Satire VI explained

Satire VI is the most famous of the sixteen Satires by the Roman author Juvenal written in the late 1st or early 2nd century. In English translation, this satire is often titled something in the vein of Against Women due to the most obvious reading of its content. It enjoyed significant social currency from late antiquity to the early modern period, being read as a proof-text for a wide array of misogynistic beliefs. Its current significance rests in its role as a crucial body of evidence on Roman conceptions of gender and sexuality.

The overarching theme of the poem is a dissuasion of the addressee Postumus from marriage; the narrator uses a series of acidic vignettes on the degraded state of (predominantly female) morality to bolster his argument. At c. 695 lines of Latin hexameter, this satire is nearly twice the length of the next largest of the author's sixteen known satires; Satire VI alone composes Book II of Juvenal's five books of satire.

Satire VI also contains the famous phrase "Sed quis custodiet ipsos custodes?" (but who will guard the guards themselves?), which is variously translated as "But who will guard the guards?", "But who will watch the watchmen?", or similar. In context, it refers to the impossibility of enforcing moral behavior when the enforcers (custodes) are corruptible:

... I am aware

of whatever councils you old friends warn,

i.e. "throw the bolt and lock her in.” But who is going to guard the

guards themselves, who now keep silent the lapses of the loose

girl - paid off in the same coin? The common crime keeps its silence.

A prudent wife looks ahead and starts (her infidelities) with them.

... noui

consilia et ueteres quaecumque monetis amici,

pone seram, cohibe'. sed quis custodiet ipsos

custodes, qui nunc lasciuae furta puellae

hac mercede silent? crimen commune tacetur.

prospicit hoc prudens et ab illis incipit uxor.

(6.O29-34)

The text of the poem is not quite certain. In particular, E.O. Winstedt in 1899 discovered in the Bodleian Library in Oxford in an eleventh-century or early 12th-century manuscript an additional 36 lines (34 placed after line 366 of the satire, and two more after line 373).[1] The authenticity of these lines (which contain the famous quis custodiet passage above) has been debated,[2] although in the opinion of one scholar, they are "fully worthy of Juvenal".[3] In most modern texts the 34 lines are usually printed after line 345. There is a partial duplication between O30-O34 and 346–348.

The themes of the poem

The author commences Satire VI by contrasting women of the distant past with the kind of modern Roman women seen in the poems of Catullus and Propertius:

I believe that, when Saturn was king, Chastity lingered

on the earth and was seen for a time - when a cold cave

provided little homes, and enclosed fire, household gods, cattle,

and the masters of the household in common darkness.

A mountain wife spread out her woodsy bed

with leaves, straw, and skins of local wild animals,

- hardly similar to you, Cynthia, nor to you

whose wet eye the dead sparrow stirred up -

but offering breasts that needed sucking to huge babies,

and often hairier than her acorn-burping husband.

Credo Pudicitiam Saturno rege moratam

in terris uisamque diu, cum frigida paruas

praeberet spelunca domos ignemque laremque

et pecus et dominos communi clauderet umbra,

siluestrem montana torum cum sterneret uxor

frondibus et culmo uicinarumque ferarum

pellibus, haut similis tibi, Cynthia, nec tibi, cuius

turbauit nitidos extinctus passer ocellos,

sed potanda ferens infantibus ubera magnis

et saepe horridior glandem ructante marito.

(6.1-10)

Peter Green explains: "'Cynthia' was the pseudonym which Propertius used to indicate his mistress Hostia in his poems; the girl who wept for her sparrow was 'Lesbia,' the mistress of Catullus, whose real name was Clodia." While the equation of these pseudonyms with historical women is debatable, the reference within Satire VI to Propertius and Catullus is clear.[4] In opposition to the sophisticated, urban woman of the elegiac ideal, the woman of the mythical golden age was a simple rustic. The constant touchstone of the remainder of the poem is the deviance of contemporary Roman women from an amorphous ideal located in the unspecified past. Though it is frequently decried as a misogynistic rant, feminist scholar Jamie Corson has pointed out:

The author sets the frame for his satire with a hyperbolic presentation of the options available to the Roman male – marriage, suicide, or a boy lover:

Are you even in this day and age preparing both a prenup

and an engagement, and getting a trim from a master

barber, and you have even perchance given the pledge to her finger?

You certainly used to be sane. Postumus, are you getting married?

Tell me by what Fury and by what vipers you are goaded.

Can you endure any Master-ess when there are so many good strong ropes,

When high, vertiginous windows are wide open,

when the Aemilian bridge offers itself to you – just right next door?

Or if from so many options no mode of death strikes your fancy,

Surely you think it better that a supple boy sleep with you?

A boy, who does not conduct a nocturnal lawsuit at you, who wheedles

no little gifts from you as he lies there, and neither complains because

you are going easy on him, nor because you don’t gasp as much as he demands.

conuentum tamen et pactum et sponsalia nostra

tempestate paras iamque a tonsore magistro

pecteris et digito pignus fortasse dedisti?

certe sanus eras. uxorem, Postume, ducis?

dic qua Tisiphone, quibus exagitere colubris.

ferre potes dominam saluis tot restibus ullam,

cum pateant altae caligantesque fenestrae,

cum tibi uicinum se praebeat Aemilius pons?

aut si de multis nullus placet exitus, illud

nonne putas melius, quod tecum pusio dormit?

pusio, qui noctu non litigat, exigit a te

nulla iacens illic munuscula, nec queritur quod

et lateri parcas nec quantum iussit anheles.

(6.25-37)

Juvenal was concerned with the morality and actions of the Roman elite; Satire VI can equally be read as an invective against the men who have permitted this pervasive degradation of the Roman world. The author harshly criticizes avaricious husbands who marry not for love but for the dowry and subsequently allow their rich wives to do whatever they wish (6.136-141). Similarly, men who care only for the fleeting beauty of their wives, and then divorce them as it fades, merit condemnation (6.142-48). While women are prone to temptation, Juvenal casts men as agents and enablers of the feminine proclivity toward vice. In the written Roma of the Satires, men will even impersonate eunuchs to get unmonitored access to corrupt a woman (6.O-20-30). The literary trope of luxury imported into Roma along with the spoils of conquest and the goods (and banes) of the world is employed by Juvenal to explain the source of degradation:

Even so, do you ask from what spring these prodigies?

Humble fortune defended the chaste Latin women then,

nor did their labor, short slumbers, hard hands irritated

by Tuscan wool, Hannibal close to the city,

and husbands standing guard at the Colline tower

allow their little shelters to be stained with vices.

Now we suffer the evils of a long peace, luxury more savage than arms

presses its attack and takes vengeance for the conquered world.

No crime or act of lust is absent from where

Roman poverty has perished. To here, to these hills,

Sybaris, and Rhodes, and Miletus – flowed here -

and Tarentum too crowned and with drunken impudence.

First tainted money carried in foreign

ways, and effeminate riches shattered the ages with

foul luxury. …

unde haec monstra tamen uel quo de fonte requiris?

praestabat castas humilis fortuna Latinas

quondam, nec uitiis contingi parua sinebant

tecta labor somnique breues et uellere Tusco

uexatae duraeque manus ac proximus urbi

Hannibal et stantes Collina turre mariti.

nunc patimur longae pacis mala, saeuior armis

luxuria incubuit uictumque ulciscitur orbem.

nullum crimen abest facinusque libidinis ex quo

paupertas Romana perit. hinc fluxit ad istos

et Sybaris colles, hinc et Rhodos et Miletos

atque coronatum et petulans madidumque Tarentum.

prima peregrinos obscena pecunia mores

intulit, et turpi fregerunt saecula luxu

diuitiae molles. …

(6.286-300)

Synopsis of the Poem by Section

Proem

Lust

Pretentiousness

Quarrelsomeness

Lack of Restraint

Unsociability

Superstitions

Drugs and Poisons

Epilogue

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Winstedt . E. O. . A Bodleian MS. of Juvenal . The Classical Review . May 1899 . 13 . 4 . 201–205 . E.O. Winstedt. 10.1017/S0009840X00078409. 161081775 .
  2. See Wilson (1901), Freeman (1975), Sosin (2000).
  3. Ferguson (1979), p. xxv.
  4. The specific poems of Catullus alluded to are poems II and III, in which the character Lesbia first plays with, then mourns, the passer (sparrow). The narrator refers to the poems of Propertius more generally as the source of the character Cynthia: e.g. 1.1, 1.3, 1.4, et cetera.
  5. There is significant disturbance of the text in the area from which the Oxford fragment originated. Various attempts have been made to reorder the lines so that the sense would be more clear.