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Ritual Elements in the New Comedy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

Gilbert Murray
Affiliation:
Oxford

Extract

The New Comedy as an art form is descended both from the Old Comedy and from fifth-century Tragedy. It is a middle style of the sort that Diderot called le genre sérieux. On the one side it made an expurgation of the Old Comedy by dropping the gross elements of the primitive ritual ⋯ϕέσεωςκ⋯μος which still survived in Aristophanes, the phallic dress, the ϒεϕυρɩομός in language, and the reckless personal satire, while it kept and emphasized the final Gamos, or union of lovers, and developed a more elaborate plot. On the other side it reformed Tragedy by getting rid of the supernatural stories and the stiff conventions. To quote some words of my own written in 1912, it ‘introduced all the simplifications and improvements which seem to a modern’—I meant a modern philistine—‘so obviously desirable. It developed an easy colloquial language, a flexible and unexacting metre. It left the Chorus quite outside the play, a kind of entr'acte, not worth writing down. It frankly abandoned religious ritual’—please observe that statement, which I now wish to correct—‘and heroic saga. It drew its material from the adventures and emotions of contemporary middle class life, and boldly invented its own plots.’ Menander in particular was considered in antiquity to have held a mirror up to life; a verse by Aristophanes of Byzantium asks.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1943

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References

1 Fr. 76, Bergk4.

2 Among the lost plays of Sophocles the following seem to have this form of plot: with a Ravishment, a child of unknown parentage, an Anagnorisis and Petipeteia: Aleadae, Alexandros, Euryalus, Thyestes, Hipponous, Ion or Creusa, Odysseus Acanthoplex, Tyro, Chryses. Possibly Athamas and Danae. I can find no example in the fragmentary plays of Aeschylus, who of course has many definitely Bacchic plays: Bacchae, Bassarae, Dionusou Trophoi, Edoni, Kabiri, Neaniskoi, Xantriai, Pentheus, Semele.