(Redirected from Publius Pomponius Secundus)'Publius Pomponius Secundus' was a Roman general and tragic
poet who lived during the reigns of
Tiberius,
Caligula and
Claudius.
Biographical details
He was on intimate terms with
the elder Pliny, who wrote a biography of him (now lost). The chief authority for his life is
Tacitus, according to whom Secundus was a man of refinement and brilliant intellect. His friendship with
Sejanus and his brother made him politically suspect, and he only escaped death by remaining practically a prisoner in his own brother's house until the accession of Caligula.
During his enforced retirement he composed tragedies, which were put on the stage during the reign of Claudius. In
AD 50 he distinguished himself against the
Chatti and obtained the honour of the triumphal insignia.
Quintilian asserts that he was far superior to any writer of tragedies he had known, and
Tacitus expresses a high opinion of his literary abilities. Secundus devoted much attention to the niceties of grammar and style, on which he was recognized as an authority. Only a few lines of his work remain, some of which belong to the tragedy ''
Aeneas''.
References
★
Otto Ribbeck, ''Geschichte der römischen Dichtung'', iii. (1892). and ''Tragicorum Romanorum fragmenta'' (1897)
★ Tacitus, ''
Annals'', v. 8, x. 13, xi. 28
★ Quintilian, ''Inst. Orat.'' x. I. 98
★ Pliny, ''Nat. Hist.'' xiv. 5
★
Martin Schanz, ''Geschichte der römischen Literatur'', ii. 2 (1900)
★
Wilhelm Siegmund Teuffel, ''History of Roman Literature'' (Eng. trans., 1900), 284, 7.
★