[Davis Introduction]
During the later Republic and Early Empire the craving for a good education was
probably more prevalent than in any other age, barring the present. Even the lower classes
were not usually illiterate (witness the numerous wall scribblings at Pompeii), although
there was no system of free public schools. What one father did to give his son all
possible advantages is told in this noble and touching tribute by Horace.
Horace, Satires,
I.6.xi.70-90
If I dare venture to speak in my own praise, and say that I live undefiled,
innocent, and dear to my friends, let me confess that I owe all this to my father. A poor
man he was, and on a lean farm, yet he was not content to send me to a local school [at
Venusia, his home town] under the pedant Flavius, though boys of pretensions, sons of
prominent centurions, went there with their school bags and writing tablets slung over
their left arms, and carrying their teacher the fee in their hands on the Ides of eight
months in the year. On the contrary, he had the spirit to bring me even as a child to
Rome, to be taught those liberal arts which a senator or eques requires for his children.
If anyone had seen my dress and the slaves that attended me in the big city, he would have
guessed that I was maintained by some hereditary estate. My father---most faithful of
guardians---was ever present at all my studies. Why need I say more? He preserved my
modesty (the first point of virtue) not merely untainted, but free from the very rumor of
taint. He was not afraid lest any one should reproach him [for giving an education to a
son] who turned out to be an auctioneer, or as my father was, a tax gatherer. I should not
then have complained. But all the more is praise due to him, and from me the greater
gratitude. As long as I keep my senses I will never be ashamed of such a father, nor
apologize for my [humble] birth as do so many, asserting "it is no fault of
theirs."
Pliny the Younger: Letters, IV.13
[Davis Introduction]:
The following letter by Pliny to the famous historian Tacitus is witness to the
interest taken in education under the Empire. The school here mentioned was, of course,
not a mere primary school - that existed surely already at Comum - but one of the higher
learning. Pliny's munificence was by no means unique. Probably in no other age was so much
money donated by wealthy men for education - especially in their home towns - until
recently in America.
This letter contains a request: let me tell you why I ask it. When I was last in my
native district [Comum, North Italy] a son of a fellow townsman of mine, a youth under
age, came to pay his respects to me. I said to him, "Do you keep up your
studies?" AYes," he answered.
"Where?@ I asked. "At Milan," was
the reply. "But why not here?" I pressed. Then the lad's father, who was with
him, said, "ecause we have no teachers here. " "How is that?" I asked.
"It is a matter of urgent importance to you who are fathers," and it so chanced
that luckily quite a number of fathers were listening to me, "that your children
should get their education here at home."
As for where can they pass their time so pleasantly as in their native town, where can
they be brought up so virtuously as under their parent's eyes; or so inexpensively as at
home? If you put your money together, you could hire teachers at a trifling cost, and you
could add to their stipends the sum you now spend on your son's lodgings and travel
money---no small sum. I have no children of my own, still, in the interests of the
community---which I may consider as my child or my parent---I am ready to contribute a
third part of what you may decide to club together upon. I would even promise the whole
sum if I did not fear that if I did so, my generosity might be corrupted to serve private
interests, as I see is the case in many places where teachers are employed at the public
charge. There is only one way of preventing the evil, and that is by leaving the right of
employing the teachers to the parents alone, who will be careful to make a right choice if
they are obliged to find part of the money. You cannot make your children a better present
than this, nor can you do your place a better turn."
And now, my friend Tacitus, since this is a serious matter, I beg you to look out for
some teachers among the throng of learned men who gather around you, whom we can sound on
the matter, but not in such a way as to pledge ourselves to employ any of them. For I wish
to give the parents a perfectly free hand. They must judge and choose for themselves: I
have only a sympathetic interest and a share in the cost. So if you find any one who
thinks himself capable, let him go to Comum, but on the express understanding that he
builds upon no certainty beyond his confidence in himself. Farewell.
Martial: Epigrams, X.62:
[Davis Introduction]:
That the Roman schoolmasters, no less than their Greek
predecessors, relied on the scourge to quicken slow wits is shown in the following from
this writer of the end of the first century A.D.
Sir Schoolmaster---show pity upon your simple scholars, at least if you wish to
have many a long-haired boy attendant upon your lectures, and the class seated around your
critical table love you. Then would no teacher of arithmetic or swift writing have a
greater ring of pupils around him. Hot and bright are the days now under the flaming
constellation of the lion; and fervid July is ripening the bursting harvest. So let your
Scythian scourge with its dreadful thongs, such as flogged Marsyas of Celaenae, and your
formidable cane---the schoolmaster's scepter---be laid aside, and sleep until the Ides of
October. Surely in summer time, if the boys keep their health, they do enough.
Source:
From: William Stearns Davis, ed., Readings in Ancient History: Illustrative Extracts
from the Sources, 2 Vols. (Boston: Allyn and Bacon, 1912-13), Vol. II: Rome and the
West, pp. 227-230.
Scanned by: J. S. Arkenberg, Dept. of History, Cal. State Fullerton.
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