Statius Caecilius (born c. 219 bce—died 168 bce, Rome [Italy]) was a Roman comic poet who was ranked by the literary critic Volcatius Sedigitus at the head of all Roman writers of comedy.
Aulus Gellius says that he was a slave and “therefore” called Statius—a name given to slaves. Jerome says that he was an Insubrian Gaul, that some said his birthplace was Milan, that at first he lived with the poet Quintus Ennius, and that he died a year later than Ennius (who died in 169) and was buried near the Janiculum Hill in Rome. Suetonius’s life of the dramatist Terence states that the aediles (magistrates who oversaw Rome) ordered Terence to read his Andria (produced 166 bce) to Caecilius; that looks like a mere anecdote.
Caecilius had some difficulty in winning popularity. Terence (Hecyra) tells of Caecilius’s initial failure as a playwright and his subsequent success when his plays were produced by Terence’s own producer, Lucius Ambivius Turpio. Of Caecilius’s comedies, 42 titles and 280 lines or parts of lines are extant. Cicero speaks of him as a translator of the Greek comic poet Menander and quotes him in court in his speech Pro Caelio; Horace, in the Epistles, says that he was celebrated for moral force (gravitas); Marcus Terentius Varro praises his plots and emotional power; and the historian Velleius finds in him a vein of Latin wit. Although Cicero criticized his Latinity, the fact that in his speech De finibus he could name Caecilius’s Hymnis without any indication of the author is perhaps proof of its popularity. The fragments are free from topical allusions to Roman life. Gellius (Attic Nights) quotes three passages of his Plocium (“Necklace”) along with Menander’s original Greek to show how freely Caecilius modified his Greek models: he inserted crude jokes, his metres are varied, and there is rhythmical effect and wordplay.
Information is too meagre to justify any very dogmatic statement. Perhaps it would be near the truth to say that Caecilius was a writer of considerable moral force and that he was fond of Menander. He was probably less lively than his predecessor Plautus and less polished than his young contemporary Terence.