost punctuate ordior “arma” and
translate accordingly as “I begin my Aeneid”).23 More generally, Silius structures
his proem in response to Vergil as much as in response to Livy: Punica 1.1–16,
like Aeneid 1.1–7, announce the epic’s theme, ending with a reference to the walls
of Rome (ac muris defendit Roma salutem, Pun. 1.16 ∼ atque altae moenia Romae,
72 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Aen. 1.7); thereafter, Punica 1.17–20, like Aeneid 1.8–11, turn to an investigation
into the (ancient) causes behind the war (tantarum causas irarum, Pun. 1.17 ∼
causas and tantaene . . . irae, Aen. 1.8, 11). Importantly, however, whereas Vergil
celebrates the labores (Aen. 1.10) of one vir (1.1, 10), Aeneas, Silius celebrates the
decus . . . laborum (Pun. 1.3) of the many larger-than-life viri who fought for
Rome in the three wars against Carthage (quantosque ad bella crearit / et quot
Roma viros, 1.4–5). Both poets invoke the Muse (Musa, Aen. 1.8 and Pun. 1.3),
but, while Vergil asks the Muse to sing on his behalf (mihi . . . memora, Aen. 1.8),
Silius asks the Muse to grant him the power to sing on his own behalf (da . . .
memorare, Pun. 1.3). Above all else, both poets deploy an elaborate system of
learned epithets with (often esoteric) mythological, historical, and cultural
resonances in order to transform their respective epics into grand cultural
narratives which transcend time and space.
While Silius certainly grounds his poem in a thorough mastery of the existing
tradition, especially Livy and Vergil, Silius also develops his own intratextual
approach which structures his introspective interpretation of the Second Punic
War and its pivotal role in the rise and fall of both Carthage and Rome. Here
again, one example illustrates the overall idea. As we have seen, Silius opens his
epic with a rather bold proclamation: ordior arma, quibus caelo se gloria tollit /
Aeneadum (“I begin my ‘arms,’ by which the glory of the Aeneadae raises itself /
to heaven,” Pun. 1.1–2). The collocation (at)tollere . . . caelo / in caelum is used in
Latin both literally, to describe the raising of some concrete or abstract object up
to heaven, as well as figuratively, to describe the raising of something mortal up
to heaven, that is, to make something which is mortal immortal.24 Across the arc
of the Punica, Silius uses this collocation figuratively at several key thematic
points in order to transform his narrative into a synecdoche for Roman history
and Roman culture.25 In doing so, Silius transforms Scipio into the ultimate
synecdochic hero, a hero who simultaneously looks back to Aeneas and Romulus
and ahead to the Julio-Claudians and the Flavians. During his conversation with
Venus on Mt. Olympus while Hannibal stands atop the Alps in book 3, Jupiter
begins his encomium of the Flavians (3.594–629) with a striking allusion to
1.1–2 which artfully incorporates the Flavians into the larger narrative: exin se
Curibus virtus caelestis ad astra / efferet (“Then, heavenly virtue will raise itself
up to the stars / from Cures,” 594–5; cf. 601–2, 604–5, 625–9).26 Later in book 12,
during the fighting on Sardinia, Silius writes his epic predecessor Ennius into the
story (12.387–419); Apollo intervenes to save the vates (409) from any harm and
hails him as the first to use his poetic powers to immortalize Rome’s heroes: hic
canet illustri primus bella Itala versu / attolletque duces caelo (“This man will first
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 73
sing about Italian wars in illustrious verse, / and will first raise generals up to
heaven,” 410–11). In the very next book, during his visit to the Underworld,
Scipio has an interesting conversation with his mother, Pomponia, about the
circumstances of his birth (13.615–49), at the beginning of which she exhorts
him not to wait for any poet to do the job with his dicta, but instead to immortalize
himself with his facta: nec in caelum dubites te attollere factis (“Do not hesitate to
raise yourself into heaven by your deeds,” 635). Later during the same visit, Scipio
receives a vision of the civil wars to come in Rome’s future (13.850–67), including
a glimpse of the catasterism of Julius Caesar: ille, deum gens, / stelligerum attollens
apicem Troianus Iulo / Caesar avo (“That man, of the race of the gods, / Trojan
Caesar descended from Iulus raising up / his starry crown,” 862–4). When read
together, this series of passages not only associates the Flavians, Scipio, and Julius
Caesar with each other as Aeneadae all in search of immortal(izing) glory
through their deeds, but also powerfully links Silius with his predecessor Ennius
as poets who claim to possess the ability to confer that immortality with their
words. Indeed, in an elegant intertextual gesture which nicely complicates the
intratextual system, all of these passages in the Punica draw their initial
inspiration from a passage in the Annales in which Jupiter assures Mars that he
will one day see his son Romulus made immortal: unus erit quem tu tolles in
caerula caeli / templa (“There is one whom you will raise into the blue regions /
of heaven,” Ann. 54–5 Skutsch ap. Varr. LL 7.6). Ovid has Mars quote this promise
back to Jupiter verbatim (minus templa, thus transforming caerula into a
substantive) in both the Metamorphoses (14.814) and the Fasti (2.487).27 By
inserting himself into this (meta)poetic dialogue, Silius not only aspires to rank
himself with the likes of Ennius and Ovid, but also adroitly unifies the narrative
by making Scipio’s quest for apotheosis the focal point of the Second Punic War
and, in essence, the focal point of the larger synecdochic narrative of Roman
history and Roman culture as a whole.28
In this close reading of Punica 1.1–20, we have seen how Silius lays great
stress on the function of the Second Punic War as a moment of crisis and
transition between the First and Third Wars. More broadly, the poet transforms
the three Punic Wars into a powerful homology for the three eras of Roman
history, namely, Monarchy, Republic, and Empire: according to this scheme,
Regulus (whose name, fittingly enough, means “Little King”) and the First Punic
War parallel the Monarchy; Scipio Africanus and the Second Punic War parallel
the Republic; and Scipio Aemilianus and the Third Punic War parallel the
Empire.29 Likewise, the period between the First and Second Wars recalls the
transition from Monarchy to Republic, while the period between the Second and
74 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Third Wars recalls the transition from Republic to Empire. The bond between
the two Scipios reinforces the bond between the Second and Third Wars, and
invites reflection upon the similar bond between Julius Caesar and Augustus. On
a smaller scale, Silius adapts this tripartite framework to the three phases of the
Early Empire as he knew it, namely, the Julio-Claudians, the Year of the Four
Emperors, and the Flavians: according to this scheme, the poet recasts the
narrative of the Second Punic War as a narrative of the civil war of the long year
ad 69, a moment of crisis and transition which threatened the imminent collapse
of the imperium Romanum much as the Hannibalic War had threatened the fall
of Rome at the height of the Middle Republic. In a sense, therefore, the Punica
defies categorization as either Neronian or Flavian epic, since it concerns itself
with the theme of dynastic transition through internecine strife. That said, on the
smallest scale, Silius also deftly crafts his narrative of the Second Punic War as a
narrative of the rise (and fall) of the Flavians, highlighting both the similarities
and the differences between Scipio Africanus, on the one hand, and Domitian,
on the other. Above all else, I do not want to claim that Silius slavishly adheres to
or rigidly applies the three schematic frameworks outlined above, but instead
that he uses them as a template for exploring the nature of the complicated
transition from Republic to Empire and the concomitant shift from bellum
externum to bellum internum. Ultimately, by incorporating the events of both the
First and Third Punic Wars into his narrative of the Second War, Silius transforms
the Hannibalic War into a, if not the, story of Romanitas from beginning to end.
Put simply, Silius asks the reader to join him in reflecting on the vicissitudes of
the res publica from the Second Punic War to the Flavians, in the face of
impending decline, moral and otherwise, leading one day to the fall of Rome
itself.
Following the proem (1.1–20), Silius recounts the rise of Hannibal (21–270).
Silius relates the history of Carthage from Dido to the First Punic War, ending
with Juno’s choice of Hannibal as the instrument of her vengeance; then, the
goddess prophesies the major battles of the looming Second Punic War through
Cannae; and, finally, Juno inspires Hannibal with dream visions of the Alps and
the Capitol (21–69). Silius pairs this divine motivation for the conflict with an
equally important human motivation: at the instigation of his father, Hamilcar, a
member of the Barcid clan (which traces its lineage back to the exiles who
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 75
accompanied Dido from Tyre), Hannibal swears an oath of eternal hatred against
Rome in the Temple of Dido in Carthage and confirms the oath with a sacrifice,
during which the presiding priestess utters a prophecy about events at and after
Cannae until she is interrupted by Juno; shortly after this episode, Hamilcar
marches to Spain, where he soon dies in battle (70–143). Following his death, his
son-in-law Hasdrubal assumes control of the Iberian peninsula, but he rules like
a tyrant until he is killed by the slave of a local noble named Tagus (144–81). At
this pivotal moment, Hannibal himself assumes command of the Carthaginian
forces in the region, and so Silius emphasizes the gravity of this change by
inserting a catalog of the various African and Spanish contingents (182–238).
Hannibal quickly secures his command by ingratiating himself with his men
and by continuing his preparations for war against Rome (239–70). Hannibal
initiates hostilities with his hated enemy by laying siege to Saguntum (271–583).
Silius recounts the multicultural origins of the city (271–95); Hannibal leads the
charge against the fortified walls of the settlement, slaying Caicus, the first named
casualty of the siege, as well as the war (296–326); and the Saguntines valiantly
shore up their crumbling defenses in the face of the Carthaginian onslaught
(327–75). The Saguntine Murrus leads the countercharge against the
Carthaginians, while Hannibal rages elsewhere in the battlefield: when the two
warriors meet for the first single combat of the epic, Hannibal ultimately kills his
overmatched foe (376–534); Jupiter descends from the heavens to hurl his
thunderbolt against Hannibal, wounding him in the thigh, which prompts Juno
to whisk her hero away from the fighting (535–55); and, after the Saguntines
spend the night rebuilding their fortifications and dispatching envoys to Rome
(556–75), the Carthaginians turn their attention away from the siege to their
injured commander (576–83). Meanwhile, the Saguntine envoys complete their
mission (584–694): following their difficult journey across rough seas (584–
608), Silius offers an ecphrasis on the Roman Curia (609–29), and then Sicoris,
the leader of the delegation, delivers an impassioned plea for assistance from the
Roman Senate, which, despite the caution urged by Fabius, promptly dispatches
a delegation to Hannibal (630–94).
The Roman envoys, led by Fabius and P. Valerius Flaccus (Liv. 21.6.8: Silius
mentions a Publicola in 2.8 in order to allude to a more famous branch of the
clan), sail on to Carthage after they are turned away from Saguntum by Hannibal,
who tauntingly promises to see them in Rome soon (2.1–55). The Carthaginians
resume the attack on Saguntum (56–269). The Amazon Asbyte enters the fray,
narrowly avoids being killed by the Cretan archer Mopsus, and, in revenge, slays
his two sons, Dorylas and Icarus, which prompts Mopsus to hurl himself in grief
76 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
to his death from the battlements (56–147); the Saguntine Theron, priest of the
Temple of Hercules, likewise enters the fray, mows down the enemy, and defeats
Asbyte in single combat, decapitating her and then parading her head on a spear
(148–207); and so Hannibal storms back into the field, hunts down Theron, and
kills him in order to avenge the death of Asbyte, who receives an improvised
burial (208–69). Meanwhile, the Roman envoys complete their mission (270–
390): upon their arrival at Carthage, the anti-Barcid Hanno tries in vain to
convince the Carthaginian Senate to turn Hannibal over to the Romans and
avoid another war (270–326); the equally strident Gestar accuses Hanno of
treason for suggesting that the Carthaginians capitulate to the Roman demands
(327–77); and so, with a divided Carthaginian Senate unable to choose between
war and peace, Fabius formally declares war (378–90). Back in Spain, Hannibal
captures Saguntum (391–707). Silius offers an extended ecphrasis on the images
which appear on the shield given to Hannibal by a local tribe: on the right side,
Dido and Hamilcar, even Hannibal swearing his oath; on the left side, Xanthippus,
the Spartan general who saved Carthage during the First Punic War, as well as
Regulus in torment; on the boss, Saguntum under siege; and, on the rim,
Hannibal crossing the Ebro River to formally break the existing treaty with
Rome (391–456). As the siege wears on and the besieged suffer from famine
(457–74), Hercules looks down in pity upon Saguntum and then beseeches Fides
to descend from Mt. Olympus in order to ennoble the Saguntines at their
impending death (475–92); Fides assures Hercules that Hannibal will one day
pay the price for attacking the city and that she will, indeed, dignify the memory
of the fallen (493–512), after which she flies down and inspires the besieged to
prevent them from resorting to cannibalism (513–25). In response, Juno looks
down in anger upon Saguntum and then orders the Fury Tisiphone to ascend
from the Underworld in order to drive the Saguntines to mass suicide (526–42).
Accompanied by her infernal entourage, Tisiphone assumes the guise of Tiburna,
the grieving wife of the fallen Murrus, inspires the besieged to construct a
massive funeral pyre and indulge in an orgy of mutual slaughter, and then, after
the real Tiburna commits suicide upon her husband’s tomb, returns in triumph
to the Underworld (543–695). The book closes with a vision of Hannibal one day
committing suicide himself, tortured by the souls of Saguntum (696–707).
After the fall of Saguntum, Hannibal travels to Gades in order to visit the
Temple of Hercules, while his envoy Bostar travels to the Siwa Oasis in order to
visit the Temple of Jupiter Ammon: Silius offers an ecphrasis on the Temple of
Hercules, as well as a description of the tides of the Atlantic at Gades (3.1–60).
Silius continues the account of the rise of Hannibal (61–414). In preparation for
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 77
the march from Spain to Italy, Hannibal decides to send his wife, Imilce, and
their infant son back home to Carthage: when he broaches the topic with her,
however, Imilce rebukes Hannibal for underestimating her ability to endure the
hardships of the campaign and implores him to restrain his ambition; Hannibal
explains why he must forge ahead, puts his wife and child aboard a waiting ship,
and holds her gaze until the ship crosses the horizon (61–157). That night,
Mercury visits Hannibal in a dream: the god reproaches the Carthaginian for
taking any rest in time of war, promises to guide him up to the very gates of
Rome if only he will follow after him, and provides him with a frightening vision
of the looming destruction of Italy; when he wakes, Hannibal thanks Mercury
for the seemingly favorable omen with a sacrifice and orders his men to break
camp (158–221). Silius once again emphasizes the gravity of the moment by
inserting an extended catalog of the various African and Spanish contingents
and their respective commanders, including the men from Carthage under
Hannibal’s brother Mago and those from Utica under Hasdrubal’s son (and,
therefore, Hannibal’s nephew) Sychaeus (222–414). Hannibal marches from
Spain to the Alps (415–556). First, he marches over the Pyrenees, the mountain
range which separates Spain from Gaul (415–41); then, he crosses the Rhône
River and the Durance River, both in Gaul (442–76); and, finally, he climbs up
the Alps, avoiding the path trodden by Hercules and instead striking out on his
own: after twelve days and twelve nights, the Carthaginians barely set up camp
on the beetling cliffs of the mountain range which separates Gaul from Italy
(477–556). With Hannibal poised atop the Alps, Venus and Jupiter discuss the
Second Punic War and its relationship to the rise of the Flavians (557–629):
frightened by the imminent Carthaginian invasion, Venus begs her father not to
inflict any further punishment upon the Romans (557–69); in reply, Jupiter
reassures his daughter by explaining how the Romans have sunk into indolence
and by connecting the moral revitalization sparked by the Second Punic War
with the later emergence of the Flavian dynasty, all culminating in the reign of
Domitian (570–629). Meanwhile, Hannibal completes the march from Spain to
Italy (630–714): climbing down the Alps with almost as much difficulty as when
he had climbed up them (630–46), he pitches camp in the lands of the Taurini,
where he meets Bostar, who brings back his report from Jupiter Ammon,
including another prophecy of a Carthaginian victory at Cannae (647–714).
The Romans receive word that Hannibal has entered Italy and make
immediate preparations to meet the invader: while some repair their weapons of
war, others reinforce the fortifications (4.1–38). In the events leading up to the
battle of the Ticinus River (39–142), the Romans under the command of the
78 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
consul Scipio, father of the future Africanus, hasten from Gaul back to Italy
when they learn of Hannibal’s march over the Alps (39–55); Hannibal and Scipio
both address their soldiers, march to the Ticinus River, and prepare for the
engagement the next day (56–100); and then, once they have mustered in the
field, the two sides witness the omen of the hawk, the doves, and the eagle:
the Roman seer Liger interprets the omen as a bad sign for Hannibal, but the
Carthaginian seer Bogus interprets it as a bad sign for the Romans and, hurling
his spear, strikes down Catus, the first named casualty of the battle (101–42).
During the battle itself (143–479), Scipio defeats the Boian Crixus in single
combat and, before killing him, mocks him for boasting about his descent from
Brennus, leader of the Gallic sack of 390 bc (143–310); seeing the Gallic forces
falter, Mago and Hannibal charge into the fray in order to reinvigorate the
Carthaginians (311–54); Roman (Virbius, Capys, and Albanus) and Spartan
(Eumachus, Critias, and Xanthippus) triplets slay each other in single combat
(355–400); and then, when Scipio finds himself surrounded, he is saved by his
son, the future Africanus, and carried away from battle under the protection of
Mars, ordered by Jupiter to escort the two of them from the field: the end of the
day brings the end of the battle, the first of many victories for Hannibal (401–
79). In the events leading up to the next engagement, the battle of the Trebia
River (480–524), Scipio joins forces with his fellow consul, Longus (Liv. 21.50.7–
51.7: Silius mentions a Gracchus in 4.495 in order to allude once again to a more
famous branch of the clan) (480–97), after which Hannibal and Longus both
address their soldiers (498–524). During the battle itself (525–703), Hannibal
and Longus wreak havoc across the battlefield, inspiring the troops on both sides
to kill countless of the enemy (525–53); together, Mago and Maharbal slay the
Italian Allius, as the Carthaginians drive the Romans into the river itself (554–
72); and then, at the behest of Juno, the Trebia swells beyond its banks in order
to attack the Romans, even to swallow up a force of Carthaginian war elephants:
Scipio fights back against the river in a μάχη παραποτάμιος which ends when he
prays to Venus to send down Vulcan to parch the river dry and to compel it to
return to its banks, leaving Hannibal victorious once again (573–703). In the
events leading up to the third engagement, the battle of Lake Trasimene (704–
829), the consul Flaminius marches to Etruria (704–21); Juno, in the guise of
Lake Trasimene, visits Hannibal in a dream in order to encourage him to
intercept Flaminius (722–38); Hannibal marches over the Apennines (739–62);
and then, receiving a delegation from Carthage, Hannibal refuses to allow the
sacrifice of his infant son, vowing to honor the gods with another victory instead
(763–829).
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 79
a series of Roman consuls at the battles of the Ticinus River, the Trebia River, and
Lake Trasimene. By manipulating the pace of the narrative (speeding it up and,
more often, slowing it down), Silius not only articulates his own, original,
presentation of the Second Punic War, but also emphasizes the cumulative
impact of that manipulation, especially the policy of delay, on the widening
disjuncture between the pace of the narrative and the pace of the actual war.
Accordingly, across books 1 and 2, Silius briskly relates events between Hannibal’s
oath of eternal hatred against the Romans and his later rise to power after the
assassination of Hasdrubal, before grinding the narrative to a halt in order to
develop the story of the fall of Saguntum and, in the process, outline both the
theology and the theodicy of the epic. As a result, the account of the siege of
Saguntum offers a template for all subsequent siege narratives, in Punica 11–12,
13–14, and 17[–18]. In book 3, Silius once again balances speed and delay,
spending as much time on the preparations for the march from Spain to Italy as
on the march itself, including the scene on Mt. Olympus at both the literal and
the literary climax when Hannibal and his men have finally scaled the Alps.
Across books 4 and 5 (and, indeed, according to the hexadic model, extending
into book 6), Silius elaborates a tricolon crescens of battle narratives, each one
longer than the preceding one(s): this progressive buildup from the Ticinus
River to the Trebia River to Lake Trasimene underscores how one engagement
leads naturally to the next (and prepares the reader for the ultimate engagement
at Cannae in the next pentad). Especially when book 6 is included in the analysis,
these three battles together offer a template for all subsequent battle narratives,
in Punica 7–10, 15, and 16. Throughout this first pentad, memories of earlier
conflicts invite the reader to look back to thematically similar moments in the
(Roman) past, including the Gallic sack, the fall of Troy, and even mythical
combats like the Titanomachy and the Gigantomachy.
On the day after the engagement, Hannibal and Mago revisit the battlefield in
order to hunt down any remaining Romans amid the heaps of dead and dying
warriors: in particular, Silius recounts the gruesome fates of Laevinus and Tyres
(6.1–61). Meanwhile, after a long digression with an extended flashback to the
First Punic War, news of the disaster at Lake Trasimene reaches Rome (62–640).
Among the few survivors, Serranus, the son of Regulus, escapes to the humble
abode of Marus, who had served under Regulus, near Perugia: Marus recognizes
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 81
Serranus, welcomes him into his hut for the night, and tends to the wounded
soldier (62–100). The next morning, Marus recounts the brave and noble deeds
of Regulus during the First Punic War, culminating with his torture and death in
Carthage: first, Serranus utters a lament for all of the Romans who have fallen
since the beginning of the war, especially Flaminius; then, Marus reminisces
about his service with Regulus, recounting the exploit of the Bagradas serpent, in
which Marus helped Regulus to slay the monster after it devoured their comrades
Aquinus and Avens; next, Serranus briefly resumes his lament, asserting that the
Romans would never have suffered their recent defeats in battle at the hands of
the Carthaginians if his father were still alive; and, finally, Marus reminisces
further, recounting how Regulus was captured in Africa for the Carthaginians by
the Spartan Xanthippus, how he was sent back home to Rome by the Carthaginian
Senate in order to negotiate a hostage exchange, which he expressly instructed
the Roman Senate to reject outright, and how he was consequently brought back
to Africa, where he was tortured to death (101–551). As rumors of the ambush
along the shores of Lake Trasimene reach Rome, the city descends into chaos
amid fears of an imminent assault until the first waves of fugitives from the
battle arrive at the city gates, including Serranus, who reunites with his mother,
Marcia: then, faced with the prospect of filling the void left by the death of
Flaminius, the Roman Senate convenes in order to appoint a new commander
(552–99). Looking down from the Alban Mount, Jupiter himself hurls his
thunderbolt four times in order to turn Hannibal away from Rome and then
directs the Roman Senate to name Fabius dictator, after which Silius retells the
story of the family, from their progenitor, Hercules, to the battle of the Cremera
River (traditionally, 477 bc ), when all but one member of the Fabian clan was
killed (600–40). Turned away from Rome, Hannibal instead burns down a
temple at Liternum, consigning the images of the First Punic War depicted on
the temple murals to the destruction which he is unable to inflict upon the
Romans (641–716).
Silius hails Fabius for his policy of delay; when word reaches the Carthaginians
about the new commander, Hannibal learns from Cilnius, an Etruscan captive,
about the gens Fabia, from Hercules to the Cremera River (7.1–73): meanwhile,
the Romans offer propitiatory sacrifices at temples throughout the city (74–89).
When Fabius leads his men out into the field, he avoids a direct engagement at
all costs until he is recalled to Rome in order to fulfill a religious obligation
(90–408). At the first sight of Roman forces, Hannibal addresses his soldiers and
promises them a speedy victory, but Fabius frustrates that hope by not taking the
bait and instead remaining in camp (90–130). Hannibal roams aimlessly around
82 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
upon the evil omen and report it to Varro, he mockingly suggests that they
instead report it to Paullus, and then lines them up for battle, too (244–77). The
battle itself consumes the rest of the day and extends beyond book 9 into book
10 (278–657). In heaven and on earth, gods and mortals are locked in a cosmic
fight as Mars himself spurs on the combatants (278–361). Amid the carnage, the
Carthaginian Nealces slays the Roman Scaevola (362–400), after which the
Carthaginian Symaethus likewise kills the Romans Marius and Caper (401–10).
Scipio, the future Africanus, and Varro, among others, lead an effective
countercharge, and so Hannibal seeks out Varro for a single combat, but Scipio
turns the Carthaginian against himself, instead (411–37). Mars and Pallas
intervene on behalf of Scipio and Hannibal, respectively, to prevent the clash: as
Mars and Pallas prepare to face off, Jupiter sends down Iris to command Pallas
to leave the battlefield (438–85). At the behest of Juno, the Vulturnus wind helps
the Carthaginians and hurts the Romans, even attacking Mars: as Mars prepares
to fight back, Jupiter sends down Iris to command him to leave the battlefield,
too (486–555). Frustrated in his attempt at engaging with Scipio in a single
combat, Hannibal recognizes Minucius in the fray and kills him, instead (556–
69). While the Carthaginian elephants run amok (570–631), Paullus bitterly
rebukes Varro for leading the Romans to their demise; Varro laments his fate
before fleeing from the battlefield, choosing to return home in disgrace rather
than to commit suicide (632–57).
The battle of Cannae continues (10.1–325). Paullus rescues Cato and then
seeks out Hannibal for a single combat, but Juno intervenes twice to prevent the
clash, first in the guise of Metellus in an ultimately unsuccessful attempt at
turning away Paullus and then in the guise of Gelesta in an ultimately successful
attempt at turning away Hannibal (1–91). Instead, whisked off to another corner
of the battlefield, Hannibal slays the Umbrian warrior Crista along with his six
sons (Lucas, Volso, Vesulus, Telesinus, Quercens, and Perusinus) (92–169).
Meanwhile, Paullus kills countless of the enemy, including the giant Phorcys, as
the Vulturnus wind grows more and more dangerous for the Romans: Viriathus
kills Servilius; Paullus kills Viriathus; an unidentified assailant mortally wounds
Paullus, who takes up a defensive position on a nearby rock; and then, when
Hannibal joins the attack on Paullus, Piso defends his failing commander by
throwing Hannibal from his horse, and so Hannibal kills Piso, instead (170–
259). In flight from the battle, the wounded Cn. Cornelius Lentulus halts when
he catches sight of Paullus on the rock and offers to escort him from the field:
Paullus praises Lentulus for his bravery, gives him orders to bring back to Rome
(that the gates of the city be closed and that Fabius be handed the reins of power),
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 85
and fulfills his vow to die in battle, falling amid a shower of enemy spears, after
which the engagement finally ends with a general rout of the Roman forces
(260–325). That night, Juno sends Somnus down to Hannibal in a dream in
order to encourage him not to march from Cannae against the walls of Rome:
when the Carthaginian forces learn that they will not be attacking the city, Mago
rebukes Hannibal for sacrificing so much in order to gain a victory over Varro
alone and not Rome as a whole (326–86). Meanwhile, the surviving Romans
gather at Canusium (387–448): as the wounded grieve both for themselves and
for their lost comrades (387–414), first, the real Metellus advises his fellow
soldiers to desert their city, to seek a new home far away from both Carthage and
Rome (415–25), but, then, Scipio storms in to compel everyone to swear an oath
to defend their city (426–48). And so, instead of marching on Rome, Hannibal
revisits the battlefield (449–577): after he comes upon Cloelius gasping out his
final breath beside his faithful steed, Hannibal learns from Cinna, who deserted
the Romans to join the Carthaginians, about the story of his family and, in
particular, about Cloelia, who swam across the Tiber River (449–502); the
Carthaginians come upon the corpse of the fallen Paullus, whom Hannibal
honors with a massive funeral pyre and a laudatory funeral oration (503–77).
Back in Rome (578–658), while the city braces for an imminent attack (578–91),
Fabius surprisingly exhorts the Roman to abandon the policy of delay which he
had advocated for so strenuously up to that point in the war (592–604), even as
Varro makes his ignominious return (605–39), after which the Roman Senate
goes so far as to enlist slaves in order to fill out the ranks (640–58).
Punica 6–10, the second pentad of the epic, provides a narrative of the events
of the Second Punic War from the battle of Lake Trasimene to the battle of
Cannae. Across this second phase of the poem, Silius describes the aftermath of
the battle of Lake Trasimene, pits Hannibal against his first true rival, Fabius, and
provides an expansive narrative of the battle of Cannae. Once again, by
manipulating the narrative pace, Silius emphasizes the structural and thematic
significance of Cannae, as well as the growing disparity between the time and
space allocated to events in the epic vis-à-vis the war itself. Accordingly, in book
6, Silius elegantly connects the Second Punic War with the First Punic War
through the extended digression about the rise and fall of Regulus. In particular,
this flashback prompts reflection upon a number of interrelated themes,
including the fraught relationship between Carthage and Rome, the linear and
cyclical nature of their, ultimately, three conflicts, and the endless complexities of
heroic exemplarity. In book 7, the “Fabius book” (Fabius, 7.1), Silius formally
introduces the Cunctator and his policy of delay as the first effective impediment
86 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
In Punica 10.640–58, Silius offers a somewhat different version for the events
after the battle of Cannae compared to the rest of the tradition, especially when
compared to the account in Livy (Pun. 10.326–658 ∼ Liv. 22.50–61).30 Perhaps
most notably, Silius reintroduces Fabius into the narrative, elevating him to a
level of visibility and importance far beyond his role in Livy (Pun. 10.578–658 ∼
Liv. 22.54.7–61.15). In doing so, Silius invites the reader to compare the scene in
Rome after Cannae (10.578–658) with that in the city after Lake Trasimene
(6.62–640). In the aftermath of Lake Trasimene, with the death of Flaminius,
Jupiter himself turned Hannibal away from Rome and directed the Roman
Senate to name Fabius dictator; in the aftermath of Cannae, with the death of
Paullus, Fabius once again emerges as a leading voice in Rome. These parallels
between the two battles strengthen the characterization of Varro as a second
Flaminius and, at the same time, that of Paullus as a second Fabius. More
88 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
specifically, Silius also reinforces the link between Rome’s staunch refusal to
ransom the captives taken at Cannae (Pun. 10.650–4 ∼ Liv. 22.58.1–61.10) and
the refusal to ransom Regulus during the First Punic War (6.299–551). The
couplet which closes book 10, 10.657–8, serves as an epigraph for the epic and
marks this moment as a, if not the, turning point in the war and in the narrative.31
Silius himself explicitly identifies Cannae as that turning point in his earlier
invocation of the Muses at the beginning of the battle (9.340–53), including
verses which powerfully resonate with those in 10.657–8:
In these lines from that invocation of the Muses (9.346–53), Silius uses this familiar
epic trope in order to transform history into myth and emphasize the gravity of
the looming engagement, much as he had in another (also 14-line) invocation of
the Muses during the battle of Lake Trasimene (5.420–33). In particular, Silius
paradoxically celebrates the forthcoming disaster as both Rome’s greatest defeat
and the city’s greatest victory: nam tempore, Roma, / nullo maior eris (351–2). This
formulation captures the essence of the underlying idea that, in the Punica, a defeat
can be a victory, and a victory, a defeat. Silius then expands on his claim that
Cannae paradoxically marks Rome’s concomitant shift from (military) defeat to
(military) victory and from (moral) victory to (moral) defeat: mox sic labere
secundis, / ut sola cladum tuearis nomina fama (352–3). Here, Silius asserts that the
military defeat at Cannae represents a moral victory for Rome and, by extension,
A Reading of Punica 1–10: From Saguntum to Cannae 89
that the military victory later at Zama represents a moral defeat for the city. More
broadly, the poet invites the reader both to look back and, after a first reading, to
look ahead to other pivotal moments in the development of this theme. On the
one hand, in book 3, during his conversation with Venus, Jupiter ominously
predicts that “the time will one day come for you when Rome, the greatest city in
the world, / will be more famous for her defeats” (iamque tibi veniet tempus, quo
maxima rerum / nobilior sit Roma malis, 584–5). On the other, in book 15, after
Scipio chooses Virtus over Voluptas, the rejected goddess (i.e., Venus herself)
likewise predicts, “My time, my time will come one day, / when Rome, trained to
my commands, will serve me / with great zeal, and I alone will be held in honor”
(venient, venient mea tempora quondam, / cum docilis nostris magno certamine
Roma / serviet imperiis et honos mihi habebitur uni, 125–7). Fittingly, both of these
passages include wordplay which underscores the notion that Venus (i.e., luxury)
will one day (soon) come to destroy Rome (Venus ∼ veniet / venient).
All of these passages center on the closing couplet of book 10, where Silius
sharpens the paradox of victory in defeat and defeat in victory in language which
pointedly invites the reader to reflect on the arc of the war and the narrative across
books 9 and 10, even across the poem as a whole: haec tum Roma fuit. post te cui
vertere mores / si stabat fatis, potius, Carthago, maneres (10.657–8). Through the
opposition between “then” and “now” in the chiasmus posthac . . . / . . . tunc (9.346–
7) ∼ tum . . . post te (10.657), Silius skillfully tropes the reversal of military victory
and defeat vis-à-vis moral victory and defeat around the turning point of Cannae.
The poet even goes so far as to cue this reversal through another chiasmus, of the
consonants r and m in Roma . . . mores, and then to mark that chiasmus with the
verb vertere, as if to say that Rome changed into her opposite when the city
changed her ways after Cannae.32 This particular wordplay on the consonants r
and m pervades the epic and, in a sense, ties together many of the poem’s essential
themes. Silius engages with the arma (i.e., the Aeneid) of Maro (i.e., Vergil) in
order to trace the rise of the city of Roma and its maiores (“ancestors”) from its
divine origins, Amor (i.e., Venus) and Mars (Romulus and Remus), as well as, after
a long mora (“delay”), the decline and fall of the city’s mores (“character”), leading
to the decline and fall of its muri (“walls”) and eventually to its mors (“death”),
leaving behind only the memoria (“memory”) of what was, including the memory
of the three wars with the Mauri (“Carthaginians”).33 From the beginning of the
epic (ordior arma, 1.1) to its end (memorat . . . / . . . Roma, 17.653–4), Silius returns
time and again to this dense cluster of theme words in order to explore the fraught
relationship between the rise and fall of Carthage and Rome, as well as the
concomitant rise and fall of Hannibal and Scipio.
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91
92 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
In Punica 11.1–27, Silius marks the transition between books, between pentads,
and between the two major phases of the Second Punic War (before and after
Cannae) with a medial proem in the form of an extended catalog of the Italian
cities which defect from Rome to Hannibal after the battle, culminating with an
extended ecphrasis of Capua, the second city in Italy, in 11.28–54.1 Once again,
Silius offers a somewhat different version for the events after the battle of Cannae
compared to the rest of the tradition, especially when compared to the account
in Livy (Pun. 11 ~ Liv. 23.1–18). Perhaps most notably, in Livy, Hannibal marches
from Cannae (in Apulia) into Samnium against the Hirpini and, from there, into
Campania against Neapolis and then Capua; in Silius, however, while Hannibal
still marches from Cannae into Samnium and, from there, into Campania, he
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 93
acquires many more peoples and places as new allies along the way, including the
Bruttians, the Apulians, and the Hirpini, as well as Atella and Calatia, Tarentum
and Croton, the Locrians and the Celts, and, of course, Capua.2 In cataloging
these defectors, Silius not only emphasizes the gravity of the situation for the
Romans, but also foreshadows many of the pivotal conflicts to come in both the
war and the narrative, from events at Tarentum and Locri to those at Capua.
Once again, Silius underscores the structural and thematic importance of Punica
11.1–27 for the epic as a whole through a deft intertextual gesture: nunc age, quos
clades insignis Iapyge campo / verterit ad Libyam populos Sarranaque castra, /
expediam (1–3), the opening sentence of the book, here recalls, but also
significantly alters, the formulation which Vergil uses in his own medial proem
in Aeneid 7.37–45, especially the opening sentence of the proem in 37–40:
Several intertextual resonances all but ensure that Silius intends the reader to
compare Punica 11.1–3 with Aeneid 7.37–40: verse-initial nunc age (Pun. 11.1 ∼
Aen. 7.37), the relative clause(s) which immediately follow (Pun. 11.1–2 ∼ Aen.
7.37–8), and, most of all, the enjambment of verse-initial expediam (Pun. 11.3 ∼
Aen. 7.40). These many linguistic similarities between the two texts point up the
striking thematic similarity between them, as well. At this point in the Aeneid,
Aeneas has just entered the Tiber and is sailing into Latium towards the future
site of Rome, where he will soon wage the (proleptic) civil war which culminates
in his victory over Turnus in single combat. At this point in the Punica,
internecine conflict is likewise brewing, as Capua and others desert the Romans
for the Carthaginians, transforming the Second Punic War into another
(proleptic) civil war. On the small scale, Silius marks the transition between
books 10 and 11 through the stark contrast between haec tum in 10.657 and
nunc age in 11.1. On the medium scale, the poet marks the complementary
transition between pentads, between books 1–5, 6–10, and 11–15, as well as the
dyad/triad of books 16–17[–18], through the repetition of references to the
94 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Bruttians at the beginning of books 6, 11, and 16: first, the reference to a certain
Bruttius, a Roman eagle bearer who commits suicide after Lake Trasimene
(6.14–40); then, the reference to the Bruttii in the catalog of Italian cities which
defect from Rome to Hannibal after Cannae (11.9–10); and, finally, the reference
to Hannibal venting his spleen in the land of the Bruttii after the Metaurus River
(16.1–22). References to the Bruttii are otherwise infrequent in the Punica
(8.568, 13.92–3, 17.179–80, 432–40) and consistently remind the reader that, like
the Capuans, the Bruttians were among the first Italians to defect: as such, the
references to this people at the beginning of books 6, 11, and 16 emphasize the
thematic opposition throughout the epic between fides and perfidia. On the large
scale, Silius uses his medial proem in 11.1–27 in order to mark the transition
between the two major phases of the war (before and after Cannae), between the
war against Hannibal, the foreign invader, and the war against the enemy within.
Silius recounts how the Capuans and other Italians desert the Romans for the
Carthaginians after Cannae (11.1–121): following the catalog which serves as a
medial proem (1–54), the Capuans send envoys to Rome in order to make the
specious demand of a share in the consulship, at the instigation of Pacuvius
Calavius, their chief magistrate (55–64); Vibius Virrius, the leader of the
delegation, presents the proposal, which the Roman Senate unanimously rejects
outright with a torrent of abuse (65–72); and the senators T. Manlius Torquatus,
Fabius, Marcellus, and Fulvius offer especially harsh denunciations (73–121).
Rejected by Rome, the Capuans turn to Hannibal (122–482). At the instigation
of Virrius, the Capuans celebrate Hannibal’s many successes thus far in the war
and send envoys to him in order to propose an alliance (122–56). Decius Magius,
the leader of the pro-Roman faction in Capua, speaks out against the proposed
alliance, warning his fellow Capuans not to forget their ties with Rome; after
Hannibal and the Capuans come to terms, the unsettling arrival of a large band
of Autololes prompts Decius to make one final plea to his fellow Capuans not to
allow Hannibal himself to enter the city (157–200). When Hannibal learns about
the situation inside Capua, he orders his band of troops to take Decius into
custody and to bring him to his camp outside the city, where Hannibal rebukes
Decius for opposing him; upon entering the city himself, Hannibal again orders
his troops to take Decius into custody, only this time he orders him to be thrown
into chains and taken away for punishment: having removed Decius, Hannibal
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 95
marches through the streets of Capua in triumph (201–66). That night, after his
triumph, Hannibal continues the celebration with a lavish banquet, at first
disapproving of but at last succumbing to the luxury of the feast, during which
Teuthras plays and sings to the lyre, including a song on the founding of Capua:
meanwhile, in the garden outside at the back of the house, Pacuvius barely
succeeds in dissuading his son, Perolla, from killing and decapitating Hannibal
by threatening to interpose himself between his son and his intended victim
(267–368). The next day, with his brother Mago, as well as Decius, on the way
back to Carthage (although Decius is subsequently driven off course to Cyrene,
where he is granted asylum by Ptolemy IV), Hannibal and his men decide to
spend the winter at Capua, wasting away in luxury: Venus sends down her
Cupids to strike the Carthaginians with their arrows, causing them to burn with
passion for wine, women, and song; above all else, Hannibal enjoys the
performances by Teuthras, and so Teuthras sings of the bards Amphion, Arion,
Chiron, and Orpheus, ending with the image of the decapitated head of Orpheus,
still singing, floating out to sea (369–482). Meanwhile, Mago returns to Carthage
(483–611): after entering the city in triumph (483–500), Mago addresses the
Carthaginian Senate with a report about the victory at Cannae, as well as a
request for supplies in order to bring the war to an end, and then rebukes Hanno
for suggesting that Hannibal be turned over to the Romans (501–53); in reply,
Hanno renews his call for peace, predicts that Rome will soon recover from
Cannae, and rejects the request for supplies, but all to no avail (554–611).
Enervated by their winter in Capua (12.1–26), Hannibal and his men strike
fear into the surrounding cities of Campania when they emerge from hibernation,
but they discover that they lack their former strength and vigor (27–160): first,
Hannibal attacks Naples, but he is repulsed from the walls of the city by a sudden
counterattack (27–59); then, he threatens Cumae, but he is again repulsed, by a
Roman garrison under the command of Ti. Sempronius Gracchus (60–107);
finally, Hannibal unsuccessfully besieges Puteoli, and so he instead lays waste to
the area around Mt. Gaurus (108–60). From there, Hannibal lays siege to Nola
(161–294). Silius offers a brief ecphrasis on the city’s topography and the Roman
garrison stationed there under the command of Marcellus (161–6). When he
catches sight of Hannibal approaching in the distance, Marcellus commands his
soldiers to take up their arms and prepare to meet the assault, then he leads them
out of the city against the Carthaginians: Marcellus seeks out Hannibal for a
single combat, but Juno intervenes to prevent the clash; instead, Hannibal strives
to rally his men (167–211). The Roman Pedianus kills the Carthaginian Cinyps,
decapitating him and, in doing so, recovers the helmet and plume which
96 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Hannibal had taken from Paullus and given to Cinyps (212–52). When Pedianus
brings back this trophy, Marcellus praises him for his valor and then hurls his
spear at Hannibal, narrowly missing him: the Carthaginians flee from the
battlefield, leaving the Romans to hail Marcellus as their victor (253–80). As
Marcellus returns to Nola in triumph, Hannibal addresses his soldiers and
blames them, not himself, for their failure to take the city (281–94). The Romans
rejoice at the news of the repulse of Hannibal (295–341): after punishing those
who had shirked their responsibility towards the war effort, the people of Rome,
rich and poor alike, pile up their private wealth as a contribution to the public
coffers (295–319); meanwhile, envoys bring back their report from the oracle of
Apollo at Delphi, including a prophecy about Rome’s imminent victory in the
war (320–41). Silius then shifts the scene briefly to the war in Sardinia (342–
419): Silius relates how Torquatus leads the Romans against Hostus, son of
Hampsagoras, who had earlier invited the Carthaginians to Sardinia (342–54),
offers an ecphrasis on the history of the island (355–75), and recounts how
Hostus and Hampsagoras meet their death (376–419). Thereafter, Hannibal lays
siege to Tarentum and Capua (420–544): after capturing the cities of Acerrae,
Nuceria, Casilinum, and Petelia in quick succession, Hannibal shifts his focus to
Tarentum, where things stand at a stalemate (420–48); when word arrives that
the Romans have besieged Capua, Hannibal hastens to relieve the city, along the
way destroying armies under the command of M. Centenius Paenula and Cn.
Fulvius Flaccus, and honoring Gracchus, who had been killed in an ambush by
the Lucanians, with a proper burial (449–544). Finally, realizing that he is unable
to defend Capua, Hannibal marches on Rome (545–752). The terrified Romans
prepare for an attack (545–57). That night, Hannibal rides around the walls of
Rome in order to inspect the fortifications (558–73). The next day, Hannibal
addresses his soldiers and promises them a speedy victory, but the Romans
frustrate that hope by charging out of the city against the Carthaginians (574–
604). Jupiter turns Hannibal away from the city for three days in a row, until he
sends Juno down to compel him to abandon the siege (605–732). The Romans
rejoice at their good fortune once they realize that Hannibal has, indeed, marched
away for good (733–52).
Hannibal learns about the Palladium, the sacred statue of Minerva which
guards Rome, from Dasius Altinius, an Italian from Arpi allied with the
Carthaginians: he gives up hope of capturing the city and plunders the Temple of
Feronia (13.1–93). Meanwhile, Fulvius takes control of Capua (94–380). Fulvius
addresses his soldiers and urges them to punish Capua for allying with Carthage
(94–110). The Romans capture the white hind of Capua, a sacred animal raised by
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 97
Capys himself, the founder of the city, and then Fulvius sacrifices the hind to
Diana (111–37). The Rutulian Ti. Claudius Asellus defeats the Capuan Cerrinus
Vibellius Taurea in single combat, chasing him right through the city of Capua
itself (138–78). Amid the carnage, Fulvius attacks Numitor, Laurens, and Taburnus,
three brothers who guard the gates of the city, striking Numitor with his spear
(179–212); Virrius leads the Capuans out of the city against the Romans, including
Calenus, who slays Veliternus and Marius before falling himself to Scipio, the
future Africanus (213–43); Volesus kills Ascanius, decapitating him, and then the
Capuans flee back to their city (244–55). That night, while the Capuans await their
imminent demise, Virrius laments his fate before gathering together his fellow
senators for one last banquet: Fides punishes the besieged Capuans for their
faithlessness to the Romans by driving them to mass suicide (256–98). The next
day, the Romans enter Capua and, seeing the terrible conditions with their own
eyes, restrain themselves from putting the city to fire and the sword (299–325).
Silius explains that it is Pan who, sent down by Jupiter, holds back the Romans
from destroying Capua (326–47). Instead, the Romans despoil the captured city:
Fulvius hails Milo for being the first to scale the walls of Capua and then rebukes
the captive Taurea when he commits suicide right in front of him rather than be
punished by the Romans (348–80). After the fall of Capua, Silius recounts the rise
of Scipio (381–895). When he learns about the death of both his father and his
uncle in Spain (381–99), Scipio decides to commune with the spirits of the dead
in a traditional epic scene which combines a nekyia and a katabasis, and so he
seeks out the Sibyl Autonoe for instructions on the proper sacrifice (400–48).
After completing the necessary rites, Scipio encounters the shade of App. Claudius
Pulcher, who had been mortally wounded during the siege of Capua, and promises
him a proper burial (449–87), then Autonoe introduces Scipio to the shade of the
Sibyl Deiphobe: Deiphobe utters a prophecy about Scipio’s future victories in
Spain and Africa, but also about his later exile from Rome, and reluctantly leads
him on a tour of the Underworld, including an ecphrasis of the ten gates which
surround it (488–614). Thereafter, Scipio converses with his mother, Pomponia,
who tells him that Jupiter is, in fact, his real father (615–49), and with his father
and uncle, P. and Cn. Cornelii Scipiones, who both encourage him to exercise
more caution than they did (650–704), as well as with Paullus (705–20), before he
receives a troubling vision of Rome’s past and future, including Hamilcar,
Alexander the Great, Homer, a catalog of famous Roman women, the civil wars,
and Hannibal himself (721–895).
Silius digresses from the narrative about the rise and fall of Hannibal in order
to recount the fall of Syracuse. After an invocation of the Muses, Silius begins
98 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
offers a brief ecphrasis on the city’s topography (220–9). Scipio leads the Roman
attack against the Carthaginian garrison stationed there under the command of
Aris and, taking advantage of the tides, takes control of New Carthage the same
day (230–50): the next day, the Romans celebrate their victory, and Laelius
praises Scipio for his continence when he returns a captured virgin unharmed to
her betrothed, the ruler of a local tribe (251–85). Silius then shifts the scene
briefly to the war in Greece (286–319). Meanwhile, back in Italy, Fabius captures
Tarentum (320–33), but Marcellus is ambushed and killed by Hannibal in Apulia
(334–98): Silius laments the premature death of such a great hero (334–42);
Marcellus and his fellow consul T. Quinctius Crispinus make the ill-fated choice
to scout out a nearby hill between the camps of the Roman and Carthaginian
armies (343–60); caught in the ambush, Marcellus rushes to his own death after
he watches his son fall (361–80); and Hannibal honors the fallen Marcellus with
a massive funeral pyre and a laudatory funeral oration (381–98). In Spain, Scipio
defeats Hannibal’s brother Hasdrubal at Baecula (399–492): after the swift
capture of New Carthage, Hasdrubal, Mago, and Hasdrubal Gisgo, the three
Carthaginian commanders in the peninsula, scramble to unite their forces
against Scipio (399–409); Scipio attacks Hasdrubal, the nearest of the three
commanders to him, as he celebrates a rite in honor of the founding of Carthage
(410–40); Scipio leads the charge against the Carthaginians, striking down
Sabbura, the first named casualty of the battle (441–50); Laelius kills Gala, Alabis,
and Draces, the last of whom he decapitates (451–70); and Hasdrubal flees from
the battlefield, leaving behind his camp for the Romans to plunder (471–92).
Following in the footsteps of Hannibal (493–521), Hasdrubal marches from
Spain to the Alps (493–506) and on into Italy in order to join forces with his
brother (507–21). Visited in a dream by the goddess Italia, the consul C. Claudius
Nero races to the Metaurus River (522–76); meanwhile, back in Rome, the city
braces for the worst (577–90). In the events leading up to the battle of the
Metaurus River (591–657), Nero reaches his destination, where he joins forces
with his fellow consul, M. Livius Salinator (591–600); Hasdrubal makes a vain
attempt at fleeing during the night (601–25); and so, the next day, after the
Roman cavalry track down the Carthaginians (626–34), Hasdrubal (635–51)
and Nero (652–7) both address their soldiers. During the battle itself (658–808),
Salinator leads the charge against the Carthaginians, striking down Nabis, who
has just slain Sabellus (658–91); Hasdrubal kills Arabus as he despoils the body
of Nabis (692–9); Canthus defeats Rutilus in single combat (700–10); Salinator
kills Mosa, decapitating him (711–34); and, after Hasdrubal wounds Salinator
with his spear (735–77), Nero slays Hasdrubal himself in single combat by
100 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
decapitating him (778–808). On the day after the engagement, Nero returns to
his own camp in triumph, parading Hasdrubal’s head on a spear for Hannibal to
see from his camp (809–23).
Punica 11–15, the third and final pentad of the epic, provides a narrative of
the events of the Second Punic War from the battle of Cannae to the battle of the
Metaurus River. Across this third phase of the poem, Silius describes the
aftermath of the battle of Cannae, charts the shift from Hannibal to Scipio, and
provides an expansive narrative of the battle of the Metaurus River. By continuing
to manipulate the narrative pace, Silius emphasizes the structural and thematic
significance of the Metaurus River. Put simply, whereas Silius slows the narrative
down across books 1–10, he speeds it up across books 11–15 (indeed, for the rest
of the poem), all in order to reflect the impending fall of the Carthaginians and
their leader, the aging Hannibal, as well as the concomitant rise of the Romans
and their leader, the youthful Scipio. Accordingly, across books 11 and 12, Silius
recounts a series of sieges which mark successive stages in this transition from
Carthage to Rome, from Hannibal to Scipio, beginning with Hannibal’s triumph
at Capua, as well as his brother Mago’s triumph at Carthage, and continuing with
Hannibal’s repulse from Nola, followed by his repulse from Rome. Across books
13 and 14, Silius recounts another series of sieges which likewise mark subsequent
stages in this fraught transition from one superpower to the other, beginning
with the fall of Capua to Fulvius and concluding with the fall of Syracuse to
Marcellus. All of these siege narratives look back to the siege of Saguntum across
books 1–2, and the fall of each city reflects and refracts elements of the falls of
every other city in the epic. In book 15, Silius elegantly underscores the growing
tension between Scipio and Rome: on the one hand, Scipio makes his dashing
entrance into the war and the narrative with his victories at New Carthage
(essentially a battle instead of a siege, since he captures the city the same day on
which he attacks it) and Baecula; on the other, the Roman forces under the
consuls Nero and Salinator garner their own monumental victory to conclude
the book. The battle of the Metaurus River represents not only the structural and
thematic culmination of this trio of battles, but also an intriguing climax to the
pentad: the single combat between Nero and Hasdrubal, which ends with the
death and decapitation of the defeated Carthaginian, represents a deft
manipulation of closure, even a plausible end to the war and the narrative, were
it not for the fact that Scipio must continue the conflict until he avenges the
death of his father and uncle. Throughout this third pentad, memories of
conflicts before and after the Second Punic War continue to punctuate the
narrative. Above all else, however, Silius transforms Scipio into a truly epic hero,
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 101
especially through his visit to the Underworld in book 13 and his choice of
Virtus over Voluptas in book 15.
Broken by the defeat and the death of his brother, Hannibal retires to the lands
of the Bruttii, where he languishes until he is finally recalled to Africa in order to
defend Carthage against the Roman invasion led by Scipio (16.1–22). In Spain,
Scipio defeats the remaining Carthaginian forces at Ilipa (23–169). He drives out
Hannibal’s brother Mago (23–7) and captures Hanno after a surprise attack on
his camp (28–43), during which L. Cornelius Scipio Asiaticus defeats the
Cantabrian Larus in single combat (44–77). When word arrives that Hasdrubal
Gisgo is on the march to join forces with Hanno, Scipio addresses his soldiers
and urges them to seize the opportunity (78–93), and then he leads them to a
final victory in Spain (94–114): after the battle, Masinissa, later to become the
first king of Numidia, receives a favorable omen during the night (115–34), and
so, the next day, he ventures into the Roman camp in order to meet with Scipio
and change sides (135–69). Scipio and Hasdrubal Gisgo both sail to the court of
Syphax in Africa, where they strive to gain the king as an ally (170–276): Silius
offers an ecphrasis on the king and describes the arrival of the competing
delegations (170–83); Syphax warmly receives both parties and encourages them
to make peace, before offering them hospitality (184–228); and, the next day,
Scipio ventures into the palace in order to convince Syphax to join the Romans
(229–61), but the sacrifice to confirm the alliance goes awry, a grim harbinger of
things to come (262–76). Scipio returns to Spain, where he holds funeral games
in honor of his dead father and uncle (277–591). Scipio is hailed as “king” (rex),
but he rejects the title as un-Roman and instead announces that he will celebrate
the promised funeral games in seven days’ time (277–302); on the appointed day,
Scipio offers a sacrifice to his father and uncle, after which the games begin (303–
11). The four-horse team led by Panchates and driven by Hiberus wins the
chariot race (312–456); Eurytus wins the foot race (457–526); during the
gladiatorial fights, twin brothers kill each other in single combat (527–56); and,
finally, Burnus wins the javelin throw (557–74). At the conclusion of the games,
Scipio Asiaticus and Laelius honor the dead, and then Scipio honors them,
hurling his spear as a tribute to his father and uncle: the spear takes root in the
ground and instantly grows into a tall oak tree, a favorable omen for the future
(575–91). Scipio returns to Rome (592–700): after Scipio enters the city in
102 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
triumph and is elected consul for the purpose of destroying Carthage (592–9),
Fabius addresses the Roman Senate in order to advise them against allowing
Scipio to invade Africa as long as Hannibal remains in Italy (600–44); in reply,
Scipio rebukes Fabius for his policy of delay, predicts that he will meet with
success, and, in the end, convinces the Roman Senate to send him with his army
on to Sicily (645–700).
P. Cornelius Scipio Nasica, son of Cn. Scipio and cousin of the future
Africanus, welcomes the Magna Mater into Rome on behalf of the city in order
to drive Hannibal out of Italy: when the ship carrying the image of the goddess
comes to a sudden halt, Claudia Quinta takes the rope and leads the ship up the
Tiber (17.1–47). Scipio sets out for Africa immediately and swiftly defeats
Syphax and Hasdrubal Gisgo at Campi Magni (48–148): Scipio sails with his
army from Sicily to Africa (48–58); Silius offers an ecphrasis on Sophonisba, the
daughter of Hasdrubal Gisgo and (new) wife of Syphax (59–75); Scipio rebukes
Syphax for changing sides from the Romans to the Carthaginians (76–84); and,
after Scipio attacks the enemy camp in the middle of the night (85–108), Syphax
is defeated and taken captive, as Hasdrubal Gisgo flees back to Africa (109–48).
Envoys sail from Carthage to Hannibal in order to complete their mission of
instructing him to return home (149–200): following a three-day journey (149–
59), the envoys arrive in Italy to find Hannibal tormented by dream visions of
the countless Romans who have perished in the war, including Flaminius,
Gracchus, and Paullus (160–9); the envoys deliver an impassioned plea for
assistance (170–83); and Hannibal reluctantly agrees to depart from Italy (184–
200). Hannibal finally returns home to Africa (201–90): he looks back at Italy as
the ships set sail (201–17), and, in a fit of anger and madness, orders his men to
turn around (218–35), but Neptune raises a terrible storm in order to drive the
fleet on to Africa until Venus intervenes to plead with him to lessen the intensity
of the storm (236–90). In the events leading up to the battle of Zama (291–384),
Hannibal and Scipio march to the battlefield (291), and then Hannibal addresses
his soldiers (292–337), but Scipio is unable to address his soldiers because they
instead demand the signal for battle (338–40). Meanwhile, Jupiter and Juno
discuss the outcome of the impending engagement: Jupiter reminds Juno that
the time has now come for the end of the war; in acknowledging that, Juno
requests that Hannibal be allowed to evade capture and that the walls of Carthage
be allowed to stand; and, in accepting those terms, Jupiter reminds Juno that
Carthage will one day be destroyed and stipulates that Hannibal never return to
Italy (341–84). During the battle itself (385–624), Silius offers an ecphrasis of
Hannibal and Scipio as they lead their respective armies into the field (385–405);
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 103
fierce fighting rages on both sides (406–43); and Hannibal (444–78) and Scipio
(479–508) each kill countless of the enemy. Scipio seeks out Hannibal for a single
combat, but Juno lures away the Carthaginian by assuming the guise first of
Scipio himself and then of a shepherd, leaving the rest of the Carthaginians to
flee from the battlefield (509–96): ultimately, Hannibal flees from the battlefield,
too, after one final address in which he proclaims his immortality for his victory
at Cannae (597–617), while his native city opens its gates to Scipio (618–24).
Scipio returns to Rome in triumph (625–54).
Punica 16–17, or, perhaps, originally 16–18, making it either the closing dyad
or perhaps the closing triad of the epic, provides a narrative of the events of the
Second Punic War from the battle of the Metaurus River to the battle of Zama.
Across this closing phase of the poem, Silius describes the aftermath of the battle
of the Metaurus River, continues to chart the ongoing shift from Hannibal to
Scipio, and provides an expansive narrative of the battle of Zama. The pace of the
action reflects the stark contrast between the fall of the Carthaginians under
Hannibal and the rise of the Romans under Scipio. In book 16, Silius continues
to underscore the growing tension between Scipio and Rome: while Hannibal
languishes in southern Italy, Scipio enjoys victory in Spain at the battle of Ilipa,
acquires Masinissa and Syphax as allies for his future war in Africa, and celebrates
funeral games in honor of his father and uncle, after which he returns to Rome
in triumph. In book 17 or, perhaps, originally across books 17 and 18, Silius
recounts a series of battles which essentially function as sieges because they
involve the destruction of the enemy fortifications and which therefore mark the
final stages in the transition from Carthage to Rome, beginning with the battle
of Campi Magni and concluding with the battle of Zama. Throughout this
closing phase, Silius completes the transformation of the Punica as a narrative of
the Second Punic War into a narrative of the entirety of Roman history and
Roman culture. At the end of the epic, Scipio Africanus enters Carthage in
triumph before returning to Rome in triumph in order to foreshadow the end of
the Third Punic War, when his adoptive grandson Scipio Aemilianus likewise
presides over the destruction of Carthage before returning to Rome in triumph,
as well.
104 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
In Punica 17.625–54, Silius describes Scipio’s triumphal return to Rome after his
victory in Africa much as he had described his return to the city after his victory
in Spain (16.592–9).3 The repetition of repetit (16.594, 17.627) unmistakably
signals the link between the two scenes, while, at the same time, prompting
reflection on both the similarities and the differences between these two
moments in the war and in the narrative: Scipio returns from Spain as “the
avenger of his country and family” (ultor patriaeque domusque, 16.593); he
returns from Africa, however, as a rector (17.625), i.e., almost a rex, who clearly
aspires for more than vengeance. The passage here at the end of the epic can be
divided into three major sections: first, Scipio enters Rome in triumph endowed
with his new cognomen Africanus to commemorate his victory (17.625–8); then,
Silius describes the triumphal procession from Syphax in chains to the image of
Hannibal in flight (17.629–44); and, finally, Scipio takes center stage dressed in
the gold and purple of the imperator (17.645–54). On an initial reading, the
passage offers an appropriately triumphant conclusion to both the war and the
106 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
partakes in the celebration. When Silius describes Scipio as ipse adstans curru
(17.645) with his Martia . . . ora (17.646), the poet recalls not only the simile in
which he likens Scipio to Mars during the fighting at Zama (17.486–90), but also
that in which he likens Hannibal to Mars during the fighting at Saguntum
(1.433–6). Likewise, when Silius describes Scipio as auro decoratus et ostro, the
poet recalls, among many other leaders in the epic, both Roman and Carthaginian,
Hannibal and Scipio dressed in purple as they lead their troops into battle at
Zama (17.385–405, esp. 391, 395). That said, when Scipio enters Rome dressed in
gold and purple, the triumphator looks most like Voluptas when she appeared to
him “shining in her dress, / in which she had suffused Tyrian purple with tawny
gold” (veste refulgens, / ostrum qua fulvo Tyrium suffuderat auro, 15.24–5, the
only other collocation of ostrum and aurum in the poem). In essence, Scipio
appears to fulfill the threat uttered by Voluptas in 15.121–8 when she promised
that her time would come before she stormed off. In the simile which follows,
Silius likens Scipio to the two canonical examples of heroic apotheosis, Bacchus
and Hercules. In particular, Silius likens Scipio to Hercules “touching the stars”
(tangens . . . astra, 17.650) after the Gigantomachy, but the vagueness of this
unusual turn of phrase could be read as a reference either to divinization or to
theomachy. Accordingly, although Bassett long ago claimed that “Scipio’s
triumphal procession to the Capitol is his apotheosis, similar to that of Hercules
on Mt. Oeta,” it is Regulus whom Silius likens to Hercules in his suffering and
death (6.452–7; cf. 3.43–4).7 Finally, in the apostrophe which closes both the
book and the epic, Silius hails Scipio as invicte parens (17.651); as the third
founder of Rome (a title elsewhere awarded to C. Marius: Plut. Mar. 27.5) after
Quirinus, the deified Romulus, and M. Furius Camillus; and even as the son of
Jupiter himself. The use of invictus again recalls Hercules, and, in his Scipio,
Ennius (ap. Cic. Orat. 45.152) had already hailed his honorand as Scipio invicte.8
Earlier in the Punica, in the apostrophe of the fallen Saguntines and Hannibal in
2.696–707 which closes the book, Silius had hailed Hannibal as “the formerly
unconquered warrior” (invictus quondam . . . bellator, 706) who would one day
commit suicide by ingesting poison (see also 3.692–714, 13.868–95). This leaves
the reader to ponder whether Scipio will likewise one day become merely
invictus quondam or remain invictus forever like Hercules (1.512) and Jupiter
(12.672). Indeed, Silius complicates the tone of the apostrophe and, in particular,
Scipio’s claim to divine paternity in the closing verses of the epic through a deft
intertextual gesture. In the closing verses of book 8 of his epic, Lucan, saddened
by the death of Pompey, consoles himself with the thought that, one day, people
will not believe the Egyptians when they claim to know the site of Pompey’s
108 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
tomb, just as people do not believe the Cretans when they claim to know the site
of Jupiter’s tomb (8.869–72). Silius marks his engagement with Lucan through
his use of Tonantis (Pun. 17.654 ∼ 8.872, verse-final and book-final in both): the
Cretan story about the tomb of Jupiter (and, therefore, his mortality) is obviously
a lie, and so, too, perhaps, is the story about Scipio’s divine paternity (mentitur,
Pun. 17.654 ∼ mendax, 8.872), especially given the potentially ironic force of vero
(OLD s.v. 3b).9 As a result, Silius manipulates the sense of closure for both the
war and the narrative by ending the epic on a note of indeterminacy, and by
prompting the reader to reflect on the relative validity of claims to divine
paternity made by other Romans before, during, and (long) after Scipio.
Reading the Punica, especially for the first time, can make for a very demanding
experience, as Silius transforms his narrative of the Second Punic War into a
narrative of the entirety of Roman history and Roman culture through a sustained
engagement with the entirety of Roman literature. The epic’s incipit, ordior,
functions as a metaliterary gesture toward this construction, as well as
deconstruction, of a totalizing vision of Romanitas because of its origin as a
weaving term (OLD s.v. 1): the poet weaves together history and myth by weaving
together historiography and epic in order to transcend the boundaries of space
and time. The narrative threads which comprise the resulting text include the
standard epic type scenes, such as invocations of the Muses; catalogs, especially
troop catalogs; digressions and ecphrases; similes; and night and dawn scenes; as
well as other recurring plot elements like dreams, oracles, and prophecies; divine
scenes; and scenes between fathers and sons.10 Above all else, however, the Punica
recounts the events of the Second Punic War itself through scenes of travel and
diplomacy; single and group combat, including aristeiai; theomachy; and triumph.
Accordingly, the hexadic model which divides the epic into groups of siege books
and battle books provides perhaps the clearest guidance for a reading, especially a
first-time reading, of the narrative within and across its 17 (or 18) books:
siege books 11–12 Capua > Carthage book(s) 17[–18] Carthage (Zama)
Nola > Rome Rome
The narrative of the siege of Saguntum follows the normative pattern, except for
the scene in the Carthaginian Senate in 2.270–390 which marks the passage of
time instead of a night scene like that inside Saguntum earlier in 1.556–75. The
narrative of the siege of Capua likewise follows the normative pattern, except for
the fact that the city falls first to the Carthaginians, in book 11, and then to the
Romans, in book 13. The narrative of the siege of Rome, however, presents the
reader with a conundrum, whether Scipio’s triumphal entrance into Rome in
book 17 represents an inversion or perhaps a continuation of Hannibal’s assault
110 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
on the city earlier in book 12. In a comparable way, the one-day battle narratives
function as a structural and thematic complement to the two-day siege narratives:
the narrative of the Ticinus River, the Trebia River, and Lake Trasimene (books
3–6) culminates in that of Cannae (books 7–10), while the narrative of New
Carthage, Baecula, and the Metaurus River (book 15) culminates in that of Ilipa
(book 16).
Above and beyond this division of the Punica into siege books and battle
books, each individual book in the poem plays a unique role in the development
of the narrative. Book 3, in particular, with its account of Hannibal’s march from
Spain to Italy, offers a structural and thematic synecdoche for the narrative arc of
the epic as a whole, especially the constant interplay between the rise and fall of
empires and the tension between speed and delay.11 Read in this way, Hannibal’s
march from the Pyrenees to the Alps parallels the events from Saguntum to
Rome:
Punica 3 Punica
3.415–41 (the Pyrenees) 1–2 (Saguntum)
3.442–65 (Rhône River) 3–6 (Ticinus River, Trebia River, Lake
Trasimene)
3.466–76 (Durance River) 7–10 (Cannae)
3.477–556 (Alps, part 1) 11–12 (Capua > Rome)
3.557–629 (Venus and Jupiter)
3.630–714 (Alps, part 2) 13–17[–18] (Capua > Rome)
Structurally, the mountain crossings parallel sieges, and the river crossings
parallel battles, while the conversation on Mt. Olympus between Venus and
Jupiter tropes not only the turning point in Hannibal’s ascent and descent of the
Alps, but also, by extension, his rise and fall in both the war and the narrative.
Thematically, Hannibal conquers nature in the very same way that he defeats his
enemies, until, that is, he encounters the Alps as a prefigurement of the walls of
Italy, even of the walls of Rome (Liv. 21.35.9; see also 30.5, as well as Plb. 3.54.2).12
As in the correlation outlined above between the number of days and the number
of books for both the siege and the battle narratives, Silius appears to have a
similar correlation between days and books in mind here. Whereas Polybius
(3.53.6) and Livy (21.35.4) agree that Hannibal took nine days to ascend the
Alps, Silius (3.554–6) asserts that the ascent took twelve days, just as it takes
Hannibal twelve books to reach the walls of Rome. More broadly, Polybius
(3.47–56, esp. 56.3) claims that the crossing of the Alps took fifteen days in total;
while Livy (21.29–38) offers an account which adds up to eighteen days, he also
A Reading of Punica 11–17: From Cannae to Zama 111
refers to the fifteen days cited by Polybius (3.56.3) at 21.38.1. Perhaps Silius
alludes to this debate in his manipulation of closure in books 15 and 18 of the
epic. Above all else, after his slow ascent of the Alps, Hannibal makes a rapid
descent of the mountain range which prefigures his rapid decline after his failed
march on Rome. Book 3 even ends with an allusion to Hannibal’s victory at
Cannae and its guarantee of his immortality after death which anticipates his
own words at the end of the poem (3.700–12 ∼ 17.605–17). Accordingly, like
several other books in the epic, including 7, 14, and 15, book 3 functions as a
mini-epic in tension with the surrounding narrative and, as a result, continues
the transformation of the Second Punic War into a totalizing vision of Romanitas,
from Troy to Carthage to Rome.
112
5
113
114 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
recounts his rise and fall, and offers a challenging heroic exemplum for all
subsequent generals seeking to distinguish themselves in the ongoing struggle
with Carthage. Across the arc of the Punica, we encounter a host of would-be
heroes who succeed and/or fail to imitate Regulus (and, therefore, by extension,
Hercules) during the action of the Second Punic War, including Flaminius,
Paullus, and Marcellus, all of whom fall in battle, as well as Fabius and, of course,
Scipio.11 To complete the picture, Silius also gives us a glimpse of Scipio
Aemilianus, the city’s greatest hero during the Third Punic War. Scholars have
organized these heroes into various groups, especially into heroic triads much
like those which we find in Sallust and Lucan; some scholars have also ventured
suggestions about possible links with the Flavians.12 More generally, Silius
explores the tension between the one, whether it be Hannibal, Scipio, or any
other would-be hero, and the many, i.e., Rome.13 In a sense, Regulus is a singular
hero who recalls the one-man rule of the Monarchy, while Scipio Aemilianus is
another singular hero who recalls the one-man rule of the Empire: between
these two poles, Silius explores the tension between one and two, the hallmark of
the transition from the Monarchy to the Republic, as well as the transition from
the Republic to the Empire, through the competition between Fabius and Scipio,
among others, to serve the state as the one true primus inter pares, whether as
consul, dictator, imperator, or perhaps rex.
Silius tropes the overall transition from two to one, from the two consuls of
the Republic to the one princeps of the Empire, in the transition from Scipio’s
father and uncle to Scipio himself. When the two generals (usually, but not
always, the consuls) fight against each other, the Romans lose, as at Cannae
(Paullus and Varro); when, however, the two generals fight together against the
enemy, the Romans win, as at the Metaurus River (Claudius Nero and Livius
Salinator). Put differently, when the consuls work together, Rome enjoys success
in foreign war; when, however, the consuls fail to work together, Rome suffers
defeat in civil war.14 Above all else, heroes must make their choices, whether it be
Paris choosing Venus over Juno and Minerva, or Hercules choosing Virtue over
Vice, or, in the Punica, Scipio likewise choosing Virtue over Vice (15.1–148).
When faced with the choice between fight and flight, heroes face the choice
between life and death, between glory and infamy. The rise and fall of heroes
motif figures most prominently in the choices between fight and flight made first
by Paullus and Varro at the battle of Cannae, and then by Hannibal and Scipio at
the battle of Zama, at the end of the two enneads which span books 1–9 and
10–17[–18]. At Cannae, Paullus confronts Varro on the battlefield, rebukes him
for his cowardice, and then plunges back into the fray to meet his fate in the
118 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Over time, however, single combat degraded into nothing more than a mere
gladiatorial bout, a spectacle of war and even a dehumanizing form of
entertainment, yet another transition which tropes the overall transition from
Republic to Empire, from bellum externum to bellum civile.17 Given that it was
Augustus who limited eligibility for the spolia opima (and the triumph18) to
members of the Imperial family, it is tempting once again to ponder what Silius
may have intended by resurrecting these memories of Republican military
prowess in the context of the Imperial reality. Across the arc of the poem, Silius
makes single combat the organizing theme of the entire narrative: if Hannibal is
defeated and decapitated, then the walls and citadel of Carthage will fall; if Scipio
is defeated and decapitated, then Rome will fall, instead.19 Time and again, the
poet delays the climactic single combat, eventually postponing it altogether, in a
sense, denying closure to the narrative, if not to the war itself.20 Indeed, by putting
off the long-anticipated climax, Silius transforms himself into a “Fabius
Cunctator” of sorts. Just as Fabius practices his policy of cunctatio in order to
delay the war, so, too, Silius practices his policy of cunctatio in order to delay the
narrative. Ultimately, Fabius can only hinder, but not derail, the progress of
the war; Silius can only hinder, but not derail, the progress of the narrative. In the
end, since neither Hannibal nor Scipio falls in battle, both will be able to lay
claim to the title of “unconquered” (2.706 ∼ 17.651), and both will share in the
victory, as well as in the defeat.
At one level, Silius transforms the Second Punic War into a new theomachy, a
new Titanomachy, and, most specifically of all, a new Gigantomachy, by troping
the transition from one generation of the gods to the next through the transition
from Carthage to Rome, from Hannibal to Scipio, as well as through the
transition from Republic to Empire, from foreign war to civil war.21
The Gigantomachy was traditionally fought at Phlegra, an ancient name for the
peninsula of Pallene, but the site of the battle was later moved to the similarly
named Campi Phlegraei in Campania:22 Silius capitalizes on this geographical
shift in order to transfer the myth from the Greek to the Roman context, cast the
Hannibalic War as a new Gigantomachy (e.g., 4.275–6, 5.434–56, 8.536–45,
8.648–55, 17.647–50), and even envision the Capitol as a new Mt. Olympus.23
Accordingly, when Jupiter makes his formal entry into the war and the narrative
during the first day of the siege of Saguntum, he does so as Jupiter Tonans,
120 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
hurling his thunderbolt in order to drive Hannibal away from the walls of the
city and give the Saguntines a brief respite (1.535–55):24
550 when she saw the wound inflicted by the spear tip which had been hurled,
she flew through the breezes, surrounded by a dark cloud,
and drew the sturdy spear out of his tough bones.
He [Hannibal] covers the gore pouring over his limbs with his shield,
and, dragging his sluggish steps one after the other, little by little,
555 with uncertain effort, he moves back away from the rampart.
At Lake Trasimene, the gods, apart from Juno, had turned their faces away from the
fighting in sadness and grief (5.201–7); here at Cannae, however, they eagerly enter
the fray (287–9): on the one side, Mars, Apollo, Neptune, Venus, Vesta, Hercules,
Cybele, Faunus, Quirinus, and Castor and Pollux fight on behalf of the Romans
(290–5); on the other side, Juno, Pallas, and Jupiter Ammon fight on behalf of the
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 123
Carthaginians (296–9). Silius vividly describes how the gods descend from the
heavens (300–3), as well as how the mortal combatants raise a shout up to the
heavens which rivals the loudness of the shouts raised both by the Giants and by
Jupiter during the Gigantomachy (304–9). The simile at the end of the passage tropes
the comparison between the Second Punic War and the Gigantomachy and, more
specifically, foreshadows the single combat between Hannibal and Scipio which
morphs into a single combat between Pallas and Mars in 9.411–555. After the long
delay following his victory at Cannae, Hannibal brings his new Gigantomachy to its
climax when he finally marches on Rome in order to sack the Capitol.
From the very beginning of both the war and the narrative, Silius identifies
three stages in Hannibal’s march on Rome, from scaling the Alps to scaling the
walls of the city to scaling the Capitoline Hill (1.63–9, 134–9, 268–70). After his
resounding victory at Lake Trasimene, Hannibal makes an initial abortive
attempt at marching on Rome, but Jupiter himself, looking down from the Alban
Mount, hurls his thunderbolt four times in order to turn Hannibal away from
the city (6.600–18). After the winter in Capua, Hannibal resumes his
Gigantomachy by visiting the Campi Phlegraei during the (ultimately
unsuccessful) siege of Puteoli (12.108–60). This moment foreshadows not only
the long-delayed march on Rome at the end of the book, but also Hannibal’s
ultimate failure: instead, Jupiter turns Hannibal away from the city for three days
in a row, until he sends Juno down to compel him to abandon the siege (12.605–
732). Fittingly, Silius transforms the climax of this new Gigantomachy into a
complex reminiscence of another Gigantomachy, at the fall of Troy recounted by
Aeneas (12.701–32 ∼ Verg. Aen. 2.559–633):27
After these words had been spoken, Saturnia [Juno] gives thanks and,
troubled,
flies down through the breezes, and, having taken hold of the youth’s right
hand,
Juno says, “Where are you rushing to, o madman, and do you take up wars
greater than it has been granted to a mortal to bear?” And she moved
away
705 the black cloud, and she revealed herself in her true form.
“Your business is not with a Phrygian [Trojan] or a Laurentian [Italian]
colonist.
Behold, there (for, having removed the cloud from your eyes, for a little
while
I will allow you to see everything), where the peak of the mountain rises
high toward the breezes, look, Apollo holds the Palatine, so called
710 by the Parrhasian king [Evander], with a full and rattling quiver,
and he stretches his bow, and he prepares for battle.
But, where the Aventine raises itself up to the lofty height
of the neighboring hills, do you see how the virgin Latonia [Diana]
brandishes the torches kindled in the stream of Phlegethon,
715 she naked with her outstretched arms in her eagerness for battle?
In another part, look how Gradivus [Mars] has filled the field
called after his own name [Campus Martius] with his fierce weapons.
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 125
From one side, Janus makes his move, from the other side, Quirinus does,
too,
each god from his own hill [Janiculan and Quirinal]. But indeed, look,
720 how great Jupiter shakes the aegis as it spews forth storms and flames,
and with what great fires the savage god feeds his anger.
Turn your face in this direction and dare to look upon the Thunderer:
what snows, how great the thunderbolts you see when the heavens
ring out at his nod! What fire flashes in his eyes!
725 Yield to the gods at last and cease the Titanic wars [Gigantomachy].”
Thus having spoken she dragged the man away, unskilled
in peace and moderation, admiring the faces of the gods
and their flaming limbs, and she restored peace to earth and to heaven.
Looking back, he goes away, and the leader orders that the standards
730 be taken away from the camp, and he threatens that he will come back.
All of a sudden, the sun returns, burning even brighter in heaven,
and the blue skies sparkle with the pouring in of Phoebus.
Ordered by Jupiter to turn Hannibal away from Rome, Juno rushes down from
Mt. Olympus, takes Hannibal by the hand, and calls upon him to abandon his
Gigantomachy (701–5). Juno impresses this point upon Hannibal by granting
him a vision of the gods themselves fighting on behalf of Rome, including Apollo,
Diana, Mars, Janus, Quirinus, and, of course, Jupiter Tonans (706–28). Hannibal
reluctantly orders his men to abandon the siege, and, as he departs, Jupiter signals
his final victory in this new Gigantomachy by clearing away his storm clouds
(729–32). Scholars have long recognized that, in this passage, Silius recalls a
similar scene from the fall of Troy in Aeneid 2, when Venus likewise tries to bring
Aeneas to his senses (2.559–633): however, whereas Hannibal stands outside the
walls of Rome trying in vain to attack his enemy city when Juno appears to him
in order to show him how the gods strive to save it, Aeneas stands inside the
walls of Troy trying in vain to defend his own city when Venus appears to him
in order to show him how the gods (here, Neptune, Juno, Pallas, and Jupiter)
strive to destroy it. Silius calls the reader’s attention to this replay of Troy at
Rome through a number of intertextual resonances: Venus and Juno “take”
Aeneas and Hannibal, respectively, “by the hand” (dextraque prehensum,
Aen. 2.592 ∼ prensa iuvenis . . . dextra, Pun. 12.702); both goddesses call their
mortal heroes back from their reckless battle fury (quid furis, Aen. 2.595 ∼ quo
ruis, Pun. 12.703); and both deities also call on their warriors to “look” when they
reveal the gods fighting all around them (aspice, Aen. 2.604; respice, 2.615 ∼
adspice, Pun. 12.709, 719). Most of all, just as Venus warns Aeneas to yield to the
126 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
gods and not mistake them for a mortal foe like Helen or Paris, so, too, Juno
warns Hannibal (in a clever intertextual gesture) to yield to the gods and
not mistake them for a mortal foe like Aeneas (non tibi . . ., Aen. 2.601 ∼ non
tibi . . ., Pun. 12.706). Altogether, these intertextual resonances transform
Hannibal’s assault on Rome not only into a new Gigantomachy, but also, more
specifically, into a new Gigantomachy which itself “looks back” to a similar
moment at Troy.
At another level, Silius transforms the Second Punic War into a new Trojan War,
as the fall of each city in the epic, from Saguntum to Rome, tropes the fall of
Troy.28 While neither Homeric poem includes a narrative of the second and final
fall of Troy, they both incorporate references to the event into their narratives of
the war before and after this climactic moment. In particular, the single combat
between Achilles and Hector functions as a homology for the entire conflict, and
the fall of Hector accordingly foreshadows the future fall of Troy. Above and
beyond the Iliad and the Odyssey, the Epic Cycle, although only extant in
fragments and summaries, provided a fuller narrative of the war from beginning
to end, including a two-book epic on the fall of Troy called the Iliou persis.29
Vergil looks back to the Iliou persis in his narrative of the fall of Troy which
fittingly concludes in book 2 of the Aeneid, and Silius likewise looks back
to Vergil and, through him, to the Iliou persis in his narrative of the fall of
Saguntum which concludes in book 2 of the Punica, thereby transforming
Saguntum into an altera Troia, a model for all other cities in the epic, as well as,
more specifically, a proleptic altera Roma (1.339–40, 384–6, 389–90, 479).30
This transformation of Saguntum into a new Troy likewise transforms the
single combat between Hannibal and Murrus in 1.376–555 into a new iteration
of the single combat between Achilles and Hector. Silius confirms the connection
through a complex intertextual gesture when he has Hannibal hail Murrus
as Romani Murrus belli mora (“Murrus, the delay of the Roman war,” 1.479).
The name “Murrus” effectively equals murus (“wall”), and the phrase belli mora
also appears elsewhere as a description of none other than Hector (Arbon.
fr. 2 ap. Sen. suas. 2.19–20: the name “Hector” itself means “he who stays [the
battle]”), and, interestingly, of the triumvir Crassus, sola futuri / . . . belli medius
mora (“in the middle, the only delay of the future war [between Caesar and
Pompey],” Lucan. 1.99–100).31 At the climax of their single combat, Hannibal
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 127
and Murrus both utter a prayer to Hercules, Murrus to Hercules as the founder
and preserver of cities, Hannibal to Hercules as the sacker and destroyer of cities
(1.502–17):32
Both the Carthaginians and the Saguntines raise a shout as if the city of Saguntum
itself were about to fall, albeit for different reasons, when they see Murrus, on the
verge of losing his single combat with Hannibal, pray to Hercules to help him
save both himself and his city (502–7). Hannibal likewise prays to Hercules to
help him destroy Murrus and Saguntum, and then slays his enemy, sealing the
city’s fate (508–17). In his prayer to Hercules, Murrus hails the god as conditor
(505), both the canonical founder of cities and, specifically, the founder of
Saguntum (1.273–95), and then he links his fate with the fate of his city’s moenia
(507). In his prayer, Hannibal hails the god as invicte (512), famous for his sack
of Troy (Troiae quondam primis memorate ruinis, 513), and calls upon him to
recognize him for his aemula virtus (510), for his desire to replay the fall of Troy
in the fall of Saguntum and, ultimately, the fall of Rome. By having both warriors
address Hercules as Alcide (505 ∼ 511), Silius emphasizes the god’s status as both
creator and destroyer, an irresolvable paradox. Ultimately, Hercules presides
over the fall of Murrus and, later, Saguntum, just as he had presided over its
foundation (2.457–707).
When Silius transforms Hannibal’s departure from Saguntum into a replay of
Aeneas’ departure from Troy (postquam, Pun. 3.1 ∼ postquam, Verg. Aen. 3.1), the
equation between the two cities becomes complete.33 After the fall of Saguntum,
Hannibal marches from Spain to Italy in order to replay the fall of Troy a second
time in the fall of Rome, but his long-delayed march on the city ultimately fails
when Jupiter himself turns Hannibal away from its walls. Instead, Silius
transforms Hannibal’s retreat into a complex reminiscence of another moment
at the fall of Troy as recounted by Aeneas, the Greek flight to Tenedos (12.733–52
∼ Verg. Aen. 2.1–249):34
At first, the cautious Romans, fearing Punic treachery, cannot believe their eyes
as they watch Hannibal lift the siege and recede into the distance: only when
they see his army follow suit do they realize that they are truly free; in their
unbounded joy, they rush to the Temple of Capitoline Jupiter in a throng and
celebrate their triumph (733–43). Then, opening up their own city gates, they
emerge from within their walls in order to explore the battlefield and perform a
lustration; having completed these duties, the Romans reenter the city and
130 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
resume the festivities (744–52). As above, scholars have long recognized that, in
this passage, Silius recalls a similar scene from the fall of Troy in Aeneid 2, when
the Greeks likewise depart from Troy, ostensibly for home, but, in reality, for the
nearby island of Tenedos, and leave behind the Trojan Horse (2.1–249). While
the Greeks return to sack Troy after the Trojans unwisely bring the Trojan Horse
into their city, Hannibal will not, in fact, see Rome ever again. And yet, in another
deft manipulation of closure, Silius appears to suggest that the city may still be
poised to fall, as the closing verses of Punica 12 recall the closing verses of the
Vergilian intertext, lines which describe the celebration at Troy on the night
before its fall: nos delubra deum miseri, quibus ultimus esset / ille dies, festa
velamus fronde per urbem (“We, however, wretched, for whom that day would be
our last, / cover the shrines of the gods with festive garlands throughout the city,”
Verg. Aen. 2.248–9). Through the echo of festa . . . fronde per urbem (2.249) in
festam . . . urbem (12.752), Silius links the fates of Troy and Rome. In addition, he
recalls his only other use of the collocation festa . . . urbs in the entire Punica, in
the description of Hannibal’s triumph earlier at Capua: instituunt de more epulas
festamque per urbem / regifice exstructis celebrant convivia mensis (“They set up
a banquet according to their custom, and, throughout the festive city, / they
celebrate a feast with tables piled high fit for a king,” 11.270–1). Given that Capua
falls not long after this triumph, Silius appears to suggest that Rome may actually
have been better off with Hannibal ad portas.
Just as Silius uses the transition from book 2 to 3 in order to complete the
transformation of Saguntum into an altera Troia, so, too, he uses that from book
12 to 13, as well as a long delay between books 12 and 17, in order to do the same
for Rome. While the narrative of the march on Rome in book 12 does not include
a new Trojan Horse, Silius does not simply omit this essential feature of the fall of
Troy narrative. On the one hand, book 13 opens with Hannibal looking back at
Rome as he reluctantly retreats, already planning his return to the city, until he
learns about the Palladium (13.1–93). This cult image of Pallas Athena (∼
Minerva) protected Troy from capture until Odysseus and Diomedes stole it so
that the Greeks could take the city; after the Trojan War, Diomedes brought the
Palladium with him to Italy, where he returned it to Aeneas: ultimately, the cult
image was installed inside the Temple of Vesta in the Roman Forum, where it
likewise guarded Rome from capture. On the other hand, book 17 opens with the
Romans welcoming the cult image of the Magna Mater into Rome in order to
drive Hannibal out of Italy once and for all (17.1–47). This cult image was brought
in from Pessinus, not far from Troy, and installed in the Temple of Victory on the
Palatine after an oracle was discovered in the Sibylline Books which declared
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 131
that, if a foreign enemy had invaded Italy and the Romans wanted to drive him
out of the peninsula, they should import the goddess. Livy 29.10.4–11.8, 14.5–14
provides the most complete narrative, and Ovid provides an equally important
account in Fasti 4.247–348: Silius makes use of both authors, but he also innovates
on the existing tradition by transforming the cult image of the Magna Mater into
something of an anti-Palladium, even a new Trojan Horse. First and foremost,
Silius links together the cult images of Pallas Athena and the Magna Mater
through the repetition of the loaded adjective Laomedonteus (13.55 ∼ 17.4),
suggesting that the Romans will ultimately not be able to escape their Trojan past.
Both cult images are essentially brought from Troy to Rome: however, whereas
the Palladium must be taken out of Rome for the city to fall, Silius appears to
suggest that, by bringing in the cult image of the Magna Mater, the Romans may
have paradoxically freed themselves from Hannibal and put themselves on the
path to (self-)destruction. In his description of the entrance of the cult image of
the Magna Mater into Rome, Silius draws on the description of the entrance of
the Trojan Horse into Troy, turning the ship on which the cult image travels into
another wooden horse and, at the same time, turning the wooden horse itself into
a ship (Pun. 17.13–25 ∼ Aen. 2.234–49): both vessels even come to the same
ominous “stop” before entering the city (substitit, Pun. 17.24 ∼ substitit, Aen.
2.243, both verse-initial). As the Magna Mater makes her grand entrance, she is
accompanied by her eunuch priests called galli, whose name suggests not only a
possible Mesopotamian origin (cf. gala in Sumerian and kalû in Akkadian), but
also, more immediately, another band of Galli, the Gauls.
At still another level, Silius transforms the Second Punic War into a new Gallic
War and, more specifically, into a replay of the Gallic sack of 390 bc .35 For
centuries, the Romans and Gauls waged intermittent war with each other, from
the Gallic victories at the battles of the Cremera River (traditionally, July 18, 477
bc ), when all but one male member of the gens Fabia fell in combat, and the Allia
River (traditionally, July 18, 390 bc ), when the Gauls marched on Rome and
took control of the city, if not of the Capitol itself, to the later Roman victory at
the battle of Clastidium (222 bc ), when Marcellus slew the Gallic king
Viridomarus in single combat, one of many (semi-)legendary engagements
between Roman and Gallic heroes. Throughout the epic, Silius recalls these and
other moments from their various conflicts, but he dwells most of all on the
132 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
events of 390, not only on how the Gallic Senones under the command of
Brennus invaded Italy and how they scored an easy victory over the Romans in
battle and just as easily captured their city, but also on how the Romans paid a
ransom in gold for the Gauls to leave and how the disgraced general M. Furius
Camillus returned from exile in time to halt the payment and avenge the loss by
annihilating the Gauls. Silius transforms Hannibal’s march over the Alps, his
victory at Cannae, and his long-delayed march on Rome into a new, if significantly
different, version of the Gallic march over the Alps, their victory at the Allia
River, and their immediate march on the city, especially as recounted most
famously in Livy 5.32–55. Later, in his analysis of the battle of Cannae at 22.50.1–
3, Livy explicitly compares and contrasts Cannae with the Allia River, and he
implicitly suggests a number of other significant similarities and differences.
Silius follows suit: besides directly comparing Lake Trasimene (1.547, 6.555–6)
and Cannae (8.647) to the Allia River, the poet transforms much of the action in
books 1–12 into a replay of earlier conflicts with the Gauls and, in particular, the
march on Rome in book 12 into a replay of the events of 390.
Hannibal himself invokes the memory of the Gallic sack in his rebuke of the
Roman embassy on the shores of Spain near Saguntum during the early stages of
the siege (2.25–35):36
While the Roman envoys, led by Fabius and Valerius Flaccus, sail on to Carthage
after they are turned away from Saguntum, Hannibal tauntingly promises to see
them in Rome soon when he marches on the city. In threatening a repetition
(iterum, 33) of the Gallic sack, however, Hannibal vows that, unlike Brennus, he
will not allow the Romans to ransom their lives. Furthermore, he imparts a
religious tone to his threat by using the verb scandatis (34), the terminus technicus
for scaling the Capitoline (e.g., Hor. Carm. 3.30.8–9). Elsewhere, Silius uses
forms of scando for “scaling” the walls of a city (1.495, 15.231; cf. 11.444, 14.310),
as well as the Alps (3.111; cf. 4.747), the walls of Rome (12.46), and the Capitol
(1.385, 4.72, 12.339), even for “scaling” up to heaven in a Gigantomachy (12.71).
(Interestingly, Vergil uses the verb only twice in the entire Aeneid, both times in
connection with the Trojan Horse: scandit, 2.237; scandunt, 2.401). After the fall
of Saguntum, Gauls make frequent, if perhaps unexpected, appearances at all
three of the battles leading up to Cannae.37 The narrative of the fighting at the
Ticinus River begins with the single combat between Scipio (father of the future
Africanus) and the Boian Crixus, who boasts about his descent from Brennus:
when Scipio slays his opponent and puts the Gauls to flight, he not only exacts
vengeance for Brennus’ earlier victory, but also demonstrates that Hannibal will
need more than a mere repetition of the Gallic sack in order to scale the Capitol
(4.143–310). Soon thereafter, during the fighting at the Trebia River, Mago and
Maharbal metaphorically put the memory of the Gallic sack to rest when they
team up to dispatch an Italian warrior by the name of Allius (4.554–72).
Nevertheless, the Gauls live on, as Ducarius and the Boii exact vengeance of their
own against Flaminius for his earlier victory over them by killing him to bring
the fighting at Lake Trasimene to an end (5.632–78; cf. 4.704–7). Ironically,
despite his claim to the contrary at Saguntum, Hannibal actually does accept a
ransom of sorts at Cannae when he collects the gold signet rings from the bodies
of the fallen Romans and sends them back home to Carthage with his brother
Mago as evidence of the great victory (11.532–5; cf. 8.674–6).
After Cannae, Hannibal famously delays, choosing not to march immediately
on Rome, whereas Brennus had chosen to march on the city immediately after
the Allia River, only to find it virtually undefended. When Hannibal does finally
decide to attack, he mistakenly believes that he can still follow in the footsteps of
134 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Brennus, and so he exhorts his men to envision their assault as a replay of the
Gallic sack, including the eerie scene of the elder statesmen awaiting death as
they dressed themselves in their official robes and sat upon their chairs of state
(12.574–86):
Through this allusion to the Gallic sack, as well as through the narrative of what
follows inside Rome in 12.587–604, Silius appears to suggest that Hannibal has
simply lost his grip on reality and that he squandered his opportunity to capture
Rome when he failed to march on the city after Cannae, whereas Brennus had
captured the city by making his march after the Allia River. In the aftermath of
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 135
the climactic events of book 12, Hannibal qua Brennus recedes into the
background, and Scipio qua Camillus emerges into the foreground. Apart from
a passing mention of Camillus in the ecphrasis of the doors of the Roman Curia
in 1.609–29, the redeemed hero makes his first significant appearance in the epic
in book 7, when Fabius reminds his son how Camillus returned from exile to
save Rome from the Gauls and forgave the Romans for their harsh treatment of
him (7.547–66). Later, Scipio sees Camillus in the Underworld (13.722), a
moment which elegantly anticipates the simile at the end of the epic when Silius
compares Scipio to Quirinus, the deified Romulus, and Camillus (17.651–2),
perhaps to point up the contrast between Camillus, who returned from exile to
save Rome from one great nemesis, and Scipio, who famously died in exile at
Liternum after saving Rome from another, just as his enemy Hannibal died in
exile, too.
The Punica is a long, dense, and totalizing historical epic which challenges the
abilities of even the most skilled “full-knowing reader”38 to tease out the sense of
every literary allusion, cultural reference, and learned epithet. The poem requires
a deep familiarity with each and every aspect of Romanitas, the full breadth and
depth of the Roman experience. That said, the epic is well worth the time and
effort, and the fundamental themes which Silius explores remain as relevant
today as they were at the time of the poem’s original composition. As we have
seen, the Punica is an important work for our understanding of both the Second
Punic War itself and, equally so, of the memory of the war, especially during the
Early Empire, if we can even identify this or any war as an ontological entity
separable from its commemoration (and I would argue that we cannot). As we
have also seen, Silius universalizes his narrative of the war by casting it as a new
version of the Gigantomachy, the Trojan War, and the Gallic sack in order to
present the story of the rise and fall of Carthage and Rome as a broader
meditation on the rise and fall of cities and heroes in general. But the story does
not end there, far from it. By way of conclusion, I would like to take a brief look
at how Silius integrates Marcellus into the Punica and, in particular, how he uses
the rise and fall of Marcellus to manipulate the closure of both the war and the
narrative through a powerful example of counterfactual history which (could
have) changed everything.
136 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Over the course of the poem, Silius transforms his version of Marcellus into
the ultimate counterfactual synecdochic hero, a larger-than-life soldier-general
who uncomfortably straddles the vanishing divide between Republican and
Imperial imperatores, and whose premature death marks the ultimate
counterfactual turning point in both the war and the narrative. Throughout the
epic, but especially in his presentation of the death of Marcellus in 15.334–98,
Silius engages with his literary predecessors in order to elaborate a counterfactual
version of events according to which it was Marcellus, and not Scipio, who would
have, could have, and should have led Rome to victory over Hannibal in the
Second Punic War, if only he had not died prematurely in the ambush. At its core,
the death of Marcellus enacts the poem’s root irony of defeat in victory and
victory in defeat, while, at the same time, absolving the Roman through his death
from any responsibility for the final outcome. In preparation for the pathos of
the death scene in book 15, Silius reminds the reader at several points throughout
the epic (1.132–3, 3.587, 8.254–5) that it was Marcellus, and not Scipio, who was
famed as Rome’s quintessential soldier-general at the outset of the conflict, most
notably for slaying the Gallic chieftain Viridomarus in single combat at the battle
of Clastidium in 222 bc and thereby earning (for the third and final time in
Roman history) the spolia opima. Furthermore, it was Marcellus, and not Scipio,
who gave Rome her first “victory” in the war by successfully defending Nola
against Hannibal’s onslaught, a victory which Silius explicitly sets above his
winning the spolia opima (12.161–294, esp. 278–80; cf. 295–319, 420–2). Silius
even isolates book 14, the narrative of the Sicilian campaign culminating in the
fall of Syracuse, from the rest of the poem in order to cast the book as a miniature
anti-epic in tension with the Scipiad which occupies books 13–17 and, therefore,
in order to pit Marcellus against Scipio in a literary, if not historical, battle to take
on Hannibal. This is the foundation upon which Silius constructs his unique
version of the death scene itself.
The death of Marcellus marked an important turning point in Roman history
and, not surprisingly, left an indelible stain on Roman historical memory both
before and after Silius.39 While there was lingering debate among the varying and
ultimately irreconcilable traditions about the fate of Marcellus’ fellow consul T.
Quinctius Crispinus and about the fate of his own corpse, there was virtually no
debate about Marcellus’ culpable lack of prudentia, especially given his advanced
age and extensive experience, and there was also virtually no debate about the
irreparable harm which Marcellus’ demise did to his reputation as Rome’s
greatest and grandest hero. In his reimagining of the death scene, Silius
dramatically instantiates the contested nature of historical memory by
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 137
columen regni (“The death-dealing name lies dead, / the pillar of the Ausonian
kingdom,” 15.384–5): note especially the repetition of iacet in 15.384 to stress the
fact that Marcellus really is dead and gone. In typical epic fashion, Hannibal
orders the construction of a massive funeral pyre appropriate for the last rites of
a worthy enemy and then, setting fire to the offering, celebrates his fallen foe:
Marcellum abstulimus Latio. deponere forsan / gens Italum tandem arma velit
(“We have taken Marcellus away from Latium. Perhaps the nation / of Italians
may finally wish to put down their arms,” 15.393–4): note forsan in 15.393 (with
another forsan in 15.375, by far the densest cluster of examples in the epic).
Hannibal evidently honored and respected Marcellus because he was, like
Hannibal himself, a vestige of a bygone era, while both the war and the narrative
continued the inexorable march from Republic to Empire. In burying Marcellus
as he had buried Paullus and Gracchus before him, Hannibal believed that he
was, in essence, burying the Republic (cf. V. Max. 1.6.6): indeed he was, but he
was also preparing himself for burial in the process by helping to clear the path
for Scipio and for the Empire. By imitating the positive exemplum of Marcellus
and Crispinus and by avoiding the negative exemplum of Paullus and Varro,
Nero and Salinator were able to defeat Hasdrubal at the Metaurus River and
thereby exact Republican revenge for the defeat at Cannae in a closing act of
collective heroism, but this victory was, in reality, insufficient to stem the tide. By
this point, only Scipio could exact Imperial revenge for the losses suffered in
Apulia and emerge as a new kind of imperator by defeating Hannibal himself at
Zama, although without, of course, winning the spolia opima.
The specter of Marcellus looms large long after his death in book 15. In
particular, his removal from the narrative marks a moment of false closure for
both the war and the narrative, appropriately commemorated by Hannibal with
a laudatio which subtly anticipates the laudatio for himself which he pronounces
later in 17.605–17. In reality, of course, the narrative of book 15 continues with
Scipio’s victory in Spain at Baecula and Hasdrubal’s subsequent flight over the
Pyrenees and the Alps in order to join forces in Italy with Hannibal. At this point,
it is actually another Claudian, Claudius Nero, who comes to the rescue and who,
in collaboration with Livius Salinator, repels Hasdrubal’s invasion, even winning
the spolia opima by defeating Hasdrubal in single combat and decapitating him.
In a clever wordplay on an etymology of the nomen Claudius (∼ claudo, “to
close”), Silius uses the progression from one Claudius to another in order to
manipulate this sense of closure which dominates book 15. More generally, the
focus on the interplay between single combat and closure manifests itself most
clearly in the deployment of the collocation proelium poscere at three critical
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 1 139
junctures (see also 4.271, 7.249–50, 17.128): first, during the single combat
between Hannibal and Murrus at Saguntum (1.420, 483); then, during the siege
of Nola, when Marcellus calls for single combat with Hannibal (12.198), but Juno
intervenes to put off the climactic combat; and, finally, during the battle of Zama,
when Scipio likewise calls for single combat with Hannibal (17.521), but Juno
once again intervenes, transforming even the end of the epic into a moment of
tantalizingly false closure. Silius incorporates the death of Marcellus and other
moments of counterfactual history into his narrative in order to issue his
ultimate challenge to the reader, that of deciding whether the Punica memorializes
the war as “fact,” “fiction,” or some uncomfortable mixture of the two.
140
6
By transforming the Second Punic War into a new Gigantomachy, a new Trojan
War, and a new Gallic sack, Silius looks back not only to what comes before the
conflict in Roman history and Roman culture, but also to what comes after it,
Rome’s ultimate victory in the Third Punic War and the fall of Carthage in 146 bc ,
the long period of internal strife from the Gracchi to the rise of Octavian/
Augustus (133–31 bc ), and the relapse into civil war during the Year of the
Four Emperors in ad 69, as well as the subsequent rise and fall of the Flavians
(ad 69–96). The world of the Flavians initially enters into the world of the
Second Punic War in the epic’s first simile (1.324–6),1 when Hannibal casts
poison arrows during the assault on Saguntum “like a Dacian along the weapons-
bearing coasts of the Getic land” (Dacus ut armiferis Geticae telluris in oris, 324).
As the first simile of the poem, we could even read this passage as a metaliterary
gesture on the part of the poet, as an intimation that we should read the entire
epic as a simile comparing the world of the Second Punic War with the world of
the Flavians. Silius formally introduces all three Flavian emperors, Vespasian and
his sons, Titus and Domitian, in the famous encomium uttered by Jupiter during
his conversation with Venus on Mt. Olympus (3.594–629):2
141
142 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
to the fierce wars of the people of Palestine at the very beginning of his
youth.
But you, Germanicus [Domitian], will transcend the deeds of your family,
still only a boy but feared by the golden-haired Batavian.
Nor will the flames of the Tarpeian peak terrify you;
610 you will be saved amid the sacrilegious flames for the peoples of these
lands.
For the comforts of our world will wait for you for a long time.
One day, the youth of the Ganges [River] will lay down their loosened bows
for this man, and Bactra will show its quivers empty of arrows.
This man will drive his chariot through the city from the North,
615 and he will lead triumphs from the East, as Bacchus yields to him.
This same man, victorious, will restrain the Danube [River] within the
lands
of the Sarmatians, disdaining to allow Dardan [Trojan] standards to
cross over it.
What is more, he will surpass the descendants of Romulus in speaking,
those who have gained glory for their eloquence. To this man the Muses
620 will bring their offerings, and, better at the lyre than he [Orpheus] for
whom
the Hebrus [River] stood still and Mt. Rhodope was moved, he will sing
songs
wondrous to Phoebus. Where, as you see, my ancient palace now stands,
that man will also put the golden Capitoline upon the Tarpeian Rock
and will join the peak of the temple to our abode in heaven.
625 Then, o son of the gods and father of future divinities, rule
the blessed lands of the earth with the authority of your father.
The comforts of heaven at last will take you up in your old age, and
Quirinus
will yield his throne, and your father and brother will place you between
them;
next to you the temples of your deified son will send forth rays of light.”
When Hannibal finally reaches the peaks of the Alps after a dozen days of
arduous climbing, Silius deftly transfers the scene of the action from that range
to the heights of Mt. Olympus (3.557–629). Venus frantically asks of her father,
Jupiter, whether he will permit a repetition of the fall of Troy (and, more recently,
the fall of Saguntum) in the fall of Rome (557–69); in his reply, Jupiter first
reassures her that, despite the fact that Rome will one day be more famous for
her defeats, Paullus, Fabius, Marcellus, and, of course, Scipio will prove their
144 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
virtus and lead the Romans to victory (570–93); and Jupiter then connects the
Republican past with the Imperial present through the encomium of Vespasian,
Titus, and Domitian (594–629). Scholars have long recognized that, in this
passage, Silius recalls two similar divine scenes at climactic moments in the
Aeneid, the conversation on Mt. Olympus, also between Venus and Jupiter, when
Aeneas first arrives at Carthage (1.223–304), and the concilium deorum (“council
of the gods”), also held on Mt. Olympus, when Jupiter instructs his fellow
divinities not to interfere in the war between the Trojans and the Latins, but
instead to wait for a future war between the Carthaginians and the Romans, i.e.,
the Second Punic War (10.1–117). Most scholars offer generally positive readings
of the encomium as a celebration of the Flavian triad (along with the passing
reference to the son of Domitian who died in infancy and was proclaimed divus
like his uncle and grandfather). That said, other scholars have read the passage in
a far less positive light, especially the lines in praise of Domitian, because they
contain a number of references to less-than-flattering moments before, during,
and, perhaps, after his reign. After all, given that Silius lived and wrote before,
during, and after the Flavian dynasty, we simply do not know when he originally
wrote the encomium, much less whether he revised it (and, if so, when). It
matters very much for our understanding of the passage and, indeed, our
understanding of the epic as a whole whether the extant verses were composed
(much less heard and/or read) before or after Domitian’s death. Either way,
through the encomium as a whole, Silius forges a link between the Second Punic
War and the Flavians, as well as, more specifically, a link between Scipio and
Domitian, as we will see in detail below.
Roman culture identifies two driving forces behind the city’s transition from
victory in foreign war, the hallmark of the Republican era and its climax in the
Second Punic War, to self-inflicted defeat in civil war, the hallmark of the
Imperial era and, for Silius, its climax in the chaos of ad 69. On the one hand, we
have the curse of Dido theme, the mythological pillar of the Roman worldview;
on the other, we have the metus hostilis theme, its historical pillar. Over the
course of the Punica, Silius interweaves these two major themes in order to
underscore the symbiotic relationship between Carthage and Rome, two cities
which, as we will see in detail below, are fated either to stand or to fall together,
as well as to elaborate something of a grand unified theory for the transition
from Republic to Empire, from bellum externum to bellum civile, around the
turning point of Cannae. In (re)constructing this model for explaining Rome’s
rise and future fall, Silius strikes a delicate balance between linear and cyclical
time, between a conception of the past, present, and future which recognizes a
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 145
beginning, a middle, and an end, a rise and a fall, and a conception which
recognizes the creative powers of destruction, a rebirth after a death.3 In terms of
Stoic cosmology, Silius envisions a palingenesis (rebirth) after an ekpyrosis (death
by fire) or a kataklysmos (death by water), and he accordingly reintroduces the
divine machinery, present in the Aeneid but absent from the Bellum civile, in
order to emphasize the controlling power of fate and fortune.4 That said, by
associating Republic and Empire with bellum externum and bellum internum,
respectively, Silius also invites his reader to reflect on the tension between
progressive repetition and regressive repetition, the tension between a
repetition which conquers the past and a repetition which is conquered by it.
Romans famously associated both the rise and the fall of their city with internal
strife, since they and only they were able to defeat themselves in war. Over
the course of his epic, Silius prompts the reader to consider the special role
of the Second Punic War in this process and, in particular, the pivotal role of
Cannae.
As we have seen in detail in the sustained reading of the poem across Chapters
3 and 4, Silius posits an inverse relationship between military success and moral
success. Before Cannae, the Carthaginians enjoy military success after military
success, but they suffer a moral failure along the way; the Romans, meanwhile,
suffer military defeat after military defeat, but they enjoy a moral triumph.5 After
Cannae, the Carthaginians begin to suffer military defeat because of their prior
military success and the consequent moral failure; the Romans, in contrast,
begin to enjoy military success because of their prior military defeat and the
consequent moral triumph: having proved their virtus, they now find themselves
in essentially the same position as the Carthaginians at the start of the epic. This
dynamic relationship between military success and moral success not only
cements the unbreakable bond between Carthage and Rome, but also instantiates
the tension between linear and cyclical time, as well as that between progressive
and regressive repetition. Silius encourages his reader to consider carefully both
the similarities and the differences between the Carthaginians and the Romans,
as well as to reflect on the impact of Cannae on both civilizations. Will the
Carthaginians, like the Romans before Cannae, now enjoy a moral regeneration
in the face of military defeat after the fateful battle has been won, and will such a
moral regeneration one day bring renewed military success? Will the Romans,
like the Carthaginians before Cannae, now suffer a moral degeneration in the
face of military success after the fateful battle has been lost, and will such a moral
degeneration one day bring renewed military defeat? Put simply, if victory at
Cannae eventually leads to the fall of Carthage at the end of the Third Punic War,
146 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
does defeat at Cannae eventually lead to the fall of Rome, too, or will Rome
successfully avert this fate through the fall of Carthage as its sacrificial substitute?6
If (when?) Rome falls, will the city rise again? These are the fundamental
questions which Silius poses through his integration of the curse of Dido and
metus hostilis themes in order to account for the looming threat of self-defeat
through civil war in the aftermath of victory in foreign war.
We begin with the curse of Dido theme. Dido utters her famous imprecation as
Aeneas prepares to set sail from Carthage in order to continue his journey on to
Italy. She calls upon her fellow Tyrians to wage ceaseless war against the Trojans,
and, in particular, she envisions the rise of a descendant who will punish the
descendants of Aeneas for his perfidy (Verg. Aen. 4.622–9):7
In a nod to the future repetition of this curse in the oath of Hannibal, as well as
to its future fulfillment at Cannae, Dido instructs her aptly named nurse, Barce,
to go and fetch her sister, Anna (4.630–41): the name connects the nurse with the
Barcids, the family of Hamilcar and Hannibal, and suggests that Hannibal will
play the role of avenger. Immediately thereafter, the queen of Carthage scales her
funeral pyre, utters her final words against Aeneas, and buries his sword in her
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 147
chest. Vergil likens the lamentation for Dido to the lamentation for an imagined
fall of Carthage or Tyre (4.642–71, esp. 669–71). During the concilium deorum
on Mt. Olympus in book 10, Jupiter himself all but identifies the ultor with
Hannibal, as he looks ahead to the time cum fera Karthago Romanis arcibus olim
/ exitium magnum atque Alpis immittet apertas (“when fierce Carthage will one
day bring great destruction / and the opening up of the Alps against the Roman
citadel,” Aen. 10.12–13).8 In the end, however, while Hannibal will succeed in
“opening up” the Alps, he will not succeed in “opening up” the walls of Rome,
where he will have to content himself with standing “at the gates”; instead, it will
be a Roman, Scipio, who scales the walls (and the Capitol) at his triumph and
thereby puts Rome on the path to civil war.
In the Punica, the curse of Dido plays an especially important thematic role
in the events at Saguntum, Cannae, and Zama.9 Immediately after the proem
(1.1–20), Hannibal, driven by Juno and by his father, Hamilcar, swears his famous
oath of vengeance at a shrine dedicated to Dido herself (according to Silius),
indeed at the very spot where the queen had pronounced her original curse and
then committed suicide: the topographical repetition tropes the thematic
repetition of the curse in the oath (1.21–139, esp. the ecphrasis of the shrine in
81–98). Hannibal cements this link with Dido by identifying himself as the
instrument of her revenge (1.114–19):
Silius frames the oath of Hannibal with visions of the coming war uttered first by
Juno (1.38–55) and then by a Massylian priestess (1.123–39), both of which
identify Hannibal’s victory at Cannae as the fulfillment of the curse, as well as of
the oath. From the ecphrasis of his shield during the siege of Saguntum (2.391–
456), we see that Hannibal carries on his shoulders a constant reminder of his
148 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
obligation to avenge both his queen and his father. Later in the epic, to begin the
lengthy narrative of Cannae across books 8–10, Juno sends Anna, Dido’s sister, to
Hannibal in a dream so that she can share the story of her own exile and death
in order to spur the Carthaginian to battle: Hannibal welcomes the dream as an
omen of his impending victory and vows to consecrate a shrine to Anna back in
Carthage (8.25–241).10 Finally, faced with the choice of fight or flight at Zama,
Hannibal utters a prophecy of his own in which he identifies his victory at
Cannae as his crowning glory before receding into the shadows, both literally
and figuratively, no longer a mere mortal, but instead now a disembodied cultural
icon who will live forever in the Roman imagination, long after his later suicide
in exile, like Dido (17.605–17):
615 wait for me to return and do not know peace in their hearts.”
Thus he is ushered away, mixed in with a few of the fugitives, and, from
there,
he heads back for the lofty mountains and safe hiding places.
As the Romans close in on him, Hannibal contemplates his legacy. Even if the
heavens should fall to the earth, the fame of Cannae will ensure his immortality,
exactly as Juno (1.50–4) and the Massylian priestess (1.125–6) prophesied, and
exactly as Juno instructed Somnus to tell Hannibal in a dream the night after his
momentous victory (10.326–86, esp. 333–6, 366–8; cf. 8.25–7). Before vanishing
into the hills, Hannibal rightly claims that the Romans will not know peace as
long as he lives (vivam, 17.612, 617). As we will see in detail below, however, the
Romans may actually have been better off with Hannibal at least alive, if not ad
portas.
We continue with the metus hostilis theme.11 The notion that Rome benefited
from the collective fear of a strong external enemy enjoyed deep roots in ancient
political theory, as well as in ancient conceptions about the rise and fall of states
(e.g., Plb. 6.57.1–9), evolving into a dominant cultural idea(l) at least by the time
of the Punic Wars.12 Romans identified countless iterations of the phenomenon,
from the metus Etruscus to the metus Gallicus and metus Punicus to the metus
Parthicus (Cic. fam. 2.17.1), metus Germanicus, and metus Gothicus, among
others. In the debate in the Roman Senate between M. Porcius Cato and P. Scipio
Nasica over the fate of Carthage before the outbreak of the Third Punic War,
Cato is said to have argued that the city “must be destroyed” (Carthago delenda
est), while Scipio is said to have countered that the city “must be saved” (Carthago
servanda est).13 In reality, this debate concerned the fate of both cities, since the
point at issue was whether Rome needed to destroy or to save Carthage in order
to preserve her own existence: like the curse of Dido, the metus hostilis dictates
that both cities must either stand or fall together. This law of reciprocity is itself
reflected in the inherent grammatical ambivalence of the phrase metus hostilis,
since the adjective bears both an active and a passive sense. This is evidenced by
Aulus Gellius’ explanation of the subjective and objective uses of the genitive in
the grammatically equivalent phrase metus hostium: nam “metus hostium” recte
dicitur, et cum timent hostes et cum timentur (“For, metus hostium [‘fear of the
150 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
enemies’] is correctly said, both when the enemies fear and when they are feared,”
9.12.13; cf. 9.12.13–16 in general for the grammatical concept). Ultimately, of
course, Cato convinced his fellow Romans that Carthage had to be destroyed,
and the city fell to end the Third Punic War.
A century later, Sallust codifies the metus hostilis as the driving force in the
history, as well as in the historiography, of the imperium Romanum, in a series of
passages which span all three of his major works, including the Catiline (6–13),
the Jugurtha (41–2), and the Histories (1.11–16 Maurenbrecher = 1.9–14
McGushin).14 In his trenchant analysis of the rise and fall of Rome, Sallust traces
the city’s descent from virtus into luxuria and directly associates this moral and
political decline with the fall of Carthage at the end of the Third Punic War.
Indeed, in all three passages, Sallust famously identifies this moment as the
turning point in the history (and, again, in the historiography) of the res publica.
In assigning the fall of Carthage this honor, he artfully capitalizes on the
fundamental paradox that it is Rome’s victory over Carthage in bellum externum
which put her on the path to self-inflicted defeat in bellum internum: postquam
remoto metu Punico simultates exercere vacuom fuit, plurumae turbae, seditiones
et ad postremum bella civilia orta sunt (“Afterwards, once the fear of the
Carthaginians had been taken away, there was a void for exercising rivalries, and
so there arose many disturbances, uprisings, and, finally, civil wars,” Hist. 1.12
Maurenbrecher = 1.12 McGushin). Sallust’s presentation of the metus hostilis
plays a central role in all subsequent historiography about the rise and fall of
Rome, including Velleius Paterculus, who divides his two-book history of Rome
at 146 bc (1.12.2–7 ∼ 2.1–3) and adopts a similar model of moral and political
decline, and Florus, who likewise divides his two-book history of Rome’s wars
into bella externa (book 1) and bella civilia (book 2), and also adopts a similar
model of decline (1.47).15 In an interesting and, apparently, overlooked passage
in his Facta et dicta memorabilia, Valerius Maximus associates the metus hostilis
and the seeds of Roman decline not with the end of the Third Punic War, but
with that of the Second. During the debate in the Roman Senate over the terms
of peace at the end of the war, Q. Caecilius Metellus “averred that, after the defeat
of Carthage, he did not know whether that victory would bring more good or
evil to the state” (devicta Carthagine nescire se illa victoria bonine plus an mali rei
publicae attulisset adseveravit, 7.2.3), since Hannibal’s presence in Italy had kept
the Romans in a constant state of readiness. Appian, who also reports the debate
(Lib. 62.290–1), does not assign this opinion to Metellus specifically; instead, he
simply comments that such a sentiment was in the air. That said, Appian does
claim that Cato the Elder later attributed the notion to none other than Scipio
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 151
Africanus. In a very similar way, Silius identifies Cannae, not simply the end of
the Second Punic War, as the turning point for both Carthage and Rome, and
Silius identifies this turning point as the beginning of Rome’s decline from virtue
to vice.
Perhaps surprisingly (or perhaps not), civil wars are relatively more common,
have higher death tolls on average, and generally last longer than foreign wars.16
Without a doubt, civil strife pervades the annals of both Greek and Roman
history, and this brand of conflict defines not only the transition from Republic
to Empire, but also (the equally contested collective memory of) the transition
from Monarchy to Republic, sparked by the suicide of Lucretia.17 In Rome as in
other societies ancient and modern, the transition from bellum externum to
bellum internum predicates the parallel transition from killing the “Other” (i.e.,
homicide) to killing the “Self ” (i.e., suicide) via various forms of intrafamilial
slaughter, especially patricide and fratricide. Sadly, just as civil wars outnumber
foreign wars, so, too, suicides outnumber homicides.18 The confusion, if not the
conflation, of “Self ” and “Other” beautifully, if tragically, captures the essence of
civil war as the ultimate manifestation of furor (fury, rage, anger, madness,
insanity). Lucan memorably portrays civil war as an act of suicide in the proem
to his Bellum civile (1.1–7, along with quis furor?, 8), and the twin themes of civil
war and suicide play a prominent role in Flavian epic, including the Punica.19
The Romans notoriously associated civil war not only with the destruction, but
also with the foundation of their city through the death of Remus.20 Livy 1.6.3–
7.3 offers two versions of the death of Remus, in the first of which Remus falls
during the fighting over the augury of the vultures, and in the second of which
Romulus slays his brother in single combat (1.7.2–3):
volgatior fama est ludibrio fratris Remum novos transiluisse muros; inde ab
irato Romulo, cum verbis quoque increpitans adiecisset, “sic deinde, quicumque
alius transiliet moenia mea,” interfectum. 3. ita solus potitus imperio Romulus;
condita urbs conditoris nomine appellata.
The more common story is that Remus crossed over the new walls as a joke on
his brother; then, he was killed by Romulus in a rage, after he had verbally
rebuked him, adding, “So I will kill him, whoever crosses over my walls.” 3. Thus
Romulus took sole power; a city was founded and called “Rome” after its founder.
From the moment of its first foundation, Rome is a city obsessed with the status
of its walls, as evidenced by the wordplay Remum . . . muros . . . Romulo. From the
moment of its first foundation, Rome is also a city marred by the original sin of
internecine conflict, all throughout its history, but especially during the transition
152 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
from Republic to Empire. Horace ruminates on this Roman proclivity for civil
war in Epodes 7 and 16, where he laments the recent transition from bellum
externum to bellum internum, and specifically identifies the curse of Remus as
the force behind the shift (7.17–20).21 Vergil explores the theme of civil war by
transforming the narrative of the war between the Trojans and the Latins (albeit
that the Trojans do claim Italian origins) across Aeneid 7–12 from a foreign war
into a (proleptic) civil war between (future) Romans culminating in the
fratricidal single combat between Aeneas and Turnus.22 Building on this theme,
Silius goes one step further, transforming his narrative, at one and the same time,
into a narrative of Rome’s greatest foreign war, the Second Punic War, and Rome’s
greatest civil war, the events of ad 69, thus pitting the Punica against both the
Aeneid and the Bellum civile as Rome’s one true epic.
Just as Silius transforms the Second Punic War into a synecdoche for Roman
history and Roman culture as a whole, so, too, he transforms the battle of Cannae
into a synecdoche for the Second Punic War, the turning point of both the war
and his narrative, and even the “singularity” for his totalizing vision of Romanitas.
In his account of the war in the third decade of his history Ab urbe condita, Livy
makes Hannibal’s march on Rome in 211 bc , approximately halfway through the
conflict, the climax of both the war and his narrative. Silius, however, reserves
this honor for the battle of Cannae much earlier in 216 bc , approximately one
quarter of the way through the conflict. In doing so, as we will see in the
conclusion, Silius aligns his narrative not with Livy and (the rest of?) the
annalistic tradition, but instead with an alternate tradition which we find before
and after the Punica. This alternate tradition shifts the midpoint of the war from
the march on Rome back to the battle of Cannae and then balances Hannibal’s
four victories at the battles of the Ticinus River, the Trebia River, Lake Trasimene,
and Cannae (four clades for Rome) with four stages of Roman vengeance for
those earlier defeats. Across the narrative arc of the Punica, Silius develops his
version of this alternate tradition in order to place even greater emphasis on the
significance of the battle of Cannae for the Second Punic War and, indeed, for
the entire course of Roman and Carthaginian history. By yoking together the
curse of Dido and metus hostilis themes, Silius strives to develop a model which
integrates myth and history into a grand cultural narrative which accounts for
the rise and fall of both Carthage and Rome.
Accordingly, like the curse of Dido, the metus hostilis plays an equally
important role throughout the Punica.23 We have seen how Silius introduces the
metus hostilis theme into the conversation between Venus and Jupiter on Mt.
Olympus (3.557–629). During a complementary exchange between Cymodoce,
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 153
the eldest of the Nereids, and Proteus, the Old Man of the Sea, after the sudden
arrival of a Carthaginian fleet at Caieta, Silius elegantly reinforces the bond
between the Second Punic War and the Flavians by subtly patterning this later
conversation after the earlier one between Venus and Jupiter (7.409–93). In
response to her frantic questions (7.409–34 ∼ 3.557–69), Proteus likewise
reassures Cymodoce that, in the end, Rome will surely triumph over Carthage. In
the first half of his speech (7.435–78 ∼ 3.570–93), Proteus retells the tale of the
choice of Paris in order to demonstrate how the fall of Troy led to the rise of
Rome; in the second half (7.479–93 ∼ 3.594–629), something of an encomium of
the Scipiones to match the earlier encomium of the Flavians, Proteus counsels
the Nereids to avoid Cannae and, instead, to wait patiently for revenge at the
Metaurus River and, of course, Zama, where Scipio will lead Rome to victory in
preparation for the future fall of Carthage to another Scipio, Scipio Aemilianus,
at the end of the Third Punic War. In two pivotal passages, one from the beginning
(9.340–53) and the other from the end (10.657–8) of his narrative of the battle
of Cannae, Silius definitively identifies Cannae as the turning point and explicitly
describes this turning point as the beginning of Rome’s transition from military
defeat to military success, but also from moral triumph to moral failure.
Accordingly, when Scipio celebrates his triumph at the end of the war and the
narrative (17.625–54), Silius prompts his reader to reflect on the impact of this
military victory on Rome’s moral decline, on the way to the future fall of the city
through civil war. Put simply, it is the battle of Cannae which unites the curse of
Dido and metus hostilis themes in Silius’ all-encompassing vision of Roman
history and Roman culture, and it is the same battle of Cannae which enacts the
transformation from Republic to Empire by collapsing the purported boundary
between bellum externum and bellum civile. Indeed, by casting the battle of
Cannae in this role, Silius poses his most challenging question to his reader: is
the Punica about the Second Punic War or the events of ad 69, or perhaps both
at one and the same time?
After the Roman and Carthaginian forces reach Cannae, Punica 9 begins with a
minor skirmish in which several Romans fall, the first of whom is a soldier
named Mancinus (1–65). That night, the Italian Satricus, who had been captured
by Xanthippus during the First Punic War and given in slavery to the king of the
Autololes, and who had returned to Italy as a part of Hannibal’s invasion and
154 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
decided to try to flee back home, is unwittingly killed by his son, Solymus, while
unwittingly wearing the armor of his other son, the Mancinus killed earlier that
day. Solymus, realizing what he has done, commits suicide upon his corpse,
writing on his shield in his own blood his father’s warning to the Romans, FUGE
PROELIA VARRO (“Flee the battle, Varro!”) (66–177). Long ago, Occioni
recognized the literary merits of this purple passage, including a key intertext in
Tacitus’ Historiae.24 But there is far more to the episode than simply its literary
merits, and I would go so far as to assert that, through this intricate example of
mistaken identity, Silius skillfully conflates patricide, fratricide, and suicide into
one sweeping condemnation of the Second Punic War as a whole, as well as into
one sweeping condemnation of the events of ad 69, by effectively transforming
the battle of Cannae into a (proleptic) civil war engagement:25
out of the Ausonian [Italian] camp, when it was his turn again by lot
to stand guard outside the gate, and he was looking for the corpse
of his brother, Mancinus, laid low among the scattered bodies,
95 wishing to bury his wretched brother in a secret plot of earth.
He had hurried along his way not very far, when he caught sight of an
enemy
coming towards him from the Sidonian [Carthaginian] camp to contend
in arms,
and, because this is what unexpected chance gave him in his exigency,
he hid himself in secret beside the tomb of the Aetolian Thoas.
100 From there, when he [Solymus] saw no weapons following close behind
and the man [Satricus] venturing through the shadows all alone,
jumping out from beside the tomb he hurls a javelin true to its mark
against the undefended back of his father, and Satricus, believing
that it was a band of Tyrians following him and that his wounds were
Sidonian,
105 looks around trembling to catch sight of the author of the surprise attack.
But when his running, with its youthful energy, brought the victor
[Solymus]
into view, and a gloomy light shone forth from weapons he knew well,
and, with the moon betraying the deed from afar, the boss of his
brother’s shield
revealed itself before his very eyes and gleamed right in front of him,
110 then the young man, enraged with a sudden anger, shouts:
“I would be no true son of your native Sulmo, Satricus,
nor your true brother, Mancinus, and I would confess that
I was a descendant unworthy of Pergamene [Trojan] Solymus, if this man
were allowed to escape my hands unpunished. Could you wear
115 the noble armor of my brother before my very eyes, and could you,
faithless man,
carry back the proud weapons of our Paelignian house while I still
breathe?
I will bring these gifts to you, my dear mother, Acca, as a solace
for your grief, so that you may fix them forever upon the tomb of your
son.”
Uttering words such as these, he attacked with his sword drawn.
120 But already that man [Satricus] was losing his grip on his sword and
shield
after he had heard the names of his home and children and wife and arms,
and a chilly fear had stunned his limbs and senses.
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 159
This scene, which is original to the Punica, powerfully resonates with other civil
war moments throughout the epic, especially the numerous intrafamilial killings
during the fall of Saguntum in 2.457–707, but also the near-exemplum of
Pacuvius and Perolla during Hannibal’s triumphal banquet in Capua in 11.267–
368 and the anti-exemplum of Asilus and Beryas during the attack on Leontini
in 14.148–77. At the same time, Silius may very well have remembered that both
Polybius (18.28.9) and Livy (22.46.4) reported that the Carthaginians marched
into battle at Cannae arrayed in arms taken from the Romans themselves after
the engagements at the Trebia and Lake Trasimene, especially when Satricus
tries to console his son Solymus by reminding him that iaceres in me cum fervidus
hastam, / Poenus eram (9.129–30). Most of all, however, Silius recalls a number
of similar episodes from the civil wars of the Late Republic, as well as one specific
episode from the civil war of ad 68–9, later recorded by Tacitus towards the end
Carthage and Rome in the Punica, Part 2 161
of his narrative of the second battle fought between Bedriacum and Cremona
(Hist. 3.25.2–3):
2. eo notabilior caedes fuit, quia filius patrem interfecit; rem nominaque auctore
Vipstano Messalla tradam. Iulius Mansuetus ex Hispania, Rapaci legioni additus,
impubem filium domi liquerat. is mox adultus, inter septimanos a Galba
conscriptus, oblatum forte patrem et vulnere stratum dum semianimem
scrutatur, agnitus agnoscensque et exsanguem amplexus, voce flebili precabatur
piatos patris manis, neve se ut parricidam aversarentur: publicum id facinus; et
unum militem quotam civilium armorum partem? 3. simul attollere corpus,
aperire humum, supremo erga parentem officio fungi. advertere proximi, deinde
plures; hinc per omnem aciem miraculum et questus et saevissimi belli
exsecratio. nec eo segnius propinquos, adfinis, fratres trucidant, spoliant: factum
esse scelus loquuntur faciuntque.
2. This slaughter was all the more notable, because a son killed his father; I relate
the deed and the names of those involved on the authority of Vipstanus Messalla.
Julius Mansuetus from Spain, enrolled in the Rapax legion, had left his young
son at home. He later grew up, was called up for service by Galba among the
soldiers of the Seventh legion, encountered his father in battle by chance and laid
him low with a wound; while he looked at his half-dead body, his father
recognized him and he recognized his father, and, embracing his now lifeless
body, he prayed in a voice choked with tears that his father’s spirits be appeased
and that they not shun him as a parricide: his deed had been a public one, and
what small part of the civil war was one single soldier? 3. At the same time, he
lifted up the body, opened up the earth, and performed the last rites owed to a
father. Those soldiers nearby noticed what had happened, then more and more
of them took note; from here along the entire battle line there was wonder and
complaint and the cursing of this cruelest of wars. Nevertheless, they killed and
despoiled their friends, relatives, and brothers with no less ferocity: they said
that a crime had been committed, and then proceeded to commit the very same
crime themselves.
The conflation of foreign war and civil war reaches its climax in Tacitus’ Historiae
in the image of Romans scaling the heights of the Capitol and burning down their
most sacred site, the Temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus.27 Over the course of the
city’s lengthy history, the Romans witnessed several such assaults, first at the hands
of foreign foes, then, beginning with Marius and Sulla, at the hands of domestic
invaders. Tacitus recounts in vivid detail the ruination of the Capitol during the
internecine fighting between the Flavians and the Vitellians (Hist. 3.72.1–2):28
In the midst of the chaos atop the Capitol during the fighting, some of the
Flavians resort to a disguise in order to escape the carnage, including the young
Domitian himself (Hist. 3.74.1–2):29
Domitian, after the first assault, had hidden himself at the house of the temple
attendant, and then, at the wise suggestion of a freedman, donning a linen
garment he mixed himself in among the crowd of celebrants and, undetected, he
lay low at the house of Cornelius Primus, one of his father’s clients, near the
Velabrum. 2. And, when his father assumed control of affairs, having knocked
down the temple attendant’s hut, he set up a small sanctuary for Jupiter the
Preserver and an altar engraved in marble with his own misadventures. Later,
after having acquired control over the empire, he consecrated a large temple to
Jupiter the Guardian and a statue of himself on the god’s lap.
By constructing his unique version, and unique vision, of the Second Punic War
in the Punica, as a dual narrative of victory in bellum externum and defeat in
bellum internum, Silius secures his place in Classical literature. At the same time,
his transformation of the conflict into a new Gigantomachy, a new Trojan War,
and a new Gallic sack reflects a contemporary obsession with the theme of
Rome’s decline and fall, especially after the fall of the Capitol. In his epicedion in
patrem suum (“lament for his father,” Silv. 5.3), Statius describes the tumultuous
period between Nero and the Flavians in a manner which powerfully resonates
with the manner in which Silius describes the Second Punic War, as a new
iteration of these archetypal conflicts (195–204):1
165
166 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Scarcely had the flames died down, and not yet had the pyre of the gods
200 grown cold, when you in your eagerness to outstrip those torches
sang of solace for the temples which had been destroyed
in pious tones, and you mourned the thunderbolts taken captive.
The Latin nobles and Caesar, the avenger of the gods, stood in amazement,
and the father of the gods gave his consent from the midst of the fire.
Like Silius over the course of the Punica, Statius here imagines the furor of civil
war bringing destruction to the Capitol in a replay of the Gigantomachy and the
Gallic sack (195–8), after which Statius’ father composed a poem (with similar
language and imagery?) which met with approval from the Roman Senate,
Domitian, and even Jupiter himself (199–204). Interestingly enough, poet and
princeps merge into one here, since Domitian composed an epic on the fall of the
Capitol, the lost Bellum Capitolinum (cf. the Fall of Troy composed by Nero at the
time of the great fire of ad 64: Tac. Ann. 15.39.3; Suet. Nero 38.2).2 In an epigram
written to celebrate the formal publication of the poem, Martial compares the
work to the Aeneid “of tragic Vergil” (cothurnati . . . Maronis, 5.5.8), a collocation
which he uses only once elsewhere, to compare the Punica to Rome’s national
epic (7.63.5).3 By associating these two particular poems, the Bellum Capitolinum
and the Punica, with the (tragic elements of the) Aeneid, Martial suggests that
both contained tragic elements of their own, that both owed a great debt to the
Aeneid, and, perhaps, that Silius composed his epic (especially the verses on
Domitian?) with Domitian’s epic in mind.
A generation later, Florus likewise casts the civil war between Marius and
Sulla as a new Gigantomachy and a new Gallic sack, and even as a new Second
Punic War (Epit. 2.9.7):
ipse quoque iaculatus incendia viam fecit arcemque Capitolii, quae Poenos
quoque, Gallos etiam Senones evaserat, quasi captivam victor insedit.
He himself [Sulla], made his way by hurling firebrands and seized the Capitol,
which had escaped capture at the hands of the Carthaginians and the Gallic
Senones, as if he were a victor taking it captive.
During his first march on Rome in 88 bc , Sulla accomplishes what no foreign foe
had yet been able to do: he seizes the Capitol. The rhetoric of the passage recalls
that of the descriptions of the fall of the Capitol in ad 69 in Statius and Tacitus,
and, at the same time, transforms the Second Punic War into another archetypal
conflict. More broadly, throughout his history, Florus evinces a close and careful
engagement with the Punica which informs not only his own approach to the arc
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 167
of Roman history and Roman culture through the transition from Republic to
Empire, from bellum externum to bellum civile, but also, as we will see, his
narrative of the Second Punic War.
Across the six chapters which constitute the core of this book, I have sought
to address three essential (and, as we have seen, interrelated) questions: who is
Silius Italicus, what is the Punica, and what is the Punica about? In Chapters 1
and 2, we studied how both the poet and his poem are very much a product of
their age, the tumultuous transition from the Julio-Claudians to the Flavians (in
contrast to the remarkably smooth transition from the Flavians to the Five Good
Emperors). In Chapters 3 and 4, we examined the narrative of the Punica book
by book, as well as representative passages from throughout the work which
provide some sense of what the epic as a whole has to offer. In Chapters 5 and 6,
we considered how and why Silius transforms his narrative of the Second Punic
War into a totalizing vision of Romanitas. Throughout, we have seen how Silius
engages with a great variety of authors and texts across an impressive array of
literary traditions on the Second Punic War (and beyond) in both prose and
poetry, but especially with Livy and the historiographical tradition, on the one
hand, and Vergil and the epic tradition, on the other. In this conclusion, I offer a
series of three close readings which explores the place of Silius Italicus and the
Punica in Classical literature, but especially in historiography and epic, in order
to illustrate various facets of that literary engagement in greater detail. Ultimately,
this series of close readings will bring us back to where we began in the
introduction to this book, with the loss and later rediscovery of Silius Italicus
and his Punica during the Renaissance.4
On the march from Spain to Italy, from Saguntum to Cannae and, eventually,
Rome, Hannibal is guided by his dreams, especially those sent by Juno, every step
of the way.5 It is Juno who fills his head with thoughts of crossing the Alps and
scaling the Capitol (1.64–5), Juno who inspires him to set the ambush along the
shores of Lake Trasimene (4.722–38), Juno who sends Anna to prompt him to
march to Cannae (8.202–41), and, of course, Juno who sends Somnus to prompt
him not to march on Rome after his momentous victory (10.326–86). In book 3,
however, after the fall of Saguntum and the triumph at Gades, it is not Juno but
Jupiter who dispatches Mercury to visit Hannibal in a dream (3.158–221).6 After
sending his wife, Imilce, and their infant son back to Carthage, Hannibal returns
168 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
to Gades, where he succumbs to the need for sleep after his many travails (158–
62); as a test of Roman virtus, Jupiter sends Mercury down to Hannibal in a
dream so that he can rebuke him for resting after the fall of Saguntum instead of
continuing on to Rome (163–82). Mercury ends his rebuke with the surprising
promise that Hannibal will stand victorious before the walls of the city, but he
must not “look back” along the way (179–82):
Hannibal then dreams that Mercury takes him by the hand and leads him on to
Italy: startled by a sudden din, Hannibal, forgetting the god’s instruction, looks
back, sees a massive serpent leaving a large swathe of destruction in its wake, and
asks the god what the monster portends (183–202). Mercury explains how the
serpent represents Hannibal himself and the terrible destruction soon to be
wrought by him as he storms over the Alps, invades Italy, and threatens Rome
(203–13):
As great as the serpent with its scaly back which rolls through the plains
the trees dragged down from the denuded mountains
210 and stains the earth far and wide with its frothy venom,
so great will you, rushing down from the conquered Alps,
embroil Italy in black war and with such a great din
will you lay low the settlements torn up from their toppled walls.”
With that, Mercury departs, leaving Hannibal to wake up in a cold sweat: after
reflecting on the dream, Hannibal offers a sacrifice to Jupiter, Mars, and Mercury,
and orders his men to prepare themselves for the march from Spain to Italy
(214–21). On the one hand, Silius draws on the various versions of this story
preserved by Livy (21.22.5–9), Cicero (Div. 1.24.49), and Valerius Maximus
(1.7.ext.1), all of whom include the injunction not to “look back” as well as
Hannibal’s unwitting backward glance. On the other hand, Silius also draws on
another dream scene, in the Aeneid, when Jupiter sends Mercury down to Aeneas
in order to rebuke him for remaining at Carthage instead of continuing on to
Italy (Verg. Aen. 4.219–78, cf. 556–70). Silius cues his engagement with Vergil
through his use of the learned epithet Cyllenius, which refers to the site of
Mercury’s birth, Mt. Cyllene. Vergil uses forms of Cyllenius in the Aeneid only in
this passage (252, 258, 276; cf. 8.138–9), and Silius likewise uses forms of the
word twice in Hannibal’s dream (168, 219; cf. 8.111, 13.630, 16.500). However,
whereas Mercury, on behalf of Jupiter, instructs Hannibal not to “look back”
(respexisse veto, 181), the messenger of the gods, once again on behalf of Jupiter,
instructs Aeneas to do the exact opposite, to “look back” upon (∼ remember) his
promised future and that of his son, Ascanius, in Italy (respice, 275; cf. 225, 236).
By weaving together these disparate threads of the historiographical and epic
traditions, Silius transforms Hannibal’s backward glance here and elsewhere in
the Punica into a complex (meta)literary and (meta)historical gesture which
functions as a homology for a whole series of other backwards glances in myth
and history before, during, and after the Second Punic War.7 In the myth of
Orpheus and Eurydice, the bard loses his wife for a second and final time when
he fails to heed the injunction not to look back at her while leading her out of the
Underworld. In his version of the story in the Georgics, Vergil accordingly
emphasizes how Orpheus “looked back” (respexit, 4.191) and lost his wife forever,
and later authors followed suit, from Ovid (Met. 10.57 flexit . . . oculos, 11.66
respicit) to Seneca (Her. F. 585 respice; cf. Her. O. 1085 respicit), even to Boethius
(Cons. 3 metrum 12.49–58, esp. respicit, 52 ∼ lumina flexerit, 56). In the Aeneid,
Vergil himself elegantly connects this backward glance with Aeneas and his wife,
170 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Creusa, whom he lost at the fall of Troy when, by his own later admission, he did
not “look back” (respexi, 2.741) to see whether she was still with him before
making it out of the living hell of the city burning to the ground all around them.
When Aeneas sets sail from Carthage, “looking back at the walls” of that city
(moenia respiciens, 5.3), he sees what he later learns are the flames of Dido’s
funeral pyre, a proleptic image of the future fall of Carthage itself. (Tibullus later
likewise describes the moment when Aeneas “looked back” [respiceret, 2.5.22] at
Troy in flames.) In Livy, Hannibal is said “to have looked back” at Italy just like a
man leaving his homeland to go into exile rather than like an enemy leaving a
foreign country when he left the peninsula in order to sail back to Africa (30.20.7,
esp. respexisse).8 Across all of these examples, looking back, or, in the case of
Creusa, at least, not looking back, entails the irrevocable loss of one’s own family
and/or city. Across the narrative arc of the Punica, Silius capitalizes on the
freighted significance of the backward glance as both a physical and a
psychological gesture in order to trace the rise and fall of Hannibal. After his
dream at Gades, Hannibal encounters so many grave challenges during his
arduous climb up the Alps that he has no opportunity “to have looked back” on
how far he has come (respexisse, 3.532); later at Rome, however, he reluctantly
retreats, “looking back again and again” as he marches off, never to return to the
city (respectans, 12.729; cf. respectantem, 7.403; respectans, 12.106). And yet, as
Hannibal looks back at Rome, like a new Orpheus or a new Aeneas (cf. Culex
157–201 ∼ 268–95), he appears to consign the city to its fate and fulfill Mercury’s
promise of “the devastation of Italy” (vastitas Italiae: Liv. 21.22.9; Cic. Div.
1.24.49; V. Max. 1.7.ext.1), if not through the Second Punic War,9 then through
the later civil wars.10
Lucan’s epic treatment of the civil war between Caesar and Pompey casts a long
shadow over Flavian epic and complicates the reception of both Vergil and Ovid,
especially as later authors like Valerius Flaccus, Statius, and, of course, Silius
explored the theme of civil war in Roman history and Roman culture, from
Monarchy to Republic to Empire. Across the narrative arc of the Bellum civile,
Lucan essentially offers the inverse of what Silius offers in the Punica. Where
Silius transforms a foreign war into a civil war, Lucan transforms a civil war into
a foreign war; in particular, where Lucan casts Julius Caesar in the mold of
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 171
Hannibal, Silius casts Hannibal in the mold of Julius Caesar.11 Ultimately, Lucan
and Silius juxtapose (conflate) bellum externum and bellum internum in order to
highlight both the similarities and the differences between the fight against the
foreign foe and that against the enemy within. Accordingly, like Silius, Lucan
uses the backwards glance at several key points in the narrative as a way of
transforming his epic into a reflection, a refraction, even a diffraction, of the
competing memories about the fall of the Republic and the rise of the Empire. In
the closing verses of the extant (unfinished?) Bellum civile, if not the closing
verses which Lucan intended to write, Julius Caesar “looks back” in a gesture
which homologizes this fraught process of competitive memorialization
(10.534–46):12
Trapped on the mole which connects Pharos (the famous lighthouse) with
Alexandria, in Egypt, Caesar is stricken by the sudden fear that he faces imminent
defeat without the opportunity to die heroically in combat (534–41). As he
hesitates between fearing and desiring to die, Caesar “looks back” upon (∼
remembers) his centurion Scaeva, who bravely fought and fell during the siege
of Dyrrhachium (542–6, esp. respexit, 543). Silius appears to have had the passage
in mind when composing Hannibal’s parting words in 17.597–617. As the enemy
closes in, both men, seated upon a natural eminence, realize that they are in a
perilous position and then reflect on a turning point in their respective wars
which put them in their current predicament. In the case of Caesar, he looks
back to Dyrrhachium, his greatest defeat; in the case of Hannibal, he looks back
to Cannae, his greatest victory. Just as Mercury issues the injunction against
“looking back” during Hannibal’s dream at Gades, so Caesar issues a similar
injunction of his own earlier in the narrative during his adhortatio before the
climactic battle at Pharsalus (7.308–10):13
Caesar expresses his concern over the coming engagement and, in particular, the
fate of his men: at the same time, he warns them that, if anyone of them “looks
back” (respexerit, 310) before the battle is won, he will see Caesar committing
suicide. The image of Caesar driving his sword into his entrails recalls both the
epic’s proem, in which Lucan describes the civil war in general in the same terms
(1.1–7), and the later suicide of Cato the Younger, which may have been the
intended ending of the poem. When Caesar violates his own injunction against
“looking back” at the end of the (again, extant) epic, he sends the reader back to
an important turning point, perhaps even the middle of a planned 12-book
poem, when the centurion Scaeva single-handedly defends the Roman camp at
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 173
In the verses which immediately follow, Scaeva loses his momentum and, after a
long struggle, finally falls in death: at the very moment when he “looks back”
(respicit, 185), Scaeva seals his fate. Moreover, when Caesar “looks back” upon
(∼ remembers) Scaeva’s backward glance, in violation of Caesar’s own injunction
not to “look back” until victory is attained, Lucan appears to direct the reader’s
glance both backwards, through this prism of earlier moments in the epic, and
forwards, ahead to the death of Cato the Younger and, perhaps, even that of
Caesar himself.
Above and beyond the theme of the backwards glance, Lucan and Silius
evince their shared concern with the transition from Republic to Empire, from
bellum externum to bellum civile, by exploring the fraught relationship between
Hannibal and Caesar as enemies of Rome who cross the Alps, invade Italy, and
threaten the city itself with destruction. Where Silius posits a link between the
cosmic disturbance caused by Hannibal and that later caused by Caesar and
Pompey (1.36–7 ∼ 13.861–7),16 Lucan goes so far as to have Caesar himself
compare his own invasion to that of Rome’s most hated foreign enemy in an
address to his men (1.303–5):17
174 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
This simile once again elides the boundary between Republic and Empire,
foreign war and civil war. More broadly, it reflects the totalizing approach to
Roman literature, Roman history, and Roman culture which Lucan and Silius,
among many others, adopt in an ultimately vain attempt at making sense of
Rome’s descent into the suicidal furor of bellum civile. Petronius captures the
essence of this totalizing approach to the descent into civil war in the prefatory
remarks on the stereotypical orator-turned-poet (e.g., Silius Italicus?) offered by
the hack Eumolpus before he recites his own (unfinished) epyllion on the civil
war between Caesar and Pompey (118).18 At the end of those remarks, Eumolpus
warns against taking on the theme of civil war (118.6):
ecce belli civilis ingens opus quisquis attigerit nisi plenus litteris, sub onere
labetur. Non enim res gestae versibus comprehendendae sunt, quod longe melius
historici faciunt, sed per ambages deorumque ministeria et fabulosum
sententiarum tormentum praecipitandus est liber spiritus, ut potius furentis
animi vaticinatio appareat quam religiosae orationis sub testibus fides.
Behold, the endless theme of civil war: whoever ventures upon this topic, unless
he is steeped in literature, will falter under its weight. For, great deeds must not
be confined to verse, since historians handle them far better, but a free spirit
must be hurled head over heels into plots and interventions of the gods and the
story-like twists and turns of aphorisms, so that it may appear to be more like the
prophecy of a raging spirit than the faithful account of a sacred speech before
witnesses.
The reference to the belli civilis ingens opus immediately recalls Vergil’s maius
opus (Aen. 7.45), the (proleptic) civil war which occupies the narrative of the
second half of Rome’s national epic, and perhaps playfully acknowledges that the
unfinished epyllion cannot possibly do justice to the grandeur of the theme. In
the extended description of his climb up the Alps (122–3, esp. verses 144–208),
Caesar trod both literally and metaphorically in the footsteps of Hercules, the
Gauls, and Hannibal (cf. esp. Pun. 3.477–556), perhaps against the backdrop of
the events of ad 69. At the climax of this part of the poem, Caesar is likened to
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 175
Hercules and then to Jupiter himself, standing atop Mt. Olympus and hurling his
thunderbolt against the Giants (123, verses 205–8):
Above and beyond the resonance between this simile and the narrative transition
from the Alps to Mt. Olympus in Punica 3, the simile itself likens Caesar to
Hercules and then to Jupiter just as the simile at Punica 17.647–50 likens Scipio
to Bacchus and then to Hercules after his victory in the Gigantomachy. Regardless
of whether Silius wrote with an eye on Petronius or vice versa, the two similes,
read together, complicate the relationship between Caesar and Hannibal, as well
as the conflation of bellum externum and bellum internum, by adding Scipio to
the equation.19
In their groundbreaking study of the Punica, Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy offer the
following ruminations on the structure of the epic and, in particular, the pivotal
importance of Cannae:20
In making Cannae the pivotal battle and assigning it the central position in his
epic, Silius is, as we have noted, breaking with traditional, historical techniques. . . .
It is reasonable to conclude that Silius’ decision to focus his epic on Cannae and
to devote three of his seventeen books to the battle and to the events immediately
preceding and following it was not based on any prior tradition of the second
Punic War. Further, neither Homer nor Vergil provided a clear precedent for
setting the major military conflict in the middle of the epic. Silius’ most obvious
exemplar is Lucan, whose epic reaches its climax with the battle in Pharsalia 7.
While Silius certainly does owe a great debt to Lucan in this respect, as in many
others, Silius also certainly owes an equal debt to the rich existing tradition on
176 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
the Second Punic War itself. Despite its extraordinary length, the Punica actually
offers a rather simplified narrative of the conflict compared to the wealth of
detail preserved elsewhere in the tradition and especially by Polybius and Livy.21
This tradition appears to include evidence of a popular memory of the war
which reduced the long string of battles to a series of four victories for Hannibal,
culminating with Cannae, and a series of four revenge victories for the Romans,
culminating with Zama. This model radically distorts the narrative chronology
of the war by identifying its turning point not with Hannibal’s march on Rome
in 211 bc , but with his victory at Cannae in 216 bc , a mere five years into the
20-year conflict. This chronological distortion, in turn, prompts both a narrative
compression, as the victory at Cannae and the march on Rome eventually merge
into one event (e.g., Ampel. 45.2 and Zos. 1.1.1), and a narrative simplification, as
most of the events after Cannae and the march on Rome eventually fall out of
the later tradition altogether, as well as a narrative displacement, as the events of
the war are rearranged to fit the scheme. In the end, the only consistent element
which survives intact is the list of Hannibal’s four victories: the battles of the
Ticinus River, the Trebia River, Lake Trasimene, and Cannae. The major evidence
for this popular memory of the war includes Florus’ narrative of the Second
Punic War in his Epitome (Epit. 1.22), Ampelius’ biography of Hannibal (28.4)
and narrative of the Second Punic War (46.4–6) in his Liber memorialis, and the
biography of Hannibal in the De viris illustribus (42), often wrongly attributed to
Sex. Aurelius Victor. All of these sources postdate the Punica but may very well
preserve later versions of an epitomizing tradition which predates the epic and
may already surface at various points in Cornelius Nepos’ biography of Hannibal
in his Vitae.22
In his abbreviated account of the Second Punic War in Epit. 1.22, Florus
provides ample evidence for this complex process of narrative compression,
simplification, and displacement. He begins with Hannibal’s oath of eternal
hatred against Rome (1–2) and continues with the fall of Saguntum (3–8).
Thereafter, Hannibal marches from Spain to Italy (9), where he then defeats the
Romans in four consecutive battles: the Ticinus River, the Trebia River, Lake
Trasimene, and Cannae (10–18). Following Cannae, Hannibal marches to Capua
to celebrate his victory instead of continuing on to Rome (19–22). For Florus,
this disastrous decision not to march immediately on Rome marks the turning
point in the war, since Hannibal and his men are soon conquered by Campanian
luxuria: Florus goes so far as to quote Livy for the idea that “Capua was Hannibal’s
Cannae” (Capuam Hannibali Cannas fuisse, 21 = Liv. 23.45.4). At this pivotal
moment in the conflict, the Romans seize the initiative and begin the long march
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 177
back to victory (23–6). The Romans exact vengeance for their four earlier defeats
in Italy by scoring victories of their own over the Carthaginians in all four
theaters of combat: Italy (27–32), Sicily (33–4), Sardinia (35), and Spain (36–40).
In a noticeable departure from the usual chronology, Fabius enters the fray not
before but after the battle of Cannae (27–8), and New Carthage falls to Scipio not
after but before Hannibal’s march on Rome (39–40). Following this awkward
enumeration of Roman successes, Florus returns to Italy, where Hannibal finally
makes his long-delayed, and ultimately fruitless, march on the city (41–8). Florus
then concludes his narrative with the Roman victories at the battles of the
Metaurus River (49–53) and Zama (54–61). In a telling comment on Rome’s
moral transformation during the course of the conflict, Florus observes how
“then, with Scipio in command, the Roman people, turning their entire force
against Africa herself, began to imitate Hannibal and to avenge the disasters of
their native Italy on Africa” (duce igitur Scipione in ipsam Africam tota mole
conversus imitari coepit Hannibalem et Italiae suae clades in Africam vindicare,
55).23 Whereas Hannibal had inflicted clades upon clades in Italy at the beginning
of the conflict, the Roman people now do the same in Africa at its end. At Zama,
Hannibal simply “withdrew” (cessit, 61) from the battlefield just as he “withdrew”
(cessit, 46) from the walls of Rome earlier in the war; perhaps surprisingly, Florus
ends his narrative not with the image of Scipio returning to Rome in triumph
but instead with that of Hannibal in flight, a decision which Florus explicitly
claims put Rome on the path to becoming the superpower (61). This version and,
once again, vision of the Second Punic War may very well have been what (elite)
Romans learned at school and considered the “standard” account, and, I would
claim, may very well reflect how Silius and his contemporaries remembered the
conflict, as well as its place in Roman history and Roman culture, especially the
pivotal importance of the battle of Cannae.
Later generations subjected this popular memory of the Second Punic War to
even more narrative compression, simplification, and displacement, ultimately
whittling down a full decade of Livy’s Ab urbe condita to a mere list of major
engagements. Writing perhaps sometime in the early third century ad, Ampelius
offers, essentially, a handbook of Roman history and Roman culture in his Liber
memorialis, including many references to all three of the Punic Wars. In two
different passages, the first from a biography of Hannibal (28.4) and the second
from a summary of the Second Punic War (46.4–6), he reduces the narrative of
the conflict to its barest outline. In Chapter 28, Ampelius compiles a list of
famous enemies with whom the Romans waged war: Populus Romanus cum
quibus gentibus bella conseruit et quibus de causis (“The nations with which the
178 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
Roman people waged war and the reasons for which they did so”). After
recounting the wars waged by the seven kings (1), the Roman defeat at the battle
of the Caudine Forks (2), and the war against Pyrrhus of Epirus (3), Ampelius
concludes the list with Hannibal (4):
Ampelius pares the memory of the Second Punic War down to the absolute
minimum and, in particular, to the intertwined themes of rise and fall around the
turning point of Cannae, as first Hannibal individually scores four victories over
the Romans and then four different Roman generals collectively score four
victories over Hannibal. Although the text breaks off with the battle of the
Metaurus River, there can be no doubt that Ampelius concluded his narrative
with the battle of Zama as the fourth and final Roman victory. By cutting out the
oath of Hannibal and the march from Spain to Italy, as well as the march to Capua
after Cannae and the later march on Rome, Ampelius divides the Second Punic
War into two phases: the first comprises Hannibal’s victories through Cannae, and
the second comprises Rome’s victories through Zama. In doing so, he distills the
conflict down to its moral essence: Hannibal will fall, and Rome will rise (again).
180 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
The popular memory of the Second Punic War continues to (d)evolve in the
various lives of the key players, both Roman and Carthaginian, included in the De
viris illustribus, which was compiled during the first half of the fourth century ad.
The biography of Hannibal (42) offers a narrative of the conflict which bears a
striking resemblance to those in Florus and Ampelius and, at the same time, offers
a slightly but significantly different account of the events after Cannae:24
1. Hannibal, Hamilcaris filius, novem annos natus, a patre aris admotus odium in
Romanos perenne iuravit. 2. exinde socius et miles in castris patri fuit. mortuo
eo causam belli quaerens Saguntum Romanis foederatam intra sex menses
evertit. tum Alpibus patefactis in Italiam traiecit. 3. P. Scipionem apud Ticinum,
Sempronium Longum apud Trebiam, Flaminium apud Trasimenum, Paullum et
Varronem apud Cannas superavit. 4. cumque urbem capere posset, in
Campaniam devertit, cuius deliciis elanguit. 5. et cum ad tertium ab urbe lapidem
castra posuisset, tempestatibus repulsus. primum a Fabio Maximo frustratus,
deinde a Valerio Flacco repulsus, a Graccho et Marcello fugatus, in Africam
revocatus, a Scipione superatus, ad Antiochum regem Syriae confugit eumque
hostem Romanis fecit.
1. Hannibal, the son of Hamilcar, when he was 9 years old, was brought by his
father to the altar and swore an oath of eternal hatred against the Romans.
2. Then, he was an ally and soldier for his father in camp. When Hamilcar died,
Hannibal, seeking a cause for war, sacked Saguntum, an ally for the Romans by
treaty, within six months. Then, after laying bare the Alps, he crossed over into
Italy. 3. He defeated Publius Scipio along the Ticinus, Sempronius Longus along
the Trebia, Flaminius along the shores of Trasimene, and Paullus and Varro near
Cannae. 4. And when he could have seized the city of Rome itself, he turned
aside into Campania, because of whose delights he grew weak. 5. And when he
had pitched camp near the third milestone from the city, he was driven off by
storms. First hampered by Fabius Maximus, then driven off by Valerius Flaccus,
then put to flight by Gracchus and Marcellus, then called back into Africa, then
defeated by Scipio, he fled to Antiochus, king of Syria, and made him an enemy
to the Romans.
The biography once again begins with the oath of Hannibal (1) and continues
with the fall of Saguntum followed by the march from Spain to Italy (2).
Thereafter, the biography rehearses the canonical list of victories for Hannibal
(3) and then recounts the march to Capua instead of Rome after Cannae (4).
When Hannibal does finally march on Rome, he is easily repulsed: at this point
in the narrative, the biographer reduces the description of the events after
Cannae to a long string of participial phrases which includes a list of four
Silius Italicus and the Punica in Classical Literature 181
victories for the Romans (different from those in Florus and Ampelius) and
culminates with Hannibal’s flight from Carthage several years after the war had
ended (5). All in all, the moral purpose of the narrative here remains the same as
that in the earlier texts, to commemorate Hannibal’s rise and fall (superavit, 3 ∼
superatus, 5) and to emphasize the significance of the events after Cannae for
Rome’s subsequent recovery. When read together, this evidence from Florus,
Ampelius, and the De viris illustribus for the popular memory of the Second
Punic War provides a glimpse of why and how the war became a defining conflict
in Roman history and Roman culture, especially as a part of the fraught transition
from Republic to Empire, from bellum externum to bellum civile. Accordingly,
the notion that it was Silius who transformed Cannae into the turning point of
the Second Punic War, whether inspired by Lucan or not, strains credulity when
it is just as possible, if not eminently plausible, that he was engaging with an
earlier stage of this evolving popular memory of the conflict. The fact that the
narratives in Silius and Florus, in particular, bear such a striking resemblance to
each other in structure, language, and theme suggests that they reflect a, if not
the, standard version and vision of the Second Punic War (and perhaps of the
Republic as a whole) during the Early Empire.
Although the Punica appears to have been lost for nearly a millennium before its
rediscovery by Poggio in the early fifteenth century, the epic’s memorialization
of the Second Punic War clearly exerted a meaningful and lasting impact on
later memorializations in Roman history, Roman culture, and Roman literature.25
Composed less than a century before the rediscovery of the Punica, Petrarch’s
Africa, also a Latin epic poem in dactylic hexameter, recounts not the entire
Second Punic War but instead only Scipio’s campaigns in Spain and Africa,
culminating in his victory at Zama and triumph back in Rome.26 (Petrarch
covers much the same material in prose in the Vita Scipionis included in his De
viris illustribus.)27 Scholars have long debated and, barring any new evidence,
will long continue to debate whether or not Petrarch somehow read Silius, in
whole or in part.28 One editor and translator, Lefebvre de Villebrune, believing
that Petrarch had, in fact, read Silius, not only accused Petrarch of plagiarizing
Africa 6.885–918, but even went so far as to “restore” these verses to their rightful
place by inserting them between Punica 16.27 and 16.28.29 A generation later,
Ugo Foscolo rebutted this baseless charge of plagiarism in his Essays on Petrarch.30
182 An Introduction to Silius Italicus and the Punica
If nothing else, this scholarly kerfuffle reflects the underlying fact that Silius and
Petrarch composed their respective epics within a shared linguistic and literary
tradition against a shared historical and cultural backdrop. As a result, any
perceived similarity between the Punica and the Africa in structure, language,
and theme may be the result of direct contact or else simply the result of that
common origin. Like Silius, Petrarch looks to Vergil’s Aeneid and Livy’s Ab urbe
condita for his main literary inspiration; like Silius, Petrarch transforms history
into epic and Scipio into the epic’s (albeit complex) hero; and, most of all, like
Silius, Petrarch transfers his reading of the Second Punic War and, in particular,
of Scipio to contemporary events. In many ways, therefore, whether or not
Petrarch read Silius, the Africa marks the beginning of the modern reception of
the Punica and the reintroduction of the lost epic into Classical literature.
Notes
1 Harth 1984–7 presents the critical edition of Poggio’s letters (in Latin) documenting
these finds; Goodhart Gordon 1974 provides an English translation of the
voluminous correspondence between Poggio and Niccolò de’ Niccoli (1364–1437);
Greenblatt 2011 recounts the rediscovery of the De rerum natura and its impact on
the rise of the modern West. For Poggio in general, Walser 1914 remains the most
complete and authoritative account of his life and works.
2 The CESG (Codices Electronici Sangallenses) project provides an online digital
collection of the existing manuscripts in the Abbey Library: visit http://www.cesg.
unifr.ch/.
3 For an overview of the manuscripts of the Punica, as well as of the early editions,
translations, and commentaries, see Delz 1966; Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976;
Reeve 1983; McGushin 1985; Delz 1987: v–lxxviii; Muecke 2011.
4 The CEEC (Codices Electronici Ecclesiae Coloniensis) project likewise provides a
collection of the existing manuscripts in the Cathedral Library: visit http://www.
ceec.uni-koeln.de/.
5 Carrio 1583; Modius 1584.
6 For the Punica in Italy during the early Renaissance, see Muecke 2005a–b; Muecke
2010. Muecke and Dunston 2011 publishes Calderini’s previously lost commentary
on the epic.
7 Bussi 1471 (April 5); Leto 1471 (April 26). In a forthcoming companion volume to
this book, I explore the history of the editions, translations, and commentaries for
the Punica in more detail.
8 Marso 1483. For Marso in general, see Dykmans 1988, esp. 11, 19–20, 29–30, 71–2,
98–9.
9 Heins 1600–1 (also, Heins 1646); Dausque 1615/18.
10 Ross 1661/72. For this translation, see Vander Motten and Daemen-de Gelder 2004;
Daemen-de Gelder and Vander Motten 2008; Bond 2009; von Contzen 2013;
Augoustakis 2018.
11 Keller 1695; Drakenborch 1717.
12 Buzio 1765; Lefebvre de Villebrune 1781a–b.
13 Ernesti 1791–2; Ruperti 1795–8.
14 Lemaire 1823; Bothe 1855–7.
183
184 Notes to pp. 2–6
15 Bauer 1890–2; Delz 1987; Budé: Miniconi and Devallet 1979; Volpilhac, Miniconi,
and Devallet 1981; Volpilhac-Léntheric, Martin, Miniconi, and Devallet 1984; Martin
and Devallet 1992; Spaltenstein 1986–90.
16 English: Kline 2018; Augoustakis and Bernstein: forthcoming; French: Budé;
Spanish: Villalba Álvarez 2005; Italian: Vinchesi 2001; German: Rupprecht 1991;
Stürner: forthcoming.
17 For an overview of recent scholarship, see Ariemma 2000; Dominik 2010;
Augoustakis 2016.
18 Occioni 18691/712; Occioni 1878; Occioni 1889; Occioni 1891; von Albrecht 1964.
For Occioni, see also Gentile 1962; Piras 2013; Sacerdoti 2014. Other early
monographs include Casale 1954; Romano 1969.
19 Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986.
20 Hardie 1993a.
21 McGuire 1997.
22 Marks 2005.
23 Tipping 2010; Stocks 2014.
24 Augoustakis 2010a; Augoustakis 2013; Augoustakis 2014a; Augoustakis 2016;
Augoustakis and Littlewood 2019; Augoustakis, Buckley, and Stocks 2019.
25 The most recent scholarship includes Syré 2017 and Haselmann 2018. Dissertations
completed during the past twenty years, mostly unpublished, include Marks 1999;
Abdel Baky 2000; Augoustakis 2001; Chhana 2005; Klaassen Kennedy 2005; Ronet
2008; Jacobs 2009; Gajderowicz 2011; Yue 2011; García Amutxastegi 2015a; Montes
Mérida 2015; van der Keur 2015; Hamvas 2016; Zaia 2016; Dibbern 2017; Conner
2018; Roumpou 2018; Siepe 2019.
26 In looking ahead to the substance of these six chapters, I provide bibliographical
references for the major critical perspectives which I apply to Silius Italicus and his
Punica in the course of this study, but I do not privilege any one theory over another.
Instead, I adopt an eclectic approach to theory throughout the volume, and I see value
in continuing to grapple even with outmoded ideas like authorial intention (for which,
see Farrell 2017, a welcome reappraisal). For the application of theory to the Classics,
especially Classical literature, see Hexter and Selden 1992; de Jong and Sullivan 1994;
Harrison 2001; Heath 2002; Schmitz 2002 ≈ Schmitz 2007; Hitchcock 2008.
27 For the relevant bibliography, see below in Chapter 1.
28 For the relevant bibliography, see below in Chapter 2.
29 Von Albrecht 1964: 16–24, esp. 16–19.
30 Von Albrecht 1964: 24–46. Hardie 1989: 15 helpfully elaborates on this idea: “Von
Albrecht sees the unifying theme of the Punica as Hannibal at the walls of Rome . . .;
it would be more correct to say that there are two unifying themes, Hannibal at the
walls and Hannibal’s attempt to climb the Capitol” (italics in original). See also
Hardie 1993a: 14–16.
Notes to pp. 6–8 185
see Rodríguez and Martín 1995; for The history of Saguntum, see Rodríguez and
Martín 1992.
43 Rodríguez and Martín 1988: 325–48 collects many of these references to Saguntum.
44 Rodríguez and Martín 1988 provides the only critical text, along with an ample
introduction (pp. xi–cxi) which offers a full discussion of the poem’s many sources,
including the Punica (pp. lxiv–lxxviii). For de Zamora in general, see López López
2015.
45 Pérez i Durà and Estellés i González 1991: 359–403 provides the only critical text
and translation (into Spanish), along with an introduction (pp. 361–74) which treats
the relationship between the Saguntineida and the Punica: see also Pérez i Durà
1993; Pérez Vilatela 2002.
46 Gaspar Zavala y Zamora: Rodríguez Cuadros 1996 provides the only critical text,
along with an ample introduction; Enrique Palos y Navarro: Millón Villena 2015
publishes a transcription and facsimile of the only manuscript, recently rediscovered
in the Archivo Histórico Nacional.
47 Bernstein 2017: xliii briefly remarks on the relationship between Sónnica la cortesana
and the Punica, but he does not mention any of the other works discussed here.
48 María Pemán and Sánchez-Castañer 1954.
49 Conte 2012.
50 For the Classics and science fiction, see Rogers and Stevens 2015. For the Classics
and modern fantasy, see Rogers and Stevens 2017. For both, see also Rogers and
Stevens 2018.
51 La Penna 1981; Reitz 1993; Keith 2000; Augoustakis 2001; Vinchesi 2005; Uccellini
2006; García Amutxastegi 2009; Augoustakis 2010b; García Amutxastegi 2010;
Augoustakis 2012; Keith 2013; Sharrock 2015.
52 Hawthorn 1991; Hellekson 2001; Tetlock, Lebow, and Parker 2006; Singles 2013;
Gallagher 2018. As this branch of scholarship well illustrates, “fake news” is nothing
new at all: today’s “fake news” has become tomorrow’s “fake history” for millennia.
For counterfactual history in ancient epic, see Nesselrath 1992; for the Punica, see
Cowan 2010. For alternate history and the Classics, see Grandazzi and Queyrel-
Bottineau 2018, esp. the many essays on ancient epic.
53 I intend this thought experiment as a conscious nod to the Columbiad (1807), by Joel
Barlow (1754–1812), like the Punica, a long-forgotten and much-maligned attempt
at a national epic: Blakemore 2007 offers the only modern reading of that epic in its
literary and historical contexts.
54 For the performance culture of the recitatio, see Starr 1991; Markus 2000; Johnson
and Parker 2009; Winsbury 2009; Roller 2018a. For Imperial Rome as a (mostly
silent) reading culture, especially under the Five Good Emperors, see Johnson 2010;
Howley 2018. For the debate about silent reading in general, see also Knox 1968;
Gilliard 1993; Gavrilov 1997; Burnyeat 1997; Saenger 1997; Johnson 2000.
Notes to pp. 12–18 187
1 For the name, see TLL Onom. II. 264.46–266.6, as well as Schulze 1904: 76, 231–2,
347, 423, 424–5; Kajanto 1965: 180; Solin and Salomies 1988: 23, 50, 171, 346;
Salomies 1992: 000–000, with Salomies 2014: 513, 515 n. 8, 516.
2 Perhaps most notably among modern scholars, Scullard 1959 begins his account of
the Late Republic and Early Empire with 133 bc and traces the course of Roman
history through to the death of Nero in ad 68. More recently, see also Mackay 2009;
Flower 2010; Osgood 2018.
3 Syme 1939 remains the classic treatment. More recently, see also Osgood 2006;
Alston 2015.
4 Raaflaub and Toher 1993; Zanker 1987 ≈ Zanker 1988; Galinsky 2012; Koortbojian
2013; as well as Weinstock 1971.
5 Galinsky 1996 offers the standard introduction to Augustan culture; for the cultural
revolution and its lasting impact throughout the Roman world, see Wallace-Hadrill
2008; Spawforth 2012.
188 Notes to pp. 18–23
6 Griffin 1984; Sullivan 1985; Rudich 1993; Rudich 1997; Champlin 2003; Malitz 1999
≈ Malitz 2005; Buckley and Dinter 2013; Bartsch, Freudenburg, and Littlewood 2017;
Drinkwater 2019.
7 Henderson 1908; Grassl 1973; Greenhalgh 1975; Wellesley 1975; Murison 1993;
Morgan 2006.
8 Briessmann 1955; Evans 1974; Nicols 1978; Bengtson 1979; Lana 1980; Darwall-
Smith 1996; Boyle and Dominik 2003; Pfeiffer 2009; Kramer and Reitz 2010; Suess
2011; Zissos 2016.
9 Mason 2016 provides a magisterial study of the war; see also Rudich 2015.
10 Temple of Peace: Tucci 2017. Arch of Titus: Pfanner 1983.
11 Jones 1992; Southern 1997; Gering 2012.
12 Coleman 1986; Franchet d’Espèrey 1986; Leberl 2004. For a synkrisis of Nero and
Domitian, see Bönisch-Meyer, Cordes, Schulz, Wolsfeld, and Ziegert 2014; Cordes
2017.
13 Grainger 2003; Morelli 2014.
14 Russell 1990; Anderson 1993; Swain 1996; Whitmarsh 2001; Whitmarsh 2005;
Richter and Johnson 2017; König and Whitton 2018.
15 Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976, esp. 342–60, provides an authoritative treatment of
these testimonia. Other discussions, primarily about the passages from Martial and
Pliny, include Klotz 1927; Groag 1927a–b; Smallwood 1967: 1–8 (esp. 6), 50, cf. 142;
Eck 1974; Vessey 1974; McDermott and Orentzel 1977: 24–7, 31–4; Laudizi 1989:
9–26; Matier 1981; Matier 1989b. For the derivative Renaissance vitae, see Bassett,
Delz, and Dunston 1976: 361–4. In addition to these Renaissance vitae, see also
Blumenröder 1694; Heister 1734; Stefani 1893. Silius almost certainly did not write
the Ilias Latina attributed to one “Baebius Italicus”: Buecheler 1880: 390–1; Stefani
1893: 11–25; Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976: 398.
16 Degrassi 1947: 332–4; Degrassi 1952: 000–000; with Gallivan 1974: 292–3, 295, 311.
17 Della Corte 1919: 236; Deane 1921: 91.
18 Calder 1935; Calder and Cormack 1962 [= MAMA 8]: 76, no. 411; Reynolds 1982:
46; also visit http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/iaph2007/iAph130609.html.
19 Burnett, Amandry, and Carradice 1999: 1.3, 119, 156–9, 204–5, 216, 2.000–000.
20 de Rossi 1882.
21 See also Suet. Vit. 15 and D.C. 65.16–18, neither of whom mentions Silius.
22 Woodman 2009: 37; Gibson 2010: 37; Gibson 2013: 76–9; Woodman 2018: 185 ad
4.33.4.
23 Moles 1998 remains the standard treatment of this justly famous passage.
24 Buecheler 1880: 391; Schinkel 1884: 12–16; von Albrecht 1964: 64; Bassett 1966: 263
n. 19; von Albrecht 1973: 181; Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976: 343; McDermott and
Orentzel 1977: 26 n. 11; Laudizi 1989: 16; Rocca-Serra 1990: 382; Cotta Ramosino
1999: 94.
Notes to pp. 24–36 189
25 Buecheler 1880: 390; Bassett 1966: 263 n. 19; von Albrecht 1973: 181; Bassett, Delz,
and Dunston 1976: 343; Laudizi 1989: 16–17; Most 1989: 2057–9; Pomeroy 1989:
121–2; Rocca-Serra 1990: 382–3; Takács 1998: 133–5; Takács 2002; Takács 2004;
Takács 2018.
26 Dickey 2012–15: 2.173–8, esp. 175–6; as well as Dionisotti 1982.
27 Blass 1876: 133 n. 1; Ussani 1918. More recently, see Connolly 2010.
28 This same error may occur much later in a 1410/12 list of codices donated by
Amplonius Ratinck of Rheinberg to the University of Erfurt: Bassett, Delz, and
Dunston 1976: 348.
29 Bursian 1867: iii–ix; Blass 1876; Pueschel 1907: 34–7; Nicol 1936: 172–3; Gelsomino
1967: xlvii, 63; Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976: 344.
30 Likewise based on this onomastic evidence, Salomies 1992: 95–6 (see also Syme
1983: 111), argues that, in addition to his two biological sons, Silius either adopted
Ti. Catius Caesius Fronto or else was his uncle. Fronto was one of the suffect consuls
for ad 96 (September–December, according to the fasti Ostienses) when Domitian
was assassinated: Degrassi 1947: 223–4; Degrassi 1952: 000–000; Vidman 1982: 45,
89; with Gallivan 1981: 192, 218.
31 Blumenröder 1694: 5–11; Hübner 1875: 58.
32 Calder 1935: 217; Campbell 1936; Chilver 1941: 109–11; Syme 1958: 1.88 n. 7;
Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976: 342; McDermott and Orentzel 1977: 24; Laudizi
1989: 11–14; Pomeroy 1989: 132–3; Cotta Ramosino 1999: 93; Dominik 2010:
428–31.
33 Watts 1971: 94–5, 97–8, 100–1; Vessey 1984; McGuire 1985: 30 n. 5; Laudizi 1989:
11–14.
34 For the most recent discussion of these dates, see Nauta 2002: 441–2.
35 In addition to the scholarship in n. 15, see Szelest 1959.
36 Henderson 2002: 116. Any use of perpetuus after Ovid also inevitably recalls the
proem of the Metamorphoses, in which the poet calls upon the Muses to strike a
balance between a carmen perpetuum and a carmen deductum: ad mea perpetuum
deducite tempora carmen (“Lead my endless song down to my own times,” Met. 1.4;
cf. Hor. Carm. 1.7.6; Stat. Theb. 7.289).
37 Degrassi 1947: 222–3; Degrassi 1952: 000–000; Vidman 1982: 45, 87; with Gallivan
1981: 191, 194, 218.
38 Gibson and Morello 2012: 104–35.
39 In addition to the scholarship in n. 15, see Sherwin-White 1966 ad loc.; Lefèvre 1989:
118–23 ≈ Lefèvre 2009: 142–5; Gagliardi 1990; Henderson 2002: 102–24.
40 Rutledge 2001, esp. 25–6, 47–9, 51–2, 125 n. 69 (on p. 361), 268–9, 298.
41 Joseph Wright of Derby (1734–97) incorporates Silius into his cycle of paintings of
the tomb of Vergil: Trapp 1984: 3, 11, 13–14, 16–17, 26; see also Trapp 1987; Hendrix
2018; Laird 2018; Peirano Garrison 2018, esp. 266, 269–80; Smiles 2018, esp. 301–6.
190 Notes to pp. 36–42
35 For historical epic in general, see Kroll 1916; Clinard 1967; Häußler 1976–8. For the
relationship between history and epic in general, see Konstan and Raaflaub 2010; for
the fraught relationship between epic, especially historical epic, and empire, see
Quint 1989a. In many ways, the Bellum Punicum serves as the direct model for the
Punica as an epic on a war with Carthage.
36 Cosack 1844: 17–18; Wezel 1873: 17–47; Woodruff 1906 ≈ Woodruff 1910; Fürstenau
1916; Mendell 1924, esp. 97–100; von Albrecht 1964: 21–2, 161–4; Häußler 1976–8:
2.148–61; Bettini 1977; Runchina 1982; Matier 1991.
37 Lucretius: Wezel 1873: 98–101; Bassett 1963: 74–6.
38 Wezel 1873: 86–9; Bruère 1958; Bruère 1959; von Albrecht 1964: 154–61; Wilson
2004; Bernstein 2016b.
39 Wezel 1873: 89–95; Steele 1922: 326–30; Meyer 1924; Hadas 1936, esp. 154–5; von
Albrecht 1964: 164–6; Häußler 1976–8: 2.161–7; Brouwers 1982; Ahl, Davis, and
Pomeroy 1986: 2501–4; Laudizi 1989: 148–52; Fucecchi 1999; Ariemma 2007; Marks
2010; Esposito 2012.
40 Valerius and Statius: Wezel 1873: 95–8; Mendell 1924, esp. 92–4, 96, 102–4; Steele
1930; Cousin 1939; Bolaffi 1959; Mozley 1963–4; Schönberger 1965; Burck 1966–81;
Gossage 1969; McDonald 1971; Sturt 1977; Burck 1978; Thuile 1980; La Penna 1981;
Vessey 1982a; Tandoi 1985; Cristóbal 1988; Hardie 1989; McGuire 1989; Toohey 1992:
186–210; Hardie 1993a; McGuire 1997; Ripoll 1998; Cowan 2003; Paschalis 2005;
Franchet d’Espèrey 2006; Bernstein 2008; Augoustakis 2010b; Vidal 2010; Augoustakis
2013; Manuwald and Voigt 2013; Augoustakis 2014a; Walter 2014; Augoustakis 2016;
Bernstein 2016a; Hamvas 2016; Manioti 2016; Ginsberg and Krasne 2018;
Augoustakis and Littlewood 2019; Coffee, Forstall, Galli Milić, and Nelis 2020;
Ferenczi and Zissos: forthcoming; Fratantuono and Stark: forthcoming; Papaioannou
and Marinis: forthcoming. Valerius: Frank 1974; Ripoll 1999; Ripoll 2003; Augoustakis
2014c; Stocks 2014: 70–3. Statius: Helm 1892: 156–70; Legras 1905; Lorenz 1968;
Venini 1969; Santini 1992; Delarue 1995; Vinchesi 1999; Morzadec 2009; Agri 2010;
Lovatt 2010; Sacerdoti 2011; Marks 2013b; Marks 2014; Stocks 2014: 73–5; Ripoll
2015; Ripoll 2017; Agri 2020. For Flavian literature in general, see also Coffee 1953–4;
Huxley 1954; Huxley 1968; Dudley 1972; Nauta 2002; Gasti and Mazzoli 2005; Nauta,
van Dam, and Smolenaars 2006; Bonadeo and Romano 2007; Bonadeo, Canobbio,
and Gasti 2011; Baier 2012; Baertschi 2013; Bessone and Fucecchi 2017.
41 Claudian: Prenner 2002. Sidonius Apollinaris: Brolli 2004. Corippus: Delattre 2011.
42 Green 2006, esp. 331–2. For the influence of the Punica on, among many examples
from early Christian Latin poetry, Venantius Fortunatus Vita Sancti Martini, see Kay
2020 passim.
43 Waltharius: Zwierlein 1970: 000–000, 000–000, 000–000 ≈ Zwierlein 2004: 522–000,
534–5, 547–8; Schieffer 1975; Önnerfors 1979: 26–7, 34–7, 45–6; Önnerfors 1988: 19
n. 28. Alexandreis: Christensen 1905: 69 n. 13, 95 n. 1, 209–11.
194 Notes to pp. 58–63
1 Marso 1483 ad loc.; Costanzi 1508: ch. XCII. For Costanzi in general, see Tomani
Amiani 1850.
2 Major scholarship for and against the authenticity of the additamentum Aldinum
includes Heitland 1896; Sabbadini 1905: 1.180–2; Goold 1956: 9–12; von Albrecht
1973: 182; Bassett, Delz, and Dunston 1976: 348; Reeve 1983: 390; Santini 1983: 62–3
Notes to pp. 63–64 195
≈ Santini 1991: 54–6, as well as 115–16; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2497; Delz
1987: lxiv–lxviii; Courtney 1989: 326–7; Brugnoli 1992; Bandiera 1993; Brugnoli and
Santini 1995; Brugnoli and Santini 1998; Ariemma 2000b: 581, 581–3; Fröhlich 2000:
38; Dominik 2006: 118 n. 5.
3 Fabius falls ill and dies between Hannibal’s return to Italy and Scipio’s victory at
Zama. If there is a lacuna here, then, in all likelihood, Silius will have recounted the
death in the missing verses; if there is no lacuna, however, then Silius will have made
the conscious choice to omit a pivotal event in the war and the narrative with
significant historical and literary implications.
4 Major scholarship for and against a lacuna, whether after 17.290 or else after 17.291,
includes Buchwald 1886: 19–20; Wallace 1958: 101–2; Beaty 1960: 87 n. 5; von
Albrecht 1964: 133 n. 34; Fincher 1979: 144; Kißel 1979: 134–6; Delz 1987 ad loc.;
Matier 1989a: 3; Braun 1993: 175, 180–1; Delz 1995: 148; von Albrecht 1999: 315–16;
Marks 2003: 139–40; Tipping 2004: 362–3; Villalba Álvarez 2004: 368 n. 7, 379;
Stocks 2014: 36 n. 7, 207 n. 55.
5 Beginnings: Dunn and Cole 1992. Ends: Kermode 1966; Smith 1968; Torgovnick
1981; Fowler 1989; Roberts, Dunn, and Fowler 1997, esp. Fowler 1997b; Grewing,
Acosta-Hughes, and Kirichenko 2013; with Hardie 1997, Tipping 2007, and
Roumpou 2019 on the Punica. Middles: Conte 1992; Kyriakidis and De Martino
2004; with Tipping 2004 on the Punica. See also Schmitz, Telg genannt Kortmann,
and Jöne 2017; with Marks 2017 on middles in the Punica.
6 Book 10: Buchwald 1886: 14–15; Wallace 1958: 100–1; Beaty 1960: 53–4, 62;
Niemann 1975: 3–36; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2505–11; Braun 1993: 179–80;
Marks 1999: 426–35. Book 12: Martin 1946: 146; von Albrecht 1964: 24, 32–9; Burck
1979: 261–3; Kißel 1979: 213–14; Laudizi 1989: 29–30; Fincher 1979: 90; Küppers
1986: 15 n. 60, 60, 178–9; Tipping 2004, esp. 351–67; Dominik 2006: 116–17; Tipping
2010a: 38–9.
7 Fröhlich 2000: 18–58 (cf. 397–401) offers an in-depth analysis of the existing
scholarship: see also Häußler 1976–8: 2.259; Küppers 1986: 14–21; von Albrecht
1999: 294–5; Delarue 1992; Fucecchi 2006: 311–15 ≈ Fucecchi 2011: 299–303; von
Albrecht 2006: 114–19 ≈ von Albrecht 2011: 102–7; Augoustakis 2010c: 8–10;
Gärtner 2010: 77–83; Schubert 2010: 22–6; Wenskus 2010; Stürner 2011. On the
structure of historical epic in general, see Häußler 1978.
8 Bickel 1911, esp. 508–12. I thank Ben Harris for the reminder that Tacitus may have
composed his Annals in eighteen books consisting of three hexads: if so, then he may
have composed his Historiae in twelve books consisting of two hexads, as well.
9 Martin 1946, esp. 146.
10 Wallace 1958.
11 Burck 1979: 260–70, esp. 263–4: for this observation about the distribution of the
narrative material, see also Mendell 1924: 100; Nicol 1936 passim; Wallace 1968;
196 Notes to pp. 64–73
Kißel 1979: 213; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2505, 2507; Küppers 1986: 190–2;
Marks 2005c: 531–2.
12 Kißel 1979: 211–18, esp. 216: see also Toohey 1992: 205–10.
13 Delarue 1992.
14 Niemann 1975: 3–36, esp. 36: see also Fincher 1979: 6–8.
15 Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2505–11, esp. 2507–8.
16 Küppers 1986: 15–19, 54–60, 176–92.
17 Braun 1993, esp. 183.
18 Fröhlich 2000: 18–58 (cf. 397–401).
19 Kißel 1979: 216–17; Delarue 1992: 149–50, 160–1.
20 The four Roman generals are grouped together at 13.716–20, 17.160–5, 295–9.
21 Cornell 1986, esp. 249–50.
22 Major discussions include von Albrecht 1964: 16–24; Fincher 1979: 9–13; Kißel 1979:
30–1; Feeney 1982 ad loc.; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2495; Küppers 1986:
22–60, esp. 22–33; Laudizi 1989: 55–70; Pomeroy 1989: 124–6; Keith 2000: 90–1;
Tipping 2004: 347–51; Marks 2005a: 67–72; Tipping 2010a: 1–7. See also Landrey
2014; Hay 2019.
23 The enjambment of Aeneadum in Pun. 1.2 supports this interpretive translation of
ordior arma and accordingly transforms every (Roman) hero of the Punica into both
a historical (or perhaps merely a mythical) descendant of Aeneas and a literary
descendant of the Aeneas of the Aeneid.
24 There are, of course, many other constructions in Latin which convey the same range
of meanings, both literal and figurative: for more on the figurative use of these various
collocations to describe a catasterism, see Bartalucci 1989. Throughout the epic, Silius
uses the general imagery of heaps (of gold and silver, of corpses, of walls, etc.) and the
destruction of the heap by fire and the sword to contrast the ascent to Heaven with
the descent to Hell, as well as to contrast victory in foreign war with defeat in civil
war: for the heaps motif in Lucan, see Masters 1992: 32, 34, 145. (This imagery of
heaps evokes Gigantomachy and, in particular, the Aloadae, Otus and Ephialtes, piling
Mt. Pelion on top of Mt. Ossa in their attempt to reach Mt. Olympus.)
25 In addition to the passages discussed in what follows, see also Pun. 1.508 (Murrus
raising his eyes up to heaven in prayer), 6.466 (Regulus raising his hands and eyes up
to heaven in prayer), and 9.168 (Solymus raising his face up to heaven in prayer),
quite an interesting set of episodes thematically, as well as 16.319 (a shout raised up
to heaven; cf. 9.304).
26 Cures was an ancient Sabine town, home of the Flavians, as well as Numa Pompilius:
the Romans identified the divinized Romulus with the Sabine god Quirinus and
called themselves “Quirites” (perhaps, “the people of Cures”).
27 See Conte 1974: 35–7 ≈ Conte 1986: 57–9 ≈ Conte 2012: 64–7; Hardie 1993a: 6;
Miller 1993: 153, 163–4; Hinds 1998: 14–16; Edmunds 2001: 136–7; Barchiesi
Notes to pp. 73–105 197
2006–9: 56–8; Elliot 2013: 45–6, 144–6, 257–9, 304, 327, 354–5; Fisher 2014: 144;
Pelttari 2014: 118–21; as well as Gosling 2002.
28 For the Ennian shape of Punica 1.1–2 and 12.410–11, see Pomeroy 2000: 152 n. 26
(on p. 164), who also adds 13.635, as well as Hardie 1993a: 113–15; for Punica
12.387–419 in general, see Pinto 1953; Bettini 1976–7; Bettini 1977: 428–32; Casali
2006; Manuwald 2007: 74–82, 87–90; Dorfbauer 2008; Risi 2008; Tipping 2010a:
195–7.
29 Tipping 2004: 370. In general, see Hardie 1993a: 3–10, 27–32.
30 Major discussions include Sechi 1951: 295–6; Kornhardt 1954: 106–23; Beaty 1960:
170–1; Fincher 1979: 96–7; McGuire 1985: 8–10; Matier 1989a: 7; McGuire 1989:
22–3; Boyle and Sullivan 1991: 298–9; McGuire 1997: 56–7; Fucecchi 1999: 338–9;
Effe 2004: 95; Tipping 2004: 363–4, 369–70; Schrijvers 2005: 83; Tipping 2007;
Gibson 2010: 41; Jacobs 2010: 136–7; Stocks 2014: 11–12, 18–19, 29, 69–70, 80, 132.
31 Silius underscores the structural and thematic importance of Punica 10.657–8 for
the epic as a whole through a deft intertextual gesture. The closing couplet here
recalls, but also significantly alters, the formulation which Aeneas uses to lament the
fall of Troy when he claims that, if the Trojans had been able to see the Trojan Horse
for what it was before they decided to bring it into their city, “Troy would now stand,
and you would remain, lofty citadel of Priam” (Troiaque nunc staret, Priamique arx
alta maneres, Verg. Aen. 2.56, esp. staret . . . maneres ∼ stabat . . . maneres).
32 For a similar example of this specific type of wordplay in the Punica, see the
description of the bull of Phalaris in book 14: mutabat gemitus mugitibus (“it
changed moans into moos,” 214).
33 See Reed 2016, especially on the relationship between mora (“delay”) and Roma: for
more on wordplay in general, see Ahl 1985; O’Hara 1996; Keith 2008; Kwapisz,
Petrain, and Szymański 2013; Mitsis and Ziogas 2016.
1 Marks 2017; as well as Fincher 1979: 99–100; Matier 1981: 143; McGuire 1997:
226–9; Stocks 2014: 134–6.
2 Livy includes his similar catalog of Italian defectors at the end of book 22, at
22.61.10–15.
3 Major discussions include Nicol 1936: 121; von Albrecht 1964: 141–2, 161 n. 45;
Bassett 1966: 271, 272–3, 273; Fincher 1979: 148; Kißel 1979: 149, 157–8, 214; Burck
1984a: 170–3; McGuire 1985: 10–11, 148–74, 189; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986:
2555; Nesselrath 1986: 229; Laudizi 1989: 138–40; McGuire 1997: 95–103, esp. 97,
98–102; Marks 1999: 278–9, 393–414; Marks 2005: 83, 89, 113–14, 168–9, 201–6;
Gärtner 2006: 156–9 ≈ Gärtner 2011: 144–7; Tipping 2007: 231–41; Jacobs 2010:
198 Notes to pp. 105–115
137–9; Marks 2010: 149–50; Tipping 2010a: 161–3, 182–92, 199–201, 211–15,
215–18; Gibson 2013: 76–9; Penwill 2013: 50–2; Wilson 2013: 18–19; Manuwald
2014: 216; Stocks 2014: 216–17; Roumpou 2019.
4 McGuire 1985: 152–63; McGuire 1997: 95–103, esp. 97, 98–102; Marks 1999: 278–9,
408–14; Marks 2005: 201–6; Tipping 2007: 231–5; Tipping 2010a: 182–5.
5 Some MSS read victa, while others read vincta: Delz prints victa, but perhaps vincta
is correct.
6 In general, see Hardie 1993a: 37–9.
7 Bassett 1966: 273. See also Kißel 1979: 157–8; Laudizi 1989: 139; Hardie 1993a: 38–9,
59–60; Hardie 1997: 158–60; Marks 1999: 401 n. 80; Ripoll 2000c: 497 n. 105;
Tipping 2007: 238, 239–41; Tipping 2010a: 161–3, 189–92.
8 Wezel 1873: 40; Woodruff 1910: 380–1; von Albrecht 1964: 161 n. 45; Bettini 1977:
444 n. 2 ≈ Bettini 1979: 000 n. 0; Tipping 2007: 238.
9 Hardie 1997.
10 See, e.g., Bouquet 2001; Bettenworth 2004; Romano Martín 2009; Nasse 2012; Jöne
2017.
11 Vessey 1982b, esp. 335, traces the rise and fall of Hannibal as the “dupe of destiny”
across book 3 and argues that book 3 can be read as a synecdoche for the epic as a
whole.
12 For the role of the Alps in the Punica, see Šubrt 1991.
either, apart from two passing mentions (pp. 70 n. 5 and 86). For Carthage in the
Punica, see Martin 1986; Opelt 1991; Ciocârlie 2006–8; for Rome in the Punica, see
Cowan 2007b; Pyy 2018; for both, see Jacobs 2009; Gajderowicz 2011. For Capua in
Livy, see Kenty 2017; as well as von Ungern-Sternberg 1975; for Capua in the Punica,
see Burck 1984b; Cowan 2003: 27–143; Cowan 2007a; Augoustakis 2015;
Augoustakis and Littlewood 2019. In a different vein, see Calvino 1972 ≈ Calvino
1974 for a creative exploration of the city as a literal and metaphorical locus / topos.
6 O’Connell 2010: 200–1, 260 reads the epic in much the same terms: “From beginning
to end Scipio’s career betrayed a restlessness with the norms and constraints
imposed by Roman politics and senatorial domination. When confronted, he
inevitably, if grudgingly, acceded, but in establishing this pattern he set a precedent
of personal ambition that led eventually to Caesar and the collapse of the republic.
So, it seems that in order to save the state from Hannibal it was necessary to generate
the very type of individual who would ultimately destroy it. This was the true Barcid
curse upon Rome. [...] In the end, we are thrown back to the point made earlier
about Silius Italicus’s appearing to argue that in the very act of fighting Hannibal,
Rome put itself on the road to civil war by coming to rely on charismatic generals
for survival. If this is the case, then Hannibal had the last laugh.” I develop this line
of argument across Chapters 5 and 6.
7 Litchfield 1914 collects an unparalleled assemblage of evidence for these exempla,
including an invaluable chart of the “national exempla virtutis cited by Roman
writers through Claudian” (28–35); for more recent work, see Chaplin 2000; Roller
2004; Barchiesi 2006–9; Bücher 2006; Roller 2011; Langlands 2018a–b; Roller 2018b;
for exemplarity in the Punica, see Tipping 2010a; Reitz 2017. Anderson 1928
conducts a similarly thorough study of “Heracles and his successors,” including
Alexander, Romulus, Scipio Africanus, Pompey, Caesar, Antony, and Augustus, but
not, curiously enough, Hannibal; for Hercules in general, see Galinsky 1972; Silk
1985; Feeney 1986; Feeney 1991 passim; Ritter 1995; Morgan 1998; Leigh 2000;
Blanshard 2005; Morgan 2005; Rawlings and Bowden 2005; Stafford 2012; Bär 2018.
For Hercules in Flavian epic, see Hardie 1993a: 36, 65–71; Ripoll 1998: 86–163; for
Hercules in the Punica, see Bassett 1966; Kißel 1979: 153–60; Ripoll 1998: 112–32;
Asso 1999; Asso 2001; Asso 2003; Augoustakis 2003; Spentzou 2008: 143; Asso 2010.
Hardie 1993a: 67 understates the sophistication and complexity of Hercules in the
Punica: “In Silius Hercules is almost monotonously present as a model for the great
men of both Rome and Carthage, above all Scipio and Hannibal.” For the general
process of aemulatio, imitatio, comparatio (using Caesar and Alexander as the
representative case study), see Green 1978.
8 In having Hannibal hail the father of Scipio Africanus (in a generalizing plural) as
the fulmina gentis / Scipiadae (Pun. 7.106–7), Silius engages with a rich tradition of
references to various Scipiones as “thunderbolt(s)”: see Cic. Balb. 34; Lucr. 3.1034;
200 Notes to pp. 116–119
Verg. Aen. 6.842–3; Val. Max. 3.5.1; with Skutsch 1968a; for Hannibal and Scipio as
fulmina belli pitted against each other in the Punica, see Stocks 2014: 182–217. At
several points in the epic, Silius ascribes the double paternity of Scipio to his mortal
father, Publius, on the one hand, and his immortal father, none other than Jupiter, on
the other, and so one might assume that Scipio is the obvious choice for an alter
Jupiter, but Silius skillfully undercuts that assumption in the epic’s finale (17.653–4).
9 Von Albrecht 1964: 55. For fides and perfidia in the Punica, see also Kißel 1979:
96–100; Burck 1988; Thomas 2001; Pomeroy 2010a; Littlewood 2014; as well as
Augoustakis, Buckley, and Stocks 2019.
10 See Kißel 1979: 101–52; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986 passim; Laudizi 1989: 93–140;
Matier 1989; Fucecchi 1993; Marks 2005a: 61–110; Spentzou 2008; Stürner 2008;
Tipping 2010a: 51–192; Maier 2018. See also Åhman 2014.
11 Marcellus: McCall 2012. Fabius: McCall 2018; Roller 2011 ≈ Roller 2018: 163–96.
Scipio and the Cornelii Scipiones: Grimal 1953; Torregaray Pagola 1998; Etcheto
2012; Hölkeskamp 2018.
12 See Kißel 1979: 150–2. Zecchini 2006: 47–8 ≈ Zecchini 2011: 35–6 connects a triad
of Scipiones (Scipio together with his father and uncle) with a Flavian triad
consisting of Vespasian, Flavius Sabinus, and Domitian. Stocks 2014: 167–81
contrasts this same triad of Scipiones with a triad of Barcids (Hannibal, Hasdrubal,
and Mago). Littlewood 2016 contrasts this same triad of Barcids with a Flavian triad
consisting of Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian. I would connect the general idea of
triads and of heroes pitted against these triads with the single combat of Hercules
pitted against Geryon (the Tenth Labor) via the metaphor of the three-headed state
as a three-bodied or three-headed monster (e.g., Varro’s Trikaranos, a lost satire
about the triumvirate of Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus).
13 For the relationship between the one and the many (including the idea of the
synecdochic hero), as well as the relationship between one and two, see Hardie
1993a: 3–11, 27–35, 49–56, esp. 8–10 for the Punica.
14 For the two-headed state as a metaphor for civil war, see Wiseman 2010.
15 For single combat in general, see Monestier 1991; Udwin 1999; for single combat in
ancient Greece and Rome, see Armstrong 1950; Glück 1964; Fries 1985; Oakley 1985;
van Wees 1988; Parks 1990; Wiedemann 1996; Martino 2008; Woodard 2013. See
also Devallet 1984.
16 For the spolia opima, see Mensching 1967; Daly 1981; Harrison 1989; Rich 1996;
Flower 2000; Sailor 2006; Garani 2007; Ingleheart 2007.
17 For the spectacle of death in ancient Rome, see Bartsch 1994; Plass 1995; Futrell
1997; Leigh 1997; Kyle 1998; Edwards 2007; Erasmo 2008; Hope 2009; Bakogianni
and Hope 2015.
18 For the triumph in ancient Rome and elsewhere in the Mediterranean world, see
Payne 1962; Versnel 1970; Taisne 1973; Künzl 1988; Auliard 2001; Itgenshorst 2005;
Notes to pp. 119–123 201
Versnel 2006; Bastien 2007; Beard 2007; Krasser, Pausch, and Petrovic 2008; La
Rocca and Tortorella 2008; Pelikan Pittenger 2008; Östenberg 2009; Östenberg 2010;
Lundgreen 2011: 178–253; Spalinger and Armstrong 2013; Lange and Vervaet 2014;
Lange 2016; Popkin 2016; Goldbeck and Wienand 2017.
19 For decapitation in ancient Rome, see Voisin 1984; Kraus and Woodman 1997: 96.
For decapitation in the Punica, see Kißel 1979: 89–90; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986:
2540–2; Marpicati 1999; Augoustakis 2003; Marks 2008; Tipping 2010a: 43–4;
McClellan 2019: 67–114. For decapitation in the ancient Near East, see Dolce 2017.
20 For the narrowly averted single combat between Hannibal and Scipio at the battle of
Zama both in the Punica and elsewhere in the tradition, see Billot 2014, esp. 73, 74,
as well as Hardie 1993a: 38–9. For the narrowly averted single combat between
Hannibal and Scipio at Cannae, which transforms into a theomachy between Pallas
and Mars, see García Amutxastegi 2015b.
21 For the Gigantomachy, including its associations with (Roman) civil war, see Vian
1951; Vian 1952a–b; Innes 1979; Hardie 1983; Romano 1985; Hardie 1986: 85–156;
Massa-Pairault and Pouzadoux 2017a–b; Wright 2018; for its later reception, see
Vetter 2002. For the Gigantomachy in Flavian epic, including the Punica, see von
Albrecht 1964: 31, 36, 37–8, 67 n. 59, 72, 76, 83–6, 87, 143, 152; Kißel 1979: 17 n. 22;
Laudizi 1989: 123–4; Fucecchi 1990a; Mezzanotte 1995: 380–1 ≈ Mezzanotte 2016:
452; Fucecchi 2013; Littlewood 2013; Connors 2015; Stocks 2019. For theomachy in
Imperial Latin poetry, including the Punica, see Ripoll 2006; Chaudhuri 2014. In
addition to the Titanomachy and the Gigantomachy, the Typhonomachy and
Pythonomachy also figure prominently, e.g., Regulus and the Bagrada serpent in
Punica 6.
22 West 1923, esp. 60–2.
23 Naevius may have cast the First Punic War as a new Gigantomachy: Fraenkel 1954;
Faber 2012; Wright 2018: 96–103; later, Lucretius (3.832–7) and Livy (29.17.6,
30.32.1–3) likewise cast the Second Punic War as a new cosmic combat: Feeney
1984: 181; Giusti 2018: 61–3.
24 Juhnke 1972: 187–8; Fincher 1979: 31; Kißel 1979: 25–6; Küppers 1986: 140–1;
Stocks 2014: 112–13.
25 Clack 1976 notes that the meter in 554–5 imitates Hannibal’s gait as he drags his feet.
Silius foreshadows this moment in his description of Hannibal before the siege in
1.252–6.
26 Silius explicitly compares Hannibal’s march over the Alps to the Gigantomachy in
3.494–5.
27 Schinkel 1884: 29, 34; Groesst 1887: 12–13; Sechi 1951: 293–5; von Albrecht 1964: 38
n. 43; Burck 1978: 24–6; Kißel 1979: 51–2; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986: 2500;
Matier 1989a: 14; Fucecchi 1990: 34–5; Santini 1992: 393; Pomeroy 2000: 159–60;
Fucecchi 2005: 17–18; Tipping 2010a: 86–7; Stocks 2014: 73–4.
202 Notes to pp. 126–137
28 For the Trojan War in Greek and Latin literature, see Erskine 2001; Jahn 2007.
29 For Homer and the Epic Cycle, see Kullmann 1960; Davies 1989; Burgess 2001; West
2013; Sammons 2017.
30 Saguntum as an altera Troia: von Albrecht 1964: 180–3; Juhnke 1972: 185–93;
Küppers 1986; Asso 2003: 232–5. See also Ripoll 2001b. Saguntum as an altera Roma:
McGuire 1985: 56–63; McGuire 1997: 209–10; Marks 2005c: 533–4.
31 Juhnke 1972: 185–7; Courtney 1993: 331; Hollis 2007: 330–1. Silius includes a
number of such “tags,” e.g., solum Decius Capuae decus (“Decius, the only glory of
Capua,” 11.158).
32 von Albrecht 1964: 26; Fincher 1979: 30–1; Kißel 1979: 88–9, 155–6; Küppers 1986:
138–40; Asso 1999: 82–3; Spentzou 2008: 143; Asso 2010: 182–5.
33 von Albrecht 1964: 181–2; Küppers 1986: 177 n. 680, 189; Marpicati 1999: 200 n. 23;
von Albrecht 1999: 237 n. 2, 294; Ariemma 2007: 18.
34 von Albrecht 1964: 32–9, esp. 37–8; Burck 1978: 24–6; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986:
2500–1; Hardie 1989: 15 n. 55 (on p. 19); Boyle and Sullivan 1991: 301–2; Santini
1992: 393; Pomeroy 2000: 160; Tipping 2004: 351–7, esp. 353–7; Tipping 2010a: 86–7;
Schrijvers 2005: 79.
35 For the Gallic sack, including its links with the fall of Troy, see Kraus 1994;
Richardson 2012. For the Gallic sack in the Punica, see von Albrecht 1964: 26, 35, 39,
44–6; Taisne 1994: 92; Mezzanotte 1995: 360 n. 17 ≈ Mezzanotte 2016: 436–7;
Tipping 2010a: 65–6, 77–8.
36 Beaty 1960: 112–13, 124, 156, 162; McGuire 1985: 49–50. Cf. Pun. 1.624–6.
37 Nicol 1936: 87, 110; Beaty 1960: 35–6; Romano 1969: 65–6.
38 See Pucci 1998: the term originally appears in Michael Drayton’s Poly-Olbion
(1612/22).
39 Other ancient sources include Plb. 10.32.1–33.7; Cic. Tusc. 1.37.89, Sen. 20.75; Nep.
Han. 5.3; Liv. 27.25.6–28.2; V. Max. 1.6.9, 5.1.ext.6; Plin. Nat. 11.37.73.189; Front. Str.
4.7.26, 38; Plut. Marc. 28.1–30.4, Comp. Pel. Marc. 3.6, Fab. 19.5, Flam. 1.4; App.
Hann. 8.50.208; Amp. 28.4; Perioch. 27.7–8; Eutr. 3.16.2; Oros. Hist. 4.18.6, 8; De vir.
ill. 45.7–8; Zonar. 9.9.1. Major modern discussions include Caltabiano 1975; Bernard
2002–3; Flower 2003; Levene 2010: 206–8; McCall 2012: 112–24. See also Giarratano
1934; Klotz 1934; Carawan 1984–5. I thank Ben Harris for the reminder that Silius
would have had Marcellus’ appearance in Verg. Aen. 6.855–9 in mind, as well (esp.
the theme of fathers and sons which heightens the pathos in both scenes).
40 Wezel 1873: 100–1; Schinkel 1884: 62; Groesst 1887: 26, 36; Klotz 1934: 314–17;
Nicol 1936: 77–8, 120–1; Beaty 1960: 69–70; Juhnke 1972: 406; Fincher 1979: 128;
Kißel 1979: 12, 19–20, 128–30; Burck 1984a: 60–8; Ahl, Davis, and Pomeroy 1986:
2539–40; Fucecchi 1990: 153; Nesselrath 1992: 119–20; Henderson 2004: 103–4;
Ariemma 2010b: 144–9; Cowan 2010: 340–1; Fucecchi 2010: 225 n. 25, 233–6, 239;
Stocks 2010: 163–5; Tipping 2010a: 75–6; Stocks 2014: 41, 145, 147, 162–6, 170 n. 13,
Notes to pp. 137–148 203
176 n. 24, 183 n. 5, 184, 186–7, 200–1, 228–30. See also Burck 1966–81; Marpicati
1999. For Marcellus in the Punica in general, see Ariemma 2010b; Fucecchi 2010;
Stocks 2010; Tipping 2010a: 7–13, 41–4, 75–6, 181–2.
11 For an earlier version of this stage in the argument, see Jacobs 2010: 123–6.
12 For fear as a political force in general, see Wood 1995; Robin 2004; Evrigenis 2008;
Dumitru Oancea, Halichias, and Popa 2016. For the metus hostilis theme in
particular, see Lintott 1972; Levick 1982; Bellen 1985; Wiedemann 1993; Kneppe
1994; Levene 2000: 178–80; Rosenberger 2003; Quillin 2004; Kapust 2008; Engels
2009; Kapust 2011: 27–52, esp. 38–43; Hammer 2014: 148–55; Biesinger 2016.
13 The problems surrounding the historicity of this debate have long attracted the
attention of scholars: for ancient sources and modern discussion, see Gelzer 1931;
Little 1934; Adcock 1946; Hoffmann 1960; Thürlemann 1974; Burian 1978; Hackl
1980; Frank 1985; Vogel-Weidemann 1989; Welwei 1989; O’Gorman 2004.
14 See Earl 1961: 13–16, 41–59; Conley 1981; Koutroubas 1988; Dunsch 2006;
Vassiliades 2013.
15 For the metus hostilis theme in Vergil and Livy, see La Penna 2008; Giusti 2016; for
the metus hostilis theme in Sallust, Augustine, and Orosius, see Bonamente 1975. For
the relationship between Sallust and Velleius Paterculus, see Woodman 1969; more
work needs to be done on the relationship between Sallust and Florus, as well as on
that between Silius and Florus.
16 For civil war in general, see Kalyvas 2006; Lacina 2006; Jacoby 2006–7; Blattman and
Miguel 2010; Armitage 2017.
17 For civil war in ancient Greece and Rome, see Jal 1962a–c; Jal 1963; Lintott 1982;
Henderson 1998; Breed, Damon, and Rossi 2010; Ambühl 2015; Börm, Mattheis, and
Wienand 2016; Maschek 2018.
18 For suicide in general, see Durkheim 1897; Halbwachs 1930 ≈ Halbwachs 1978; with
Travis 1990. For suicide in ancient Greece and Rome, see Bayet 1951; Grisé 1980;
Grisé 1982; Griffin 1986; van Hooff 1990; Hill 2004; Rauh 2015.
19 For civil war in Lucan, as well as Flavian epic, see Masters 1992; Hardie 1993b;
McGuire 1997; Ginsberg and Krasne 2018; for civil war in the Punica, see Ahl, Davis,
and Pomeroy 1986; Fucecchi 1999; Dominik 2003: 492–3; Ariemma 2008; Jacobs
2009; Marks 2010; Tipping 2010a: 36–41; Tipping 2010b: 197–9; Wilson 2013: 15–16;
Bernstein 2016a; Littlewood 2016; Bartolomé 2018; for suicide in Flavian epic,
including the Punica, see McGuire 1989; McGuire 1997; Gärtner 2008; Dietrich
2009; Agri 2010.
20 For Romulus and Remus, see Krämer 1965; Puhvel 1975; Alfonsi 1982; Konstan
1986: 199–200; Bremmer 1987; Miles 1995: 137–78; Wiseman 1995; Bannon 1997;
Barcaro 2007; Stem 2007; Neel 2014; Vasaly 2015: 36–40.
21 For these two Epodes, see Carrubba 1966; Carrubba 1967; Dufallo 2007: 101–5.
22 For the single combat as a fratricide, see Pogorzelski 2009.
23 For an earlier version of this stage in the argument, see Jacobs 2010: 126–39. For the
metus hostilis theme in Silius, see McGuire 1985: 11–26, 185–7; Ahl, Davis, and
Pomeroy 1986: 2501–4; McGuire 1997: 118, 219; Tipping 2004: 370; Schrijvers 2005:
Notes to pp. 152–167 205
83–4; Dominik 2006, esp. 122–3; Zecchini 2006: 45 ≈ Zecchini 2011: 33; Tipping
2010a: 26–35, esp. 32–5; Fuccechi 2012: 243–7. Laudizi 1989: 158 explicitly claims
that Silius does not concern himself with the metus hostilis theme, but this claim
simply does not stand up to scrutiny.
24 Occioni 1877, esp. 278–83 ≈ Occioni 1891: 141–53, esp. 148–53.
25 Wezel 1873: 44–5, 89; Schinkel 1884: 10; Nicol 1936: 12–13; Bruère 1959: 229–32;
Beaty 1960: 12, 59, 104, 112, 118; Romano 1969: 90; Fincher 1979: 89–90; Matier
1989b: 7–8; McGuire 1997: 134–5; Fucecchi 1999, esp. 305–22, 332–6; Tipping 2004:
365–6; Wilson 2004: 243–6; Marks 2005c: 134; Dominik 2006: 124–5; Ariemma
2010a: 247–8, 249, 257, 269–72; Marks 2010: 135, 137–8; Tipping 2010a: 37–8; García
Amutxastegi 2015a: 123–73; Zaia 2016: 21–3, 101–51; Syré 2017: 181–8; Siepe 2019:
73–88.
26 Masters 1992: 216–59 offers the canonical treatment of the theme of the endlessness
of civil war in Lucan: see also Henderson 1987 passim; Tipping 2011: 223; Tracy
2011.
27 For the historical, cultural, and literary significance of the Temple of Jupiter Optimus
Maximus and the Capitol, especially under the Flavians, see Skutsch 1953; Skutsch
1978; Fears 1981; Lindsay 2010; Escámez 2012; Escámez 2013; Escámez 2014; Thein
2014; Burgeon 2018. In general, see also Quinn and Wilson 2013.
28 Wiseman 1978; Wellesley 1981; Wellesley 1975: 192–4; Southern 1997: 17–19; Jones
2002: 14; Heinemann 2016; In general, see Tac. Hist. 3.72–5, as well as Plu. Publ.
14–15, esp. 15.2–5.
29 Briessmann 1955: 69–83; Wellesley 1956: 211–14; Wiseman 1978: 173–5.
30 Braunert 1953; Jones 1973; Evans 1975; Jones 1982; Strobel 1987; Stefan 2005.
31 Leberl 2004: 167–81; Hulls 2007.
26 Festa 1926a–b offers the standard critical edition and a literary study. Bergin and
Wilson 1977 offers an English translation. Other scholarship includes Bernardo
1962; Regn 2009.
27 Martellotti 1954.
28 Occioni 1869: 116–48 ≈ Occioni 1871: 91–116 ≈ Occioni 1891: 114–39; Occioni
1889: 1.xvi–xxi ≈ Occioni 1891: 185–90; Develay 1883; Nichi 1909: 7–27; Mustard
1921: 119–20; von Albrecht 1964: 22–3, 90, 118–44; von Albrecht 1973: 188;
Martellotti 1981; Brugnoli 1992, esp. 207–14; Santini 1993; Tedeschi 1994; Caputo
1995; Cassata 1997; ter Haar 1997; Cassata 1998; ter Haar 1999; von Albrecht 1999:
298; Harich-Schwarzbauer 2005; Schubert 2005; Bianchi 2015.
29 Lefebvre de Villebrune 1781b: 1.x–xi, 3.36–8.
30 Foscolo 1823: 97–100, 214–17.
208
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Index
Aeneas 41, 56–7, 61, 72–3, 93–4, 125–6, Carthago Nova (New Carthage), fall of 43,
128–30, 130, 146–7, 152, 169–70 51, 98–9, 106
Alexander the Great 56, 97 Cassius Dio 54–5, 163
Alexandreis 58 Catius Caesius Fronto, Ti. 189 n. 30
Alps 43, 47, 51, 74, 77, 99, 110–11, 123, 132, Cato the Elder 44, 54, 82, 84, 149–50,
133, 143, 147, 167–70, 173, 174–5 150–1
Ampelius 175–81 Catullus 26–8, 58, 58–9
Anna (Perenna), sister of Dido 48, 82–3, Centenius Paenula 96
146–7, 148 Cerrinus Vibellius Taurea 97
Apennines 47, 78, 79 Charisius 23–4, 38
Appian 54–5, 150–1 Cicero 28–9, 31–2, 56, 169–70
Appius 47, 79 Cilnius 48, 81, 106
Arator 58 Cinna 85
Archimedes 51, 98 Cinyps 95–6
Aris 99, 106 Claudia Quinta 102
Asbyte 46, 75–6 Claudian 58
Asilus 98, 160 Claudius Asellus 97
Aulus Gellius 55, 149–50 Claudius Nero 51, 99–100, 117, 138
Augustine 54–5 Cloelia 85
Augustus 17, 18, 74, 119, 141 Coelius Antipater 54
Colloquium Celtis 24
Bacchus 82, 107, 174–5 Corbulo 98
Baecula, battle of 43, 51, 99 Corippus 58
Barlow, Joel 186 n. 53 Cornelius Nepos 55, 176
Beryas 98, 160 Cornutus 23–4, 38
Boethius 169–70 Corvinus 47, 79
Bostar 46, 47, 76, 77 Council of Constance 1
Bruttii 51, 93–4, 101 Crista 49, 84
Crixus 78, 133
Camillus 82, 107, 131–2, 134–5 Curtius Rufus 56
Campi Magni, battle of 52, 102 Cymodoce 152–3
Cannae, battle of 6, 43, 44–5, 48–9, 52–3,
56, 57, 59, 62, 63–4, 74, 74–5, 77, Dasius Altinius 50, 96
82–5, 86–9, 92–4, 103, 106, 111, 117, De viris illustribus 55, 175–81
117–18, 121–3, 132, 133, 138, 144–6, Decius Magius 49–50, 94–5, 95
148, 151, 152, 153–61, 172, 175–81 La destrucción de Sagunto (Enrique Palos
Canusium 49, 85 y Navarro) 8–9
Capitol, Capitoline Hill 19, 74, 106–7, 115, La destrucción de Sagunto (Francisco
116, 118, 119–26, 128–30, 131, 133, Sánchez-Castañer and José Maria
133–5, 147, 162–3, 165–7, 167–70 Pemán) 8–9
Capua, fall of 39, 43, 49–50, 92–3, 94–5, 96, La destrucción de Sagunto (Gaspar Zavala
96–7, 106, 123, 130, 160 y Zamora) 8–9
257
258 Index
Dido 41, 46, 48, 56–7, 61, 74, 76, 82–3, 113, Hasdrubal, brother of Hannibal 43, 51, 99,
146–9, 169–70 99–100, 106, 116
Diodorus Siculus 54 Hasdrubal, son-in-law of Hamilcar and
Dionysius of Halicarnassus 54 brother-in-law of Hannibal 46, 75,
Disticha Catonis 24 116
Domitian 4, 20, 58, 74, 77, 162–3, 166 Hasdrubal Gisgo 51, 51–2, 99, 101, 102,
See also Flavian emperors 116
Dracontius 58 Hercules 37–8, 38, 46, 76, 77, 81, 107,
Ducarius 47, 79, 133 113–14, 115–16, 117–18, 122,
126–8, 174–5
Ennius 57, 58, 59, 64, 67, 72–3 Herodotus 55
Epictetus 23 Hiero III 97–8
Eumolpus 174–5 Hieronymus, grandson of Hiero III 97–8
Eutropius 54–5 Himilco 98
Homer 57, 97, 126
Fabius Maximus 43, 46, 48, 49, 51, 52, 57, Horace 58, 58–9, 152
75, 76, 81–2, 84–5, 85, 87, 94, 99, Hostus, son of Hampsagoras 96
101–2, 116, 117, 119, 134–5, 137,
143–4 Ilias Latina 188 n. 15
Fabius Pictor 54 Ilipa, battle of 43, 51, 101
fabula praetexta 59 Imilce 46–7, 76–7, 167–70
Falernus 82 Iris 84
Festus 54–5 Isalcas, prospective son-in-law of Mago
Fides 46, 50, 76, 97, 116 47, 79
First Punic War 42, 74, 80–1, 83–4, 87–8, Italia 51, 99, 106
153–4
See also Punic Wars Josephus 55, 163
Flaminius 47, 78, 79, 87, 102, 117, 133 Julius Caesar 11–12, 17, 17–18, 18, 55, 73,
Flavian emperors 4, 5, 5–6, 11–12, 19–20, 74, 170–5
35–6, 47, 52–3, 72, 74, 77, 117, Julius Valerius 56
141–6, 152–3, 162–3, 165–6 Juno 46, 47, 48, 49, 52, 74–5, 76, 78, 79,
See also Vespasian, Titus, and 82–3, 84, 85, 95, 96, 102, 102–3, 106,
Domitian 119–21, 122, 122–3, 123–6, 139, 147,
Florus 54–5, 150, 166–7, 175–81 148, 167
Frontinus 192 n. 28 Jupiter 46, 47, 48, 50, 52, 72, 73, 75, 77, 78,
Fulvius Flaccus, Cn. 96 81, 84, 87, 89, 96, 97, 98, 102, 107,
Fulvius Flaccus, Q. 50, 94, 96–7 107–8, 110–11, 114, 116, 117–18,
119–26, 128, 141–6, 147, 152–3, 163,
Gades 46, 76, 167–70, 172 166, 167–70, 174–5
Gereonium, battle of 48, 82 Jupiter Ammon 46, 47, 76, 77, 122–3
Gergenus 79 Juvenal 58
Geryon 200 n. 12 Juvencus 58
Gestar 76
Laelius 98–9, 99, 101
Hamilcar, father of Hannibal 42, 42–3, 46, Laomedon 60–2, 114, 131
74–5, 76, 97, 106, 116, 146 Larus 101
Hampsagoras 96 Lefebvre de Villebrune, Jean-Baptiste 2,
Hannibalic War see Second Punic War 181–2
Hanno 51, 76, 95, 101, 116 Lentulus 84–5
Index 259
Leontini 51, 98, 160 Pacuvius Calavius, father of Perolla 50, 94,
Livius Andronicus 57–8 95, 160
Livius Salinator 51, 99–100, 117, 138 Palladium 50, 96, 130–1
Livy 5, 12–13, 23, 52–3, 53–6, 64, 65, 67, 69, Pallas (Minerva) 49, 50, 84, 96, 122–3, 123,
69–71, 87–8, 92–3, 110–11, 131, 125, 130–1
151–2, 152, 160, 167–70, 176, 181–2 Pan 97
Lucan 5, 5–6, 11–12, 24, 52–3, 58, 59–60, Paullus 48–9, 50, 83, 84–5, 87, 95–6, 97,
65, 107–8, 117, 126, 144–5, 151, 102, 117, 138, 143–4
170–5, 175–6 Pausanias 55
Lucilius 58 Pedianus 95–6
Lucretius 58, 137 Periochae 54–5
Perolla, son of Pacuvius 50, 95, 160
Magna Mater 52, 102, 130–1 Petrarch 181–2
Mago, brother of Hannibal 47, 47–8, 50, Petronius 170–5
51, 77, 78, 80, 85, 95, 99, 101, 116, Phorcys 84
133 Plautus 59
Maharbal 78, 133 Pliny the Elder 32, 55
Mancinus, son of Satricus 49, 83–4, Pliny the Younger 4, 21, 22, 23, 26, 32–6,
153–61 36–9
Marcellus 50, 50–1, 51, 57, 94, 95–6, 97–8, Plutarch 55
99, 116, 117, 131, 135–9, 143–4 Poggio Bracciolini 1, 181
Marcia, wife of Regulus 81 Polyaenus 192 n. 28
Mars 49, 73, 78, 79, 84, 89, 107, 122, 123, Polybius 54, 110–11, 149, 160, 176
125, 169 Pompey 11–12, 17, 107–8, 170–5
Martial 4, 21, 22, 24–5, 26–32, 32, 35, 36–7, Pomponia, mother of Scipio Africanus 50,
53, 163, 166 73, 97
Marus 48, 57, 80–1 Pomponius Mela 55
Masinissa 51, 101, 116 Porcius Licinus 191 n. 13
Mercury 46–7, 77, 167–70, 172 Priam 61, 114
Metaurus River, battle of 43, 51, 99–100, Propertius 59
117, 138, 152–3 Proteus 48, 82, 152–3
Metellus 49, 84, 85, 150 Prudentius 58
Minerva see Pallas (Minerva) Punic Wars 5, 17, 41–2, 44–5, 54–5, 73–4
Minucius Rufus 43, 48, 81–2, 84 See also First Punic War, Second Punic
Mopsus 75–6 War, and Third Punic War
Murrus 38, 46, 75, 113, 121, 126–8, 139, Punica
173 17 or 18 books 5, 45, 63
lacunae 5, 45, 63–4
Naevius 57–8, 59 structure 63–7, 108–11, 175–81
Nero 4, 5, 18, 35, 36, 37, 165–6 summary 5, 45–53
Nerva 4, 20–1, 35–6 title 45
Nola 50, 95–6, 136, 139 Pyrenees 47, 77