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See also: born at Madaura in See also: Numidia about A.D
.
125
.
As the son of one of the See also: principal off'icials,.he received an excellent See also: education, first at See also: Carthage and subsequently at Athens
.
After leaving Athens he undertook a long course of travel, especially in the See also: East, principally with the view of obtaining initiation into religious mysteries
.
Having practised for some See also: time as an advocate at See also: Rome, he returned to See also: Africa
.
On a journey to Alexandria he See also: fell sick at Oea (See also: Tripoli), where he made the acquaintance of a See also: rich widow, Aemilia Pudentilla, whom he subsequently married
.
The members of her See also: family disapproved of the See also: marriage, and indicted See also: Apuleius on a See also: charge of having gained her affections by magical arts
.
He easily established his innocence, and his spirited, highly entertaining, but inordinately long defence (Apologia or De Magia) before the proconsul See also: Claudius See also: Maximus is our principal authority for his biography
.
From allusions in his subsequent writings, and the mention of him by St Augustine, we gather that the See also: remainder of his prosperous See also: life was devoted to literature and philosophy
.
At Carthage he was elected provincial See also: priest of the imperial cult, in which capacity he occupied a prominent position in the provincial council, had the duty of See also: collecting and managing the funds for the temples of the cult, and the superintendence of the See also: games in the amphitheatre
.
He lectured on philosophy and rhetoric, like the See also: Greek sophists, apparently with success, since statues were erected in his honour at Carthage and elsewhere
.
The See also: year of his See also: death is not known
.
The See also: work on which the fame of Apuleius principally rests has little claim to originality
.
The Metamorphoses or See also: Golden Ass (the latter title seems not to be the author's own, but to have been bestowed in compliment, just as the Libri Rerum Quotidianarum of See also: Gaius were called Aurei) was founded on a narrative in the Metamorphoses of See also: Lucius of Patrae, a work extant in the time of See also: Photius
.
From Photius's account (impugned, however, by Wieland and See also: Courier), this See also: book would seem to have consisted of a collection of marvellous stories, related in an inartistic fashion, and in perfect See also: good faith
.
The See also: literary capabilities of this particular narrative attracted the See also: attention of Apuleius's contemporary, Lucian, who proceeded to work it up in his own manner, adhering, 3s Photius seems to indicate, very closely to the See also: original, but giving it a comic and satiric turn
.
Apuleius
followed this rifacimento, making it, however, the groundwork of an elaborate See also: romance, interspersed with numerous episodes, of which the beautiful See also: story of See also: Cupid and See also: Psyche is the most celebrated, and altering the denouement to suit the religious revival of which he was an apostle
.
The adventures of the youthful See also: hero in the See also: form of an ass are much the same in both romances, but in Apuleius he is restored to human shape by the aid of See also: Isis, into whose mysteries he is initiated, and finally becomes her priestess
.
The book is a remarkable See also: illustration of the contemporary reaction against a See also: period of scepticism, of the general appetite for miracle and magic, and of the influx of See also: oriental and See also: Egyptian ideas into the old See also: theology
.
It is also composed with a well-marked literary aim, defined by Kretzschmann as the emulation of the Greek sophists, and the transplantation of their See also: tours de force into the Latin language
.
Nothing, indeed, is more characteristic of Apuleius than his versatility, unless it be his ostentation and self-confidence in the display of it
.
The dignified, the ludicrous, the voluptuous, the horrible, succeed each other with bewildering rapidity; fancy and feeling are everywhere apparent, but not less so affectation, meretricious See also: ornament, and that effort to say everything finely which prevents anything being said well
.
The Latinity has a strong See also: African colouring, and is .crammed with obsolete words, agreeably to the taste of the time
.
When these defects are mitigated or overlooked, the Golden Ass will be pronounced a most successful work, invaluable as an illustration of See also: ancient See also: manners, and full of entertainment from beginning to end
.
The most famous and poetically beautiful portion is the See also: episode of Cupid and Psyche, adapted from a popular See also: legend of which traces are found in most fairy mythologies, which explains the seeming incongruity of its being placed in the mouth of an old See also: hag
.
The allegorical purport he has infused into it is his own, and entirely in the spirit of the Platonic philosophy
.
See also: Don Quixote's adventure with the See also: wine-skins, and Gil See also: Bias's captivity among the robbers, are palpably borrowed from Apuleius; and several of the humorous episodes, probably current as popular stories long before his time, reappear in See also: Boccaccio
.
Of Apuleius's other writings, the See also: Apology has been already mentioned
.
The See also: Florida (probably meaning simply " See also: anthology," without any reference to See also: style) consists of a collection of excerpts from his declamations, ingenious but highly affected, and in general perfect examples of the sophistical See also: art of saying nothing with emphasis
.
They See also: deal with the most varied subjects, and are intended to exemplify the author's versatility
.
The pleasing little See also: tract On the See also: God of See also: Socrates expounds the Platonic See also: doctrine of beneficent daemons, an intermediate class between gods and men
.
Two books on See also: Plato (De Platone et Ejus Doginate) treat of his life, and his See also: physical and ethical philosophy; a third, treating of logic, is generally considered See also: spurious
.
The De Mundo is an adaptation of the Hepi K60'µov wrongly attributed to See also: Aristotle
.
Apuleius informs us that he had also composed numerous poems in almost all possible styles, and several See also: works on natural See also: history, some in Greek
.
In the preparation of these he seems to have attended more closely to actual anatomical research than was customary with ancient naturalists
.
Some other works—dealing with theology, the properties of herbs, medical remedies and See also: physiognomy, are wrongly attributed to him
.
The character of Apuleius, as delineated by himself, is attractive; he appears vehement and passionate, but devoid of rancour; enterprising, munificent, genial and an enthusiast for the beautiful and good . His vanity and love of display are conspicuous, but are extenuated by a genuine thirst for know-ledge and a surprising versatility of attainments . He prided himself on his proficiency in both Greek and Latin . His place in letters is accidentally more important than hisSee also: genius strictly entitles him to hold
.
He is the only extant example in Latin literature of an accomplished sophist in the good sense of the See also: term
.
The loss of other ancient romances has secured him a See also: peculiar influence on See also: modern fiction; while his See also: chronological position in a transitional period renders him at once the evening See also: star of the Platonic, and the See also: morning star of the Neo-Platonic philosophy
.
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