Quid tibi fecimus tale ut nobis facias male
Appellamus regem quia nostram fecimus legem.
The elder and more advanced students spoke in rhyming hexameters:—
Non nobis pia spes fuerat cum sis novus hospes
Ut vetus in pejus transvertere tute velis jus.
CHAPTER IV.
THREE PERIODS OF ROMAN CLASSICAL LITERATURE—ITS ELEMENTS RUDE—ROMAN RELIGION—ETRUSCAN INFLUENCE—EARLY HISTORICAL MONUMENTS—FESCENNINE VERSES—FABULÆ ATELLANÆ—INTRODUCTION OF STAGE PLAYERS—DERIVATION OF SATIRE.
The era during which Roman classical literature commenced, arrived at perfection, and declined, may be conveniently divided into three periods. The first of these embraces its rise and progress, such traces as are discoverable of oral and traditional compositions, the rude elements of the drama, the introduction of Greek literature, and the cultivation of the national taste in accordance with this model, the infancy of eloquence, and the construction and perfection of comedy.
To this period the first five centuries of the republic may be considered as introductory; the groundwork and foundation were then being gradually laid on which the superstructure was built up; for, properly speaking, Rome had no literature until the conclusion of the first Punic war.[[87]]
Independently therefore of these 500 years, this period consists of 160 years extending from the time when Livius Andronicus flourished[[88]] to the first appearance of Cicero in public life.[[89]]
The second period ends with the death of Augustus.[[90]] It comprehends the age of which Cicero is the representative, as the most accomplished orator, philosopher, and prose writer of his times, as well as that of Augustus, which is commonly called the golden age of Latin poetry.