INTRODUCTION Plutarch’s essay on the Fortune of the Romans , like the following essays, is very plainly an epideictic oration. Where and when it was delivered, or whether it was ever delivered at all, we have no means of ascertaining. Hartman feels very sure that it was delivered to a Roman audience in the early days of Plutarch’s sojourn at Rome, and was intended to commend the speaker to other Romans besides his personal friends there. The thesis that Fortune was responsible for the great Roman empire would hardly be pleasing to Romans, but Plutarch is careful to point out that the high character of many individual Romans also contributed to the Roman success. In fact the essay might well bear the double title of Fortune or Virtues , This name it actually does bear in seven (out of a total of about twenty-six) mss. as does the essay on Alexander. Plutarch was thoroughly familiar with the interpretations of Roman history then fashionable, and in this essay he gives a colourful sketch of as much as will serve his purpose. Much that is here may also be found elsewhere in Plutarch’s writings. The essay comes to a somewhat abrupt conclusion, and many have thought it unfinished; the same is true of the essays immediately following. One may wonder whether a time limit was set for these orations, as in the courts at Athens where the time allowed was measured by the water-clock or clepsydra. We may note, however, that these orations are of quite unequal length. The text is fairly good, and the majority of the ms. mistakes have been corrected by the various editors and commentators. The essay is No. 175 in Lamprias’s list of Plutarch’s works. Virtue and Fortune, who have often engaged in many great contests, are now engaging each other in the present contest, which is the greatest of all; for in this they are striving for a decision regarding the hegemony of Rome, to determine whose work it is and which of them created such a mighty power. For to her who is victorious this will be no slight testimonial, but rather a defence against accusation. For Virtue is accused of being a fair thing, but unprofitable; Fortune of being a thing inconstant, but good. Virtue’s labours, they say, are fruitless. Fortune’s gifts untrustworthy. Who, then, will not declare, when Rome shall have been added to the achievements of one of the contestants, either that Virtue is a most profitable thing if she has done such good to good men, or that Good Fortune is a thing most steadfast if she has already preserved for so long a time that which she has bestowed? The poet Ion Cf. Moralia , 717 b. in his prose works observes that Fortune is a thing very dissimilar to Wisdom, and yet she becomes the creator of things very similar: they both bring increase and added honours to men, they lead them on to high repute, to power, to dominion. What need to be tedious by enumerating the many examples? Even Nature herself, who creates and produces all things for us, some think to be Fortune, others Wisdom. Wherefore our present discourse does, in a measure, bestow a fair and enviable dignity upon Rome, if we raise the question over her, even as we do over earth and sea, heaven and stars, whether she has come to her present state by Fortune or by Forethought. That is, Wisdom. I believe myself to be right in suspecting that, even if Fortune and Virtue are engaged in a direct and continual strife and discord with each other, yet, at least for such a welding together of dominion and power, it is likely that they suspended hostilities and joined forces; and by joining forces they co-operated in completing this most beautiful of human works. Even as Plato Timaeus , 28 b, 31 b-32 b. asserts that the entire universe arose from fire and earth as the first and necessary elements, that it might become visible and tangible, earth contributing to it weight and stability, and fire contributing colour, form, and movement; but the medial elements, water and air, by softening and quenching the dissimilarity of both extremes, united them and brought about the composite nature of Matter through them; in this way, then, in my opinion, did Time lay the foundation for the Roman State and, With the help of God, so combine and join together Fortune and Virtue that, by taking the peculiar qualities of each, he might construct for all mankind a Hearth, in truth both holy and beneficent, a steadfast cable, a principle abiding for ever, an anchorage from the swell and drift, as Democritus Diels, Frag. der Vorsokratiker , ii. 88, Frag. b 148: cf. Moralia , 495 e. says, amid the shifting conditions of human affairs. For even as the physicists Cf. Moralia , 878 c-f; De Anima , i. 1 (Bernardakis, vol. vii. p. 1). assert that the world was in ancient days not a world nor were the atoms willing to coalesce and mix together and bestow a universal form upon Nature, but, since the atoms, which were yet small and were being borne hither and thither, kept eluding and escaping incorporation and entanglement, and the larger, close-compacted atoms were already engaging in terrific struggles and confusion among themselves, there was pitching and tossing, and all things were full of destruction and drift and wreckage until such time as the earth, by acquiring magnitude from the union of the wandering atoms, somehow came to be permanently abiding herself, and provided a permanent abode in herself and round about herself for the other elements; even so, while the mightiest powers and dominions among men were being driven about as Fortune willed, and were continuing to collide one with another because no one held the supreme power, but all wished to hold it, the continuous movement, drift, and change of all peoples remained without remedy, until such time as Rome acquired strength and growth, and had attached to herself not only the nations and peoples within her own borders, but also royal dominions of foreign peoples beyond the seas, and thus the affairs of this vast empire gained stability and security, since the supreme government, which never knew reverse, was brought within an orderly and single cycle of peace; for though Virtue in every form was inborn in those who contrived these things, yet great Good Fortune was also joined therewith, as it will be possible to demonstrate as the discourse proceeds. And now, methinks, from my lofty look-out, as it were, from whence I survey the matter in hand, I can descry Fortune and Virtue advancing to be judged and tried one against the other. This scene is perhaps imitated from Xenophon, Memorabilia , ii. 1. 21-34: Prodicus’s Heracles and the contest of the goddesses, Virtue and Vice. The gait of Virtue is unhurried, her gaze unwavering; yet the flush of ambition lends to her countenance some intimation regarding the contest. She follows far behind Fortune, who makes great haste, and in a throng conducting her and guarding her person are Heroes slain in the conflict, wearing their blood-stained armour, Homer, Od. xi. 41. men befouled with wounds in front, dripping blood with sweat commingled, trampling upon battered spoils. Is it your desire that we inquire what men are these? They declare themselves to be the Fabricii, the Camilli, the Decii, the Cincinnati, the Fabii Maximi, the Claudii Marcelli, and the Scipios. I see also Gaius Marius showing anger at Fortune, and yonder Mucius Scaevola is exhibiting his burning hand and crying, Do you graciously attribute this also to Fortune? And Marcus Horatius, the hero of the battle by the Tiber, weighed down by Etruscan shafts and showing his limping limb, cries aloud from the deep whirl of the waters, Then am I also maimed by Fortune’s will? Of such character is Virtue’s choir that advances to the lists, Sturdy contender in arms, baleful to all that oppose. Bergk, Poet. Lyr. Graec. ii. p. 242, or Edmonds, Elegy and Iambus , i. p. 420; cf. Moralia , 334 d, infra , 640 a; Compar. of Demosthenes and Cicero , ii. (887 b); cf. 337 d, infra . But swift is the pace of Fortune, bold is her spirit, and most vaunting her hopes; she outstrips Virtue and is close at hand. She does not raise herself in the air on light pinions, nor advance poised on tip-toe above a globe, in a precarious and hesitant posture, and then depart from sight. But even as the Spartans say that Aphroditê, as she crossed the Eurotas, put aside her mirrors and ornaments and her magic girdle, and took a spear and shield, adorning herself to please Lycurgus, even so Fortune, when she had deserted the Persians and Assyrians, had flitted lightly over Macedonia, and had quickly shaken off Alexander, made her way through Egypt and Syria, conveying kingships here and there; and turning about, she would often exalt the Carthaginians. But when she was approaching the Palatine and crossing the Tiber, it appears that she took off her wings, stepped out of her sandals, and abandoned her untrustworthy and unstable globe. This is the Fortuna of Horace, Carmina , i. 35; cf. Dio Chrysostom, Oration , lxiii. (p. 591 c-d); Galen, Protrepticus , 2. Thus did she enter Rome, as with intent to abide, and in such guise is she present to-day, as though ready to meet her trial. For stubborn is she not, as Pindar Pindar, Frags. 39-41 (ed. Christ), or Bergk, Poet. Lyr. Graec. i. p. 382. says, Nor is the rudder double that she plies ; but rather is she The sister of Good Order and Persuasion, and The daughter of Foresight, as Alcman Bergk, Poet. Lyr. Graec. iii. p. 58, Alcman, no. 62; or Edmonds, Lyra Graeca , i. p. 90. describes her lineage. And she holds that celebrated Horn of Plenty in her hand, filled not with fruits of everlasting bloom, but as many as are the products of the whole earth and of all the seas, rivers, mines, and harbours, these does she pour forth in unstinted abundance. Not a few splendid and distinguished men are seen in her company: Numa Pompilius from the Sabine country and Priscus from Tarquinii, whom as adventitious and foreign kings she set upon the throne of Romulus; and Aemilius Paulus, leading back his army without a wound An exaggeration; 100 were killed: cf. Life of Aemilius Paulus , chap. xxi. (266 e); Livy, xliv. 42. from Perseus and the Macedonians, triumphing for a tearless victory, magnifies Fortune. There magnifies her also the aged Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus, Cf. Cicero, De Finibus , v. 27 (82); Tusculan Disp. i. 35 (85); Velleius Paterculus, i. 11. 7; Valerius Maximus, vii. 1. 1; Pliny, Natural History , vii. 13. 59; 44. 142. borne to his grave by four sons of consular rank, Quintus Baliaricus, Lucius Diadematus, That is, Vittatus. Marcus Metellus, Gaius Caprarius, and by two sons-in-law of consular rank, and by grandsons made distinguished by illustrious deeds and offices. Aemilius Scaurus, a novus homo , Not literally true; he was of the gens Aemilia ( cf. Cicero, Pro Murena , 7 (16)); but his father was engaged in the charcoal trade, and he had to fight his way as thought he had been a novus homo . was raised by her from a humble station and a humbler family to be enrolled as the first man of the Senate, Princeps senatus . Cornelius Sulla she took up and elevated from the embraces of his mistress, Nicopolis, Life of Sulla , chap. ii. (452 b-c). and designated him for a monarchy and dictatorship which ranked far above the Cimbrian triumphs and the seven consulships of Marius. Sulla used openly to declare himself, together with his exploits, to be the adopted child of Fortune, loudly asserting in the words of Sophocles’ Oedipus, Oedipus Tyrannus , 1080. And Fortune’s son I hold myself to be. In the Latin tongue he was called Felix, Life of Sulla , chap. xxxiv. (473 d-e); Appian, Civil Wars , i. 97; Diodorus, xxxviii. 15; Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum , vii. nos. 264, 372, 413 (= Dittenberger, Sylloge 3 , 747, 752). but for the Greeks he wrote his name thus: Lucius Cornelius Sulla Epaphroditus. That is, Venustus . And the trophies at my home in Chaeroneia and those of the Mithridatic Wars are thus inscribed, quite appropriately; for not Night, as Menander Koch, Com. Att. Frag. iii. 209, Menander, no. 739, or Menander , ed. Allinson (in L.C.L.), p. 528: cf. Moralia , 654 d; scholia on Theocritus , ii. 10. has it, but Fortune has the greater share in Aphroditê. .