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                <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="H"><div type="textpart" subtype="entry" xml:id="haterius-bio-4" n="haterius_4"><head><persName xml:lang="la"><surname full="yes">Hate'rius</surname></persName></head><p>3. <persName xml:lang="la"><forename full="yes">Q.</forename><surname full="yes">Haterius</surname></persName>, a senator and rhetorician in the age of Augustus and
      Tiberius, and, in what year is unknown, a supplementary consul. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 2.33">Tac.
       Ann. 2.33</bibl>.) In the contest of mutual distrust and dissimulation between the senate and
      Tiberius on his accession, <date when-custom="14">A. D. 14</date> (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.11">Tac.
       Ann. 1.11</bibl>-<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 1.13">13</bibl>), Haterius unguardedly asked the cautious
      emperor, " how long he meant to suffer the commonwealth to be without a head ? "--an offensive
      question, since it obliged Tilerius to declare his intentions, and he gravely rebuked its
      author. (<bibl n="Suet. Tib. 29">Suet. Tib. 29</bibl>.) When the senate broke up, Haterius
      repaired to the palace to implore pardon. He found the emperor walking, attended by a guard.
      Either to escape his importunity (<bibl n="Suet. Tib. 27">Suet. Tib. 27</bibl>), or in anger
      at his presumption (Tac. <hi rend="ital">ib.</hi> 13), Tiberius turned away from Haterius,
      who, in the energy of supplication, had cast himself at his feet. Accidentally, or in
      struggling to be rid of the suppliant, Tiberius himself fell to the ground, and Haterius
      narrowly avoided being slain by the guard. The intercession of the empress-mother, Livia, at
      length rescued Haterius from peril. We find hint afterwards, in <date when-custom="16">A. D.
       16</date>, advocating a sumptuary law, to restrain the use of gold-plate and silk garments
      (Tac. <hi rend="ital">ib.</hi> 2.33), and in 22 moving that a decree of the senate, which
      conferred the Tribunicia Potestas on Drusus, the emperor's son, be inscribed in letters of
      gold, and affixed to the walls of the curia (Tac. <hi rend="ital">ib.</hi> 3.57)--a useless
      piece of adulation, since the decree was little more than matter of course. If the systematic
      legacy-hunter mentioned by Seneca (<hi rend="ital">de Ben.</hi> 6.38) were the same Q.
      Haterius, it accords well with his servility as a senator.</p><p>The reputation of Haterius was, however, higher in the rhetorical schools than in the
      senate. His character as a declaimer is sketched by Seneca the rhetorician, who had heard him
       (<hi rend="ital">Excerpt. Controv. Proem.</hi> iv. p. 422, Bipont. ed.), and by Seneca the
      philosopher (<hi rend="ital">Ep.</hi> 40). Their accounts are confirmed by Tacitus (<hi rend="ital">Anns.</hi> 4.61), and may be thus compressed. His voice was sonorous, his lungs
      unwearied, his invention fertile, and his sophistical ingenuity, though it sometimes betrayed
      him into ludicrous blunders, was extraordinary. There was much to applaud, more to excuse or
      condemn, in his declamation. Augustus said that his eloquence needed a drag-chain--" Haterius
      noster sufflaminandus est "--it not only ran, but it ran down-hill. He had so little control
      over his volubility, that he employed a freedman to punctuate his discourse while speaking,
      and the partitions and transitions of his theme were regulated by this monitor. Seneca, the
      philosopher (<hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>), censures him severely. He began impetuously, he
      ceased abruptly. His manner was abhorrent from common sense, good taste, and Roman usage. The
      evolutions of Cicero were slow and decorous; but the rapid verbiage of Haterius was suitable
      only to the hacknied demagogue, and excitable crowd of a Greek agora. The elder Seneca
      frequently cites the declamations of Haterius (<hi rend="ital">Suas.</hi> 2, 3, 6, 7, <hi rend="ital">Controv.</hi> 6, 16, 17, 23, 27, 28, 29), but Tacitus says that his works were in
      his age nearly obsolete. (<hi rend="ital">Ann.</hi> 4.61.) The best specimens of the rhetoric
      of Haterius are,--Sen. <hi rend="ital">Suas.</hi> 6, 7, and <hi rend="ital">Controv.</hi> 6,
       <hi rend="ital">Excerpt. ex Controv.</hi> i.; in the latter, Seneca praises the pathos of the
      declaimer. Haterius died at the end of <date when-custom="26">A. D. 26</date>, in the eighty-ninth
      year of his age. (<bibl n="Tac. Ann. 4.61">Tac. Ann. 4.61</bibl>; Euseb. <hi rend="ital">Chron.</hi> n. 2040, p. 157 ; Hieron. <hi rend="ital">Ep. ad Pammach. adv. error. Joan.
       Hierosol.</hi>) His sons appear to have died before him. (Sen. <hi rend="ital">Excerpt.
       Controv. Proem.</hi> Bip. ed. p. 422.) It is worth noting, that Haterius is accused by Seneca
       (<hi rend="ital">l.c.</hi>) of archaisms, but those archaisms were words or phrases from
      Cicero--so brief was the meridian of Latin prose.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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