30 pages ⢠1 hour read
A modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
āIt is true indeed that noble character is best appreciated in those ages in which it can most readily develop. But today, when I set out to recount the life of one no longer with us, I had to beg an indulgence that I would not have sought for an invective: so savage and hostile to virtue are our times.ā
This passage from the opening chapter of āAgricolaā may be a reference to Tacitus having requested permission from Domitian to write about Agricola and being denied. Whether or not this is true, the sentiment Tacitus expresses here speaks to his belief that tyranny eroded morality under Domitianās reign. According to Tacitus, the emperor was jealous of othersā success and hostile to hearing them praised, making it easier to abuse great men than honor them.
āNo doubt they believed that by that fire the voice of the Roman people, the freedom of the Senate and the moral consciousness of the human race were wiped out; even teachers of philosophy and all honorable studies were banished, so that nothing decent might be encountered anywhere. We have indeed left an impressive example of subservience. Just as the Rome of old explored the limits of freedom, so have we plumbed the depths of slavery, robbed by informers even of the interchange of speech. We would have lost our memories as well as our tongues had it been as easy to forget as to be silent.ā
Here, Tacitus discusses the depths to which Roman morality has sunk during Domitianās tyrannous reign. The āRome of oldā most likely alludes to the republic, ostensibly a time of greater freedom for Roman citizens, which Tacitus contrasts with the current empire, which not only engages in expansion abroad but seeks to colonize the inner consciousness of its citizens. The āfireā that would wipe out the Senateās freedom and humanityās moral consciousnessāmeaning the burning of the eulogies written for Paetus Thrasea and Priscus Helvidiusārepresents the destruction of freedom, especially freedom of memory and thought. Tacitusās form of resistance is to preserve memory by writing history.
Plus, gain access to 9,200+ more expert-written Study Guides.
Including features: