[55] (1) Haec quanta sint et cuius modī, Maximē, quantusque campus calumniīs hōc Aemiliānī trāmite aperiātur, quantīque sūdōrēs innocentibus hōc ūnō sūdāriolō adferantur, possum equidem plūribus disputāre, (2) sed faciam quod īnstituī: etiam quod nōn necesse est cōnfitēbor et interrogātus ab Aemiliānō respondēbō. (3) Interrogās, Aemiliāne, quid in sūdāriō habuerim. At ego, quanquam omnīnō positum ūllum sūdārium meum in bibliothēcā Pontiānī possim negāre (4) ac, sī maximē fuisse concēdam, tamen habeam dīcere nihil in eō involūtum fuisse – (5) quae sī dīcam, neque testimōniō aliquō neque argūmentō revincar; nēmō est enim quī attigerit, ūnus lībertus, ut ais, quī vīderit – (6) tamen, inquam, per mē licet fuerit refertissimum. Sīc enim, sī vīs, arbitrāre, ut ōlim Vlixī sociī thēsaurum repperisse arbitrātī sunt, cum utrem ventōsissimum manticulārentur. (7) Vīn dīcam, cuius modī illās rēs in sūdāriō obvolūtās laribus Pontiānī commendārim? Mōs tibi gerētur.
(8) Sacrōrum plēraque initia in Graeciā participāvī. Eōrum quaedam signa et monumenta trādita mihi ā sacerdōtibus sēdulō cōnservō. Nihil īnsolitum, nihil incognitum dīcō. Vel ūnīus Līberī patris mystae quī adestis, scītis quid domī conditum celētis et absque omnibus profānīs tacitē venerēminī. (9) At ego, ut dīxī, multiiuga sacra et plūrimōs rītūs et variās cērimōniās studiō vērī et officiō ergā deōs didicī. (10) Nec hoc ad tempus compōnō, sed abhinc fermē triennium est cum, prīmīs diēbus quibus Oeam vēneram, publīce disserēns dē Aesculāpiī maiestāte eadem ista prae mē tulī et quot sacra nōssem percēnsuī. (11) Ea disputātiō celebrātissima est, vulgō legitur, in omnibus manibus versātur, nōn tam fācundiā meā quam mentiōne Aesculāpiī religiōsīs Oeēnsibus commendāta.
(12) Dīcite aliquis, sī quī forte meminit, huius locī prīncipium. (...) Audīsne, Maxime, multōs suggerentēs? Immō, ecce etiam liber offertur. Recitārī ipsa haec iubēbō, quoniam ostendis hūmānissimō vultū audītiōnem tē istam nōn gravārī. (...)
notes
I could simply deny that there was such a napkin and that there was something magical in it. But I will oblige you by discussing these matter of Greek religion which I am familiar with. In fact, I gave a public speech about Asclepius three years ago which many people here have read. Let it be read aloud now.
(1)
Haec: crimina, the ones against sorcery which Apuleius imagines proliferating rapidly if his accusers are allowed to charge him with sorcery because of something that might have been inside a napkin.
quanta sint: this and the following indirect questions depend on possum … disputāre, below.
trāmite: "path," i.e., "line" of questioning, a bold metaphor.
sūdōrēs: "trouble," "worry," untranslatable wordplay with sūdāriolō, "napkin."
plūribus: supply verbīs: "at greater length."
(2)
quod īnstituī: supply facere: "what I set out to do," LS instituo II.E.
quod nōn necesse est: "(that) which I need not (concede)," direct object of confitēbor.
(3)
positum: supply esse, indirect statement after negāre below.
ūllum sūdārium meum: "any napkin of mine," subject of positum (esse).
(4)
maximē fuisse: supply sūdārium positum: "that indeed a napkin had been so placed." For maximē as an affirmation (opposite of minimē), see LS maxime B.2 (at the end of the magnus entry).
sī ... concēdam: present subjunctive in a future less vivid conditional.
habeam: "would be able," LS habeo II.A.2.
(5)
quae: connecting relative, referring back to both the admission of the napkin and the denial of any contents therein (55.4).
sī dīcam: present subjunctive in a future less vivid conditional.
revincar: "I would be (able to be) proven wrong."
attigerit ... vīderit: "touched ... saw (the napkin)," perfect subjunctive in a relative clauses of characteristic with an indefinite antecedent (AG 534).
ūnus lībertus: supply est. "there is (only) one freedman."
(6)
per mē: "of my own volition," "through my own agency," LS per II.B.
licet: "it is permitted that," "I will grant that," followed by plain subjunctive (no ut), which is classical (LS licet I.δ).
fuerit refertissimum: supply sūdārium as a subject.
Sīc ... arbitrāre: deponent imperative: "imagine that's how it was" i.e., packed very full of stuff.
repperisse: supply sē (i.e., Ulixī sociī) as a subject of this indirect statement dependent upon arbitrātī sunt: "they imagined that they had discovered."
utrem ventōsissimum: Aeolus's bag of winds, Odyssey 10.19-55. Odysseus' men thought the bag was full of treasure.
manticulārentur: a rare and poetic verb formed on the noun manticula, a purse or wallet. An ancient lexicographer explains that it means "to steal," after people who grope around in other people's purses (Festus, De verborum significatione 133, manticulari dicebantur, qui furandi gratia manticulas attrectabant. inde poetae pro dolose quid agendo usi sunt eo verbo).
(7)
Vīn: Vīsne.
dīcam: supply ut, "that I should say." With vī(s)n(e): "Do you want me to say?"
cuius modī illās rēs: "what sort of things those were which …."
commendārim: commendāverim; "deposited with," + dat.
Mōs tibi gerētur: "I shall humor you." See LS mos I: morem alicui gerere = to do the will of a person, to humor, gratify, obey him.
(8)
initia: secret sacred rites, sacred mysteries, to which only the initiated were admitted, LS initium II.
Eōrum: sacrōrum.
monumenta: "tokens," "souvenirs."
Vel ūnīus Līberī patris mystae: vel = "for instance" (OLD vel 4.b), and unus lists one of an implied number (OLD unus 9.b): "For instance, merely take the initiates of Liber pater" (Jones), not to speak of the other gods with initiatory cults.
Līberī patris: Liber was an Italic-Roman god of nature, fertility, and wine, equated with Dionysus.
domī: locative, construe with conditum: "hidden at home."
absque: "apart from," "away from."
profānīs: "the uninitiated" who are not allowed to see the sacred items.
(9)
studiō vērī: "with a passion for truth (about the universe)."
officiō: "dutifulness," "reverence," OLD officium 3.d. Normally the word designates an act, not an attitude.
(10)
Nec hoc ad tempus compōnō: "I am not making this (argument) up on the spot" (Jones), LS compono II.A.1.γ.
abhinc ... cum: "from the time when."
prīmīs diēbus quibus: "in the very first days on which."
Oeam: accusative of place to which, "to Oea."
publīce disserēns: "declaiming publicly," discussing in a public speech." Apuleius acted as a sophist, a lecturer or declaimer of a type familiar in the cities of the Roman Empire in this period. See S.J. Harrison, Apuleius: A Latin Sophist (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000).
eadem ista: "these same facts (about myself)," that he was dedicated to the cultivation of religious mysteries.
prae mē tulī: "I openly declared," a Ciceronian phrase often combined with a verb of speaking.
quot sacra nōssem: "every rite I was familiar with," LS quot II. nō(vi)ssem.
(11)
disputātiō: "discussion," rather than a debate (OLD disputatio c).
vulgō legitur, in omnibus manibus versātur: the speech was published in written form and found a wide audience. See Tacitus, Dialogus de oratoribus 21.2: at hercule in omnium studiosorum manibus versantur accusationes quae in Vatinium inscribuntur.
(12)
Dīcite aliquis: after this sentence we are to understand that several people present speak up with the beginning of the passage in Apuleius's speech.
sī quī: sī aliquī. The indefinitine quī can be either singular or plural after sī.
huius locī: "of this passage," about Aesculapius, from his published speech.
suggerentēs: "supplying (the prīncipium)."
Immō: "even more than that."
Recitārī: at the end of this sentence we are to understand that a servant of the court reads out the relevant passage from Apuleius's speech.
iubēbō: "I shall ask."
ostendis: "you show that," introducing the indirect statement tē ... nōn grāvārī. tē = Maximus, the judge in the case.
hūmānissimō vultū: "by your most patient expression," LS humanus II.A.
audītiōnem tē istam nōn gravārī: "that you have no objection to hearing them" (Jones). audītiō = "recital," as at Florida 16.
Vocabulary
(1)
cuiusmodī: of what kind/sort/nature soever
Māximus –ī m.: cognomen of Claudius Maximus, judge in the case
calumnia –ae f.: the bringing of a false accusation
Aemiliānus –ī m.: Sicinius Aemilianus, principal accuser, uncle of Sicinius Pontianus and Sicinius Pudens
trāmes –itis m.: a crossway; path or track
sūdor sūdōris m.: sweat; trouble, worry, fatigue
innocēns –ntis: innocent, harmless
sūdāriolum –ī n.: a little handkerchief
equidem: indeed, certainly; for my part
disputō disputāre disputāvī disputātus: to discuss, debate, argue
(3)
sūdārium –ī n.: handkerchief, napkin
omnīnō: entirely, altogether [after negatives/with numerals => at all/in all]
bibliothēca –ae f.: library
Pontiānus –ī m.: Sicinius Pontianus: Roman knight, elder son of Sicinius Amicus and Aemilia Pudentilla, now dead
(4)
involvō –ere –volvī –volūtus: cover, wrap up
(5)
testimōnium –ī n.: testimony; evidence
argūmentum –ī n.: proof, evidence, argument
revincō –vincere –vīcī –victum: to refute, disprove
attingō attingere attigī attāctus: to touch
lībertus –ī m.: ex–slave, freedman
(6)
refertus –a –um: crammed, bursting with
Ulixēs –ī m.: Odysseus, son of Laertes, king of Ithaca
thēsaurus –ī m.: a treasure
ūter ūtris m.: a bag of hide, leathern bottle, vessel of skin, skin
ventōsus –a –um: windy, stormy; fleet as the wind (> ventus)
manticulor manticulārī manticulātus sum: to steal
(7)
obvolvō obvolvere obvoluī obvolūtum: to cover completely
lār laris m.: lar, household god; a dwelling or home
Pontiānus –ī m.: Sicinius Pontianus: Roman knight, elder son of Sicinius Amicus and Aemilia Pudentilla, now dead
commendō commendāre commendāvī commendātus: to entrust
(8)
Graecia –ae f.: Greece
participō participāre participāvī participātus: to participate in
monumentum –ī n.: token, souvenir, memento
sēdulō: carefully
cōnservō cōnservāre cōnservāvī cōnservātus: to keep, preserve
īnsolitus –a –um: unfamiliar, strange
incognitus –a –um: unknown, unnoticed, unperceived; not understood
Līber Līberī m.: Bacchus, Dionysus; Liber Pater, an Italic-Roman god of nature, fertility, and wine
mysta –ae m.: an initiate of secret rites
cēlō celāre celāvī celātus: to hide, conceal
absque: apart from +abl.
profānī -ōrum m. pl.: the uninitiated
tacitē: quietly, silently
veneror venerārī venerātus sum: to venerate
(9)
multijugus, -a -um: yoked many together; manifold, of many sorts
rītus –ūs m.: a form, rite; custom, manner
cērimōnia –ae f.: a religious usage, sacred rite, religious ceremony
ergā: towards, opposite (friendly) + acc.
(10)
abhinc: before now, henceforth, hence, hereafter
fermē: nearly, almost, about; (with negatives) hardly ever
triennium –ī n.: three-year period
Oea –ae f.: Oea, a town of Africa, now Tripoli
disserō –serere –seruī –situm: to give a discourse, lecture
Aesculāpius –ī m.: Aesculapius, god of medicine
māiestās –ātis f.: greatness; majesty, dignity, authority, power (> magnus, maius)
prae: before, in front of +abl.
quot: how many; as many as (indeclinable)
percēnseō –cēnsēre –cēnsuī: to review, enumerate, list
(11)
disputātiō –ōnis f.: public speech, discourse
versō versāre versāvī versātus: to keep turning/going round
fācundia –ae f.: eloquence, fluency, command of language
mentiō mentiōnis f.: mention
religiōsus –a –um: religious, reverent, superstitious
Oeēnsis –e: of or belonging to Oea
commendō commendāre commendāvī commendātus: to entrust, give in trust
(12)
Māximus –ī m.: cognomen of Claudius Maximus, judge in the case
suggerō –ere –gessī –gestus: furnish; supply
immō: on the contrary; indeed, in fact, even more
recitō recitāre recitāvī recitātus: to read aloud, recite
audītiō –ōnis f.: a hearing, listening to
gravōr gravārī gravātus sum: to take badly, be annoyed at + acc.