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At the very beginning, to see what pure irrelevancy, what almost incredible foolishness, finds its wayinto print, take this instance. It had been supposed for several centuries that Plautus' name was M. Accius Plautus , when Ritschl in 1845 pointed out that in the Ambrosian palimpsest discovered by Mai in 1815, written in the[74] fourth or fifth century, and much the oldest of Plautus'MSS., the name appears in the genitive as T. Macci Plauti , so that he was really called Titus Maccius (or Maccus ) Plautus . An Italian scholar, one Vallauri, objected to this innovation on the ground that in all printededitions from the sixteenth to the nineteenth century the name was M. Accius . He went to Milan to look at the palimpsest, and there, to be sure, he found T. Macci quite legibly written. But he observed that many other pages of the MS. were quite illegible,and that the whole book was very much tattered and battered; whereupon he said that he could not sufficiently wonder at anyoneattaching any weight to a MS. which was in such a condition. Is there any other science, anything calling itself a science, intowhich such intellects intrude and conduct such operations in public? But you may think that Mr. Vallauri is a uniquephenomenon. No: if you engage in textual criticism you may come upon a second Mr. Vallauri any turn. The MSS. of Catullus, noneof them older than the fourteenth century, present at 64. 23 the verse:

heroes saluete, deum genus! o bona mater!
The Veronese scholia on Vergil, a palimpsest of the fifth or sixth century, at Aen . v. 80,"salue sancte parens,"have the note:"Catullus: saluete, deum gens , o bona matrum | progenies, saluete iter[um]"—giving gens for genus, matrum for mater , and adding a half-verse absent from Catullus' MSS.; and scholars havenaturally preferred an authority so much more ancient. But one editor is found to object:"the weight of the Veronese scholia, imperfect and full of lacunae as they are, is not to beset against our MSS."There is Mr. Vallauri over again: because the palimpsest has large holes elsewhere and because muchof it has perished, therefore what remains, though written as early as the sixth century, has less authority than MSS. writtenin the fourteenth. If however anyone gets hold of these fourteenth-century MSS., destroys pages of them and tears holes inthe pages he [75] does not destroy, the authority of those partswhich he allows to survive will presumably deteriorate, and may even sink as low as that of the palimpsest.

Again. There are two MSS. of a certain author, which we will call A and B. Of these two it is recognised that Ais the more correct but the less sincere, and that B is the more corrupt but the less interpolated. It is desired to know whichMS., if either, is better than the other, or whether both are equal. One scholar tries to determine this question by thecollection and comparison of examples. But another thinks that he knows a shorter way than that; and it consists in saying"the more sincere MS. is and must be for any critic who understands his business the better MS."

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Source:  OpenStax, Text as property/property as text. OpenStax CNX. Feb 10, 2004 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10217/1.7
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