While the freeborn Roman boy went to school to learn rhetoric, math, et cetera, the slave boy worked from a very young age. Whether they worked physically, mathematically or sexually, they still worked, which is a prime difference between them and the freeborn (although the poor freeborn worked, they often were displaced by slaves because slaves were free labor).
Sarah Ruden, the translator of this edition of Satyricon, comments that freedmen were like immigrants in America today. Only the particularly ambitious won their freedom. This process has a modern equivalent in which only the most ambitious immigrants tend to make it to American soil. This process of ‘self-selection’ weeds out the lazy (155).
Slaves that had won their freedom had worked very hard from a very early age and thus had the experience needed to be successful and amass fortunes. However, what the freedmen could not possibly have learned from that kind of experience is the behavior and manners of a respectful Roman aristocrat. Personality is naturally instilled by living among others in your social class. One cannot completely learn a foreign culture unless he is adopted at an early age by a family in that culture. Although slaves lived with families, they performed completely different functions ergo had completely difference experiences and upbringings. Unfortunately for the freedmen who that made it and became rich, they were still socially inferior to the freeborn. Petronius shows that the host of the dinner party, Trimalchio is a crude freedman. He has no respectable virtues. He is cruel to his slaves despite the fact that he was once a slave. He threatens death to those who leave the estate without permission (19).
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He sexually abuses his pet slave because he was molested as a child by his master (19, 146).
He is a social outcast in Roman culture because he was sodomized, however he rationalizes that ‘it’s okay if your master makes you do it’ (146).
He uses language that a blacksmith might use (23).
His wife was a prostitute before he bought her freedom. For the cultured Roman, it would be repulsive to even take bread from her hand, let alone marry her (26).
Some very sublime, perhaps debatable evidence of the thesis is presented by Petronius using a metaphor to express his view that a slave will always be a slave. If a slave is freed, he’s still the same person, a low life.
Petronius writes a scene where a boar wearing the hat of a freedman is brought into the dining room. It was supposed to be the dinner for the previous night but they ‘set him free’ (29).
However, a free boar is still a boar, and now he is dinner. The hat changes nothing. Petronius asserts his personal belief that slaves will be slaves no matter what changes on the outside, they will always be slaves on the inside. From the viewpoint of the aristocracy, merchants were generally considered to be of a very low class.
Trimalchio, which ironically means ‘prince’ in Hebrew (18), gained his freedom because he was an accountant and the sexual servant to both the master and the mistress of the household. He inherited money and freedom when his master died. He amassed great wealth by using that money in trade. Regardless of how great a merchant he was, he was still a merchant and merchants had poor taste, in general. He attempts to mimic the culture and social standing of his social superiors which he had matched or exceeded in wealth from trading, although he has no roots in the upper class. This new money situation is a dilemma for freedmen.
Trimalchio has the general idea of what a dinner party is supposed to be like but he misses the point. Dinner parties were supposed to be a relaxing six to eight hour long gathering amongst friends. The Latin word for dinner party means ‘Living Together’ (166).
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Guests were supposed to limit their alcohol intake in order to allow interaction between each other. Trimalchio’s party is much like modern parties with loud music and the chance to escape conversation by ‘going to get a drink.’ The nature of which would defeat any planned activities and conversation which were the purpose of traditional Roman dinner parties (166).
Trimalchio has no ancestors that he can remember so he has nothing to display in the entry way but a painting of a lifelike giant chained dog, which is tacky, and a portrait of himself and his life. The guests that step into his entry room look at an artist’s one-sided rendering of Trimalchio’s life.
It shows his life as he moved from being a slave, a freedman and then lifted onto the Magistrates platform by a god (20).
Trimalchio doesn’t actually break any laws in the attempt at aristocratic impersonation, but he comes close to doing so. He wears a Senatorial stripe embroidered on a napkin instead of on his toga and a gold ring much like that of a Roman Knight only, it has an iron cross welded onto it which legally is ambiguous (22, 23).
Although he holds an office he still is a freedman so he can’t hold any office of importance and significance such as a Senator or a Knight. He holds the petty office of the Board of Six, which is in charge of emperor worship (20).
He brags about the power of his signature ring which authorizes various activities. In reality he would like his guests to think that he holds much more power than he actually does.
Trimalchio would like one to believe that he is a senator or a knight, the two highest ranks in society, but any keen individual would notice that he is nothing more than the boar, on the silver platter, wearing the freedman’s hat. In the dinner seating arrangements, he gets the general idea; he has the right number of couches in the right positions. The seat of honor at the dinner table, the highest seat on the highest couch, is usually reserved for the guest of honor, which would have been Agamemnon. Trimalchio’s position would have been the freedman’s place in the middle of the low couch. But this is not so in Trimalchio’s house. He reserves it for himself (22).
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What he doesn’t get is the concept of honor and what purposes guests of honor are supposed to fulfill at dinner parties. When Trimalchio emerges he is hauled into the dining room and placed on the seat of honor. He looks like he belongs on the table as the main course.
He is very fat, and all dressed up in a tight cloak that makes his fat protrude from his neck. He picks his teeth with a silver toothpick as he demands helpings of food (23).
There is a sharp contrast as he plays checkers on a board ‘made of rare terebinth wood… and with gold and silver Greek coins instead of black and white counters’ while muttering foul profanities (23).
One can tell a great deal about the true nature of a person by the way they carry themselves and the language they use. On the seat of honor there are tiny pillows, that he lays on, which further provides a means to make him look larger than life, like a big fat boar. This brings to mind a peculiarly savage image.
This savagery is proved numerous times, exempli gratia, when a slave boy accidentally breaks a dish and receives an ‘ear boxing’ (23).
When a similar action occurs again by another slave he orders that slave “to go kill himself” (37).
“Good Romans” like Cicero were known to be kind to their slaves, believing that they are humans too (152).
But Trimalchio is a cruel pig and treats his slaves like they are less than human. Trimalchio is equally cruel to his wife. He flirts with a young slave boy right in front of her, which predictably causes an outburst (57).
He strikes her in retaliation. If a Roman aristocrat did that he would immediately face divorce. Fortunata is not that fortunate, as she does not have a dowry, ergo cannot leave him. More unmentionable events happen at the party but none as bizarre as the mock funeral. He is so infatuated with himself that he wants to hear his eulogies, so he drunkenly falls down and orders people to say nice things about him (60).
If this was his real funeral, there would be few kind words said of him.
His guests are at their wits end. Most are only are there to drink and dine for free. His friends are just as crude as he is, harshly ordering drinks and becoming drunk. In the traditional Roman dinner party, the wine was often diluted so that people didn’t get too drunk (166).
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He has no clue that the reason Romans threw dinner parties was to socialize. Trimalchio apparently believes that dinner parties were the proper time to get drunk and brag about himself (166).
At this point, the protagonist and friends cannot take it anymore plan their escape.
It seems impossible until after the fire patrol breaks down the front door. Apparently the trumpeters playing in the funeral procession were too loud and it sounded like a fire alarm. The commotion is taken advantage of and they make their escape (60).
At Trimalchio’s dinner party the theme was drunk and disorderly as opposed to relaxed and enjoyable, the nature of the traditional Roman dinner parties (166).
It is though this story that Petronius tells us the aristocracy’s views on uneducated slaves and freedmen. Comparisons can be drawn to its modern equivalent of ‘new money.’ Exempli gratia, when the latest rap artist from a ghetto makes an album and subsequently gets rich, there is no moral improvement.
Money cannot buy character change. It cannot change behavior, improve social skills or refine the personality. Lacking a warm childhood upbringing to set in good manners, as well as protection from sexual predators, slaves never came close to matching the behavior, values, virtues, morals and decency of the ‘Good Roman Citizen.’ In this ancient equivalent to the verse from a Snoop Dogg song, “You can take the boy out [of] the ‘hood,’ but you can’t take the ‘hood’ out [of] the ‘Homeboy,'” no matter how much money and freedom slaves gained, they still are slaves at heart..