| Produced by An Anonymous Volunteer
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| THE POETICS OF ARISTOTLE
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| By Aristotle
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| A Translation By S. H. Butcher
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| [Transcriber's Annotations and Conventions: the translator left
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| intact some Greek words to illustrate a specific point of the original
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| discourse. In this transcription, in order to retain the accuracy of
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| this text, those words are rendered by spelling out each Greek letter
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| individually, such as {alpha beta gamma delta...}. The reader can
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| distinguish these words by the enclosing braces {}. Where multiple
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| words occur together, they are separated by the "/" symbol for clarity.
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| Readers who do not speak or read the Greek language will usually neither
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| gain nor lose understanding by skipping over these passages. Those who
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| understand Greek, however, may gain a deeper insight to the original
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| meaning and distinctions expressed by Aristotle.]
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| Analysis of Contents
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| I 'Imitation' the common principle of the Arts of Poetry.
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| II The Objects of Imitation.
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| III The Manner of Imitation.
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| IV The Origin and Development of Poetry.
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| V Definition of the Ludicrous, and a brief sketch of the rise of
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| Comedy.
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| VI Definition of Tragedy.
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| VII The Plot must be a Whole.
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| VIII The Plot must be a Unity.
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| IX (Plot continued.) Dramatic Unity.
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| X (Plot continued.) Definitions of Simple and Complex Plots.
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| XI (Plot continued.) Reversal of the Situation, Recognition, and
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| Tragic or disastrous Incident defined and explained.
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| XII The 'quantitative parts' of Tragedy defined.
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| XIII (Plot continued.) What constitutes Tragic Action.
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| XIV (Plot continued.) The tragic emotions of pity and fear should
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| spring out of the Plot itself.
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| XV The element of Character in Tragedy.
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| XVI (Plot continued.) Recognition: its various kinds, with examples.
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| XVII Practical rules for the Tragic Poet.
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| XVIII Further rules for the Tragic Poet.
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| XIX Thought, or the Intellectual element, and Diction in Tragedy.
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| XX Diction, or Language in general.
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| XXI Poetic Diction.
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| XXII (Poetic Diction continued.) How Poetry combines elevation of
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| language with perspicuity.
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| XXIII Epic Poetry.
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| XXIV (Epic Poetry continued.) Further points of agreement with Tragedy.
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| XXV Critical Objections brought against Poetry, and the principles on
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| which they are to be answered.
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| XXVI A general estimate of the comparative worth of Epic Poetry and
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| Tragedy.
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| ARISTOTLE'S POETICS
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| I
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| I propose to treat of Poetry in itself and of its various kinds, noting
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| the essential quality of each; to inquire into the structure of the plot
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| as requisite to a good poem; into the number and nature of the parts of
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| which a poem is composed; and similarly into whatever else falls within
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| the same inquiry. Following, then, the order of nature, let us begin
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| with the principles which come first.
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| Epic poetry and Tragedy, Comedy also and Dithyrambic: poetry, and the
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| music of the flute and of the lyre in most of their forms, are all in
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| their general conception modes of imitation. They differ, however, from
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| one: another in three respects,--the medium, the objects, the manner or
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| mode of imitation, being in each case distinct.
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| For as there are persons who, by conscious art or mere habit, imitate
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| and represent various objects through the medium of colour and form, or
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| again by the voice; so in the arts above mentioned, taken as a whole,
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| the imitation is produced by rhythm, language, or 'harmony,' either
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| singly or combined.
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| Thus in the music of the flute and of the lyre, 'harmony' and rhythm
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| alone are employed; also in other arts, such as that of the shepherd's
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| pipe, which are essentially similar to these. In dancing, rhythm alone
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| is used without 'harmony'; for even dancing imitates character, emotion,
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| and action, by rhythmical movement.
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| There is another art which imitates by means of language alone, and
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| that either in prose or verse--which, verse, again, may either combine
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| different metres or consist of but one kind--but this has hitherto been
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| without a name. For there is no common term we could apply to the mimes
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| of Sophron and Xenarchus and the Socratic dialogues on the one hand;
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| and, on the other, to poetic imitations in iambic, elegiac, or any
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| similar metre. People do, indeed, add the word 'maker' or 'poet' to
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| the name of the metre, and speak of elegiac poets, or epic (that is,
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| hexameter) poets, as if it were not the imitation that makes the poet,
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| but the verse that entitles them all indiscriminately to the name. Even
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| when a treatise on medicine or natural science is brought out in verse,
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| the name of poet is by custom given to the author; and yet Homer and
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| Empedocles have nothing in common but the metre, so that it would be
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| right to call the one poet, the other physicist rather than poet. On the
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| same principle, even if a writer in his poetic imitation were to combine
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| all metres, as Chaeremon did in his Centaur, which is a medley composed
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| of metres of all kinds, we should bring him too under the general term
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| poet. So much then for these distinctions.
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| There are, again, some arts which employ all the means above mentioned,
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| namely, rhythm, tune, and metre. Such are Dithyrambic and Nomic poetry,
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| and also Tragedy and Comedy; but between them the difference is, that in
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| the first two cases these means are all employed in combination, in the
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| latter, now one means is employed, now another.
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| Such, then, are the differences of the arts with respect to the medium
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| of imitation.
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| II
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| Since the objects of imitation are men in action, and these men must be
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| either of a higher or a lower type (for moral character mainly answers
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| to these divisions, goodness and badness being the distinguishing marks
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| of moral differences), it follows that we must represent men either as
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| better than in real life, or as worse, or as they are. It is the same
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| in painting. Polygnotus depicted men as nobler than they are, Pauson as
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| less noble, Dionysius drew them true to life.
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| Now it is evident that each of the modes of imitation above mentioned
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| will exhibit these differences, and become a distinct kind in imitating
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| objects that are thus distinct. Such diversities may be found even in
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| dancing, flute-playing, and lyre-playing. So again in language, whether
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| prose or verse unaccompanied by music. Homer, for example, makes men
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| better than they are; Cleophon as they are; Hegemon the Thasian, the
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| inventor of parodies, and Nicochares, the author of the Deiliad, worse
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| than they are. The same thing holds good of Dithyrambs and Nomes;
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| here too one may portray different types, as Timotheus and Philoxenus
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| differed in representing their Cyclopes. The same distinction marks
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| off Tragedy from Comedy; for Comedy aims at representing men as worse,
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| Tragedy as better than in actual life.
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| III
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| There is still a third difference--the manner in which each of these
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| objects may be imitated. For the medium being the same, and the objects
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| the same, the poet may imitate by narration--in which case he can either
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| take another personality as Homer does, or speak in his own person,
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| unchanged--or he may present all his characters as living and moving
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| before us.
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| These, then, as we said at the beginning, are the three differences
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| which distinguish artistic imitation,--the medium, the objects, and the
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| manner. So that from one point of view, Sophocles is an imitator of the
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| same kind as Homer--for both imitate higher types of character; from
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| another point of view, of the same kind as Aristophanes--for both
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| imitate persons acting and doing. Hence, some say, the name of 'drama'
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| is given to such poems, as representing action. For the same reason the
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| Dorians claim the invention both of Tragedy and Comedy. The claim to
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| Comedy is put forward by the Megarians,--not only by those of Greece
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| proper, who allege that it originated under their democracy, but also
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| by the Megarians of Sicily, for the poet Epicharmus, who is much earlier
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| than Chionides and Magnes, belonged to that country. Tragedy too is
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| claimed by certain Dorians of the Peloponnese. In each case they appeal
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| to the evidence of language. The outlying villages, they say, are by
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| them called {kappa omega mu alpha iota}, by the Athenians {delta eta
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| mu iota}: and they assume that Comedians were so named not from {kappa
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| omega mu 'alpha zeta epsilon iota nu}, 'to revel,' but because they
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| wandered from village to village (kappa alpha tau alpha / kappa omega mu
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| alpha sigma), being excluded contemptuously from the city. They add
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| also that the Dorian word for 'doing' is {delta rho alpha nu}, and the
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| Athenian, {pi rho alpha tau tau epsilon iota nu}.
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| This may suffice as to the number and nature of the various modes of
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| imitation.
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| IV
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| Poetry in general seems to have sprung from two causes, each of them
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| lying deep in our nature. First, the instinct of imitation is implanted
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| in man from childhood, one difference between him and other animals
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| being that he is the most imitative of living creatures, and through
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| imitation learns his earliest lessons; and no less universal is the
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| pleasure felt in things imitated. We have evidence of this in the facts
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| of experience. Objects which in themselves we view with pain, we delight
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| to contemplate when reproduced with minute fidelity: such as the forms
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| of the most ignoble animals and of dead bodies. The cause of this again
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| is, that to learn gives the liveliest pleasure, not only to philosophers
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| but to men in general; whose capacity, however, of learning is more
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| limited. Thus the reason why men enjoy seeing a likeness is, that in
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| contemplating it they find themselves learning or inferring, and saying
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| perhaps, 'Ah, that is he.' For if you happen not to have seen the
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| original, the pleasure will be due not to the imitation as such, but to
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| the execution, the colouring, or some such other cause.
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| Imitation, then, is one instinct of our nature. Next, there is the
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| instinct for 'harmony' and rhythm, metres being manifestly sections of
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| rhythm. Persons, therefore, starting with this natural gift developed
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| by degrees their special aptitudes, till their rude improvisations gave
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| birth to Poetry.
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| Poetry now diverged in two directions, according to the individual
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| character of the writers. The graver spirits imitated noble actions, and
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| the actions of good men. The more trivial sort imitated the actions of
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| meaner persons, at first composing satires, as the former did hymns to
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| the gods and the praises of famous men. A poem of the satirical kind
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| cannot indeed be put down to any author earlier than Homer; though many
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| such writers probably there were. But from Homer onward, instances
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| can be cited,--his own Margites, for example, and other similar
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| compositions. The appropriate metre was also here introduced; hence the
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| measure is still called the iambic or lampooning measure, being that
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| in which people lampooned one another. Thus the older poets were
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| distinguished as writers of heroic or of lampooning verse.
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| As, in the serious style, Homer is pre-eminent among poets, for he alone
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| combined dramatic form with excellence of imitation, so he too first
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| laid down the main lines of Comedy, by dramatising the ludicrous instead
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| of writing personal satire. His Margites bears the same relation to
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| Comedy that the Iliad and Odyssey do to Tragedy. But when Tragedy and
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| Comedy came to light, the two classes of poets still followed their
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| natural bent: the lampooners became writers of Comedy, and the Epic
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| poets were succeeded by Tragedians, since the drama was a larger and
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| higher form of art.
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| Whether Tragedy has as yet perfected its proper types or not; and
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| whether it is to be judged in itself, or in relation also to the
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| audience,--this raises another question. Be that as it may, Tragedy--as
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| also Comedy--was at first mere improvisation. The one originated with
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| the authors of the Dithyramb, the other with those of the phallic songs,
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| which are still in use in many of our cities. Tragedy advanced by slow
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| degrees; each new element that showed itself was in turn developed.
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| Having passed through many changes, it found its natural form, and there
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| it stopped.
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| Aeschylus first introduced a second actor; he diminished the importance
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| of the Chorus, and assigned the leading part to the dialogue. Sophocles
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| raised the number of actors to three, and added scene-painting.
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| Moreover, it was not till late that the short plot was discarded for
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| one of greater compass, and the grotesque diction of the earlier satyric
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| form for the stately manner of Tragedy. The iambic measure then replaced
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| the trochaic tetrameter, which was originally employed when the poetry
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| was of the Satyric order, and had greater affinities with dancing. Once
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| dialogue had come in, Nature herself discovered the appropriate measure.
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| For the iambic is, of all measures, the most colloquial: we see it
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| in the fact that conversational speech runs into iambic lines more
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| frequently than into any other kind of verse; rarely into hexameters,
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| and only when we drop the colloquial intonation. The additions to
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| the number of 'episodes' or acts, and the other accessories of which
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| tradition; tells, must be taken as already described; for to discuss
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| them in detail would, doubtless, be a large undertaking.
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| V
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| Comedy is, as we have said, an imitation of characters of a lower type,
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| not, however, in the full sense of the word bad, the Ludicrous being
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| merely a subdivision of the ugly. It consists in some defect or ugliness
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| which is not painful or destructive. To take an obvious example, the
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| comic mask is ugly and distorted, but does not imply pain.
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| The successive changes through which Tragedy passed, and the authors
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| of these changes, are well known, whereas Comedy has had no history,
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| because it was not at first treated seriously. It was late before the
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| Archon granted a comic chorus to a poet; the performers were till then
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| voluntary. Comedy had already taken definite shape when comic poets,
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| distinctively so called, are heard of. Who furnished it with masks, or
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| prologues, or increased the number of actors,--these and other similar
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| details remain unknown. As for the plot, it came originally from
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| Sicily; but of Athenian writers Crates was the first who, abandoning the
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| 'iambic' or lampooning form, generalised his themes and plots.
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| Epic poetry agrees with Tragedy in so far as it is an imitation in verse
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| of characters of a higher type. They differ, in that Epic poetry admits
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| but one kind of metre, and is narrative in form. They differ, again,
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| in their length: for Tragedy endeavours, as far as possible, to confine
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| itself to a single revolution of the sun, or but slightly to exceed this
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| limit; whereas the Epic action has no limits of time. This, then, is
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| a second point of difference; though at first the same freedom was
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| admitted in Tragedy as in Epic poetry.
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| Of their constituent parts some are common to both, some peculiar to
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| Tragedy, whoever, therefore, knows what is good or bad Tragedy, knows
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| also about Epic poetry. All the elements of an Epic poem are found in
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| Tragedy, but the elements of a Tragedy are not all found in the Epic
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| poem.
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| VI
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| Of the poetry which imitates in hexameter verse, and of Comedy, we
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| will speak hereafter. Let us now discuss Tragedy, resuming its formal
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| definition, as resulting from what has been already said.
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| Tragedy, then, is an imitation of an action that is serious, complete,
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| and of a certain magnitude; in language embellished with each kind of
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| artistic ornament, the several kinds being found in separate parts of
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| the play; in the form of action, not of narrative; through pity and
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| fear effecting the proper purgation of these emotions. By 'language
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| embellished,' I mean language into which rhythm, 'harmony,' and song
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| enter. By 'the several kinds in separate parts,' I mean, that some parts
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| are rendered through the medium of verse alone, others again with the
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| aid of song.
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| Now as tragic imitation implies persons acting, it necessarily follows,
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| in the first place, that Spectacular equipment will be a part of
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| Tragedy. Next, Song and Diction, for these are the medium of imitation.
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| By 'Diction' I mean the mere metrical arrangement of the words: as for
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| 'Song,' it is a term whose sense every one understands.
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| Again, Tragedy is the imitation of an action; and an action implies
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| personal agents, who necessarily possess certain distinctive qualities
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| both of character and thought; for it is by these that we qualify
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| actions themselves, and these--thought and character--are the two
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| natural causes from which actions spring, and on actions again all
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| success or failure depends. Hence, the Plot is the imitation of the
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| action: for by plot I here mean the arrangement of the incidents. By
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| Character I mean that in virtue of which we ascribe certain qualities to
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| the agents. Thought is required wherever a statement is proved, or, it
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| may be, a general truth enunciated. Every Tragedy, therefore, must have
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| six parts, which parts determine its quality--namely, Plot, Character,
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| Diction, Thought, Spectacle, Song. Two of the parts constitute the
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| medium of imitation, one the manner, and three the objects of imitation.
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| And these complete the list. These elements have been employed, we may
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| say, by the poets to a man; in fact, every play contains Spectacular
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| elements as well as Character, Plot, Diction, Song, and Thought.
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| But most important of all is the structure of the incidents. For Tragedy
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| is an imitation, not of men, but of an action and of life, and life
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| consists in action, and its end is a mode of action, not a quality. Now
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| character determines men's qualities, but it is by their actions that
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| they are happy or the reverse. Dramatic action, therefore, is not with
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| a view to the representation of character: character comes in as
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| subsidiary to the actions. Hence the incidents and the plot are the
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| end of a tragedy; and the end is the chief thing of all. Again, without
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| action there cannot be a tragedy; there may be without character.
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| The tragedies of most of our modern poets fail in the rendering of
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| character; and of poets in general this is often true. It is the same
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| in painting; and here lies the difference between Zeuxis and Polygnotus.
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| Polygnotus delineates character well: the style of Zeuxis is devoid
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| of ethical quality. Again, if you string together a set of speeches
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| expressive of character, and well finished in point of diction and
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| thought, you will not produce the essential tragic effect nearly so well
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| as with a play which, however deficient in these respects, yet has a
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| plot and artistically constructed incidents. Besides which, the most
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| powerful elements of emotional: interest in Tragedy Peripeteia or
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| Reversal of the Situation, and Recognition scenes--are parts of the
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| plot. A further proof is, that novices in the art attain to finish: of
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| diction and precision of portraiture before they can construct the plot.
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| It is the same with almost all the early poets.
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| The Plot, then, is the first principle, and, as it were, the soul of
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| a tragedy: Character holds the second place. A similar fact is seen in
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| painting. The most beautiful colours, laid on confusedly, will not give
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| as much pleasure as the chalk outline of a portrait. Thus Tragedy is
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| the imitation of an action, and of the agents mainly with a view to the
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| action.
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| Third in order is Thought,--that is, the faculty of saying what is
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| possible and pertinent in given circumstances. In the case of oratory,
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| this is the function of the Political art and of the art of rhetoric:
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| and so indeed the older poets make their characters speak the language
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| of civic life; the poets of our time, the language of the rhetoricians.
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| Character is that which reveals moral purpose, showing what kind of
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| things a man chooses or avoids. Speeches, therefore, which do not make
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| this manifest, or in which the speaker does not choose or avoid anything
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| whatever, are not expressive of character. Thought, on the other hand,
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| is found where something is proved to be, or not to be, or a general
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| maxim is enunciated.
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| Fourth among the elements enumerated comes Diction; by which I mean, as
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| has been already said, the expression of the meaning in words; and its
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| essence is the same both in verse and prose.
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| Of the remaining elements Song holds the chief place among the
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| embellishments.
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| The Spectacle has, indeed, an emotional attraction of its own, but, of
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| all the parts, it is the least artistic, and connected least with the
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| art of poetry. For the power of Tragedy, we may be sure, is felt
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| even apart from representation and actors. Besides, the production of
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| spectacular effects depends more on the art of the stage machinist than
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| on that of the poet.
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| VII
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| These principles being established, let us now discuss the proper
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| structure of the Plot, since this is the first and most important thing
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| in Tragedy.
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| Now, according to our definition, Tragedy is an imitation of an action
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| that is complete, and whole, and of a certain magnitude; for there may
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| be a whole that is wanting in magnitude. A whole is that which has a
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| beginning, a middle, and an end. A beginning is that which does not
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| itself follow anything by causal necessity, but after which something
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| naturally is or comes to be. An end, on the contrary, is that which
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| itself naturally follows some other thing, either by necessity, or as
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| a rule, but has nothing following it. A middle is that which follows
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| something as some other thing follows it. A well constructed plot,
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| therefore, must neither begin nor end at haphazard, but conform to these
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| principles.
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| Again, a beautiful object, whether it be a living organism or any whole
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| composed of parts, must not only have an orderly arrangement of parts,
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| but must also be of a certain magnitude; for beauty depends on magnitude
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| and order. Hence a very small animal organism cannot be beautiful;
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| for the view of it is confused, the object being seen in an almost
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| imperceptible moment of time. Nor, again, can one of vast size be
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| beautiful; for as the eye cannot take it all in at once, the unity and
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| sense of the whole is lost for the spectator; as for instance if there
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| were one a thousand miles long. As, therefore, in the case of animate
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| bodies and organisms a certain magnitude is necessary, and a magnitude
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| which may be easily embraced in one view; so in the plot, a certain
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| length is necessary, and a length which can be easily embraced by the
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| memory. The limit of length in relation to dramatic competition and
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| sensuous presentment, is no part of artistic theory. For had it been the
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| rule for a hundred tragedies to compete together, the performance would
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| have been regulated by the water-clock,--as indeed we are told was
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| formerly done. But the limit as fixed by the nature of the drama itself
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| is this: the greater the length, the more beautiful will the piece be
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| by reason of its size, provided that the whole be perspicuous. And
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| to define the matter roughly, we may say that the proper magnitude is
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| comprised within such limits, that the sequence of events, according
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| to the law of probability or necessity, will admit of a change from bad
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| fortune to good, or from good fortune to bad.
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| VIII
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| Unity of plot does not, as some persons think, consist in the Unity of
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| the hero. For infinitely various are the incidents in one man's life
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| which cannot be reduced to unity; and so, too, there are many actions of
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| one man out of which we cannot make one action. Hence, the error, as it
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| appears, of all poets who have composed a Heracleid, a Theseid, or other
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| poems of the kind. They imagine that as Heracles was one man, the story
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| of Heracles must also be a unity. But Homer, as in all else he is of
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| surpassing merit, here too--whether from art or natural genius--seems
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| to have happily discerned the truth. In composing the Odyssey he did not
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| include all the adventures of Odysseus--such as his wound on Parnassus,
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| or his feigned madness at the mustering of the host--incidents between
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| which there was no necessary or probable connection: but he made the
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| Odyssey, and likewise the Iliad, to centre round an action that in our
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| sense of the word is one. As therefore, in the other imitative arts, the
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| imitation is one when the object imitated is one, so the plot, being an
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| imitation of an action, must imitate one action and that a whole, the
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| structural union of the parts being such that, if any one of them is
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| displaced or removed, the whole will be disjointed and disturbed. For a
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| thing whose presence or absence makes no visible difference, is not an
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| organic part of the whole.
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| IX
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| It is, moreover, evident from what has been said, that it is not
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| the function of the poet to relate what has happened, but what may
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| happen,--what is possible according to the law of probability or
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| necessity. The poet and the historian differ not by writing in verse or
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| in prose. The work of Herodotus might be put into verse, and it would
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| still be a species of history, with metre no less than without it. The
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| true difference is that one relates what has happened, the other what
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| may happen. Poetry, therefore, is a more philosophical and a higher
|
| thing than history: for poetry tends to express the universal, history
|
| the particular. By the universal, I mean how a person of a certain type
|
| will on occasion speak or act, according to the law of probability or
|
| necessity; and it is this universality at which poetry aims in the names
|
| she attaches to the personages. The particular is--for example--what
|
| Alcibiades did or suffered. In Comedy this is already apparent: for here
|
| the poet first constructs the plot on the lines of probability, and then
|
| inserts characteristic names;--unlike the lampooners who write about
|
| particular individuals. But tragedians still keep to real names, the
|
| reason being that what is possible is credible: what has not happened
|
| we do not at once feel sure to be possible: but what has happened is
|
| manifestly possible: otherwise it would not have happened. Still there
|
| are even some tragedies in which there are only one or two well known
|
| names, the rest being fictitious. In others, none are well known, as in
|
| Agathon's Antheus, where incidents and names alike are fictitious, and
|
| yet they give none the less pleasure. We must not, therefore, at all
|
| costs keep to the received legends, which are the usual subjects of
|
| Tragedy. Indeed, it would be absurd to attempt it; for even subjects
|
| that are known are known only to a few, and yet give pleasure to all.
|
| It clearly follows that the poet or 'maker' should be the maker of plots
|
| rather than of verses; since he is a poet because he imitates, and what
|
| he imitates are actions. And even if he chances to take an historical
|
| subject, he is none the less a poet; for there is no reason why some
|
| events that have actually happened should not conform to the law of the
|
| probable and possible, and in virtue of that quality in them he is their
|
| poet or maker.
|
|
|
| Of all plots and actions the epeisodic are the worst. I call a plot
|
| 'epeisodic' in which the episodes or acts succeed one another without
|
| probable or necessary sequence. Bad poets compose such pieces by their
|
| own fault, good poets, to please the players; for, as they write show
|
| pieces for competition, they stretch the plot beyond its capacity, and
|
| are often forced to break the natural continuity.
|
|
|
| But again, Tragedy is an imitation not only of a complete action, but of
|
| events inspiring fear or pity. Such an effect is best produced when the
|
| events come on us by surprise; and the effect is heightened when, at the
|
| same time, they follow as cause and effect. The tragic wonder will thee
|
| be greater than if they happened of themselves or by accident; for even
|
| coincidences are most striking when they have an air of design. We may
|
| instance the statue of Mitys at Argos, which fell upon his murderer
|
| while he was a spectator at a festival, and killed him. Such events seem
|
| not to be due to mere chance. Plots, therefore, constructed on these
|
| principles are necessarily the best.
|
|
|
| X
|
|
|
| Plots are either Simple or Complex, for the actions in real life, of
|
| which the plots are an imitation, obviously show a similar distinction.
|
| An action which is one and continuous in the sense above defined, I call
|
| Simple, when the change of fortune takes place without Reversal of the
|
| Situation and without Recognition.
|
|
|
| A Complex action is one in which the change is accompanied by such
|
| Reversal, or by Recognition, or by both. These last should arise from
|
| the internal structure of the plot, so that what follows should be the
|
| necessary or probable result of the preceding action. It makes all the
|
| difference whether any given event is a case of propter hoc or post hoc.
|
|
|
| XI
|
|
|
| Reversal of the Situation is a change by which the action veers round
|
| to its opposite, subject always to our rule of probability or necessity.
|
| Thus in the Oedipus, the messenger comes to cheer Oedipus and free
|
| him from his alarms about his mother, but by revealing who he is, he
|
| produces the opposite effect. Again in the Lynceus, Lynceus is being led
|
| away to his death, and Danaus goes with him, meaning, to slay him; but
|
| the outcome of the preceding incidents is that Danaus is killed and
|
| Lynceus saved. Recognition, as the name indicates, is a change from
|
| ignorance to knowledge, producing love or hate between the persons
|
| destined by the poet for good or bad fortune. The best form of
|
| recognition is coincident with a Reversal of the Situation, as in the
|
| Oedipus. There are indeed other forms. Even inanimate things of the most
|
| trivial kind may in a sense be objects of recognition. Again, we may
|
| recognise or discover whether a person has done a thing or not. But the
|
| recognition which is most intimately connected with the plot and action
|
| is, as we have said, the recognition of persons. This recognition,
|
| combined, with Reversal, will produce either pity or fear; and actions
|
| producing these effects are those which, by our definition, Tragedy
|
| represents. Moreover, it is upon such situations that the issues of good
|
| or bad fortune will depend. Recognition, then, being between persons,
|
| it may happen that one person only is recognised by the other-when the
|
| latter is already known--or it may be necessary that the recognition
|
| should be on both sides. Thus Iphigenia is revealed to Orestes by the
|
| sending of the letter; but another act of recognition is required to
|
| make Orestes known to Iphigenia.
|
|
|
| Two parts, then, of the Plot--Reversal of the Situation and
|
| Recognition--turn upon surprises. A third part is the Scene of
|
| Suffering. The Scene of Suffering is a destructive or painful action,
|
| such as death on the stage, bodily agony, wounds and the like.
|
|
|
| XII
|
|
|
| [The parts of Tragedy which must be treated as elements of the whole
|
| have been already mentioned. We now come to the quantitative parts,
|
| and the separate parts into which Tragedy is divided, namely, Prologue,
|
| Episode, Exode, Choric song; this last being divided into Parode and
|
| Stasimon. These are common to all plays: peculiar to some are the songs
|
| of actors from the stage and the Commoi.
|
|
|
| The Prologue is that entire part of a tragedy which precedes the Parode
|
| of the Chorus. The Episode is that entire part of a tragedy which
|
| is between complete choric songs. The Exode is that entire part of a
|
| tragedy which has no choric song after it. Of the Choric part the Parode
|
| is the first undivided utterance of the Chorus: the Stasimon is a Choric
|
| ode without anapaests or trochaic tetrameters: the Commos is a joint
|
| lamentation of Chorus and actors. The parts of Tragedy which must
|
| be treated as elements of the whole have been already mentioned. The
|
| quantitative parts the separate parts into which it is divided--are here
|
| enumerated.]
|
|
|
| XIII
|
|
|
| As the sequel to what has already been said, we must proceed to consider
|
| what the poet should aim at, and what he should avoid, in constructing
|
| his plots; and by what means the specific effect of Tragedy will be
|
| produced.
|
|
|
| A perfect tragedy should, as we have seen, be arranged not on the simple
|
| but on the complex plan. It should, moreover, imitate actions which
|
| excite pity and fear, this being the distinctive mark of tragic
|
| imitation. It follows plainly, in the first place, that the change, of
|
| fortune presented must not be the spectacle of a virtuous man brought
|
| from prosperity to adversity: for this moves neither pity nor fear; it
|
| merely shocks us. Nor, again, that of a bad man passing from adversity
|
| to prosperity: for nothing can be more alien to the spirit of Tragedy;
|
| it possesses no single tragic quality; it neither satisfies the moral
|
| sense nor calls forth pity or fear. Nor, again, should the downfall of
|
| the utter villain be exhibited. A plot of this kind would, doubtless,
|
| satisfy the moral sense, but it would inspire neither pity nor fear; for
|
| pity is aroused by unmerited misfortune, fear by the misfortune of a man
|
| like ourselves. Such an event, therefore, will be neither pitiful
|
| nor terrible. There remains, then, the character between these two
|
| extremes,--that of a man who is not eminently good and just,-yet whose
|
| misfortune is brought about not by vice or depravity, but by some error
|
| or frailty. He must be one who is highly renowned and prosperous,--a
|
| personage like Oedipus, Thyestes, or other illustrious men of such
|
| families.
|
|
|
| A well constructed plot should, therefore, be single in its issue,
|
| rather than double as some maintain. The change of fortune should be not
|
| from bad to good, but, reversely, from good to bad. It should come about
|
| as the result not of vice, but of some great error or frailty, in a
|
| character either such as we have described, or better rather than
|
| worse. The practice of the stage bears out our view. At first the poets
|
| recounted any legend that came in their way. Now, the best tragedies
|
| are founded on the story of a few houses, on the fortunes of Alcmaeon,
|
| Oedipus, Orestes, Meleager, Thyestes, Telephus, and those others who
|
| have done or suffered something terrible. A tragedy, then, to be perfect
|
| according to the rules of art should be of this construction. Hence
|
| they are in error who censure Euripides just because he follows this
|
| principle in his plays, many of which end unhappily. It is, as we have
|
| said, the right ending. The best proof is that on the stage and in
|
| dramatic competition, such plays, if well worked out, are the most
|
| tragic in effect; and Euripides, faulty though he may be in the general
|
| management of his subject, yet is felt to be the most tragic of the
|
| poets.
|
|
|
| In the second rank comes the kind of tragedy which some place first.
|
| Like the Odyssey, it has a double thread of plot, and also an opposite
|
| catastrophe for the good and for the bad. It is accounted the best
|
| because of the weakness of the spectators; for the poet is guided in
|
| what he writes by the wishes of his audience. The pleasure, however,
|
| thence derived is not the true tragic pleasure. It is proper rather to
|
| Comedy, where those who, in the piece, are the deadliest enemies--like
|
| Orestes and Aegisthus--quit the stage as friends at the close, and no
|
| one slays or is slain.
|
|
|
| XIV
|
|
|
| Fear and pity may be aroused by spectacular means; but they may also
|
| result from the inner structure of the piece, which is the better way,
|
| and indicates a superior poet. For the plot ought to be so constructed
|
| that, even without the aid of the eye, he who hears the tale told will
|
| thrill with horror and melt to pity at what takes place. This is the
|
| impression we should receive from hearing the story of the Oedipus. But
|
| to produce this effect by the mere spectacle is a less artistic method,
|
| and dependent on extraneous aids. Those who employ spectacular means
|
| to create a sense not of the terrible but only of the monstrous, are
|
| strangers to the purpose of Tragedy; for we must not demand of Tragedy
|
| any and every kind of pleasure, but only that which is proper to it. And
|
| since the pleasure which the poet should afford is that which comes from
|
| pity and fear through imitation, it is evident that this quality must be
|
| impressed upon the incidents.
|
|
|
| Let us then determine what are the circumstances which strike us as
|
| terrible or pitiful.
|
|
|
| Actions capable of this effect must happen between persons who are
|
| either friends or enemies or indifferent to one another. If an enemy
|
| kills an enemy, there is nothing to excite pity either in the act or
|
| the intention,--except so far as the suffering in itself is pitiful.
|
| So again with indifferent persons. But when the tragic incident occurs
|
| between those who are near or dear to one another--if, for example, a
|
| brother kills, or intends to kill, a brother, a son his father, a mother
|
| her son, a son his mother, or any other deed of the kind is done--these
|
| are the situations to be looked for by the poet. He may not indeed
|
| destroy the framework of the received legends--the fact, for instance,
|
| that Clytemnestra was slain by Orestes and Eriphyle by Alcmaeon but he
|
| ought to show invention of his own, and skilfully handle the traditional
|
| material. Let us explain more clearly what is meant by skilful handling.
|
|
|
| The action may be done consciously and with knowledge of the persons, in
|
| the manner of the older poets. It is thus too that Euripides makes Medea
|
| slay her children. Or, again, the deed of horror may be done, but
|
| done in ignorance, and the tie of kinship or friendship be discovered
|
| afterwards. The Oedipus of Sophocles is an example. Here, indeed, the
|
| incident is outside the drama proper; but cases occur where it falls
|
| within the action of the play: one may cite the Alcmaeon of Astydamas,
|
| or Telegonus in the Wounded Odysseus. Again, there is a third case,--<to
|
| be about to act with knowledge of the persons and then not to act. The
|
| fourth case is> when some one is about to do an irreparable deed through
|
| ignorance, and makes the discovery before it is done. These are the only
|
| possible ways. For the deed must either be done or not done,--and that
|
| wittingly or unwittingly. But of all these ways, to be about to act
|
| knowing the persons, and then not to act, is the worst. It is shocking
|
| without being tragic, for no disaster follows. It is, therefore, never,
|
| or very rarely, found in poetry. One instance, however, is in the
|
| Antigone, where Haemon threatens to kill Creon. The next and better way
|
| is that the deed should be perpetrated. Still better, that it should be
|
| perpetrated in ignorance, and the discovery made afterwards. There
|
| is then nothing to shock us, while the discovery produces a startling
|
| effect. The last case is the best, as when in the Cresphontes Merope is
|
| about to slay her son, but, recognising who he is, spares his life. So
|
| in the Iphigenia, the sister recognises the brother just in time. Again
|
| in the Helle, the son recognises the mother when on the point of giving
|
| her up. This, then, is why a few families only, as has been already
|
| observed, furnish the subjects of tragedy. It was not art, but happy
|
| chance, that led the poets in search of subjects to impress the tragic
|
| quality upon their plots. They are compelled, therefore, to have
|
| recourse to those houses whose history contains moving incidents like
|
| these.
|
|
|
| Enough has now been said concerning the structure of the incidents, and
|
| the right kind of plot.
|
|
|
| XV
|
|
|
| In respect of Character there are four things to be aimed at. First, and
|
| most important, it must be good. Now any speech or action that manifests
|
| moral purpose of any kind will be expressive of character: the character
|
| will be good if the purpose is good. This rule is relative to each
|
| class. Even a woman may be good, and also a slave; though the woman
|
| may be said to be an inferior being, and the slave quite worthless. The
|
| second thing to aim at is propriety. There is a type of manly valour;
|
| but valour in a woman, or unscrupulous cleverness, is inappropriate.
|
| Thirdly, character must be true to life: for this is a distinct thing
|
| from goodness and propriety, as here described. The fourth point is
|
| consistency: for though the subject of the imitation, who suggested the
|
| type, be inconsistent, still he must be consistently inconsistent. As an
|
| example of motiveless degradation of character, we have Menelaus in
|
| the Orestes: of character indecorous and inappropriate, the lament of
|
| Odysseus in the Scylla, and the speech of Melanippe: of inconsistency,
|
| the Iphigenia at Aulis,--for Iphigenia the suppliant in no way resembles
|
| her later self.
|
|
|
| As in the structure of the plot, so too in the portraiture of character,
|
| the poet should always aim either at the necessary or the probable. Thus
|
| a person of a given character should speak or act in a given way, by the
|
| rule either of necessity or of probability; just as this event should
|
| follow that by necessary or probable sequence. It is therefore evident
|
| that the unravelling of the plot, no less than the complication, must
|
| arise out of the plot itself, it must not be brought about by the 'Deus
|
| ex Machina'--as in the Medea, or in the Return of the Greeks in the
|
| Iliad. The 'Deus ex Machina' should be employed only for events external
|
| to the drama,--for antecedent or subsequent events, which lie beyond the
|
| range of human knowledge, and which require to be reported or foretold;
|
| for to the gods we ascribe the power of seeing all things. Within the
|
| action there must be nothing irrational. If the irrational cannot be
|
| excluded, it should be outside the scope of the tragedy. Such is the
|
| irrational element in the Oedipus of Sophocles.
|
|
|
| Again, since Tragedy is an imitation of persons who are above the common
|
| level, the example of good portrait-painters should be followed. They,
|
| while reproducing the distinctive form of the original, make a likeness
|
| which is true to life and yet more beautiful. So too the poet, in
|
| representing men who are irascible or indolent, or have other defects
|
| of character, should preserve the type and yet ennoble it. In this way
|
| Achilles is portrayed by Agathon and Homer.
|
|
|
| These then are rules the poet should observe. Nor should he neglect
|
| those appeals to the senses, which, though not among the essentials, are
|
| the concomitants of poetry; for here too there is much room for error.
|
| But of this enough has been said in our published treatises.
|
|
|
| XVI
|
|
|
| What Recognition is has been already explained. We will now enumerate
|
| its kinds.
|
|
|
| First, the least artistic form, which, from poverty of wit, is
|
| most commonly employed recognition by signs. Of these some are
|
| congenital,--such as 'the spear which the earth-born race bear on their
|
| bodies,' or the stars introduced by Carcinus in his Thyestes. Others are
|
| acquired after birth; and of these some are bodily marks, as scars; some
|
| external tokens, as necklaces, or the little ark in the Tyro by which
|
| the discovery is effected. Even these admit of more or less skilful
|
| treatment. Thus in the recognition of Odysseus by his scar, the
|
| discovery is made in one way by the nurse, in another by the swineherds.
|
| The use of tokens for the express purpose of proof--and, indeed,
|
| any formal proof with or without tokens--is a less artistic mode of
|
| recognition. A better kind is that which comes about by a turn of
|
| incident, as in the Bath Scene in the Odyssey.
|
|
|
| Next come the recognitions invented at will by the poet, and on that
|
| account wanting in art. For example, Orestes in the Iphigenia reveals
|
| the fact that he is Orestes. She, indeed, makes herself known by the
|
| letter; but he, by speaking himself, and saying what the poet, not what
|
| the plot requires. This, therefore, is nearly allied to the fault above
|
| mentioned:--for Orestes might as well have brought tokens with him.
|
| Another similar instance is the 'voice of the shuttle' in the Tereus of
|
| Sophocles.
|
|
|
| The third kind depends on memory when the sight of some object awakens
|
| a feeling: as in the Cyprians of Dicaeogenes, where the hero breaks into
|
| tears on seeing the picture; or again in the 'Lay of Alcinous,' where
|
| Odysseus, hearing the minstrel play the lyre, recalls the past and
|
| weeps; and hence the recognition.
|
|
|
| The fourth kind is by process of reasoning. Thus in the Choephori: 'Some
|
| one resembling me has come: no one resembles me but Orestes: therefore
|
| Orestes has come.' Such too is the discovery made by Iphigenia in the
|
| play of Polyidus the Sophist. It was a natural reflection for Orestes to
|
| make, 'So I too must die at the altar like my sister.' So, again, in
|
| the Tydeus of Theodectes, the father says, 'I came to find my son, and
|
| I lose my own life.' So too in the Phineidae: the women, on seeing the
|
| place, inferred their fate:--'Here we are doomed to die, for here
|
| we were cast forth.' Again, there is a composite kind of recognition
|
| involving false inference on the part of one of the characters, as in
|
| the Odysseus Disguised as a Messenger. A said <that no one else was able
|
| to bend the bow;... hence B (the disguised Odysseus) imagined that A
|
| would> recognise the bow which, in fact, he had not seen; and to bring
|
| about a recognition by this means that the expectation A would recognise
|
| the bow is false inference.
|
|
|
| But, of all recognitions, the best is that which arises from the
|
| incidents themselves, where the startling discovery is made by natural
|
| means. Such is that in the Oedipus of Sophocles, and in the Iphigenia;
|
| for it was natural that Iphigenia should wish to dispatch a letter.
|
| These recognitions alone dispense with the artificial aid of tokens or
|
| amulets. Next come the recognitions by process of reasoning.
|
|
|
| XVII
|
|
|
| In constructing the plot and working it out with the proper diction,
|
| the poet should place the scene, as far as possible, before his eyes. In
|
| this way, seeing everything with the utmost vividness, as if he were a
|
| spectator of the action, he will discover what is in keeping with it,
|
| and be most unlikely to overlook inconsistencies. The need of such a
|
| rule is shown by the fault found in Carcinus. Amphiaraus was on his way
|
| from the temple. This fact escaped the observation of one who did not
|
| see the situation. On the stage, however, the piece failed, the audience
|
| being offended at the oversight.
|
|
|
| Again, the poet should work out his play, to the best of his power, with
|
| appropriate gestures; for those who feel emotion are most convincing
|
| through natural sympathy with the characters they represent; and one
|
| who is agitated storms, one who is angry rages, with the most life-like
|
| reality. Hence poetry implies either a happy gift of nature or a strain
|
| of madness. In the one case a man can take the mould of any character;
|
| in the other, he is lifted out of his proper self.
|
|
|
| As for the story, whether the poet takes it ready made or constructs it
|
| for himself, he should first sketch its general outline, and then
|
| fill in the episodes and amplify in detail. The general plan may be
|
| illustrated by the Iphigenia. A young girl is sacrificed; she disappears
|
| mysteriously from the eyes of those who sacrificed her; She is
|
| transported to another country, where the custom is to offer up all
|
| strangers to the goddess. To this ministry she is appointed. Some time
|
| later her own brother chances to arrive. The fact that the oracle for
|
| some reason ordered him to go there, is outside the general plan of the
|
| play. The purpose, again, of his coming is outside the action proper.
|
| However, he comes, he is seized, and, when on the point of being
|
| sacrificed, reveals who he is. The mode of recognition may be either
|
| that of Euripides or of Polyidus, in whose play he exclaims very
|
| naturally:--'So it was not my sister only, but I too, who was doomed to
|
| be sacrificed'; and by that remark he is saved.
|
|
|
| After this, the names being once given, it remains to fill in the
|
| episodes. We must see that they are relevant to the action. In the case
|
| of Orestes, for example, there is the madness which led to his capture,
|
| and his deliverance by means of the purificatory rite. In the drama, the
|
| episodes are short, but it is these that give extension to Epic poetry.
|
| Thus the story of the Odyssey can be stated briefly. A certain man is
|
| absent from home for many years; he is jealously watched by Poseidon,
|
| and left desolate. Meanwhile his home is in a wretched plight--suitors
|
| are wasting his substance and plotting against his son. At length,
|
| tempest-tost, he himself arrives; he makes certain persons acquainted
|
| with him; he attacks the suitors with his own hand, and is himself
|
| preserved while he destroys them. This is the essence of the plot; the
|
| rest is episode.
|
|
|
| XVIII
|
|
|
| Every tragedy falls into two parts,--Complication and Unravelling or
|
| Denouement. Incidents extraneous to the action are frequently combined
|
| with a portion of the action proper, to form the Complication; the rest
|
| is the Unravelling. By the Complication I mean all that extends from
|
| the beginning of the action to the part which marks the turning-point
|
| to good or bad fortune. The Unravelling is that which extends from the
|
| beginning of the change to the end. Thus, in the Lynceus of Theodectes,
|
| the Complication consists of the incidents presupposed in the drama, the
|
| seizure of the child, and then again, The Unravelling extends from
|
| the accusation of murder to the end.
|
|
|
| There are four kinds of Tragedy, the Complex, depending entirely on
|
| Reversal of the Situation and Recognition; the Pathetic (where the
|
| motive is passion),--such as the tragedies on Ajax and Ixion; the
|
| Ethical (where the motives are ethical),--such as the Phthiotides and
|
| the Peleus. The fourth kind is the Simple <We here exclude the purely
|
| spectacular element>, exemplified by the Phorcides, the Prometheus, and
|
| scenes laid in Hades. The poet should endeavour, if possible, to combine
|
| all poetic elements; or failing that, the greatest number and those the
|
| most important; the more so, in face of the cavilling criticism of the
|
| day. For whereas there have hitherto been good poets, each in his own
|
| branch, the critics now expect one man to surpass all others in their
|
| several lines of excellence.
|
|
|
| In speaking of a tragedy as the same or different, the best test to take
|
| is the plot. Identity exists where the Complication and Unravelling are
|
| the same. Many poets tie the knot well, but unravel it ill. Both arts,
|
| however, should always be mastered.
|
|
|
| Again, the poet should remember what has been often said, and not make
|
| an Epic structure into a Tragedy--by an Epic structure I mean one with
|
| a multiplicity of plots--as if, for instance, you were to make a tragedy
|
| out of the entire story of the Iliad. In the Epic poem, owing to its
|
| length, each part assumes its proper magnitude. In the drama the result
|
| is far from answering to the poet's expectation. The proof is that the
|
| poets who have dramatised the whole story of the Fall of Troy, instead
|
| of selecting portions, like Euripides; or who have taken the whole
|
| tale of Niobe, and not a part of her story, like Aeschylus, either fail
|
| utterly or meet with poor success on the stage. Even Agathon has been
|
| known to fail from this one defect. In his Reversals of the Situation,
|
| however, he shows a marvellous skill in the effort to hit the popular
|
| taste,--to produce a tragic effect that satisfies the moral sense. This
|
| effect is produced when the clever rogue, like Sisyphus, is outwitted,
|
| or the brave villain defeated. Such an event is probable in Agathon's
|
| sense of the word: 'it is probable,' he says, 'that many things should
|
| happen contrary to probability.'
|
|
|
| The Chorus too should be regarded as one of the actors; it should be an
|
| integral part of the whole, and share in the action, in the manner not
|
| of Euripides but of Sophocles. As for the later poets, their choral
|
| songs pertain as little to the subject of the piece as to that of any
|
| other tragedy. They are, therefore, sung as mere interludes, a practice
|
| first begun by Agathon. Yet what difference is there between introducing
|
| such choral interludes, and transferring a speech, or even a whole act,
|
| from one play to another?
|
|
|
| XIX
|
|
|
| It remains to speak of Diction and Thought, the other parts of Tragedy
|
| having been already discussed. Concerning Thought, we may assume what
|
| is said in the Rhetoric, to which inquiry the subject more strictly
|
| belongs. Under Thought is included every effect which has to be produced
|
| by speech, the subdivisions being,--proof and refutation; the excitation
|
| of the feelings, such as pity, fear, anger, and the like; the suggestion
|
| of importance or its opposite. Now, it is evident that the dramatic
|
| incidents must be treated from the same points of view as the dramatic
|
| speeches, when the object is to evoke the sense of pity, fear,
|
| importance, or probability. The only difference is, that the incidents
|
| should speak for themselves without verbal exposition; while the effects
|
| aimed at in speech should be produced by the speaker, and as a result of
|
| the speech. For what were the business of a speaker, if the Thought were
|
| revealed quite apart from what he says?
|
|
|
| Next, as regards Diction. One branch of the inquiry treats of the Modes
|
| of Utterance. But this province of knowledge belongs to the art
|
| of Delivery and to the masters of that science. It includes, for
|
| instance,--what is a command, a prayer, a statement, a threat, a
|
| question, an answer, and so forth. To know or not to know these things
|
| involves no serious censure upon the poet's art. For who can admit
|
| the fault imputed to Homer by Protagoras,--that in the words, 'Sing,
|
| goddess, of the wrath,' he gives a command under the idea that he utters
|
| a prayer? For to tell some one to do a thing or not to do it is, he
|
| says, a command. We may, therefore, pass this over as an inquiry that
|
| belongs to another art, not to poetry.
|
|
|
| XX
|
|
|
| [Language in general includes the following parts:--Letter, Syllable,
|
| Connecting word, Noun, Verb, Inflexion or Case, Sentence or Phrase.
|
|
|
| A Letter is an indivisible sound, yet not every such sound, but only
|
| one which can form part of a group of sounds. For even brutes utter
|
| indivisible sounds, none of which I call a letter. The sound I mean
|
| may be either a vowel, a semi-vowel, or a mute. A vowel is that which
|
| without impact of tongue or lip has an audible sound. A semi-vowel, that
|
| which with such impact has an audible sound, as S and R. A mute, that
|
| which with such impact has by itself no sound, but joined to a vowel
|
| sound becomes audible, as G and D. These are distinguished according
|
| to the form assumed by the mouth and the place where they are produced;
|
| according as they are aspirated or smooth, long or short; as they are
|
| acute, grave, or of an intermediate tone; which inquiry belongs in
|
| detail to the writers on metre.
|
|
|
| A Syllable is a non-significant sound, composed of a mute and a
|
| vowel: for GR without A is a syllable, as also with A,--GRA. But the
|
| investigation of these differences belongs also to metrical science.
|
|
|
| A Connecting word is a non-significant sound, which neither causes nor
|
| hinders the union of many sounds into one significant sound; it may
|
| be placed at either end or in the middle of a sentence. Or, a
|
| non-significant sound, which out of several sounds, each of them
|
| significant, is capable of forming one significant sound,--as {alpha mu
|
| theta iota}, {pi epsilon rho iota}, and the like. Or, a non-significant
|
| sound, which marks the beginning, end, or division of a sentence; such,
|
| however, that it cannot correctly stand by itself at the beginning of a
|
| sentence, as {mu epsilon nu}, {eta tau omicron iota}, {delta epsilon}.
|
|
|
| A Noun is a composite significant sound, not marking time, of which no
|
| part is in itself significant: for in double or compound words we do not
|
| employ the separate parts as if each were in itself significant. Thus
|
| in Theodorus, 'god-given,' the {delta omega rho omicron nu} or 'gift' is
|
| not in itself significant.
|
|
|
| A Verb is a composite significant sound, marking time, in which, as in
|
| the noun, no part is in itself significant. For 'man,' or 'white' does
|
| not express the idea of 'when'; but 'he walks,' or 'he has walked' does
|
| connote time, present or past.
|
|
|
| Inflexion belongs both to the noun and verb, and expresses either the
|
| relation 'of,' 'to,' or the like; or that of number, whether one or
|
| many, as 'man' or 'men '; or the modes or tones in actual delivery, e.g.
|
| a question or a command. 'Did he go?' and 'go' are verbal inflexions of
|
| this kind.
|
|
|
| A Sentence or Phrase is a composite significant sound, some at least of
|
| whose parts are in themselves significant; for not every such group
|
| of words consists of verbs and nouns--'the definition of man,' for
|
| example--but it may dispense even with the verb. Still it will always
|
| have some significant part, as 'in walking,' or 'Cleon son of Cleon.' A
|
| sentence or phrase may form a unity in two ways,--either as signifying
|
| one thing, or as consisting of several parts linked together. Thus the
|
| Iliad is one by the linking together of parts, the definition of man by
|
| the unity of the thing signified.]
|
|
|
| XXI
|
|
|
| Words are of two kinds, simple and double. By simple I mean those
|
| composed of non-significant elements, such as {gamma eta}. By double
|
| or compound, those composed either of a significant and non-significant
|
| element (though within the whole word no element is significant), or
|
| of elements that are both significant. A word may likewise be triple,
|
| quadruple, or multiple in form, like so many Massilian expressions, e.g.
|
| 'Hermo-caico-xanthus who prayed to Father Zeus>.'
|
|
|
| Every word is either current, or strange, or metaphorical, or
|
| ornamental, or newly-coined, or lengthened, or contracted, or altered.
|
|
|
| By a current or proper word I mean one which is in general use among
|
| a people; by a strange word, one which is in use in another country.
|
| Plainly, therefore, the same word may be at once strange and current,
|
| but not in relation to the same people. The word {sigma iota gamma
|
| upsilon nu omicron nu}, 'lance,' is to the Cyprians a current term but
|
| to us a strange one.
|
|
|
| Metaphor is the application of an alien name by transference either from
|
| genus to species, or from species to genus, or from species to species,
|
| or by analogy, that is, proportion. Thus from genus to species, as:
|
| 'There lies my ship'; for lying at anchor is a species of lying. From
|
| species to genus, as: 'Verily ten thousand noble deeds hath Odysseus
|
| wrought'; for ten thousand is a species of large number, and is here
|
| used for a large number generally. From species to species, as: 'With
|
| blade of bronze drew away the life,' and 'Cleft the water with the
|
| vessel of unyielding bronze.' Here {alpha rho upsilon rho alpha iota},
|
| 'to draw away,' is used for {tau alpha mu epsilon iota nu}, 'to cleave,'
|
| and {tau alpha mu epsilon iota nu} again for {alpha rho upsilon alpha
|
| iota},--each being a species of taking away. Analogy or proportion is
|
| when the second term is to the first as the fourth to the third. We
|
| may then use the fourth for the second, or the second for the fourth.
|
| Sometimes too we qualify the metaphor by adding the term to which the
|
| proper word is relative. Thus the cup is to Dionysus as the shield to
|
| Ares. The cup may, therefore, be called 'the shield of Dionysus,' and
|
| the shield 'the cup of Ares.' Or, again, as old age is to life, so is
|
| evening to day. Evening may therefore be called 'the old age of
|
| the day,' and old age, 'the evening of life,' or, in the phrase
|
| of Empedocles, 'life's setting sun.' For some of the terms of the
|
| proportion there is at times no word in existence; still the metaphor
|
| may be used. For instance, to scatter seed is called sowing: but the
|
| action of the sun in scattering his rays is nameless. Still this process
|
| bears to the sun the same relation as sowing to the seed. Hence the
|
| expression of the poet 'sowing the god-created light.' There is another
|
| way in which this kind of metaphor may be employed. We may apply an
|
| alien term, and then deny of that term one of its proper attributes; as
|
| if we were to call the shield, not 'the cup of Ares,' but 'the wineless
|
| cup.'
|
|
|
| {An ornamental word...}
|
|
|
| A newly-coined word is one which has never been even in local use, but
|
| is adopted by the poet himself. Some such words there appear to be: as
|
| {epsilon rho nu upsilon gamma epsilon sigma}, 'sprouters,' for {kappa
|
| epsilon rho alpha tau alpha}, 'horns,' and {alpha rho eta tau eta rho},
|
| 'supplicator,' for {iota epsilon rho epsilon upsilon sigma}, 'priest.'
|
|
|
| A word is lengthened when its own vowel is exchanged for a longer one,
|
| or when a syllable is inserted. A word is contracted when some part of
|
| it is removed. Instances of lengthening are,--{pi omicron lambda eta
|
| omicron sigma} for {pi omicron lambda epsilon omega sigma}, and {Pi eta
|
| lambda eta iota alpha delta epsilon omega} for {Pi eta lambda epsilon
|
| iota delta omicron upsilon}: of contraction,--{kappa rho iota}, {delta
|
| omega}, and {omicron psi}, as in {mu iota alpha / gamma iota nu epsilon
|
| tau alpha iota / alpha mu phi omicron tau episilon rho omega nu /
|
| omicron psi}.
|
|
|
| An altered word is one in which part of the ordinary form is left
|
| unchanged, and part is re-cast; as in {delta epsilon xi iota-tau epsilon
|
| rho omicron nu / kappa alpha tau alpha / mu alpha zeta omicron nu},
|
| {delta epsilon xi iota tau epsilon rho omicron nu} is for {delta epsilon
|
| xi iota omicron nu}.
|
|
|
| [Nouns in themselves are either masculine, feminine, or neuter.
|
| Masculine are such as end in {nu}, {rho}, {sigma}, or in some letter
|
| compounded with {sigma},--these being two, and {xi}. Feminine, such as
|
| end in vowels that are always long, namely {eta} and {omega}, and--of
|
| vowels that admit of lengthening--those in {alpha}. Thus the number of
|
| letters in which nouns masculine and feminine end is the same; for {psi}
|
| and {xi} are equivalent to endings in {sigma}. No noun ends in a mute
|
| or a vowel short by nature. Three only end in {iota},--{mu eta lambda
|
| iota}, {kappa omicron mu mu iota}, {pi epsilon pi epsilon rho iota}:
|
| five end in {upsilon}. Neuter nouns end in these two latter vowels; also
|
| in {nu} and {sigma}.]
|
|
|
| XXII
|
|
|
| The perfection of style is to be clear without being mean. The clearest
|
| style is that which uses only current or proper words; at the same
|
| time it is mean:--witness the poetry of Cleophon and of Sthenelus. That
|
| diction, on the other hand, is lofty and raised above the commonplace
|
| which employs unusual words. By unusual, I mean strange (or rare) words,
|
| metaphorical, lengthened,--anything, in short, that differs from the
|
| normal idiom. Yet a style wholly composed of such words is either a
|
| riddle or a jargon; a riddle, if it consists of metaphors; a jargon, if
|
| it consists of strange (or rare) words. For the essence of a riddle is
|
| to express true facts under impossible combinations. Now this cannot be
|
| done by any arrangement of ordinary words, but by the use of metaphor it
|
| can. Such is the riddle:--'A man I saw who on another man had glued the
|
| bronze by aid of fire,' and others of the same kind. A diction that
|
| is made up of strange (or rare) terms is a jargon. A certain infusion,
|
| therefore, of these elements is necessary to style; for the strange (or
|
| rare) word, the metaphorical, the ornamental, and the other kinds above
|
| mentioned, will raise it above the commonplace and mean, while the use
|
| of proper words will make it perspicuous. But nothing contributes more
|
| to produce a clearness of diction that is remote from commonness than
|
| the lengthening, contraction, and alteration of words. For by deviating
|
| in exceptional cases from the normal idiom, the language will gain
|
| distinction; while, at the same time, the partial conformity with usage
|
| will give perspicuity. The critics, therefore, are in error who censure
|
| these licenses of speech, and hold the author up to ridicule. Thus
|
| Eucleides, the elder, declared that it would be an easy matter to be
|
| a poet if you might lengthen syllables at will. He caricatured the
|
| practice in the very form of his diction, as in the verse: '{Epsilon pi
|
| iota chi alpha rho eta nu / epsilon iota delta omicron nu / Mu alpha rho
|
| alpha theta omega nu alpha delta epsilon / Beta alpha delta iota zeta
|
| omicron nu tau alpha}, or, {omicron upsilon kappa / alpha nu / gamma /
|
| epsilon rho alpha mu epsilon nu omicron sigma / tau omicron nu / epsilon
|
| kappa epsilon iota nu omicron upsilon /epsilon lambda lambda epsilon
|
| beta omicron rho omicron nu}. To employ such license at all obtrusively
|
| is, no doubt, grotesque; but in any mode of poetic diction there must
|
| be moderation. Even metaphors, strange (or rare) words, or any similar
|
| forms of speech, would produce the like effect if used without propriety
|
| and with the express purpose of being ludicrous. How great a difference
|
| is made by the appropriate use of lengthening, may be seen in Epic
|
| poetry by the insertion of ordinary forms in the verse. So, again, if
|
| we take a strange (or rare) word, a metaphor, or any similar mode of
|
| expression, and replace it by the current or proper term, the truth of
|
| our observation will be manifest. For example Aeschylus and Euripides
|
| each composed the same iambic line. But the alteration of a single word
|
| by Euripides, who employed the rarer term instead of the ordinary one,
|
| makes one verse appear beautiful and the other trivial. Aeschylus in his
|
| Philoctetes says: {Phi alpha gamma epsilon delta alpha iota nu alpha /
|
| delta / eta / mu omicron upsilon / sigma alpha rho kappa alpha sigma /
|
| epsilon rho theta iota epsilon iota / pi omicron delta omicron sigma}.
|
|
|
| Euripides substitutes {Theta omicron iota nu alpha tau alpha iota}
|
| 'feasts on' for {epsilon sigma theta iota epsilon iota} 'feeds on.'
|
| Again, in the line, {nu upsilon nu / delta epsilon / mu /epsilon omega
|
| nu / omicron lambda iota gamma iota gamma upsilon sigma / tau epsilon /
|
| kappa alpha iota / omicron upsilon tau iota delta alpha nu omicron sigma
|
| / kappa alpha iota / alpha epsilon iota kappa eta sigma), the difference
|
| will be felt if we substitute the common words, {nu upsilon nu / delta
|
| epsilon / mu / epsilon omega nu / mu iota kappa rho omicron sigma /
|
| tau epsilon / kappa alpha iota / alpha rho theta epsilon nu iota kappa
|
| omicron sigma / kappa alpha iota / alpha epsilon iota delta gamma
|
| sigma}. Or, if for the line, {delta iota phi rho omicron nu / alpha
|
| epsilon iota kappa epsilon lambda iota omicron nu / kappa alpha tau
|
| alpha theta epsilon iota sigma / omicron lambda iota gamma eta nu /
|
| tau epsilon / tau rho alpha pi epsilon iota sigma / omicron lambda iota
|
| gamma eta nu / tau epsilon / tau rho alpha pi epsilon zeta alpha nu,}
|
| We read, {delta iota phi rho omicron nu / mu omicron chi theta eta rho
|
| omicron nu / kappa alpha tau alpha theta epsilon iota sigma / mu iota
|
| kappa rho alpha nu / tau epsilon / tau rho alpha pi epsilon zeta alpha
|
| nu}.
|
|
|
| Or, for {eta iota omicron nu epsilon sigma / beta omicron omicron omega
|
| rho iota nu, eta iota omicron nu epsilon sigma kappa rho alpha zeta
|
| omicron upsilon rho iota nu}
|
|
|
| Again, Ariphrades ridiculed the tragedians for using phrases which no
|
| one would employ in ordinary speech: for example, {delta omega mu alpha
|
| tau omega nu / alpha pi omicron} instead of {alpha pi omicron / delta
|
| omega mu alpha tau omega nu}, {rho epsilon theta epsilon nu}, {epsilon
|
| gamma omega / delta epsilon / nu iota nu}, {Alpha chi iota lambda lambda
|
| epsilon omega sigma / pi epsilon rho iota} instead of {pi epsilon rho
|
| iota / 'Alpha chi iota lambda lambda epsilon omega sigma}, and the like.
|
| It is precisely because such phrases are not part of the current idiom
|
| that they give distinction to the style. This, however, he failed to
|
| see.
|
|
|
| It is a great matter to observe propriety in these several modes of
|
| expression, as also in compound words, strange (or rare) words, and so
|
| forth. But the greatest thing by far is to have a command of metaphor.
|
| This alone cannot be imparted by another; it is the mark of genius, for
|
| to make good metaphors implies an eye for resemblances.
|
|
|
| Of the various kinds of words, the compound are best adapted to
|
| Dithyrambs, rare words to heroic poetry, metaphors to iambic. In heroic
|
| poetry, indeed, all these varieties are serviceable. But in iambic
|
| verse, which reproduces, as far as may be, familiar speech, the most
|
| appropriate words are those which are found even in prose. These
|
| are,--the current or proper, the metaphorical, the ornamental.
|
|
|
| Concerning Tragedy and imitation by means of action this may suffice.
|
|
|
| XXIII
|
|
|
| As to that poetic imitation which is narrative in form and employs
|
| a single metre, the plot manifestly ought, as in a tragedy, to be
|
| constructed on dramatic principles. It should have for its subject a
|
| single action, whole and complete, with a beginning, a middle, and
|
| an end. It will thus resemble a living organism in all its unity, and
|
| produce the pleasure proper to it. It will differ in structure from
|
| historical compositions, which of necessity present not a single action,
|
| but a single period, and all that happened within that period to one
|
| person or to many, little connected together as the events may be. For
|
| as the sea-fight at Salamis and the battle with the Carthaginians in
|
| Sicily took place at the same time, but did not tend to any one result,
|
| so in the sequence of events, one thing sometimes follows another, and
|
| yet no single result is thereby produced. Such is the practice, we may
|
| say, of most poets. Here again, then, as has been already observed, the
|
| transcendent excellence of Homer is manifest. He never attempts to make
|
| the whole war of Troy the subject of his poem, though that war had
|
| a beginning and an end. It would have been too vast a theme, and not
|
| easily embraced in a single view. If, again, he had kept it within
|
| moderate limits, it must have been over-complicated by the variety of
|
| the incidents. As it is, he detaches a single portion, and admits as
|
| episodes many events from the general story of the war--such as the
|
| Catalogue of the ships and others--thus diversifying the poem. All other
|
| poets take a single hero, a single period, or an action single indeed,
|
| but with a multiplicity of parts. Thus did the author of the Cypria
|
| and of the Little Iliad. For this reason the Iliad and the Odyssey
|
| each furnish the subject of one tragedy, or, at most, of two; while the
|
| Cypria supplies materials for many, and the Little Iliad for eight--the
|
| Award of the Arms, the Philoctetes, the Neoptolemus, the Eurypylus, the
|
| Mendicant Odysseus, the Laconian Women, the Fall of Ilium, the Departure
|
| of the Fleet.
|
|
|
| XXIV
|
|
|
| Again, Epic poetry must have as many kinds as Tragedy: it must be
|
| simple, or complex, or 'ethical,' or 'pathetic.' The parts also, with
|
| the exception of song and spectacle, are the same; for it requires
|
| Reversals of the Situation, Recognitions, and Scenes of Suffering.
|
| Moreover, the thoughts and the diction must be artistic. In all these
|
| respects Homer is our earliest and sufficient model. Indeed each of
|
| his poems has a twofold character. The Iliad is at once simple and
|
| 'pathetic,' and the Odyssey complex (for Recognition scenes run through
|
| it), and at the same time 'ethical.' Moreover, in diction and thought
|
| they are supreme.
|
|
|
| Epic poetry differs from Tragedy in the scale on which it is
|
| constructed, and in its metre. As regards scale or length, we have
|
| already laid down an adequate limit:--the beginning and the end must be
|
| capable of being brought within a single view. This condition will be
|
| satisfied by poems on a smaller scale than the old epics, and answering
|
| in length to the group of tragedies presented at a single sitting.
|
|
|
| Epic poetry has, however, a great--a special--capacity for enlarging
|
| its dimensions, and we can see the reason. In Tragedy we cannot imitate
|
| several lines of actions carried on at one and the same time; we must
|
| confine ourselves to the action on the stage and the part taken by the
|
| players. But in Epic poetry, owing to the narrative form, many events
|
| simultaneously transacted can be presented; and these, if relevant to
|
| the subject, add mass and dignity to the poem. The Epic has here an
|
| advantage, and one that conduces to grandeur of effect, to diverting the
|
| mind of the hearer, and relieving the story with varying episodes. For
|
| sameness of incident soon produces satiety, and makes tragedies fail on
|
| the stage.
|
|
|
| As for the metre, the heroic measure has proved its fitness by the test
|
| of experience. If a narrative poem in any other metre or in many metres
|
| were now composed, it would be found incongruous. For of all measures
|
| the heroic is the stateliest and the most massive; and hence it most
|
| readily admits rare words and metaphors, which is another point in which
|
| the narrative form of imitation stands alone. On the other hand, the
|
| iambic and the trochaic tetrameter are stirring measures, the latter
|
| being akin to dancing, the former expressive of action. Still more
|
| absurd would it be to mix together different metres, as was done by
|
| Chaeremon. Hence no one has ever composed a poem on a great scale in any
|
| other than heroic verse. Nature herself, as we have said, teaches the
|
| choice of the proper measure.
|
|
|
| Homer, admirable in all respects, has the special merit of being the
|
| only poet who rightly appreciates the part he should take himself. The
|
| poet should speak as little as possible in his own person, for it is not
|
| this that makes him an imitator. Other poets appear themselves upon the
|
| scene throughout, and imitate but little and rarely. Homer, after a few
|
| prefatory words, at once brings in a man, or woman, or other personage;
|
| none of them wanting in characteristic qualities, but each with a
|
| character of his own.
|
|
|
| The element of the wonderful is required in Tragedy. The irrational, on
|
| which the wonderful depends for its chief effects, has wider scope in
|
| Epic poetry, because there the person acting is not seen. Thus, the
|
| pursuit of Hector would be ludicrous if placed upon the stage--the
|
| Greeks standing still and not joining in the pursuit, and Achilles
|
| waving them back. But in the Epic poem the absurdity passes unnoticed.
|
| Now the wonderful is pleasing: as may be inferred from the fact that
|
| every one tells a story with some addition of his own, knowing that his
|
| hearers like it. It is Homer who has chiefly taught other poets the
|
| art of telling lies skilfully. The secret of it lies in a fallacy, For,
|
| assuming that if one thing is or becomes, a second is or becomes, men
|
| imagine that, if the second is, the first likewise is or becomes. But
|
| this is a false inference. Hence, where the first thing is untrue, it is
|
| quite unnecessary, provided the second be true, to add that the first
|
| is or has become. For the mind, knowing the second to be true, falsely
|
| infers the truth of the first. There is an example of this in the Bath
|
| Scene of the Odyssey.
|
|
|
| Accordingly, the poet should prefer probable impossibilities to
|
| improbable possibilities. The tragic plot must not be composed of
|
| irrational parts. Everything irrational should, if possible, be
|
| excluded; or, at all events, it should lie outside the action of the
|
| play (as, in the Oedipus, the hero's ignorance as to the manner of
|
| Laius' death); not within the drama,--as in the Electra, the messenger's
|
| account of the Pythian games; or, as in the Mysians, the man who
|
| has come from Tegea to Mysia and is still speechless. The plea that
|
| otherwise the plot would have been ruined, is ridiculous; such a plot
|
| should not in the first instance be constructed. But once the irrational
|
| has been introduced and an air of likelihood imparted to it, we must
|
| accept it in spite of the absurdity. Take even the irrational incidents
|
| in the Odyssey, where Odysseus is left upon the shore of Ithaca. How
|
| intolerable even these might have been would be apparent if an inferior
|
| poet were to treat the subject. As it is, the absurdity is veiled by the
|
| poetic charm with which the poet invests it.
|
|
|
| The diction should be elaborated in the pauses of the action, where
|
| there is no expression of character or thought. For, conversely,
|
| character and thought are merely obscured by a diction that is over
|
| brilliant.
|
|
|
| XXV
|
|
|
| With respect to critical difficulties and their solutions, the number
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| and nature of the sources from which they may be drawn may be thus
|
| exhibited.
|
|
|
| The poet being an imitator, like a painter or any other artist, must
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| of necessity imitate one of three objects,--things as they were or are,
|
| things as they are said or thought to be, or things as they ought to be.
|
| The vehicle of expression is language,--either current terms or, it
|
| may be, rare words or metaphors. There are also many modifications of
|
| language, which we concede to the poets. Add to this, that the standard
|
| of correctness is not the same in poetry and politics, any more than in
|
| poetry and any other art. Within the art of poetry itself there are
|
| two kinds of faults, those which touch its essence, and those which are
|
| accidental. If a poet has chosen to imitate something, <but has imitated
|
| it incorrectly> through want of capacity, the error is inherent in
|
| the poetry. But if the failure is due to a wrong choice if he has
|
| represented a horse as throwing out both his off legs at once, or
|
| introduced technical inaccuracies in medicine, for example, or in any
|
| other art the error is not essential to the poetry. These are the points
|
| of view from which we should consider and answer the objections raised
|
| by the critics.
|
|
|
| First as to matters which concern the poet's own art. If he describes
|
| the impossible, he is guilty of an error; but the error may be
|
| justified, if the end of the art be thereby attained (the end being that
|
| already mentioned), if, that is, the effect of this or any other part of
|
| the poem is thus rendered more striking. A case in point is the pursuit
|
| of Hector. If, however, the end might have been as well, or better,
|
| attained without violating the special rules of the poetic art, the
|
| error is not justified: for every kind of error should, if possible, be
|
| avoided.
|
|
|
| Again, does the error touch the essentials of the poetic art, or some
|
| accident of it? For example,--not to know that a hind has no horns is a
|
| less serious matter than to paint it inartistically.
|
|
|
| Further, if it be objected that the description is not true to fact, the
|
| poet may perhaps reply,--'But the objects are as they ought to be': just
|
| as Sophocles said that he drew men as they ought to be; Euripides,
|
| as they are. In this way the objection may be met. If, however, the
|
| representation be of neither kind, the poet may answer,--This is how men
|
| say the thing is.' This applies to tales about the gods. It may well be
|
| that these stories are not higher than fact nor yet true to fact: they
|
| are, very possibly, what Xenophanes says of them. But anyhow, 'this
|
| is what is said.' Again, a description may be no better than the fact:
|
| 'still, it was the fact'; as in the passage about the arms: 'Upright
|
| upon their butt-ends stood the spears.' This was the custom then, as it
|
| now is among the Illyrians.
|
|
|
| Again, in examining whether what has been said or done by some one is
|
| poetically right or not, we must not look merely to the particular act
|
| or saying, and ask whether it is poetically good or bad. We must also
|
| consider by whom it is said or done, to whom, when, by what means, or
|
| for what end; whether, for instance, it be to secure a greater good, or
|
| avert a greater evil.
|
|
|
| Other difficulties may be resolved by due regard to the usage of
|
| language. We may note a rare word, as in {omicron upsilon rho eta alpha
|
| sigma / mu epsilon nu / pi rho omega tau omicron nu}, where the poet
|
| perhaps employs {omicron upsilon rho eta alpha sigma} not in the sense
|
| of mules, but of sentinels. So, again, of Dolon: 'ill-favoured indeed
|
| he was to look upon.' It is not meant that his body was ill-shaped, but
|
| that his face was ugly; for the Cretans use the word {epsilon upsilon
|
| epsilon iota delta epsilon sigma}, 'well-favoured,' to denote a fair
|
| face. Again, {zeta omega rho omicron tau epsilon rho omicron nu /
|
| delta epsilon / kappa epsilon rho alpha iota epsilon}, 'mix the drink
|
| livelier,' does not mean `mix it stronger' as for hard drinkers, but
|
| 'mix it quicker.'
|
|
|
| Sometimes an expression is metaphorical, as 'Now all gods and men were
|
| sleeping through the night,'--while at the same time the poet says:
|
| 'Often indeed as he turned his gaze to the Trojan plain, he marvelled
|
| at the sound of flutes and pipes.' 'All' is here used metaphorically for
|
| 'many,' all being a species of many. So in the verse,--'alone she hath
|
| no part...,' {omicron iota eta}, 'alone,' is metaphorical; for the best
|
| known may be called the only one.
|
|
|
| Again, the solution may depend upon accent or breathing. Thus Hippias of
|
| Thasos solved the difficulties in the lines,--{delta iota delta omicron
|
| mu epsilon nu (delta iota delta omicron mu epsilon nu) delta epsilon
|
| / omicron iota,} and { tau omicron / mu epsilon nu / omicron upsilon
|
| (omicron upsilon) kappa alpha tau alpha pi upsilon theta epsilon tau
|
| alpha iota / omicron mu beta rho omega}.
|
|
|
| Or again, the question may be solved by punctuation, as in
|
| Empedocles,--'Of a sudden things became mortal that before had learnt to
|
| be immortal, and things unmixed before mixed.'
|
|
|
| Or again, by ambiguity of meaning,--as {pi alpha rho omega chi eta kappa
|
| epsilon nu / delta epsilon / pi lambda epsilon omega / nu upsilon xi},
|
| where the word {pi lambda epsilon omega} is ambiguous.
|
|
|
| Or by the usage of language. Thus any mixed drink is called {omicron
|
| iota nu omicron sigma}, 'wine.' Hence Ganymede is said 'to pour the wine
|
| to Zeus,' though the gods do not drink wine. So too workers in iron
|
| are called {chi alpha lambda kappa epsilon alpha sigma}, or workers in
|
| bronze. This, however, may also be taken as a metaphor.
|
|
|
| Again, when a word seems to involve some inconsistency of meaning, we
|
| should consider how many senses it may bear in the particular passage.
|
| For example: 'there was stayed the spear of bronze'--we should ask
|
| in how many ways we may take 'being checked there.' The true mode
|
| of interpretation is the precise opposite of what Glaucon mentions.
|
| Critics, he says, jump at certain groundless conclusions; they pass
|
| adverse judgment and then proceed to reason on it; and, assuming that
|
| the poet has said whatever they happen to think, find fault if a thing
|
| is inconsistent with their own fancy. The question about Icarius
|
| has been treated in this fashion. The critics imagine he was a
|
| Lacedaemonian. They think it strange, therefore, that Telemachus should
|
| not have met him when he went to Lacedaemon. But the Cephallenian story
|
| may perhaps be the true one. They allege that Odysseus took a wife from
|
| among themselves, and that her father was Icadius not Icarius. It is
|
| merely a mistake, then, that gives plausibility to the objection.
|
|
|
| In general, the impossible must be justified by reference to artistic
|
| requirements, or to the higher reality, or to received opinion. With
|
| respect to the requirements of art, a probable impossibility is to
|
| be preferred to a thing improbable and yet possible. Again, it may be
|
| impossible that there should be men such as Zeuxis painted. 'Yes,' we
|
| say, 'but the impossible is the higher thing; for the ideal type must
|
| surpass the reality.' To justify the irrational, we appeal to what is
|
| commonly said to be. In addition to which, we urge that the irrational
|
| sometimes does not violate reason; just as 'it is probable that a thing
|
| may happen contrary to probability.'
|
|
|
| Things that sound contradictory should be examined by the same rules as
|
| in dialectical refutation whether the same thing is meant, in the same
|
| relation, and in the same sense. We should therefore solve the question
|
| by reference to what the poet says himself, or to what is tacitly
|
| assumed by a person of intelligence.
|
|
|
| The element of the irrational, and, similarly, depravity of character,
|
| are justly censured when there is no inner necessity for introducing
|
| them. Such is the irrational element in the introduction of Aegeus by
|
| Euripides and the badness of Menelaus in the Orestes.
|
|
|
| Thus, there are five sources from which critical objections are drawn.
|
| Things are censured either as impossible, or irrational, or morally
|
| hurtful, or contradictory, or contrary to artistic correctness. The
|
| answers should be sought under the twelve heads above mentioned.
|
|
|
| XXVI
|
|
|
| The question may be raised whether the Epic or Tragic mode of imitation
|
| is the higher. If the more refined art is the higher, and the more
|
| refined in every case is that which appeals to the better sort of
|
| audience, the art which imitates anything and everything is manifestly
|
| most unrefined. The audience is supposed to be too dull to comprehend
|
| unless something of their own is thrown in by the performers, who
|
| therefore indulge in restless movements. Bad flute-players twist and
|
| twirl, if they have to represent 'the quoit-throw,' or hustle the
|
| coryphaeus when they perform the 'Scylla.' Tragedy, it is said, has
|
| this same defect. We may compare the opinion that the older actors
|
| entertained of their successors. Mynniscus used to call Callippides
|
| 'ape' on account of the extravagance of his action, and the same view
|
| was held of Pindarus. Tragic art, then, as a whole, stands to Epic in
|
| the same relation as the younger to the elder actors. So we are told
|
| that Epic poetry is addressed to a cultivated audience, who do not need
|
| gesture; Tragedy, to an inferior public. Being then unrefined, it is
|
| evidently the lower of the two.
|
|
|
| Now, in the first place, this censure attaches not to the poetic but to
|
| the histrionic art; for gesticulation may be equally overdone in
|
| epic recitation, as by Sosi-stratus, or in lyrical competition, as by
|
| Mnasitheus the Opuntian. Next, all action is not to be condemned any
|
| more than all dancing--but only that of bad performers. Such was the
|
| fault found in Callippides, as also in others of our own day, who are
|
| censured for representing degraded women. Again, Tragedy like Epic
|
| poetry produces its effect even without action; it reveals its power
|
| by mere reading. If, then, in all other respects it is superior, this
|
| fault, we say, is not inherent in it.
|
|
|
| And superior it is, because it has all the epic elements--it may even
|
| use the epic metre--with the music and spectacular effects as important
|
| accessories; and these produce the most vivid of pleasures. Further,
|
| it has vividness of impression in reading as well as in representation.
|
| Moreover, the art attains its end within narrower limits; for the
|
| concentrated effect is more pleasurable than one which is spread over a
|
| long time and so diluted. What, for example, would be the effect of the
|
| Oedipus of Sophocles, if it were cast into a form as long as the Iliad?
|
| Once more, the Epic imitation has less unity; as is shown by this, that
|
| any Epic poem will furnish subjects for several tragedies. Thus if
|
| the story adopted by the poet has a strict unity, it must either be
|
| concisely told and appear truncated; or, if it conform to the Epic canon
|
| of length, it must seem weak and watery. <Such length implies some loss
|
| of unity,> if, I mean, the poem is constructed out of several actions,
|
| like the Iliad and the Odyssey, which have many such parts, each with a
|
| certain magnitude of its own. Yet these poems are as perfect as possible
|
| in structure; each is, in the highest degree attainable, an imitation of
|
| a single action.
|
|
|
| If, then, Tragedy is superior to Epic poetry in all these respects, and,
|
| moreover, fulfils its specific function better as an art for each art
|
| ought to produce, not any chance pleasure, but the pleasure proper to
|
| it, as already stated it plainly follows that Tragedy is the higher art,
|
| as attaining its end more perfectly.
|
|
|
| Thus much may suffice concerning Tragic and Epic poetry in general;
|
| their several kinds and parts, with the number of each and their
|
| differences; the causes that make a poem good or bad; the objections of
|
| the critics and the answers to these objections.
|
|
|
| End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poetics, by Aristotle |