2020
DOI: 10.1086/709977
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Os columnatum Again: Plautus Miles Gloriosus 211

Abstract: As Palaestrio works to formulate a plan, Periplectomenus looks on and describes the sequence of physical gestures through which the wily slave manifests his mental exertions. It is not difficult for the modern reader to imagine the sight gags that might have accompanied this little monologue, but Periplectomenus' reaction to one pose presents its own interpretative challenges (Plaut. Mil. 209-212): 1 ecce autem aedificat: columnam mento suffigit suo. apage, non placet profecto mihi illaec aedificatio; nam os c… Show more

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“…Latin-speaking) poeta.74 Verrius would probably have been aware of more than the twenty-one known plays of Plautus, so (if the reading does go back to him) it is not necessarily the passage in the Miles in particular he was thinking of, though the linguistic69 AsJocelyn (1969) 42 points out, the exile story may be 'a post-Varronian guess based on the story of the exchange of verses'.70 The word os signals outspokenness in Plautus at Mil. 189: see also Ter.Germany (2019) 71, andGallia (2020) all find the link credible. Gallia (2020) 722 n. 3 points out that much of the scepticism has been based on a rigidly schematic understanding of the differences between Old and New Comedy.…”
mentioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Latin-speaking) poeta.74 Verrius would probably have been aware of more than the twenty-one known plays of Plautus, so (if the reading does go back to him) it is not necessarily the passage in the Miles in particular he was thinking of, though the linguistic69 AsJocelyn (1969) 42 points out, the exile story may be 'a post-Varronian guess based on the story of the exchange of verses'.70 The word os signals outspokenness in Plautus at Mil. 189: see also Ter.Germany (2019) 71, andGallia (2020) all find the link credible. Gallia (2020) 722 n. 3 points out that much of the scepticism has been based on a rigidly schematic understanding of the differences between Old and New Comedy.…”
mentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Beta (2014 205 reads another double entendre in Metellus' line (malum = apple). 64 Notably Wiseman (1998) 39, Boyle (2006Beta (2014); Germany (2019); Gallia (2020). Crawford (1996) 40, citing Momigliano (1942, sees the story of Naevius' prosecution at the hands of the Metelli as 'still the best explanation' for the connection between the legal possibility enshrined in the XII Tables and the story of Naevius spending time 'in detention awaiting trial' and dying in exile, though, he argues, the death penalty would not have been implemented.…”
Section: Dabunt Malum Metelli Naeuio Poetaementioning
confidence: 99%