Dream of Scipio

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Scipio Africanus the Elder, who in Cicero's story appears to his grandson and tells him of the universe and his destiny.

The Dream of Scipio (Latin, Somnium Scipionis), written by Cicero, describes a fictional dream vision of the Roman general Scipio Aemilianus, set two years before he commanded at the destruction of Carthage in 146 BC.

Upon his arrival in Africa, Scipio Aemilianus is visited by his dead grandfather (by adoption), Scipio Africanus, hero of the Second Punic War. He finds himself looking down upon Carthage "from a high place full of stars, shining and splendid". His future is foretold by his grandfather, and great stress is placed upon the loyal duty of the Roman soldier, who will as a reward after death "inhabit...that circle that shines forth among the stars which you have learned from the Greeks to call the Milky Way". Nevertheless, Scipio Aemilianus sees that Rome is an insignificant part of the earth, which is itself dwarfed by the stars. The planetary spheres are enumerated with references to Pythagorean thought and the idea of the Music of the Spheres. Then the climatic belts of the earth are observed, from the snow fields to the deserts, and there is discussion of the nature of the Divine, the soul and virtue, from the Stoic point of view.

The Dream of Scipio appears in the sixth book of Cicero's partly lost De re publica, (On the Republic), a treatise on the history, laws, and polity of the Roman republic.

Relation to other Works

The Universe, the Earth in the centre, surrounded by the seven planets within the zodiacal signs. Image from a 12th century manuscript of Macrobius' Commentarii in Somnium Scipionis (Parchment, 50 ff.; 23.9 × 14 cm; Southern France). Date: ca. 1150. Source: Copenhagen, Det Kongelige Bibliotek, ms. NKS 218 4°.

The tale is modelled on The Myth of Er in Plato's Republic.1 Although the story of Er records a near-death experience, while the journey of Scipio's "disembodied soul" takes place in a dream, both give examples of belief in astral projection.2.

Macrobius' Commentary upon Scipio's Dream was known to the sixth-century philosopher Boethius, and was later valued throughout the Middle Ages as a primer of cosmology. The work assumed the astrological cosmos formulated by Claudius Ptolemy. Chretien de Troyes referred to Macrobius' work in his first Arthurian romance, Erec, and it was a model for Dante's account of heaven and hell. Chaucer referred to the work in The Nun's Priest's Tale and especially in the Parlement of Foules.

The composer Mozart, at the age of fifteen, wrote a short opera entitled Il sogno di Scipione (K. 126) based upon Scipio Aemilianus's inter-planetary journey through the cosmos.

References

  1. ^ Patrick V. Reid, Readings in Western Religious Thought: The Ancient World, Paulist Press 1987, page 175
  2. ^ Julian Palley, Bécquer's "Disembodied Soul", University of Pennsylvania Press 1979

External links

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  • This page was last modified on 2 January 2009, at 22:49.

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