The following structural division of the poem is proposed by Toohey ;I Proem ;II. Dogs ;III. Horses ;IV. Hunting equipment ;V. Hunting: hunting season
Commentary and Analysis
Metre
The Cynegetica is written in hexameter verse. Duff and Duff note the following metrical features :
shortening of the vowel o at the end of words such as devotio and exerceto.
only one hiatus.
less use of elision.
Length and state of completion of Text
325 lines of the Cynegetica survive. It is generally agreed that the poem is incomplete. It is uncertain whether Nemesianus never finished the poem, or whether it was finished but that sections have subsequently been lost. Martin takes the view that the poem was finished, but lost in transmission, referring to the fact that Vospiscus mentions it as a literary achievement and by reference to Haupt's textual analysis. It is unknown how long the Cynegetica originally was. Williams cites the length of Oppian's four volume Cynegetica as a precedent for a reasonably long work - although notes that there is no evidence that Nemesianus' Cynegetica was as long. Toohey estimates that Nemesianus' poem was at least 400 lines long, on the basis of the length of its proem.
Toohey notes that the Cynegetica displays the typical features of the tradition of ancient Greek and Latin didactic poetry: an addressee, detailed technical instructions, narrative or mythological panels, the use of hexameter verse and a likely original length of over 400 lines. Toohey considers that the Cynegetica offers "a literature of escape": i.e. escape from/alternative to the concerns of city and public life and that it is fixated on leisure. In this regard, Toohey sees the Cynegetica's preoccupation with escapism and leisure as an exception to the general themes of didactic poetry of the same period and as representing the extreme end of the didactic tradition.
Place in the Tradition of Tradition of Ancient Greek and Latin Cynegetic Literature
There are several extant works of Ancient Greek and Latin literature on the subject of hunting that predate Nemesianus' Cynegetica - some in written in prose, others in verse: Xenophon's Cynegetica, Arrian of Nicodemus' supplement to Xenophon's work focusing on Greyhound coursing, Oppian's Cynegetica in four books and Grattius' Latin poem, of which 541 verses survive Scholars have considered the extent to which Cynegetica was aware of and influenced by such literature, especially given Nemesianus' claim to originality of theme "insistere prato/complacitum, rudibus qua luceat orbita sulcis". Martin considers that Nemesianus' work bears very little resemblance to Xenophon's and Arrian's, but a much larger debt to Oppian's. Although Grattius' work was sufficiently well known to be referred to by Ovid, Martin considers that Nemesianus does not seem to imitate Grattius - referring to the lack of similarity of diction, different use of technical terms and the different structure/order of material. Martin concludes that Nemesianus may not even have heard of the Cynegtica of Grattius, given such divergences. Toohey points out that Nemesianus' Cynegetica is hardly a practical manual on hunting. Aymard is of the view that Nemesianus seems to have no practical experience of hunting and so must have taken all his purported knowledge on the subject from literary sources, despite his claim to literary originality. In contrast, Anderson considers that Nemesianus does have something to say that does not come merely from books - citing strange or unpleasant details and the anticipation of a medieval veterinary practice of bleeding horses.
Virgilian Influence
was an influence on, and model for, Nemesianus. Martin notes, in particular, the influence of Virgil's Third Georgic. In particular:
Both Virgil and Nemesianus scorn dealing with trite mythological themes ;
Both Virgil and Nemesianus state that they will of new rustic themes, predicting glory for themselves in so doing ;
Both Virgil and Nemesianus promise to sing of loftier themes such as the glories of Caesar at a later time ;
Both Virgil's Third Georgic and Nemesianus' Cynegetica deal with breeding/caring for animals
In particular, Nemesianus imitates Virgil's description of the good features of a horse, and Virgil's comparison of the speed of a horse with the north wind ;
Although Virgil only devotes a few lines to dogs and hunting, these lines are imitated by Nemesianus, in his more extensive passages ;
More generally, throughout Nemesianus' Cynetgetica, Martin detects other words and phrases that are borrowed from Virgil.
Toohey notes that Nemesianus' approach to hunting as a form of "escape" may be indebted to Virgil's Eclogue 10, in which Gallus is depicted as considering hunting to be an escape from lovesickness.
Transmission and Editions
Transmission
Three medieval manuscripts of the Cynegetica exist. The earliest existing manuscript was produced in around 825. It is likely that all three manuscripts descend from a common archetype. The Cynegetica is generally considered to have been transmitted in an incomplete state. Reasons for this conclusion include the fact that its proemium/introduction seems disproportionately long, and the fact that Nemesianus indicates that he will give a further description of a Tuscan dog. The first printed edition of the Cynegetica was printed in Venice, in 1534.