Neven, thanks,
1. My suggestion is, of course, subjective and very fragile - that's
really the nature of the beast: speculating about the influence of
poems which are almost wholly lost. Most will be unproveable (or,
perhaps worse, undisproveable...).
2. On the other hand the critical tendency to effectively ignore (I
exaggerate, here) the possible influence of Gallus in the elegists
because we do not have G. inevitably leads to major distortions. Had
we got the full text of Gallus, a commentary to e.g. Ovid's Amores
would likely contain as many, if not more, references to Gallus as
Tibullus / Propertius (for Ovid himself tells us he considers himself
the fourth of a canon of four starting with G.). A headline example of
this sort of distortion: Antolin in the introduction to his commentary
on 'Lygdamus' "Of prime importance for the history of Latin
literature, however, is the question of whether we consider L. to be
earlier or later than Ovid or, even more drastic, earlier than
Tibullus, or even identify him with the young Tibullus himself, which
would convert Lygdamus, as if by magic, into the 'first elegist' and
founder of the most typically Roman literary genre (for all the claims
of Satire and the poet Gallus of whom so little is known" (!!!) - i.e.
we do not know much about Gallus => he was not the 'first elegist'!
3. At Tibullus 1.7.32 "Pomaque non notis legit ab arboribus." the
polysyllabic pentameter ending "arboribus" (rare in Tibullus) would be
enough to point towards G. by itself. Then, there is the relationship
between this line and 1.5.31-2, which suggests a common model. I'd
also highlight that "notus"="well-known" is Gallan vocabulary, at
least, according to Cairns (who argues for the importance of what he
calls the 'nomen-complex' in G. - e.g. "nomen"; "notus"; "noscere";
"nobilis").
4. For the pun on "notis", I had in mind primarily the noun "notum"
rather than the verb "notare". (NB Tib. has chosen "non notis" not
e.g. "ignotis" (although the latter would require some recasting of
the line)). I note in passing that, T. uses "notis" of inscribed
letters at Tib. 1.3.54.
5. I think that "notis legit" together would be sufficient to suggest
the possible pun. Since my original post, I have also noted (no pun
intended...!) that at Ov. Her. 5.23-6 a passage again clearly indebted
to the Acontius / Cydippe Gallan poem which one sees through Eclogue
10, Ovid uses, precisely, "notata" of the letters which Paris (in the
role of Acontius) inscribes on trees (note too "nomina" in the line
above and again in the line below - i.e. Ov. connects "notata" with
the "nomen"-complex of words (as, the argument goes, G. had done -
e.g. "your name (nomen) will be well known (notus) when I have
inscribed it ("notare") on trees"))).
6. But it is the fact that there are *two* (three?) possible wordplays
referring to the Acontius / Cydippe myth which I find most persuasive:
(i) Cydippe reads/picks up apples/poems; (ii) Acontius puts letters on
trees (and apples).
7. I do not attempt to make a case for this enriching our reading of
Tibullus (at least so far as Tibullus' meaning is concerned). The
adaptation might be entirely inert, although without Gallus' poem one
cannot exclude the possibility that there is some point to the echo
[1]. My impression is rather that T. has simply closely adapted G.'s
line to a new context in a way which allows us to see the vestiges of
the (extensive) verbal play which Gallus' poem had.
Adrian.
[1] "Illi iucundos primum matura sapores / Expressa incultis uva dedit
pedibus." Tib. 1.7.35-6 (the next but one couplet) has another
polysyllabic pentameter ending and "matura...uva" puts me in mind of
Ecl. 10.36 "Would that I [Gallus] had been 'maturae vinitor uvae'". So
I do not discount the possibility that there is wider reference to G.
in this area of Tib. 1.7.