Abstract
This article offers a philological commentary on the ‘Calpurnia Cycle’
present within the letters composed by Pliny the Younger, concentrating particularly
on the analysis of Ep. 7.5. The author behaves like a true elegiac lover and a
loving husband, since the letters that he writes to his wife Calpurnia can be set in
the context of the elegiac genre, given the lexicon and motifs present in them.
Calpurnia is transformed into a scripta puella not in the sense of a metaphorical
figure, but in the sense of ‘literary material’. The aim is to adapt the elegiac motifs
to his declared intention of creating a positive image of his persona in the world
and for posterity (immortalitas) through the Epistulae. Although Pliny presents
himself as similis excluso amatori, albeit while innovatively setting the scene at
midday, his interest is not in the typical elegiac conduct of militia or servitium
amoris, which would run counter to his self-presentation as an active and politically
engaged citizen; rather, his theme is the praise of the beloved and reflections
upon his own importance as a poet.