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A Companion to the Political Culture of the Roman Republic


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pushed to the backstage, and the dominant component of such rhetoric would be Roman. The use of the plural in referring to ‘Bruti’ and ‘Cassii’, alluding to the Roman senators Brutus (Marcus Junius Brutus, 85–42 BCE) and Cassius (Gaius Cassius Longinus, d. 42 BCE) who led the conspiracy to murder Julius Caesar when he overthrew the Republic, suggested at this early point of the conflict what would become obvious in years to come: the belief that America would not only repeat Roman grandeur, but would indeed surpass the empires of the past with its native ‘Romans’. An Elegy of the Times, also published in 1774, invited its readers to ‘meet the Fathers of this western clime; Nor names more noble graced the rolls of fame, When Spartan firmness brav’d the wrecks of time, or Rome’s bold virtues fann’d th’ heroic flame’ (Trumbull 1774: 11). Once again this patriotic poet envisioned America in a succession of ancient and glorious polities. Owing its greatness to its ‘fathers’, the American-Romans who equalled the virtue of the patriots of old, America would rise and eventually it, too, would ennoble the wrecks of time.

      Patriots commonly looked backward to antiquity to evaluate their present achievements and prospects. The ‘poet of the Revolution’ Philip Freneau asked, after prophesying that America would become a new Greece or Rome, ‘how could I weep that we were born so soon,/In the beginning of more happy times!’ (Freneau 1772: 21). The ‘more happy times’ to which Freneau referred were those when Americans would equal the Romans. John Adams referred to such an epoch in a 1776 letter to George Wythe (described by Thomas Jefferson as a ‘Cato without the avarice of the Roman’): ‘You and I, my dear friend’, Adams wrote, ‘have been sent into life at a time when the greatest lawgivers of antiquity would have wished to have lived’ (Richard 1994: 57, 83). Similarly, the Continental Army’s general Charles Lee reflected, again during the year of Independence, ‘I us’d to regret not being thrown into the world in the glamorous third or fourth century [BCE] of the Romans; but now I am thoroughly reconcil’d to my lot’ (Richard 1994: 84).

      5.5 American Catones

      Sewall presented in the Epilogue a Manichean worldview in which he contrasted ‘heroic fortitude’ and ‘patriotic truth’ with ‘tyrannic rage’ and ‘boundless ambition’; in the current battle, Britannia occupied the role of the wicked, while ‘what now gleams with dawning ray, at home, Once blaz’d… at ROME’ (Sewall 1778). Sewall thus identified the protagonists of his epilogue and established a historical link between America and Rome, a ‘ray’, which once blazed in Rome and currently dawned in America. Like the Roman Senate, the American ‘senate’, the Continental Congress (the ‘aristocratic’ branch of its successor legislature soon to be significantly named the United States Senate), had armed a ‘virtuous few’, to fight the ‘British Caesar’. America has found a worthy candidate to re-enact the Catonian role in the face of a British Caesar: ‘For a CATO’ she has armed ‘a WASHINGTON.’ The identification of the two leading antagonists marked the beginning of an elaborate effort to assign Romans to contemporary American figures.