Martial

Martial, Latin in full
Marcus Valerius Martialis
(b. Mar. 1, ad 38–41,
Bilbilis, Hispania
[Spain]—d. c. 103), Roman
poet who brought the Latin
epigram to perfection and
provided in it a picture of
Roman society during the
early empire that is
remarkable both for its
completeness and for its
accurate portrayal of human
foibles.
Life and career
Martial was born in a
Roman colony in Spain along
the Salo River. Proudly
claiming descent from Celts
and Iberians, he was,
nevertheless, a freeborn
Roman citizen, the son of
parents who, though not
wealthy, possessed
sufficient means to ensure
that he received the
traditional literary
education from a grammarian
and rhetorician. In his
early 20s, possibly not
before ad 64, since he makes
no reference to the burning
of Rome that occurred in
that year, Martial made his
way to the capital of the
empire and attached himself
as client (a traditional
relationship between
powerful patron and humbler
man with his way to make) to
the powerful and talented
family of the Senecas, who
were Spaniards like himself.
To their circle belonged
Lucan, the epic poet, and
Calpurnius Piso, chief
conspirator in the
unsuccessful plot against
the emperor Nero in ad 65.
After the latter incident
and its consequences,
Martial had to look around
for other patrons.
Presumably the Senecas had
introduced him to other
influential families, whose
patronage would enable him
to make a living as a poet.
Yet precisely how Martial
lived between ad 65 and 80,
the year in which he
published Liber
Spectaculorum (On the
Spectacles), a small volume
of poems to celebrate the
consecration of the
Colosseum, is not known. It
is possible that he turned
his hand to law, although it
is unlikely that he
practiced in the courts
either successfully or for
long.
When he first came to Rome,
Martial lived in rather
humble circumstances in a
garret on the Quirinal Hill
(one of the seven hills on
which Rome stands). He
gradually earned
recognition, however, and
was able to acquire, in
addition to a town house on
the Quirinal, a small
country estate near Nomentum
(about 12 miles [19 km]
northeast of Rome), which
may have been given to him
by Polla, the widow of
Lucan. In time Martial
gained the notice of the
court and received from
emperors Titus and Domitian
the ius trium liberorum,
which entailed certain
privileges and was
customarily granted to
fathers of three children in
Rome. These privileges
included exemption from
various charges, such as
that of guardianship, and a
prior claim to magistracies.
They were therefore
financially profitable and
accelerated a political
career. Martial was almost
certainly unmarried, yet he
received this marital
distinction. Moreover, as an
additional mark of imperial
favour, he was awarded a
military tribuneship, which
he was permitted to resign
after six months’ service
but which entitled him to
the privileges of an eques
(knight) throughout his
life, even though he lacked
the required property
qualification of an eques.
From each of the patrons
whom Martial, as client,
attended at the morning
levee (a reception held when
arising from bed), he would
regularly receive the “dole”
of “100 wretched farthings.”
Wealthy Romans, who either
hoped to gain favourable
mention or feared to receive
unfavourable, albeit
oblique, mention in his
epigrams, would supplement
the minimum dole by dinner
invitations or by gifts. The
poverty so often pleaded by
the poet is undoubtedly
exaggerated; apparently his
genius for spending kept
pace with his capacity for
earning.
Martial’s first book, On the
Spectacles (ad 80),
contained 33 undistinguished
epigrams celebrating the
shows held in the Colosseum,
an amphitheatre in the city
begun by Vespasian and
completed by Titus in 79;
these poems are scarcely
improved by their gross
adulation of the latter
emperor. In the year 84 or
85 appeared two
undistinguished books
(confusingly numbered XIII
and XIV in the collection)
with Greek titles Xenia and
Apophoreta; these consist
almost entirely of couplets
describing presents given to
guests at the December
festival of the Saturnalia.
In the next 15 or 16 years,
however, appeared the 12
books of epigrams on which
his renown deservedly rests.
In ad 86 Books I and II of
the Epigrams were published,
and between 86 and 98, when
Martial returned to Spain,
new books of the Epigrams
were issued at more or less
yearly intervals. After 34
years in Rome, Martial
returned to Spain, where his
last book (numbered XII) was
published, probably in ad
102. He died not much over a
year later in his early 60s.
The chief friends Martial
made in Rome—Seneca, Piso,
and Lucan—have already been
mentioned. As his fame grew,
he became acquainted with
the literary circles of his
day and met such figures as
the literary critic
Quintilian, the letter
writer Pliny the Younger,
the satirist Juvenal, and
the epic poet Silius
Italicus. Whether he knew
the historian Tacitus and
the poet Valerius Flaccus is
not certain.
Poetry
Martial is virtually the
creator of the modern
epigram, and his myriad
admirers throughout the
centuries, including many of
the world’s great poets,
have paid him the homage of
quotation, translation, and
imitation. He wrote 1,561
epigrams in all. Of these,
1,235 are in elegiac
couplets, each of which
consists of a six-foot line
followed by a five-foot
line. The remainder are in
hendecasyllables (consisting
of lines 11 syllables long)
and other metres. Though
some of the epigrams are
devoted to scenic
descriptions, most are about
people—emperors, public
officials, writers,
philosophers, lawyers,
teachers, doctors, fops,
gladiators, slaves,
undertakers, gourmets,
spongers, senile lovers, and
revolting debauchees.
Martial made frequent use of
the mordant epigram bearing
a “sting” in its tail—i.e.,
a single unexpected word at
the poem’s end that
completes a pun, antithesis,
or an ingenious ambiguity.
Poems of this sort would
later greatly influence the
use of the epigram in the
literature of England,
France, Spain, and Italy.
Martial’s handling of this
type of epigram is
illustrated by I:28, where
the apparent contradiction
of an insult masks an insult
far more subtle: “If you
think Acerra reeks of
yesterday’s wine, you are
mistaken. He invariably
drinks till morning.” Puns,
parodies, Greek quotations,
and clever ambiguities often
enliven Martial’s epigrams.
Martial has been charged
with two gross faults:
adulation and obscenity. He
certainly indulged in a
great deal of nauseating
flattery of the emperor
Domitian, involving, besides
farfetched conceits dragging
his epigrams well below
their usual level, use of
the official title “my Lord
and my God.” Furthermore,
Martial cringed before men
of wealth and influence,
unashamedly whining for
gifts and favours. Yet,
however much one despises
servility, it is hard to see
how a man of letters could
have survived long in Rome
without considerable
compromise. As for the
charge of obscenity, Martial
introduced few themes not
touched on by Catullus and
Horace (two poets of the
last century bc) before him.
Those epigrams that are
obscene constitute perhaps
one-tenth of Martial’s total
output. His references to
homosexuality, “oral
stimulation,” and
masturbation are couched in
a rich setting of wit,
charm, linguistic subtlety,
superb literary
craftsmanship, evocative
description, and deep human
sympathy. Martial’s poetry
is generally redeemed by his
affection toward his friends
and his freedom from both
envy of others and hypocrisy
over his own morals. In his
emphasis on the simple joys
of life—eating, drinking,
and conversing with
friends—and in his famous
recipes for contentment and
the happy life, one is
reminded continually of the
dominant themes of Horace’s
Satires, Epistles, and
Second Epode.
Numerous editions and
English translations have
been published; most are
single volumes of
selections. D.R. Shackleton
Bailey edited the complete
Latin text (M. Valerii
Martialis Epigrammata
[1990]) and also produced a
3-volume translation,
Epigrams (1993).
Herbert Henry Huxley