by George Long, M. A.
M. ANTONINUS was born at Rome A.D. 121, on the 26th of
April. His father Annius Verus died while he was praetor. His mother
was Domitia Calvilla, also named Lucilla. The Emperor T. Antoninus
Pius married Annia Galeria Faustina, the sister of Annius Verus, and
was consequently the uncle of M. Antoninus. When Hadrian adopted
Antoninus Pius and declared him his successor in the empire, Antoninus
Pius adopted both L. Ceionius Commodus, the son of Aelius Caesar, and
M. Antoninus, whose original name was M. Annius Verus. Antoninus then
took the name of M. Aelius Aurelius Verus, to which was added the
title of Caesar in A.D. 139: the name Aelius belonged to Hadrian's
family, and Aurelius was the name of Antoninus Pius. When M. Antoninus
became Augustus, he dropped the name of Verus and took the name of
Antoninus. Accordingly he is generally named M. Aurelius Antoninus or
simply M. Antoninus.
The youth was most carefully brought up. He thanks the gods
(I. 17) that he had good grandfathers, good parents, a good sister,
good teachers, good associates, good kinsmen and friends, nearly
everything good. He had the happy fortune to witness the example of
his uncle and adoptive father Antoninus Pius, and he has recorded in
his work (I. 16; VI. 30) the virtues of this excellent man and prudent
ruler. Like many young Romans he tried his hand at poetry and studied
rhetoric. Herodes Atticus and M. Cornelius Fronto were his teachers in
eloquence. There are extant letters between Fronto and Marcus,[2] which
show the great affection of the pupil for the master, and the master's
great hopes of his industrious pupil. M. Antoninus mentions Fronto
(I. 11) among those to whom he was indebted for his education.
When he was eleven years old, he assumed the dress of
philosophers, something plain and coarse, became a hard student, and
lived a most laborious, abstemious life, even so far as to injure his
health. Finally, he abandoned poetry and rhetoric for philosophy, and
he attached himself to the sect of the Stoics. But he did not neglect
the study of law, which was a useful preparation for the high place
which he was designed to fill. His teacher was L. Volusianus
Maecianus, a distinguished jurist. We must suppose that he learned the
Roman discipline of arms, which was a necessary part of the education
of a man who afterwards led his troops to battle against a warlike
race.
Antoninus has recorded in his first book the names of his
teachers and the obligations which he owed to each of them. The way in
which he speaks of what he learned from them might seem to savour of
vanity or self-praise, if we look carelessly at the way in which he
has expressed himself; but if any one draws this conclusion, he will
be mistaken. Antoninus means to commemorate the merits of his several
teachers, what they taught and what a pupil might learn from
them. Besides, this book, like the eleven other books, was for his own
use, and if we may trust the note at the end of the first book, it was
written during one of M. Antoninus' campaigns against the Quadi, at a
time when the commemoration of the virtues of his illustrious teachers
might remind him of their lessons and the practical uses which he
might derive from them.
Among his teachers of philosophy was Sextus of Chaeroneia, a
grandson of Plutarch. What he learned from this excellent man is told
by himself (I. 9). His favourite teacher was Q. Junius Rusticus
(I. 7), a philosopher and also a man of practical good sense in public
affairs. Rusticus was the adviser of Antoninus after he became
emperor. Young men who are destined for high places are not often
fortunate in those who are about them, their companions and teachers;
and I do not know any example of a young prince having had an
education which can be compared with that of M. Antoninus. Such a body
of teachers distinguished by their acquirements and their character
will hardly be collected again; and as to the pupil, we have not had
one like him since.
Hadrian died in July, A.D. 138, and was succeeded by Antoninus
Pius. M. Antoninus married Faustina, his cousin, the daughter of Pius,
probably about A.D. 146, for he had a daughter born in 147. He
received from his adoptive father the title of Caesar and was
associated with him in the administration of the state. The father and
the adopted son live together in perfect friendship and
confidence. Antoninus was a dutiful son, and the emperor Pius loved
and esteemed him.
Antoninus Pius died in March, A.D. 161. The Senate, it is said,
urged M. Antoninus to take the sole administration of the empire, but
he associated with himself the other adopted son of Pius, L. Ceionius
Commodus, who is generally called L. Verus. Thus Rome for the first
time had two emperors. Verus was an indolent man of pleasure and
unworthy of his station. Antoninus, however, bore with him, and it is
said that Verus had sense enough to pay to his colleague the respect
due to his character. A virtuous emperor and a loose partner lived
together in peace, and their alliance was strengthened by Antoninus
giving to Verus for wife his daughter Lucilla.
The reign of Antoninus was first troubled by a Parthian war, in
which Verus was sent to command, but he did nothing, and the success
that was obtained by the Romans in Armenia and on the Euphrates and
Tigris was due to his generals. This Parthian war ended in
A.D. 165. Aurelius and Verus had a triumph (A.D. 166) for the
victories in the east. A pestilence followed which carried off great
numbers in Rome and Italy, and spread to the west of Europe.
The north of Italy was also threatened by the rude people beyond
the Alps from the borders of Gallia to the eastern side of the
Hadriatic. These barbarians attempted to break into Italy, as the
Germanic nations had attempted near three hundred years before; and
the rest of the life of Antoninus with some intervals was employed in
driving back the invaders. In 169 Verus suddenly died, and Antoninus
administered the state alone.
During the German wars Antoninus resided for three years on the
Danube at Carnuntum. The Marcomanni were driven out of Pannonia and
almost destroyed in their retreat across the Danube; and in A.D. 174
the emperor gained a great victory over the Quadi.
In A.D. 175 Avidius Cassius, a brave and skillful Roman
commander who was at the head of the troops in Asia, revolted and
declared himself Augustus. But Cassius was assassinated by some of his
officers, and so the rebellion came to an end. Antoninus showed his
humanity by his treatment of the family and the partisans of Cassius,
and his letter to the senate in which he recommends mercy is
extant. (Vulcatius, Avidius Cassius, c. 12.)
Antoninus set out for the east on hearing of Cassius'
revolt. Though he appears to have returned to Rome in A.D. 174, he
went back to prosecute the war against the Germans, and it is probable
that he marched direct to the east from the German war. His wife,
Faustina, who accompanied him into Asia, died suddenly at the foot of
the Taurus to the great grief of her husband. Capitolinus, who has
written the life of Antoninus, and also Dion Cassius accuse the
empress of scandalous infidelity to her husband and of abominable
lewdness. But Capitolinus says that Antoninus either knew it not or
pretended not to know it. Nothing is so common as such malicious
reports in all ages, and the history of imperial Rome is full of
them. Antoninus loved his wife and he says that she was "obedient,
affectionate and simple." The same scandal had been spread about
Faustina's mother, the wife of Antoninus Pius, and yet he too was
perfectly satisfied with his wife. Antoninus Pius says after her death
in a letter to Fronto that he would rather have lived in exile with
his wife than in his palace at Rome without her. There are not many
men who would give their wives a better character than these two
emperors. Capitolinus wrote in the time of Diocletian. He may have
intended to tell the truth, but he is a poor, feeble biographer. Dion
Cassius, the most malignant of historians, always reports and perhaps
he believed any scandal against anybody.
Antoninus continued his journey to Syria and Egypt, and on his
return to Italy through Athens he was initiated into the Eleusinian
mysteries. It was the practice of the emperor to conform to the
established rites of the age and to perform religious ceremonies with
due solemnity. We cannot conclude from this that he was a
superstitious man, though we might perhaps do so, if his book did not
show that he was not. But this is only one among many instances that a
ruler's public acts do not always prove his real opinions. A prudent
governor will not roughly oppose even the superstitions of his people,
and though he may wish that they were wiser, he will know that he
cannot make them so by offending their prejudices.
Antoninus and his son Commodus entered Rome in triumph, perhaps
for some German victories, on the 23rd of December, A.D. 176. In the
following year Commodus was associated with his father in the empire
and took the name of Augustus. This year A.D. 177 is memorable in
ecclesiastical history. Attalus and others were put to death at Lyon
for their adherence to the Christian religion. The evidence of this
persecution is a letter preserved by Eusebius (E. H. v. I; printed in
Routh's "Reliquiae Sacrae," vol. 1., with notes). The letter is from
the Christians of Vienna and Lugdunum in Gallia (Vienne and Lyon) to
their Christian brethren in Asia and Phrygia; and it is preserved
perhaps nearly entire. It contains a very particular description of
the tortures inflicted on the Christians in Gallia, and it states that
while the persecution was going on, Attalus, a Christian and a Roman
citizen, was loudly demanded by the populace and brought into the
amphitheatre, but the governor ordered him to be reserved with the
rest who were in prison, until he had received instructions from the
emperor. Many had been tortured before the governor thought of
applying to Antoninus. The imperial rescript, says the letter, was
that the Christians should be punished, but if they would deny their
faith, they must be released. On this the work began again. The
Christians who were Roman citizens were beheaded: the rest exposed to
the wild beasts in the amphitheatre. Some modern writers on
ecclesiastical history, when they use this letter, say nothing of the
wonderful stories of the martyrs' sufferings. Sanctus, as the letter
says, was burnt with plates of hot iron till his body was one sore and
had lost all human form, but on being put to the rack he recovered his
former appearance under the torture, which was thus a cure instead of
a punishment. He was afterwards torn by beasts, and placed on an iron
chair and roasted. He died at last.
The letter is one piece of evidence. The writer, whoever he was
that wrote in the name of the Gallic Christians, is our evidence both
for the ordinary and the extraordinary circumstances of the story, and
we cannot accept his evidence for one part and reject the other. We
often receive small evidence as a proof of a thing which we believe to
be within the limits of probability or possibility, and we reject
exactly the same evidence, when the thing to which it refers, appears
very improbable or impossible. But this is a false method of inquiry,
though it is followed by some modern writers, who select what they
like from a story and reject the rest of the evidence; or if they do
not reject it, they dishonestly suppress it. A man can only act
consistently by accepting all this letter or rejecting it all, and we
cannot blame him for either. But he who rejects it may still admit
that such a letter may be founded on real facts; and he would make
this admission as the most probable way of accounting for the
existence of the letter: but if, as he would suppose, the writer has
stated some things falsely, he cannot tell what part of his story is
worthy of credit.
The war on the northern frontier appears to have been
uninterrupted during the visit of Antoninus to the East, and on his
return the emperor again left Rome to oppose the barbarians. The
Germanic people were defeated in a great battle, A.D. 179. During this
campaign the emperor was seized with some contagious malady, of which
he died in the camp at Sirmium (Mitrovitz) on the Save in Lower
Pannonia, but at Vindobona (Vienna) according to other authorities, on
the 17th March, A.D. 180, in the fifty-ninth year of his age. His son
Commodus was with him. The body or the ashes probably of the emperor
were carried to Rome, and he received the honour of deification. Those
who could afford it had his statue or bust, and when Capitolinus
wrote, many people still had statues of Antoninus among the Dei
Penates or household deities. He was in a manner made a
saint. Commodus erected to the memory of his father the Antonine
column which is now in the Piazza Colonna at Rome. The bas reliefs
which are placed in a spiral line round the shaft commemorate the
victories of Antoninus over the Marcomanni and the Quadi, and the
miraculous shower of rain which refreshed the Roman soldiers and
discomfited their enemies. The statue of Antoninus was placed on the
capital of the column, but it was removed at some time unknown, and a
bronze statue of St. Paul was put in the place by Pope Sixtus the
fifth.
The historical evidence for the times of Antoninus is very
defective, and some of that which remains is not credible. The most
curious is the story about the miracle which happened in A.D. 174
during the war with the Quadi. The Roman army was in danger of
perishing by thirst, but a sudden storm drenched them with rain, while
it discharged fire and hail on their enemies, and the Romans gained a
great victory. All the authorities which speak of the battle speak
also of the miracle. The Gentile writers assign it to their gods, and
the Christians to the intercession of the Christian legion in the
emperor's army. To confirm the Christian statement it is added that
the emperor gave the title of Thundering to this legion; but Dacier
and others who maintain the Christian report of the miracle, admit
that this title of Thundering or Lightning was not given to this
legion because the Quadi were struck with lightning, but because there
was a figure of lightning on their shields, and that this title of the
legion existed in the time of Augustus.
Scaliger also had observed that the legion was called Thundering
([Greek], or [Greek]) before the reign of Antoninus. We learn this
from Dion Cassius (Lib. 55, c. 23, and the note of Reimarus), who
enumerates all the legions of Augustus' time. The name Thundering or
Lightning also occurs on an inscription of the reign of Trajan, which
was found at Trieste. Eusebius (v. 5), when he relates the miracle,
quotes Apolinarius, bishop of Hierapolis, as authority for this name
being given to the legion Melitene by the emperor in consequence of
the success which he obtained through their prayers; from which we may
estimate the value of Apolinarius' testimony. Eusebius does not say in
what book of Apolinarius the statement occurs. Dion says that the
Thundering legion was stationed in Cappadocia in the time of
Augustus. Valesius also observes that in the Notitia of the Imperium
Romanum there is mentioned under the commander of Armenia the
Praefectura of the twelfth legion named "Thundering Melitene"; and
this position in Armenia will agree with what Dion says of its
position in Cappadocia. Accordingly Valesius concludes that Malitene
was not the name of the legion, but of the town in which it was
stationed. Melitene was also the name of the district in which this
town was situated. The legions did not, he says, take their name from
the place where they were on duty, but from the country in which they
were raised, and therefore what Eusebius says about the Melitene does
not seem probable to him. Yet Valesius on the authority of Apolinarius
and Tertullian believed that the miracle was worked through the
prayers of the Christian soldiers in the emperor's army. Rufinus does
not give the name of Melitene to this legion, says Valesius, and
probably he purposely omitted it, because he knew that Melitene was
the name of a town in Armenia Minor, where the legion was stationed in
his time.
The emperor, it is said, made a report of his victory to the
Senate, which we may believe, for such was the practice; but we do not
know what he said in his letter, for it is not extant. Dacier assumes
that the emperor's letter was purposely destroyed by the Senate or the
enemies of Christianity, that so honourable a testimony to the
Christians and their religion might not be perpetuated. The critic has
however not seen that he contradicts when he tells us purport of the
letter, for he says that it was destroyed, and even Eusebius could not
find it. But there does exist a letter in Greek addressed by Antoninus
to the Roman people and the sacred Senate after this memorable
victory. It is sometimes printed after Justin's first Apology, but it
is totally unconnected with the apologies. This letter is one of the
most stupid forgeries of the many which exist, and it cannot be
possibly founded even on the genuine report of Antoninus to the
Senate. If it were genuine, it would free the emperor from the charge
of persecuting men because they were Christians, for he says in this
false letter that if a man accuse another only of being a Christian
and the accused confess and there is nothing else against him, he must
be set free; with this monstrous addition, made by a man inconceivably
ignorant, that the informer must be burnt alive.
During the time of Antoninus Pius and Marcus Antoninus there
appeared the first Apology of Justinus, and under M. Antoninus the
Oration of Tatian against the Greeks, which was a fierce attack on the
established religions; the address of Athenagoras to M. Antoninus on
behalf of the Christians, and the Apology of Melito, bishop of Sardes,
also addressed to the emperor, and that of Apolinarius. The first
Apology of Justinus is addressed to T. Antoninus Pius and his two
adopted sons. M. Antoninus and L. Verus; but we do not know whether
they read it.[3]The second Apology of Justinus is intitled "to the
Roman Senate"; but this superscription is from some copyist. In the
first chapter Justinus addresses the Romans. In the second chapter he
speaks of an affair that had recently happened in the time of
M. Antoninus and L. Versus, as it seems; and he also directly
addresses the emperor, saying of a certain woman, "she addressed a
petition to thee, the emperor, and thou didst grant the petition." In
other passages the writer addresses the two emperors, from which we
must conclude that the Apology was directed to them. Eusebius
(E. H. IV. 18) states that the second Apology was addressed to the
successor of Antoninus Pius, and he names him Antoninus Verus, meaning
M. Antoninus. In one passage of this second Apology (c. 8), Justinus,
or the writer, whoever he may be, says that even men who followed the
Stoic doctrines, when they ordered their lives according to ethical
reason, were hated and murdered, such as Heraclitus, Musonius in his
own times, and others; for all those who in any way laboured to live
according to reason and avoided wickedness were always hated; and this
was the effect of the work of daemons.
Justinus himself is said to have been put to death at Rome,
because he refused to sacrifice to the gods. It cannot have been in
the reign of Hadrian, as one authority states; nor in the time of
Antoninus Pius, if the second Apology was written in the time of
M. Antoninus; and there is evidence that this event took place under
M. Antoninus and L. Verus, when Rusticus was praefect of the
city.
The persecution in which Polycarp suffered at Smyrna belongs to
the time of M. Antoninus. The evidence for it is the letter of the
church of Smyrna to the churches of Philomelium and the other
Christian churches, and it is preserved by Eusebius
(E. H. IV. 15). But the critics do not agree about the time of
Polycarp's death, differing in the two extremes to the amount of
twelve years. The circumstances of Polycarp's martyrdom were
accompanied by miracles, one of which Eusebius (IV. 15) has omitted,
but it appears in the oldest Latin version of the letter, which Usher
published, and it is supposed that this version was made not long
after the time of Eusebius. The notice at the end of the letter states
that it was transcribed by Caius from the copy of Irenaeus, the
disciple of Polycarp, then transcribed by Socrates at Corinth; "after
which I, Pionius, again wrote it out from the copy above mentioned,
having searched it out by the revelation of Polycarp, who directed me
to it, etc." The story of Polycarp's martyrdom is embellished with
miraculous circumstances which some modern writers on ecclesiastical
history take the liberty of omitting.[4]
In order to form a proper notion of the condition of the
Christians under M. Antoninus we must go back to Trajan's time. When
the younger Pliny was governor of Bithynia, the Christians were
numerous in those parts, and the worshippers of the old religion were
falling off. The temples were deserted, the festivals neglected, and
there were no purchasers of victims for sacrifice. Those who were
interested in the maintenance of the old religion thus found that
their profits were in danger. Christians of both sexes and of all ages
were brought before the governor, who did not know what to do with
them. He could come to no other conclusion than this, that those who
confessed to be Christians and persevered in their religion ought to
be punished; if for nothing else, for their invincible obstinacy. He
found no crimes proved against the Christians, and he could only
characterize their religion as a depraved and extravagant
superstition, which might be stopped, if the people were allowed the
opportunity of recanting. Pliny wrote this in a letter to
Trajan.[5]
In the time of Hadrian it was no longer possible for the Roman
government to overlook the great increase of the Christians and the
hostility of the common sort to them. If the governors in the
provinces were willing to let them alone, they could not resist the
fanaticism of the heathen community, who looked on the Christians as
atheists. The Jews, too, who were settled all over the Roman Empire,
were as hostile to the Christians as the Gentiles were.[6] With the
time of Hadrian begin the Christian Apologies, which show plainly what
the popular feeling towards the Christians then was. A rescript of
Hadrian to Minucius Fundanus, the Proconsul of Asia, which stands at
the end of Justin's first Apology,[7] instructs the governor that
innocent people must not be troubled and false accusers must not be
allowed to extort money from them; the charges against the Christians
must be made in due form, and no attention must be paid to popular
clamours; when Christians were regularly prosecuted and convicted of
illegal acts, they must be punished according to their deserts; and
false accusers also must be punished. Antoninus Pius is said to have
published Rescripts to the same effect. The terms of Hadrian's
Rescript seem very favourable to the Christians; but if we understand
it in this sense, that they were only to be punished like other people
for illegal acts, it would have had no meaning, for that could have
been done without asking the emperor's advice. The real purpose of the
Rescript is that Christians must be punished if they persisted in
their belief, and would not prove their renunciation of it by
acknowledging the heathen religion. This was Trajan's rule, and we
have no reason for supposing that Hadrian granted more to the
Christians than Trajan did. There is also printed at the end of
Justin's first Apology a Rescript of Antoninus Pius to the Commune of
Asia ([Greek]), and it is also in Eusebius (E. H. IV. 13). The date of
the Rescript is the third consulship of Antoninus Pius. The Rescript
declares that the Christians, for they are meant, though the name
Christians does not occur in the Rescript, were not to be disturbed
unless they were attempting something against the Roman rule, and no
man was to be punished simply for being a Christian. But this Rescript
is spurious. Any man moderately acquainted with Roman history will see
by the style and tenor that it is a clumsy forgery.
In the time of M. Antoninus the opposition between the old and
the new belief was still stronger, and the adherents of the heathen
religion urged those in authority to a more regular resistance to the
invasions of the Christian faith. Melito in his apology to
M. Antoninus represents the Christians of Asia as persecuted under new
imperial orders. Shameless informers, he says, men who were greedy
after the property of others, used these orders as a means of robbing
those who were doing no harm. He doubts if a just emperor could have
ordered anything so unjust; and if the last order was really not from
the emperor, the Christians entreat him not to give them up to their
enemies. We conclude from this that there were at least imperial
Rescripts or Constitutions of M. Antoninus, which were made the
foundation of these persecutions. The fact of being a Christian was
now a crime and punished, unless the accused denied their
religion. Then come the persecutions at Smyrna, which some modern
critics place in A.D. 167, ten years before the persecution of
Lyon. The governors of the provinces under M. Antoninus might have
found enough even in Trajan's Rescript to warrant them in punishing
Christians, and the fanaticism of the people would drive them to
persecution, even if they were unwilling. But besides the fact of the
Christians rejecting all the heathen ceremonies, we must not forget
that they plainly maintained that all the heathen religions were
false. The Christians thus declared war against the heathen rites, and
it is hardly necessary to observe that this was a declaration of
hostility against the Roman government, which tolerated all the
various forms of superstition that existed in the empire, and could
not consistently tolerate another religion, which declared that all
the rest were false and all the splendid ceremonies of the empire only
a worship of devils.
If we had a true ecclesiastical history, we should know how the
Roman emperors attempted to check the new religion, how they enforced
their principle of finally punishing Christians, simply as Christians,
which Justin in his Apology affirms that they did, and I have no doubt
that he tells the truth; how far popular clamour and riots went in
this matter, and how far many fanatical and ignorant Christians, for
there were many such, contributed to excite the fanaticism on the
other side and to embitter the quarrel between the Roman government
and the new religion. Our extant ecclesiastical histories are
manifestly falsified, and what truth they contain is grossly
exaggerated; but the fact is certain that in the time of M. Antoninus
the heathen populations were in open hostility to the Christians, and
that under Antoninus' rule men were put to death because they were
Christians. Eusebius in the preface to his fifth book remarks that in
the seventeenth year of Antoninus' reign, in some parts of the world
the persecution of the Christians became more violent and that it
proceeded from the populace in the cities; and he adds in his usual
style of exaggeration, that we may infer from what took place in a
single nation that myriads of martyrs were made in the habitable
earth. The nation which he alludes to is Gallia; and he then proceeds
to give the letter of the churches of Vienna and Lugdunum. It is
probable that he has assigned the true cause of the persecutions, the
fanaticism of the populace, and that both governors and emperor had a
great deal of trouble with these disturbances. How far Marcus was
cognizant of these cruel proceedings we do not know, for the
historical records of his reign are very defective. He did not make
the rule against the Christians, for Trajan did that; and if we admit
that he would have been willing to let the Christians alone, we cannot
affirm that it was in his power, for it would be a great mistake to
suppose that Antoninus had the unlimited authority, which some modern
sovereigns have had. His power was limited by certain constitutional
forms, by the senate, and by the precedents of his predecessors. We
cannot admit that such a man was an active persecutor,[8] for there is
no evidence that he was, though it is certain that he had no good
opinion of the Christians, as appears from his own words. But he knew
nothing of them except their hostility to the Roman religion, and he
probably thought that they were dangerous to the state,
notwithstanding the professions false or true of some of the
Apologists. So much I have said, because it would be unfair not to
state all that can be urged against a man whom his contemporaries and
subsequent ages venerated as a model of virtue and benevolence. If I
admitted the genuineness of some documents, he would be altogether
clear from the charge of even allowing any persecutions; but as I seek
the truth and am sure that they are false, I leave him to bear
whatever blame is his due.[9] I add that it is quite certain that
Antoninus did not derive any of his Ethical principles from a religion
of which he knew nothing.[10]
There is no doubt that the Emperor's "Reflections," or his
"Meditations," as they are generally named, is a genuine work. In the
first book he speaks of himself, his family, and his teachers; and in
other books he mentions himself. Suidas ([Greek]) notices a work of
Antoninus in twelve books, which he names the "conduct of his own
life"; and he cites the book under several words in his Dictionary,
giving the emperor's name, but not the title of the work. There are
also passages cited by Suidas from Antoninus without mention of the
emperor's name. The true title of the work is unknown. Xylander, who
published the first edition of this book (Zürich, 1558, 8vo.) with
a Latin version, used a manuscript, which contained the twelve books,
but it is not known where the manuscript is now. The only other
complete manuscript which is known to exist is in the Vatican library,
but it has no title and no inscriptions of the several books: the
eleventh only has the inscription [Greek] marked with an asterisk. The
other Vatican manuscripts and the three Florentine contain only
excerpts from the emperor's book. All the titles of the excerpts
nearly agree with that which Xylander prefixed to his edition,
[Greek]. This title has been used by all subsequent editors. We cannot
tell whether Antoninus divided his work into books or somebody else
did it. If the inscriptions at the end of the first and second books
are genuine, he may have made the division himself.
It is plain that the emperor wrote down his thoughts or
reflections as the occasions arose; and since they were intended for
his own use, it is no improbable conjecture that he left a complete
copy behind him written with his own hand; for it is not likely that
so diligent a man would use the labour of a transcriber for such a
purpose, and expose his most secret thoughts to any other eye. He may
have also intended the book for his son Commodus, who however had no
taste for his father's philosophy. Some careful hand preserved the
precious volume; and a work by Antoninus is mentioned by other late
writers besides Suidas.
Many critics have laboured on the text of Antoninus. The most
complete edition is that by Thomas Gataker, 1652, 4to. The second
edition of Gataker was superintended by George Stanhope, 1697,
4to. There is also an edition of 1704. Gataker made and suggested many
good corrections, and he also made a new Latin version, which is not a
very good specimen of Latin, but it generally expresses the sense of
the original and often better than some of the more recent
translations. He added in the margin opposite to each paragraph
references to the other parallel passages; and he wrote a commentary,
one of the most complete that has been written on any ancient
author. This commentary contains the editor's exposition of the more
difficult passages, and quotations from all the Greek and Roman
writers for the illustration of the text. It is a wonderful monument
of learning and labour, and certainly no Englishman has yet done
anything like it. At the end of his preface the editor says that he
wrote it at Rotherhithe near London in a severe winter, when he was in
the seventy-eighth year of his age, 1651, a time when Milton, Selden,
and other great men of the Commonwealth time were living; and the
great French scholar Saumaise (Salmasius), with whom Gataker
corresponded and received help from him for his edition of
Antoninus. The Greek text has also been edited by J. M. Schultz,
Leipzig, 1802, 8vo.; and by the learned Greek Adamantinus Corais,
Paris, 1816, 8vo. The text of Schultz was republished by Tauchnitz,
1821.
There are English, German, French, Italian, and Spanish
translations of M. Antoninus, and there may be others. I have not seen
all the English translations. There is one by Jeremy Collier, 1702,
8vo., a most coarse and vulgar copy of the original. The latest French
translation by Alexis Pierron in the collection of Charpentier is
better than Dacier's, which has been honoured with an Italian version
(Udine, 1772). There is an Italian version (1675) which I have not
seen. It is by a cardinal. "A man illustrious in the church, the
Cardinal Francis Barberini the elder, nephew of Pope Urban VIII.,
occupied the last years of his life in translating into his native
language the thoughts of the Roman emperor, in order to diffuse among
the faithful the fertilizing and vivifying seeds. He dedicated this
translation to his soul, to make it, as he says in his energetic
style, redder than his purple at the sight of the virtues of this
Gentile"
I have made this translation at intervals after having used the
book for many years, it is made from the Greek, but I have not always
followed one text; and I have occasionally compared other versions
with my own. I made this translation for my own use, because I found
that it was worth the labour; but it may be useful to others also and
therefore I determined to print it. As the original is sometimes very
difficult to understand and still more difficult to translate, it is
not possible that I have always avoided error. But I believe that I
have not often missed the meaning, and those who will take the trouble
to compare the translation with the original should not hastily
conclude that I am wrong, if they do not agree with me. Some passages
do give the meaning, though at first sight they may not appear to do
so; and when I differ from the translators, I think that in some
places they are wrong, and in other places I am sure that they are. I
have placed in some passages a +, which indicates corruption in the
text or great uncertainty in the meaning. I could have made the
language more easy and flowing, but I have preferred a ruder style as
being better suited to express the character of the original; and
sometimes the obscurity which may appear in the version is a fair copy
of the obscurity of the Greek. If I have not given the best words for
the Greek, I have done the best that I could; and in the next text I
have always given the same translation of the same word.
The last reflection of the Stoic philosophy that I have observed
is in Simplicius' "Commentary of the Enchiridion of Epictetus."
Simplicius was not a Christian, and such a man was not likely to be
converted at a time when Christianity was grossly corrupted. But he
was a really religious man, and he concludes his commentary with a
prayer to the Deity which no Christian could improve. From the time of
Zeno to Simplicius, a period of about nine hundred years, the Stoic
philosophy formed the characters of some of the best and greatest
men. Finally it became extinct, and we hear no more of it till the
revival of letters in Italy. Angelo Poliziano met with two very
inaccurate and incomplete manuscripts of Epictetus' Enchiridion, which
he translated into Latin and dedicated to his great patron Lorenzo de'
Medici, in whose collection he had found the book. Poliziano's version
was printed in the first Bâle edition of the Enchiridion, A.D. 1531
(apud And. Cratandrum). Poliziano recommends the Enchiridion to
Lorenzo as a work well suited to his temper, and useful in the
difficulties by which he was surrounded.
Epictetus and Antoninus have had readers ever since they were
first printed. The little book of Antoninus has been the companion of
some great men. Machiavelli's "Art of War" and Marcus Antoninus were
the two books which were used when he was a young man by Captain John
Smith, and he could not have found two writers better fitted to form
the character of a soldier and a man. Smith is almost unknown and
forgotten in England, his native country, but not in America, where he
saved the young colony of Virginia. He was great in his heroic mind
and his deeds in arms, but greater still in the nobleness of his
character. For a man's greatness lies not in wealth and station, as
the vulgar believe, nor yet in his intellectual capacity, which is
often associated with the meanest moral character, the most abject
servility to those in high places and arrogance to the poor and lowly;
but a man's true greatness lies in the consciousness of an honest
purpose in life, founded on a just estimate of himself and everything
else, on frequent self-examination, and a steady obedience to the rule
which he knows to be right, without troubling himself, as the emperor
says he should not, about what others may think or say, or whether
they do or do not do that which he thinks and says and does.