Plautus Asinaria
EN Lat Orig
Prologue
Hoc agite sultis, spectatores, nunciam,
quae quidem mihi atque vobis res vertat bene
gregique huíc et dominis atque conductoribus.
face nunciam tu, praeco, omnem auritum poplum.
5 age nunc reside, cave modo ne gratiis.
nunc quid processerim huc et quid mihi voluerim
dicam: ut sciretis nomen huius fabulae;
nam quod ad argumentum attinet, sane brevest.
nunc quod me dixi velle vobis dicere,
10 dicam: húic nomen graece Onagost fabulae;
Demophilus scripsit, Maccus vortit barbare;
Asinariam volt esse, si per vos licet.
inest lepos ludusque in hac comoedia,
ridicula res est. date benigne operam mihi,
15 ut vos, ut alias, pariter nunc Mars adiuvet.
Tap any Latin word to look it up
An open-access project
Leo 1895
Leo, Weidmann, 1895 · 1895
The Editor

Friedrich Leo (1851–1914) was one of the greatest Latin scholars of the imperial German university system. Professor at Göttingen from 1889, he combined textual criticism with literary history to an unusual degree. His Geschichte der römischen Literatur (1913) was a landmark work, and his editions of Plautus (1895–1896) and Seneca's tragedies set new standards. Leo's Plautine scholarship was transformative: he was the first to systematically analyse Plautus's metrical practice, using it as a tool for detecting interpolations and establishing the text.

About This Edition

Leo's edition of Plautus, published by Weidmann in Berlin (2 vols., 1895–1896), represented a dramatic advance over previous editions. Leo was the first editor to take full account of the Ambrosian palimpsest (Codex Ambrosianus, 4th–5th century), the oldest witness to Plautus's text, which had been imperfectly read by earlier scholars. His text is characterised by rigorous metrical analysis and a willingness to identify passages he considered interpolated. W. M. Lindsay's OCT (1904–1905) drew heavily on Leo's work while sometimes differing on individual readings.

Tap any Latin word to look it up