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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 February 2009
At Epistles 2.2.87–9 Horace introduces an argument against writing poetry based on the unpleasant mutual admiration required in poetic society with an anecdote about an orator and a jurisconsult:
†frater erat Romae† consulti rhetor, ut alter
alterius sermone meros audiret honores,
Gracchus ut hic illi, foret huic ut Mucius ille.
1 Quoted from the third edition (Berlin, 1869).
2 Ed. Berlin, 1883.
3 ‘Horatiana’, CQ 39 (1945), 113–18, at 118: ‘if space permitted I should defend it further’.
4 Gnomon 58 (1986), 611–15Google Scholar at 613–14. There is no sign of the conjecture even in the extensive lists of Joliffe, H. K., The Critical Methods and Influence of Bentley' Horace (Chicago, 1939).Google Scholar
5 Aeguales; cf. Cic. De or. 1.180, Brutus 145, RE xvi.1 437.28ff.
6 cf. Wilkins, ' edition of Cicero, De Oratore (Oxford, 1892), p. 23.Google Scholar
7 Fr. 86 Marx = 86 Warmington (Cic. De Or. 3.171).
8 cf. Wilkins, , op. cit. (n. 6), p. 12.Google Scholar, Douglas on Brutus 143.12, Stroux, J., Summum ius summa iniuria (Leipzig, 1928), pp. 29–31.Google Scholar
9 3.93; cf. Suet. de gramm. 25Google Scholar, Tac. dial. 35.Google Scholar
10 ‘Horatiana, III’, Classical Papers (Cambridge, 1972), i. 136–61 at 153–4.Google Scholar
11 CR 15 (1965), 11–13.Google Scholar
12 For the dative, see Bentley, ad loc., TLLGoogle Scholar x.1.19.36ff.
13 McGann, Contra M. J., CR 16 (1966), 266–7.Google Scholar
14 We are most grateful for comments and corrections to Dr R. O. A, M. Lyne and Professor R. G. M. Nisbet.