The Pharsalia - Lucan Audiobook
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
Epic Poetry
 Roman
Shared by:60cowboys
Written by
Read by Charlton Griffin
Format: M4B
Bitrate: 64 Kbps
Unabridged
If you had been a court poet during the reign of the Roman emperor Nero, irritating the megalomaniac ruler would not have been wise. And one of the things which would have really angered Nero would have been the effort to write an epic poem about the struggle between Pompey and Caesar in which the noble hero (portrayed by Pompey) was the man who fought to preserve the Republic, and the selfish villain (portrayed by Caesar), the man who destroyed it. Yet Lucan wrote just such a poem, and Nero, naturally, hated both poem and poet. To the educated Roman of the mid-first century AD, the young Lucan probably appeared amazingly foolhardy. Naturally, his epic work got him into trouble. The poem abruptly breaks off in the middle of the 10th book. It was never finished because Lucan was ordered to commit suicide or face execution. He took poison.
Nero’s ire is easy to understand. Idle talk about restoring the Republic had been making the rounds for quite some time, and the ruling Julio-Claudian dynasty did not want such talk taken seriously. Besides, the average Roman citizen was primarily interested in economic and political stability. Any discussion of the old Republic conjured up evil memories of earlier civil wars. But the brash young poet went right ahead and produced a minor masterpiece recounting the clash between Julius Caesar and the Republican aristocracy. Lucan called it “De Bello Civili” (”On the Civil War”). Later, it came to be called “The Pharsalia”, the name of the battle where Pompey met defeat.
With soaring rhetoric, thundering speeches, cataclysmic scenes of war, and beautifully written passages full of the pathos of life and love, Lucan has left us an unfinished gem from Latin literature’s Silver Age.
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| Creation Date: | Tue, 17 Nov 2020 10:34:56 +0000 |
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This post has 3 comments with rating of 5/5
November 17th, 2020
Back when poetry could be properly fatal.
Although, you’ve gotta love Caesar.
November 17th, 2020
Long live Caesar!
November 17th, 2020
This is a real trouble-maker’s poem (it’s the one Christopher Marlowe started translating, before he too was taken down by agents of the state).
It isn’t easy reading though. Dante featured Lucan among the great Latin poets in the Inferno: but that was probably because he didn’t know Catullus or Lucretius.
The Pharsalia is one for the completists; but this is a good version.
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