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The Nature and Nurture of Kingship in Virgil's Georgics and Seneca's De Clementia

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posted on 2023-05-22, 18:57 authored by Jayne KnightJayne Knight
As Susanna Braund observes in her commentary on De Clementia, Seneca frequently employs organic imagery in order to illustrate a symbiotic, natural relationship between a ruler and his subjects (Oxford 2009, 55; 58). Images and vocabulary drawn from the natural world (animal, agricultural, and meteorological) instruct Nero on the nature of his absolute power as princeps and suggest to him how it should be exercised. At Clem. 1.4.1, Seneca famously quotes Georgics 4.212–13 about the beehive’s devotion to its ‘king’ (rege incolumi mens omnibus una, | amisso rupere fidem) to bolster his argument that the safety of ruler and ruled are intertwined. Seneca’s direct quotation of the Georgics in his philosophical works has been noticed, but the subtler ways in which he engages with the poem’s ideas and imagery in the De Clementia have not been fully appreciated. As Christopher Nappa persuasively argues in his book Reading After Actium: Vergil’s Georgics, Octavian, and Rome, the Georgics deploys complex agricultural and cosmological themes to instruct Octavian on the nature of his recently acquired power and provide guidance on how he might navigate the responsibilities of his new role. The poem, then, is an important predecessor for Seneca’s treatise addressed to Nero upon his accession. This chapter highlights significant contributions of the Georgics to the development of Roman imperial ideology by analyzing aspects of Seneca’s reception of Virgil’s poem that have been neglected in previous scholarship.

History

Publication title

Latin Poetry and Its Reception

Editors

CW Marshall

Pagination

43-55

ISBN

9781003092698

Department/School

School of Humanities

Publisher

Routledge

Place of publication

New York

Extent

18

Rights statement

Copyright unknown

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Expanding knowledge in history, heritage and archaeology; Expanding knowledge in language, communication and culture

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