<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:A.ausonius_1</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1:A.ausonius_1</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:base="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><body xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:pdlrefwk:viaf88890045.003.perseus-eng1"><div type="textpart" subtype="alphabetic_letter" n="A"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="ausonius-bio-1" n="ausonius_1"><head><persName xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001"><surname full="yes">Auso'nius</surname></persName></head><p>who in the oldest MSS. is entitled <title xml:lang="la" rend="smallcaps">Decimus Magnus
       Ausonius</title>, although the first two names are found neither in his own poems, nor in the
      epistle addressed to him by Symmachus, nor in the works of any ancient author, was born at
      Bourdeaux in the early part of the fourth century. His father, Julius Ausonius, who followed
      the profession of medicine, appears to have been a person of high consideration, since he was
      at one period invested with the honorary title of praefect of Illyricum; but there is no
      ground for the assertion of Scaliger, frequently repeated even in the most recent works, that
      he acted as physician in ordinary to the emperor Valentinian. If we can trust the picture of
      the parent drawn by the hand of the son, he must have been a very wonder of genius, wisdom,
      and virtue. (<hi rend="ital">Idyll.</hi> ii. passim ; <hi rend="ital">Parental.</hi> 1.9,
      &amp;c.) The maternal grandfather of our poet, Caecilius Argicius Arborius, being skilled in
      judicial astrology, erected a scheme of the nativity of young Ausonius, and the horoscope was
      found to promise high fame and advancement. (<hi rend="ital">Parental.</hi> 4.17, &amp;c.) The
      prediction was, in all probability, in some degree the cause of its own accomplishment. The
      whole of his kindred took a deep interest in the boy whose career was to prove so brilliant.
      His infant years were sedulously watched by his grandmother, Aemilia Corinthia Maura, wife to
      Caecilius Arborius, and by his maternal aunts, Aemilia Hilaria and Aemilia Dryadia, the former
      of whom was a holy woman, devoted to God and chastity. (<hi rend="ital">Parental.</hi> vi. and
      xxv.) he received the first rudiments of the Greek and Latin languages from the most
      distinguished masters of his native town, and his education was completed under the
      superintendence of Aemilius Magnus Arborius, his mother's brother, who taught rhetoric
      publicly at Toulouse, and who is named as the author of an elegy still extant, <hi rend="ital">Ad Nympham nimis cultam.</hi> (<hi rend="ital">Profess.</hi> 8.12, &amp;c., 10.16, 3.1,
      1.11; <hi rend="ital">Parental.</hi> 3.12, &amp;c.; Wernsdorf, <hi rend="ital">Poct. Lat.
       Minores,</hi> vol. iii. p. 217.) Upon his return to Bourdeaux he practised for a while at the
      bar ; but at the age of thirty began to give instructions as a grammarian, and not long after
      was promoted to be professor of rhetoric. The duties of this office were discharged by him for
      many years, and with such high reputation that he was summoned to court in order that he might
      act as the tutor of Gratian, son of the emperor Valentinian. (<hi rend="ital">Praef. ad
       Syayr.</hi> 15, &amp;c.) Judging from the honours which were now rapidly showered down upon
      him, he must have acquitted himself in his important charge to the entire satisfaction of all
      concerned. He received the title of count (<hi rend="ital">comes</hi>) and the post of
      quaestor from Valentinian, after whose death he was appointed by his pupil praefectus of
      Latium, of Libya, and of Gaul, and at length, in the year 379, was elevated to the consulship,
      thus verifying to the letter, as Bayle has observed, the apophthegm of Juvenal: <pb n="445"/>
      <quote xml:lang="la"><l>si fortuna volet fies de rhetore consul.</l></quote></p><p>The letter of Gratian, conferring the dignity, and the grateful reply of Ausonius, are both
      extant. After the death of Gratian he retired from public life, and ended his days in a
      country retreat at no great distance from his native city (<hi rend="ital">Epist.</hi> xxiv.),
      without losing, however, his court favour, for we have direct evidence that he was patronised
      by Theodosius. (<hi rend="ital">Praefatiuncula,</hi> i.)</p><p>The precise dates of the birth and of the death of Ausonius are alike unknown. That he was
      born about the beginning of the fourth century, as stated above, is evident from the fact,
      that he speaks of himself as far advanced in years when invested with the consulship (<hi rend="ital">Grat. Act.</hi>), and he was certainly alive in 388, since he refers to the
      victory of Theodosius over Maximus, and the death of the " Rutupian robber." (<hi rend="ital">Clar. Urb.</hi> vii.)</p><p>Judging from the fond terms in which Ausonius speaks of his relations, the kindly feeling
      which appears to have been maintained between himself and several of his pupils, and the warm
      gratitude expressed by him towards his benefactors, we should be led to conclude that he was
      gentle, warm-hearted, and affectionate; but it is so very easy to be amiable upon paper, that
      we have perhaps no right to form any decided opinion upon his character. His religious faith
      has been the subject of keen controversy, but there seems to be little difficulty in
      determining the question. From his cradle he was surrounded by Christian relatives, he was
      selected by a Christian emperor to guide the studies of his Christian son, and he openly
      professes Christianity in several of his poems. It is objected -- 1. That his friend and
      quondam disciple, Pontius Paullinus, the famous bishop of Nola, frequently upbraids him on
      account of his aversion to the pure faith. 2. That several of his pieces are grossly impure.
      3. That his works contain frequent allusions to Pagan mythology, without any distinct
      declaration of disbelief. 4. That he was the intimate friend of Symmachus, who was notorious
      for his hostility to Christianity. 5. That the compositions in which he professes Christianity
      are spurious. To which arguments we may briefly reply, that the first falls to the ground,
      because the assertion, on which it rests, is entirely false; that if we admit the validity of
      the second and third, we might demonstrate half the poets who have lived since the revival of
      letters to be infidels; that the fourth proves nothing, and that the fifth, the rest being set
      aside, amounts to a petitio principal, since it is supported by no independent evidence
      external or internal. His poetical powers have been variously estimated. While some refuse to
      allow him any merit whatever, others contend that had he lived in the age of Augustus, he
      would have successfully disputed the palm with the brightest luminaries of that epoch. Without
      stopping to consider what he might have become under a totally different combination of
      circumstances, a sort of discussion which can never lead to any satisfactory result, we may
      pronounce with some confidence, that of all the higher attributes of a poet Ausonius possesses
      not one. Considerable neatness of expression may be discerned in several of his epigrams, many
      of which are evidently translations from the Greek; we have a very favourable specimen of his
      descriptive powers in the <title>Mosella,</title> perhaps the mest pleasing of all his pieces;
      and some of his epistles, especially that to Paullinus (xxiv.) are by no means deficient in
      grace and dignity. But even in his happiest efforts we discover a total want of taste both in
      matter and manner, a disposition to introduce on all occasions, without judgment, the thoughts
      and language of preceding writers, while no praise except that of misapplied ingenuity can be
      conceded to the great bulk of his minor effusions, which are for the most part sad trash. His
      style is frequently harsh, and in latinity and versification he is far inferior to
      Claudian.</p><div><head>Works</head><p>His extant works are--</p><div><head>1. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.001">Epigrammatum
        Liber</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Epigrammatum Liber,</title> a collection of 150 epigrams. </p></div><div><head>2. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.002">Ephemeris</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Ephemeris,</title> containing an account of the business and
        proceedings of a day. </p></div><div><head>3. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.003">Parentalia,</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Parentalia,</title> a series of short poems addressed to friends and
        relations on their decease. From these Vinet has extracted a very complete catalogue of the
        kindred of Ausonius, and constructed a genealogical tree.</p></div><div><head>4. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.004">Professores</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Professores,</title> notices of the Professors of Bourdeaux, or of
        those who being natives of Bourdeaux gave instructions elsewhere.</p></div><div><head>5. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.005">Epitaphia
        Heroum</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Epitaphia Heroum,</title> epitaphs on the heroes who fell in the
        Trojan war and a few others.</p></div><div><head>6. <title xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.006">The Twelve Caesars</title></head><p>A metrical catalogue of the first twelve Caesars, the period during which each reigned,
        and the manner of his death.</p></div><div><head>7. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.007">Tetrasticha</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Tetrasticha,</title> on the Caesars from Julius to Elagabalus.</p></div><div><head>8. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.008">Clarae Urbes</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Clarae Urbes,</title> the praises of fourteen illustrious cities.</p></div><div><head>9. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.009">Ludus Septem
         Sapientum,</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Ludus Septem Sapientum,</title> the doctrines of the seven sages
        expounded by each in his own person.</p></div><div><head>10. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010">Idyllia</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Idyllia,</title> a collection of twenty poems on different subjects,
        to several of which dedications in prose are prefixed. The most remarkable are, <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010.001">Epicedion in patrem Julium
         Antonium</title>; <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010.002">Ausonii
         Villula</title>; <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010.003">Cupido cruci
         affixus</title>; <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010.004">Mosella</title>; and the too celebrated <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.010.005">Cento Nuptialis.</title></p></div><div><head>11. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.011">Eclogarium</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Eclogarium,</title> short poems connected with the Calendar and with
        some matters of domestic computation.</p></div><div><head>12. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.012">Epistolae</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Epistolae,</title> twenty-five letters, some in verse, some in prose,
        some partly in verse and partly in prose, addressed to various friends.</p></div><div><head>13. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.013">Gratiarum Actio pro
         Consulatu</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Gratiarum Actio pro Consulatu,</title> in prose, addressed to the
        emperor Gratian.</p></div><div><head>14. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.014">Periochae,</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Periochae</title> short arguments to each book of the
         <title>Iliad</title> and <title>Odyssey</title>.</p></div><div><head>15. <title xml:lang="la" xml:id="latinauth-smith-0001.015">Tres
         Praefatiunculae,</title></head><p><title xml:lang="la">Tres Praefatiunculae</title> one of them addressed to the emperor
        Theodosius.</p></div></div><div><head>Editions</head><p><bibl>The Editio Princeps of Ausonius appeared at Venice in folio, without a printer's
        name, in a volume bearing the date 1472, and containing <hi rend="ital">Probae
         Centones,</hi> the eclogues of <hi rend="ital">Calpurnius,</hi> in addition to which some
        copies have the Epistle on the death of Drusus and some opuscula of Publius Gregorius
        Tifernus. It is extremely scarce.</bibl><bibl>The first edition, in which Ausonius is found separately, is that edited by J. A.
        Ferrarius, fol. Mediolan. 1490, printed by Ulderic Scinzenzeller.</bibl><bibl>The first edition, in which the whole of the extant works are collected in a complete
        form, is that of Tadaeus Ugoletus, printed by his brother Angelus, at Parma, 4to.
        1499.</bibl><bibl>The first edition, which exhibits a tolerable text, is that of Phil. Junta, 8vo.
        Florent. 1517</bibl>; and <bibl>the best edition is the Variorum of Tollius, 8vo. Amstel.
        1671</bibl>. </p></div><byline>[<ref target="author.W.R">W.R</ref>]</byline></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>