Letter 17

Pliny the YoungerCornelius Titianus|c. 100 AD|pliny younger

To Cornelius Titianus.

Faith and loyalty are not yet extinct among men: there are still those to be found who keep friendly remembrances even of the dead. Titinius Capito has obtained permission from our Emperor to erect a statue of Lucius Silanus * in the forum. It is a graceful and entirely praiseworthy act to turn one's friendship with a sovereign to such a purpose, and to use all the influence one possesses to obtain honours for others. But Capito is a devoted hero-worshipper; it is remarkable how religiously and enthusiastically he regards the busts of the Bruti, the Cassii, and the Catos in his own house, where he may do as he pleases in this matter. ** He even composes splendid lyrics on the lives of all the most famous men of the past. Surely a man who is such an intense admirer of the virtue of others must know how to exemplify a crowd of virtues in his own person. Lucius Silanus quite deserved the honour that has been paid to him, and Capito in seeking to immortalise his memory has immortalised his own quite as much. For it is not more honourable and distinguished to have a statue of one's own in the forum of the Roman People than to be the author of someone else's statue being placed there. Farewell.

[Note: L. Junius Silanus Torquatus, Nero's victim in 65 A.D. ]

[Note: Even under Trajan it would not have been allowable to erect statues in public to anti-imperialists.]

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

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