The Golden Pig 4
The Golden Pig 4
The Golden Pig 4
by Apuleius of Madaura
A novel set in ltaly, the Roman provinces, and Greece in the latter half of the
second century ce; first published in Latin (as Metamorphoses) in the second
century ce,
SYNOPSIS
Lucius, a lusty young Greek under Roman rule, is accidentally transformed into a
donkey when his experimentation with magic goes awry. In animal form, he passes
from owner to owner, undergoing some strange and dangerous experiences before being
rescued by an Egyptian goddess.
Apuleius was born in the 120s ce to prosperous parents in Madaura, a city in Roman
North Africa. He wrote in Latin, delivered speeches in both Greek and Latin, and
probably also spoke Punic, the language of that area during the pre-Roman empire of
Carthage. His birth and multilingual abilities raise some still hotly debated
questions—What was his ethnicity? Was he of Italian or African descent? Did he
identify with his local African origins or strive to become thoroughly Roman?
Apuleius traveled widely, studying in Carthage, Athens, and Rome. Back in North
Africa, he married Pudentilla, the wealthy, widowed mother of a school friend, who
was considerably older than Apuleius. Suspecting his motives, her former in-laws
charged him with seducing Pudentilla through magic. Apuleius, a legal advocate, was
equipped to de-fend himself. He was also a skilled public speaker, a student of
natural science, and a reputable philosopher in the tradition of Plato. In his
spiritual life, Apuleius became an initiate of several mystery religions (Greco-
Roman cults that promised a blissful afterlife) and a priest of the imperial cult
(devoted to the health and the security of Roman emperors and their families). Most
importantly, Apuleius wrote—mainly non-fiction. His works include philosophical
treatises, the court speech in which he defended himself from Pudentilla’s in-laws
(the Apologia), extracts from his public orations (the Florida), and a fictional
work. Although Metamorphoses is the title on the work’s earliest surviving manu-
scripts, according to the fifth-century bishop Augustine, Apuleius himself called
it Asinus Aureus, or The Golden Ass (using golden to refer to excellence of
character). Apuleius’ adult life coincided with the growing social and economic
prominence of the provinces and elite provincial families in the Roman Empire, and
The Golden Ass reflects this fact. A novel of some-times comical adventure, it
focuses on life in Greece under Roman rule.
Rome ruled each of its provinces through a governor, whose main duties were to keep
the province “peaceful,” that is, out of foreign hands and free from dissidents,
insurgents, and criminals. In the words of one ancient authority, a governor
“should search out persons guilty of sacrilege, brigands, kidnappers and thieves
and punish them according to their offences” (Ulpian in Freeman, p. 503). The
empire selected certain cities as assize towns, that is, towns where legal cases
were heard. Mostly the cases involved small-scale crimes. A provincial governor
would rely on local magistrates to bring the accused before him. They would
cooperate with the Roman authori-ties to enforce the imperial laws. With
cooperation, recognized the magistrates (and others in the local elite, including
army veterans), came privileges—control of the local government, the food supply,
various properties, and more.
Society in the provinces was comprised of two basic classes: the honestiores (”more
honorable people”) and the humiliores (”humbler people”). Slaves were another case
altogether. Not part of the humiliores, they were thought of as property rather
than people. The honestiores class, made up of the local elite, received
preferential treatment. In criminal cases, their hearings were the first to be
conducted, and if convicted, their sentencing involved fines or, at worst, exile,
not bodily punishment or death. In contrast, though nominally free and sometimes of
citizen status, the criminals who were humiliores suffered penalties such as
torture and crucifixion. Often the accused from this class were even condemned
without a proper hearing. A governor could judge only so many cases, and, again,
the rich came first. Only in fiction, says one historian, such as “The Golden
Ass... would a poisoned woman get instant access to justice” (Goodman, p. 193).
The “justice” meted out to slaves was especially harsh. It is impossible to arrive
at an accurate number of slaves in the whole of the Roman Empire at any period. It
has been conjectured that, during the reign of Augustus (31 bce-14 ce), in the
century before Apuleius, the empire had 10 million slaves in a population of
roughly 50 million. In Italy itself, one in every three persons was probably a
slave (Madden). These figures, while speculative, are likely not to have varied
significantly by Apuleius’ time. Romans enslaved war captives, abandoned children,
and the kidnapped and then put them to work in various capacities. There were slave
road builders, construction workers, factory laborers, cooks, house cleaners,
secretaries, miners, barbers, seamstresses, and farmhands. In some cases, the
captives looked like their captors and were just as educated, but, in society’s
eyes, slavery robbed them of any social or moral status, regardless of their
talents and skills. Slaves were commonly subjected to floggings and sexual
assaults. For a capital crime (adultery, treason, or murder) they would be
crucified or burned alive. One Roman custom called for all the slaves in a
household to be murdered if one of them had killed their master.
Along with acceptance of Roman customs came acknowledgement of and reverence for
the Roman emperor, as indicated by the spread of the imperial cult. Discouraging
inhabitants from worshipping a living emperor, officials advised them to instead
worship Roma (the divine spirit of Rome) and to pray for the continued good health
of the living emperor. It became common after 44 bce (the murder of Julius Caesar)
to conceive of the deceased emperor as joining the ranks of the gods, and the
inhabitants in Asia Minor went so far as to worship the living emperor as a god. A
comic episode of The Golden Ass provides a striking illustration of how revered and
feared the emperor was in the provinces. After the double misfortune of being
transformed into an ass and then abducted by bandits, the protagonist tries to
summon bystanders in an openair market to rescue him by invoking the name of the
emperor:
So when… we were passing through a largeish town with a busy market and a crowd all
round us, I tried to call on the august name of Caesar in my native Greek. I did
indeed produce a clear and convincing ‘O’, but the name ‘Caesar’ itself I couldn’t
manage. My discordant bray was not appreciated by the robbers, who laid into my
wretched hide from all sides…
The fact that Lucius, the protagonist, tries to rally Greek locals to his side this
way is a powerful testimony to the widespread acceptance of Rome’s emperor as “an
ever-present protector” (Millar, p. 66). In 77 ce, out of gratitude to the Roman
emperor Vespasian, who had donated desperately needed aid after a terrible
earthquake, Corinth went so far as to rename itself “the colony of Julius Flavius
Augustus Corinthiensis,” honoring Vespasian by invoking his family name, Flavius,
and his position as emperor, indicated by the name Augustus (means “venerable”).
During reconstruction, Corinth reorganized its city center so that its major
buildings could be dedicated to worship of the imperial cult, in the manner of many
other cities.
Greco-Roman religious cults that worshipped a deity through secret rites and
rituals were known as mystery religions. The name comes from the Greek mysterion,
or “secret thing,” a reference to the fact that these cults concentrated on
explaining the mystery of life and death. The ultimate object was union with the
divine and im-mortal life; thus, the cults concerned themselves with questions of
personal redemption, salvation, and the afterlife. Their focus on the individual,
both in this life and the hereafter, made mystery religions different from Greco-
Roman paganism, which emphasized stability and prosperity for the community, and
offered little hope for a happy afterlife. The possibilities of divine attention to
the problems of the individual in this life and of eternal bliss in the hereafter
were a strong draw.
A few mystery cults gained considerable followings in the empire, among them the
cult of the Egyptian goddess, Isis, and her divine hus-band Osiris (also known as
Serapis). Other popular cults were those of Orpheus, Bacchus (Greek Dionysus), and
the Persian Mithra. Already ancient by Roman times, these cults spread from Asia
Minor, Greece, and Egypt. Soldiers, mer-chants, slaves, and immigrants transported
their beliefs to every corner of the empire. They shared a few common attributes—a
set of secret practices, claims to mysterious knowledge about the universe and the
gods, and a complex, sometimes very costly initiation process for followers. The
time, trouble, and expenses were considered worth the privilege of entering into
the cult’s higher levels, which gave followers access to di-vine secrets and
greater intimacy with the divine. Since there was freedom of worship in the Roman
Empire, the religious cults were allowed to flourish as long as they did not have
anything to do with political insurrection. Sometimes an emperor even encouraged
the spread of a cult.
In real life, Isis attracted numerous followers. By the second century ce, the cult
had grown into one of the most popular religions in the Roman world. Isis was
conceived of as queen of nature, of the immortals, and of the dead, as universal
mother, and as single manifestation of all gods and goddesses. While Isis-worship
existed throughout the empire, she had important temples dedicated to her worship
in Rome and in Cenchreae, near Corinth, both of which are mentioned in The Golden
Ass.
To the ancients, the universe was a field of di-vine forces. Some of these forces
were known and could be harnessed by an established religious authority; others
could only be approached by an-other kind of specialist, one with the knowledge to
confront and manipulate them. What is called “magic” today was the manipulation of
divine powers to attain a private goal. There were some common features between
magicians and the fol-lowers of mystery cults. Magicians often used the language of
the mystery rites in their spells, and their rites too involved secrecy, complex
processes of initiation, and the goal of direct contact with the divine. But in
other respects magic diverged.
The empire established a couple of laws against magic. The first was part of the
Twelve Tables, a body of Roman laws written on bronze tablets in the mid-fifth
century bce. These laws guarded against magically removing or cursing someone’s
crops, in keeping with concerns of the predominantly agricultural society at the
time. Magic itself was not targeted; the use of magic to commit theft (of the
crops) was. In 81 bce Rome passed the second act—the Cornelian Law Concerning
Stabbers and Poisoners. Poisoning was a catchall category for violence committed by
means difficult or impossible to verify, including magic. In Apuleius’ own trial,
the accusation that he seduced Pudentilla by means of magic was likely treated
under the poisoning category of the Cornelian Law. Although physical violence was
probably not involved, the accusers thought he had compelled Pudentilla to make a
decision detrimental to themselves that she would not otherwise have made.
Whereas mystery cults maintained a public presence and remained highly conscious of
the need for governmental approval, magicians operated quite differently. The
mystery cults were ever mindful of the harsh measures imperial officials (the
magistrates) might take against a group considered hostile to Rome’s security. In
the first century bce, Rome had several times sup-pressed the Isis cult, perhaps
most famously when Emperor Augustus was preparing for war against Cleopatra of
Egypt (who considered her-self the incarnation of Isis). Magic, on the other hand,
was a solitary endeavor. Mindful of com-petition and of the air of authority that
secrecy lent to their art, magicians worked individually and kept their knowledge
private. Part of this knowledge was the alleged ability to transform people into
animals, long considered a feature of magic. Although technically a goddess, Circe
in the Odyssey (eighth century bce) turned mortals into swine. Herodotus’ Histories
(fifth century bce) records that magi, or Persian priests, could turn themselves
into wolves. In Virgil’s Eclogues (first century bce), a male magician transforms
himself into a wolf (all three works also in Classical Literature and Its Times).
Subsequent works suggest that these beliefs persisted far beyond Apuleius’ day, as
shown by the writings of Augustine, a Christian bishop of the fifth century who
described how some of the women of Italy mixed drugs with the food that they gave
travelers in order to turn them into pack animals for the performance of chores.
Already in Apuleius’ era, intellectuals had begun to doubt that such a tale could
actually be true, but they stopped short of ruling out the possibility altogether.
Returning late one night, a rather drunk Lucius stabs what he takes to be three
would-be intruders trying to batter down the door of his host’s house. He is
arrested early the next morning and put on trial for murder before the town
magistrates. A strangeness settles over the trial. While Lucius does his best to
speak in his own defense, the crowd keeps laughing. Then, just as he is to be
handed over for torture, the trial is revealed as a giant hoax. It turns out that
the murdered intruders are not humans after all, but three inflated goatskin bags
that Pamphile had earlier turned into human form. The spectators erupt into general
hilarity at Lucius’ expense. The town’s representatives plead with Lucius not to be
angry, because everything he has just undergone has been done for an important
local god. Each year the God of Laughter is honored with an improvised festival,
which this year took the form of a vast practical joke on Lucius, using the slain
goatskin bags as the prop. Because he has served the God of Laughter in this way,
the townspeople assure Lucius, he will remain forever under Laughter’s divine
protection.
Psyche, explains the old woman, is the youngest and most beautiful of three
princesses; she is so breathtaking that others worship her as an earthly
manifestation of Venus, the goddess of love. Venus suffers as a result, as
worshippers neglect the rites and temples of the genuine goddess. Infuriated, she
dispatches her son Cupid to punish Psyche. Meanwhile, despite her extraordinary
loveliness, no suitors have sought Psyche’s hand in marriage. Her concerned father
consults Apollo (God of Oracles), who directs the father to leave his daughter on a
mountaintop, where she will be claimed as wife by a snakelike monster that plagues
humanity.
Abandoned on the peak, Psyche passes out, and a gentle wind transports her to a
beautiful house, where she spends the day with invisible servants who cater to her
every wish. That night her new husband enters her room in the dark, consummates the
marriage, and then departs un-seen. This pattern continues night after night, and,
though she never sees him, Psyche grows to love her mysterious spouse. She
conceives a child. Though elated, Psyche grieves at not being able to comfort her
sisters, who mourn for her. Her husband relents, allowing them to visit, but warns
her not to heed them if they urge her to investigate his identity. Despite his
warnings, they convince her. She approaches him with a lamp as he sleeps only to
discover that her hus-band is the beautiful, winged youth Cupid. Just then a drop
of hot oil spills from her lamp and wakens him, whereupon Psyche is banished and
punished by Venus, who tortures the girl, then assigns her a series of impossible
tasks. During one of these tasks, Psyche falls into a coma and Cupid rushes to the
rescue. After reviving her, the still-loving husband makes his way to Jupiter, King
of the Gods, to beg his indulgence. A for-giving Jupiter rules the two shall be
officially married and Psyche, turned into a goddess as be-fits Venus’ daughter-in-
law. Cupid and the now immortal Psyche have a child, a daughter named Pleasure. At
this point, the robbers return, and the story stops abruptly.
Lucius the ass and the young bride Charite are rescued by her husband, who
infiltrates the gang in disguise. The reunited couple’s happiness is short-lived,
however. When a jealous former suitor murders the husband, Charite avenges his
death and commits suicide. Lucius the ass passes into new ownership and is put to
work in a mill, tediously turning the mill wheel. As he plods along at the tiresome
task, he observes the miserable slaves and animals at work in the mill: “As to the
human contingent—what a crew!—their whole bodies picked out with livid weals
[welts], their whip-scarred backs shaded rather than covered by their tattered
rags, some with only a scanty loin-cloth by way of covering” (The Golden Ass, 9.12,
p. 153). A sequence of misad-ventures lead to Lucius the ass falling into the
possession of two slaves owned by a wealthy master in Lucius’ hometown of Corinth.
Since his new owners, the two slaves, are a pastry cook and a chef, Lucius now has
access to delicious human food. When discovered eating various choice delicacies,
his owners are amused. They summon the rest of the household to join in their
laughter at the ass with gourmet tastes.
The master of the house brings Lucius to the dining room to entertain his guests
with his humanlike behavior. The satisfaction of Lucius’ humanlike appetites is
taken still further when a wealthy lady of Corinth arranges to have secret sexual
encounters with him. The master, after spying on this spectacle for his own
pleasure, decides to reproduce it in the arena for the entertainment of the city at
large. Since he has been awarded the highest magistracy in the city, he needs to
stage an impressive event to mark the occasion, and this show promises to be a
crowdpleaser. A woman, already sentenced to die in the arena by attack by a wild
animal, is chosen to become the bride of the ass. Lucius learns that while he
publicly rapes her, wild beasts will be released to execute her death sentence,
probably killing him in the process. He manages to escape.
The final section opens as Lucius awakens by the seaside. Sensing divine power in
the night air, he prays to the mother goddess, addressing her by all the holy names
that come to mind. Pleading for her mercy, he falls asleep again. He awakens later
to a magnificent apparition of the goddess Isis, who explains how to find the roses
that will cure him and promises him her protection forever after, provided he lives
chastely and obediently in her service. Following her instructions, Lucius is
restored to human form and begins the rites of initiation. In Isis’ service, he
journeys to Rome and, although overwhelmed by the cost of living in the imperial
city, is able to cover his expenses by establishing a legal practice, the success
of which he credits to Isis. The novel ends with the image of a transformed youth—
his days as an ass over, Lucius has become the bald priest of Isis and a prosperous
lawyer.
A world of slaves
After his transformation into an ass, Lucius’ first encounter with a human being
other than Photis is with his own slave, who promptly beats him. It is a telling
moment. The slave, of course, fails to recognize his master and sees only an ass
trying to eat roses off the statue of a deity. Even so, the incident marks Lucius’
new place in the scheme of things. In antiquity, slaves were often associated with
beasts of burden. Lucius himself makes the connection, noting that, in the form of
an ass, he has been made the “fellow slave and yoke-mate” of the horse he once
owned as a human (The Golden Ass, 7.3, p. 113). In truth, the beast of burden ranks
even lower: until he regains his human form, Lucius becomes the slave of slaves as
well as of the free.
The fictional adventure offers insight into the actual conditions of slaves and the
lower economic classes under Roman rule. Tediously turning the mill wheel, Lucius
the ass surveys his new surroundings, considering the human slaves first. Their
heads are shaven; their foreheads, branded; and their feet, manacled. If they wear
anything more than a loincloth, their clothing amounts to nothing but the barest
and most tattered of rags. Their backs are scarred with welts from whippings, and
the bodies of all the slaves are coated head to toe in an eerie whitish powder, a
mixture of dirt and the flour ground at the mill. Next Lucius considers the
animals. Constant beatings have nearly stripped the flesh from their ribs. They are
underfed, the skin hangs on their bones, and their hooves have flattened and
widened from the constant circular march of turning the mill wheel. The harshness
of life depicted by the novel is arresting, though it seems not to trouble its main
character much.
Recounting these events long after they are over, Lucius the narrator fixes on the
wide variety of people and places he met as an ass rather than the suffering. He
recalls but does not condemn slavery or oppression. Apuleius himself, like all men
and women of property in the Greco-Roman world, owned slaves. His wealthy wife
owned so many that she gave her grown children 400 slaves as an advance on their
inheritance. There is no evidence from the author’s life that he considered slavery
morally wrong. His novel contains no criticism of the institution, only con-cern
for individual slaves and, perhaps, for how their treatment reflects on the
humaneness of their owners.
The first ten of The Golden Ass’s eleven “books” (chapter-sized sections) are based
on a Greek novel, which was later abridged in Greek and entitled Lucius, or the
Ass. The abridgement survives, but not the original. Much debate has arisen over
the relationship between the three texts—the lost original, the abridgement, and
Apuleius’ adaptation. Apuleius’ version is considerably more literary than the
surviving Greek abridgement. Perhaps the best indicator of the difference between
The Golden Ass and the abridgement, Lucius, or the Ass, is a glance at the latter’s
ending.
As in Apuleius’ version, the abridgement has Lucius the ass enter into a sexual
relationship with a woman shortly before he is changed back into human form. In
Apuleius, we hear no more about this woman, but in the abridgement, there is
further communication. Lucius imagines that she will be overjoyed to see him in his
resplen-dent human shape after having loved him so passionately in spite of his
animal form. All seems to go well as they meet, have dinner, and get re-acquainted.
Lucius walks to the bedroom, strips off his clothing, and waits for her on the bed.
When she arrives, she is not pleased with what she sees. After a barrage of
insults, she clarifies the situation for the bewildered Lucius:
I wasn’t in love with you. I was in love with the donkey you were. I slept with it
those times, not you. I thought you might have saved at least one thing and still
have that nice big emblem of your donkeyhood trailing between your legs. You’ve
gone and turned yourself from a lovely, precious beast into an ape, that’s what
you’ve done.
(Lucian, p. 93)
The abridgement closes humorously, with these sentiments. It ends with the same
comic irreverence that has guided the narrative throughout, not with the concern
for a new life of chastity and restraint that ends Apuleius’ telling.
Reception
Ancient reactions to The Golden Ass are few, with those that are known ranging from
the cautious to the hostile. Some of the novel’s earliest readers are known to have
objected to the erotic and fantastic tenor of The Golden Ass. Apparently Emperor
Septimius Severus (193–211 ce) accused a rival of frittering away his time reading
The Golden Ass. In a similar vein, the fourth-century scholar, Macrobius, expressed
shock that Apuleius, a reputable philosopher, would indulge in literary endeavors
of this sort.
[These stories] beguile the listener in the same way as comedies, of the sort that
Menander and his imitators produced for performance, or, again, as the plots told
about the imaginary vicissitudes of lovers, in which kind of work Petronius so
indulged himself, and in which Apuleius also sometimes dallied—to our astonishment.
A century later the novel impressed the bishop Augustine (354–430), who in
considering whether to give the benefit of the doubt to popular reports of magical
transformation, treated The Golden Ass as Apuleius’ own autobiographical claim to
have undergone a metamorphosis. A skeptical Augustine refers to Apuleius when he
doubts the truth of tales about female innkeepers who transform travelers into pack
animals that perform chores:
This is what Apuleius, in the work bearing the title The Golden Ass, describes as
his experience, that after taking a magic potion he became an ass, while retaining
his human mind. But this may be either fact or fiction. Stories of this kind are
either untrue or at least so extraordinary that we are justified in withholding
credence.
The Golden Ass then fell from view for close to a millennium. In the 1300s,
Giovanni Boccaccio rediscovered it and responded to the story with such enthusiasm
that he translated it into vernacular Italian and fused three of its episodes into
his own masterpiece, the Decameron. The popularity of The Golden Ass was secure
thereafter, as was its incorporated tale of Cupid and Psyche, which went on to have
a healthy existence of its own. Translated into English by William Adlington
(1566), The Golden Ass was available to Shakespeare, and probably influenced his A
Midsummer’s Night Dream. More definitely, it inspired John Keats’s “Ode to Psyche”
(1819) and a myriad of visual artists. European painters and sculptors from
Raphael, to Orazio Gentileschi, Anthony van Dyck, Antonio Canova, Jacques-Louis
David, Edward Burne-Jones, and Auguste Rodin have all turned their hands to
depicting Cupid and Psyche.
—Seán Easton
Augustine. The City of God. Trans. Henry Bettenson. New York: Penguin, 1984.
Feeney, Denis. Literature and Religion at Rome: Cultures, Contexts, and Beliefs.
Cambridge: Cam-bridge University Press, 1998.
Freeman, Charles. Egypt, Greece and Rome. Oxford:Oxford University Press, 2004.
Goodman, Martin. The Roman World: 44 BC-AD 180. London: Routledge, 1997.
Graf, Fritz. Magic in the Ancient World. Trans. Franklin Philip. Cambridge, Mass.:
Harvard University Press, 1997.
Griinewald, Thomas. Bandits in the Roman Empire: Myth and Reality. Trans. John
Drinkwater. London: Routledge, 2004.
Lucian. Selected Satires ofLucian. Ed. and trans. Lionel Casson. New York: W. W.
Norton, 1968.
Madden, John. “Slavery in the Roman Empire: Numbers and Origins.” Classics Ireland
3 (1996): 109–128. http://www.ucd.ie/classics/96/Madden96.html.
Millar, Fergus. “The World of the Golden Ass.” The Journal of Roman Studies 71
(1981): 64–75.
Shelton, Jo-Ann. As the Romans Did: A Sourcebook in Roman Social History. New York:
Oxford University Press, 1998.
Tatum, James. Apuleius and The Golden Ass. Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press,
1979.