CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY i§! Cornell University B Library The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://archive.org/details/cu31924022691822 Cornell University Library PA 3092.S88 1873 v.1 Studies of the Greek poets. 3 1924 022 691 822 STUDIES THE GREEK POETS. LONDON : PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE AND PARLIAMENT STREET. STUDIES GREEK PO ETS JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS, AUTHOR OF " AN INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY OF DANTE.' 1 4,1 Im Ganzen. Guten Schonen Resolut zu leben. LONDON: SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15, WATERLOO PLACE. 1873- [All Rights Reserved?^ vi PREFACE. who desires to stimulate the interests and the sym- pathies of his audience for works of art which are at the same time both old and unfamiliar. I may take this opportunity once and for all of acknowledging my debt to Mure and Miiller, to Hegel's " Philosopy of History," to Bunsen's " God in History," to Donaldson's " Theatre of the Greeks," and to Bergk's invaluable collection of the Lyric Poets. It is only the pre-existence of such books as these which renders possible the kind of criticism I have attempted in my Essays. In the spelling of names I have not judged it necessary to diverge from the old-fashioned ortho- graphy, unless it seemed advisable to mark the value of diphthongs or hard consonants. Finally, I must beg to be excused for the repetition of some thoughts and illustrations which were in each case essential to the proper development of the subject. Clifton, March, 1873. CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. Language and Mythology. — The Five Chief Periods of Greek Literature. — The First Period : Homer— Religion and State of the Homeric Age — Achilles and Ulysses. — Second Period : Transition- — Breaking up of the Homeric Monarchies — Coloniza- tion — the Nomothetse — Ionians and Dorians — Development of Elegiac, Iambic, Lyric Poetry — Beginning of Philosophy. — Third Period : Athenian Supremacy — Philosophy at Athens — the Fine Arts — the Drama — History — Sparta and Athens — Pericles and Anaxagoras. — Fourth Period : Hegemony of Sparta — Enslave- ment of Hellas — Demosthenes — Alexander and Achilles— s- Aristotle — the Hellenization of the East — Menander — the Orators. — Fifth Period : Decline and Decay — Greek Influence upon the World — Alexandria — the Sciences — Theocritus — the University of Athens — Sophistic Literature — Byzantium — Hellas and Christendom page CHAPTER II. EMPEDOCLES. The Grandeur of his Fame. — His Versatility of Genius. — His self- exaltation. — His Mysticism. — His supposed Miracles. — Legends about his Death. — His Political Action. — His Poems. — Estima- tion in which the Ancients held them. — Their Prophetic Fervour. — Belief in Metempsychosis. — Purifying Rites. — Contempt for the Knowledge of the Senses. — Physical Theories. — The Poem on Nature. — The Four Elements. — The Sphferus. — Love and Dis- cord. — The Eclecticism of Empedocles -fage 37 viii THE GREEK POETS. CHAPTER III. THE GNOMIC POETS. Definition of the term Gnomic— The Elegiac Metre.— The Age of the Despots in Greece.— Three Periods in Elegiac Poetry : the Martial, the Erotic, the Gnomic— Callinus. — Mimnermus. — His Epicurean Philosophy of Life. — Solon. — The Salaminian Verses. — Doctrine of Hereditary Guilt. — Greek Melancholy.— Pho- cylides. — His Bourgeois Intellect. — Xenophanes. — Theognis. — The Politics of Megara. — Cyrnus. — Precepts upon Education and Conduct in Public and Private Life. — The Biography of The- ognis. — Dorian Clubs. — Lamentations over the decay of Youth and Beauty page 65 CHAPTER IV. THE SATIRISTS. Invention of the Iambic Metre. — Archilochus. — His Parentage and Life. — His Fame among the Ancients. — Ancient and Modem Modes of Judging Artists. — The Originality of Archilochus as a Poet. — Simonides of Amorgos. — His Satire on Women. — The Ionian Contempt for Women. — Hipponax. — Limping Iambics. — Differences between the Satire of the Greeks and Romans . . .page CHAPTER V. THE L YRIC POETS. The ^Esthetic Instinct of the Greeks in their Choice of Metres. — Different Species of Lyrical Poetry. — The Fragments in Bergk's Collection. — Proemia. — Prosodia. — Parthenia. — Pa?an. — Hypor- chem. — Dithyramb. — Phallic Hymn. — Epinikia . — Threnoi. — Scolia. — ^Eolian and Dorian Lyrists. — The Flourishing Period of Lesbos. — Sappho. — AlcEeus. — Anacreon. — Nationality of the Dorian Lyrists. — Spartan Education. — Alcman. Arion. Stesichorus. — Ibycus. — Simonides. — Greek Troubadours. — Style of Simonides. — Pindar -page 1 10 CONTENTS. ix CHAPTER VI. PINDAR. lis Life.— Legends connected with him.— The Qualities of his Poetry. — The Olympic Games. — Pindar's Professional Character. — His Morality.— His Religious Belief. —Doctrine of a Future State. — Rewards and Punishments. — The Structure of his Odes. — The Proemia to his Odes. — His Difficulty and Tumidity of Style... : .page 153 CHAPTER VII. GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. Two Conditions for the development of a national Drama. — The Attic audience. — The Persian War. — Nemesis the cardinal idea of Greek Tragedy. — Traces of the doctrine of Nemesis in early Greek Poetry. — The fixed material of Greek Tragedy. — Athens in the age of Euripides. — Changes introduced by him in Dramatic Art. — The law of progress in all art. — ^Eschylus, Sophocles, Euripides. — The treatment otcvipvxia by Euripides. — Menoikeus. — The death of Eteocles and Polynices. — Polyxena.— Medea. — Hippolytus. — Electra and Orestes. — Injustice done to Euripides by recent critics -page 184 CHAPTER VIII. ARISTOPHANES. Heine's critique on Aristophanes. — Aristophanes as a poet of the fancy. — The nature of his comic grossness. — Greek Comedy in its relation to the worship of Dionysus. — Greek acceptance of the animal conditions of humanity. — His Burlesque, Parody, Southern ' sense of fun. — Aristophanes and Menander. — His greatness as- a Poet. — Glimpses of pathos. — His Conservatism and serious aim. — Socrates, Agathon, Euripides. — German critics of Aristo- phanes. — Ancient and Modern Comedy. — The Birds. — The Clouds.— Greek youth and education.-— The Allegories of Aristo- phanes. — The Thesmophoriazusa.— Aristophanes and Plato... page 233 a THE GREEK POETS. CHAPTER I. THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. Language and Mythology.— The Five Chief Periods of Greek Literature. The First Period : Homer— Religion and State of the Homeric Age — Achilles and Ulysses. — Second Period : Transition — Breaking up of the Homeric Monarchies — Colonization — the Nomothetae — Ionians and Dorians — Development of Elegiac, Iambic, Lyric Poetry — Beginning of Philosophy. — Third Period : Athenian Supremacy — Philosophy at Athens — the Fine Arts — the Drama — History- Sparta and Athens — Pericles and Anaxagoras. — Fourth Period : Hegemony of Sparta — Enslavement of Hellas — Demosthenes- Alexander and Achilles — Aristotle — the Hellenization of the East — Menander — the Orators. — Fifth Period : Decline and Decay— Greek Influence upon the World — Alexandria — the Sciences — Theocritus — the University of Athens — Sophistic Literature — Byzantium — Hellas and Christendom. The most fascinating problems of history are veiled as closely from our curiosity as the statue of Egyptian Isis. Nothing is known for certain about the emergence from primitive bar- barism of the great races, or about the determination of national characteristics. Analogies may be adduced from the material world ; but the mysteries of organized vitality remain impe- netrable. What made, the Jew a Jew, the Greek a Greek, is as unexplained as what daily causes the germs of an oak and of an ash to produce different trees. All we know is that in the womb of the vague and infinitely distant past, the embryos of races were nourished into form and individuality by means of the unseen cord which attaches man to nature, his primitive B 2 THE GREEK POETS. mother. But the laws of that rudimentary growth are still unknown ; " the abysmal deeps of Personality " in nations as in men remain unsounded : we cannot even experimentalize upon the process of ethnical development. Those mighty works of art which we call languages, in the construction of which whole peoples unconsciously co-ope- rated, the forms of which were determined not by individual genius, but by the instincts of successive generations acting to one end inherent in the nature of the race : — those poems of pure thought and fancy, cadenced not in words but in living imagery, fountain-heads of inspiration, mirrors of the mind of nascent nations, which we call Mythologies : — these surely are more marvellous in their infantine spontaneity than any more mature production of the races which evolved them. Yet we are utterly ignorant of their embryology : the true science of Origins is as yet not even in its cradle. Experimental philologers may analyze what remains of early languages, may trace their connections and their points of divergence, may classify and group them. But the nature of the organs of humanity which secreted them is unknown, the problem of their vital structure is insoluble. Antiquarian theorists may persuade us that Myths are decayed, disinte- grated, dilapidated phrases, the meaning of which had been lost to the first mythopoeists. But they cannot tell us how these splendid flowers, springing upon the rich soil of rotting language, expressed in form and colour to the mental eye the thoughts and aspirations of whole races, presented a measure of the faculties to be developed during long ages of expanding civilization. If the boy is father of the man, Myths are the parents of philosophies, religions, polities. To these unknown artists of the prehistoric age, to the language-builders and myth-makers, architects of cathedrals not raised with hands but with the Spirit of man for Humanity to dwell therein, poets of the characters of nations, sculptors of THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 3 the substance of the very soul, melodists who improvised the themes upon which subsequent centuries have written varia- tions, we ought to erect our noblest statues and our grandest temples. The work of these first artificers is more astonishing in its unconsciousness, more effective in its spontaneity, than are the deliberate and calculated arts of sculptor, painter, poet, philosopher, and lawgiver of the historic periods. Some such reflections as these are the natural prelude to the study of a literature like that of the Greeks. Language and Mythology form the vestibules and outer courts to Homer, Pheidias, Lycurgus. It is common to divide the history of Greek literature into three chief periods : the first embracing the early growth of Poetry and Prose before the age in which Athens became supreme in Hellas — that is, anterior to about 480 B.C. : the second coinciding with the brilliant maturity of Greek genius during the supremacy of Athens — that is, from the termination of the Persian war to the age of Alexander : the third ex- tending over the Decline and Fall of the Greek spirit after Alexander's death — that is, from B.C. 323, and onwards, to the final extinction of Hellenic civilization. There is much to be said in favour of this division. Indeed, Greek history falls naturally into these three sections. But a greater degree of accuracy may be attained by breaking up the first and last >of these divisions, so as to make five periods instead of three. After having indicated these five periods in outline, we will return to the separate consideration of them in detail and in connection with the current of Greek history. The first may be termed the Heroic,- or Prehistoric, or Legendary period. It ends with the first Olympiad, B.C. 776, and its chief monuments are the epics of Homer and Hesiod. The second is a period of transition from the Heroic or Epical to that of artistic maturity in all the branches of literature. In this stage history, properly so called, begins. The Greeks try 4 THE GREEK POETS. their strength in several branches of composition. Lyrical, Satirical, Moral, and Philosophical poetry supplant the Epic. Prose is cultivated. The first foundations of the Drama are. laid. The earliest attempts at science emerge from the criticism; of old mythologies. The whole mind of the race is in a fer- ment, and, for the moment, effort and endeavour are more . apparent than mastery and achievement. This period extends from B.C. 776 to B.C. 477, the date of the Athenian league. The third period is that of the Athenian Supremacy. Whatever is great in Hellas is now concentrated upon Athens. Athens, after her brilliant activity during the Persian war, wins the con- fidence and assumes the leadership of Greece. Athens is the richest, grandest, most liberal, most cultivated,' most enlightened state of Hellas. To Athens flock all the poets and historians and philosophers. The Drama attains maturity in her theatre. Philosophy takes its true direction from Anaxagoras and Socrates, and is perfected by Plato. The ideal of history is. realized by Thucydides. Oratory flourishes under the great statesmen and the demagogues of the Republic. During the brief but splendid ascendancy of Athens, all the masterpieces of Greek literature are simultaneously produced with marvel- lous rapidity. Fixing 413 B.C. as the date of the commence- ment of Athenian Decline, our fourth period, which terminates in B.C. 323 with the death of Alexander, is again one of transi- tion. The second period was transitional from adolescence to maturity. The fourth is transitional from maturity to bid age. The creative genius of the Greeks is now less active. We have indeed the great names of Aristotle and Demos- thenes, to give splendour to this stage of national existence. But the sceptre has passed away from the Greek nation proper. Their protagonist, Athens, is in slavery. The civilization which they had slowly matured, and which at Athens had been reflected in the masterpieces of Art and Literature, is- now spread abroad and scattered over the earth. Asia and THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERA TURE. 5 Egypt are Hellenized. The Greek spirit is less productive than it has been ; but it is not less vigorous. It still asserts itself as the greatest in the world ; but it does so, relying more upon its past acquirements than on any seeds of power that remain to be developed in the future. The fifth period, the longest of all, is one of decline and decay. It extends from B.C. 323 to the final extinction of classical civilization. Two chief centres occupy our attention — Athens, where the tradi- tions of art and philosophy yet linger, where the Stoics and Epicureans and the sages of the New Academy still educate the world and prepare a nidus for the ethics of Christianity — and Alexandria, where physical science is cultivated under the Ptolemies, where mystical theology flourishes in the schools of the Neoplatonists, where libraries are formed and the labour * of literary criticism is conducted on a gigantic scale, but where nothing new is produced except the single, most beautiful flower of Idyllic poetry and some few epigrams. In this fifth period, Rome and Byzantium, where the Greek spirit, still vital, over- lives its natural decay upon a foreign soil, close the scene. In these five periods — periods of superb adolescence, early manhood, magnificent maturity, robust old age, and senility — we can trace the genius of the Greeks putting forth its vigour in successive works of art and literature, concentrating its energy at first upon its own self-culture, then extending its influence in every direction and controlling the education of humanity, finally contenting itself with pondering and poring on its past, with mystical metaphysics and pedantic criticism. Yet even in its extreme decadence the Hellenic spirit is still potent. It still assimilates, transmutes, and alchemizes what it works upon. Coming into contact with the new and mightier genius of Christianity, it forces even that first-born of the Deity to take form from itself. One dying effort of the Greek intellect, if we may so speak, is to formulate the dogma of the Trinity and to impress the doctrine of the Logos upon the author of 6 THE GREEK POETS. the Gospel of St. John. The analogy between the history of ai race so undisturbed in its development as the Greek, and the life of a man, is not altogether fanciful. A man like Goethe, beautiful in soul and body, exceedingly strong and swift and active and inquisitive in all the movements of his spirit, first lives the life of the senses and of physical enjoyment. His soul, "immersed in rich foreshadowings of the world," has> scarcely begun to think consciously in the first period. But he feels the glory of existence, the strivings of inexhaustible energy, the desire of infinite expansion. The second period is one of Sturm und Drang. New things are learned : much of the beautiful physical activity is sacrificed ; he discovers, that life involves care and responsibility as well as pleasure ; he concentrates his mental faculty on hard and baffling study, in which at first he halts and falters. Then he goes forth to the world, and wins great fame, and does the deeds and thinks the thoughts by which he shall be known to all posterity. His physical and mental faculties are now in perfect harmony - T together they offer him the noblest and most enduring pleasures. But after a while his productiveness begins to dwindle. ' He has put forth his force, has fully expressed himself, has matured his principles, has formed his theory of the world. Our fourth period corresponds to the early old age of such a man's life. He now applies his principles, propagates his philosophy, subordinates his fancy, produces less, enjoys with more sobriety and less exhilaration, bears burdens, suffers disappointments, yet still, as Solon says, " learns always as he grows in years." Then comes the fifth stage. He who was so vigorous and splendid, now has but little joy in physical life ; his brain is dry and withering ; he dwells on his old thoughts, and has no faculty for generating new ones : yet his soul contains deep mines of wisdom ; he gives counsel and frames laws for younger generations. And so he gradually sinks into the grave. His acts remain : his life is written. THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 7 The great name of Homer covers the whole of the first period of Greek Literature.* It is from the Homeric poems alone that we can form a picture to our imagination of the state of society in prehistoric Hellas. The picture which they pre- sent is so lively in its details, and so consistent in all its parts, that we have no reason to suspect that it was drawn from fancy. Its ideal, as distinguished from merely realistic, charac- ter is obvious. The poet professes to sing to us of heroes who were of the seed of gods, whose strength exceeded tenfold the strength of actual men, and who filled the world with valiant deeds surpassing all that their posterity achieved. Yet, in spite of this, the Iliad and the Odyssey may be taken as faithful mirrors of a certain phase of Greek society, just as the Niebelungen Lied, the romances of Charlemagne, and the tales of the Round Table reflect three stages in the history of feudalism. We find that in this earliest period of Greek history the nation was governed by monarchs each of whom claimed descent from a god. Thus the kings exercised their power over the people by divine right ; but at the same time a neces- sary condition of their maintaining this supremacy was that that they should be superior in riches, lands, personal bravery, and wisdom. Their subjects obeyed them, not merely because they were AioyEvelg, or because they were Fathers of the people, but also, and chiefly, because they were the ablest men, the men fitted by nature to rule, the men who could be depended upon in an emergency. The king had just so much personal authority as he had ability to acquire or to assert. As soon as this ability failed, the sceptre departed from him. Thus Laertes overlives his royalty ; and the suitors of Penelope, fancying that Ulysses is dead, take no heed of Telemachus, who ought to rule in his stead, because Telemachus is a mere * My special debt to Hegel's Philosophy of History in this paragraph ought to be acknowledged. 8 THE GREEK POETS. lad ; but as soon as the hero returns, and proves his might by stringing the bow, the suitors are slain like sheep. Again, Achilles, while acknowledging the sway of Agamemnon, quar- rels with him openly, proving his equality and right to such independence as he can assert for himself. The bond between the king in the Heroic age and his chieftains was founded on the personal superiority of the suzerain, and upon the necessity felt for the predominance of one individual in warfare and council. The chiefs were grouped around the monarch like the twelve peers round Charlemagne, or like the barons, whose turbulence Shakspere has described in RicJiard II. -The relation of the Homeric sovereign to his princes was, in fact, a feudal one. Olympus repeats the same form of government. There Zeus is monarch simply because he wields the thunder. When Here" wishes to rebel, Hephaestus advises her to submit, because Zeus can root up the world, or hurl them all from the crystal parapet of heaven. Such, then, is the society of kings and princes in Homer. They stand forth in brilliant relief against the background, grey and misty, of the common people. The masses of the nation, like the Chorus in Tragedy, kneel passive, deedless, appealing to heaven, trembling at the strokes of fate, watching with anxiety the action of the heroes. Mean- while the heroes enact their drama for themselves. They assume responsibility. They do and suffer as their passions sway them. Of these the greatest, the most truly typical, is Achilles. In Achilles, Homer summed up and fixed for ever the ideal of the Greek character. He presented an imperish- able picture of their national youthfulness, and of their ardent genius, to the Greeks. The "beautiful human heroism" of Achilles, his strong personality, his fierce passions controlled and tempered by divine wisdom, his intense friendship and love that passed the love of women, above all, the splendour of his youthful life in death made perfect, hovered like a dream above the imagination of the Greeks, and insensibly deter- THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 9 mined their subsequent development. At a later age this ideal was destined to be realized in Alexander. The reality fell below the ideal : for rien rtest si beau que la fable, sitriste que la. verite. But the life of Alexander is the most convincing proof of the importance of Achilles in the history of the Greek race. If Achilles be the type of the Hellenic genius, radiant, adolescent, passionate; as it still dazzles us in its artistic beauty and unrivalled physical energy; Ulysses is no less a true portrait of the Greek as known to us in history — stern in action, ruthless in his hatred, pitiless in his hostility ; subtle, vengeful, cun- ning ; yet at the same time the most adventurous of men, the most persuasive in eloquence, the wisest in counsel, the bravest and coolest in danger. The Graculus esuriens of Juvenal may be said to be the caricature in real life of the idealized Ulysses. And what remains to the present day of the Hellenic genius in the so-called Greek ■ nation, descends from Ulysses rather than Achilles. If the Homeric Achilles has the superiority of sculpturesque and dramatic splendour, the Homeric Ulysses beats him on the ground of permanence of type. Homer, then, was the Poet of the Heroic age, the Poet of Achilles and Ulysses. Of Homer we know nothing, we have heard too much. Need we ask ourselves again the question whether he existed, or whether he sprang into the full possession of consummate art without a predecessor? That he had no predecessors, no scattered poems and ballads to build upon, no well-digested body of myths to synthesize, is an absurd hypothesis which the whole history of literature refutes. That, on the other hand, there never was a Homer, — that is to say, that some diaskeuast, acting under the orders of Pisistratus, gave its immortal outline to the colossus of the Iliad, and wove the magic web of the Odyssey, that no supreme and conscious artist working to a well-planned con- clusion conceived and shaped these epics to the form they bear, appears to the spirit of sound criticism equally ridiculous. io THE GREEK POETS. Some Homer did exist. Some great single poet intervened between the lost chaos of legendary material and the cosmos of artistic beauty which we now possess. His work may have been tampered with in a thousand ways, and religiously but inadequately restored. Of his age and date and country we may know nothing. But this we do know, that the fire of moulding, fusing, and controlling genius in some one single brain has made the Iliad and the Odyssey what they are. The Epic poet merges his personality in his poems, the words of which he ascribes to the inspiration of the Muse. The individual is nowhere, is forgotten in the subject and suppressed, while the luminous forms of gods and heroes move serenely across the stage, summoned and marshalled by the maidens of Helicon. In no other period of Greek literature shall we find the same unconsciousness of self, the same immersion in the work of Art. In this respect the poetry of the Heroic age answers to the condition of pre- historic Hellas, where as yet the elements of the Greek race remain still implicit in the general mass and undeveloped. We hear- in Homer of no abrupt division between Dorians and Ionians. Athens and Sparta have not grown up into prominence as the two leaders of the nation. Argos is the centre of power ; but Phthiotis, the cradle of the Hel- lenes, is the home of Achilles. Ulysses is an islander. In the same way, in Homer the art of the Greeks is still a mere potentiality. The artistic sentiment, indeed, exists in exquisite perfection ; but it is germinal, not organ- ized and expanded as it will be. We hear of embroidery for royal garments, of goldsmith's work for shields and breast- plates, of stained ivory trappings for chariots and horses. But even here the poet's imagination had probably outrun the fact. What he saw with his fancy, could the heroic artisans have fashioned with their tools ? Is not the shield of Achilles, like Dante's pavement of the Purgatorial staircase, a forecast of THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. u the future? Architecture and Sculpture at any rate can scarcely be said to exist. Ulysses builds his own house. The statues of the gods are fetishes. But, meanwhile, the founda- tion of the highest Greek art is being laid in the cultivation of the human body. The sentiment of beauty shows itself in dances and games, in the races of naked runners, in rhythmic processions, and the celebration of religious rites. This was the proper preparation for the after-growth of Sculpture. The whole race lived out its sculpture and its painting, rehearsed, as it were, the great works of Pheidias and Polygnotus, in physical exercise before it learned to express itself in marble or in colour. The public games, which were instituted in this first period, further contributed to the cultivation of the sense of Beauty, which was inherent in the Greeks. The second period is one of transition — in Politics, in Literature, in the Fine Arts. Everywhere the old landmarks are being broken up, and the new ones are not yet fixed. The Heroic monarchies yield first of all to oligarchies, and then to tyrannies; the tyrannies in their turn give place to democracies, or to constitutional aristocracies. Argos, the centre of Heroic Hellas, is the first to change. Between 770 and 730 B.C. Pheidon usurps the sovereign power, and dies, leaving no dynasty behind him. Between 650 and 500 we find despots springing up in all the chief Greek cities. At Corinth the oligarchical family of the Bacchiads are superseded by the tyrants Cypselus and Periander. At Megara the despot Theagenes is deposed and exiled. At Sicyon the Orthagoridse terminate in the despot Cleisthenes, whose reign is marked by an attempt to supersede the ancient Doric order of govern- ment by caste. At Mitylene, Pittacus becomes a constitu- tional autocrat, or dictator for the public safety. At Samos, Polycrates holds a post of almost Oriental despotism. At Athens, we find' the great family of the Pisistratidas, who upersede the dynastic tyranny in commission of the house 12 THE GREEK POETS. of Codrus. What is the meaning of these changes ? How does the despot differ from the Heroic monarch, who held, as we have seen, his power by divine right, but who also had to depend for his ascendancy on personal prowess ? Gradually the old respect for the seed of Zeus died out. Either the royal families abused their power, or became extinct, or, as in the case of Athens and Sparta, retained hereditary privileges under limitations. During this decay of the Zeus-born dynasties, the cities of Greece were a prey to the quarrels of great families ; and it often happened that one of these obtained supreme power — in which case a monarchy, based not on divine right, but on force and fear, was founded : or else a few of the chief houses combined against the State, to establish an oligarchy. The oligarchies, owing their authority to no true, legal, or religious fount of honour, were essentially selfish, and were exposed to the encroachments of the more able among their own families. The cleverest man in an oligarchy tended to draw the power into his own hands ; but in this he generally succeeded by first flattering, and then intimidating the people. Thus in one way or another the old type of dynastic government was superseded by despotisms, more or less arbitrary, tending to the tyranny of single individuals, or to the coalition of noble houses, and bringing with them the vices of greed, craft, and servile cruelty. The political ferment caused a vast political excitement. Party strove against party; and when one set gained the upper hand, the other had to fly. The cities of Hellas were filled with exiles. Diplomacy and criticism occupied the minds of men. Personal cleverness became the one essential point in politics. But two permanent advantages were secured by this anarchy to the Greeks. The one was a strong sense of the equality of citizens ; the other a desire for established law, as opposed to the caprice of individuals and to the clash of factions in the State. This then is the first point which marks THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 13 the transitional period. The old monarchies break up, and give place to oligarchies first, and then to despotism. The tyrants maintain themselves by violence and by flattering the mob. At last they fall, or are displaced, and then the states agree to maintain their freedom by the means of constitutions and fixed laws. The despots are schoolmasters, who bring the people to Nomas as their lord. Three other general features distinguish this period of transition. The first is Colonization. In the political disturb- ances which attended the struggle for power, hundreds of citizens were forced to change their residence. So we find the mother cities sending settlers to Italy, to Sicily, to Africa, to the Gulf of Lyons, to Thrace, and to the islands. In these colonies the real life and vigour of Hellas show themselves at this stage more than in the mother states. It is in Sicily, on the coast of Magna Grascia, on thesea-board of Asia Minor, in the islands of the ^Egean, that the first poets and philosophers and historians of Greece appear. Sparta and Athens, des- tined to become the protagonists of the real drama of Hellas, are meanwhile silent and apparently inert. Again this is the age of the Nomothetas. Thebes receives a constitution from the Corinthian lovers and lawgivers Philolaus and Diodes. Lycurgus and Solon form the states of Sparta and Athens. It is not a little wonderful to think of these three great cities, successively the leaders of historic Hellas, submitting to the intellect each of its own lawgiver, taking shape beneath his hands, cheerfully accepting and diligently executing his directions. Lastly, it is in this period that the two chief races of the Greeks — the Ionians and the Dorians — emerge into distinctness. Not only are Athens and Sparta fashioned to the form which they will afterwards maintain ; but also in the colonies two distinct streams of thought and feeling begin to flow onwards side by side, and to absorb, each into its own current, those minor rivulets which it could best appropriate. 14 THE GREEK POETS. What happens to literature in this period of metamorphosis, expansion, and anarchy? We have seen that Homer covers the whole of the first period of literature ; and in the Homeric poems we saw that the interests of the present were subordinated to a splendid picture of the ideal past, that the poet was merged in his work, that the individual joys and sorrows of the artist remained unspoken, and that his words were referred imme- diately to the Muse.' All this is now to be altered. But meanwhile between the first and second period a link is made by Hesiod. In his Works a?id Days he still preserves the traditions of the Epic. But we no longer listen to the deeds of gods and heroes ; and though the Muse is invoked, the poet appears before us as a living, sentient, suffering man. We descend to earth. We are instructed in the toils and duties of the beings who have to act and endure upon the prosaic stage of the world, as it exists in the common light of the present time. Even in Hesiod there has therefore been a change. Homer strung his lyre in the halls of princes who loved to dwell on the great deeds of their god-descended ancestors. Hesiod utters a weaker and more subdued note to the tillers of the ground and the watchers of the seasons. In Homer we see the radiant heroes expiring with a smile upon their lips as on the ^Eginetan pediment. In Hesiod we hear the low sad outcry of humanity. The inner life, the daily loss and profit, the duties and the cares of men are his concern. Homer too was never analytical. He described the world without raising a single moral or psycho- logical question. Hesiod poses the eternal problems : What is the origin and destiny of mankind ? Why should we toil pain- fully upon the upward path of virtue ? How came the gods to be our tyrants ? What is Justice ? How did evil and pain and disease begin? After Hesiod the Epical impulse ceases. Poets indeed go on writing narrative poems in hexameters. But the Cycle, so called by the Alexandrian THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 15 critics, produced about this time, had not innate life enough to survive the wear and tear of centuries. We have lost the whole series, except in the tragedies which were composed from their materials. Literature had passed beyond the stage of the heroic Epic. The national ear demanded other and more varied forms of verse than the hexameter. Among the Ionians of Asia Minor was developed the pathetic melody of the Elegiac metre, which first apparently was used to express the emotions of love and sorrow, and afterwards came to be the vehicle of moral sentiment and all strong feeling. Callinus and Tyrtseus adapted the Elegy to songs of battle. Solon consigned his wisdom to its couplets, and used it as a trumpet for awakening the zeal of Athens against her tyrants. Mimnermus confined the metre to its more plaintive melo- dies, and made it the mouthpiece of lamentations over the fleeting beauty of youth and the evils of old age. In Theognis the Elegy takes wider scope. He uses it alike for satire and invective, for precept, for autobiographic grumblings, for political discourses, and for philosphical apophthegms. Side by side with the Elegy arose the various forms of Lyric poetry. The names of Alcaeus and Sappho, of Alcman, Anacreon, Simo- nides, Bacchylides, Stesichorus, Arion instantly suggest themselves. But it must be borne in mind that Lyric poetry in Greece at a very early period broke up into two distinct species. The one kind gave expression to strong personal emotion and became a safety-valve for perilous passions : the other was choric and complex in its form ; designed for public festivals and solemn ceremonials, it consisted chiefly of odes sung in the honour of gods and great men. To the former or personal species belong the lyrics of the Ionian and yEolian families : to the latter, or more public species, belong the so-called Dorian odes. Besides the Elegy and all the forms of lyric stanza, the Iambic was invented in this period, and adapted to satire. Archilochus is said to have constructed 1 6 THE GREEK POETS. this metre, as being the closest in its form to common speech, and therefore suited to his unideal practical invective. From the lyric Dithyrambs of Arion, sung at festivals of Dionysus, and from the Iambic satires of Archilochus, recited at the feasts of Demeter, was to be developed the metrical structure of the Drama in the third period. As yet, it is only among the Dorians of Sicily and of Megara that we hear of any mimetic shows, and these of the simplest description. In this period the first start in the direction of philosophy was made. The morality which had been implicit in Homer, and had received a partial development in Hesiod, was con- densed in proverbial couplets by Solon, Theognis, Phocylides, and Simonides. These couplets formed the starting-points for discussion. Many of Plato's dialogues turn on sayings of Theognis and Simonides. Many of the sublimer flights of meditation in Sophocles are expansions of early Gnomes. Even the Ethics of Aristotle are indebted to their wisdom. The ferment of thought produced by the political struggles of this age tended to sharpen the intellect and to turn reflection inwards. Hence we find that the men who rose to greatest eminence in statecraft as tyrants or as lawgivers, are also to be reckoned among the primitive philosophers of Greece. The aphorisms of the Seven Sages, two of whom were Nomothetse, and several of whom were despots, contain the kernel of much that is peculiar in Greek thought. It is enough to mention these : prfiiv ixyav' fiirpov apiarov' yvddi (tecwtov' Kaipbv yvQQi' avayKri <3' ovBe Oeol fia\ovTai, which are the genus of subsequent systems of ethics, metaphysics, and theories of art. Solon, as a patriot, a modeller of the Athenian constitution, an elegiac poet, one of the Seven Sages, and the representative of Greece at the court of Crcesus, may be chosen as the one most eminent man in a period when literature and thought and politics were to a remarkable extent combined in the person of individuals. Meanwhile philosophy began to flourish in more definite THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 17 shape among the colonists of Asia Minor, Italy, and Sicily. The criticism of the Theogony of Hesiod led the Ionian thinkers, Thales, Anaximenes, Anaximander, Heraclitus, to evolve separate answers to the question of the origin of the universe. The problem of the physical apxi) of the world occupied their attention. Some more scientific theory of existence than mythology afforded was imperatively demanded. The same spirit of criticism, the same demand for accuracy, gave birth to history. The Theogony of Hesiod and the Homeric version of the Trojan war, together with the genea- logies of the Heroes, were reduced to simple statements of fact, stripped of their artistic trappings, and rationalized after a rude and simple fashion by the annalists of Asia Minor. This zeal for greater rigour of thought was instrumental in developing a new vehicle of language. The time had come at length for separation from poetry, for the creation of a prose style which should correspond in accuracy to the logical necessity of exact thinking. Prose accordingly was elaborated with infinite difficulty by these first speculators from the ele- ments of common speech. It was a great epoch in the history of European culture when men ceased to produce their thoughts in the fixed cadences of verse, and consigned them to the more elastic periods of prose. Heraclitus of Ephesus was the first who achieved a notable success in this new and difficult art. He for his pains received the title of 6 gko-uvoq, the obscure, so strange and novel did the language of science seem to minds accustomed hitherto to nothing but metre. Yet even after his date philosophy of the deepest species was still conveyed in verse. The Eleatic metaphysicians Xenophanes and Parmenides — Xenophanes, who dared to criticise the an- thropomorphism of the Greek Pantheon, and Parmenides, who gave utterance to the word of Greek ontology, ro ov, or Being, which may be significantly contrasted with the Hebrew I am, wrote long poems in which they invoked the Muse, and dragged c l8 THE GREEK POETS. the hexameter along the pathway of their argument upon the entities, like a pompous sacrificial vestment. Empedocles of Agrigentum, to whom we owe the rough and ready theory of the four elements, cadenced his great work on Nature in the same sonorous verse, and interspersed his speculations on the Cycles of the Universe with passages of brilliant eloquence. Thus the second period is marked alike by changes in politics and society and by a revolution in the spirit of litera- ture. The old Homeric monarchies are broken up. Oligarchies and tyrannies take their place. To the anarchy and unrest of transition succeeds the demand for constitutional order. The colonies are founded, and contain the very pith of Hellas at this epoch : of all the great names we have mentioned, only Solon and Theognis belong to Central Greece. The Homeric Epos has become obsolete. In its stead we have the greatest possible variety of literary forms. The Elegiac poetry of morality and war and love ; the Lyrical poetry of personal feeling and of public ceremonial; the Philosophical poetry of metaphysics and mysticism ; the Iambic, with its satire ; Prose, in its adaptation to new sciences and a more accurate historical investigation; are all built up upon the ruins of the Epic. What is most prominent in the spirit of this second period is the emergence of private interests and individual activities. No dreams of a golden past now occupy the minds of men. No gods or heroes fill the canvas of the poet. Man, his daily life, his most crying necessities, his deepest problems, his loves and soitows, his friendships, his social relations, his civic duties — these are the theme of poetry. Now for the first time in Europe a man tells his own hopes and fears, and expects the world to listen. Sappho simply sings her love ; Archilochus, his hatred ;. Theognis, his wrongs; Mimnermus, his ennui; AIcecus, his misfortunes ; Anacreon, his pleasure of the hour ; and their songs find an echo in all hearts. The Individual and the Present have triumphed over the Ideal and the Past. Finally, THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 19 it should be added that the chief contributions to the culture of the fine aits in this period are Architecture, which is carried to perfection; Music, which receives elaborate form in the lyric of the Dorian order ; and Sculpture, which appears as yet but rudimentary upon the pediments of the temples of ^Egina and Selinus. Our third period embraces the supremacy of Athens from the end of the Persian to the end of the Peloponnesian war. It was the struggle with Xerxes which developed all the latent energies of the Greeks, which intensified their national existence, and which secured for Athens, as the central power on which the scattered forces of the race converged, the intellectual dictatorship of Hellas. No contest equals for interest and for importance this contest of the Greeks with the Persians. It was a struggle of spiritual energy against brute force, of liberty against oppression, of intellectual freedom against superstitious ignorance, of civilization against barbarism. The whole fate of Humanity hung trembling in the scales at Marathon, at Salamis, at Platsa. On the one side were ranged the hordes of Asia, tribe after tribe, legion upon legion, myriad by myriad, under their generals and princes. On the other side stood forth a band of athletes, of Greek citizens, each one himself a prince and general. The countless masses of the herd-like Persian host were opposed to a handful of resolute men in whom the force of the spirit of the world was concentrated. The triumph of the Greeks was the triumph of the spirit, of the intellect of man, of light dispersing darkness, of energy repelling a dead weight of matter. Other nations have shown a temper as heroic as the Greeks. The Dutch, for instance, in their re- sistance against Philip, or the Swiss in their antagonism to Burgundy and Austria. But in no other single instance has heroism been exerted on so large a scale, in such a fateful contest, for the benefit of Humanity at large. Had the Dutch, for example, been quelled by Spain, or the Swiss been crushed c 2 20 THE GREEK POETS. by the house of Hapsburg, the world could have survived the loss of these athletic nations. There were other mighty peoples, who held the torch of liberty and of the spirit, and who were ready to carry it onward in the race. But if Persia had overwhelmed the Greeks upon the plains of Marathon or in the straits of Salamis, that torch of spiritual liberty would have been extinguished. There was no runner in the race to catch it up from the dying hands of Hellas, and to bear it forward for the future age. No : this contest of the Greeks with Persia was the one supreme battle of history ; and to the triumph of the Greeks we owe whatever is most great and glorious in the subsequent achievements of the human race. Athens rose to her full height in this duel. She bore the brunt of Marathon alone. Her generals decided the seaTfight of Salamis. For the Spartans it remained to defeat Mardonius at Platsea. Consequently the olive-wreath of this more than Olympian victory crowned Athens. Athens was recognized as Saviour and Queen of Hellas. And Athens, who had fought the battle of the Spirit — by Spirit we mean the greatness of the soul, liberty, intelligence, civilization, culture, everything which raises men above brutes and slaves, and makes them free beneath the arch of heaven — Athens who had fought and won this battle of the Spirit, became immediately the recognized impersonation of the Spirit itself. Whatever was superb in human nature found its natural home and sphere in Athens. We hear no more of the colonies. All great works of Art and Literature now are produced in Athens. It is to Athens that the sages come to teach and to be taught. Anaxagoras, Socrates, Plato, the three masters of philosophy in this third period, are Athenians. It is, however, noticeable and significant that Anaxagoras, who forms a link between the philosophy of the second and the third period, is a native of Clazomense, though the thirty years of his active life are spent at Athens. These thinkers introduce into speculation a new element. Instead THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 21 of inquiries into the factors of the physical world or of onto- logical theorizing, they approach all problems which involve the activities of the human soul, the presence in the universe of a controlling Spirit. Anaxagoras issues the famous apo- phthegm, vovq navTa Kparel : intelligence disposes all things in the world. Socrates founds his ethical investigation upon the Delphian precept, yvdQi atavrov : or, " the proper study of mankind is man." Plato, synthesizing all the previous specu- lations of the Greeks, ascends to the conception of an ideal existence which unites Truth, Beauty, and Goodness in one scheme of universal order.' At the same time Greek art rises to its height of full matu- rity. Ictinus designs the Parthenon ; Pheidias completes the development of Sculpture in his statue of Athene, his pediment and friezes of the Parthenon, his chryselephantine image of Zeus at Olympia, his marble Nemesis upon the plain of Marathon. These were the ultimate, consummate achieve- ments of the sculptor's skill ; the absolute standards of what the statuary in Greece could do. Nothing remained to be added. Subsequent progression — for a progression there was in the work of Praxiteles — was a deflection from the pure and perfect type. Poetry, in the same way, receives incomparable treatment at the hands of the great dramatists. As the Epic of Homer contained implictly all forms of poetry, so did the Athenian Drama consciously unite them in one supreme work of art. The energies aroused by the Persian war had made action and the delineation of action of prime importance to the Greeks. We no longer find the poets giving expression to merely per- sonal feeling, or uttering wise saws and moral precepts, as in the second period. Human emotion is indeed their theme : but it is the phases of passion in living, acting, and con- flicting personalities which the Drama undertakes to depict. Ethical philosophy is more than ever substantive in verse : but 22 THE GREEK POETS. its lessons are set forth by example and not by precept — they animate the conduct of whole trilogies. The awakened activity of Hellas at this period produced the first great drama of Europe, as the Reformation in England produced the second. The Greek Drama being essentially religious, the tragedians ascended to Mythology for their materials. Homer is dis- membered, and his episodes or allusions, together with the substance of the Cyclic poems, supply the dramatist with plots. But notice the difference between Homer and ^Eschylus, the Epic and the Drama. In the latter we find no merely external delineation of mythical history. The legends are used as out- lines to be filled in with living and eternally important details. The heroes are not interesting merely as heroes, but as the types and patterns of human nature, as representatives on a gigantic scale of that humanity which is common to all men in all ages, and as subject to the destinies which control all human affairs. Mythology has thus become the text-book of life, interpreted by the philosophical consciousness. With the names of ^Eschyliis, Sophocles, Euripides, must be coupled that of Aristophanes. His Comedy is a peculiarly Athenian product — the strongest mixture of paradox and irony and broad buffoonery and splendid poetry, designed to serve a serious . aim, the world has ever seen. Here the many-sided, flashing genius of the Ionian race appears in all its subtlety, variety, suppleness, and strength. The free spirit of Athens runs riot and proclaims its liberty by license in the prodigious saturnalia of the wit of Aristophanes. It remains to be added that to this period belong the histories of Herodotus the Ionian and colonist from Athens, and of Thucydides, the Athenian general ; the lyrics of Pindar the Theban, who was made the public guest of Athens ; the eloquence of Pericles, and the wit of Aspasia. This brief enumeration suffices to show that in the third period of Greek Literature was contained whatever is most splendid in the THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 23 achievements of the genius of the Greeks, and that all these triumphs converged and were centred upon Athens. The public events of this period are summed up in the struggle for supremacy between Athens and Sparta. The race which had shown itself capable of united action against the common foe, now develops within itself two antagonistic and mutually exclusive principles. The age of the despots is past. The flowering-time of the colonies is over. The stone of Tantalus in Persia has been removed from Hellas. But it remains for Sparta and Athens to fight out the duel of Dorian against Ionian prejudices, of Oligarchy against Democracy. Both states have received their definite stamp, or permanent ■fjOoe — Sparta from semi-mythical Lycurgus ; Athens from iSolon, Cleisthenes, and Pericles. Their war is the warfare of the powers of the sea with the powers of the land, of Conserva- tives with Liberals, of the rigid principle of established order with the expansive spirit of intellectual and artistic freedom. What is called the Peloponnesian war — that internecine struggle of the Greeks — is the historical outcome of this deep- seated antagonism. And the greatest historical narrative in the world, that of Thucydides, is its record. To dwell upon the events of this war would be superfluous. Athens uniformly exhibits herself as a dazzlingly brilliant, impatient power,, led astray by the desire of novelty, and the intoxicating sense of force in freedom. Sparta proceeds slowly, coldly, cautiously ; secures her steps ; acts on the defensive ; spends no strength in vain ; is timid, tentative, and economical of energy ; but at the decisive moment she steps in and crushes her antagonist. Deluded by the wandering fire of the inspiration of Alcibiades, the Athenians venture to abandon the policy of Pericles and to contemplate the conquest of Syracuse. A dream of gigantic empire, in harmony with their expansive spirit, but inconsistent with the very conditions of vitality in a Greek state, floated before their imaginations. In attempting to execute it, they 24 THE GREEK POETS. over-reached themselves and fell a prey to Sparta. With the fall of Athens, faded the real beauty and grandeur of Greece. Athens had incarnated that ideal of loveliness and sublimity. During her days of prosperity she had expressed it in superb works of art and literature, and in the splendid life of a free people governed solely by their own intelligence. Sparta was strong to destroy this life, to extinguish this light of culture: But to do more she had no strength. Stiffened in her narrow rules of discipline, she was utterly unable to sustain the spiritual vitality of Hellas, or to carry its still vigorous energy into new spheres. It remained for aliens to accomplish this. Just before passing to the fourth period of comparative de- cline, let us halt a moment to contemplate the man who repre- sents this age of full maturity. Pericles, called half in derision by the comic poets the Zeus of Athens, called afterwards, with reverence, by Plutarch, the Olympian — Pericles expresses in himself the spirit of this age. He is the typical Athenian, who governed Athens during the years in which Athens governed Greece, who formed the taste of the Athenians at the time when they were educating the world by the production of im- mortal works of beauty. We have seen that the conquest of the Persians was the triumph of the spirit, and that after the con- quest the spirit of Humanity found itself for the first time abso- lutely and consciously free in Athens. This spirit was, so to speak, incarnated in Pericles. Verbum caro factum est — the Word of the Greek genius was made flesh in him, and dwelt at Athens. In obedience to its dictates, he extended the political liberties of the Athenians to the utmost, while he controlled those liberties with the laws of his own reason. In obedience to the same spirit, he expended the treasures of the Ionian League upon the public works, which formed the subsequent glory of Hellas, and made her august even in humiliation. " That," says Plutarch, " which now is Greece's only evidence that the power she boasts of and her ancient wealth are no THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 25 romance or idle story, was his construction of the public and sacred buildings." It was, again, by the same inspiration that Pericles divined the true ideal of the Athenian commonwealth. In the Funeral Oration he says : " We love the beautiful, but without ostentation or extravagance ; we philosophize without being seduced into effeminacy : we are bold and daring ; but this energy in action does not prevent us from giving to ourselves a strict account of what we undertake. Among other nations, on the contrary, martial courage has its foundation in deficiency of culture ; we know best how to distinguish between the agreeable and the irksome ; notwithstanding which we do not shrink from perils." In this panegyric of the national character, Pericles has rightly expressed the real spirit of Athens as dis- tinguished from Sparta. The courage and activity of the Athenians were the result of open-eyed wisdom, and not of mere gymnastic training. Athens knew that the arts of life and the pleasures of the intellect were superior to merely physical exercises, to drill, and to discipline. While fixing our thoughts upon Pericles as the exponent of the mature spirit of free Hellas, we owe some attention to his master, the great Anaxagoras, who first made Reason play the chief part in the scheme of the universe. Of the relations of Anaxagoras to his pupil Pericles, this is what Plutarch tells us : " He that saw most of Pericles, and furnished him most especially with a weight and grandeur of sense, superior to all arts of popularity, and in general gave him his elevation and sublimity of purpose and of character, was Anaxagoras of Clazomense, whom the men of those times called by the name of Nous, that is, mind or intelligence ; whether in admiration of the great and extraordinary gift he displayed for the science of nature, or because he was the first of the philosophers who did not refer the first ordering of the world to fortune or chance, nor to necessity or compulsion, but to a pure, unadulterated intelligence, which in all other existing mixed and compound 26 THE GREEK POETS. things acts as a principle of discrimination, and of combination of like with like." Thus we may say, without mysticism, that at the very moment in history when the intelligence of Humanity attained to freedom, there arose a philosopher in Anaxagoras to proclaim the freedom and absolute supremacy of intelligence in the universe ; and a ruler in Pericles to carry into action the laws of that intelligence, and to govern the most uncon- trollably free of nations by Reason. When Pericles died, Athens lost her Zeus, her head, her real king. She was left a prey to parties, to demagogues, to the cold encroaching policy of Sparta. But Pericles had lived long enough to secure the immortality of what was greatest in his city, to make of Athens in her beauty " a joy for ever." " If the army of Nicias had not been defeated under the walls of Syracuse ; if the Athenians had. acquiring Sicily, held the balance between Rome and Carthage, sent garrisons to the Greek colonies in the south of Italy, Rome might have been all that its intellectual condition entitled it to be, a tributary, not the conqueror, of Greece ; the Macedonian power would never have attained to the dictatorship of the civilized states of the world." Such is the exclamation of Shelley over the fall of Athens. But, according to the Greek proverb, to desire impossibilities — in the past as in the present — is a sickness of the soul. No Greek state could have maintained its j)0og while it ruled a foreign empire ; nor is the right to govern measured by merely intellectual capacity. The work of Greece was essentially spiritual and not political. The chief sign of weakness which meets us in the fourth period is in the region of politics. After the humiliation of Athens, Sparta assumed the leadership of Greece. But she / shamefully misused her power by betraying the Greek cities of Asia to the Persians, while her generals and harmosts made use of their authority for the indulgence of their private vices. Nothing in the previous training of the Spartan race fitted" them for the THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERA TURE. 27 control of nations with whose more liberal institutions and refined manners they could not sympathize. Their tyranny proved insupportable, and was at last reduced to the dust by the Thebans under Pelopidas and Epaminondas. But Thebes had neither the wealth nor the vigour to administer the govern- ment of Hellas. Therefore the Greek states fell into a chaos of discord, without leadership, without a generous spirit of mutual confidence and aid ; while at the same time the power of the Macedonian kingdom was rapidly increasing under the control of Philip. An occasion offered itself to Philip for interfering in the Greek affairs. From that moment forward for ever the cities of Greece became the fiefs of foreign despots. The occasion in question was a great one. The Phocians had plundered the Delphian temple, and none of the Greeks were strong enough to punish them. The act of the Phocians was parricidal in its sacrilege, suicidal in short-sightedness. Desecrating the altar of the ancestral god, on whose oracles the states had hitherto depended for counsel, and destroying, with the sanctity of Delphi, the sacred symbol of Greek national existence, they abandoned themselves to desecration and dis- honour. With as little impunity might a king of Judah have robbed the temple and invaded the Holiest of Holies. But neither Spartans, nor Athenians, nor yet Thebans arose to avenge the affront offered to their common nationality. The whole of Greece proper lay paralyzed, and the foreigner stepped in — Philip, whom in their pride they had hitherto called the Barbarian. He took up the cause of Phoebus and punished the children of the Delphian god for their impiety. It was clearly proved to the states of Hellas that their inde- pendence was at an end. They submitted. Greece became the passive spectator of the deeds of Macedonia. Hellas, who had been the hero, was now the chorus. It was Alexander of Macedon who played the part of Achilles in her future drama. One man vindicated the spirit of Greek freedom against this 28 THE GREEK POETS. despotism. The genius of Athens, militant once more, but destined not to triumph, incarnates itself in Demosthenes. By dint of eloquence and weight of character he strives to stem the tide of dissolution. But it is in vain. His orations remain as the monuments of a valiant but ineffectual resist- ance. The old intelligence of Athens shines, nay, fulminates, in these tremendous periods ; but it is no longer intelligence combined with power. The sceptre of empire has passed from the hands of the Athenians. Still, though the states of Greece are humiliated, though we hear no more of Ionians and Dorians, but only of Macedonians, yet the real force of the Greek race is by no means exhausted in this fourth period. On the contrary, their practical work in the world is just beginning. Under the guidance of Alexander, the Greek spirit conquers and attempts to civilize the East. The parallel between Alexander and Achilles, as before hinted, is more than accidental. Trained in the study of Homer as we are in the study of the Bible, he compared his destinies with those of the great hero, and formed himself upon the type of Pelides. At Troy he pays peculiar reverence to the tomb of Patroclus. He celebrates Hephaestion's death with Homeric games and pyres up-piled to heaven. He carries Homer with him on war-marches, and consults the Iliad on occasions of doubt. Alexander's purpose was to fight out to the end the fight begun by Achilles between West and East, and to avenge Greece for the injuries of Asia. But it was not a merely military conquest which he executed. Battles were the means to higher ends. Alexander sought to subject the world to the Greek spirit, to stamp the customs, the thoughts, the language, and the culture of the Greeks upon surrounding nations. Poets and philosophers accompanied his armies. In the deserts of Bactria and Syria and L'ibya he founded Greek cities. During the few years of his. short life he not only swept those continents, but he effaced the past and THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 29 inaugurated a new state of things throughout them ; so that, in subsequent years, when the Romans, themselves refined by contact with the Greeks, advanced to take possession of those territories, they found their work half done. The alchemizing touch of the Greek genius had transformed languages, cities, constitutions, customs, nay, religions also, to its own likeness. This fourth period, a period of transition from maturity to decay, is the period of Alexander. In it the Greek spirit, which had been gathering strength through so many generations, poured itself abroad over the world. What it lost in intensity and splendour, it gained in extension. It was impossible even for Greeks, while thus impressing their civilization on the whole earth, to go on increasing in the beauty of their life and art at home. Some of the greatest names in Art, Philosophy, and Lite- rature still belong to this fourth period. The chief of all is Aristotle, il maestro di color che sanno, the absorber of all previous and contemporary knowledge into one coherent system, the legislator for the human intellect through eighteen centuries after his death. It is worth observing that Aristotle, unlike Socrates and Plato, is not a citizen of Athens, but ot the small Thracian town Stageira. Thus, at the moment when philosophy lost its essentially Hellenic character and became cosmopolitan in Aristotle, the mantle devolved upon an alien. Again Aristotle was the tutor of Alexander. The two greatest men of the fourth period are thus brought into the closest relations. In pure literature the most eminent productions of this period are the orations of ^Eschines, Demosthenes, Isocrates ; and the comedies of Menander. It is not a little significant that we should have retained no authentic fragment of the speeches of Pericles— except in so far as we may trust Thucydides — while the studied Rhetoric of these politically far less important orators should have been so copiously preserved. The reign of mere talk was imminent. Oratory 30 THE GREEK POETS. was coming to be studied as an art, and practised, not as a potent instrument in politics, but as an end in itself. Men were beginning to think more of how they spoke than of what they might achieve by speaking. Besides, the whole Athenian nation, as dikasts and as ecclesiasts, were interested in Rhetoric. The first masters of eloquence considered as a fine art, were therefore idolized. Demosthenes, ^schines, Isocrates, com- bined the fire of vehement partisans and impassioned politicians with the consummate skill of professional speech-makers. After their days Rhetoric in Greece became a matter of frigid display — an aywrurfia eg to Trapayprifia. In the comedies of Menander, as far as we may judge of them from fragments and critiques, and from their Latin copies, a very noticeable change in the spirit of literature is apparent. The so-called New Comedy, of which he was the representative, is the product of a meditative and inactive age. The great concerns of the world, and of human life seen in its profoundest depth, which formed the staple of Aristophanes, have been abandoned. We are brought close to domesticities : the events of common life occupy the stage of Menander. The audience of Aristo- phanes listened with avidity to comedies of which politics upon the grandest scale were the substance. Menander invited his Athenians to the intrigues of young men, slaves, and hetairai, at warfare with niggardly parents. Athens has ceased to be an empress. She has become a garrulous housewife. She contents herself with amusements, — still splendid with intelligence and dignified with wisdom, but not weighty with the consciousness of power, nor throbbing with the pulses of superabundant youthfulness and vigour. In the Fine Arts this fourth period was still inventive. Under Alexander painting, which had received its Hellenic character from Polygnotus and Zeuxis, continued to flourish with Apelles. Indeed, it may be fairly said that while Art in the Heroic period was confined to the perfecting of the human THE PERIODS 01 GREEK LITERATURE. 3r body, in the second period it produced Architecture, in the third Sculpture, and in the fourth Painting — this being ap- parently the natural order of progression in the evolution of the fine arts. Of Greek Music, in the absence of all sure information, it is difficult to speak. Yet it is probable that the age of Alexander witnessed a new and more complex development of orchestral music. We hear of vast symphonies performed at the Macedonian court. Nor is this inconsistent with what we know about the history of Art : for Music attains independence, ceases to be the handmaid of Poetry or Dancing, only in an age of intellectual reflectiveness. When nations- have expressed themselves in the more obvious and external arts, they seek through harmonies and melodies to give form to their emotions. The fifth, last, and longest period is one of Decline and Decay. But these words must be used with qualification when we speak of a people like the Greeks. What is meant, is that the Greeks never recovered their national vigour or produced men so great as those whom we have hitherto been men- tioning. The Macedonian empire prepared the way for the Roman : Hellenic civilization put on the garb of servitude to Rome and to Christianity. Henceforth we must not look to Greece proper for the more eminent achievements of the still surviving spirit of the Greeks. Greek culture in its decadence has become the heritage of the whole world. Syrians, Egyptians, Phrygians, Romans, carry on the tradition inherited from Athens. Hellas is less a nation now than an intellectual commonwealth, a society of culture holding various races in communion. The spiritual republic estab- lished thus by the Greek genius prepares the way for Christian brotherhood : the liberty of the children of the Muses leads onward to the freedom of the sons of God. In this period, the chief centres are first Alexandria and Athens, then Rome and Byzantium. The real successors of 32 THE GREEK POETS. Alexander were his generals. But the only dynasty founded by them which rises into eminence by its protection of the arts and literature was the Ptolemaic. At Alexandria, under the Ptolemies, libraries were formed and sciences were studied. Euclid the geometer, Aratus the astronomer, Ptolemy the cos- mographer, add lustre to the golden age of Alexandrian culture. Callimachus at the same time leads a tribe of learned poets and erudite men of letters. Dramas meant to be read, like Lycophron's Cassandra; epics composed in the study, like the Argonautica of Apollonius Rhodius, form the diversion of the educated world. Meanwhile the whole genus of parasitic litterateurs begin to flourish : grammarians, who settle and elucidate texts with infinite labour and some skill ; sophists and rhetoricians, whose purpose in life it is to adorn imaginary subjects and to defend problematical theses with conceits of the fancy and ingenious subtleties of reasoning. A young man writing to his mistress, a dinner-seeker who has failed to get an invitation, Themistocles at the Persian court, celebrated statues, philosophical puzzles — everything that can be wordily elaborated, is grist for their mill. The art of writing without having anything particular to say, the sister art of quarrying the thoughts of other people and setting them in elaborate prolixities of style, are brought to perfection. At the same time, side by side with these literary moths and woodlice, are the more industrious ants, — the collectors of anecdotes, com- pilers of biographies, recorders of quotations, composers of all sorts of commonplace books, students of the paste-brush and scissors sort, to whom we owe much for the pre- servation of scraps of otherwise lost treasures. Into such mechanical and frigid channels has the life of literature passed. Literature is no longer an integral part of the national existence, but a form of polite amusement. The genius of Hellas has nothing better to do than to potter about like a dilettante among her treasures. HIE PERIODS OF GREEK LITER A TURE. 33 The only true poets- of this period are the Sicilian Idyllists. Over the waning day of Greek poetry Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus cast the sunset hues of their excessive beauty. Genuine and exquisite is their inspiration ; pure, sincere, and true is their execution. Yet we agree with Shelley, who compares their perfume to " the odour of the tuberose, which overcomes and sickens the spirit with excess of sweetness." In the same way the erotic epigrammatists, though many of them genuine poets, especially the exquisite Meleager of Gadara, in the very perfection of their peculiar quality of genius offer an unmistakable sign of decay. It is the fashion among a certain class of modern critics to rave about the art of Decadence, to praise the hectic hues of consumption and even the strange livors of corruption, more than the roses and the lilies of health. Let them peruse the epigrams of Meleager and of Straton. Of beauty in decay sufficient splendours may be found there. While Alexandria was thus carrying the poetic tradition of Hellas to its extremity in the Idyll and the Epigram — carving cherrystones after the sculptor's mallet had been laid aside, and was continuing the criticism which had been set on foot by Aristotle, Athens persisted in her function of educating Europe. She remained a sort of university, in which the doctrines of Plato and Aristotle were adequately developed, though not in the most comprehensive spirit, by a crowd of Peripatetic and Academic sages, and where the founders of the Epicurean and Stoic schools gave a new direction to thought. It was -during the first vigour of the Epicurean and Stoic teaching that the spirit of Hellas came into contact with the spirit of Rome. Hence Lucretius, Cicero, the Satirists — whatever, in fact, Rome may boast of philosophy, retains the tincture of the ethics of her school- masters. Rome, as Virgil proudly said, was called to govern — not to write poems or carve statues — but to quell the proud 34 THE GREEK POETS. and spare the abject. Still she caught, to some extent, the aesthetic manners of her captive. Consequently, long after the complete political ascendancy of Rome was an established fact, and geographical Greece had become 'an insignificant province, the Hellenic spirit led the world. And some of its latest products are still dazzling in beauty, marvellous in ingenuity, Titanic in force. A few names selected from the list of Grseco-Roman authors will be more impressive than description. Plutarch of Chseronea, in the first century, the author of the great biographies ; Lucian, the Syrian, in the second century, the master of irony and graceful dialogue and delicate description ; Epictetus, the Phrygian slave, in the second century, who taught the latest form of Stoicism to the Romans, and had for his successor Marcus Aurelius; Philostratus of Lemnos, the rhetorician and author of the life of Apollonius ; Plotinus, Porphyrius, and Proclus, the re- vivers of Platonic philosophy under a new form of mysticism at Alexandria during the third and fourth centuries ; Longi- nus, the critic, who adorned Palmyra in the third century; Heliodorus of Emesa, Achilles Tatius, Longus, Musseus, the erotic novelists and poets of the fourth and fifth centuries ; these, not to mention the Christian fathers, are a few of the great men whom Greece produced in this last period. But now notice how miscellaneous in nationality and in pursuit they are. One only is a Greek of the old stock — Plutarch, the Boeotian. One is a slave from Phrygia. Another is a Roman Emperor. A fourth is the native of the desert city of Tadmor. Two are Syrians. One is a Greek of the ^Egean. Another is- an Egyptian. From this we may see how the genius of the Greeks had been spread abroad to embrace all lands. No fact better illustrates the complete leavening of the world by their spirit. But considering that this fifth period may be said to cover six centuries, from the death of Alexander to about 300 after THE PERIODS OF GREEK LITERATURE. 35 Christ, — for why should we continue our computation into the dreary regions of Byzantine dulness ? — it must be confessed that it is sterile in productiveness and inferior in the quality of its crop to any of the previous periods. Subtle and beautiful is the genius of Hellas still, because it is Greek ; strong and stern it is in part, because it has been grafted on the Roman character ; its fascinations and compulsions are powerful enough to bend the metaphysics 'of the Christian faith. Yet, after all, it is but a shadow of its own self. After the end of the fourth century the iconoclastic zeal and piety of the Christians put an end practically to Greek art and literature. Christianity was at that time the superior force in the world ; and though Clement of Alexandria contended for an amicable treaty of peace between Greek culture and the new creed, though the two Gregories and Basil were, to use the words of Gibbon, " distinguished above all their contem- poraries by the rare union of profane eloquence and orthodox piety," though the Bishops of the Church were selected from the ranks of scholars trained by Libanius and other Greek Sophists, yet the spirit of Christianity proved fatal to the spirit of Greek art. Early in the fifth century the Christian rabble at Alexandria, under the inspiration of their ferocious despot Cyril, tore in pieces Hypatia, the last incarnation of the dying beauty of the Greeks. She had turned her eye backwards to Homer and to Plato, dreaming that haply even yet the gods of Hellas might assert their power and resume the government of the world, and that the wisdom of Athens might supplant the folly of Jerusalem. But it was a vain and idle dream. The genius of Greece was effete. Christianity was pregnant with the mediseval and the modern world. In violence and blood- shed the Gospel triumphed. This rending in pieces of the past, this breaking down of temples and withering of illusions, was no doubt necessary. New wine cannot be poured into old bottles. No cycle succeeds another cycle in human affairs 36 THE GREEK POETS. without convulsions and revolutions that rouse the passions of humanity. It is thus that "God fulfils Himself in many ways, Lest one good custom should corrupt the world. " Yet even in this last dire struggle of the spirit of Pagan art with the spirit of Christian faith, when Beauty had become an abomination in the eyes of the Holiest, on the ruins, as it were, of the desecrated fanes of Hellas, weeds lovely in their rank- ness flourished. While Cyril's mobs were dismembering Hypatia, the erotic novelists went on writing about Daphnis, and Musseus sang the lamentable death of Leander. Nonnus was perfecting a new and more polished form of the hexameter. These were the last, the very swan's notes, of Greek poetry. In these faint and too melodious strains the Muse took final farewell of her beloved Hellas. And when, after the lapse of iooo years, the world awoke upon the ruins of the past, these were among the first melodies which caught its ear. Our Marlowe in the 16th century translated Musseus. The French Amyot translated Longus, and bequeathed to his nation a voluminous literature of pastorals founded upon the tale of Chloe. Tasso and Guarini, in Italy, caught the same strain ; so that the accents of the modern Renaissance were an echo of the last utterances of dying Greece. The golden age ot pastoral innocence, the belP eta dell' oro, of which the Alex- andrians had been dreaming in the midst of their effete and decaying civilization, fascinated the imagination of our imme- diate ancestors, when, three centuries ago, they found the Sun of Art and Beauty shining in the heavens, new worlds to con- quer, and indefinite expansions of the spirit to be realized. CHAPTER II. EMPEDOCLES. The Grandeur of his Fame.— His Versatility of Genius. —His Self-exaltation. — His Mysticism. — His supposed Miracles.— Legends about his Death. —His Political Action. — His Poems. — Estimation in which the Ancients held them. — Their Prophetic Fervour. — Belief in Metem- psychosis. — Purifying Rites. — Contempt for the Knowledge of the Senses. — Physical Theories. — The Poem on Nature. — The Four Ele- ments. — The Sphserus. — Love and Discord. — The Eclecticism of Empedocles. The figure of Empedocles of Agrigentum, when seen across the twenty-three centuries which separate us from him, presents perhaps a more romantic appearance than that of any other Greek philosopher. This is owing in a great measure to the fables which invest his life and death with mystery, to his reputation for magical power, and to the wild sublimity of some of his poetic utterances. Yet, even in his lifetime, and among contemporary Greeks, he swept the stage of life like a great tragic actor, and left to posterity the fame of genius as a poet, a physician, a patriot, and a philosopher. The well-known verses of Lucretius are enough to prove that the glory of Empedocles increased with age, and bore the test of time. Reading them, we cannot but regret that poems which so stirred the reverent enthusiasm of Rome's greatest singer have been scattered to the winds, and that what we now possess of their remains affords but a poor sample of their unimpaired magnificence. Nothing is more remarkable about Empedocles than his versatility and comprehensiveness. Other men of his age 38 " THE GREEK POETS. were as nobly born, as great in philosophic power, as distin- guished for the part they bore in politics, as celebrated for poetic genius, as versed in mystic lore, in medicine, and in magic arts. But Parmenides, Pythagoras, Pausanias, and Epimenides could claim honour in but one, or two at most, of these departments. Empedocles united all, and that too, if we may judge by the temper of his genius and the few legends handed down to us about his life, in no ordinary degree. He seems to have possessed a warmth and richness of nature which inclined him to mysticism and poetry, and gave a tone of peculiar solemnity to everything he did, or thought, or said. At the same time, he was attracted by the acute- ness of his intellect to the metaphysical inquiries which were agitating the western colonies of Greece, while his rare powers of observation enabled him to make discoveries in the then almost unexplored region of natural science. The age in which he lived had not yet thrown off the form of poetry in philosophical composition. Even Parmenides had committed his austere theories to hexameter verse. There- fore, the sage of Agrigentum was easily led to concentrate his splendid powers on the production of one great work, and made himself a poet among philosophers, and a phi- losopher among poets, without thereby impairing his claims to rank highly both as a poet and also as a thinker among the most distinguished men of Greece. But Empedocles had not only deeply studied metaphysics, nature, and the arts of verse ; whatever was mysterious in the world around him, in the guesses of past ages, and in the forebodings of his own heart, possessed a powerful attraction for the man who thought himself inspired of God. Having embraced the Pythagorean theories, he maintained the fallen .state of men, and implored his fellow-creatures to purge away the guilt by which they had been disinherited and exiled from the joys of heaven. Thus he appeared before his countrymen not EMPEDOCLES. 39 only as a poet and philosopher, but also as a priest and purifier. Born of a wealthy and illustrious house, he did not expend his substance merely on horse-racing and chariots, by which means of display his ancestors had gained a princely fame in Sicily, but, not less proud than they had been, he shod himself with golden sandals, set the laurel crown upon his head, and, trailing robes of Tyrian purple through the streets of Agrigentum, went attended by a crowd of serving-men and reverent admirers. He claimed to be a favourite of Phoebus, and rose at length to the pretension of divinity. His own words show this, gravely spoken, with no vain assumption, but a certainty of honour well deserved : — "Friends who dwell in the great city hard by the yellow stream of, Acragas, who live on' the Acropolis, intent on honourable cares, harbours revered of strangers, ignorant of what is ' vile ; welcome : but I appear before you an immortal god, having overpassed the limits of mortality, and walk with honour among all, as is my due, crowned with long fillets and luxuriant garlands. No sooner do I enter their proud prosperous cities than men and women pay me reverence, who follow me in thousands, asking the way to profit, some desiring oracles, and others racked by long and cruel torments, hanging on my lips to hear the spells that pacify disease of every kind." , We can hardly wonder that some of the fellow-citizens of Empedocles were jealous of his pretensions, and regarded him with suspicious envy and dislike, when we read such lines of lofty self-exaltation. Indeed, it is difficult for men of the nine- teenth century to understand how a great and wise philosopher could lay claim to divine honours in his own lifetime. This arrogance we have been accustomed to associate with the names of a Caligula and a Claudius. Yet when we consider the circumstances in which Empedocles was placed, and the nature of his theories, our astonishment diminishes. The line of demarcation between this world and the supernatural was then but vague and undetermined. Popular theology abounded in legends of gods who had held familiar intercourse with men, 40 THE GREEK POETS. and of men who had been raised by prowess or wisdom to divinity. The pedigrees of all distinguished families ended in a god at no great distance. Nor was it then a mere figure of speech when bards and priests claimed special revelations from Apollo, or physicians styled themselves the children of Ascle- pius. Heaven lay around the first Greeks in their infancy of art and science ; it was long before the vision died away and faded into the sober daylight of Aristotelian philosophy. Thus when Empedocles proclaimed himself a god, he only stretched beyond the usual limit a most common pretension of all men learned in arts and sciences. His own speculations gave him further warrant for the assumption of the style of deity. For he held the belief that all living souls had once been demons or divine spirits, who had lost their heavenly birthright for some crime of impurity or violence, and yet were able to restore themselves to pristine splendour by the rigorous exer- cise of abstinence and expiatory rites. These rites he thought he had discovered : he had prayed and fasted ; he had held communion with Phcebus the purifier, and received the special favour of that god, by being made a master in the arts of song, and magic, and healing, and priestcraft. Was he not therefore justified in saying that he had won again his rights divine, and transformed himself into a god on earth ? His own words tell the history of his fall : — " Woe to me that I did not fall a prey to death before I took the cursed food within my lips ! . . . From what glory, from what immeasurable bliss, have I now sunk to roam with mortals on this earth ! " Again, he says — "For I have been in bygone times a youth, a maiden, and a flowering shrub, a bird, yea, and a fish that swims in silence the deep sea." From this degraded state the spirit gradually emerges. Of the noblest souls he says — " Among beasts they become lions dwelling in caverns of the earth upon EMPEDOCLES. 41 the hills, and laurels among leafy trees, . . . and at last prophets, and bards, and physicians, and chiefs among the men of earth, from whence they rise to be gods supreme in honour, . . . sitting at banquets with, immortal comrades, in their feasts unvisited by human cares, beyond the reach of fate and wearing age." Empedocles, by dint of pondering on nature, by long penance, by the illumination of his intellect and the coercion of his senses, had been raised before the natural term of life to that high honour, and been made the fellow of immortal gods. His language upon this topic is one of the points in which we can trace an indistinct resemblance between him and some of the Indian mystics. There is, however, no reason to suppose that Asiatic thought had any marked or direct influence on Greek philosophy. It is better to refer such similarities to the working of the same tendencies in the Greek and Hindu minds. ' To those who disbelieved his words he showed the mighty works which he had wrought. Empedocles, during his lifetime, was known to have achieved marvels, such as only supernatural powers could compass. More than common sagacity and in- genuity in the treatment of natural diseases, or in the removal of obstacles to national prosperity, were easily regarded by the simple people of those times as the evidence of divine authority. Empedocles had devised means for protecting the citizens of Agrigentum from the fury of destructive winds. What these means were, we do not know ;■ but he received in consequence the title of KuXvcravefiae, or warder-off of winds. Again, he resuscitated, from the very jaws of death, a woman who lay senseless and unable to breathe, long after all physicians had despaired of curing her. This entitled him to be regarded as a master of the keys of life and death ; nor did he fail to attribute his own power to the virtue of super- natural spells. But the greatest of his achievements was the deliverance which he wrought for the people of Selinus from a 42 THE GREEK POETS. grievous pestilence. It seems that some exhalations from a marsh having caused this plague, Empedocles, at his own cost, cut a channel for two rivers through the fen, and purged away the .fetid vapours. A short time after the cessation of the sickness, Empedocles, attired in tragic state, appeared before the Selinuntians at a banquet. His tall and stately figure wore the priestly robe ; his brazen sandals rang upon the marble as he slowly moved with front benign and solemn eyes ; beneath the sacrificial chaplet flowed his long Phcebean locks, and in his hand he bore a branch of bay. The nobles of Selinus rose ; the banquet ceased ; all did him reverence, and hailed him as a god, deliverer of their city, friend of Phoebus, intercessor between angry Heaven and . suffering men. Coins were struck at Selinus to commemorate their liberation from the scourge. Two of them remain, on each of which Empedocles is represented standing by the side of Phoebus in his car. Phcebus is shooting with the bow of pestilence ; but Empedocles restrains his hand, and curbs the horses, which seem rushing forward on the pathway of destruction. Closely connected with his claim to divinity was the position ■which Empedocles assumed as an enchanter. Gorgias, his .pupil, asserts that he often saw him at the magic rites. Nor are we to suppose that this wizardry was a popular misinter- pretation of his real power as a physician and philosopher. It is far more probable that Empedocles himself believed in the potency of incantations, and delighted in the ceremonies and mysterious songs by which the dead were recalled from Hades, and secret^ of the other world wrung from unwilling fate. We can form to ourselves a picture of this stately and magnificent enchanter, convinced of his own supernatural ascendancy, and animated by the wild enthusiasm ot his ardent nature, alone among the mountains of Girgenti, or by the sea-shore, invoking the elemental deities to aid his incantations, and ascribing the EMPEDOCLES. 43 forebodings of his own poetic spirit to external inspiration or the voice of gods. In solitary meditations he had wrought out a theory of the world, and had conceived the notion of a spiritual God, one and unseen, pure intellect, an everlasting omnipresent power, to whom might be referred those natural remedies that stopped the plague, or cured the sick, or found new channels for the streams. The early Greek philosophers were fond of attributing to some " common wisdom " of the world, some animating soul or universal intellect, the arts and intuitions to which they had themselves attained. Therefore, with this belief predominating in his mind, it is not strange that he should have trusted to the divine efficacy of his own spells, and have regarded the results of observation as a kind of supernatural wisdom. To his friend Pausanias the physician he makes these lofty promises, " Thou shalt learn every kind of medicines that avert diseases and the evils of old age. Thou too shalt curb the fury of untiring winds, and when it pleases thee thou shalt reverse thy charms and loose avenging storms. Thou shalt replace black rain-clouds with the timely drought that men desire, and when the summer's arid heat prevails, thou shalt refresh the trees with showers that rustle in the thirsty corn. And thou shalt bring again from Hades the life of a departed man." Like the Pytha- goreans whom he followed, he seems to have employed the fascination of music in effecting cures : it is recorded of him that he once arrested the hand of a young man about to slay his father, by chanting to the lyre a solemn soul-subduing strain. The strong belief in himself which Empedocles pos- sessed, inspired him with immense personal influence, so that his looks, and words, and tones, went farther than the force of other men. He compelled them to follow and confide in him, like Orpheus, or like those lofty natures which in every age have had the power of leading and controlling others by innate supremacy. That Empedocles tried to exhibit this 44 THE GREEK POETS. ascendancy, and to heighten its effect by gorgeous raiment and profuse expenditure, by public ceremonies and myste- rious modes of life, we need not doubt. There was much of the spirit of Paracelsus in Empedocles, and vanity impaired the simple grandeur of his genius. In every age of the world's history there have been some such men — men in whom the highest intellectual gifts are blent with weakness inclining them to superstitious juggleries. Not content with their philosophi- cal pretensions, or with poetical renown, they seek a more mysterious fame, and mix the pure gold of their reason with the dross of idle fancy. Their very weakness adds a glow of colour, which we miss in the whiter light of more purely scientific intellects. They are men in whom two natures cross —the poet and the philosopher, the mountebank and the seer, the divine and the fortune-teller, the rigorous analyst and the retailer of old wives' tales. But none have equalled Empe- docles, in whose capacious idiosyncrasy the most opposite qualities found ample room for co-existence, who sincerely claimed the supernatural faculties which Paracelsus must have only half believed, and who lived at a time when poetry and fact were indistinguishably mingled, and when the world was still absorbed in dreams of a past golden age, and in rich foreshadowings of a boundless future. We are not, therefore, surprised to read the fantastic legends which involve his death in a mystery. Whatever ground of fact they may possess, they are wholly consistent with the picture we have formed to ourselves of the philosopher, and prove at least the superstition which had gathered round his name. One of these legends has served all ages as a moral of the futility of human designs, and the just reward of inordi- nate vanity. Every one who knows the name of Empedocles has heard that, having jumped into Etna in order to conceal the time and manner of his death, and thus to establish his divinity, fate frustrated his schemes by casting up his brazen EMPEDOCLES. 45 slippers on the crater's edge. According to another legend, which resembles that of the death of Romulus, of CEdipus, and other divinized heroes, Empedocles is related to have formed one of a party of eighty men who assembled to celebrate by sacrifice his restoration of the dying woman. After their banquet they retired to sleep. But Empedocles remained in his seat at table. When morning broke, Empedocles was nowhere to be found. In reply to the questions of his friends, some one asserted that he had heard a loud voice calling on Empedocles at midnight, and that, starting up, he saw a light from heaven and burning torches. Pausanias, who was pre- sent at the sacrificial feast, sent far and wide to inquire for his friend, wishing to test the truth of this report. But piety restrained his search, and he was secretly informed by heavenly messengers that Empedocles had won what he had sought, and that divine honours should be paid to him. This story rests on the authority of Heraclides Ponticus, who professed to have obtained it from Pausanias. The one legend we may regard as the coinage of his foes, the other as a myth created by the superstitious admiration of his friends. We have hitherto regarded Empedocles more in his private and priestly character than as a citizen. Yet it was not to be expected that a man so nobly born, and so remarkable for intellectual power, should play no public part in his native state. A Greek could hardly avoid meddling with politics, even if he wished to do so, and Empedocles was not one to hide his genius in the comparative obscurity of private life. While he was still a young man, Theron, the wise tyrant of Agrigentum, died, and a powerful aristocracy endeavoured to enslave the state. Empedocles manfully resisted them, supporting the liberal cause with vehemence, and winning so much popular applause that he is even reported to have received and refused the offer of the kingly power. By these means he made himself many foes among the nobility of Agri- 46 THE GREEK POETS. gentum ; it is also probable that suspicion attached to him for trying to establish in his native city the Pythagorean common- wealth, which had been extirpated in South Italy. That he loved spiritual dominion we have seen; and this he might have hoped to acquire more easily by taking the intellectual lead among citizens of equal rights, than by throwing in his lot with the aristocratic party, or by exposing himself to the dangers and absorbing cares of a Greek tyrant. At any rate, it is recorded that he impeached and procured the execution of the leaders of the aristocracy ; thus rescuing the liberty of his nation at the expense of his own security. After a visit to Peloponnesus Empedocles returned to Agrigentum, but was soon obliged to quit his home again by the animosity of his political enemies. Where he spent the last years of his life, and died, remains uncertain. It remains to estimate the poetical and philosophical renown of Empedocles. That his genius was highly valued among the ancients appears manifest from the panegyric of Lucretius. Nor did he fail to exhibit the versatility of his powers in every branch of poetical composition. Diogenes Laertius affirms that forty-three tragedies bearing his name were known to Hieronymus, from whom he drew materials for the life of Empedocles. Whether these tragedies were really written by the philosopher, or by another Sicilian of the same name, admits of doubt. But there is no reason why an author, possessed of such varied and distinguished talents as Empedocles, should not have tried this species of composition. Xenophanes is said to have composed tragedies ; and Plato's youthful efforts would, we fondly ima- gine, have afforded the world fresh proofs of his commanding genius, had they escaped the flames to which they were con- demned by his maturer judgment. No fragments of the tragedies of Empedocles survive; they probably belonged to the class of semi-dithyrambic compositions, which prevailed at EMPEDOCLES. 47 Athens before the days of ^Eschylus, and which continued to be cultivated in Sicily. Some of the lyrical plays of the Italians — such, for instance, as the Orfeo of Poliziano — may enable us to form an idea of these simple dramas. After the tragedies, Diogenes makes mention of political poems. These may be re- ferred to the period of the early manhood of Empedocles, when he was engaged in combat with the domineering aristocracy, and when he might have sought to spread his liberal principles through the medium of gnomic elegies, like those of Solon or Theoghis. The fragments of the Kadap/wi sufficiently display his style of earnest and imperious exhortation to make us be- lieve that at a time of political contention he would not spare this powerful instrument of persuasion and attack. In the next place, we hear of an epic poem on the invasion of Greece by Xerxes, which Empedocles is said to have left unfinished, and which his sister or his daughter burned with other papers at his death. The great defeat of the Medes took place while Empedocles was still a youth. All Hellas had hung with breath- less expectation on the event of Marathon and Salamis. The fall of Xerxes brought freedom and relief from terrible anxiety, not only to the towns of Attica and the Peloponnesus, but also the shores of Sicily and Italy. It is not, therefore, unlikely that the triumph which excited Simonides and ^Eschylus to the production of masterpieces, may have stirred the spirit of the youthful patriot of Agrigentum. Another composition of Empe- docles, which perished under his sister's hands, was a Proemium to Apollo. The loss of this poem is deeply to be regretted. Empedocles regarded himself as specially protected by the god of song and medicine and prophetic insight. His genius would therefore naturally take its highest flight in singing praises to this mighty patron. The hymn to Zeus, which has been ascribed to Cleanthes, and some of the pseudo-Orphic declama- tions, may give us an idea of the gravity and enthusiasm which Empedocles would have displayed in treating so stirring a 48 THE GREEK POETS. , theme. Of his remaining works we possess fragments. The great poem on Nature, the Lustral Precepts, and the Discourse on Medicine, were all celebrated among the ancients. Fortunately, the inductions to the first and second of these have been pre- served, and some lines addressed to Pausanias may be regarded as forming the commencement of the third. It is from these fragments, amounting in all to about 470 lines, that we must form our judgment of Empedocles, the poet and the sage. That Empedocles was a poet of the didactic order is clear from the nature of his subjects. Even as early as the time ot Aristotle, critics disputed as to whether poems written for trie purpose of scientific instruction deserved the name of poetry. In the Poetics, Aristotle says, — ovtlv Se kolvov kariv 'Ofjtqpa kol "Eifme&OK\€i nXf/v to fihpov' Sto tvv jxIv iroiriTriv ZiKawv KaiKilv, ~bv Se pdam' ytyove fi£TaopiKUQ re &v Kai role aWoig irspl ty)v 7roirjTti:r)v iiri- Tcuyiiaai xp^voc. The epithet 'Opripatbc is very just; for not only is it clear that Empedocles had studied the poems of Homer with care, and had imbibed their phraseology, but he also possessed a genius akin to that of Homer in love of simplicity, in fidelity to nature, in unimpeded onward flow of energetic verse. The simile of the girl playing with a water-clock, by which Empedocles illustrates his theory of respiration, and that of the lantern, which serves to explain his notion of the structure of the eye, are both of them Homeric in their unadorned simplicity and vigour. Again, such epithets as these, n-oXvcu/mrov for the liver, iXaupa for the moon, 6^v/3e\r)e for the sun, woKvari^avoQ for majesty, OtfiEpunris for harmony, and the constant repetition of Bcol SoXtx c "' fc "' £ c rtjuijfft (ptpiaroi, have the true Homeric ring. Like Homer, he often chooses an epithet specific of the object which he wishes to describe, but not especially suited to the matter of his argument. Thus 7ro\vK\avru>v ywaUuiv occurs when there is no particular reason to fix the mind upon the tearfulness of women. But the poetic value of the passage is increased by the mind being thus carried away from the logical order of ideas to a generality on which it can repose. At other times, when this is necessary, the epithets are as accu- rately descriptive as those of a botanist or zoologist : iv Kuyyausi OaXarTO-ovo/J.oiQ fiapwiiroiQ .... Xidoppivoiv re x^ m '^ v i f° r ex " ample. Again, Empedocles gives loose to his imagination by creating bold metaphors ; he calls the flesh aapiciov x'™>', and birds TTTtpoflafiovaQ Kvp(la.Q. Referring to his four elements, he thus personifies their attributes : " Fiery Zeus, and Here, source of vital breath, and Aidoneus, and Nestis, with her tears." At another time he speaks of " earth, and ocean with his countless 50 THE GREEK POETS. waves, and liquid air, the sun-god and ether girdling round the universe in its embrace.", The passage, too, in which he describes the misery of earth rises to a sublime height. It may well have served as the original of Virgil's celebrated lines in the sixth ./Eneid : — " I lifted up my voice, I wept and wailed, when I beheld the unfamiliar shore. A hideous shore, on which dwell murder, envy, and the troop of baleful destinies, wasting corruption, and disease. Through Ate's meadow they go wandering up and down in gloom. There was the queen of dark- ness, and Heliope with her far-searching eyes, and bloody strife, and mild-eyed peace, beauty and ugliness, swiftness and sloth, and lovely truth, and insincerity with darkling brows. Birth too and death, slumber and wakefulness, motion and immobility, crowned majesty and squalid filth, discordant clamour and the voice of gods." We can understand by these passages how Empedocles not only was compared with Homer by Aristotle, but also with Thucydides and ^Eschylus by Dionysius of Halicarnassus, who speaks of his "austere harmony" (ava-ripav ap/xoyiav). The conciseness of his argumentative passages, the breadth of his treatment, and the dryness of his colouring, to quote the terms of painting, resemble the style of Thucydides, while his bold figures and gloomy grandeur are like those of ^Eschylus. Plu- tarch, in the treatise on the genius of Socrates, speaks of the style of Empedocles at large, both as regards his poems and his theories, as fiAXa ^eftaK-^eviiivrj. This seems a contradic- tion to the "austere harmony" of Dionysius. But there are passages which justify the title. This exordium, for instance, savours of prophetic fury : — " It stands decreed by fate, an ancient ordinance of the immortal gods, established 'from everlasting, ratified by ample oaths, that, when a spirit of that race, which has inherited the length of years divine, sinfully stains his limbs with blood, he must go forth to wander thrice ten thousand years from heaven, passing from birth to birth through every form of mortal mutability, changing the toilsome paths of life without repose, even as I now roam, exiled from God, an outcast on this world, the bondman of insensate strife. "Alas, ill-fated race of mortals, thrice accursed! from what dire EMPEDOCLES. 51 ■struggles and what groans have ye been bom ! The air in its anger drives them to sea, and ocean spues them forth upon the solid land, earth tosses them into the flames of the untiring sun, he flings them back again into the whirlwinds of the air ; from one to the other are they cast, and all abhor them. " And the following adjuration has a frantic energy, to modern readers almost laughable but for its indubitable gravity, — " Wretches, thrice wretches, keep your hands from beans !" •or, again, with reference to the abomination of animal food : — "The father drags along his dear son changed in form, and slays him, pouring prayers upon his head. But the son goes begging mercy from his maniac sire. The father heeds him not, but goads him on, and, having slaughtered him, prepares a cursed meal. In like manner sons take their fathers, and children their mothers, and tearing out the life devour the kindred flesh. Will ye not put an end to this accursed slaughter ? Will ye not see that ye consume each other in blind ignorance of soul ? " It is not strange that the poems of Empedocles were pilfered by oracle-mongers in after-ages. But besides these passages, there are some of a milder beauty which deserve high praise for their admirable power of suggest- ing the picture which the poet wishes to convey. The follow- ing lines describe the golden age of old, to which Empedocles looked back with melancholy longing : — " There every animal was tame and familiar with men, both beasts and birds, and mutual love prevailed. Trees flourished with perpetual leaves and fruits, and ample crops adorned their boughs through all the year. Nor had these happy people any Ares or mad Uproar for their god ; nor was their monarch Zeus, or Cronos, or Poseidon, but Queen Cypris. Her favour they besought with pious, symbols and with images, and fragrant essences, and censers of pure myrrh, and frankincense, and with brown honey poured upon the ground. The altars did not reek with bullocks' gore." It may sound ridiculous to say so, yet Empedocles resembles Shelley in the quality of his imagination and in many of his utterances. The lines just quoted, the belief in a beneficent e 2 52 THE GREEK POETS. universal soul of nature, the hatred of animal food, the love of all things moving or growing on the face of earth, the sense of ancient misery and present evil, are all, allowing for the differ- ence of centuries, and race, and education, points by which the Greek and the English poets meet in a community ot - nature. Two more passages illustrative of the poetical genius of Empedocles may be quoted. In the first he describes the nature of God, invisible and omnipresent. In the second he asserts the existence of a universal law. They both are re- markable for simplicity and force, and elevation of style : — " Blessed is the man who hath obtained the riches of the wisdom of God; wretched is he who hath a false opinion about things divine. " He (God) may not be approached, nor can we reach him with our eyes, or touch him with our hands. No human head is placed upon his limbs, nor branching arms ; he has no feet to carry him apace, nor other parts of man : but he is all pure mind, holy, and infinite, darting with swift thought through the universe from end to end. " "This law binds all alike, and none are free from it: the common ordinance which all obey prevails through the vast spaces of wide-ruling air and the illimitable fields of light in endless continuity." The quotations which have served to illustrate the poetical genius of Empedocles have also exhibited one aspect of his philosophy— that in which he was connected with the Pytha- goreans. It is quite consistent with the whole temper of his intellect that he should have been attracted to the semi-Oriental mysticism which then was widely spread through Grecian Italy and Sicily. After the dissolution of the monastic common- wealth which Pythagoras had founded, it is probable that refugees imbued with his social and political theories scattered themselves over the adjacent cities, and from some of these men Empedocles may have imbibed in early youth the dreaim- like doctrines of an antenatal life, of future immortality, of past transgression and the need of expiation, of absti- nence, and of the bond of fellowship which bound man to his kindred sufferers upon the earth. It is even asserted in EMPEDOCLES. 53 one legend that the philosopher of Agrigentum belonged to the Pythagorean Society, and was expelled from it for having been the first to divulge its secrets. In later life these theories were developed by Empedocles after his own fashion, and received a peculiar glow of poetic colouring from his genius. There is no need to suppose that he visited the East and learned the secrets of Gymnosophists. A few Pythagorean seeds sown in his fruitful soil sprang up and bore a hundred- fold. Referring to the exordium of his poem on Nature, and to the lines in which he describes the unapproachable Deity, we find that Empedocles believed in a pristine state of happi- ness, in which the " Dasmons," or "gods, long of life, supreme in honour," dwelt together, enjoying a society of bliss. Yet this state was not perfect, for some of these immortals stained, their hands with blood, and some spoke perjury, and so sin entered in and tainted heaven. After such offence the erring spirit, by the fateful, irrevocable, and perennial law of the divine commonwealth, had to relinquish his heavenly throne and wander "thirty thousand seasons" from his comrades. In this period of exile he passed through all the changes of metempsychosis. According to the rigorous and gloomy con- ception of Empedocles, this change was caused by the hatred of the elements ; earth, air, fire, and water refusing to retain the criminal, and tossing him about from one to the other without intermission. Thus, he might be a plant, a bird, a fish, a beast, or a human being in succession. But the trans- migration did not depend upon mere chance. If the tortured spirit, environed, as he was, by the conflicting shapes and con- tradictory principles and baleful destinies which crowded earth — " the over- vaulted cave," the " gloomy meadow of discord," as Empedocles in his despair described our globe — could yet discover some faint glimmering of the truth, seize and hold fast some portion of the heavenly clue, then he might hope to reascend to bliss. Instead of abiding among birds, and 54 THE GREEK POETS. unclean beasts, and common plants, his soul passed into the bodies of noble lions, and mystic bay-trees, or became a bard, a prophet, a ruler among men, and lastly rose again to the enjoyment of undying bliss. Throughout these wanderings death was impossible. Empedbcles laughed at the notion of birth and death ; he seems to have believed in a fixed number of immortal souls, capable of any transformation, but incapable of perishing. Therefore, when his spirits, falling earthward, howled at the doleful aspect of the hideous land, the very poignancy of their grief consisted in that bitter thought of Dante's, " questi non hanno speranza di morte" — in that thought which makes the Buddhist welcome annihilation. It has been already hinted, that although the soul by its forced exile lost not only happiness but also knowledge, yet the one might be in part retrieved, and the other toilsomely built up again in some degree by patient observation, prayer, and magic rites. On this point hinges the philosophy of Empedocles. It is here that his mysticism and his science are united into one system. In like manner, Plato's philosophy rests upon the doctrine of Anamnesis, and is connected with the. vision of a past beatitude, the tradition of a miserable fall, and the prospect of a possible restoration. Empedocles, like Parmenides and Xenophanes in their disquisitions on the eternal Being, like Plato in his references to the Supreme Idea, seems to have imagined that the final Essence of the universe was unapproach- able, and to have drawn a broad distinction between the rational and sensual orders, between the world as cognizable by pure intellect, and the world as known through the medium of human sense. The lines of Empedocles upon God, which have been already quoted, are similar to those of Xenophanes i both philosophers assert the existence of an unknown Deity pavilioned in dense inscrutability, yet not the less to be re- garded as supreme and omnipresent and omnipotent — as God of gods, as life of life. How to connect this intuition with the EM-PEDOCLES. 55 physical speculations of Empedocles is difficult. The best way- seems to be to refrain from identifying his eloquent description of the unknown God with the Sphserus of his scientific theories, and to believe that he regarded the same universe from different points of view at different times, as if in moments of high ex- altation he obtained a glimpse of the illimitable Being by a process of ecstatic illumination, while in more ordinary hours of meditation his understanding and his senses helped him to obtain a knowledge of the actual phenomena of this terrestrial globe. His own language confirms this view of the case : — " Weak and narrow," he says, "are the powers implanted in the limbs of men ; many the woes that fall on them and blunt the edge of thought ; short is the measure of the life in death through which they toil ; then are they borne away, like smoke they vanish into air, and what they dream they know is but the little each hath stumbled on in wandering about the world ; yet boast they all that they have learned the whole — vain fools ! for what that is no eye hath seen, no ear hath heard, nor can it be conceived by mind of man. Thou, then, since thou hast fallen to this place, shalt know no more than human wisdom may attain. "But, O ye gods, avert the madness of those babblers from my tongue, and cause the stream of holy words to issue from my hallowed lips. And thou, great Muse of Memory, maiden with the milk-white arms, I pray to thee to teach me things that creatures of a day may hear. Come from the House of Holiness, and bring to me her harnessed car." Here we see plainly set forth the impossibility of mortal, fallen intellects attaining to a perfect knowledge of the Uni- verse, the impiety of seeking such knowledge, or pretending to have found it; and, at the same time, the limitations under which true science remains within the reach of human beings. How this science may be reached, he tells us in some memo- rable lines, probably supposed to issue from the lips of the Muse whom he invokes : — " But come, search diligently, and discover what is clear in every realm of sense, . . . check the conviction of thy senses, and judge by reason what is evident in every case." Thus the senses, although feeble and erring guides, are, after 56 THE GREEK POETS. all, the gates to knowledge ; and their reports, when tested by the light of reason, form the data for human speculation. The senses, resident in the limbs, are composed in certain propor- tion of the four elements, which also constitute the earth. Therefore, between the frame of man and the world outside him, there is a community of substance, whereby he is enabled to know. "Ofioia o/xuioig yiyvixTKerat is the foundation of our phi- losopher's theory of knowledge. The rational soul, being that immortal part of man whereon depends his personal identity, whether he take the shape of plant or animal, receives and judges the results of sensation. This theory, it will be ob- served, has a kind of general similarity to that of Parmenides. Empedocles draws a marked difference between the province of the senses and of the reason, and inveighs against the im- potence of the former. Again, he speaks of the real being of the world as pure and perfect intellect ; and at the same time elaborately describes the universe as it appears to human sense and understanding. But here the likeness ends. Par- menides has no mysticism, and indulges in no theology. He believes in the actual truth of his rational ontology, and sneers at the senses. " Thy fate it is," he says, " all mysteries to learn, both the unswerving mind of truth that wins a sure assent, and the vain thoughts of men, in which no certainty abides. But, baseless as they are, these also shalt thou learn ; since thou must traverse every field of knowledge, and discern the fabric of the dreams of men." His ontology is just as elaborate as his physics, and he evidently considers its barren propositions of more value than any observations on astronomy or physiology. Empedocles, on the other hand, quite despaired of ontology, and gave all his mind to explanations of the phy- sical universe — how it came to be, and what laws governed its alternations, — believing all along that there was a higher region of pure intellect beyond the reach of his degraded soul. "Here we see in a glass darkly, but then face to face." In this respect EMPEDOCLES. 57 he resembled Xenophanes more than Parmenides. Xeno- phanes had said, " No man hath been, nor will ever be, who knows for certain all about the gods, and everything of which I speak; for should one publish the most sure and settled truth, yet even he cannot be said to know ; opinion is supreme in all things." Empedocles belonged more to the age behind him than to that which followed ; and his extensive knowledge of nature was a part of his artistic rather than his scientific temperament. Yet, allowing for the march of human progress during twenty-three centuries, we are bound to hold much the same language as Empedocles regarding the limitations of know- ledge. We have, indeed, infinitely extended our observation of phenomena ; we have gained fuller conceptions of the Deity and of the destinies of man. But the plummet which he threw into the bottomless abyss of science has yet found no bottom, and the circle which it made by striking on the surface of the illimitable ocean has grown and grown, but yet has touched no shore on any side. Like him, we still speak of an unapproachable God, utterly beyond the reach of human sense and intellect ; like him, we still content our- selves with receiving the reports of our senses, comparing and combining them by means of our understanding, and thus obtaining some conception of the universe in which we live. If we reject the light of Christianity, the guesses which we form about a future world are less vague than those of Empedocles, but founded on no surer scientific basis ; the God we worship still remains enveloped in symbols ; we still ascribe to him, if not a human form, at least the reason, partialities, and passions of mankind. Indeed, in this respect, the sage of Agrigentum stood unconsciously upon the platform which only our profoundest thinkers have attained. He felt the awe of the Unseen — he believed in the infinite Being,— but he refused to dogmatize about His attributes, confining his 58 THE GREEK POETS. own reason to the phenomenal universe which he strove in every way to understand, and to employ for the good of his race. Empedocles was greater than most of his contemporaries, for he neither believed it possible to explain the whole mystery of the world,' nor did he yet reject the notion of there being a profound mystery. He steered clear between the Parmenides and Democritus of his own day — between the Spinoza and the materialist of modern speculation. Herein the union of phi- losophy and poetry, of thought and feeling, in his nature, gave the tone to all his theories. We must not, however, in our praise forget that all these problems appeared in a far more simple form to the Greeks of that age than to ourselves, and were therefore more hastily and lightly answered. Between the ontology of Parmenides and of Hegel what a step there is ! What meagre associations gather round the one ; what many- sided knowledge gives substance to the other ! Remembering, therefore, in what light Empedocles regarded his own speculations, we may proceed to discuss them more in detail. We shall find that he deserved a large portion of that praise which Bacon rather whimsically lavished on the pre- Socratic philosophers, to the disadvantage of the mightier names of Plato and Aristotle. The poem on Nature is addressed to Pausanias the physician, who was a son of Anchitus of Agrigentum, and a special friend of Empedocles. To Pausanias, the philosopher begins his in- struction with these words : — " First learn what are the four chief roots of everything that is : fiery Zeus, and Here, source of vital breath, and Aidoneus, and Nestis with her tears, who is the fount of moisture in the world." Thus Empedocles, after the fashion of the Pythagoreans, allegorized his four elements. In other passages he calls them "fire, water, earth, and air's immeasurable height;" or "earth, and ocean with his countless waves, and liquid air, the sun-god, and ether girdling the universe in its embrace ;" or again, " Hephaestus, EMPEDOCLES. 59 rain, and radiant ether;" or lastly, "light, earth, heaven, and ocean." It will be seen that he designated his elements some- times by mythological titles, sometimes by abstract terms, and sometimes by selecting one or other natural object — such as the sun, the air, the ocean — in which they were most manifest. It is well known that Empedocles was the first philosopher to adopt the four elements, which, since his day, continued to rule supreme over natural science, until modern analysis revealed far simpler and broader bases. Other speculators of the Ionian sect had maintained each of these four ele- ments, — Thales the water, Anaximenes the air, Heraclitus the fire, and perhaps (but this rests on no sure evidence), Phere- cydes the earth. Xenophanes had said : — " Of earth and water are all things that come into existence." Parmenides had spoken of dark and light, thick and subtle, substances. Each of' these fundamental principles is probably to be re- garded not as pure fire, or pure water, or pure air, but as an universal element differing in rarity, and typified according to the analogical necessities of language, by means of some familiar object. The four elements of Empedocles appear to have been suggested to him, partly by his familiarity with contemporary speculation, and partly by his observation of Nature. They held their ground so long in scientific theory, because they answered so exactly to a superficial view of the world. Earth with everything of a solid quality, water in- cluding every kind of fluid, fire that burns or emits light, air that can be breathed, appear to constitute an exhaustive division of the universe. Of the eternity of these four primal substances, according to the Empedoclean theory, there is no doubt. The philosopher frequently reiterates his belief in the impossibility of an absolute beginning or ending, though he acquiesces in the popular use of these terms to express the scientific conceptions of dissolution and recombination. These elements, then, were the material part of the world 60 THE CREEK POETS. according to Empedocles. But inherent in them, as a tendency is inherent in an organism, and yet separable in thought from them as the soul is separable from the body, were two con- flicting principles of equal power, love and discord. Love and discord by their operation wrought infinite changes in the universe : for it was the purpose of love to bind the elements together into a compact, smooth, motionless globe ; and of dis- cord to separate them one from another, and keep them distinct in a state of mutual hostility. When, therefore, either love or discord got the upper hand, the phenomenal universe could not be said to exist, but in the intermediate state was a perpetual order of growth and decay, composition and dissolu- tion, whereby the world; as we behold it, came into exist- ence. This intermediate state, das Werdende, to yiyvopivov nal airoXKvixtvov, was (pvmc, or Nature : the conflicting energies of love and discord formed the pulses of its mighty heart, the systole and diastole of its being, the one power tending to life, the other power to death, the one pushing all the elements for- ward to a perfect unity of composition, the other rending them apart. To the universe when governed by love in supremacy Empedocles gave the name of otycCipoc, which he also called a god. This aQdipog answered to the Eleatic tv, while the dis- jointed elements subservient to the force of strife corresponded to the Eleatic iroWa. Thus the old Greek antagonism of Good and Evil, One and Many, Love and Hatred, Being and Not- being, were interpreted by Empedocles. He looked on all that is, das Werdende, as transitory between two opposite and contradictory existences. Again, according to his system, the alternate reigns of love and discord succeeded one another at fixed intervals of time ; so that, from one point of view, the world was ceaselessly shifting, and from another point of view, was governed by eter- nal and unalterable Law. Thus he reconciled the Heraclitean flux and the Parmenidean immobility by a middle term. Each EMPEDOCLES. 61 of the elements possessed a separate province, had separate functions, and was capable of standing by itself. To fire it would seem that the philosopher assigned a more active influ- ence than to any of the other elements ; so that a kind of dualism may be recognized in his Universe between this ruling principle and the more passive ingredients of air, earth, and water. The influence of love and harmony kept them joined and interpenetrated, and so mingled as to bring the different objects which we see -around us into being. Empedocles professed to understand the proportions of these mixtures, and measured them by Pythagorean rules of arithmetic. Thus everything subsists by means of transformation and mixture ; absolute beginning and ending are impossible. Such, briefly stated, is the theory of Empedocles. The fol- lowing passage may be quoted to show how the phenomenal Universe comes into being under the influence of love : — "When strife has reached the very bottom of the seething mass, and love assumes her station in the centre of the ball, then everything begins to come together, and to form one whole — not instantaneously, but different substances come forth, according to a steady process of development. Now, when these elements are mingling, countless kinds of things issue from their union. Much, however, remains unmixed, in opposition to the mingling elements, and these malignant strife still holds within his grasp. For he has not yet withdrawn himself altogether to the extremities of the globe ; but part of his limbs still remain within its bounds, and part have passed beyond. As strife, however, step by step, retreats, mild and innocent love pursues him with her force divine ; things which had been immortal instantly assume mortality; the simple elements become confused by interchange of influence. When these are mingled, then the countless kinds of mortal beings issue forth, furnished with every sort of form, — a sight of wonder." In another passage this development is compared to the operation of a painter mixing his colours, and forming with them a picture of various objects. Discord is said to have made the elements immortal, because he kept them apart, and would willingly have preserved their separate qualities ; whereas 62 THE GREEK POETS. love mixes them together, breaks up their continuity, and con- fuses their kinds. What Empedocles exactly meant by Sphserus is hard to understand ; nor do we know how far he intended Chance to operate in the formation of the Universe. He often uses such expressions as these, " So they chanced to come together," and describes the amorphous condition of the first organisms in a way that makes one think he fancied a perfectly chaotic origin. Yet " the art of Aphrodite," " so Cypris ordained their form," are assertions of designing intelligence. In fact, we may well believe that Empedocles, in the infancy of specula- tion, was led astray by his double nomenclature. When talking of Aphrodite, he naturally thought of a person ruling creation ; when using the term " Love," he naturally conceived an innate tendency, which might have been the sport of chance in a great measure. It also appears probable that, when Empedocles spoke of " Chance " and " Necessity," he referred to some in- herent quality in the elements themselves, whereby they grew together under certain laws, and that the harmony and discord which ruled them in turn, were regarded by him as forces aiding and preventing their union. To understand the order of creation, we may begin by ima- gining the 'sphere, which, in the words of Empedocles, "by the hidden bond of harmony is stablished, and rejoices in unbroken rest ... in perfect equipoise, of infinite extent, it stays a full-orbed sphere rejoicing in unbroken rest." Love now is omnipotent ; she has knit all the elements into one whole ; Discord has retreated, and abides beyond the globe. But soon his turn begins : he enters the sphere, and " all the limbs of the god begin to tremble." Now the elements are divided one from the other — ether first, then fire, then earth, then water from the earth. Still the elements are chaotic ; but wandering about the spaces of the world, and "permeating each the other's realm," they form alliances and tend to union. Love is busy no less than Discord. The various tribes of plants and EMPEDOCLES. 63 animals appear at first in a rudimentary and monstrous con- dition : " many heads sprouted up without necks, and naked arms went wandering forlorn of shoulders, and solitary eyes were straying destitute of foreheads." Still the process of seething and intermingling continued; "when element with element more fully mixed, these members fell together by haphazard . . . many came forth with double faces and two breasts, some shaped like oxen with a human front, others, again, of human race with a bull's head ; and some we're mixed of male and female parts.'' Unfortunately, the lines in which he describes the further progress of development have been lost, and we do not know how the interval between chaos and order was bridged over in his system. Only with reference to human beings he asserts that in the earliest stage they were produced in amorphous masses, containing the essence, as it were, of both male and female ; and that after the separation of these masses into two parts, each part yearned to join its tally. And therefrom sprang the passion of desire in human hearts. This theory has been worked out by Plato artistically in the Symposium. Also, with reference to the accretion of the phenomenal universe, he says that earth formed the basis of all hard and solid substances, preponderating in the shells of fish, and so on. Bones were wrought of earth, and fire, and water, " marvellously jointed by the bonds of Harmony.'' It is need- less to follow Empedocles through all his scattered fancies, to show that he knew that the night was caused by the earth intercepting the sun's rays, or that he thought the sun reflected heaven's fire like a mirror, or that he placed the intellect in the blood, and explained respiration by a theory of pores, and the eyesight by imagining afire shut up within the pupil. The fragments we possess are too scanty to allow of our obtaining a perfect view of his physical theory; all we gather from them is that Empedocles possessed more acquired and original knowledge than any of his contemporaries. 64 THE GREEK POETS. It may appear from what has been said about his system that Empedocles was at best a great Eclectic. But this is not entirely the case. If he deserves the name of Eclectic, he deserves it in the same sense as Plato, though it need not be said how infinitely inferior, as an original thinker, he is to Plato. Empedocles was deeply versed in all the theories, metaphysical, cosmogonical, mystical, and physiological, of his age. He viewed from a high station all the problems, intellectual, social, and moral, which then vexed Greece. But he did not pass his days in a study or a lecture-room, nor did he content himself with expounding or developing the theories of any one master. He went abroad, examined nature for himself, cured the sick, thought his own thoughts, and left an impress on the con- stitution of his native state. In his comprehensive mind all the learning he had acquired from men, from books, from the world, and from reflection, was consolidated into one system, to which his double interest for mysticism and physics gave a double aspect. He was the first in Greece to reconcile Eleatic and Heraclitean speculations, the puzzle of plurality and unity, the antagonism of good and evil, in one theory, and to connect it with another which revealed a solemn view of human obligations and destinies, and required a life of social purity and self-restraint. The misfortune of Empedocles as a philosopher consisted in this — that he succeeded only in resuming the results of contemporary speculation, and of individual research, in a philosophy of indisputable originality, without anticipating the new direction which was about to be given to human thought by Socrates and Plato. He closed one period, — the period of poetry and physical theories and mysticism. The period of prose, of logic, and of ethics, was about to begin. He was the last of the great colonial sages of Greece. The Hellenic intellect was destined henceforth to 1 centre itself at Athens. CHAPTER III. THE GNOMIC POETS. Definition of the term Gnomic. — The Elegiac Metre. — The Age of the Despots in Greece. — Three Periods in Elegiac Poetry : the Martial, the Erotic, the Gnomic. — Callinus. — Mimnermus. — His, Epicurean Philosophy of Life. — Solon. — The Salaminian Verses. — Doctrine of Hereditary Guilt. — Greek Melancholy. — Phocylides. — His Bourgeois Intellect. — Xenophanes. — Theognis. — The Politics of Megara. — Cyrnus. — Precepts upon Education and Conduct in Public and Private Life. — The Biography of Theognis. — Dorian Clubs. — Lamentations over the Decay of Youth and Beauty. The term Gnomic, when applied to a certain number of Greek poets, is arbitrary. There is no definite principle for rejecting some and including others in the class. It has, however, been ■ usual to apply this name to Solon, Phocylides, Theognis, and Simonides of Ceos. Yet there seems no reason to exclude some portions of Callinus, Tyrtseus, Mimnermus, and Xenophanes. These poets, it will be observed, are all writers of the elegy. Some of the lyric poets, however, and iambographers, such as Simonides of Amorgos and Archilochus, have strong claims for admission into the list. For, as the derivation of the name implies, gnomic poets are simply those who embody yvu>/.iai, or sententious maxims on life and morals, in their verse ; and though we find that the most celebrated masters of this style composed elegies, we yet may trace the thread of gnomic thought in almost all the writers of their time. Conversely, the most genuine authors of elegiac gnomes trespassed upon the domain of lyric poetry, and sang of love and wine and per- sonal experience no less than of morality. In fact, the gnomic F 66 THE GREEK POETS. poets represent a period of Greek literature during which the old and simple forms of narrative poetry were giving way to. lyrical composition on the one hand, and to meditative writing on the other; when the epical impulse had become extinct, and when the Greeks were beginning to think definitely. The elegy, which seems to have originated in Asia Minor, and to have been used almost exclusively by poets of the Ionian race for the expression of emotional and reflective sentiments, lent itself to this movement in the development of the Greek genius, and formed a sort of midway stage between the impassioned epic of the Homeric age and the no less impassioned poetry and prose of the Athenian age of gold. Viewed in this light, the gnomic poets mark a transition from Homer and Hesiod to the dramatists and moralists of Attica.. The ethical precepts inherent in the epos received from therm a more direct and proverbial treatment ; while they in turn prepared for the sophists, the orators, and Socrates. This transitional period in the history of Greek literature, corresponding, as it does, to similar transitions in politics, re- ligion, and morality, offers many points of interest. Before Homer, poetry had no historical past, but after him a long time elapsed before the vehicle of verse was exchanged • for that of prose. Xenophanes, Parmenides, and Empedocles wrote poems, upon nature in hexameters. Solon and Theognis committed their state-craft and ethics to elegiac couplets. Yet at the same time Heraclitus and the seven sages were developing the germs of prose, and preparing the way for Attic historians and philosophers. Again, whereas Homer introduces us to a Hellas small in its. extent, and scarcely separated from surrounding tribes, we find- in the transitional period that all the strength and splendour of the Greek race are dissipated over distant colonies, Hellenic civilization standing out in definite relief against adjacent barbarism. The first lyrical and elegiac poets come from the THE GNOMIC POETS. 6f islands of the Archipelago, or from the shores of Asia Minor.. The first dramatists of note are Sicilian. Italy and Sicily afford: a home to the metaphysical poets, while the philosophers of the Ionian sect nourish at Ephesus and Miletus. Corresponding to this change in the distribution of the race, a change was taking place in the governments of the States. The hereditary monarchies of Homer's age have disappeared, and, after passing through a period of oligarchical supremacy, have given place to tyrannies. The tyrants of Miletus and of Agrigentum, rising from the aristocracy itself; those of Corinth, Athens, and Megara owing their power to popular favour ; others, like Cylon, flourishing a while by force of mere audacity and skill ; others, again, like Pittacus of Mitylene, using the rights of their dictatorship for the public benefit, — had this one point in common : it was the interest of all of them to destroy the traditional prejudices of the race, to gather a powerful aud splendid court around them, to patronize art, to cultivate diplomacy, and to attach men of ability to their persons. As the barons of feudalism encouraged the romances of the Niebelungen, Carlovingian, and Arthurian cycles, so the hereditary monarchies had caused the cyclical epos to flourish. It was not for the interest of the tyrants to revive Homeric legends, but rather to banish from the State all traces of the chivalrous past. With this view Cleisthenes of Sicyon put down the worship of Adrastus, and parodied the heroic names of the three tribes. Poetry, thus separated from the fabulous past, sought its subjects in the present, — in personal experience, in pleasure, in politics, in questions of diplomacy, in epigrammatic morality. This, then, was the period during which the gnomic poets flourished, —a period of courts and tyrannies, of colonial prosperity, of political animation, of social intrigue, of intellectual development, of religious transforma- tion, of change and uncertainty in every department. Behind them lay primitive Homeric Hellas ; before them, at no great F 2 68 THE GREEK POETS. distance, was the time when the Greek genius would find its home in Athens. Poetry and science were then to be distin- guished ; the philosophers, historians, and orators were to make a subtle and splendid instrument of Greek prose; the dramatists were to develop the choice and dialectic beauty of the Greek language to its highest possible perfection ; tyrannies were to be abolished, and the political energies of Hellas to be absorbed in the one great struggle between the Dorian and Ionian families. But in the age of gnomic poetry these changes were still future ; and though the mutations of Greek history were accomplished with unparalleled rapidity, we yet may draw cer- tain lines, and say — Here was a breathing-time of indecision and suspense ; this period was the eve before a mighty drama. I propose, therefore, to consider the gnomic poets as the re- presentatives to some extent of such an age, and as exponents of the rudimentary, social, and political philosophy of Greece before Socrates. Three periods may be marked in the development of the early Greek elegiac poetry — the Martial, the Erotic, and the Gnomic. Callinus and Tyrtaeus are the two great names by which the first is distinguished. Mimnermus gave a new direction to this style of composition, -fitting the couplet, which had formerly been used for military and patriotic pur- poses, to amatory and convivial strains. In after-years it never lost the impress of his genius ; so that Ovid, Tibullus, and Propertius may be regarded as the lineal descendants of the Colophonian bard. Solon at a later date applied the elegiac measure to severer subjects. He was the first to use it for purely gnomic purposes, maintaining, however, the martial spirit in his Salaminian verses, and imitating the example ot Mimnermus in his lighter compositions. Phocylides, to judge by the scanty fragments which we possess of his poems, was almost wholly gnomic in his character. But Theognis, who is the latest and most important of the elegiac writers of this THE. GKOMIC POETS, 69 period, combined the political, didactic, and erotic qualities to a remarkable degree. As a poet, Simonides was greater than any of those whom I have named ; but his claims to rank among the sententious philosophers rest more upon the frag- ments of his lyrics than upon the elegiac epitaphs for which he was so justly famed. These are the poets of whom I intend to speak in detail. Taken together with Homer and Hesiod, their works formed the body of a Greek youth's education at the time when Gorgias and Hippias were lecturing at Athens. From them the contemporaries of Pericles, when boys, had learned the rules of good society, of gentlemanly breeding, of practical morality, of worldly wisdom. Their saws and precepts were on the lips of the learned and the vulgar ; wise men used them as the theses for subtle arguments or the texts for oratorical discourses. Public speakers quoted them as Scripture might be quoted in a synod of the clergy. They pointed remarks in after-dinner conversation or upon the marketplace. Pole- marchus, for instance, in Plato's Republic, starts the dialogue on Justice by a maxim of Simonides. Isocrates the Rhetor alludes to them as being " the best counsellors in respect of human affairs," and Xenophon terms the gnomes of Theognis " a comprehensive -treatise concerning men." Having been used so commonly and largely by the instructors of youth, and by men of all conditions, it was natural that these elegies should be collected into one compendious form, and that passages of a gnomic tendency should be excerpted from larger poems on different subjects. In this way a body of sententious poetry grew up under the great names of Solon, Phocylides, Simonides, and Theognis. But in the process of compilation confusions and mistakes of all kinds occurred, so that the same couplets were often attributed to several authors. The earliest elegiac poet was Callinus, a native of Ephesus, between the years 730 and 678 B.C. His poems consist almost exclusively of exhortations to bravery in battle. " How long 70 THE GREEK POETS. will ye lie idle ?" he exclaims ; " put on your valour ; up to the fight, for war is in the land ! " He discourses in a bold and manly strain upon the certainty of death, and the glory of facing it in defence of home and country, winding up with this noble sentiment : — " The whole people mourns and sorrows for the death of a brave-hearted man ; and while he lives he is the peer of demigods." The lines of Tyrtaeus, whose prominent part during the second Messenian war is the subject of a well- known legend, embody the same martial and patriotic senti- ments in even more masculine verse. It would be alien from my purpose to dwell upon these military poems, since the only gnomic character which they display is the encourage- ment of a heightened honour, unselfishness, indifference to gain, devotion to the State, and love of public fame. Strangely different are the elegies of Mimnermus, the poet of Colophon, who flourished toward the end of the seventh century B.C. His name has passed into a proverb for luxurious verse, saddened by reflections on the fleeting joys of youth, and on the sure and steady progress of old age and death. Tyrtaeus, though a native of Attica, wrote for Spartans at war with a strong nation ; Mimnermus was born and lived among Ionian Greeks emasculated by barbarian control and by con- tact with the soft Lydians. It was of these Colophonians that Xenophanes, a native poet, said, "Instructed in vain luxury by the Lydians, they trailed their robes of purple through the streets, with haughty looks, proud of their flowing locks, be- dewed with curious essences and oils." For such a people the exquisitely soft and musical verses of Mimnermus, pervaded by a tone of lingering regret, were exactly suited. They breathe the air of sunny gardens and cool banquet-rooms, in which we picture to ourselves the poet lingering out a pensive life, endeavouring to crowd his hours with pleasures of all kinds, yet ever haunted and made fretful among his roses by the thought of wrinkles and death. " When your youth is gone,''' THE GNOMIC POETS. 71 lie says, " however beautiful you may have been, you lose the reverence of your children and the regard of your friends." " More hideous is old age than death. It reduces the hand- some and the plain man to one level — cares attend it — the senses and the intellect^ get deadened— a man is forgotten and put out of the way." The Greek sentiment of hatred for old age is well expressed in one epithet which Mimnermus employs — apoptyov, formless. The Greeks detested the ugliness and loss of grace which declining years bring with them, almost more than weakened powers or the approach of death. Nay, " when the flower of youth is past," says Mimnermus, " it is best to die at qnce." Men are like herbs, which flourish for a while in sunshine — then comes the winter of old age, with poverty or disease, or lack of children. His feeling for the charm of youth was intense ; he expressed it in language which reminds us of the fervency of Sappho — "Down my flesh the sweat runs in rivers, and I tremble when I see the flower of my equals in age gladsome and beautiful." Such is the dreamy and regretful strain of Mimnermus. He repeats it with a monotonous, yet almost pathetic persistency, as if the one thought of inevitable age oppressed him like a nightmare day and night. " May I complete my life without disease or cares, and may death strike me at my sixtieth year !" Such is the prayer he utters, feeling, probably, that up to sixty the senses may still afford him some enjoyment, and that, after they are blunted, there is nothing left for man worth living for. In all this Mimnermus was very true to one type of the Greek character. I shall have occasion further on to revert to this subject, and to dwell again upon the fascination which the flower of youth possessed for the Greeks, and the horror with which the ugliness of age inspired them. That some escaped this kind of despair, which to us appears trivial and unmanly, may be gathered from the beautiful discourse upon old age with which the Repcblic of Plato opens. 72 THE GREEK POETS. Mimnermus belonged to a class of men different from Ce- phalus, however : nowhere in the whole range of literature can be found a more perfect specimen of unmitigated ennui produced by political stagnation, by the absence of any religion or morality whatever, and by the practice of mere aesthetic sensuality. In Mimnermus we have the prostrate tone of the Oriental, combined with Greek delicacy of intellect and artistic expression. The following passage may be cited as at once illustrative of his peculiar lamentation, and also of his poetical merits : — " What's life or pleasure wanting Aphrodite ? When to the gold-haired goddess cold am I, When love and love's soft gifts no more delight me, Nor stolen dalliance, then I fain would die ! Ah ! fair and lovely bloom the flowers of youth ; On men and maids they beautifully smile : But soon comes doleful eld, who, void of ruth, Indifferently afflicts the fair and vile : Then cares wear out the heart ; old eyes forlorn Scarce reck the very sunshine to behold — Unloved by youths, of every maid the scorn, — So hard a lot God lays upon the old."* We are not surprised to hear that the fragments of Mim- nermus are supposed to have belonged to a series of elegies addressed to a flute-player called Nanno. They are worthy of such a subject. Nanno, according to one account, did not return the passion of the poet. In Mimnermus, however affected or morbid he may have been, we yet observe a vein of meditation upon life and destiny, which prepares us for the more distinctly gnomic poets. Considered in the light of Greek philosophy, Mim- nermus anticipates the ethical teaching of the Hedonists and Epicureans. In other words, he represents a genuine view of * Miscellanies, by the late John Addington Symonds, M.D. Mac- millan & Co. 1871. p. 410. THE GNOMIC POETS. 73 life adopted by the Greeks. Horace refers to him as an authority in these well-known lines :— " Si, Mimnermus uti censet, sine amore jocisque Nil est jucundum, vivas in amore jocisque," on which the scholiast observes that the elegiac poet " agreed with the sect of the Epicureans." Next to Mimnermus in point of time is Solon. Perhaps the verses of this great man were among his least important pro- ductions. Yet their value, in illustrating the history of Athens, would have been inestimable, had they been preserved to us in a more perfect state. "There is hardly anything," says Grote, " more to be deplored, amidst the lost treasures of the Grecian mind, than the poems of Solon ; for we see by the remaining fragments that they contained notices of the public and social phenomena before him, which he was compelled attentively to study, blended with the touching "expression of his own personal feelings, in the post, alike honourable and difficult, to which the confidence of his countrymen had exalted him." The interest of Solon as a gnomic poet is derived chiefly from the fact that he was reckoned one of the seven wise men of Greece, that he was one of the two most distinguished Nomothetee of Hellas, that he is said to have conversed familiarly with the great Lydian monarch, and that he endeavoured to resist the ascendancy of Pisistratus. Thus Solon bore a prominent part in all the most important affairs of the period to which the gnomic poetry belongs. Its politics, diplomacy, and social theories, its constitutional systems and philosophy, were perfectly familiar to him, and received a strong impress from his vigorous mind. It is thought that his poems belong to an early period of his life, yet they embody the same sentiments as those which Herodotus refers to his old age, and express in the looser form of elegiac verse the gist of those apophthegms which were ascribed to him as one of 74 THE GREEK POETS. the seven sages. Literature and politics were cultivated together at this period among the Greeks ; philosophy was gained in actual life and by commerce with men of all descriptions. The part which Tyrtseus, Alcseus, Pythagoras, Empedocles, and Archilochus played in the history of their States need not be more than alluded to. Simonides of Amorgos founded a colony ; Theognis represented a large and important party. But Solon, more than any of these men, combined a prominent public life with letters. Nor is it, perhaps, necessary to agree with Grote in depreciating the poetical value of his verses. Some of them are very fine and forcible. The description, for example, of the storm which sweeps away the clouds, and leaves a sunny sky (Frag. 13, ed. Bergk), is full of noble imagery. The first three fragments of Solon's elegies form part of the ode which he recited in the market-place of Athens, when he braved the penalty of death, and urged his fellow-citizens" " to rise and fight for the sweet isle of Salamis." These lines are followed by a considerable fragment of great importance, which describes the misery of ill-governed and seditious Athens. Among the sayings attributed to Solon (Diog. Laer., i. 63) is one which gives the keynote to this poem. When asked what made an orderly and well-consti- tuted state, he answered, " When the people obey the rulers, and the rulers obey the laws." The paraphrase which we subjoin exhibits in strong contrast the difference between Dysnomia and Eunomia, as conceived by the Athenian law- giver. Demosthenes, who used the name of Solon on all occasions with vast rhetorical effect, quotes these lines in a celebrated passage of the speech De Fals. Leg., 254: — "The citizens seek to overthrow the State by love of money, by following indulgent and self-seeking demagogues, who neglect religion and pervert the riches of the temples. Yet justice, silent but all-seeing, will in time bring vengeance on them for these things. War, want, civil discord, slavery, are at our THE GNOMIC POETS. 75 gates ; and all these evils threaten Athens because of her law- lessness. • Whereas good laws and government set all the State in order, chain the hands of evil-doers, make rough places plain, subdue insolence, and blast the budding flowers of Ate, set straight the crooked ways of tortuous law, root out sedition, quell the rage of strife ; under their good influence all things are fair and wise with men." Thus early and emphatically was the notion of a just balance enunciated among the Greeks ; it formed the ruling principle of their philosophy as well as of their politics ; for the firjUv ayav of Solon corresponded to the /.terpov of the Ionic speculators, and contained within itself the germ of Aristotle's ethical system, no less than of the political philosophy of Plato's Republic. In the fifth and sixth fragments Solon describes the amount of power which he would have intrusted to the Athenian Demus ; in the ninth, he prophesies the advent of a despot : " From storm-clouds descend furious snow and hail, and thunder is born of bright lightning ; so great men produce the overthrow of States, and into the bondage of a despot's power the people fall unwit- tingly. Easy it is to raise the storm, but hard to curb the whirlwind ; yet must we now take thought of all these things." Fragment the second contains a further warning on the subject of impending tyranny. The power of Pisistratus was growing to a head, and Solon told the Athenians that if he proved despotic they would have no one but themselves to blame for it. The remaining fragments of Solonian poetry are more purely meditative. " Bright daughters of Memory and Olym- pian Zeus," he begins, " Pierian Muses ! hear my prayer. Grant me wealth from the blessed gods, and from all men a good name. May I be sweet to my friend and bitter to my foe ; revered by the one and dreaded by the other. Money I desire, but no ill-gotten gain : for the wealth that the gods give lasts, and fleets not away ; but the fruits of insolence and crime bring vengeance — sure, though slow. Zeus seeth all 76 THE GREEK POETS. things, and like a wind scattering the clouds, which shakes the deep places of the sea and rages over the corn-land, and comes at last to heaven, the seat of gods, and makes a clear sky to be seen, whereupon the sun breaks out in glory, and the clouds are gone — so is the vengeance of Zeus. He may seem to forget, but sooner or later he strikes ; perchance the guilty man escapes, yet his blameless children or remote posterity pay the penalty." Two points are noticeable in this passage ; first, the dread of ill-gotten gain ; and secondly, the conception of im- placable justice. There was nothing which the Greeks more dreaded and detested than wealth which had been procured by fraud. They were so sensitive upon this point that even Plato and Aristotle regarded usury as criminal, unnatural, and sure to bring calamity upon the money-lender. Thus Chilon, the Lacedemonian sage, is reported to have said, " Choose loss rather than dishonourable gain : for the one will hurt you for the moment, the other will never cease to be a curse." There are few of the seven sages who have not at least one maxim bearing on this point. It would seem as if the conscience ot humanity were touched at a very early period by superstitious scruples of this kind. The Jewish law contains warnings similar to those of Solon ; and among our own people it is commonly believed that unlawful wealth, especially money taken from the devil, or property wrested from the Church, is disastrous to its owner, and incapable of being long retained in the possession of his family. Theognis expresses nearly the same sentiments as Solon in the following verses : — " He who gets wealth from Zeus by just means, and with hands unstained, will not lose it ; • but if he acquire it wrongfully, covetously, or by false swearing, though it may seem at first to bring him gain, at last it turns to calamity, and the mind of Heaven prevails. But these things deceive men, for the blessed gods do not always take vengeance on crime at the moment of its being committed ; but one man in his person pays for a THE GNOMIC POETS. 77 bad deed, another leaves disaster hanging over his own children, a third avoids justice by death." Both Solon and Theognis, it will be„observed, express emphatically their belief in a vengeance of Heaven falling upon the children, and the children's children of offenders. This conception of doom received its most splendid illustration at the hands of the tragic poets, and led philosophers like Empedocles to devise systems of expiation and purification, by means of which an- cestral guilt might be purged away, and the soul be restored to its pristine blamelessness. Theognis in another fragment (731-752) discusses the doctrine, and calls in question its justice. He takes it for granted, as a thing too obvious to be disputed, that children suffer for their father's sin, and argues with Zeus about the abstract right and policy of this law, suggesting that its severity is enough to make men withdraw their allegiance from such unjust governors. The inequality of the divine rule had appeared in the same light to Hesiod and Homer (see Iliad, xiii. 631; Hesiod, Op. et Dies, 270). But it is in the gnomic poets that we first discover a ten- dency to reason upon such questions : the wedge of philo- sophical scepticism was being inserted into the old super- stitious beliefs of the Greek race. And in some respects these gnomic poets present even a more gloomy view of human destinies than the epic poets. Solon says, "It is fate that bringeth good and bad to men ; nor can the gifts of the im- mortals be refused;" and in Theognis we find, "No man is either wealthy or poor, mean or noble, without the help of the gods." ..." Pray to the gods ; nought happens to man of good or ill without the gods." . .• . " No one, Cyrnus, is him- self the cause of loss and gain ; but of both these the gods are givers." It would be easy to multiply such passages, in which the same conception of the divine government as that for which Plato {Rep.,^. 379) blamed Homer, is set forth; but the gnomic poets go beyond this simple view. They seem to . 78 THE GREEK POETS. regard Heaven as a jealous power, and superstitiously believe all changes of fortune to be produced by the operation of a god anxious to delude human expectations. This theology lies at the root of the Solonian maxim, that you ought not to judge of a man's happiness until his death: "for," in the language of Herodotus, " there are many to whom God has first displayed good fortune, and whom he afterwards has rooted up and overthrown." Thus Solon moralizes in his elegies upon the vicissitudes of life :■ — " Danger lies everywhere, nor can a man say where he will end when he begins ; for he who thinks that he will fare well comes to grief; and often when a man is at his worst, Heaven sends him good luck, and he ends prosperously." It must however be observed that Solon in no passage of his elegiac poems alludes distinctly to the intervention of a jealous or malicious destiny. He is rather deeply impressed with the uncertainty of human affairs — an uncertainty which the events of his own life amply illustrated, a-nd which he saw displayed in every town about him. Simonides repeats the same strain of despondency, moralizing (Frag. 2, ed. Gaisford) upon the mutabilities of life, and exclaiming with a kind of horror : " One hideous Charybdis swallows all things — wealth and mighty virtue." The tone of belief was very low and insuffi- cient at this period in Greece. The" old simplicity of life was passing away, and philosophy had not yet revealed her broader horizons, her loftier aims, and her rational sources of content. We have seen how Mimnermus moralized upon the woes of age. Solon, whose manliness contrasts in every other respect with the effeminacy and languor of the Colophonian poet, gave way to the same kind of melancholy when he cried, "No mortal man is truly blessed ; but all are wretched whom the sun beholds." What can be more despairing than the lament- ations of Simonides ? — " Few and evil are our days of life ; but everlasting is the sleep which we must sleep beneath the THE GNOMIC POETS. 79 earth." . . . "Small is the strength of man, and invincible are his sorrows ; grief treads upon the heels of grief through his short life ; and death, which no man shuns, hangs over him at last : to this bourne come the good and bad alike." In the midst of this uncertainty and gloom Theognis cannot find a rule of right conduct. "Nothing," he says, "is denned by Heaven for mortals, nor any way by which a man may walk and please immortal powers." Nor can we point to any more profoundly wretched expression of misery than the following elegy of the same poet : " It is best of all things for the sons of earth not to be born, nor to see the bright rays of the sun, or after birth to pass as soon as possible the gates of death, and to lie deep down beneath a weight of earth." This sentiment is repeated by Bacchylides, and every student of Greek tragedy knows what splendid use has been made of it by Sophocles in one of the choruses of (Edipus Coloneus. Afterwards it passed into a commonplace. Two Euripidean fragments em- body it in words not very different from those of Theognis, and Cicero is said to have translated it. Truly the people were walking in darkness ; and it is marvellous that men, conscious of utter ignorance, and believing themselves to be the sport of almost malignant deities, could have grown so nobly and maintained so high a moral standard as that of the Greek race. The remaining fragments of Solon contain the celebrated lines upon the Life of Man, which he divided into ten periods of seven years. He rebuked Mimnermus for wishing to make sixty the term of human life, and bade him add another decade. We also possess some amorous verses of very questionable character, supposed to have been written in his early youth. The prudes of antiquity were scandalized at Solon, a lawgiver and sage, for having penned these couplets. The libertines rejoiced to place so respectable a name upon their list of worthies. To the student of history they afford, in a compact 80 THE GREEK POETS. form, some insight into the pursuits and objects of an Athenian man of pleasure. Plato quotes one couplet in the Lysis, and the author of the dialogue wcpl ipii-wv, attributed to Lucian, makes use of the same verses to prove that Solon was not exempt from the passion for which he is apologizing.- Apuleius mentions another as " lascivissimus ille versus." On the whole, although the most considerable of these elegies has also been ascribed to Theognis, there seems no reason to doubt their authenticity. Solon displays no asceticism in his poetry, or in anything that is recorded of his life or sayings. It is pro- bable that he lived as a Greek among Greeks, and was not ashamed of any of their social customs. ^ Passing from Solon to Phocylides we find a somewhat dif- ferent tone of social philosophy. Phocylides was a native of Miletus, who lived between 550 and 490 b.c. If Mimnermus represents the effeminacy of the Asiatic Greeks, Phocylides displays a kind of prosaic worldly wisdom, for which the Ionians were celebrated. He is thoroughly bourgeois, to use a modern phrase ; contented with material felicity, shrewd, safe in his opinions, and gifted with great common sense. Here are some of his maxims : — " First get your living, and then think of getting virtue." . . . " What is the advantage of noble birth, if favour follow not the speech and counsel of a man?" ..." The middle classes are in many ways best off; I wish to be of middle rank in the State." Aristotle {Pol., iv. 9, 7) quotes the last of these sayings with approbation. It is a thoroughly Ionian sentiment. Two of his genuine fragments contain the germ of Greek ideas which were destined to be widely developed and applied by the greatest thinkers ot Greece. One of these describes the Greek conception of a perfect State: — "A small city, set upon a rock, and well governed, is better than all foolish Nineveh." We here recog- nize the practical wisdom and thorough solidity of Greek good sense. Wealth,- size, and splendour they regarded as stumbling- THE GNOMIC POETS. 8 1 blocks and sources of weakness. To be compact and well governed expressed their ideal of social felicity. Plato in the Republic, and Aristotle in the Politics, carry the thought ex- pressed in this couplet of Phocylides to its utmost logical consequences. Again he says, " In justice the whole of virtue exists entire." This verse, which has also been incorporated into the elegies of Theognis, was probably the common pro- perty of many early moralists. Aristotle quotes it in the fifth book of the Ethics with the preface : Aw ml -n-apoi- fiia£6fievoi fyafXEv. It might be placed as a motto on the first page of Plato's Republic, for justice is the architectonic virtue which maintains the health and safety of the State. Phocylides enjoyed a high reputation among the ancients. Though few genuine fragments of his sayings have been handed down to us, there is a long and obviously spurious poem which bears his name. Some moralist of the Christian period has endeavoured to claim for his 'half-Jewish precepts the sanction of a great and antique authority. The greater number of those which we may with safety accept as genuine are prefaced by the words ml roye h>Kv\ifati>, forming an integral part of a hexameter. Phocylides was author of an epigram in imitation of one ascribed to Demodocus, which is chiefly interesting as having furnished Porson with the model of his well-known lines on Hermann. He also composed an epigrammatic satire on women, in which he compares them to four animals, a dog, a bee, a pig, and a horse, in the style of the poem by Simonides of Amorgos. Xenophanes, a native of Colophon, and the founder of the Eleatic school of philosophy, has left some elegies of a gnomic character, which illustrate another point in the Ionian intellect. While Phocylides celebrated the superiority of comfort and the solid goods- of life, Xenophanes endeavoured to break down the prejudice in favour of mere physical advantages, and to assert the absolute pre-eminence of intellectual power. In his G X2 THE GREEK POETS. second fragment (ed. Bergk) he says, " You give all kinds of honours — precedence at festivals, pensions, and public mainte- nance—to runners, boxers, pentathletes, wrestlers, pancratists, and charioteers, who bear away the prize at Olympia ; yet these men are not so worthy of reward as I am ; for better than the strength of men or horses is our wisdom. ■ What is the use of all this muscular development ? It will not improve the con- stitution of the State or increase the revenue." In this para- phrase I have, for the sake of brevity, modernized the language of Xenophanes, while seeking to preserve the meaning of an elegy which admirably illustrates the principles of the Ionian race, and of Athens in particular, as contrasted with those of the Dorians. Plato, Aristotle, and all the political moralists of Greece, blamed Sparta and Thebes for training mere soldiers and gymnasts, to the exclusion of intellectual culture; thus retarding the growth of their constitutions and forcing them to depend in all emergencies upon brute force. Had all Ionians been like Solon and Xenophanes, had there been nothing of Mimnermus or Phocylides in their character, then the Athenians might have avoided the contrary charge of effeminacy and ignobility of purpose and merely assthetical superiority, with which they have been taxed. Contemporary with Phocylides was Theognis, a poet of whose gnomic elegies nearly fourteen hundred lines are still extant. Some of these are identical with verses of Solon, and of other contemporary writers ; yet we need not suppose that Theognis was himself an imitator. It is far more probable that all the gnomic poets borrowed from the same sources, or embodied in their couplets maxims of common and proverbial wisdom. That Aristotle so regarded one of their most important apho- risms on the architectonic supremacy of justice we have already seen. Besides, it is not certain on what principle the elegies which bear the names of different poets were assigned to them. Theognis covers more ground than any of his predecessors, and THE GNOMIC POETS. 83 •embraces a greater variety of subjects. It has never been ima- gined that the fragments we possess formed part of an elaborate and continuous poem. They rather seem to have been written as occasion served, in order to express the thoughts of the moment. Many of them contain maxims of political wisdom, and rules for private conduct in the choice of friends ; others seem to have been composed for the lyre, in praise of good society, or wine, or beauty ; again we find discussions of moral questions, and prayers to the gods, mixed up with lamentations on the miseries of exile and poverty ; a few throw light upon the personal history of Theognis ; in all cases the majority are addressed, to one person, called Cyrnus.* Theognis was a noble, born at Megara about the middle of the sixth century B.C. His city, though traditionally subject to the yoke of Corinth, had under the influence of its aristocracy acquired independence. In course of time Theagenes, a dema- gogue, gained for himself despotical supremacy, and' exiled the members of the old nobility from Megara. He, too, succumbed to popular force, and for many years a struggle was maintained between the democratic party, whom Theognis persistently styles Karat and SsiXol, and the aristocracy, whom he calls ayadol and eaOXoi. Theognis himself, as far as we can gather from the fragments, spent a long portion of his life in exile from Megara ; but before the period of his banishment he occupied the position of friend and counsellor to Cyrnus, who, though clearly younger than himself, seems to have been in some sense leader of the Megarian aristocracy. A large number of the maxims of Theognis on State-government are specially addressed * A very ingenious attempt was made by Mr. Hookham Frere to reconstruct the life of Theognis from his elegies. It would be too much to assert that his conjectures are always successful. Indeed he often intro- duces foreign matter and modern sentiment, while he neglects the peculiarly Greek relations of the poet to his friend. Those who are curious about such works of hypercriticism would do well to study his T/ieognis RestituttiS .(Frere's Works, vol. ii.) G 2 84 THE GREEK POETS. to him. Before proceeding to examine these elegies in detail, we may touch upon the subject of the friendship of Theognis for Cyrnus, which has been much misunderstood. It must be remembered that Theognis was the only Doric poet of the gnomic class — all the rest of those whom we have mentioned belonging without exception to the Ionian family of the Greek race. We are not, therefore, surprised to find some purely Dorian qualities in the poetry of Theognis, which are missing in that of the others. Such, for instance, are the invocations to Phoebus and Artemis, with which our collection of fragments opens ; but such, in a far more characteristic sense, is the whole relation of the poet to his friend. From time immemorial it had been the custom among the Dorian tribes for men distin- guished in war or statecraft to select among the youths one comrade, who stood to them in the light of pupil and squire. In Crete this process of election was attended with rites of peculiar solemnity, and at Sparta the names of dv(iivog a>/cW, which Ben Jonson fancifully translated, " the dear glad angel of the spring, the nightingale" — that we muse in a sad rapture of astonishment to think what the complete poems must have been. Among the ancients Sappho enjoyed a unique renown. She was called "The Poetess," as Homer was called " The Poet." Aristotle placed her in the same rank as Homer and Archilochus. Plato in the Phcedrus mentioned her as the tenth Muse. Solon, hearing one of her poems, prayed that he might not see death till he had learned it. Strabo speaks of her genius with religious awe. Longinus cites her love ode as a specimen of poetical sublimity. The epigrammatists call her Child of Aphrodite and Erds, nursling of the Graces and Persuasion, pride of Hellas, peer of Muses, companion of Apollo. Nowhere is a hint whispered that her poetry was aught but perfect. As far as we can judge, these praises were strictly just. Of all the poets of the world, of all the illustrious artists of all literatures, Sappho is the one K 130 THE GREEK POETS. whose every word has a peculiar and unmistakable perfume, a seal of absolute perfection and inimitable grace. In her art she was unerring. Even Archilochus seems commonplace when compared with her exquisite rarity of phrase. About her life — her brother Charaxus, her 'daughter Cleis, her rejection of Alcasus and suit to Phaon, her love for Atthis and Anactoria, her leap from the Leucadian cliff — we know so very little, and that little is so confused with mythology and turbid with the scandal of the comic poets, that it is not worth while to rake up once again the old materials for hypothetical conclusions. There is enough of heart-devouring passion in Sappho's own verse without the legends of Phaon and the cliff of Leucas. The reality casts all fiction into the shade ; for nowhere, except, perhaps, in some Persian or Provencal love- songs, can be found more ardent expressions of overmastering emotion. Whether addressing the maidens, whom even in Elysium, as Horace says, Sappho could not forget ; or em- bodying the profounder yearnings of an intense soul after beauty, which has never on earth existed, but which inflames the hearts of noblest poets, robbing their eyes of sleep and giving them the bitterness of tears to drink — these dazzling fragments — "Which still, like sparkles of Greek fire, Burn on through time and ne'er expire " — are the ultimate and finished forms of passionate utterance, diamonds, topazes, and blazing rubies, in which the fire of the soul is crystallized for ever. Adequately to translate Sappho was beyond the power of "even Catullus : that love-ode, which Longinus called " not one passion, but a congress of passions," and which a Greek physician copied into his book of diagnoses as a compendium of all the symptoms of corroding emotion, appears but languid in its Latin dress of " Ille mi par." Far less has any modern poet succeeded in the task : Rossetti, who THE LYRIC POETS. 131 deals so skilfully with Dante and Villon, is comparatively tame when he approaches Sappho. Instead of attempting, therefore to interpret for English readers the charm of Sappho's style,* it is best to refer to pp. 874-924 of Bergk, where every vestige that is left of her is shrined. Beside Sappho, Alcseus pales. His drinking-songs and war songs have indeed great beauty ; but they are not to be named in the same breath, for perfection of style, with the stanzas of Sappho. Of his life we know a few not wholly uninteresting incidents. He was a noble of Mitylene, the capital of Lesbos, where he flourished as early as 611 b.c. Alcaeus belonged to a family of distinguished men. His brothers Cicis and Antimenidas upheld the party of the oligarchy against the tyrant Meianchrus ; and during the troubles which agitated Mitylene after the fall of this despot, while other petty tyrants — Myrsilus, Megalagyrus, and the Cleanactids — were attempting to subdue the island, the three brothers ranged themselves uniformly on the side of the aristocracy. At first they seem to have been friendly with Pittacus. It was while fighting at his side against the Athenians at Sigeum that Alcaeus threw his shield away — an exploit which, like Archilochus, he celebrated in a poem, without apparently damaging his reputation for valour. Being a stout soldier, a violent partisan, the bard of revolutions, and the brother of a pair of heroes, he could trifle with this little accident, which less doughty warriors must have concealed. When Pittacus was chosen ^symnetes, or dictator with despotic power for the preservation of public order, in 589 B.C., Alcaeus and his brothers went into opposition and were exiled. All three of them were what in modern politics we # Those who are curious in the matter of metres will find the Sapphic stanza reproduced in English, with perfect truth of cadence, in Swin- burne's "Sapphics" (Poems and Ballads). The imitations by Horace are far less close to the original. K. 2 132 THE GREEK POETS. should call High Tories. They could not endure the least approach to popular government, the slightest infringement of the rights of the nobility. During his exile Alcseus employed his poetic faculty in vituperating Pittacus. His satires were esteemed almost as pungent as those of Archilochus. But the liberal-minded ruler did not resent them. When Alcseus was on one occasion taken prisoner, he set him free, remarking that " forgiveness is better than revenge." Alcseus lived to be reconciled with him and to recognize his merits. As a trait in the domestic life and fortunes of the Greeks of this time, it is worth mentioning that Alcseus took refuge in Egypt during his banishment from Lesbos, and that his brother Antimenidas entered the service of the king of Babylon. In the same way two Englishmen in the times of the Edwards might have travelled in Germany or become soldiers of the Republic of Florence. Of the Greek oligarch who lent his sword to Nebu- chadnezzar — in his wars perhaps against Jehoiakim or Pharaoh- Necho — we get a curious glimpse. Alcseus greeted him on his return in a poem of which we possess a fragment, and which may be paraphrased thus : — From the ends of the earth thou art come Back to thy home ; The ivory hilt of thy blade With gold is embossed and inlaid ; Since for Babylon's host a great deed Thou didst work in their need, Slaving a warrior, an athlete of might, Royal, whose height Lacked of five cubits one span — A terrible man. We can fancy with what delight and curiosity Alcasus, who, as may be gathered from his poems, was an amateur of armour, examined the sword-handle, wrought perhaps from ./Ethiopian tusks by Egyptian artists with lotos-flowers or patterns of crocodiles, monkeys, and lions. This story of THE LYRIC POETS. 133 the polished Greek citizen's adventures among the Jews and Egyptians, known to us through Holy Writ, touches our imagination with the same strange sense of novelty as when we read of the Persian poet Sady, a slave in the camp of Richard Coeur de Lion's Crusaders. Considering the life Alcseus led, it is not strange that he should have sung of arms and civic struggles. Many frag- ments, preserved in all probability from the Stasiolica, or Songs of Sedition, which were very popular among the ancients, throw light upon the stormier passages of his history. One of these pieces* describes the poet's armoury — his polished helmets and white horsehair plumes, the burnished brazen greaves that hang upon the wall, the linen breastplates and bucklers thrown in heaps about the floor, with Chalkidian blades, and girdles, and tunics. The most striking point about this fragment is its foppery. Alcseus spares no pains to make us know how bright his armour is, how carefully his greaves are fixed against the wall by pegs you cannot see (iratraakoiQ KpvTrrmai irepuceifitvai), how carelessly the girdles and small gear are tossed about in sumptuous disarray. The poem seems to reveal a luxurious nature delighting in military millinery. No Dorian would have described his weapons from this point of view, but would have rather told us how often they had been used with effect in the field. The ^Eolian character is here tempered with Orientalism. Of the erotic poems of Alcseus, only a very few and incon- siderable fragments have survived. Horace says of them, addressing his lyre : — " Lesbio primum modulate civi, Qui ferox bello, tamen inter arraa, Sive jactatam religarat udo Littore navim, * Bergk, p. 935. 134 THE GREEK POETS. Liberum et Musas Veneremque et illi Semper hjerentem puerum canebat ; Et Lycum nigris oculis nigroque Crine decorum.'' Of Lycus we only know, on the authority of. Cicero,* that he had a wart upon the finger, which Alcseus praised in one of his poems. It has also been conjectured that the line olvoc, <3 i\av\oc, and which Aristotle calls QtXdvdpwiroe. Rather more is known about Stesichorus. He was a native of Himera, in Sicily, but possibly a Locrian by descent. His parents called him Tisias, but he took his more famous name from his profes- sion. Stesichorus is a title that might have been given to any THE LYRIC POETS. 143 chorus-master in a Greek city ; but Tisias of Himera won it by being emphatically the author of the choric system. Antiquity recognised in him the inventor of Strophe, Antistrophe, and Epode, with the corresponding movements of the dance, which were designated the Triad of Stesichorus. A remark made by Quintilian about this poet — that he sustained the burden of the Epos with his lyre — forms a valuable criticism on his style. In the da!ys of Stesichorus, the epic proper had lost its vitality; but people still felt the liveliest interest in heroic legends, and loved to connect the celebration of the past with their cere- monies. A lyrical poet had therefore so to treat the myths of Hellas that choruses should represent them in their odes and semi-dramatic dances. It is probable that Stesichorus made far more use of mythical material than Pindar, dealing with it less allusively, and adhering more closely to the epic form of narrative. When we hear of his ode, the Orestea, being divided into three books (whatever that may mean), and read the titles of the rest — Cerberus, Cycnus, Scylla, Europa, the Sack of Troy, the Nostoi, and Geryonis, we are led to suspect that his choral compositions were something of the nature of mediaeval mystery plays, — semi-lyrical, semi-dramatic poems, founded on the religious legends of the past. Stesichorus did not confine himself to this species of composition, but wrote hymns, encomia, and paeans, like other professional lyrists that succeeded him, and invented a curious kind of love-tale from real life. One of these romantic poems, called Calyce', was about a girl, who loved purely but unhappily, and died. Another, called Rhadina, told the forlorn tale of a Samian brother and sister put to death by a cruel tyrant. It is a pity that these early Greek novels in verse are lost. We might have found in them the fresh originals of Daphnis and Chloe, or of the romances of Tatius and Heliodorus. Finally, Stesi- chorus composed fables, such as the Horse and the Stag, and pastorals upon the death of Daphnis, in which he proved him- 144 THE GREEK POETS. ' self true to his Sicilian origin, and anticipated Theocritus. Enough has been said about Stesichorus to show that he was a richly inventive genius, one of those facile and abundant natures who excel in many branches of art, and who give hints by which posterity may profit. Yet with all his genius he was not thoroughly successful. His pastorals and romances were abandoned by his successors ; his epical lyrics were lost in the tragic drama. Like many other poets, he failed by coming at a wrong moment, or else by adhering to forms of art which could not long remain in vogue. In his attempt to reconcile the epical treatment of mythology with the choric system of his own invention, he proved that he had not fully grasped the capabilities of lyrical poetry. In his endeavour to create an idyllic and romantic species, he was far before his age. The remaining choral poets of the Dorian style, of whom the eldest, Ibycus, dates half a century later than Arion, re- ceived from their predecessors an instrument of poetical expression already nearly complete. It was their part to use it as skilfully as possible, and to introduce such changes as might render it more polished. Excellence of workmanship is particularly noticeable in what remains of Ibycus, Simonides, Bacchylides. These later lyrists are no longer local poets: under the altered circumstances of Hellas at the time of the Persian war, art has become Panhellenic, the artists cease to be the servants of one state or of one deity ; they range from city to city, giving their services to all who seek for them, and embracing the various tribes and religious rites of the collected Greeks in their aesthetic sympathy. Now, for the first time, poets began to sell their songs of praise for money. Simonides introduced the practice, which had something shocking in it to Greek taste, and which Plato especially censures as sophistic and illiberal in his Protagoras. Now, too, poets became the friends and counsellors of princes, mixing freely in the politics of Samos, Syracuse, Agrigentum, Thessaly ; aiding the tyrants THE LYRIC POETS. 145 Polycrates, Hiero, Theron, the Scopads, with their advice. Simonides is said to have suspended hostilities between Theron and Hiero by his diplomatic intercession after their armies had been drawn up in battle-array. Petrarch did not occupy a more important place among the princes and re- publics of mediaeval Italy. Under these new conditions, and with this expansion of the poet's calling, the old character of the Dorian lyric changed. The title Dorian is now merely nominal, and the dialect is a conventional language consecrated to this style. Ibycus was a native of Rhegium, a colony of mixed Ionians and Dorians. To which of these families he belonged is not certain. If we judged by the internal evidence of his poems, we should call him an Ionian ; for they are distinguished by voluptuous sweetness, with a dash of almost ^Eoli'an intensity. Ibycus was a poet-errant, carrying his songs from state to state. The beautiful story of the cranes who led to the discovery of his murderer at Corinth, though probably mythical, like that of Arion's dolphin, illustrates the rude lives of these Greek troubadours, and shows in what respect the sacer vates, servant of the Muses and beloved of Phcebus, was held by the people. Ibycus was regarded by antiquity as a kind of male Sappho. His odes, composed for birthday festivals and banquets, were dedicated chiefly to the praise of beautiful youths, and the legends which adorned them, like those of Ganymede or Tithonus, were appropriate to the erotic style. Aristophanes, in the Thesmophoriazusa, makes Agathon connect him with Anacreon and Alcseus, as the three refiners of language. It is clear, therefore, that in his art Ibycus adapted the manner of Dorian poetry to the matter of ^Eolian or Ionian love-chants. Of his poetry we have but few fragments. The following seems to strike the keynote of his style : " Love once again looking upon me from his cloud-black brows, with languishing glances, drives me by enchantments of all kinds to the endless nets of L 146 THE GREEK POETS. Cypris : verily I tremble at his onset, as a chariot-horse, who hath won prizes in old age, goes grudgingly to try his speed in the swift race of cars.'' In another piece he compares the onset of Love to a downrush of the Thracian north wind armed with lightning. It is interesting to compare the different meta- phors by which the early lyrists imaged the assaults of the Love-God. Sappho describes him in one place as a youth arrayed with a flame-coloured, chlamys descending from heaven ; in another she calls him " a limb-dissolving, bitter-sweet, im- practicable wild beast "; again, she compares the state of her soul under the influence of love to oak-trees torn and shaken by a mountain whirlwind. Anacreon paints a fine picture of Love like a blacksmith, forging his soul and tempering it in icy torrents. The dubious. winged figure armed with a heavy sword, which is carved upon the recently-discovered column from the Temple of Ephesus, if he be the Love-God, and not, as some conjecture, Death, seems to have been conceived in the spirit of these energetic metaphors. The Greeks, at the period of Anacreon and Ibycus, were far from having as yet imagined the baby Cupid of Moschus, the Epigrammatists, . and the Alexandrian Anacreontics. He was still a terrible and passion-stirring power — no mere malicious urchin coming by night with drenched wings and unstrung bow to reward the poet's hospitality by wounding him ; no naughty boy who runs away from his mother and steals honeycombs, no bee-like elf asleep in rosebuds. Simonides is a far more brilliant representative than Ibycus, both of Greek choral poetry in its prime, and also of the whole literary life of Hellas during the period which immediately preceded and followed the Persian war. He was born in the island of Ceos, of pure Ionian blood and breeding ; but the Ionians of Ceos were celebrated for their <™0po'j), a quality which is strongly marked in the poems of Simonides. In his odes we do not trace that mixture of ^Eolian passion and that THE LYRIC POETS. 147 concentration upon personal emotions which are noticeable in those of Ibycus, but rather a Dorian solemnity of thought and feeling, which qualified Simonides for the arduous functions to which he was called, of commemorating in elegy and epigram and funeral ode the achievements of Hellas against Persia. Simonides belonged to a family of professional poets ; for the arts among the early Greeks were hereditary ; a father taught the trade of flute-playing and chorus-leading and verse-njaking to his son, who, if he had original genius, became a great poet, as was the fate of Pindar ; or, -if he were endowed with commonplace abilities, remained a journeyman in art without discredit to himself, performing useful functions in his native place.* Simonides exercised his calling of chorus-teacher at Carthsea in Ceos, and lived at the xopvy^'"", or resort of the chorus, near the temple of Apollo. But the greater portion of his life, after he had attained celebrity, was passed with patrons, — with Hipparchus, who invited him to Athens, where he dwelt at amity with Anacreon, and at enmity with Pindar's master Lasos — with the Scopads and Aleuads of Thessaly, for whom he composed the most touching threnoi and the most brilliant panegyrics, of which fragments have descended to us ; — finally, with Hiero of Syracuse, who honoured him exceedingly, and When he died, consigned him to the earth with princely funeral pomp. The relations of Simonides tp these patrons may be gathered from numerous slight indications, none of which are very honourable to his character. For instance, after receiving * The Dramatic art was hereditary among the Athenians. ^Jschylus left a son, Euphorion, and two nephews, Philocles and Astydamas, who produced tragedies. The last is reported to have written no fewer than -two hundred and forty plays. Iophon the son and Sophocles the grandson of the great Sophocles were dramatists of some repute at Athens. Euri- pides had a. nephew of his own name, and Aristophanes two sons who followed the same calling. It is only from families like the Bachs that we can draw any modern parallel to this transmission of an art from.father to ■son in the same race. L 2 148 the greek poets. the hospitality of Hipparchus, he composed an epigram for the statue of Harmodius, in which he calls the murder of the tyrant " a great light rising upon Athens." Again, he praised the brutal Scopas, son of Creon, in an ode which is celebrated, both as being connected with the most dramatic incident in the poet's life, and also as having furnished Plato with a theme for argument, and Aristotle with an ethical quotation — "To be a good man in very truth, a square without blame, is hard." This proposition Plato discusses in the Protagoras, while Aristotle cites the phrase, Tcrpdywvoe avtv ipoyov. From the general tenour of the fragments of this ode, from Plato's criticism, and from what is known about the coarse nature of Scopas, who is being praised, we must conjecture that Simonides attempted to whitewash his patron's character by depreciating the standard of morality. With Ionian facility and courtly compliment, he made excuses for a bad man by pleading that perfect goodness was unattainable. Scopas refused to pay the price required by Simonides for the poem in question, telling him to get half of it from the Dioscuri, who had also been eulogized. This was at a banquet. While the king was laughing at his own rude jest, a • servant whispered to the poet that two goodly youths waited without, desiring earnestly to speak with him. Simonides left the palace, but found no one. Even as he stood looking for his visitors, he heard the crash of beams and the groans of dying men. Scopas with his guests had been destroyed by the falling of the roof, and Simonides had received a godlike guerdon from the two sons of Tyndareus. This story belongs, perhaps, to the same class as the cranes of Ibycus and the dolphin of Arion. Yet there seems to be no doubt that the Scopad dynasty was suddenly extinguished ; for we hear nothing of them at the time of the Persian war, and we know that Simonides composed a threnos for the family. The most splendid period of the life of Simonides was that which he passed at Athens during the great wars with Persia. 1 THE LYRIC POETS. 149 Here he was the friend of Miltiades, Themistocles, and Pausa- nias. Here he composed his epigrams on Marathon, Ther- mopylae, Salamis, Plataea— poems not destined to be merely sung or consigned to parchment, but to be carved in marble or engraved in letters of imperishable bronze upon the works of the noblest architects and statuaries. The genius of Simo- nides is unique in this branch of monumental poetry. His couplets — calm, simple, terse, strong as the deeds they cele- brate, enduring as the brass or stone which they adorned — animated succeeding generations of Greek patriots ; they were transferred to the brains of statesmen like Pericles and Demos- thenes, inscribed upon the fleshy tablets of the hearts of war- riors like Cleomenes, Pelopidas, Epaminondas. We are thrice fortunate in possessing the entire collection of these epigrams, unrivalled for the magnitude of the events they celebrate, and for the circumstances under which they were composed. When we reflect what would have become of the civilization of the world but for these Greek victories — when we remember that the events which these few couplets record transcend in im- portance those of any other single period of history — we are almost appalled by the contrast between the brevity of the epigrams and the world-wide vastness of their matter. In reviewing the life of Simonides, after admitting that he was greedy of gain and not averse to flatter, we are bound to con- fess that, as a poet, he proved himself adequate to the age of Marathon and Salamis. He was the voice of Hellas — the genius of Fame, sculpturing upon her brazen shield with a pen of adamant, in austere letters of indelible gold, the achieve- ments to which the whole world owes its civilization. Happy poet ! Had ever any other man so splendid a heritage of song allotted to him ? In style Simonides is always pure and exquisitely polished. The ancients called him the sweet poet — Melice'rtes — par ex- cellence. His owtypoavvt] gives a mellow tone not merely to 150 THE GREEK POETS. his philosophy and moral precepts, but also to his art. He has none of Pindar's rugged majesty, volcanic force, gorgeous exuberance : he does not, like Pindar, pour forth an inex- haustible torrent of poetical ideas, chafing against each other in the eddies of breathless inspiration. On the contrary, he works up a few thoughts, a few carefully selected images, with patient skill, producing a perfectly harmonious result, but one which is always bordering on the commonplace. Like all correct poets, he is somewhat tame, though tender, delicate, and exquisitely beautiful. Pindar electrifies his hearer, seizing him like the eagle in Dante's vision, and bearing him breath- less through the ether of celestial flame. Simonides leads us by the hand along the banks of pleasant rivers, through laurel groves, and by the porticos of sunny temples. What he pos- sesses of quite peculiar to his own genius is pathos — the pathos of romance. This appears most remarkably in the fragment of a threnos which describes Danae afloat upon the waves at night. The careful development of simple thoughts in Simo- nides may best be illustrated by the fragment on the three hundred Spartans who died at Thermopylae : — "Of those who died at Thermopylae glorious is the fate and fair the doom ; their grave is an altar ; instead of lamentation, they have endless fame ; their dirge is a chant of praise. Such winding-sheet as theirs no rust, no, nor all-conquering time, shall bring to nought. But this sepulchre of brave men hath taken for its habitant the glory of Hellas. Leonidas is witness, Sparta's king, who hath left a mighty crown of valour and undying fame. '" The antitheses are wrought with consummate skill ; the fate of the heroes is glorious, their doom honourable ; so far the eulogy is commonplace ; then the same thought receives a bolder turn : their grave is an altar. We do not lament for them so much as hold them in eternal memory; our very songs of sorrow become paeans of praise. What follows is a still further expansion of the leading theme : rust and time cannot affect THE LYRIC POETS. 151 their fame; Hellas confides her glory to their tomb. Then generalities are quitted ; and Leonidas, the protagonist of Thermopylae, appears. In his threnoi Simonides has generally recourse to the common grounds of consolation, which the Ionian elegists repeat ad nauseam, dwelling upon the shortness and uncer- tainty and ills of life, and tending rather to depress the survivors on their own account than to comfort them for the dead. In one he says, " Short is the strength of men, and vain are all their cares, and in their brief life trouble follows upon trouble ; and death, that no man shuns, is hung above our heads — for him both good and bad share equally." It is impossible, while reading this lachrymose lament, to forget the fragment of that mighty threnos of Pindar's which sounds like a trumpet-blast for immortality, and, trampling under feet the glories of this world, reveals the gladness of the souls who have attained Elysium : — " For them, the night all through, In that broad realm below, The splendour of the sun spreads endless light ; 'Mid rosy meadows bright, Their city of the tombs with incense-trees, And golden chalices Of flowers, and fruitage fair, , Scenting the breezy air, Is laden. There with horsfes and with play, With games and lyres, they while the hours away. " On every side around Pure happiness is found, With all the blooming beauty of the world ; There fragrant smoke upcurled From altars where the blazing fire is dense With perfumed frankincense, Burned unto gods in heaven, Through all the land is driven, Making its pleasant places odorous With scented gales and sweet airs amorous.'' 152 THE GREEK P0E7S. What has been said about Simonides applies in a great measure also to Bacchylides, who was his nephew, pupil, and faithful follower. The personality of Bacchylides, as a man and a poet, is absorbed in that of his uncle — the greater bard, the more distinguished actor on the theatre of the world. While Simonides played his part in public life, Bacchylides gave him- self up to the elegant pleasures of society; while Simonides celebrated in epigrams the military glories of the Greeks, Bacchylides wrote wine-songs and congratulatory odes. His descriptions of Bacchic intoxication and of the charms of peace display the same careful word-painting as the description by Simonides of Orpheus, with more luxuriance of sensual sug- gestion. His threnoi exhibit the same Ionian despondency and resignation — a dead settled calm, an elegant stolidity of epicureanism. Here we must stop short in the front of Pindar— the Hamlet among these lesser actors, the Shakspere among a crowd of inferior poets. To treat of Greek lyrical poetry and to omit Pindar is a paradox in action. Yet Pindar is so colossal, so much apart, that he deserves a separate study, and cannot be dragged in at the end of a bird's-eye view of a period of lite- rature. At the time of Pindar poetry was sinking into man- nerism. He by the force of his native originality gave it a wholly fresh direction, and created a style as novel as it was inimitable. Like Athos, like Atlas, like the Matterhorn, like Monte Viso, like the Peak of Teneriffe, he stands alone, sky- piercing and tremendous in his solitary strength. CHAPTER VI. PINDAR. His Life. — Legends connected with him.— The Qualities of his Poetry. — The Olympic Games. — Pindar's Professional Character. — His Morality. — His Religious Belief. — Doctrine of a Future State. — Rewards and Punishments. — The Structure of his Odes.— The Proemia to his Odes. — His Difficulty and Tumidity of Style. Pindar, in spite of his great popularity among the Greeks, offers no exception to the rule that we know but little of the lives of the illustrious poets and artists of the world. His parents belonged to the town of Cynoscephalae ; but Pindar himself resided at Thebes, and spoke of Thebes as his native place — 9>'//3a /^artp kfid. That his father was called Daiphantus appears tolerably certain; and we may fix the date of his birth at about 522 b.c. He lived to the age of seventy-nine ; so that the flourishing period of his life exactly coincides with the great Persian struggle, in which he lived to see Hellas victorious. He had three children — a son, Daiphantus, and two daughters, Eumetis and Protomache. His family was among the noblest and most illustrious of Thebes, forming a branch of the ancient house of the ^Egeida?, who settled both at Thebes and Sparta in heroic times, and offshoots from whom were colonists of Thera and Cyrene. Thus many of the heroes celebrated by Pindar, and many of the illustrious men to whom he dedicates his odes, were of his own kin. Genius for the arts seems to have been here- ditary in the family of Pindar, as it was in that of Stesichorus and of Simonides : therefore, when the youth showed- an 154 THE GREEK POETS. aptitude for poetry, his father readily acceded to his wishes, and sent him to Athens to learn the art of composing for the chorus from Lasos, the then famous but now forgotten antagonist of the bard of Ceos. Before his twentieth year, Pindar returned to Thebes and took, it is said, instruction from the poetesses Myrtis and Corinna. To this period of his artistic career belongs the oft-told tale, according to which Corinna bade her pupil interweave myths with his panegyrics, and when, following her advice, he produced an ode in which he had exhausted all the Theban legends, told him rj; x e V l Stly oirdpciv, dXka fit) o\ Tto OvKaKU), that one ought to SOW with the hand and not with the whole sack. Against both Myrtis and Corinna, Pindar entered the lists of poetical contest. Corinna is reported to have beaten him five times, and never to have been vanquished by her more illustrious rival. Pausanias' hints that she owed her victories to her beauty, and to the fact that she wrote in a broad iEolic dialect, more suited to the ears of her judges than Pindar's Doric style. The same circumstance which ensured her this temporary triumph may have caused her ultimate neglect. The fragment we possess of Corinna — fiilKpojiri Si ki) \iyovpav Mowpnfl' libvya on fiava i\dy\aoe which he gives to Girgenti, suits himself. The splendour- loving Pindar is his name and title for all time. If we search the vocabulary of Pindar to find what phrases are most fre- quently upon his lips, we shall be struck with the great pre- ponderance of all words that indicate radiance, magnificence, lustre. To Pindar's soul splendour was as elemental as har- mony to Milton's. Of the Graces, Aglaia must have been his favourite. Nor, love as he did the gorgeousness of wealth, was it mere transitory pomp, the gauds and trappings of the world, which he admired. There must be something to stir the depths of his soul — beauty of person, or perfection of art, or moral radiance, or ideal grandeur. The blaze of real mag- nificence draws him as the sun attracts the eagle ; he does not flit moth-like about the glimmer of mere ephemeral lights. After these three figures, which illustrate the fiery flight, the torrent-fulness, the intoxicating charm of Pindar, one remains by which the magnetic force and tumult of his poetry may be faintly adumbrated. He who has watched a sunset attended by the passing of a thunderstorm in the outskirts of the Alps, from some height like the Rigi or the Monte Generoso, or from the meadow-slopes of Berchtesgaden — who has seen the distant ranges of the mountains alternately obscured by cloud and blazing with the concentrated radiance of the sinking sun, while drifting scuds of hail and rain, tawny with sunlight, glistening with broken rainbows, clothe peak and precipice and forest in the golden veil of flame-irradiated vapour— who has heard the PINDAR. 163 thunder bellow in the thwarting folds of hills, and watched the lightning, like a snake's tongue, flicker at intervals amid gloom and glory — knows in nature's language what Pindar teaches with the voice of art. It is only by an inflated metaphor like this that any attempt to realize the Sturm und Drang of Pindar's style can be communicated. Go still further afield in search of similes : fancy yourself playing such a motette as Mozart's Splendente te Deics in the chapel of Mont St. Michel, which is built like a lighthouse on a rock, at the bottom of which the sea is churning in a tempest : and perhaps the ima- ginative equivalent will be still more complete. But a truce to this fanciful building up of similes ! In plain critical language, Pindar combines the strong flight of the eagle, the irresistible force of the torrent, the richness of Greek wine, the majestic pageantry of Nature in one of her sublimer moods. Like all the great lyrists of the Dorian School, Pindar com- posed odes of various species — Hymns, Prosodia, Parthenia, Threnoi, Scolia, Dithyrambs, as well as Epinikia. Of all but the Epinikian Odes we have only inconsiderable fragments left ; yet these are sublime and beautiful enough to justify us in believing that Pindar surpassed his rivals in the Threnos and the Scolion as far as in the Epinikian Ode. Forty-four of his poems we possess entire— fourteen Olympians, twelve Pythians, eleven Nemeans, seven Isthmians. Of the occasions which led to the composition of these odes something must be said. The Olympian games were held in Elis once in five years, during the summer : their prize was a wreath of wild olive. The Pythian games were held in spring, on the Crissaean plain, once in five years : their prizes were a wreath of laurel and a palm. The Nemean games were held in the groves of Nemea, near Cleonae, in Argolis, once in three years : their prize was a wreath of parsley. The Isthmian games were held at Corinth, once in three years : their prize was a wreath of pine, native to the spot. The Olympian festival honoured Zeus ; that of 1 64 THE GREEK POETS. Pytho, Phoebus ; that of Nemea, Zeus ; that of the Isthmus, Poseidon. Originally they were all of the nature of a wavliyvpiq or national assembly at the shrine of some deity local to the spot, or honoured there with more than ordinary reverence. The Isthmian games in particular retained a special character : instituted for an Ionian deity, whose rites the men of Elis refused to acknowledge, they failed to unite the whole Greek race. The Greek games, like the Zwing-feste and shooting matches of Switzerland, served as recurring occasions of reunion and fellowship. Their influence in preserving a Pan- hellenic feeling was very marked. During the time of the feast, and before and after, for a sufficient number of days to allow of travellers journeying to and from Olympia and Delphi, hostilities were suspended through Hellas ; safe-conduct was given through all states to pilgrims. One common religious feeling animated all the Greeks at these seasons : they met in rivalry, not of arms on the battle-field, but of personal prowess in the lists. And though the various families of the Hellenic stock were never united, yet their games gave them a common object, and tended to the diffusion of ideas. Let us pause to imagine the scene which the neighbourhood of Olympia must have presented, as the great Derby-day of the Greek race approached — a Derby-day, however, consecrated by religion, dignified by patriotic pride, adorned with Art. The full blaze of summer is overhead ; plain and hill-side yield no- shade but what the spare branches of the olive and a few spreading pines afford. Along the road throng pilgrims and deputies, private persons journeying modestly, and public ambassadors gorgeously equipped at the expense of their state. Strangers from Sicily, or Cyrene, or Magna Graecia, land from galleys on the coast of Elis. Then there are the athletes with their trainers — men who have been in rude exercise for the prescribed ten months, and whose limbs are in the bloom of manly or of boyish strength. Sages, like Gorgias, or Prodicus, PINDAR. 165 or Protagoras, are on their way, escorted by bands of disciples, eager to engage each other in debate beneath the porticos of the Olympian Zeus. Thales or Anaxagoras arrives, big with a new theory of the universe. Historians like Hero- dotus are carrying their scrolls to read before assembled Hellas. Epic poets and rhapsodes are furnished with tales of heroes, freshly coined from their own brains, or conned with care from Homer. Rich men bring chariots for racing or display ; the more a man spends at Olympia, the more he honours his native city. Women, we need not doubt, are also on the road — Hetairae from Corinth, and Cyprus, and Ionia. Sculptors bring models of their skill. Potters exhibit new shapes of vases, with scrolls of honeysuckle wreathing round the pictured image of some handsome boy, to attract the eyes of buyers. Painters have their tablets and colours ready. Apart from these more gay and giddy servants of the public ' taste, are statesmen and diplomatists, plenipotentiaries de- spatched to feel the pulse of Hellas, negotiators seeking opportunities for safe discussion of the affairs of rival cities. Every active brain, or curious eye, or wanton heart, or well- trained limb, or skilful hand, or knavish wit may find its fit employment here. A mediaeval pilgrimage to St. James of Compostella or St. Thomas of Canterbury was nothing to this exodus of wit in Greece. As they approached Olympia, a splendid scene burst upon the travellers' eyes — the plain of Elis, rich, deep-meadowed, hoary with olive-trees. One cried to the other, There is the hill of Cronion ! There is the grove of Altis ! Thither flows - Alpheus to the sea ! Those white and glittering statues are the portraits of the victors ! That temple is the house of everlasting Zeus ; beneath its roof sits the Thunderer of Phei- dias! Every step made the journey more exciting. By the bed of the Alpheus, tawny in midsummer with dusty oleander- blossoms, the pilgrims passed. At last they enter the pre- 166 THE GREEK POETS. cincts of Olympian Zeus : the sacred enclosure is alive with men ; the statues among the trees are scarcely more wonder- worthy in their glittering marble than are the bodies of the athletes moving beneath them. The first preoccupation of every Greek who visited Olympia, was to see the statue of Zeus: Not to have gazed upon this masterpiece of Pheidias was, according to a Greek proverb, the unhappiness of life. In this, his greatest work, the Athenian sculptor touched the highest point of art, and incarnated the most sublime concep- tion of Greek religious thought. The god was seated on his throne ; but, even so, the image rose to the height, of forty feet, wrought of pure ivory and gold. At his feet stood figures symbolical of victory in the Olympian games : among them the portrait of Pantarkes, himself a victor, the youth whom Pheidias loved. In designing his great statue the sculptor had • in mind those lines of Homer which describe Zeus nodding his ambrosial locks, and shaking Olympus. That he had succeeded in presenting to the eye all that the Greek race could imagine of godlike power and holiness and peace, was attested not only by the universal voice of Hellas, but also by the Romans who gazed as conquerors upon the god. Lucius Paulus ^Emilius, we are told, after the battle of Pydna, swept Greece, and coming to Olympia, saw the Pheidian Zeus. He shuddered, and exclaimed that he had set mortal eyes upon the deity incarnate. Yet Paulus was a Roman trampling with his legionaries the subject states of fallen Hellas. Cicero proclaimed that Pheidias had copied nothing human, but had carved the ideal image existing in an inspired mind. Zeus, it must be remembered, was the supreme god of the Aryan race, the purest divinity of the Greek cultus. He was called Father, Sire of gods and men. Therefore his presence in the Panhellenic temple was peculiarly appropriate and awe-inspiring. We may imagine the feelings of an athlete coming to struggle for the fame of his own city, when he PINDAR. 167 first approached this statue in the august Olympian shrine. The games were held at the time of a full moon ; through the hypaethral opening of the temple-roof fell the silver rays aslant upon those solemn lineaments, making the glow of ivory and gold more solemn in the dimness of a wondrous gloom. Presidents chosen from the people of Elis and named Hellanodikai, awarded the prizes and controlled the conduct of the games. From their decision, in cases of doubt, there was a final appeal to the assembly of Elis. In the morning the heralds opened the lists with this proclamation :* " Now begins the contest that dispenses noblest prizes; time tells you to delay no longer." When the runners were ready, the heralds started them with these words, " Put your feet to the line and run." At the end of the day they cried, " Now ceases the contest that dispenses noblest prizes ; time tells you to delay no longer." The victor was crowned with wild olive, and led by his friends to the temple of Zeus. On the way they shouted the old Archilochian chorus? rfiveWa KaWiviKe, to which Pindar alludes in the beginning of his 9th Olympian : " The song of Archilochus uttered at Olympia, the triple cry of Hail Victorious ! was enough to conduct Epharmostus, leading the revel to the Cronian hill with his comrades. But now, from the far-darting bows of the Muses, approach Zeus of the blazing thunder and the holy jutting land of Elis with these mightier shafts." Sacrifice and banquet took place in the evening ; and happy was the athlete who, in this supreme moment, was greeted by Pindar with attendant chorus and musicians of the flute and lyre. Three Olympians, which seem to have been composed and chanted on the spot, survive — the 4th, the 8th, the 10th The Proemia to these odes, two of which are remarkably short, * Bergk, Poetce Lyrici, p. 1301. l£8 THE GREEK POETS. indicating the haste in which they had been prepared, suffi- ciently establish this fact. " Supreme hurler of the thunderbolt that never tires, Zeus ! Thy festival recurring with the season brings me with sound of lyre and song to witness august games." " Parent of golden-crowned contests, Olympia, mis- tress of truth," &c. But it could not be expected that the more elaborate of Pindar's compositions should be ready on such occasions. It usually happened that the victor either found Pindar at Olympia, or sent a message to him at Thebes, and bespoke an ode, adding gifts in accordance with the poet's rank and fame.. Then Pindar composed his Epinikian, which was sung when the conqueror returned to his own city. The ode would be repeated on successive anniversaries at banquets, sacrificial festivals, and processions in honour of the victory. The 9th Olympian, which has been already quoted, was, for example, sung at a banquet in honour of Epharmostus of Opus, after the altar of Ajax, son of Oileus, had been crowned. Pindar, as we find from frequent allusions in the odes, had such a press of work that he often delayed sending his poems at the proper time, and had to excuse himself for neglect. In the second Isthmian he records a delay of two years. We may add that he did not disdain to accept money for his toil. In the nth Pythian he says : " Muse, it is thy part, since thou hast contracted to give thy voice for gold, to set it going in various ways." In the Proemium to the second Isthmian he somewhat bitterly laments the necessity that made him sell his songs. " The men of old, Thrasybulus, who climbed the chariot of the gold- crowned Muses, and received a famous lyre, lightly shot their arrows of honey-voiced hymns in praise of boys, of him whose beauty kept the summer bloom of youth, that sweetest souvenir of Aphrodite throned in joy. For the Muse as yet loved not gain, nor worked for hire, nor were sweet and tender songs with silvered faces sold by Terpsichore. But now she bids us keep the Argive's speech in mind ; and verily it hits the truth; that Money, Money, Money makes the man. He spoke it when deserted of his riches and his friends." PINDAR. 169 Yet we must not suppose that Pindar sang slavishly the praise of every bidder. He was never fulsome in his pane- gyric. He knew how to mingle eulogy with admonition. If his theme be the wealth of a tyrant like Hiero, he reminds him of the dangers of ambition and the crime of avarice. Arcesi- laus of Cyrene is warned * to remit his sentence of banish- ment in favour of a powerful exile. Victors, puffed up with the pride of their achievements, hear from him how variable is the life 'of man, how all men are mere creatures of a day. Handsome youths are admonished to beware of lawlessness and shun incontinence. Thus Pindar, while suiting his praises to the persons celebrated, always interweaves an appropriate precept of morality. There was nothing that he hated more than flattery and avarice, and grasping after higher honours than became his station. In him more than in any other poet, were apparent the Greek, virtues of eh^oafxia, auxfipoavvri, and all the qualities which were summed up in the motto pjStV iLyav. Those who are curious to learn Pindar's opinions on these points may consult the following passages :f * Pyth. iv. 263. ^ t " Hateful of a truth, even in days of old, was treacherous blandishment, attendant of wily words, designing guile, mischief-making slander, which loves to wrest the splendour of fame and to maintain the unreal honours of ignoble men. Never may such be my temper, Zeus, our father ! but may I follow the plain paths ' of life, that, dying, I may leave no foul fame to my children. Some pray for gold, and some for vast lands ; but I to please my countrymen, and so to hide my limbs beneath the earth, praising where praise is due, and sowing blame for sinful men. Virtue grows and blooms, like a tree that shoots up under fostering dews, when skilled men and just raise it towards the liquid air." .... " Among my fellow-citizens I look with brightness in my eye, not having overstepped due bounds, and having removed from before my feet all violence. May future time come kindly to me.'' .... "May I obtain from heaven the desire of what is right, aiming at things within my powers in my prime of life. For finding, as I do, that the middle status in a city flourishes with more lasting prosperity, I deprecate the lot of kings." .... " Passing the pleasure of the days I gently glide towards old age and man's destined end : for all alike we die : 170 THE GREEK POETS. Nem. viii. 32 ; Nem. vii. 65 ; Pyth. xi. 50 j Isthm. vii. 40 ; Isthm. v. 14 ; and lastly, Pyth. x. 22, which contains this truly beautiful description of a thoroughly successful life, as imagined by a Greek : " That man is happy and songworthy by the skilled, who, victorious by might of hand or vigour of foot, achieves the greatest prizes with daring and with strength ; and who in his lifetime sees his son, while yet a boy, crowned happily with Pythian wreaths. The brazen heaven, it is trne, is inaccessible to him; but whatsoever joys we race of mortals touch, he reaches to the farthest voyage." With this we may compare the story of happy lives told by Croesus to Solon, and the celebrated four lines of Simonides : — " Health is best for a mortal man ; next beauty ; thirdly, well-gotten wealth ; fourthly, the pleasure of youth among friends." Closely connected with Pindar's ethical beliefs were his religious notions, which were both peculiar and profound. Two things with regard to his theology deserve especial notice — its conscious criticism of existing legends, and its strong Pythagorean bias, both combined with true Hellenic orthodoxy in all essentials. One of the greatest difficulties in forming an exact estimate of the creed of a philosophical Greek intellect, is to know how to value the admixture of scientific scepticism on the one hand, and of purer theism on the other. About Pindar's time the body of Hellenic mytho- logy was being invaded by a double process of destructive and constructive criticism. Xenophanes, for example, very plainly denounced as absurd the anthropomorphic Pan- theon made in the image of man, while he endeavoured to yet is our fortune unequal ; and if a man seek far, short is his strength to reach the brazen seat of the gods : verily winged Pegasus cast his lord Bellerophon, who sought to come into the dwellings of the heaven, unto the company of Zeus.'' . . . . " Seek not to be Zeus .... mortal fortunes are for mortal men." PTNDAR. 171 substitute a cult of the One God, indivisible and incognis- able. Plato still further developed the elements suggested by Xenophanes. But there was some inherent incapacity in the Greek intellect for arriving at monotheism by a process of rarefaction and purification. The destructive criticism which in Xenophanes, Pindar, and Plato had assailed the grosser myths, dwindled into unfruitful scepticism. The at- tempts at constructing a rational theosophy ended in meta- physics. Morality was studied as a separate branch of investigation, independent of destructive criticism and re- ligious construction. Meanwhile the popular polytheism continued to flourish, though enfeebled, degenerate, and disconnected from the nobler impulses of poetry and art. In Pindar the process of decadence had not begun. He stood at the very highest point which it was possible for a religious Greek to reach — combining the aesthetically ennobling enthusiasm for the old Greek deities with so much critical activity as enabled him to reject the grosser myths, and with that moderate amount of theological mysticism which the unassisted intellect of the Greeks seemed capable of receiving without degeneracy into puerile superstition. The first Olympian ode contains the most decided passages in illustration of his critical in- dependence of judgment : "Impossible is it for me to call one of the blessed ones a glutton : I stand aloof : loss hath often overtaken evil speakers. " Again : ' ' Truly many things are wonderful ; and it may be that in some cases fables dressed up with cunning fictions beyond the true account falsify the traditions of men. But Beauty, which is the author of all delicious things for mortals, by giving to these myths acceptance, ofttimes makes even what is incredible to be credible : but succeeding time gives the most certain evidence of truth ; and for a man to speak nobly of the gods is seemly; for so the blame is less." These two passages suffice to prove how freely Pindar handled 172 THE GREEK POETS. the myths, not indeed exposing them to the corrosive action of mere scepticism, but testing them* by the higher standard of the healthy human conscience. When he refuses to believe that the immortals were cannibals and eat the limbs of Pelops, he is like a rationalist avowing his disbelief in the doctrine of eternal damnation. His doubt does not proceed from irre- ligion, but from faith in the immutable holiness of the gods, who set the ideal standard of human morality. What seems to him false in the myths, he attributes to the accretions of ignorant opinion and vain fancy round the truth. The mystical element of Pindar's creed, whether we call it Orphic or Pythagorean, is remarkable for a definite belief in the future life, including a system of rewards and punishments, for the assertion of the supreme tribunal of conscience,t and finally, for a reliance on rites of purification. The most splendid passage in which these opinions are expressed by Pindar is that portion of the second Olympian in which he describes the torments of the wicked and the blessings of the just beyond the grave : — ' ' Among the dead, sinful souls at once pay penalty, and the crimes done in this realm of Zeus are judged beneath the earth by one who gives sentence under dire necessity. "But the good, enjoying perpetual sunlight equally by night and day, receive a life more free from woes than this of ours ; they trouble not the * Compare for a similar freedom of judgment Antigone's famous speech on the unwritten Laws. t The conscience forms a strong point in the ethical systems of many of the ancients, especially of Plato, of Lucretius, of Persius — authors otherwise dissimilar enough as representing three distinct species of thought. In Mythology it receives an imperfect embodiment in the Erinnyes, who, how- ever, are spiritual forces acting from without, rather than from within, upon the criminal. Purifying rites belonged to the Mysteries or reXerai ; they formed a prominent feature in the Ethics of Empedocles and Pythagoras, and an integral part of the cult of Apollo and the nether deities. Phi- losophers like Plato rejected them as pertaining to ceremonial superstition. PINDAR. 173 earth with strength of hand, nor the water of the sea for scanty sustenance ; but with the honoured of the gods, all they who delighted in the keeping of their oath pass a tearless age : the others suffer woe on which no eye can bear to look. Those who have thrice endured on either side the grave to keep their spirits wholly free from crime, journey on the road of Zeus to the tower of Cronos : where round the islands blow breezes ocean-bome : and flowers of gold burn some on the land from radiant trees, and others the wave feeds : with necklaces whereof they twine their hands and brows, in the just decrees of Rhadamanthus, whom father Cronos has for a perpetual colleague, he who is spouse of Rhea throned above all gods. , "Peleus and Cadmus are numbered among these: and thither was Achilles brought by his mother when she swayed the heart of Zeus with prayer ; he who slew Hector, the invincible firm pillar of Troy, and gave Cycnus to death and Eo's .^Ethiopian son." The following fragments from Threnoi* translated by Pro- fessor Conington, further illustrate Pindar's belief in a future state of weal or woe : " They from whom Persephone Due atonement shall receive For the things that made to grieve, To the upper sunlight she Sendeth back their souls once more, Soon as winters eight are o'er. From those blessed spirits spring Many a great and goodly king, Many a man of glowing might, Many a wise and learned wight : And while after-days endure, Men esteem them heroes pure. " And again : *' Shines for them the sun's warm glow When 'tis darkness here below : And the ground before their towers, Meadow-land with purple flowers, Teems with incense-bearing treen, Teems with fruit of golden sheen. Some in steed and wrestling feat, Some in dice take pleasure sweet, * Bunsen's God in History, vol. ii. pp. 144 and 136. 174 THE GREEK POETS. Some in harping: at their side Blooms the spring in all her pride. Fragrance all about is blown O'er that country of desire, Ever as rich gifts are thrown Freely on the far-seen fire, Blazing from the altar-stone. * * * # * But the souls of the profane, Far from heaven removed below, Flit on earth in murderous pain' 'Neath the unyielding yoke of woe ; While pious spirits tenanting the sky Chant praises to the mighty one on high. " For Pindar's conception of the destinies of frail humanity, take this sublime but melancholy ending to an ode* which has been full of triumphant exultation : " Brief is the growing-time of joy for mortals, and briefly too doth its flower fall to earth shaken by fell fate. Things of a day ! what are we — and what are we not ! A shadow's dream is man. But when the splendour that God gives descends, then there remains a radiant light and gladsome life for mortals." Compare with this the opening of the sixth Nemean : "One is the race of men, and one the race of gods ; from one mother we both draw breath. But a total difference of force divides us, since man's might is nought, while brazen heaven abideth a sure seat for aye. Never- theless, we are not all unlike immortals either in our mighty soul or strength of limb, though we know not to what goal of night or day fate hath written down for us to run." Passing to the consideration of Pindar purely as an artist, we may first examine the structure of his odes, and then illus- trate the qualities of his poetry by reference to some of the more splendid Proemia and descriptions. The task which lay before him when he undertook to celebrate a victory at one * Pyth. viii. PINDAR. 175 of the Greek games, was this. Some rich man had won a race with his chariot and horses, or some strong man had conquered his competitors by activity or force of limb. Pindar had to praise the rich man for his wealth and liberality, the strong man for his endurance of training and personal courage or dexterity. In both cases the victor might be felicitated on his good fortune — on the piece, of luck which had befallen him ; and if he were of comely person or illustrious blood, these also offered topics for congratulation. The three chief common- places of Pindar, therefore, are 6X(doq, aperij, evrvxia, wealth or prosperity, manliness or spirit, and blessings independent of both, god-given, not acquired. But it could not be that a great poet should ring the changes only on these three sub- jects, or content himself with describing the actual contest, which probably he had not witnessed. Consequently Pindar illustrates his odes with myths or stories bearing more or less closely on the circumstances of his hero. Sometimes he cele- brates the victor's ancestry, as in the famous sixth Olympian, in which the history of the Iamidas is given ; sometimes his city, as in the seventh Olympian, where he describes the birth- place of Diagoras, the island Rhodes ; sometimes he dwells upon an incident in the hero's life, as when in the third Pythian the illness of Hiero suggests the legend of Asclepius and Cheiron ; sometimes a recent event, like the eruption of Etna, alluded to in the first Pythian, gives colour to his ode ; sometimes, as in the case of the last Pythian, where the story of Medusa is narrated, thel egendary matter is introduced to specialize the nature of the contest. The victory itself is hardly touched upon : the allusions to o\/3oe, apery, cvrvxia, though frequent and interwoven with the texture of the ode, are brief: the whole poetic fabric is so designed as to be appropriate to the occasion and yet independent of it. There- fore Pindar's odes have not perished with the memory of the events to which they owed their composition. 176 THE GREEK POETS. Pindar's peculiar treatment of the Epinikian ode may best be illustrated by analyzing the structure of one or two of his poems. But first take this translation of one of the shorter and simpler of the series— the twelfth Pythian : " To thee, fairest of earthly towns, I pray — Thou splendour-lover, throne of Proserpine, Piled o'er Girgenti's slopes, that feed alway Fat sheep ! — with grace of gods and men incline, Great queen, to take this Pythian crown and own Midas ; for he of all the Greeks, thy son, Hath triumphed in the art which Pallas won, Weaving of fierce Gorgonian throats the dolorous moan. "She from the snake-encircled hideous head Of maidens heard the wailful dirges flow, What time the third of those fell Sisters bled By Perseus' hand, who brought the destined woe To vexed Seriphos. He on Phorkys' brood Wrought ruin, and on Polydectes laid Stern penance for his mother's servitude, And for her forceful wedlock, when he slew the maid ' ' Medusa. He by living gold, they say, Was got on Danae : but Pallas bore Her hero through those toils, and wrought the lay Of full-voiced flutes to mock the ghastly roar Of those strong jaws of grim Euryale : A goddess made and gave to men the flute, The fountain-head of many a strain to be, That ne'er at game or nation's feast it might be mute, "Sounding through subtle brass and voiceful reeds, Which near the city of the Graces spring By fair Cephisus, faithful to the needs Of dancers. Lo ! there cometh no good thing Apart from toils to mortals, though to-day Heaven crown their deeds : yet shun we not the laws Of Fate ; for times impend when chance withdraws What most we hoped, and what we hoped not gives for aye." Here it will be seen that Pindar introduces his subject with a panegyric of Girgenti, his hero's birthplace. Then he names PINDAR. 177 Midas, and tells the kind of triumph he has gained. This leads him to the legend of Medusa. The whole is concluded with moral reflections on the influence of Fate over human destinies. The structure of the sixth Pythian is also very- simple. " I build an indestructible treasure-house of praise for Xenocrates (lines 1-18), which Thrasybulus, his son, gained for him ; as Antilochus died for Nestor (19-43), so Thrasybulus has done what a son could for his father (44-46) ; wise and fair is he in his youth ; his company is sweeter than the honeycomb" (47-54). One of the longest odes, the fourth Pythian, is constructed thus : " Muse ! celebrate Arcesilaus (1-5). Cyrene, Arcesilaus' home; its foundation and the oracle given to Battus (5-69). The tale of the Argonauts, ancestors of the founders of Thera and of Cyrene (69-262). Advice to Arcesilaus in the interest of Demophilus " (263-299). Here the victory at Pytho is but once briefly alluded to (1. 64). The whole ode consists of pedigree and political admonition, either directly administered at the end, or covertly conveyed through the example of Pelias. The sixth Olympian, which contains the pedigree of the Iamidae, is framed on similar principles. The third Pythian introduces its mythology by a different method : " I wish I could restore Cheiron, the healer and the tutor of Asclepius, to life (1-7). The story of Coronis, her son Asclepius, and Hippolytus (7-58). Moral, to be con- tent and submit to mortality (58-62). Yet would that Cheiron might return and heal Hiero (62-76)! I will pray; and do you, Hiero, remember that Heaven gives one blessing and two curses, and that not even Cadmus and Peleus were always fortunate (17-106). May I suit myself always to my fortune 1 " (107-115). The whole of this ode relates to Hiero's illness, .and warns him of vicissitudes : even the episode of Coronis and Aslepicus contains a covert warning against arrogance, while it gracefully alludes to Hiero's health. The originality and splendour of Pindar are most noticeable N 178 THE GREEK POETS. in the openings of his odes — the Proemia, as they are techni- cally called. It would appear that he possessed an inexhaustible storehouse of radiant imagery, from which to draw new thoughts for the commencement of his poems. In this region, which most poets find but barren, he displayed the fullest vigour and fertility of fancy. Sometimes, but rarely, the opening is simple, as in the second Olympian : " Hymns that rule the lyre ! what god, what hero, what man shall we make famous?" Or the ninth Pythian : " I wish to proclaim, by help of the deep- girdled Graces, brazen-shielded Telesicrates, Pythian victor," &c. Rather more complex are the following : Nem. iv. " The joy of the feast is the best physician after toil ; but songs, the wise daughters of the Muses, soothe the victor with their touch : warm water does not so refresh and supple weary limbs as praise attended by the lyre ;" or again : 01. xi. " There is a time when men have greatest need of winds ; there is when heaven's showers of rain, children of the cloud, are sorest sought for. But if a man achieves a victory with toil, then sweet-voiced hymns arise as the beginning of future fame," &c. &c. But soon we pass into a more gorgeous region. " As when with golden columns reared beneath the well-walled palace-porch we build a splendid hall, so will I build my song. At the beginning of the work we must make the portal radiant."* Or again : " No carver of statues am I, to fashion figures stationary on their pedestal ; but come, sweet song ! on every argosy and skiff set forth from ^Egina to proclaim that Pytheas, Lampon's son, by strength of might is victor in Nemean games, upon whose chin and cheek you see not yet the tender mother of the vine-flower, summer's bloom." + Or again : " Hallowed bloom of youth, herald of Aphrodite's am- brosial pleasures, who, resting on the eyelids of maidens and of boys, bearest one aloft with gentle hands of violence, but another rudely \"% Or once again, in a still grander style : * 01. vi. ' f Nem. v. J Nem. viii. PINDAR. 179 "Listen ! for verily it is of beauty's queen, or of, the Graces, that we turn the glebe, approaching the rocky centre of the deep-voiced earth: where for the blest Emmenidse and stream-washed Acragas, yea, and for Zenocrates is built a treasure-house of Pythian hymns in the golden Apollonian vale. This, no rain of winter, driving on the wings of wind, the pitiless army of the rushing cloud, no hurricane, shall toss, storm- lashed with pebbles of the up-torn beach, into the briny ocean caves: but in pure light its glorious face shall speak the victory that brings a common fame on thy sire, Thrasybulus, and thy race, remaining in the windings of Crissean valleys." * We have already seen how Pindar compares his odes to arrows, to sun-soaring eagles, to flowers of the Muses, to wine in. golden goblets, to water, to a shrine which no years will fret away. Another strange figure t may be quoted from the third Nemean (line 76) : "I send to thee this honey mingled with white milk ; the dew of their mingling hangs around the bowl, a draught of song, flowing through the ^Eolian breath of flutes." It will be perceived that to what is called confusion of meta phors Pindar shows a lordly indifference. Swift and sudden lustre, the luminousness of a meteor, marks this monarch of lyric song. He grasps an image, gives it a form of bronze, irradiates it with the fire of flame or down-poured sunlight. To do justice to Pindar's power of narrative by extracts and • translations is impossible. No author suffers more by mutila- tion and by the attempt to express in another language and another rhythm what he has elaborately fashioned. Yet it may be allowed me to direct attention to the rapidity with which the burning of Coronis (Pyth. iii. 38), and the birth of Rhodes from the sea (01. vii. 54), are told in words the grandest, simplest, and most energetic that could be found. This is the birth of Iamos (01. vi. 39) : — "Nor could she hide from yEpytus the seed Divine : but he to Pytho, chewing care, * Pyth. vi. t Compare, too, Nem. vii. n, 62, 77. N 2 iSo THE GREEK POETS. Journeyed to gain for this great woe some rede ; She loosening her crimson girdle fair, And setting on the grourjd her silver jar, Beneath the darksome thicket bare a son, Within whose soul flamed godhead like a star ; And to her aid the golden-haired sent down Mild Eleithuia and the awful Fates, Who stood beside, while from the yearning gates " Of childbirth, with a brief and joyous pain, Came Iamos into the light, whom she therewith Sori-grieving left upon the grass : amain By gods' decree two bright-eyed serpents lithe Tended, and with the harmless venom fed Of bees, the boy ; nor ceased they to provide Due nurture. But the king, what time he sped Homeward from rocky Pytho, to his side Called all his household, asking of the son Borne of Evadne, for he said that none " But Phoebus was the sire, and he should be Chief for his prophecy 'mid mortal men, Nor should his children's seed have end. Thus he Uttered the words oracular ; and then They swore they had not heard or seen the child, Now five days old ; but he within the reed And thick-entangled woodland boskage wild, His limbs 'mid golden beams and purple brede Of gillyflowers deep-sunken, lay; wherefore He by his mother's wish for all time bore "That deathless name. But when he plucked the flower Of golden-wreathed youth, he went and stood Midmost Alpheus, at the midnight hour, And called upon the ruler of the flood, His ancestor Poseidon, and the lord Of god-built Uelos, praying that he might Rear up some race to greatness. Then the word Responsive of his sire upon the night Sounded : — ' Arise, my son, go forth, and fare Unto the land whereof all men shall share ! ' "So came they to the high untrodden mound Of Cronion ; and there a double meed PINDAR. 181 Of prophecy on Iamos was bound, Both from the voice that knows no lie to heed Immortal words, and next, when Heracles, Bold in his counsels, unto Pisa came, Founding the festivals of sacred peace And mighty combats for his father's fame, Then on the topmost altar of Jove's hill, The seat of sooth oracular to fill." After so much praise of Pindar's style, it must be confessed that he has faults. One of these is notoriously tumidity — an overblown exaggeration of phrase. For example, when he wants to express that he cannot enlarge on the fame of ^Egina, but will relate as quickly as he can the achievements of Aristomenes which he has undertaken, he says : — " But I am not at leisure to consecrate the whole long tale to the lyre and delicate voice, lest satiety should come and cause annoy : but that which is before my feet shall go at running speed — thy affair, my boy — the latest of the noble deeds made winged by means of my art."* The imaginative force which enabled him to create epithets like 4>iXv. These, poured forth by Pindar in the insolence of prodigality, when imitated by infe- rior poets, produced that inflated manner of lyrical diction which Aristophanes ridicules in Kinesias. The same may be said about his mixed metaphors, of which the following are fair examples : — So^av i%t>> tiv' siri yXdaai} ateovag \iyvpag ii p.' i9k\ovTa -irpoGzkKti KaWipooiOL itvoaig. — 01. vi. S2. Pyth. viii. 30. 1 82 THE GREEK POETS. K.i!>wav (rxaaov raxi 8' ayicvpav tptiaov \6ovi irpKkda — the same tvipvx'a, yewau>Tr)c, indifference to life when honour is at stake. The pride of her good name drives Phaedra to a crime more detest- able than Medea's, because her victim Hippolytus is eminently innocent. We do not want to dwell upon the pining sickness of Phsedra, which Euripides has wrought with exquisitely painful details, but rather to call attention to Hippolytus. Side by side with the fever of Phsedra is the pure fresh health of the hunter-hero. The scent of forest-glades, where he pursues the deer with Artemis, surrounds him; the sea-breeze from the sands, where he trains his horses, moves his curls. His piety is as untainted as his purity; it is the maiden-service of a maiden-saint. In his observance of the oath extorted from him by Phaedra's nurse, in his obedience to his father's will, in his kindness to his servants, in his gentle endurance of a pain- ful death, and in the joy with which he greets the virgin huntress when she comes to visit him, Euripides has firmly traced the ideal of a guileless, tranquil manhood. Hippolytus among the ancients was the Paladin of chastity, the Percival of their romance. Nor is any knight of mediaeval legend more 222 THE GREEK POETS. true and pure than he. Hippolytus first comes upon the stage with a garland of wild flowers for Artemis : — " Lady, for thee this garland have I woven Of wilding flowers plucked from an unshorn meadow, Where neither shepherd dares to feed his flock, Nor ever scythe hath swept, but through the mead Unshorn in spring the bee pursues her labours, And maiden modesty with running rills Waters the garden. Sweet queen, take my crown To deck thy golden hair : my hand is holy. To me alone of men belongs this honour, To be with thee and answer when thou speakest ; Yea, for I hear thy voice but do not see thee. So may I end my life as I began." Even in this bald translation some of the fresh morning feeling, as of cool fields and living waters, and pure companion- ship and a heart at peace, transpires. Throughout the play, in spite of the usual Euripidean blemishes of smart logic-chopping and pragmatical sententiousness, this impression is maintained. Hippolytus moves through it with the athletic charm that belongs to such statues as that of Meleager and his dog in the Vatican. At the end the young hero is carried from the sea- beach, mangled, and panting out his life amid intolerable pain and fever-thirst. His lamentations are loud and deep as he Calls on Death the healer. Then suddenly is he aware of the presence of Artemis : — " O, breath and perfume of the goddess ! Lo, I feel thee even in torment, and am eased ! Here in this place is Artemis the queen." The scent of the forest coolness has been blown upon him. His death will now be calm. "A. Poor man ! she is ; the goddess thou most loved. H. Seest thou me, lady, in what plight I lie ? A. I see thee ; but I may not drop a tear. H. Thou hast no huntsman and nc servant now. GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. 223 A. Nay, truly, since thou diest, dear my friend. H. No groom, no guardian of thy sculptured shrine. A. 'Twas Kupris, the arch-fiend, who wrought this woe. H. Ah, me ! Now know I what god made me die. A. Shorn of her honour, vexed with thy chaste life. H. Three of us her one spite — behold ! hath slain. A. Thy father and his wife, and thirdly thee. H. Yea, and I therefore mourn my sire's ill hap. A, Snared was he by a goddess's deceit. H. Oh ! for your sorrow in this woe, my father ! T. Son ! I have perished : life has now no joy. H. I mourn this error more for you than me. T. Would, son, I were a corpse instead of you. A. Stay ! for though earth and gloom encircle thee, Not even thus the anger unavenged •Of Kupris shall devour at will thy body : For I, with my own hand, to pay for thee Will pierce of men him whom she mostly dotes on, With these inevitable shafts. But thou, As guerdon for thine anguish, shalt henceforth Gain highest honours in Tfcezenian land, My gift. Unwedded maids before their bridals Shall shear their locks for thee, and thou for ever Shalt reap the harvest of unnumbered tears. Yea, and for aye, with lyre and song the virgins Shall keep thy memory ; nor shall Phsedra's love For thee unnamed fall in oblivious silence. But thou, O son of aged ^Egeus, take Thy child within thy arms and cherish him ; For without guile thou slewest him, and men, When the gods lead, may well lapse into error. Thee too I counsel ; hate not thy own father,. Hippolytus : 'twas fate that ruined thee." Thus Artemis reconciles father and son. Hippolytus dies slowly in the arms of Theseus, and the play ends. The ap- pearance of the goddess, as a lady of transcendent power more than as a divine being — her vindictive hatred of Aphrodite, and the moral that she draws about the fate by which Hippolytus died and Theseus sinned, are all thoroughly Euripidean. Not so would ^Eschylus the theologian, or Sophocles the moralist, 224 THE GREEK POETS. have dealt with the conclusion of the play. But neither would have drawn a more touching picture. The following scene from the opening of the Orestes may be taken as a complete specimen of the manner of Euripides when working pathos to its highest pitch, and when desirous of introducing into mythic history the realities of common life. Electra appears as the devoted sister; Orestes as the invalid brother; the Chorus are somewhat importunate, but, at the same time, sympathetic visitors. This extract also serves to illustrate the Euripidean habit of mingling lyrical dialogue with the more regular Iambic in passages which do not exactly correspond to the Commos of the elder tragedians, but which require highly-wrought expres- sion. Helen has just left Electra. As the wife of Menelaus walks away, the daughter of Agamemnon follows her with her eyes, and speaks thus : — " El. O nature ! what a curse art thou 'mid men — Yea, and a safeguard to the nobly-tempered ! [Points her finger at Helen. See how she snipped the tips of her long hair, Saving its beauty ! She's the same woman still. — May the gods hate thee for the ruin wrought On me, on him, on Hellas ! Woe is me ! [Sees the Chorus advancing. Here come my friends again with lamentations, To join their wails with mine : they'll drive him far From placid slumber, and will waste mine eyes With weeping when I see my brother mad. [Speaking to the Chorus. O dearest maidens, tread with feet of wool ; Come softly, make no rustling, raise no cry : For though your kindness be right dear to me, Yet to wake him will work me double mischief. [ The Chorus enters. Ch. Softly, softly ! let your tread Fall upon the ground like snow ! Every sound be dumb and dead : , Breathe and speak in murmurs low ! El. Further from the couch, I pray you ; further yet, and yet away ! Ch. Even so, dear maid, you see that I obey. GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. 225 El. Ah, my friend, speak softly, slowly, Like the sighing of a rush. Ch . See I speak and answer lowly With a stealthy smothered hush. El. That is right : come hither now ; come boldly forward to my side ; Come, and say what need hath brought you : for at length with watching tried, Lo, he sleeps, and on the pillow spreads his limbs and tresses wide. Ch. How is he ? Dear lady, say : Let us hear your tale, and know Whether you have joy to-day, Whether sorrow brings you low. El. He is breathing still, but slightly groaning in his sleep alway. Ch. O •poor man ! but tell us plainer what you say. El. Hush ! or you will scare the pleasant Sleep that to his eyelid brings Brief oblivion of the present. Ch. Ah, thrice wretched race that springs Burdened with the god-sent curses of abhorred deeds ! El. Ah me ! Guilty was the voice of Phoebus, when enthroned for prophecy, He decreed my mother's murder — mother murdered guiltily ! Ch. Look you, lady, on his bed, How he gently stirs and sighs ! El. Woe is me ! His sleep hath fled, Frightened by your noisy cries ! Ch. Nay ; I thought he sleeping lay. El. Hence, I bid you, hence away From the bedside, from the house ! Cease your noise ; Subdue your voice ; Stay not here to trouble us ! Ch. He is sleeping, and you rightly caution us. El. Holy mother, mother Night ! Thou who sheddest sleep on every wearied wight ! Arise from Erebus, arise With plumy pinions light : Hover o'er the house of Atreus ; and upon our aching eyes, Wearied with woe, With grief brought low, Solace bring 'mid miseries. Silence ! Hush ! what noise was this ? 226 THE GREEK POETS. Can you ne'er your tongue restrain, And allow soft slumber's kiss To refresh his fevered brain ? Ch. Tell me, lady, what the close Of his grief is like to be ? El. Death. Nought else will end his woes,. Lo, he fasts continually. Ch. i Alas ! Alas ! his fate is sure. El. By the promise, to make pure Hands a mother's life-blood stained, Phcebus brought Woe, and wrought All the grief that we have gained. Ch. Just it was to slay the slayer ; yet the deed with crime was fraught. El. Thou art dead : oh, thou art dead, Mother, who didst bear me ! mother, who didst shed A father's blood, and slay The children of thy bed ! We are dying, we are dying, like the dead, and weak as they : For thou art gone, And I am wan, Weeping, sighing night and day ! Look upon me, friends, behold How my withered life must run, Childless, homeless, sad and cold, Comfortless beneath the sun. Ch. Come hither, maid Electra, to the couch ; Lest haply he should breathe his life away Unheeded : I like not this deep dead languor. [ Orestes wakes up. Or. O soothing sleep ! dear friend ! best nurse of sickness ! How sweetly came you in my hour of need. Blest Lethe of all woes, how wise you are, How worthy of the prayers of wretched men ! Whence came I to this place? How journeyed I? I cannot think : my former mind is vanished. El. O dearest, how hath your sleep gladdened me ! Say, can I help to soothe or raise your body ? Or. Yes, take me, take me : with your kind hands wipe The foam of fever from my lips and eyes. El. Sweet is this service to me ; I am glad To soothe my brother with a sister's hand. GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. 227 Or. Support me with your breast, and fan my forehead ; Brush the loose hair : I scarce can see for sickness. El. Poor head ! How rough and tangled are the curls, How haggard is your face With long neglect ! Or. Now lay me back upon the bed again : When the fit leaves me, I am weak and helpless. El. Yea ; and the couch is some relief in sickness, A sorry friend, but one that must be borne with. Or. Raise me once more upright, and turn my body : Sick men are hard to please, through wayward weakness. El. How would you like to put your feet to earth ? 'Tis long since you stood up ; and change is pleasant. Or. True : for it gives a show of seeming health ; And shows are good, although there be no substance. [Orestes changes his posture and sits at ease. El. Now listen to me, dearest brother mine, While the dread Furies leave you space to think. Or. What have you new to say ? Good news will cheer me ; But of what's bad I have enough already. El. Menelaus is here, your father's brother : His ships are safely moored in Nauplia. Or. What ! Has he come to end your woes and mine ? He is our kinsman and our father's debtor. El: He has : and this is surety for my words — Helen hath come with him from Troy, is here. Or. If heaven had saved but him, he'd now be happier : But with his wife, he brings a huge curse home. El. Yea : Tyndareus begat a brood of daughters Marked out for obloquy, a shame through Hellas. Or. Be you then other than the bad ; you can : Make not fine speeches, but be rightly minded ! [As he speaks, he becomes excited. El. Ah me, my brother ! your eyes roll and tremble — One moment sane, and now swift frenzy fires you ! [Orestes speaks to phantoms in the air. Or. Mother, I sue to thee : nay, mother, hound not Those blood-faced, snake-encircled women on me ! There ! There ! See there — close by they bound upon me ! El. Stay, wretched brother ; start not from the bed ! For nought you see of what seems clear and certain. Or. O Phcebus ! They will slay me, those dog-faced, Fierce-eyed, infernal ministers, dread goddesses ! El. I will not leave you ! but with woven arms Q2 228 THE GREEK POETS. Will stay you from the direful spasm-throes. [Orestes hurls Electro, from him. Or. Let go ! Of my damned Furies thou art 'one, That with thy grip wouldst hale me down to hell ! El. Ah, woe is me ! what succour shall I find, Seeing the very gods conspire against us ? Or. Give me my bow and arrows, Phoebus' gift, Wherewith Apollo bade me fight the fiends, If they should scare me with wild-eyed delirium. Some god shall feel the fury of man's hand, Unless ye vanish forth from out my sight ! [He threatens the phantoms. Hear ye not ! See ye not the feathery wings Of swift, sure-striking shafts, ready to flutter ? Ha ! Ha ! Why linger here? Go, sweep with outspread pinions The windy sky ! Hence, and complain of Phoebus ! Woe's me ! [Recovering his reason again. Why waste I breath, wearying my lungs in vain ? Where am I ? From my bed how leaped I — when ? 'Midmost the waves once more I see fair weather. Sister, why weep you ? Wherefore veil your head ? I blush to see you partner of my woe, Blush that a girl should suffer in my sickness. Nay, do not pine thus, bowed beneath my burden — All mine ; — you said but yea, 'twas I who shed Our mother's blood : but Loxias I blame, Who urging me to most unholy deeds Helped me with words, in act availed me nothing. Yea, and I think my sire, if, face to face, I asked him — is it right to slay my mother ? Would lengthen many prayers, beseeching me Never to draw my sword on her who bare me, Seeing he might not see the sun again, And I am doomed to bear this weight of horrors. But now unveil your face again, dear sister, And cease from weeping — even though we be Ringed round with sorrows. When you see me downcast, Soothe you my terror and my frenzied soul — Soothe and caress me ; yea, and when you moan, 'Tis mine to stay and comfort as I can : For these kind services' of friends are fair. But, dear, sad sister, go into the house, GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. 229 And give your watchful eyes to sleep, and rest ; Take food, and with fair water bathe yourself. For think, if you should fail me, if by watching You take some sickness, then we're lost : 'tis you, You only, are my help ; all else is vanished. El. Not so. With you to die I choose, with you To live : it is all one : r for if you perish, What shall I do — a woman ? How shall I, Brothei-less; friendless, fatherless, alone, Live on ? Nay, if you ask it, I will do Your will : but, brother, rest you on your bed ; Nor take the terror and the startling fear For more than phantoms : stay upon the couch. For though one is not sick and only seems, Yet is this pain and weariness to mortals. This scene, for variety of motive and effect, is not excelled by any passage in ancient tragedy. The scope which it afforded for impressive acting must have been immense, though it is difficult to understand how the fixed masks and conventional dresses of the Greek stage could have been adapted to the violent and frequent changes of mood exhibited by Orestes. Adequately to render the effect of the lyrical dialogue between Electra and the Chorus is very difficult. I have attempted to maintain in some degree the antistrophic pauses, and by the use of rhyme, to hint how very near the tragedy of the Greeks approached, in scenes like this, to the Italian opera. The entrance of the Chorus singing " Silence, " can only be paralleled by passages in which the spies or conspirators of .Rossini or Mozart appear upon the stage, whispering "Zitto, Zitto !" to the sound of subdued music. In the same way Electra's impassioned apostrophe to Night must have been the subject of an elaborate Aria. It is hard, while still beneath the overshadowing presence of so great a master as Euripides, to have patience with the critics and the scholars who scorn him-. — critics who cannot compre- hend him, scholars who have not read him since they were at 230 THE GREEK POETS. school. Decadence ! is their cry. Yet what would they have ? Would they ask for a second Sophocles, or a revived ^-Eschylus ? That being clearly impossible, beyond all scope of wish, why will they not be satisfied with beauty as luminous as that of a Greek statue or a Greek landscape, with feeling as profound as humanity itself, and with wisdom "musical as is Apollo's lute" ? These are the qualities of a great poet, and we contend that Euripides possesses them in an eminent degreee. It is false criticism, surely, to do as Schlegel, Miiller, and Bunsen have successively done* — to measure Euripides by the standard of the success of his predecessors, or to ransack his plays for illustrations of pet dramatic theories, and then because he will not bear these tests, to refuse to see his own distinguished merits. It would sometimes seem as if our nature were exhausted by its admiration of a Sophocles or a Shakspere. There is no enthusiasm left for Euripides and Fletcher. Euripides, after all is said, incontestably displays the quality of radiancy. On this we are willing to base a portion of his claim to rank as a great poet. An admirer of ^Eschylus or Sophocles might affirm that neither ^Eschylus nor Sophocles chose to use *Goethe wasvery severe on the critics who could not appreciate Euripides : ' ' to feel and respect a great personality, one must be something oneself. All those who denied the sublime to Euripides, were either poor wretches incapable of comprehending such sublimity, or shameless charlatans, who, by their presumption, wished to make more of themselves, and really did make more of themselves than they were." (Eciermann's Conversations of Goethe, English edn., vol. ii. p. 377.) In another place he indicates the spirit in which any adverse criticism of Euripides should be attempted : " A poet whom Socrates called his friend, whom Aristotle'lauded, whom Menander admired, and for whom Sophocles and the city of Athens put on mourning on hearing of his death, must certainly have been something. If a modern man like Schlegel must pick out faults in so great an ancient, he ought only to do it upon his knees." (lb., vol. i. p. 378.) Again (ib., vol. i. p. 260), he energetically combats the opinion that Euripides had caused the decline of Greek tragedy« GREEK TRAGEDY AND EURIPIDES. 231 their art for the display of thrilling splendour. However that may be, Euripides, alone of Greeks, with the exception of Aristophanes, entered the fairyland of dazzling fancy which Calderon and Shakspere and Fletcher trod. The Baccha, like the Birds, proves, what otherwise we might have hardly known, that there lacked not Greeks for whom the Tempest and A Midsummer Nighfs Dream would have been intelligible. Meanwhile, in making any estimate of the merits of Euripides, it would be unfair to omit mention of the enthusiasm felt for him by contemporaries and posterity. Mr. Browning, in the beautiful monument which he has erected to the fame of Euripides, has chosen for poetical treatment the well-known story of Athenians rescued from captivity by recitation of the verses of their poet. There is no reason to doubt a story which attests so strongly to the acceptation in which Euripides was held at large among the Greeks. Socrates, again, visited the theatre on the occasion of any representation of his favourite's plays. By the new comedians, Menander and Philemon, Euripides was regarded as a divine miracle. Tragedy and comedy, so dissimilar in their origins, had approximated to a coalition ; tragedy losing its religious dignity, comedy quitting its obscene though splendid personalities; both meeting on the common ground of daily life. In the decadence of Greece it was not ^Eschylus and Aristophanes, but Euripides and Menander, who were learned and read arid quoted. The colossal theosophemes of ^Eschylus called for profound reflec- tion ; the Titanic jokes of Aristophanes taxed the imagination to its utmost stretch. But Euripides "the human, with his droppings of warm tears," gently touched and soothed the heart. Menander with his facile wisdom flattered the intellect of worldly men. The sentences of both were quotable at large and fit for all occasions. They were not too great, too lofty too resplendent for the paths of common life. We have lost 232 THE GREEK POETS. Menander, alas ! but we still possess Euripides. It seems a strange neglect of good gifts to shut our ears to his pathetic melodies and ringing eloquence — because, forsooth, ^Eschylus and Sophocles had the advantage of preceding him, and were superior artists in the bloom and heyday of the young world's prime. CHAPTER VIII. A R IS TOPHANES. ■ Heine's critique on Aristophanes. — Aristophanes as a poet of the fancy. — The nature of his comic grossness. — Greek Comedy in its relation to the worship of Dionysus. — Greek acceptance of the animal conditions of humanity. — His Burlesque, Parody, Southern sense of fun. — Aristophanes and, Menander — His greatness as a Poet. — Glimpses of pathos. — His Conservatism and serious aim. — Socrates, Agathon, Euripides. — German critics of Aristophanes. — Ancient and Modern Comedy.— The Birds. — The Clouds. — Greek youth and education. — The Allegories of Aristophanes. — The Thesmoplwriazusa — Aristo- phanes and Plato. "A. deep* idea of world-destruction (Wettvernichtungsidee) lies at the root of every Aristophanic comedy, and, like a fantas- tically ironical magic tree, springs up in it with blooming orna- ment of thoughts, with singing nightingales, and climbing, chattering apes." This is a sentence translated from the German of Heinrich Heine, who, of all poets, was the one best fitted to appreciate the depth of Aristophanes, to pierce beneath his smiling comic mask, and to read the underlying Weltver- nichtungsidee with what he calls its " jubilee of death and fire- works of annihilation." Perhaps, as is common with German writers of imagination, Heine pushes his point too far, and insists with too much force upon the "jubilee of death," " the * It is almost impossible to translate this word, which will frequently recur in the essay, and which seems to depend for its force upon the con- ception of theeatiric spirit, as that which " stets vernichtet," the Mephis- tophilistic " verneinender Geist." 234 THE GREEK POETS. fireworks of annihilation." The strong wine of his own paradox intoxicates his judgment, and his taste is somewhat perverted by the Northern tendency to brood upon the more fantastic aspects of his subject. It is not so much Aristophanes himself whom Heine sees, as Aristophanes reflected in the magic mirror of his own melancholy and ironical fancy. Yet, after making these deductions, the criticism I have quoted seems to me to be the proper preface to all serious study of the greatest comic poet of the world. It strikes the true keynote, and tunes our apprehension to the right pitch ; for, in approaching Aris- tophanes, we must divest our minds of all the ordinary canons and definitions of comedy : we must forget what we have learned from Plautus and Terence, from Moliere and Jonson. No modern poet, except perhaps Shakspere and Calderon in parts, will help us to understand him. We must not expect to find the gist of Aristophanes in vivid portraits of character, in situations borrowed from every-day life, in witty dialogues, in carefully constructed plots arriving at felicitous conclusions. All these elements, indeed, he has ; but these are not the main points of his art. His plays are not comedies in the sense in which we use the word, but scenic allegories, Titanic farces in which the whole creation is turned upside down ; transcendental, travesties, enormous orgies of wild fancy and unbridled imagi- nation, Dionysiac dances in which tears are mingled with laughter, and fire with wine ; Choruses that, underneath their oceanic merriment of leaping waves, hide silent deeps of unstirred thought. If Coleridge was justified in claiming the German word Lustspiel for the so-called comedies of Shak- spere, we have a far greater right to appropriate this wide and pregnant title to the plays of Aristophanes. The brazen mask which crowns his theatre smiles indeed broadly, serenely, as if its mirth embraced the universe; but its hollow eye-sockets suggest infinite possibilities of profoundest irony. Buffoonery carried to the point of paradox, wisdom disguised as insanity, ARISTOPHANES. 235 and gaiety concealing the whole sum of human disappoint- ment, sorrow, and disgust, seem ready to escape from its open but rigid lips, which are moulded to a proud perpetual laughter. It is a laughter which spares neither God nor man — which climbs Olympus only to drag down the Immortals to its scorn, and trails the pall of august humanity in'- the mire ; but which, amid its mockery and blasphemy, seems everlastingly asserting, as by paradox, that reverenoe of the soul which bends our knees to Heaven and makes us respect our brothers. There is nothing sinister or even serious in Aristophanes. He did not write in the sarcastic, cynical old age of his nation or his era. He is rather the voice of its superabundant youthfulness : his genius is like a young man, sporting in his scorn of danger, with the thought of death ; like Achilles, in the sublimity of his beauty, mimicking the gestures of Thersites. Nor, again, are his thoughts shaded down, concealed, wrapped up in symbols. On the contrary, the very " Weltvernichtungsidee " of which Heine speaks, leaps forth and spreads its wings beneath the full blaze of Athenian noon-day, showing a glorious face, as of sculptured marble, and a comely person unashamed. It is not the morbid manifestations of sour secretions and unnatural juices, but the healthy product of keen vitality and perfectly harmonious functions. Into the clear light his para- doxes, and his irony, and his unblushing satire spring like song- birds rejoicing in their flight. Then, again, how miraculously beautiful are " the blooming ornament of thoughts," " the nightingales and climbing apes," of which we spoke ! No poet — not even Shelley — has exceeded the choruses of the Birds and Clouds in swiftness, radiance, and condensed imagination. Shakspere alone, in his Midswmner Night's Dream, and the Tempest; or Calderon, in some of his allegorical dramas, carries us away into the same enchanted land, where the air is purer and the skies are larger than in our world ; where the stars are close above our heads, and where 236 THE GREEK POETS. the flowers harbour visible spirits — elfs and Ariels clinging to. the branches, and dazzling fireflies tangled in the meadow- grass beneath' our feet. Nor is it only by this unearthly splendour of visionary loveliness that Aristophanes attracts us. Beauty of a more mundane and sensual sort is his. Multitudes of brilliant ever-changing figures fill the scene ; and here and there we find a landscape or a piece of music and moonlight glowing with the presence of the vintage god. Bacchic proces- sions of young men and maidens move before us, tossing inspired heads wreathed with jasmine flowers and wet with wine. The Mystse in the meadows of Elysium dance their rounds with the clash of cymbals and with madly twinkling snow-white feet. We catch glimpses at intervals of Athenian banquets, of midnight serenades, of the palasstra with its crowd of athletes, of the Panathenaic festival as Pheidias carved it, of all the busy rhythmic coloured life of Greece. The difficulty of treating Aristophanes in an essay is twofold. There are first of all those obstacles which every writer on so old a subject has to meet. Aristophanes, like all Greek poets, has been subjected to prolonged and most minute criticism. He has formed a part of classical education for centuries, and certain views about his poetry, substantially correct, have be- come a fixed element in our literary consciousness. Thus every fresh writer on the old Comedy of Athens must take a good deal of knowledge for granted in his readers — but what and how much he hardly knows. He may expect them to be acquainted with the details furnished by scholars like Donald- son about the times at which comedies were exhibited, the manner of their presentation on the stage, and the change from the old to the middle and new periods. He may suppose that they will know that Aristophanes stood in the same relation to Cratinus as Sophocles to yEschylus ; that the Clouds had not so much to do with the condemnation of Socrates as some of the later Greek gossips attempted to make out ; that Aristo- ARISTOPHANES. 237 phanes was Conservative in politics, philosophy, and literature, vehemently opposing the demagogues, the sophists, and Euri- pides. Again, he may, or rather he must, avoid the ground which has been so well trodden by Schlegel, Miiller, and Mitchell, in their familiar criticisms of Aristophanes : and lie may content himself with a passing allusion to Grote's dis- cussion of the Clouds. But though, from this point of view, Aristophanes is almost stale from having been so much written about and talked about and alluded to — though in fact there is a prima facie obligation imposed on every one who makes his plays the subject of fresh criticism to pretend at least to some originality of view or statement — still Aristophanes has never yet been fairly dealt with or submitted to really dispas- sionate consideration. Thus he shares in common with all poets of antiquity the disabilities of being hackneyed, while he has the peculiar and private disability of never having been really appreciated at his worth except by a few scholars and enthusiastic poets. The reason for this want of intelligence in the case of Aristophanes is not hard to seek. First of all, his plays are very difficult. Their allusions require much learned illustration. Their vocabulary is copious and rare. So that none but accomplished Grecians or devoted students of litera- ture can hope to read him with much pleasure to themselves. In a translation his special excellence is almost unrecognizable. Next — and this is the real reason why Aristophanes has been unfairly dealt with, as well as the source of the second class of difficulties which meet his interpreters — it is hard for the modern Christian world to tolerate his freedom of speech and coarseness. Of all the Greeks, essentially a nude nation, he is the most naked — the most audacious in his revelation of all that human nature is supposed to seek to hide. The repug- nance felt for his ironical insouciance and for his profound indelicacy has prevented us from properly valuing his poetry. Critics begin their panegyrics of him with apologies ; they lift 233 THE GREEK POETS. their skirts and tread delicately, passing over his broadest humour sicco pede, picking their way among his heterogeneous images, winking and blinking, hesitating and condoning, omitting a passage here, attempting to soften an allusion there, until the real Aristophanes has almost disappeared. Yet there is no doubt that this way of dealing with our poet will not do. The time has come at which any writer on Greek literature, if not content to pass by Aristophanes in silence, must view him as he is, and casting aside for a moment at least the veil of modern propriety, must be prepared to admit that this great comic genius was " far too naked to be shamed." So important is this point in the whole of its bearing upon Aristophanes, that I may perhaps be allowed to explain the peculiar position which he occupies, and, without seeking to offer any exculpation for what offends us in the moral . sensi- bilities of the Greeks, to show how such a product as the Comedy of Aristophanes took root and grew in Athens. His plays, I have already said, are not comedies in the modern sense, but Lustspiele — fantastic entertainments, debauches of the reason and imagination. The poet, when he composed them, knew that he was writing for an audience of Greeks, inebriated with the worship of the vintage god, ivy-crowned, and thrilling to the sound of orgiastic flutes. Therefore, we who read him in the cool shades of modern Protestantism, excited by no Dionysiac rites, forced to mine and quarry at his jests with grammar, lexicon, and commentary,. unable, except by the exercise of the historical imagination, to conceive of a whole nation agreeing to honour its god by frantic license, must endeavour to check our natural indignation, and by no means to expect from Aristophanes such views of life as are consistent with our sober mood. We cannot, indeed, exactly apply to the case of Aristophanes those clever sophistries by which Charles Lamb defended the comic poets of our Restoration, when he said that they had created an unreal world, and that, allowing ARISTOPHANES. 239 for their fictitious circumstances, the perverse morality of their plays was not only pardonable but even necessary. Yet it is true that his audacious immodesty forms a part of that Weltver- nichtungsidee, of that total upturn and Titanic revolution in the universe, which he affects ; and so far we may plead in his defence, and in the defence of the Athenian spectators, that his comedies were 'consciously exaggerated in their coarseness, and that beyond the limits of the Dionysiac festival their jokes would not have been tolerated. To use a metaphor, his plays were offered as a sacrifice upon the thymele or orchestral altar of that Bacchus who was sire by Aphrodite" of Priapus : this potent deity protected them; and the poet, as his true and loyal priest, was bound, in return for such protection, to repre- sent the universe at large as conquered by the madness of intoxication, beauty, and desire. Thus the Aristophanic comedies are in one sense a radiant and pompous show, by which the genius of the Greek race chose, as it were in bravado, to celebrate an apotheosis of the animal functions of humanity ; and from this point of view we may fairly accept them as visions, Dionysiac day-dreams, from which the nation woke and rose and went about its business soberly, until the Bacchic flutes were heard again another year. On the religious origin of Greek Comedy some words may perhaps be reckoned not out of place in this connection. It has frequently been pointed out to what a great extent the character of the Aristophanic Comedy was determined by its sacred nature, and by the peculiar condition of semi-religious license which prevailed at Athens during the celebration of the festival of Bacchus. We know that much is tolerated in a Roman or Venetian carnival which would not be condoned at other seasons of the year. Yet the Italian carnival, in its palmiest days, must have offered but a very poor and frigid picture of what took place in Athens at the Dionysia, nor was the expression of the crudest sensuality ever thought agreeable 2 4 o THE GREEK POETS. to any modern saint. That the Greeks most innocently and simply wished to prove their piety by these excesses is quite clear. Aristophanes himself, in the Acharnians, gives us an example of the primitive Phallic Hymn, which formed the nucleus of Comedy in its rudest stage. The refrain of ipaXijs, l-alpc Ba^t'ov, ^vyKw/ic, vvKTtpoirkavrjTe, poiyi, sufficiently indi- cates its nature. Again, the Choruses of the Mystae in the Frogs furnish a still more brilliant example of the intermingle- ment of debauchery with a spirit of true piety, of sensual pleasure with pure-souled participation in divine bliss. Their hymns to Iacchus and Demeter alternate between the holiest strains of praise and the most scurrilous satire. At one time they chant the delights of the meadows blooming with the rose ; at another they raise cries of jubilant intoxication and fierce frenzy.- In the same breath with the utterance of sensual passion, they warn all profane persons and impure livers to avoid their rites, and boast that for them alone the light of heaven is gladsome, who have forsworn impiety and preserved the justice due to friends and strangers. We must imagine that this Phallic ecstasy, if we may so name it, had become, as it were, organized and reduced to system in the Aristophanic Lustspiel. It permeates and gives a flavour to the comic style long after it has been absorbed and superseded by the weightier interests of developed art. This ecstasy implied a profound sympathy with nature in her large and perpetual reproductiveness, a mysterious sense of the sexuality which pulses in all members of the universe and reaches conscious- ness in man. It encouraged a momentary subordination of the will and intellect and nobler feelings to the animal propensities, prompting the same race which had produced the sculptures of the Parthenon, the tragedies of ^Eschylus, the deeds of Pericles and Leonidas, the self-control of Socrates, the thought of Plato, to throw aside its royal mantle of supreme humanity, and to proclaim in a gigantic work of art the ARISTOPHANES. 241 irreconcilable incongruity which exists between the physical nature and the spirit of the man, when either side of the antithesis is isolated for exclusive contemplation. We need not here point out how far removed was the Phallic ecstasy from any prurient delight in licentious details, or from the scientific analysis of passions. Nor, on the other hand, need we indicate the vein of a similar extravagant enthusiasm in Oriental poetry. It is enough to remember that it existed latent in all the comic dramas of the earlier period, throbbing through them as the seve de lajeunesse palpitates in youthful limbs and adds a glow and glory to the inconsiderate or unseemly acts of an Alcibiades or Antony. Christianity, by introducing a new con- ception of the physical relations of humanity, by regarding the body as the temple of the spirit, utterly rejected and repudiated this delirium of the senses, this voluntary acceptance of merely animal conditions. Christianity taught mankind, what the Greeks had never learned, that it is our highest duty to be at discord with the universe upon this point. Man, whose subtle nature might be compared to a many-stringed instrument, is bidden to restrain the resonance of those chords which do not thrill in unison with purely spiritual and celestial har- monies. Hence the theories of celibacy and asceticism, and of the sinfulness of carnal pleasure, which are wholly alien to Greek moral and religious notions. Never since the age of Athenian splendour has a rational and highly civilized nation dared to express by any solemn act its sense of union with merely physical nature. Aristophanes is therefore the poet of a past age, the " hierophant of a now unapprehended mystery," the unique remaining example of an almost unlimited genius set apart and consecrated to a cultus which subsequent civiliza- tion has determined to annihilate. The only age which offers anything like a parallel to the Athenian era of Aristophanes is that of the Italian Renaissance. In the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, at Venice, Florence, and Rome, it seemed as if the R 242 THE GREEK POETS. Phallic ecstasy might possibly revive, as if the animal nature of man might again be deified, in sentiment at least, and as if the highest arts might stoop once more to interpret and to con- secrate the poetry of the senses. But the conscience of the world was changed ; and this could no longer be. The image of Christ crowned with thorns had passed across the centuries ; hopes undreamed of by the Greeks had aroused a new spirit in the soul of man, and had forced him, in spite of inclination, to lift his eyes from earth to heaven. Over the joys of the flesh, which were connected with a future doom of pain unending and disgrace, was shed a hue of gloom and horror. Conception was looked upon as sin : birth as disaster. It was even doubted whether for any but for virgins, except by some special privilege of election, salvation could be hoped. Therefore, while the Greeks had been innocent in their serene uncon- sciousness of sin or shame, the extravagances of the Renais- sance were guilty, turbid, and morbid, because they were committed defiantly, in open rerpobacy, in scorn of the acknowleged law. What was at worst bestial in the Greeks has become devilish in the Renaissance. How different from a true Greek is Benvenuto Cellini : how unlike the monsters even of Greek mythic story is Francesco Cenci : how far more awful in his criminality is the Borgia than any despot of Greek colony or island ! I have been somewhat led astray from the point in view, which was to prove that the comedies of Aristophanes embody a peculiar and temporary, though recur- ring and recognized, phase of Greek feeling — that they owe their license in a great measure to their religious origin, and to the enthusiasm of the Bacchic ecstasy. But what has just been said about the difference between Athenian Greece and the Italian Renaissance will show that Aristophanes has a still more solid ground of defence in the fact that he was thoroughly in harmony with the moral sense of his age and nation, and that the Bacchic license was only an ARISTOPHANES. 243 exaggeration of more ordinary habits both of thought and action. It must be acknowledged that the Greeks were devoid of what we call shame and delicacy in respect of their bodies. It was only in the extreme old age of the Greek race, and under the dominion of Oriental mysticism, that the Alexandrian Plotinus was heard to exclaim that he blushed because he had a body. The true Greeks, on the contrary, were proud of the body, loved to display their physical perfections, felt no shame of any physical needs, were not degraded by the exercise of any animal function, nay poetized the pleasures of the flesh. Simonides, in his lines on Happiness, prays first for health, and next for beauty ; and a thousand passages might be quoted to prove how naturally and sincerely the Greeks reckoned physical beauty among the -chief goods of life, and how freely they exhibited it in all its splendour. As a slight indication of the popular feeling we might quote the reproof for effeminacy which Aristophanes utters against the young men who thought it necessary to appear clothed at the Pan- athenaic festival, from which it is clear that the Greek con- science connected nudity with purity. The immense value attached to physical beauty is evident even from their military history — from the record, for instance, of Callicrates among the heroes of Plataea simply because he was the fairest of the Greeks who fought that day. Again, Herodotus tells of one Philippus, who joined in the expedition of Dorieus against Eryx, and who being slain and stripped by the people of Segeste, was taken up by his foes and nobly buried, and thereafter wor- shipped as a hero on account of his exceeding beauty. The influence which the sight of beauty exercised over the gravest of the Greeks is proved by the story of Phryne before the Areo- pagus, and by what Plato tells of Socrates at the beginning of the Charmides. How it could electrify a nation assembled in the theatre, is shown by Plutarch's story of the slave whom Nicias set free for winning the applause of all Athens when a 2 244 THE GREEK POETS. acting Dionysus, and by Xenophon's tale'about another Dorieus whom the Athenians, though he was their deadly foe, released ransomless and scatheless, after he had been captured and sent to Attica, because he was a very goodly man. Nor was it the sense of beauty only, or the open exhibition of the person, which marked the Greeks. Besides this, and perhaps flowing from it, we find in them an extraordinary callousness with regard to many things which we think shocking and degrading in the last degree. The mere fact that Alcibiades, while a minister of the Athenian people, could have told the tales of his youth, recorded in Plato's Banquet, or that grave men could have contended without reserve for the favour of distinguished cour- tesans, proves that the Athenian public was ready to accept whatever Aristophanes might set before them — not to take his jokes scornfully, as a Roman patron trifled with the inuendoes of his Grceculus esuriens, but while enjoying them, to respect their author. Nor is Aristophanes without another solid ground of defence, on the score of sincerity and healthiness. In his immodesty there is nothing morbid, though it is expressed more crudely than suits the moral dignity of man. Aristophanes is never prurient, never in bad taste or vulgar. He has none of the obscenity which revolts us in Swift, who uses filth in order to degrade and violate our feelings ; none of the nastiness of Moliere or Pope, whose courtly and polished treatment of dis- gusting subjects is a disgrace to literature; none of the coarse- ness of Ben Jonson ; none of the far more indecent inuendo which contaminates the writings of humorists like Sterne and satirists like Voltaire, who seem always trying, childishly or apishly, to tamper with forbidden things. Aristophanes accepts licentiousness as a fact which needs no apology : he does not, as the moderns do, mingle it with sentiment or indulge in it on the sly. He has no polissonnerie : the vice 'egrillard of the French (from whom we are obliged to borrow these phrases) is ARISTOPHANES. 245 unknown to him. His license is large, serene, sane, statuesque, self-approved. His sensuality is nonchalant and natural — so" utterly devoid of shame, so thoroughly at home and well con- tented with itself, that it has no perturbation, no defiance, no mysterious attractiveness. Besides he is ironical : his ora-Eil/w\?j- jxivoi and ciipvirpwKroi promenade in noonday, and get laughed at, instead of being stoned and hooted down. About the au- dacious scene between Kinesias and Murrhine", in the Lysis- trata, there is no Aretine hircosity. It is merely comic — a farcical incident, selected, not for the rankness of its details, but for its dramatic capabilities. The same may be said about the termination of the Thesmophoriazusce and the scene in the Ecclesiazusce, which so vividly illustrates the working of one law in the new commonwealth. So innocent in his unconsciousness is Aristophanes, that he rarely condescends even to satirize the sensual vices. The lines about Ariphrades in the Knights, how- ever, are an instance of his having done this with more than the pungency of Martial ; and it must be admitted that his pictures of the drunkenness and incontinence of the Athenian women have something Swiftish in their sarcasm. If we are to seek for an approximation to Aristophanic humour, we shall find it per- haps in Rabelais. Rabelais exhibits a similar disregard for decency, combining the same depth of purpose and largeness of insight with the same coarse fun. But in Aristophanes there is nothing quite grotesque and homely, whereas Rabelais is full of these qualities. Even the opening of the Peace, fantastic as it is in its absurdity, does not touch the note of grossness peculiar to French Pantagruelism. Aristophanes is always Greek, while Rabelais inherits the mediaeval spirit. In reading Aristophanes we seem to have the serene skies of Attica above our heads ; the columns of the Propylsea and the Parthenon look down on us ; noble shapes of youths and maidens are crowding sacred marble steps ; below, upon the mirror of the sea, shine Salamis and iEgina; and far off, in hazy distance, rise Peloponne- 245 THE GREEK POETS. sian hills. With these pictures of the fancy his comedy har- monizes. But Rabelais carries us away to Gothic courts and monkish libraries : we fill his margin with etchings in the style of Gustave Dore". What has been said of Rabelais applies with even greater force to Hogarth, whose absolute sincerity is as great a% that of Aristophanes, but who is never light and care- less. His coarseness is the product of a coarse nature, of coarse manners, of a period of national coarseness. We tolerate it because of the moral earnestness beneath : the artist is striving diligently to teach us by warning us of vice. This is hardly ever the case with Aristophanes. When he is coarse, we par- don him for very different reasons. In his wilful degradation of humanity to the level of animals we recognize a portion of the Weltvernichtungsidee. In the intellectual arrogance of the Athenian prime a poet could afford thus to turn the world up- side down. But those who cannot subscribe to the following dictum of Taine, which is very applicable to Aristophanes, — " Elevens a cette e'normite' et savourees avec cette insou- ciance, les fonctions co'rporelles deviennent po6tiques" — those who " Wink and shut their apprehension up From common sense of what men were and are, Who would not know what men must be " — will need to " hurry amain" from the masque of moral anarchy which the great comedian displays. With these remarks I may finally dismiss what has to be said about the chief disability under which Aristophanes labours as a poet. For the enjoyment of Aristophanic fun a sort of southern childishness and swiftness of gleeful apprehension is required. It does not shine so much in its pure wit as in its overflowing humour and in the inexhaustible fertility of ludicrous devices by which laughter is excited. The ascent of Trugaios to heaven upon the dung-beetle's back, and the hauling of Peace from her ARISTOPHANES. 247 well in the Eirene, or the wine-skin dressed up like a baby in the Thesmophoriazusa, may be mentioned as instances of this broad but somewhat peculiar drollery. Burlesquing the gods was always a capital resource of the comic poets ; if we in the nineteenth century can find any amusement whatever in Byron's or Burnand's travesties of Olympus, how exquisitely absurd to an Athenian mob must have been the figures of Prometheus under an umbrella, Heracles the glutton, Hermes and yEacus the household slaves, Bacchus the young fop, and Iris the soubrette. The puns of Aristophanes for the most part are very bad, but the parodies are excellent. Then the surprises (■n-apa. TrpualoKiai'), both of language and of incident, with which his comedies abound, the broad and genial caricatures which are so largely traced and carried out in detail with such force, the brilliant descriptions of familiar things seen from odd or unexpected points of view, and lastly the enormous quantity of mirth-producing matter which the poet squanders with the prodigality of conscious omnipotence, all contribute to heighten the comic effect of Aristophanes. Perhaps the most intelli- gible piece of fun, in the modern sense of the word, is the last sceneof the Thesmophoriazusce, which owes its effect to parody and caricature more than to allusions which are hard to seize. A great deal of the fun of Aristophanes must have depended upon local and personal peculiarities which we cannot under- stand : the constant references to the effeminate Cleisthenes, the skin-flint Pauson, miserly Patrocles, cowardly Cleonymus, Execestides the alien, Agyrrhius the upstart, make us yawn , because we cannot catch the exact point of the jests against them. Indeed, as Schlegel has said, " we may boldly affirm that, notwithstanding all the explanations which have come down to us — notwithstanding the accumulation of learning which has been spent upon it, one half of the wit of Aristophanes is altogether lost to the moderns." Having dismissed these preliminary considerations, we may 248 THE GREEK POETS. now ask what has caused the comedy of Aristophanes to triumph over the obstacles to its acceptance. Why have his plays been transmitted to posterity when those of Eupolis and Cratinus , have perished, and when scarcely a line of the eight hundred comedies of the middle period read by Athenseus has survived destruction ? No one has asked of Aristophanes the question which the Alexandrian critic put to Menander : " Oh, nature and Menander, which of you copied the other ? " Yet Menander is scarcely more to us than a name, or at best an echo sounding somewhat faintly from the Roman theatre, while Aristophanes survives among the most highly cherished monuments of anti- quity. The answer to this question is, no doubt, that Aris- tophanes was more worth preservation than his predecessors or successors. It is wiser to have confidence in the ultimate good taste and conservative instinct of humanity, than to accept Bacon's half-ironical, half-irritable saying, that the stream of time lets every solid substance sink, and carries down the froth and scum upon its surface. As far, at least, as it is possible to form a judgment, we may be pretty certain that' in the province of the highest art and of the deepest thought we possess the greater portion of those works which the ancients themselves prized highly; indeed, we may conjecture that had the great libraries of Alexandria and Byzantium been transmitted to us entire, the pure metal would not greatly have exceeded in bulk what we now possess, but would have been buried beneath masses of dross from which centuries would have scarcely sufficed to disengage it. Aristophanes was preserved in his integrity, we need not doubt, because he shone forth as a. poet transcendent for his splendour even among the most brilliant of Attic playwrights. Cratinus may have equalled or surpassed . him in keen satire : Eupolis may have rivalled him in exquisite artistic structure ; but Aristophanes must have eclipsed them, not merely by uniting their qualities successfully, but also by the exhibition of some diviner faculty, some higher spiritual ARISTOPHANES. 249 afflatus. If we analyze his art, we find that he combines the breadth of humour, which I have already sought to charac- terize, with the utmost versatility and force of intellect, with the power of grasping his subjects under all their bearings, with extraordinary depth of masculine good sense, with inexhaust- ible argumentative resources, and with a marvellous hold on personalities. Yet all these qualities, essential to a comic poet who pretended also to be the public censor of politics and morals, would not have sufficed to immortalize him had he not been essentially a poet — a poet in what we are apt to call the modern sense of the word — a poet, that is to say, endowed with original intuitions into nature, and with the faculty of presenting to our minds the most varied thoughts and feelings in language uniformly beautiful, as the creatures of an exube- rant and self-swayed fancy. Aristophanes is a poet as Shelley, or Ariosto, or Shakspere is a poet, far more than as Sophocles, or Pindar, or Lucretius is a poet. In spite of his profound art, we seem to hear him uttering "his native wood notes wild." The subordination of the fancy to the fixed aims of the reason, which characterizes classical poetry, is not at first sight striking in Aristophanes ; but he splendidly exhibits the wealth, luxuriance, variety, and subtlety of the fancy working with the reason, and sometimes superseding it, which we recognize in the greatest modern poets. If we seek to define the peculiar qualities of his poetic power, we are led' to results not easily expressed, because all general critical conclusions are barren and devoid of force when worded, but which may perhaps be stated and accepted as the text for future illustration. The poetry of Aristophanes is always swift and splendid. We watch its brilliant course as we might watch the flight of a strong rapid bird, whose plumage glitters by moments in the light of the sun ; for, to insist upon the metaphor, the dazzling radiance of his fancy only shines at intervals, capriciously, with 250 THE GREEK POETS. fitful flashes, coruscating suddenly and dying out again. It is as if the neck alone and a portion of the feathers of the soaring bird were flecked with gold and crimson grain, so that a turn of the body or a fluttering of the pinions is enough to bring the partial splendour into light or cast it into shadow. Aristophanes passes by abrupt transitions from the coarsest or most simply witty dialogue to passages of pure and plaintive song ; he quits his fiercest satire for refreshing strains of lark- like heaven-aspiring melody. These again he interrupts with sudden ruthlessness, breaking the melody in the middle of a bar, and dropping the unfinished stanza. He seems shy of giving his poetic impulse free rein, and prefers to tantalize * us with imperfect specimens of what he might achieve ; so that his splendour is like that of northern streamers in its lambency, though swift and piercing as forked lightnings in its intensity. Even his most*,impassioned and sustained flights of imagination are broken by digressions into satire, fantastic merriment, or parody, by which the more dull-witted Athenians must have been sorely puzzled in their inability to decide on the serious or playful purpose of the poet. Perhaps the most splendid passages of true poetry in Aristophanes are the Choruses of the initiated in the Frogs, the Chorus of the Clouds before they appear upon the stage, the invitation to the nightingale, and the parabasis of the Birds, the speech of Dikaios Logos in the Clouds, some of the praises of rustic life in the Peace, the sere- nade (notwithstanding its coarse satire) in the Ecclesiazusm, and the songs of Spartan and Athenian maidens in the Lysistrata. The charm of these marvellous lyrical episodes consists of their perfect simplicity and freedom. They seem to be poured forth * As a minor instance of these sudden transitions from the touching to the absurd, take Charon's speech (Frogs, 185) : — rig tig avairavXag fc/c icntcuiv Kai 7rpayfidro)v ; Tig tig to Ar}9tjg 7re5iov, rj 'g ovov -KOKag, ri 'g Kipfiepiovg, i) 'g Kopaicag, fj 'tti Taifctpov ; ARISTOPHANES. 251 as "profuse strains of unpremeditated art" from the fulness of the poet's soul. Their language is elastic, changeful, finely- tempered, fitting the delicate thought like a veil of woven air. It has no Pindaric involution, no^Eschylean pompousness, no studied Sophoclean subtlety, no Euripidean concetti. It is always bright and Attic, sparkling like the many-twinkling laughter of the breezy sea, or like the light of morning upon rain-washed olive-branches. But this poetry is never very deep or passionate. It cannot stir us with the intensity of Sappho, with the fire and madness of the highest inspiration. Indeed, the conditions of comedy precluded Aristophanes, even had he desired it, which we have no reason to suspect, from attempting the more august movements of lyric poetry. The peculiar glories of his style are its untutored beauties, the improvised perfection and unerring exactitude of natural expression, for wbich it is unparalleled by that of any other Greek poet. In her most delightful moments the muse of Aristophanes suggests an almost plaintive pathos, as if behind the comic mask there were a thinking, feeling human soul, as if the very uproar of the Bacchic merriment implied some afterthought of sadness. A detailed examination of the structure of the comedies would be the best illustration of these remarks. At present it will be enough to bring forward two examples of the tender melodies which may at times be overheard in pauses of the wild Aristophanic symphony. The first of these is the well- known Welcome to the Nightingale, sung by the Chorus before their Parabasis : — w 0i'X»7, w HovSrj, 5i (piXrarov 6pvsu>v r 7ra.VThiV %VVVQ\lt T&V i\Ltj}V vfiviov ^vvrpotj? dijdoZ ; rjXOtSt V^@££, <*> ica\\i(36av Kpeicovj' avXdv (pOkyftaffiv ripivdiQ, ap%ov t&v dvccirairTTutv. 252 THE GREEK POETS. With what a fluent caressing fulness one word succeeds another here ! How each expresses love and joy ! Remember, too, that all the birds are singing together, and that the wild throat of their playfellow, the nightingale, is ready to return the welcome with its throbbing song of Maytime and young summer. Take another poetic touch, brief and unobtrusive, yet painting a perfect picture with few strokes, and transfus- ing it with the spirit of the scene imagined : — aW dvafivTjffBsvTSCj tbvSptg, Ttjg SiatTt]Q Ttjg 7ra\atag, r)v irapfltf avrr) irod' rtjiiv, Tutv re irakaoibtv SKiLvwv, tS>v ti aitcoiv, twv re pipruiv, Trjq rpvyog te Tr\g y\vKtiag, ' Tijg iwviag ts TT)g -irpbg Tip Qpsari, tS>v Tt iXaiov, Hiv Tro9ovp.iv — " The violet-bed beside the well, and the olives which we long to see again." Trugaios is reminding his fellow-villagers of the pleasures of peace and of their country life. Those who from their recollection of southern scenery can summon up the picture, who know how cool and shady are those wells, mirror- ing maiden-hair in their black depth ; how fragrant and dewy are the beds of tangled violets, how dreamy are the olive-trees, aerial, mistlike, robed with light, will understand the peculiar wodog of these lines. But we must not dwell too much upon the glimpses of pathetic poetry in Aristophanes, which after all are but few and far between, mere swallow-flights of song, when compared with the serious business of his art. It is well known that the old comedy of the Athenians performed the function of a public censorship. Starting from the primitive comic song, in which a rude Fescennine license of what we now call " chaffing " was allowed, and tempering its rustic jocularity with the caustic bitterness of Archilochian satire, comedy became an instrument ARISTOPHANES. 253 for holding up to public ridicule all things of general interest. Persons and institutions, nay, the gods themselves, are freely- laughed at. Bacchus seems to have enjoyed the jokes even when directed against himself : rat 6 8ede "ktwq x a 'P ei i\6ys\ioQ tiq &v are the words of Lucian. So no one else had a right to resent the poet's merriment when the presiding god of the festival approved of sarcasms against his deity, and trod his own stage as a cowardly effeminate young profligate. This being the more serious aim of comedy, it followed that Aristophanes always had some satiric, and in so far didactic purpose, underlying his extravagant caricatures. What that purpose was, is too well known to need more than passing mention. From his earliest appearance under the name of Callistratus, to the last of his victories, Aristophanes maintained his character as an Athenian Conservative. He came forward uniformly as a panegyrist of the old policy of Athens, and a vehement antagonist of the new direction taken by his nation subsequently to the Persian war. This one theme he varied, according to circumstances and convenience. In the first of his plays — the Daitaleis, he attacked the profligacy and immodesty of the rising generation, who neglected their Homer for the lessons of the Sophists, and engaged in legal quarrels. The Acharnians, the Peace, and the Lysistrata are devoted to impressing on the Athenians the advantages of peace, and inducing them to lay aside their enmity against Sparta. In the Knights, the demagogues are attacked through the person of Cleon, with a violence of concentrated passion that surpasses the most savage onslaughts of Archilochus. The Clouds and Wasps exhibit different pictures of the insane passion for litigation and the dishonest aits of rhetoric which prevailed at Athens, fostered partly by the influence of sophists who professed to teach a profitable method of public speaking, and partly by the flattery of. the demagogues. The Birds is a fantastic satire upon the Athenian habit of building castles in 254 THE GREEK POETS. the air, and indulging in extravagant dreams of conquest. In the Ecdesiazusce Aristophanes seems bent on ridiculing the visionary Utopias of political theorists like Plato, and also on caricaturing the social license which prevailed in Athens, where everything, as he complains, had been tried, except for women to appear in public like the men. In the TfiesmophoriazuscE and the Frogs, we exchange politics for literature ; but in his treatment of the latter subject, Aristophanes exhibits the same conservative spirit. His hostility against Euripides, which is almost as bitter as his hatred of Cleon, is founded upon the sophistical nature of his art. Indeed, the Demagogues, the Sophists, and Euripides were looked upon by him as three forms of the same poison which was corrupting the old fjdos of his nation. We have now indicated the serious intention of all the plays of Aristophanes, except the Plutus, which is an ethical allegory conceived under a different inspiration from that which gave the impulse to his other creative acts. Yet it must not be forgotten that the subject matter of these plays is often varied : in the Achamians, for example, we have a specimen of literary criticism, while the Lysistrata is aimed as much at the follies of women as intended to set forth the advantages of peace. We must also remember that it was the poet's purpose to keep his serious ground-plan concealed. His Comedy had to be the direct antithesis to Greek Tragedy. If it taught, it was to teach by paradox. In this respect, Aristophanes realized a very high ideal. Preach as he may be doing in reality, and underneath his merriment, there is hardly a passage in all his plays, if we accept the pleadings of Dikaios Logos in the Clouds, and the personal portions of the Parabases, in which we catch him revealing his own earnest- ness. Every ordinary point of view is so consistently ignored, and all the common relations of things are so thoroughly reversed, that the topsy-turvy Chaos which a play of Aristophanes presents, is quite harmonious. It is, in fact, ARISTOPHANES. 25$ madness methodized and with a sober meaning. Perhaps we ought to seek in this consideration the key to those problems which have occupied historians when dealing with the Aristo- phanic criticism of Socrates. How, it is always asked, could Aristophanes have been so consciously unjust to the great moralist of Athens? If we keep in sight the intentional absurdity of everything in one of the Aristophanic comedies, we may perhaps understand how it was possible for the poet to travesty the friend with whom he conversed familiarly at supper parties. That Plato understood the ridicule of his great master from some such point of view as this, is clear from his express recommendation of the Clouds to Dionysius, from the portrait which he draws of Aristophanes in the Symposium, and from the eulogistic epigram (if that is genuine) which he composed upon him. It is curious as a parallel, that Agathon should have been even more ignobly caricatured than Socrates at the beginning of the Thesmophoriazusce ; yet we know from his own lips, as well as from the dialogue of Plato, that Aristophanes was a friend of the tragic poet, for he elsewhere calls him dyaBbg TroirjTr/Q teal irodeivbg toTq (piXotg. The lash applied to Socrates and Agathon is scarcely less stinging than that applied to Cleon and Euripides. Yet the fact remains, that Aristophanes was the friend of Agathon, and a member of the Socratic circle. Much of the obscurity attending the interpretation .of the Clouds arises from our having lost the finer nuances of Athenian feeling respecting the persons satirized in the old Comedy. We do not, for example, understand Cratinus when he joins the name of Euripides with that of his great satirist in one epithet descrip- tive of the quibbling style of the day — avpi-KilapioTotyavi&iv.* * This epithet contains the gist of the objection often brought against Aristophanes, that he assisted the demoralization which he denounced. If 256 THE GREEK POETS. But, to return from this digression, we may observe that it was only in a democracy that an institution unsparing of friend and foe, like the old Comedy, in which persons were openly exposed to censure, and the solemn acts of the government were called in question, could be tolerated. Accordingly we find that the early development of Comedy, after the date of Susarion, was checked by the accession of Pisistratus to power, and that the old Comedy itself perished with the extinction of Athenian liberty. It is only a democracy that likes to criticise itself, that takes pride in its indifference to ridicule, and in its readiness to acknowledge its own errors. In this respect, we English are very democratic : we abuse ourselves and expose our own follies more than any other nation ; the press and the platform do for us in a barren, unEesthetic fashion, what Aris- tophanes did for the Athenian public. Perhaps we may now be able to see that a middle course must be followed between the extremes of regarding Aris- tophanes as an indecent parasite pandering to the worst incli- nations of the Athenian rabble, and of looking upon him as a profound philosopher and sober patriot. The former view is maintained by Grote, who, though he is somewhat hampered by his pronounced championship of all the democratic institu- tions of Athens, among which the Comedy of Aristophanes must needs be reckoned ; yet clearly thinks that the poet was a meddling monkey, full indeed of genius, but injurious to the order of the State, and to the peace of private persons. The latter has been advocated by the German scholars, Ranke, Bergk, and Meineke, against whom Grote has directed an able and conclusive argument in the notes to his eighth volume. Truly, it is absurd to pretend that Aristophanes was the prudent and far-seeing moralist described by his German ad- he did so, it was not by his grossness and indelicacy, but by his subtilty and refinement and audacity of universal criticism. The sceptical aquafortis of his age is as strong in Aristophanes as in Euripides. ARISTOPHANES. 257 mirers. To imagine him thus, would be to falsify the whole purpose of the Athenian Comic Drama, and to test its large extravagance by the narrow standard of modern morality. We might as well fancy that Alexander was an unselfish worker in the service of humanity, as bring ourselves to see in Aris- tophanes the sage of uniformly staid sobriety. Not to mention that such a notion is at total variance with the only authentic portrait we possess of him, every line of his Comedies cries out against so pedantic and priggish a calumny. For it is a calumny thus to misrepresent the high-spirited muse of Aris- tophanes, with her dishevelled hair and Coan robe of flimsiest gauze, and wild eyes swimming in the mists of wine. She never pretends to be better than a priestess of the midnight Bacchus and Corinthian Aphrodite, though she believes sin- cerely in the inspiration of these deities. To see in her a Vestal or a Diotima, to set the owl of Pallas on her shoulder, and to strap the aegis round her panting breasts, is a piece of elaborate stupidity and painful impertinence, which it remained for German pedagogues to perpetrate. Yet it is equally wrong to think of Aristophanes merely as a pernicious calumniator, who killed Socrates, and put an ineffectual spoke in the wheel of Progress. Granted that he was more of a Merry-Andrew than a moralist, more of a yikwro-woibg than a ^erewpoXiaxve, we must surely be blind if we fail to recognize the deep under- note of good sense and wisdom which gives eternal value to his jests — worse than blind if we do not honour him for valiant and unflinching service in the cause which he had recognized as right. Nor are the enemies of Aristophanes less insensible to his real merits as an artist, than his ponderous German friends. What are we to think of the imaginative faculties of a man, who after gazing upon the divine splendours of the genius of Aristophanes, after tracking the erratic flight of this most radiant poet, "with his singing robes about him," can descend to earth and wish that he had never existed, or shake s 258 THE GREEK POETS. his head and measure him by the moral standards of Quarterly Reviews and British respectability? Alas, that from the modern world should have evanesced all appreciation of Art that is not obviously useful, palpably didactic ! If we would rightly estimate Aristophanic Comedy, we must be prepared to accept it in the classical spirit, and separating ourselves from either sect of the Pharisees, refuse to picture its great poets to ourselves, on the one hand as patriots eximia morum gravitate, or on the other, as foul slanderers and irreverent buffoons. Far beyond and outside the plane of either standing- ground are they. The old Comedy of Athens is a work of art so tempered and so balanced, that he who would appreciate ' it must submit, for a moment at least, to forego his modern advantages of improved morality, and public decency, and purer taste, and parliamentary courtesy, and to become — if he can bend his moral back to that obliquity — a " Merry Greek." It is now clear that Aristophanic Comedy is in the history of Art unique — the product of peculiar and unrepeated circum- stances. The essential differences between it and modern Comedy are manifold. Modern Comedy partakes of the Tragic spirit : it has a serious purpose, acknowledged by the poet; a lesson is generally taught in its catastrophe ; it is fond of poetical justice. Aristophanic Comedy, as we have seen, whatever may be its purpose, is always ludicrous to the spec- tators and to itself. Tartuffe, A New Way to Pay Old Debts, and Volpone, are tragedies without bloodshed : you only laugh at them incidentally. The Clouds, the Knights, and the Frogs excite inevitable laughter. Nor is this difference manifest only in the matter and spirit of the two Comedies : it expresses itself externally in their several forms. The Plays of Aris- tophanes, upon the stage, must have been like our Panto- mimes, or rather, like our Operas. If we wish to form a tolerable notion of the appearance of an Aristophanic Comedy, we cannot do better than keep in mind the Flatito Magico of ARISTOPHANES. 259 Mozart. Had Mozart received a good translation of the Birds instead of the wretched libretto of the Zauberflote, what a really- magic drama, what a living image of Athenian Comedy, he might have produced ! Even as it is, with the miserable materials he had to work upon, the master musician has given us an Aristophanic specimen of the ludicrous passing by abrupt but delicate transitions to the serious, of Parody and Irony playing in and out at hide and seek, of Pathos lurking beneath Merriment, and of Madness leaping by a bound into the regions of Pure Reason. And this he has achieved by the all-subduing witchery of music — by melodies which solve the stiffest contradictions, by the ebb and flow of measured sound rocking upon its surface the most varied thoughts and feelings of the soul of man. In the Zauberflote we are never surprised by any change, however sudden — by any incident, however whimsical. After first lamenting over the stupidity of the libretto, and then resigning ourselves to the caprices of the fairy story, we are delighted to follow the wanderings of Music through her labyrinth of quaint and contradictory absurdities. Just so, we fancy, must have been the case with Aristophanes. Peisthetserus and Euelpides were not more discordant than Papageno ; the Birds had their language as Astrifiammante has hers ; nor were the deeper tones of Aristophanic meaning more out of place than the bass notes of Sarastro, and the choruses of his attendant priests. Music, which has harmonized the small and trivial contradictions of the Zauberflote, harmonized the vast and profound contradictions of Aristophanic Comedy. It was the melodramatic setting of such plays as the Birds and the Clouds which caused their Weltvernichtungsidee to blossom forth melodiously into the magic tree, with all its blossoms and nightingales and merry apes, to which I have so often referred. With this parallel between the Birds and an opera like the Zauberflote in our minds, we may place ourselves among the s 2 260 THE GREEK POETS. thirty thousand Athenian spectators assembled in the theatre about the end of March, 414 b.c. We must remember that the great expedition had recently gone forth to Sicily. It was only in the preceding year that the Salaminian galley had been sent for Alcibiades, who had escaped to Sparta, where he was now engaged in stirring up evil for his countrymen. But as yet no disaster had befallen the army of invasion. Gylippus had not arrived. Lamachus was still alive. Every vessel brought news to the Athenians of the speed with which their forces were car- rying on the work of circumvallation, and of the despondency of the Syracusans. The spectators of the plays of Aristophanes and Ameipsias were nearly the same persons who had listened to the honeyed eloquence of Alcibiades persuading them to undertake the expedition, and promising them not merely the supremacy of Hellas, but the empire of the Mediterranean and the subjugation of Carthage. Alcibiades, indeed, had turned a traitor to his country ; but the charm of his oratory and the spirit he had roused remained. Each father in the audience might fairly hope that his son would share in raising Athens to her height of splendour : not a man but felt puffed up with insolent prosperity. The only warning voice which spoke while Athens trembled on the very razor-edge of fortune, was that of Aristophanes — but with how sweet and delicate a satire, with sarcasms that had the sound of flattery, with prognostications of failure that wore the shape of realized ambitions, with musical banter and multitudinous jests that seemed to apologize for folly rather than to censure it ! There is no doubt but that Aristophanes intended in the Birds to ridicule the ambition of the Athenians and their inveterate gullibility. Peisthetserus and Euelpides represent in comic caricature the projectors, agi- tators, schemers, flatterers, who, led by Alcibiades, had imposed upon the excitable vanity of the nation. Cloudcuckootown is any castle in the air, or South Sea Bubble, which might take the fancy of the Athenian mob. But it is also more especially ARISTOPHANES. 261 the project of Western dominion connected with their scheme of Sicilian conquest. Aristophanes has treated his theme so poetically and largely that the interest of the Birds is not, like that of the Wasps or the Knights, almost wholly confined to the Athens of his day. It transcends those limitations of place and time, and is the everlasting allegory of foolish schemes and flimsy ambition. A modern dramatist — Ben Jonson or Moliere for instance, perhaps even Shakspere — could hardly have refrained from ending the allegory with some piece of poetical justice. We should have seen Peisthetserus disgraced and Cloudcuckootown resolved into "such stuff as dreams are made of." But this is not the art of Aristophanes. He brings Peisthetserus to a successful catastrophe, and ends his Comedy with marriage songs of triumph. Yet none the less pointed is the satire. The unreality of the vision is carefully maintained, and Peisthetserus walking home with Basileia for his bride, like some new sun-eclipsing star, seems to wink and strut and shrug his shoulders, conscious of the Titanic sham. To analyze in detail a work of art so well known to all students as the Birds would be needless. It is enough to notice in passing that it is quite unique of its kind, combining as it does such airy fancies as we find in the Midsummer Nights Dream with the peculiar pungency of Aristophanic satire, untainted by the obscenity which forms an integral part of the Ecclesiazustz or Lysistrata. Most exquisite is the art with which Aristophanes has collected all the facts of orni- thology, all the legends and folk-lore connected with birds, so as to create a fanciful birdland and atmosphere of true bird life for his imaginary beings. Not less wonderful is the imagination with which he has conceived the whole universe from the bird's point of view, his sympathy with the nightingale, the drollery of his running footman Trochilus, the pompous gravity of his King Epops, and so on through the whole of his winged dramatis persona. The triumph of his art is the Parabasis, in 262 THE GREEK POETS. which the birds pour forth rhelodious compassion for the tran- sitory earth-born creatures of an hour. Poor men, with their little groping lives ! The epithets of pity which the happier birds invent to describe man are woven as it were of gossamer and dew, symbols of fragility. Then the music changes as the vision of winged Er6s, upsoaring from the primeval wind-egg, bursts upon the fancy of the chorus. Again it subsides into still more delicate irony when the just reign of the birds on earth and over heaven is prophesied ; and the whole concludes with semi-chorus answering to semi-chorus in antiphonal strains of woodland poetry and satire — the sweet notes of the flute responded to by shouts of Bacchic laughter. We have seen in dealing with the Birds how Aristophanes has converted the whole world into a transcendental birdland, and filled his play with airy shapes and frail imaginings. This power of alchemizing and transmuting everything he touches into the substance of his thought of the moment, is no less remarkable in the comedy of the Clouds. And here we are able to trace the peculiar nature of his allegory more clearly than in the choruses of the Birds, with greater accuracy to distinguish the play of pure poetry alternating with satire, to trace the glittering thread of fancy drawn athwart the more fantastic arabesque of comic caricature. In the Clouds Aristo- phanes ridicules the rising school of teachers who professed to train the youth of Athens in the arts of public speaking and successful litigation. He aims at the tribe of sophists, who substituted logical discussion for the old aesthetic education of the Greeks, and who sought to replace mythological religion by meteorological explanations of natural phenomena. The pedantry of this dialectic in its boyhood offended the artistic sense of a conservative like Aristophanes : the priggishness of upstart science had the air to him of insolent irreligion. Besides, he saw that this new philosophy, while it undermined the r/doc of his nation, was capable of lending itself to ignoble ARISTOPHANES. 263 ends — that its possessors sought to make money, that their disciples were eager to acquire mere technical proficiency, in order to cut a fine figure in public and to gain their selfish pur- poses. The sophists professed two chief subjects, rk fieriwpa, or the science of natural phenomena ; and rhetoric, or the art of conquering by argument. Aristophanes, in the Clouds, sa- tirizes both under the form of allegory by bringing upon the stage his chorus of Clouds, who, in their changeful shapes — heaven-obscuring, appearing variously to various eyes, coming into being from the nothing of the air, and passing away again by imperceptible dissolution, usurping upon the functions of Zeus in the thunder and the rain, hurrying hither and thither at the will of no divine force, but impelled by the newly dis- covered abstraction Vortex — are the very forms and symbols of the airy, misty Proteus of verbal falseness and intangible irreligion which had begun to possess the Athenians. In order to understand the force of this allegory we must remember the part which the clouds played in the still vital mythology of the Greeks. It was by a cloud that, Here in her divine scorn had deluded the impious desires of Ixion, who embracing hollow shapes of vapour begat Centaurs. The rebellious giants who sought to climb Olympus were forms of mist and tempest in- vading the serenity of highest heaven : this Strepsiades indicates when he quotes the words irkoicanovs ff cKaroyKcf * This seems to have been the gist of one of the grudges of Aristophanes against Euripides. 296 THE GREEK POETS. Alcestis, the almost frigid acquiescence in death of Makaria. The later Greek drama, and especially the drama of Euripides, abounded in these characters. They are incarnations of certain moral qualities. Like the masks which concealed the actor's face they show one fixed and sustained mood of emotion : we find in them no hesitancy and difficult resolve, no ebb and flow of wavering inclination, but one immutable, magnificent, heroic fixity of purpose. In a word, they are conformed to the sculptural type of the Greek tragic art.* * The most perfect femsle character in Greek poetry is the Antigone of Sophocles. She is purely Greek, unlike any modern woman of fiction except perhaps the Fedalma of George Eliot. In her filial piety, in her intercession for Polyneices at the knees of CEdipus, in her grief when her father is taken from her, she resembles the woman whom most men have learned to honour in their sisters or their daughters or their mother. But the Antigone, who defies Creon, who lays her life down lest her brother should receive no funeral dues, who marches to her living tomb in order that the curse-haunted corpse of Polyneices should have rest in Hades, appears to the modern mind a being from another sphere. A strain of unearthly music seems to announce her entrance and her exit on the stage. That the sacrifice of the sister's very life, the breaking of her plighted troth to Hcemon, should follow upon the sprinkling of those few handfuls of dust — ' that she should give that life up smilingly, nor ever in her last hours breathe her lover's name, — is a tragic circumstance for which our sympathies are not prepared. It is almost in vain that we remember, first, that she has inherited a portion of her father's proud self-will, and then, that disaster after disaster, — the loss of CEdipus, the death of her two brothers,— has come huddling upon her in a storm of fate. In spite of all this she strikes us at the first as frigid. It is only after long contemplatibn of her perfect lineaments that we come to recognize" a purity of passion, a fixity of purpose, a loyalty of kinship, a sublime sense of duty, raised far above the strain of common modern sentiment. Even Alfieri, in the noble outline- drawing he has sketched from Sophocles, could not refrain from violating the perfection of the picture by these final words : — " Emone, ah ! tutto io sento, Tutto 1' amor, che a te portava : io sento II dolor tutto, a cui ti lascio. " None such are to be found in Sophocles upon .the lips of the dying Antigone. She is all for her father and her brothers. The tragedy of ANCIENT AND MODERN TRAGEDY. 297 Owing to the very structure of the Attic stage Greek tragedy could never have recourse to those formless, vague, and unsub- stantial sources of terror and of charm which the modern dramatist has at his command. How could such airy nothings as the elves of the Tempest, the fairies of A Midsummer Night's Dream, or the witches of Macbeth have been brought upon that colossal theatre in the full blaze of an Athenian noon ? Figures of Thanatos and of Lyssa did indeed appear: the ghost of Clytemnestra roused the sleeping Furies in the courts of Delphi : the phantom of Darius hovered over his grave. But these spectres were sculpturesque — such as Pheidias might have carved in marble, and such as we see painted on so-called Etruscan vases. They were not Banquo-apparitions gliding into visible substance from the vacant gloom and retiring thitherward again. When such creatures of the diseased imagi- nation had to be suggested, the seer, like Cassandra, before whose eyes the phantoms of the children of ThyesteS passed, or Orestes, who drew his arrows upon an unseen cohort of threatening fiends, stared on vacancy. Shakspere dares at times to realize such incorporeal beings, to give to them a voice and a visible form. Yet it may be doubted whether even in his tremendous supernatural apparatus the voice which shrieked to Macbeth " Sleep no more ! " the mutterings of Lady Macbeth in her somnambulism, the spectre which Hamlet saw and his mother could not see, the dream of Clarence with its cry of injured ghosts, are not really the most appalling. The Greek Drama owed its power to the qualities of regu- larity and simplicity : the strength of the modern lies in subtlety and multiplicity. The external conditions of the Attic theatre no less than the prevailing spirit of Greek tragic HEemon belongs to Creon, not to her. None of the women of Euripides are so sublime as this. The situations he has invented for them are less complex ; their humanity is less perfect. 298 THE GREEK POETS. art forced this simplicity and regularity upon the ancient dramatists. These conditions do not occur in the modern world. We have our little theatres, our limited audience, our unmasked actors, our scenical illusions, our freedom in the choice of subjects. Therefore to push the subtlety and multi- plicity of tragic composition to the utmost — to arrange for the most swift and sudden changes of expression in the actor, for the most delicate development of a many-sided character, for the most complicated grouping of contrasted forms, and for the utmost realization of imaginative incidents — is the glory of a Shakspere or a Goethe. The French dramatists made the mistake of clinging to the beggarly elements of the Attic stage, when they had no means of restoring its colossal grandeur. When it was open to them to rival the work of the ancients in a new and truly modern style, they hampered their genius by arbitrary rules, and thought that they were following the principles of the highest art, while they submitted to the mere necessities of a bygone form of presentation. If Racine had believed in Nemesis, if Versailles had afforded him a theatre and an audience like that of Athens, if his actors had worn masks, if sculpture had been the dominant art of modem Europe, he would have been following the right track. As it was, he became needlessly formal. The same blind enthusiasm for antiquity led to the doctrine of the Unities, to the absti- nence from bloodshed on the stage, and to the restriction of a play to five acts. Horace had advised a dramatist not to extend his tragedy beyond the fifth act, nor to allow Medea to murder her children within sight of the audience. All modern playwrights observe the rule of five acts : nor is there much to be said against it, except that the third act is apt to be languid for want of matter. But the Greeks disregarded this division : judging by the choric songs, we find that some of their tragedies have as many as seven, and some as few- as two acts. Again, as to bloodshed on the stage, it ANCIENT AND MODERN TRAGEDY. 299 is probable that if the Greek actors had not been so clumsily arrayed, we should have had many instances of their violation of this rule. iEschylus discloses the shambles where Agamemnon and Cassandra lie weltering in their blood, and hammers a stake through the body of Prometheus. Sopho- cles exhibits CEdipus with eyes torn out and bleeding on his cheeks. Euripides allows the mangled corpse of Astyanax to be brought upon'the stage in his father's shield. There is nothing more ghastly in an actual murder than in these spectacles of slaughter and mutilation. With reference to the Unities, the French critics demand that a drama shall proceed' in the same place, and the playwrights are at infinite pains to manage that no change of scene shall occur. But Aristotle, whose authority they claim, is silent on the point ; while the usage of the Greek Drama shows more than one change of place, — especially in the Ajax of Sophocles, and in the Eumenides of ./Eschylus, where the scene is shifted from the temple of Phce- bus at Delphi to the Areopagus at Athens. Still the exigencies of the Greek theatre made it advisable to alter the centre of action as little as possible ; and as a matter of convenience this requirement was complied with. The circumstances of our own stage have removed this difficulty, and it is only on the child- ish principle of maintaining an impossible illusion that the unity of place can be observed with any propriety. The unity of time has more to say for itself. Aristotle remarks that it is better to have a drama completed within the space of a day : this rule flows from his just sense of the proportion of parts ; a work of art ought to be such that the mind can easily com- prehend it at a glance. Yet many Greek plays, such as the Agememnon of ^Eschylus, where Agamemnon has time to return from Troy, or the Etimenides, where Orestes performs the journey from Delphi to Athens, disregard this rule in cases where it required no strain of the mind to bridge over the space of a few unimportant days or hours. When in the 3 oo THE GREEK POETS. modern drama we are introduced to the hero of a play first as a child and then as a full-grown man, and are forced mean- while to keep our attention on his acts in the interval as im- portant to the dramatic evolution, there is a gross violation of ssthetical Unity. About the Unity of action all critics are agreed. It is the same as unity of interest, or unity of subject, the interest and the subject of a play being its action. A good tragedy must have but one action, just as a good epic or a good poem of any sort must have but one subject ; for the simple reason that, as the eye cannot look at two things at once, so the mind cannot attend to two things at once. Modern poets have been apt to disregard this canon of common sense : the under- plots of many plays and the episodes bf such epics as the Orlando of Ariosto are not sufficiently subordinated to the main design or interwoven with it. Aristotle is also right in saying that the unity of the hero is not the same as the unity of action : a play, for example, on the labours of Hercules could only be made a good drama if each labour were shown to be one step in the fulfilment of one divinely appointed task. Shakspere has complied with the canon of the Unity of action in all his tragedies. Whether Goethe has done so in Faust may admit of doubt. The identity of his hero seems to him sufficient for the tragic unity of his piece : yet he has given us another centre of interest in Margaret, whose story is but a mere episode in the experience of Faust. Unity of action in a tragedy, the very soul of which is action, is the same as organic coherence in a body ; and therefore, as every work of art ought, according to the energetic metaphor of Plato, to be a living creature, with head, trunk and limbs all vitalized by one thought, this Unity is essential. Admitting this point, we may fairly say that the other rules of French dramatic criticism are not only arbitrary but also founded on a mistake with regard to the Greek theatre and a misapprehension of the proper functions of the modern stage. Composing in obedience to ANCIENT AND MODERN TRAGEDY. 301 them is like walking upon stilts in a country where there are no marshes to make the inconvenience necessary. In this review of the differences between our own tragedy and that of the Greeks I have scarcely touched upon those primary qualities which differentiate all modern from ancient art. The " sentiment of the infinite," which Renan regards as the chief legacy of medisevalism to modern civilization, and the preoccupation with the internal spirit rather than the external form which makes Music the essentially modern, as Sculpture was the essentially ancient art, are causes of innume- rable peculiarities in our conception of tragedy. I have hardly alluded to these, but have endeavoured to show that the immer- sion of Greek Tragedy in religious ideas, the fixed body of mythical matter handled by the Greek dramatists in succession, and the actual conditions of the Attic theatre will account for the greater number of those characteristics which distinguish Sophocles from Shakspere, the prince of Greek from the prince of modern tragic poets. CHAPTER X. THE ID YZ LISTS. Theocritus. — His Life. — The Canon of his Poems. — The meaning of the word Idyll. — Bucolie Poetry in Greece, Rome, Modern Europe. — The Scenery of Theocritus. — Relation of Southern Nature to Greek Mythology and Greek Art. — Rustic Life and Superstitions. — Feeling for Pure Nature in Theocritus. — How distinguished from the same feeling in Modern Poets. — Galatea. — Pharmaceutria?. — Hylas. — Greek Chivalry. — The Dioscuri. — Thalysia. — Bion. — The Lament for Adonis. — Moschus. — Europa. — Megara. — Lament for Bion. — The debts of Modem Poets to the Idyllists. Of the lives of Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus there is very little known, and that little has been often repeated. Theocritus was a Syracusan, the son of Praxagoras and Philinna. Some confu- sion as to his parentage arose from the fact that in the seventh Idyll Theocritus introduced himself under the artificial name of Simichidas, which led early critics to suppose he had a father called Simichus. It is however quite clear that the concurrent testimony of Suidas and of an epigram in the Anthology which distinctly asserts his descent from Praxagoras and Philinna, is to be accepted in preference to all conjectures founded on a 7i07ii de flu77ie. Theocritus flourished between 283 and . 263 B.C., but the dates and circumstances of his birth and death are alike unknown. We may gather inferentially or directly from his poems that he sought the patronage of Ptolemy Phil- adelphus at Alexandria, and lived for some time among the men of letters at his court. Indeed Theocritus was the most bril- liant ornament of that somewhat artificial period of literature ; he above all the Alexandrian poets carried the old genius of THE IDYLLISTS. 303 Greece into new channels, instead of imitating, annotating, and rehandling ancient masterpieces. The sixth and seventh Idylls prove that Aratus, the astronomer, was a familiar friend of the Syracusan bard ; probably the frequent allusions to meteorology and the science of the stars which we trace in the poems of Theocritus may be referred to this intimacy. From the Idylls again we learn that the poet left Alexandria wearied with court life ; and, like Spenser, unwilling "To lose good nights that might be better spent, To waste long days in pensive discontent, To speed to-day, to be put back to morrow, To feed on hope, and pine with fear and sorrow. " He seems however to. have once more made trial of princely favour at the Syracusan court of Hiero, and to have been as much offended with the want of appreciation and good taste as with the illiberality that he 'found there. Among his friends were numbered Nicias,' the physician of Miletus, and his wife Theugenis, to whom he addressed the beautiful little poem called r/XaxaTr) — a charming specimen of what the Greek muse could produce by way of vers de socikte. The end of his life is buried in obscurity. We can easily believe that he spent it quietly among the hills and fields of Sicily, in close communion with the nature that he loved so weli. His ill success as a court poet does not astonish us ; the panegyrics of Hiero and Ptolemy are among his worst poems — mere pinchbeck when compared with the pure gold of the Idylls proper. It was in scenes of natural beauty that he felt at home, and when he died he left a volume of immortal verse, each line of which proclaims of him — " Et ego in Arcadia." We cannot give him a more fitting epitaph than that of his own Daphnis : — tfia poov' £k\u<7£ Siva tov Mwtraie 0i\oi> avSpa, tov ov NvfHpaiatv ajr£x9'j-* * Down to the dark stream he went ; the eddies drowned The muses' friend, the youth, the, nymphs held dear. 30 4 THE GREEK POETS. If we know little of Theocritus, less is known of Bion. Suidas says that he was born at Smyrna, and the elegy written on his death leads us to suppose that he lived in Sicily, and died of poison wilfully administered by enemies. Theocritus, though his senior in age and as a Bucolic poet, seems to have survived him. Bion's elegist, from whom the few facts which we have related with regard to the poet of Smyrna's life and untimely death are gathered, has generally been identified with Moschus. Ahrens however with characteristic German minuteness and scepticism places the 'EiriTafioc BiWoc upon a list oilncertorum Idyllia. Nor can it be denied that the author of this poem leads us to "believe that he was a native of Magna Grsecia, whereas Moschus is known to have been a Syracusan. The third and last of the Sicilian Idyllists, he stands at a great dis- tance from Theocritus in all essential qualities of pastoral com- position. He has more of the grammarian or man of erudition about him; and we can readily conceive him to have been, according to the account of Suidas, a friend of Aristarchus. Of the dates of his life nothing can be recorded with any certainty. He seems to have lived about the end of the third century B.C. During the short period in which Bucolic poetry flourished under Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus, Syracuse remained beneath the sceptre of Hiero. While the bloody strife was being waged between Rome and Carthage for the empire of the Mediterranean, Syracuse, intermediate between the two great combatants, was able not only to maintain a splendid independence under the sway of her powerful tyrant but also to afford the Romans signal aid upon the battle-fields of Sicily. In Sicily the sun of Greece still shone with some of its old radiance on the spots where, before Athens had assumed the intellectual supremacy of Hellas, poetry, philosophy, and all the arts of life had first displayed their splendid spring-time. The island in which the April of the Greek spirit had disclosed its earliest flowers now bore the last but not least lovely wreath of THE IDYLLISTS. 305 autumn. The winter was soon coming. Rome and her Verres were already looking upon Trinacria as their prey ; and the Idyllic garland was destined to crown with exotic blossoms the brows of Virgil. About the authenticity of many of the Idylls grave questions have been raised. It is hard to be- lieve that all the thirty which bear the name of Theocritus were really written by him. The 23rd and 25th, for instance, are not in his style ; while the 19th reminds us more of the Anacreontic elegance of Bion or Moschus than of his pecu- liarly vigorous workmanship. But without some shock to my feelings I cannot entertain the spuriousness of the 21st Idyll, which Ahrens places among the productions of some doubtful author. The whole series after the 18th have been questioned. These however include the Epical compositions of Theocritus, who might well have assumed a different manner when treating of Hercules or the Dioscuri from that in which he sang the loves of Lycidas and Daphnis. That they are inferior to his pastorals is not to be wondered at ; for he who blows his own flute with skill may not be therefore strong enough to sound the trumpet of Homer. Ahrens extends his scepticism to the lament for Bion, which, I confess, appears to me more full of fire and inventive genius than any other of the poems attributed to Moschus. Yet in these matters of minute evidence too much depends upon mere conjecture and comparison of styles for us to remove old landmarks with cer- tainty. Suppose all records of Raphael's works had been lost, and a few fragments of the Cartoons together with the Trans- figuration and the little picture of the Sleeping Knight alone remained of all his paintings, would not some Ahrens be inclined to attribute the Sleeping Knight to a weaker if not less graceful artist of the Umbrian School % The Allegro and Penseroso might by a similar process of disjunctive criticism be severed from the Paradise Lost. On the other hand, nothing can be more doubtful than assertions in favour of x 306 THE GREEK POETS. authenticity. It is almost impossible for a foreigner to per- ceive minute differences of style in the works of two con- temporary poets, and infinitely more difficult for a modern to exercise the same exact discrimination in deciding on the monuments of classic art. Schlegel, in his History of Dramatic Literature, asserts that he discovers no internal difference between Massinger and Fletcher, Yet an English student is struck by the most marked divergences of feeling, language, natural gifts, and acquired habits of thought in these two dramatists. Thus the difficulty of such criticism is two- fold. If a Syracusan of 200 B.C. could discuss our lucubra- tions on the text of the Bucolic poets, he would probably in one case express astonishment at our having ascribed two dissimilar Idylls to Theocritus, and in another case explain away our scepticism by enumerating the three or four suc- cessive manners of the poet. Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus are the Eponyms of Idyllic poetry. To each belongs a peculiar style. It is quite possible that some Idylls of suc- cessful imitators whose names have been lost may have been fathered upon the three most eminent founders of the school. The name of the Idyll sufficiently explains its nature. It is a little picture. Rustic or town life, legends of the gods, and passages of personal experience supply the idyllist with sub- jects. He does not treat them lyrically, following rather the rules of epic and dramatic composition. Generally there is a narrator, and in so far the Idyll is epic j its verse too is the hexameter. But occasionally the form of dramatic monologue, as in the Pharmaceutria, or that of dramatic dialogue, as in the Adoniazustz, takes^ the place of narrative. Bion's lament for Adonis again is a kind of sacred hymn ; while the dirge on Bion's death is elegiac. Two Idylls of Theocritus are encomiastic ; several celebrate the deeds of ancestral Doric heroes — Heracles and the Dioscuri. One is an epistle. . Many of Bion's so-called Idylls differ little, except in metre, from the THE IDYLLISTS. 307 Anacreontics, while one at least of the most highly finished pieces of Theocritus must be ranked with erotic poetry of the purely lyrical order. It will be seen from these instances that the idyllic genus admitted many species, and that the Idyllists were far from being simply pastoral poets. This form of com- position was in fact the growth of a late age of Greek art, when the great provinces had been explored and occupied, and when the inventor of a new style could legitimately adopt the tone and manner of his various predecessors. - Perhaps the plastic arts determined the direction of idyllic poetry, suggest- ing the name and supplying the poet with models of com- pact and picturesque treatment. In reading the Idylls it should never be forgotten that they are pictures, so studied and designed by their authors : they ought to affect us in the same way as the bas-reliefs and vases of Greek art, in which dramatic action is presented at a moment of its evolution, and beautiful forms are grouped together with such simplicity as to need but little story to enhance their value. If we approach the Idylls from this point of view, and regard them as very highly finished works of decorative art, we shall probably be able to enjoy their loveliness without complaining that the shepherds and shepherdesses are too refined, or that the land- scapes have not been drawn from nature. Without discussing the whole hackneyed question of Bucolic poetry, a word must be said about its origin, and ■about the essential difference between Theocritus and modern pastorals. It is natural to suppose that country folk, from the remotest period of Greek history, refreshed themselves with dance and song, and that music formed a part of their religious ceremonials. The trials of strength which supply the motive of so many Theocritean Idylls were quite consistent with the manners of the Greeks, who brought all rival claims of superiority to the touchstone of such contests. Their antiquity in the matter, of music may be x 2 308 THE GREEK POETS. gathered from the legends of Pan and Apollo, and of Apollo and Marsyas. Phoebus, in the character of shepherd to Admetus, gave direct sanction to Bucolic minstrelsy. In respect of bodily strength, the gymnastic rivalry of Olympia and other great Hellenic centres was so important as to deter- mine the chronology of Greece, — while even claims to per- sonal beauty were decided by the same trial : the three goddesses submitted to the arbitration of Paris ; and there were in many states apiare'ia of physical charms, not. to men- tion the boys' prize for kisses at Nissean Megara. Bucolic poetry may therefore be referred to the pastoral custom of shepherds singing together and against each other at festivals or on the green. It was the genius of Theocritus in all probability which determined the Doric and Sicilian character of the Idylls we possess. He, a Syracusan and a Dorian, per- fected the genre, and was followed by his imitators. Nothing can be more simple and lifelike than the conversations of his rustics, or more nicely discriminated than the pedestrian style of their dialogue and the more polished manner of their studied songs. The poet has no doubt invested these rural encounters with the imaginative beauty which belongs to art. He has attributed to Corydon and Thyrsis much of his own imagination and delicate taste and exquisite sense of natural loveliness. Had he refrained from doing so, his Idylls would not have challenged the attention and won the admiration of posterity. As it is, we find enough of rustic grossness on his pages, and may even complain that his cowherds and goat- herds savour too strongly of their stables. Of his appreciation of scenery it is difficult to speak in terms of exaggerated praise. As I purpose to discuss this subject more minutely further on, it may here be enough to remark that he alone of pastoral poets drew straight from nature, and fully felt the charm which underlies the facts of rustic life. In com- parison with Theocritus, Bion and Moschus are affected and THE IDYLLISTS. 309 insipid. JTheir pastorals smack of the study more. than of the fields. Virgil not only lacks his vigour and enthusiasm for the open-air life of the country, but, with Roman bad taste, he commits the capital crime of allegorizing. Virgil's pernicious example infected Spenser, Milton, and a host of inferior imitators, flooding literature with dreary pastorals in which shepherds discussed politics, religion, and court-gossip, so that at last Bucolic poetry became a synonyme for every- thing affected and insipid. Poetry flourishes in cities, where rustic song must always be ah exotic plant. To analyze Poliziano, Sanazarro, Guarini, Tasso, Spenser, Fletcher, Jonson, Barnfield, Browne, Pope, etc., and to show what strains of natural elegance adorn their imitations of the ancients, would be a very interesting but lengthy task. As society became more artificial, especially at Florence, Paris, and Versailles, the taste for pseudo-pastorals increased. Court- ladies tucked up their petticoats and carried crooks with ribbons at their tops, while Court-poets furnished aristocratic Corydons with smooth verses about pipes and pine-trees, and lambs and wattled cotes. The whole was a dream and a delusion ; but this mirage of rusticity appropriated the name of pastoral, and reflected discredit even on the great and natural Theocritus. At length this genre of composition, in which neither invention nor observation nor truth nor excellence of any kind except inglorious modulation of old themes was needed, died a natural death ; and the true Bucolic genius found fresh channels. Crabbe revived an interest in village life ; Burns sang immortal lyrics at the plough ; Goethe achieved a masterpiece of Idyllic delineation ; Wordsworth- reasserted the claims of natural simplicity; Keats ex- pressed the sensuous charms of rustic loveliness ; Tennyson and Barnes have written rural idylls in the dialects of Lincolnshire and Dorsetshire; while other writers are pursuing similar lines of composition. Theocritus, it is 3io THE GREEK POETS. true, differs widely from these poets both in his style and matter. But he deserves to rank among the most realistic artists of the nineteenth century on account of his simplicity and perfect truth to nature. In reading him we must divest ourselves of any prejudices which we have acquired from the perusal of his tasteless imitators. We must take his volume with us to the scenes in which he lived, and give him a fair trial on his own merits. It is on the shores of the Mediterranean — at Sorrento, at Amain, or near Palermo, or among the valleys of Mentone, — that we ought to study Theocritus, and learn the secret of his charm. Pew of us pass middle life without visiting one or other of these sacred spots, which seem to be the garden of perpetual spring. Like the lines of the Sicilian idyllist, they inspire an inevitable and indescribable ■koQoq, touching our sense of beauty with a subtle power, and soothing our spirits with the majesty of classical repose. Straight from the sea-beach rise mountains of distinguished form, not capped with snow or clothed with pines', but carved of naked rock. We must accept their beauty as it is, nude, well denned, and unadorned, nor look in vain for the mystery or sublimity or picturesqueness of the Alps. Light and colour are the glory of these mountains. Valleys divide their flanks, Seaming with shadow-belts and bands of green the broad hillside, while lower down the olives spread a hoary greyness and soft robe of silver mist, the skirts of which are kissed by tideless waves. The harmony between the beauty of the olive boughs and the blue sea can be better felt than described. Guido, whose subtlety of sentiment was very rare, has expressed it in one or two of his earliest and best pictures by graduated tones of silver, azure, and cool grey. The de- finite form and sunny brightness of the olive-tree suits our conception of the Greek character. It may well have been the favourite plant of the wise and calm Athene". Oaks with their umbrageous foliage, pine-trees dark and mournful upon THE IDYLLISTS. 311 Alpine slopes, branching limes, and elms" in which the wind sways shadowy masses of thick leaves, belong, with their huge girth and gnarled boles and sombre roofage, to the forests of the North, where nature is rather an awful mother than a kind foster-nurse and friend of man. In northern landscapes the eye travels through vistas of leafy boughs to still, secluded crofts and pastures, where slow-moving oxen graze. The mystery of dreams and the repose of meditation haunt our mas- sive bowers. But in the South, the lattice-work of olive boughs and foliage scarcely veils the laughing sea and bright blue sky, while the hues of the landscape find their climax in the daz- zling radiance of the sun upon the waves, and the pure light of the horizon. There is no concealment and no melancholy , here. Nature, seems to hold a never-ending festival and dance, in which the waves and sunbeams and shadows join. Again, in northern scenery, the rounded forms of full-foliaged trees ■suit the undulating country, with its gentle hills and brooding clouds; but in the South the spiky leaves and sharp branches of the olive carry out the defined outlines which are everywhere observable through the broader beauties of mountain and valley and sea-shore. Serenity and intelligence characterize this southern landscape, in which a race of splendid men and women lived beneath the pure light of Phcebus, their ancestral god. Pallas protected them, and golden Aphrodite' favoured them with beauty. Nations as great and noble have arisen among the oak and beech woods of the North ; strong-sinewed warriors, heroic women, counsellors with mighty brains, and poets on whose tongue the melody of music lingers like a charm. But the Greeks alone owned the gift of innate beauty and unerring taste. The human form upon those bare and sunny hills, beneath those twinkling olive boughs, beside that sea of everlasting laughter, reached its freedom ; and the spirit of human loveliness was there breathed fully into all the forms of art. Poetry, sculpture, architecture, music, dancing, all became 312 THE GREEK POETS. the language of that moderate and lucid harmony which we discover in the landscape of the Greeks. Olives are not how- ever by any means the only trees which play a part in idyllic scenery. The tall stone pine is even more important; for, underneath its shade the shepherds loved to sing, hearing the murmur in its spreading roof, and waiting for the cones with their sweet fruit to fall. Near Massa, by Sorrento, there are two gigantic pines so placed that, lying on the grass be- neath them, one looks on Capri rising from the sea, Baise, and all the bay of Naples sweeping round to the base of Vesu- vius. Tangled growths of olives, oranges, and rose-trees fill the garden-ground along the shore, while far away in the dis- tance pale Inarime sleeps, with her exquisite Greek name, a virgin island on the deep. In such a place we realize Theocri- tean melodies, and find a new- and indestructible loveliness in the opening line of his first idyll : — adv Ti rb TpiOvpio/ia Kal a tt'itvq, a'nrokt, Tt\va. These pines are few and far between ; growing alone or in pairs they stand like monuments upon the hills, their black forms sculptured on the cloudlike olive groves, from which at intervals spring spires and columns of slender cypress-trees. Here and there in this bright garden of the age of gold white villages are seen, and solitary cottage roofs high up among the hills, — dwellings perhaps of Amaryllis, whom the shepherds used to serenade. Huge fig-trees lean their weight of leaves and purple fruit upon the cottage walls, while cherry- trees and apricots snow the grass in spring with a white wealth of April blossoms. The stone walls and little wells in the cottage garden are green with immemorial moss and ferns, and fragrant with gadding violets that ripple down their sides, and chequer them with blue. On the wilder hills you find patches of ilex and arbutus glowing with crimson berries and white THE IDYLL1STS. 313 waxen bells, sweet myrtle rods and shafts of bay, frail tamarisk and tall tree-heaths that wave their frosted boughs above your head. Nearer the shore, the lentisk grows, a savoury shrub, with cytisus and aromatic rosemary. Clematis and polished garlands of tough sarsaparilla wed the shrubs with clinging, climbing arms ; and here and there in sheltered nooks the vine shoots forth luxuriant tendrils bowed with grapes, stretching from branch to branch of mulberry or elm, fling- ing festoons on which young loves might sit and swing, or weaving a lattice-work of leaves across the open shed. Nor must the sounds of this landscape be forgotten, — sounds of bleating flocks, and murmuring bees, and nightingales, and doves that moan, and running streams, and shrill cicadas, and hoarse frogs, and whispering pines. There is not a single detail which a patient student may not verify from Theocritus. Then too it is a landscape in which sea and country are never sundered. This must not be forgotten of Idyllic scenery ; for it was the warm sea-board of Sicily, beneath protecting heights of ^Etna, that gave birth to the Bucolic muse. The intermingling of pastoral and sea life is exquisitely allegorized in the legend of Galatea ; and on the cup which Theocritus describes in his first Idyll the fisherman plays an equal part with the shepherd youths and the boy who watches by the vine- yard wall. The higher we climb upon the mountain-side the more marvellous is the beauty of the sea, which seems to rise as we ascend, and stretch into the sky. Sometimes a little flake of blue is framed by olive boughs, sometimes a turning in the road reveals the whole broad azure calm below. Or after toiling up a steep ascent we fall upon the undergrowth of juniper, and lo ! a double sea, this way and that, divided by the sharp spine of the jutting hill, jewelled with villages along its shore, and smiling with fair, islands and silver sails. Upon the beach the waves come tumbling in, swaying the corallines 314 THE GREEK POETS. and green and purple sea-weeds in the pools. Ceaseless beat- ing of the spray has worn the rocks into jagged honeycombs, on which lazy fishermen sit perched, dangling their rods like figures in Pompeian frescoes. In landscapes such as these we are readily able to understand the legends of rustic gods ; the metamorphoses of Syrinx, Narcissus, Echo, Hyacinthus, and Adonis ; the tales of slumbering Pan, and horned satyrs, and peeping fauns, with which the Idyllists have adorned their simple shepherd songs. Here, too, the Oread dwellers of the woods, and dryads, and sylvans, and water-nymphs, seem possible. They lose their unreality and mythic haziness ; for men themselves are more a past of Nature here than in the North, more fit for companionship with deities of stream and hill. Their labours are lighter, and their food more plentiful. Summer leaves them not, and the soil yields fair and graceful crops. There is surely some difference between hoeing turnips and trimming olive boughs, between tending turkeys on a Norfolk common and leading goats to browse on cytisus beside the shore, between the fat pasturage and bleak winters of our midland counties and the spare herbage of the South dried by perpetual sunlight. It cannot be denied that men assimilate something from their daily labour, and that the poetry of rustic life is more evident upon Mediterranean shores than in England. Nor must the men and women of classical landscape be forgotten. When we read of the Idylls of Theocritus, and wish to see before us Thestylis, and Daphnis, and Lycidas, we have but to recall the perfect forms of Greek sculpture. We may for instance summon to our mind the Endymion of the Capitol, nodding in eternal slumber, with his sheep-dog slumber- ing by — or Artemis stepping from her car ; her dragons coil themselves between the shafts and fold their plumeless wings — or else Hippolytus and Meleager booted for the boar-chase — THE IDYLLISTS. 315 or Bacchus finding Ariadne by the sea-shore; maenads and satyrs are arrested in their dance ; flower-garlands fall upon the path ; or a goat-legged satyr teaches a young faun to play ; the pipe and flute are there, and from the boy's head fall long curls upon his neck- — or Europa drops anemone and crocus from her hand, trembling upon the bull as he swims onward through the sea' — or tritons blow wreathed shells, and dolphins splash the water — or the eagle's claws clasp Ganymede, and bear him up to ZeuS — or Adonis lies wounded, and wild Aphrodite' spreads hungry arms, and wails with rent robes tossed above her head. From the cabinet of gems we draw a Love, blind, bound, and stung by bees ; or a girl holding an apple in her hand; or a young man tying on his sandal. Then there is the Praxitelean genius of the Vatican who might be Hylas, or Uranian Eros, or Hymenasus, or curled Hyacin^ thus — the faun who lies at Munich overcome with wine, his throat bare, and His deep chest heaving with the breath of sleep — Hercules strangling the twin snakes in his cradle, or ponderous with knotty sinews and huge girth of neck — Demeter, holding fruits of all sorts in one hand and corn-stalks in the other, sweeping her full raiment on the granary floor. Or else we bring again the pugilists from Caracalla's bath, — bruised ears and faces, livid with unheeded blows, — their strained arms bound with thongs, and clamps of iron on their fists. Proces- sions move in endless line, of godlike youths on prancing steeds, of women bearing baskets full of cakes and flowers, of oxen lowing to the sacrifice. The Trojan heroes fall with smiles upon their lips ; the Athlete draws the strigil down his arm ; the sons of Niobe lie stricken, beautiful in death. Cups too and vases help us, chased with figures of all kinds, — dance, festival, love-making, rustic sacrifice, the legendary tales of hate and woe, the daily Idylls of domestic life. Such are some of the works of Greek art which we may use in our attempt to realize Theocritus. Nor need we neglect the 316 THE GREEK POETS. monuments of modern painting — Giorgione's pastoral pictures of piping men, and maidens crowned with jasmine flowers, or the Arcadians of Poussin reading the tale of death upon the gravestone, and its epitaph — " Et ego.'' To reconstruct the mode of life of the Theocritean dramatis persona is not a matter of much difficulty. Pastoral habits are singularly unchangeable, and nothing strikes us more than the recurrence of familiar rustic proverbs, superstitions, and ways of thinking which we find in the Idyllic poets. The mixture of simplicity and shrewdness, of prosaic interest in worldly affairs and of an unconscious admiration for the poetry of nature, which George Sand has recently assigned with delicate analysis to the Bucolic character in her Idylls of Nohant, meets us in every line of the Sicilian pastorals. On the Mediterranean shores too the same occupations have been carried on for centuries with little interruption. The same fields are being ploughed, the same vineyards tilled, the same olive-gardens planted, as those in which Theocritus played as a child. The rocks on which he saw old Olpis watching for the tunnies, with fishing-reed and rush basket, are still haunted through sunny hours by patient fishermen. Perhaps they cut their reeds and rushes in the same river-beds ; certainly they use the same sort of KaXcifioe. The goats have not forgotten to crop cytisus and myrtle, nor have the goat-herds changed their shaggy trousers and long crooks. You may still pick out a shepherd lad among a hundred by his skin and cloak. It is even said that the country ditties of the Neapolitans are Greek ; and how ancient is the origin of local superstitions who shall say ? The country folk still prefer, like Comatas in the fifth Idyll, garden-grown roses to the wild eglantine and anemones of the hedgerow, scorning what has not required some cost or trouble for its cultivation. Gretchen's test of love by blowing on thistle-down does not differ much from that of the shepherd in the third Idyll. Live blood in the eye is still a sign of mysterious im- THE IDYLLISTS. 317 portance"(Idyll iii. 36). To spit is still a remedy against the evil eye (vii. 39). Eunica, the town girl, still turns up her nose at the awkward cowherd ; city and country are not yet wholly harmonized by improved means of locomotion. Then the people of the South are perfectly unchanged ; the fisher boys of Castel- lamare ; the tall straight girls of Capri singing as they walk with pitchers on their heads and distaffs in their hands; the wild Apulian shepherds ; the men and maidens laughing in the olive-fields or vineyards ; the black-browed beauties of the Cornice trooping to church on Sundays with gold earrings, and with pink tulip-buds in their dark hair. One thing however is greatly altered. Go where we will, we find no statues of Priapus and the Nymphs. No lambs are sacrificed to Pan. No honey or milk is poured upon the altars of the rustic Muse. The temples are in ruins. Aloes and cactuses have invaded the colonnades of Girgenti, and through the halls of Paestum winds whistle, and sunbeams stream unheeded. But though the gods are gone, men remain unaltered. A. little less careless, a little more superstitious they may be; but their joys and sorrows, their vices and virtues, their loves and hates, are still the same. Such reflections are trite and commonplace. Yet who can resist the force of their truth and pathos ? ovx afiXv Tbv"Epu>Ta fiovoig £X£;\;', u)Q IdoKivfttQj NiKi'a, ifrivi tovto 0e<3i' ttoko. t'ikvov iytvTO' ov\ afilv to. tca\a irpdroig ra\d Qaivtrai iifiiQ, o'i Ovaroi irtKofieaBa, to 5' avpiov ovk loopa/ieg — said Theocritus, looking back into the far past, and remem- bering that the gifts of love and beauty have belonged to men from everlasting. With what redoubled force may we, after the lapse of twenty centuries, echo these words, when we tread the ground he knew, and read the songs he sang ! His hills stir our vague and yearning admiration, his sea laughs its old laugh of waywardness and glee, his flowers bloom yearly, and fade in 3i« THE GREEK POETS. the spring, his pine and olive branches overshadow us, we listen to the bleating of his goats, and taste the sweetness of the springs from which he drank, the milk and honey are as fresh upon our lips, the wine in winter by the woodfire, when the winds are loud, is just as fragrant, youth is still youth, nor have the dark-eyed maidens lost their charm. Truly ovx afilv -a KttXa irpa-oiQ icaXa. (paiverai I'l/xeQ. In this consists the power of Theocritean poetry. It strikes a note which echoes through our hearts by reason of its genuine simplicity and pathos. The thoughts which natural beauty stirs in our minds find their embodiment in his sweet strange verse ; and though since his time the world has grown old, though the gods of Greece have rent their veils and fled with shrieks from their sanctuaries, though in spite of ourselves we turn our faces skyward from the earth, though emaciated saints and martyrs have supplanted Adonis and the Graces, though the cold damp shades of Cal- vinism have chilled our marrow and our blood, yet there remain deep down within our souls some primal sympathies with nature, some instincts of the Faun, or Satyr, or Sylvan, which educa- tion has not quite eradicated. " The hand which hath long time held a yiolet does not soon forego her fragrance, nor the cup from which sweet wine hath flowed his fragrance." I have dwelt long upon the peculiar properties of classical landscape as described by the Greek idyllists, and as they still exist for travellers upon the more sheltered shores of the Medi- terranean, because it is necessary to understand them before we can appreciate the truth of Theocritus. Of late years much has been written about the difference between classical and modern ways of regarding landscape. Mr. Ruskin has tried to persuade us that the ancients only cared for the more culti- vated parts of nature, for gardens or orchards, from which food or profit or luxurious pleasure . might be derived. And in this view there is no doubt some truth. The Greeks and Romans paid far less attention to inanimate nature than we do, and THE IDYLLISTS. 319 were beyond all question repelled by the savage grandeur of marine and mountain scenery, preferring landscapes of smiling and cultivated beauty to rugged sublimity or the picturesque- ness of decay. In 1 this they resembled all southern nations. An Italian of the present day avoids ruinous places and soli- tudes however splendid. Among the mountains he complains of the brutto paese in which he has to live, and is always longing for town gaieties and the amenities of civilized society. The ancients again despised all interests that pretended to rival the paramount interest of civic or military life. Seneca's figurative expression, circum flosculos occupaiur, might be translated literally as applied to a trifler, to denote the scorn which thinkers, statesmen, patriots, and generals of Greece and Rome felt for mere rural prettiness ; while Quinctilian's verdict on Theocritus (whom however he allows to be admirabilis in suo genere), musa ilia ruslica et pastor alis non forum modo verum ipsam etiam urban reformidat, characterizes the insensibility of urban intellects to a branch of art which we consider of high importance. But it is very easy to overstrain this view, and Mr. Ruskin, we think, has laid an undue stress on Homer in his criticism of the classics ; whereas it is among the later Greek and Roman poets that the analogy of modern literature would lead us to expect indications of a genuine taste for un- adorned nature. These signs the Idyllic poets amply supply ; but in seeking for them we must be prepared to recognize a very different mode of expression from that which we are used to in the florid poets of the modern age. Conciseness, sim- plicity, and an almost prosaic accuracy are the never-failing attributes of classical descriptive art. Moreover humanity is always more present to their minds than to ours. Nothing evoked sympathy from a Greek unless it appeared before him in a human shape, or in connection with some human senti- ment. The ancient poets do not describe inanimate nature - as such, or attribute a vague spirituality to fields and clouds. 320 THE GREEK POETS, That feeling for the beauty of the world which is embodied in such poems as Shelley's Ode to the West Wind gave birth in their imagination to definite legends, involving some dramatic interest and conflict of passions. We who are apt to look for rhapsodies and brilliant outpourings of eloquent fancy can scarcely bring ourselves to recollect what a delicate sense of nature and what profound emotions are implied in the con- ceptions of Pan and Hyacinthus and Galatea. The misuse which has been made of mythology by modern writers has effaced half its vigour and charm. It is only by returning to the nature which inspired these myths that we can reconstruct their exquisite vitality. Different ages and nations express themselves by different forms of art. Music appears to be dominant in the present period ; sculpture ruled among the Greeks, and struck the keynote for all other arts. Even those sentiments which in our mind are most vague, the admiration of sunset skies, or flowers or copsewoods in spring, were ex- pressed by them in the language of definite human form. They sought to externalize and realize as far as possible, not to communicate the inmost feelings and spiritual suggestions arising out of natural objects. Never advancing beyond cor- poreal conditions, they confined themselves to form, and sacri- ficed the charm of mystery, which is incompatible with very definite conception. It was on this account that sculpture, the most exactly imitative of the arts, became literally Archi- tectonic among the Greeks. And for a precisely similar reason music, which is the most abstract and subjective of the, arts, the most evanescent in its material, and the vaguest, assumes the chief rank among modern arts. Sculpture is the language of the body, music the language of the soul. Having once admitted their peculiar mode of feeling Nature, no one can deny that landscape occupies an important place in Greek literature. Every line of Theocritus is vital with a strong passion for natural beauty, incarnated in myths. But even in THE IDYLLISTS. 321 descriptive poetry he is not deficient. His list of trees and flowers is long, and the epithets with which they are characterized are very exquisite, — not indeed brilliant with the inbreathed fancy of the North, but so perfectly appropriate as to define the special beauty of the flower or tree selected. In the same way, a whole scene is conveyed in a few words by mere con- ciseness of delineation, or by the artful introduction of some incident suggesting human emotion. Take for example this picture of the stillness of the night : — rfvide (fiyd* piv tovtoq, aiyuivri 8* arjrai' a 8' £[id ov aiyq. arkpvbiv ZvrooBsv di>la r dXX' ltti tt]V((} iraaa tcaraiOofiai, oc fiE rdXaivav dvTi yivaiKOQ £9i}K€ KdKdv ical dirdpQsvov rjfiiv,* Idyll ii. 38-41. Or this : — d\\d tv p-tv %aipoiffa iror J iiKtavov rpkirt ttwXovq 7r6rvi\ &yu) 8* oiffui rov ip,bv irovov, oj(nrep vireGTav. %atpE, 2eXavaia Xnrapoxpot' %aipET£ 8\ dXXot aoTiptg, £vici}\oio Ear' dvrvya Ni/Kroc o-jradoi.^ Idyll ii. 163 el seqq. Or this of a falling star : — Karrfpiirt rV sc p-'eXav vowp dOpooQ, wq OKa TrvpfToQ dir' ovpavSJ ijpnrtv aGTr]p dQpooQ tv TrovTtj), vuvraig 8k Tig tlirtv eratpoiQ' KovQoTtp', o) iraiSig, TrotilaO' iSjrXcr irXevsTiKoe oupoc.J Idyll xiii. 49-52. * Now rests the deep, now rest the wandering winds, But in my heart the anguish will not rest, While for his love I. pine who stole my sweetness, And made me less than virgin among maids. duL* si- -]- Adieu, dead queen, thou to the ocean turn Thy harnessed steeds ; but I abide, and suffer ; Adieu, resplendent moon, and all you stars, That follow on the wheels of night, adieu ! J Into the black wave Fell headlong, as a fiery star from heaven Falls headlong to the deep, and sailors cry One to another, Lighten sail ; behold, The breeze behind us freshens ! Y 322 THE GREEK POETS. Or the seaweeds on a rocky shore (vii. 58), or the summer bee (iii. 15), or the country party at harvest time (vii. 129 to the end). In all of these, a peculiar simplicity will be noticed, a self-restraint and scrupulosity of definite delineation. To Theocritus the shadowy and iridescent fancies of modern poetry would have been unintelligible. The creations of a Keats or Shelley would have appeared to be monstrous births, like the Centaurs of Ixion, begotten by lawless imaginations upon cloud and mist. When the Greek poet wished to express the charm of summer waves he spoke of Galatea, more fickle and light than thistle-down, a maiden careless of her lover and as cruel as the sea. The same waves suggested to Shakspere these lines, from Midsummer Night's Dream : — " Thou rememberest Since once I sat upon a promontory, And heard a mermaid on a dolphin's back Uttering such dulcet and harmonious breath That the rude sea grew civil at her song ; And certain stars shot madly from their spheres, To hear the sea-maid's music ; " and to Weber the ethereal " mermaid's song " in Oberon. ■ No one acquainted with Shakspere and Weber can deny that both have expressed with marvellous subtlety the magic of the sea in its enchanting calm, whereas the Greek poet works only by indirect suggestion, and presents us with a human portrait more than a phantom of the glamour of the deep. What we have lost in definite projection we have gained in truth, variety, and freedom. The language of our Art appeals immediately to the emotions, disclosing the spiritual reality of things, and caring less for their form than for the feelings they excite in us. Greek art remains upon the surface, and translates into marble the humanized aspects of the external world. The one is for ever seeking to set free, the other to imprison thought. The Greek tells with exquisite precision what he THE IDYLLISTS. 323 "has observed, investing it perhaps with his own emotion. He says, for instance : — aWs ysvoi/jav a pofi^ivaa jiiKiaaa, Kal ig rebv avrpov iKoi/xav, rb'v Kiaabv diadvg' sai rdv vTepiv, $ tv Trvxaady.* The modern poet, to use Shelley's words, " will watch from dawn to gloom The lake-reflected sun illume The yellow bees in the ivy bloom ; Nor heed nor see what shapes they be, But from these create he can Forms more real than living man, Nurslings of immortality," endeavouring to look through and beyond the objects of the . outer world, to use them as the starting-points for his creative fancy, and to embroider their materials with the dazzling fioriture of his invention. Metamorphosis existed for the Greek poet as a simple fact : if the blood of Adonis became anemones, yet the actual drops of blood and the flowers re- mained distinct in his mind ; and even though he may have been sceptical about the miracle, he restrained his fancy to the reproduction of the one old fable. The modern poet believes in no metamorphosis but that which is produced by the alchemy of his own brain. He loves to confound the most dissimilar existences, and to form startling combinations of thoughts which have never before been brought into con- nection with each other. Uncontrolled by tradition or canons of propriety, he roams through the world, touching its various objects with the wand of his imagination. To the west wind he cries : — ' ' Thou on whose stream, 'mid the steep sky's commotion, Loose clouds like earth's decaying leaves are shed, * Would I were The murmuring bee, that through the ivy screen, And through the fern that hides thee, I might come Into thy cavern ! Y 2 324 THE GREEK POETS. Shook from the tangled boughs of heaven and ocean, Angels of rain and lightning ; there are spread On the blue surface of thine airy surge, Like the bright hair uplifted from the head Of some fierce Masnad, ev'n from the dim verge Of the horizon to the zenith's height, The locks of the approaching storm. ..." Imagine how astonished even .^Eschylus would have been at these violent transitions and audacious transformations ! The Greeks had no conceits : * they did not call the waves " nodding hearse-plumes " like Calderon, or the birds " winged lyres" like Guarini, or daisies "pearled Arcturi of the earth'' like Shelley, or laburnums "dropping wells of fire" like Tennyson. If they ventured on such licenses in their more impassioned lyrics, they maintained the metaphor with strict propriety. One good instance of the difference in this respect between the two a'ges is afforded by Ben Jonson, who translates Sappho's j;poe tuipofttivog ayyeXof ar]6uv, followed Jason in the Argo to the Colchian shores, and he took young Hylas with him ; " for even," says Theocritus, "the brazen-hearted son of Amphitryon, who withstood the fierceness of the lion, loved a youth, the charm- ing Hylas, and taught him like a father everything by which THE IDYLLISTS. 329 he might become a good and famous man; nor would he leave the youth at dawn, or noon, or evening, but sought continually to fashion him after his own heart, and to make him a right yokefellow with him in mighty deeds." How he lost Hylas on the Cianian shore, and in the wildness of his sorrow let Argo sail without him, and endured the reproach of desertion, is well known. Theocritus has wrought the story with more than his accustomed elegance. But we wish to confine our attention to the ideal of knighthood and knightly education presented in the passage quoted. Heracles was not merely the lover but the guardian also and tutor of Hylas. He regarded him not only as an object of tenderness, but also as a future friend and helper in the business of life. His constant aim was to form of him a brave and manly warrior, a Herculean hero. And in this re- spect Heracles was the Eponym and patron of an order which existed throughout Doric Hellas. This order, protected by religious tradition and public favour, regulated by strict rules, and kept within the limits of honour, produced the Cretan lovers, the Lacedaemonian " hearers " and " inspirers," the Theban immortals who lay with faces turned so stanchly to their foes that vice seemed incompatible with so much valour. Achilles was another Eponym of this order. In the twenty-ninth Idyll, the phrase, 'A^AXs'iot i\oi is used, to describe the most perfect pair of manly friends. The twelfth Idyll is written in a similar if a weaker and more wanton vein. The same longing retrospect- is cast upon the old days " when men indeed were golden, when the love of comrades was mutual," 'and constancy is rewarded with the same promise of glorious immortality as that which Plato holds out in the Phadrut. Bion, we may remark in passing, celebrates with equal praise the friendships of Theseus, Orestes, and Achilles. Without taking some notice of this peculiar institution, in its origin military and austere, it is impossible to understand the chivalrous age of Greece among 330 THE GREEK POETS. the Dorian tribes. In the midst of brute force and cunning and an almost absolute disregard of what we are accustomed to understand by chivalry — gentleness, chastity, truth, regard for women and weak persons — this one anomalous sentiment emerges. Passing to another point in which Greek differed from mediaeval chivalry, we notice the semi-divine nature of the heroes : Belog awTos is the name by which they are designated and supernatural favour is always showered upon them. This indicates a primitive society, a national consciousness ignorant of any remote Past. The heroes whom Theocritus celebrates are purely Dorian — Heracles, a Jack the Giant-Killer in his cradle, brawny, fearless, of huge appetite, a mighty trainer, with a scowl to frighten athletes from the field; Polydeuces, a notable bruiser; Castor, a skilled horseman and a man of blood. In one point the twin sons of Leda resembled mediaeval knights. They combined the arts of song with mar- tial prowess. Theocritus styles them 'nnriieg KiBapurral, uedXqriifies aoiSol. Their achievements narrated in the twenty-second Idyll may be compared with those of Tristram and Lancelot. The gigantic warrior whom they find by the well in the land of the Bebrycians, gorgeously armed, insolent, and as knotty as a brazen statue, who refuses access to the water and challenges them to combat, exactly resembles one of the lawless giants of the Morte Arthur. The courtesy of the Greek hero contrasts well with the barbarian's violence; and when they come to blows, it is good to observe how address, agility, training, nerve, enable Polydeuces to overcome with ease the vast fury and brute strength of the Bebrycian bully. As the fight proceeds, the son of Leda improves in flesh and colour, while Amycus gets out of breath, and sweats his thews away. Polydeuces pounds the giant's neck and face, reducing him to a hideous mass of bruises, and receiving the blows of Amycus upon his chest and loins. At the end of the fight he spares his prostrate THE IDYLLISJS. 331 foe, on the condition of his respecting the rites of hospitality and dealing courteously with strangers. Throughout it will be noticed how carefully Theocritus maintains the conception of the Hellenic as distinguished from the barbarian combatant. Christian and Pagan are not more distinct in a legend of the San Graal. But Greek chivalry has no magic, no monstrous exaggeration. All is simple, natural, and human. Bellero- phon, it is true, was sent after the Chimera, and Perseus freed Andromeda like St. George from a dragon's mouth. But these ruder fancies of Greek infancy formed no integral part of the mythology ; instead of being "multiplied they were gradually winnowed out, and the poets laid but little stress upon them. The achievement of Castor is not so favourable to the character of Hellenic chivalry. Having in concert with Poly- deuces borne off by guile the daughters of Leucippus from their affianced husbands, Castor kills one of the injured lovers who pursues him and demands restitution. He slays him, though he is his own first cousin, ruthlessly; and while the other son of Aphareus is rushing forward to avenge his brother's death Zeus hurls lightning and destroys him. Theocritus remarks that it is no light matter to engage in battle with the Tyndarids ; but he makes no reflection on what we should call " the honour" of the whole transaction. Of all the purely pastoral Idylls by which Theocritus is most widely famous perhaps the finest is the seventh, or Thalysia. It glows with the fresh and radiant splendour of southern beauty. In this poem the Idyllist describes the journey of three young men in summer from the city to the farm of their friend Phrasidamus, who has invited them to partake in the feast with which he purposes to honour Demeter at harvest time. On their way they meet with a goat-herd, Lycidas, who invites them, "with a smiling eye," to recline beneath the trees and while away the hours of noon-tide heat with song. " The very lizard," he says, " is sleeping by the wall ; but on the hard 332 THE GREEK POETS. stones of the footpath your heavy boots keep up a ceaseless ringing." Thus chided by the goat-herd they resolve upon a singing match between Simichidas, the teller of the tale, and Lycidas, who offers his crook as the prize of victory. Lycidas begins the contest with that exquisite song to Ageanax, which has proved the despair of all succeeding Idyllists, and which furnished Virgil with one of the most sonorous lines in his Georgics.- No translation can do justice to the smooth and liquid charm of its melodious verse, in which the tenderest feeling mingles gracefully with delicate humour and with homely descriptions of a shepherd's life. The following lines, which form a panegyric on Comatas, some famed singer of the rustic muse, may be quoted for their pure Greek feeling. Was ever an unlucky mortal envied more melodiously, and yet more quaintly, for his singular fortune ? aiati 3\ wc 7tok' £5ekto tov clittoXov supra Xdpva'i Zutbv iovra Kaicyaiv ara<76a\iyfftv avaKTOQ' wc T£ viv al (Tifial Xetp.tiiv6Qe tpkpfiov ioltrai Kiopov tQ adeiav [laXaKolt; dvBeuffi ithkivaai' ovvtxa oi yXuKU Moicra Kara trrofiaroQ %c£ v'tKrap. ui fiaKapitTTE KofiaTa, tv drjv rdSs repiri'd ire-jrovBrjQ, Kal tv aariKKaaBiiQ kg Xapvaica, Kal tv, ptXiaaav Krjpia 0fp/3u'/A£voc, itoq iopiov l^erkXeatrag.* The song with which Simichidas contends against his rival is not of equal beauty; but the goat-herd hands him the crook "as * How of old The goat-herd by his cruel lord was bound, And left to die in a great chest ; -and how The busy bees, up .coming from the meadows, To the sweet cedar, fed him with soft flowers, Because the Muse had filled his mouth with nectar. Yes, all these sweets were thine, blessed Comatas ; And thou wast put into the chest, and fed By the blithe bees, and passed a pleasant time. Leigh Hunt's Jar of Honey from Mount Hybla. THE IDYLLISTS. 333 a gift of friendship from the Muses." Then he leaves the three friends, who resume their journey till they reach the house of Phrasidamus. There elms and poplar-trees and vines embower them with the pleasant verdure of rustling leaves and the per- fumes of summer flowers and autumn fruits. The jar of wine as sweet as that which made the Cyclops dance among his sheep-fold spreads its fragrance through the air; while the statue of Demeter, with her handfuls of corn and poppy-heads, stands smiling by. This seventh Idyll, of which no adequate idea can be con- veyed by mere description, may serve as the type of those purely rustic poems which since the days of Theocritus have from age to age been imitated by versifiers emulous of his gracefulness. If space allowed, it would not be uninterest- ing to analyze the Idyll of the two old fishermen, who gossip together so wisely and contentedly in their huts by the sea-shore, mending their nets the while, and discoursing gravely of their dreams. In this Idyll, which is however probably the work of some of Theocritus's imitators, and in the second, which consists of a singing match between two harvest- men, the native homeliness of the Idyllic muse appears to best ■ advantage. With this brief and insufficient notice, I must leave Theo- critus in order to say a few words about his successors. Bioh's poetry, when compared with that of Theocritus, declines con- siderably from the Bucolic type. His Idylls are for the most part fragments of delicately finished love-songs, remarkable for elegance and sweetness more than for masculine vigour or terse expression. In Bion the artificial style of pastoral begins. Theocritus had made cows and pipes and shepherds fashion- able. His imitators followed him, without the humour and natural >taste which rendered his pictures so attractive. We already trace the frigid affectation of Bucolic interest in the elegy on Bion : " He sang no song of wars or tears, but piped 334 THE CREEK POETS. of Pan and cowherds, and fed flocks, singing as he went ; pipes he fashioned, and milked the sweet-breathed heifer, and taught kisses, and cherished in his bosom love, and stole the heart of Aphrodite." As it happens, the most original and powerful of Bion's remaining poems is a " Song of Tears," of passionate .lamentation, of pathetic grief, composed, not as a pastoral ditty, but on the occasion of one of those splendid festivals in which the Syrian rites of slain Adonis were celebrated by Greek women. The iTrird^wg 'ASwyiSog is written with a fiery passion and a warmth of colouring peculiar to Bion. The verse bounds with tiger leaps, its full-breathed dactyls panting with the energy of rapid flight. The tender and reflective beauty of Theo- critus, the concentrated passion of his SimEetha, and the flow- ing numbers of his song to Adonis are quite lost and swallowed up in the Asiatic fury of Bion's lament. The poem begins with the cry Aia'£w rbv " Alwviv which is variously repeated in Idyllic fashion as a refrain throughout the lamentation. After this prelude, having as it were struck the key-note to the music, the singer cries : • p.7)Keri TropQvpioLQ zvl tpapaei Kinrpi KaOsvdf tfyjoeo deiXaia KvavoffroXe Kal TrXaTayrjGov OTadta, Kal Xkye iraaiv, aTruXero KaXbg "Adtovig* Notice how the long words follow one another with quick pulses and flashes of sound. The same peculiar rhythm recurs when, after describing the beautiful dead body of Adonis, the poet returns to Aphrodite : a c"' 'AQpodira Xvacipsva TrXoKafuSaQ ava SpvjiMQ aXaXijTai •TrtvQaXsa, vrjTrXeKTOQ, dffdvdaXoQ' al cl jStirot vlv spXOfikvav KUpovTi Kal Upbv alpa opkirovrai. * Sleep, Cypris, no more, on thy purple-strewed bed; Arise, wretch stoled in black, — beat thy breast unrelenting, And shriek to the worlds, "Fair Adonis is dead." Translation by Mrs. Barrett Browning. THE IDYLLISTS. 335 b\v tik KuKVOiffa 81 ciyicea paxpa tpopurai, 'Aaovpiov J3a6u)Q evorjaev 'Aowvidog ao\tTov cXkoq, lis iSe (poivLov al/ia iiapatvojiEvqi irtpi /*W;J, 7raxEag afnrtTaffatra Kivvptro' fiiivov *Add)vi, SvaTTOTjii jiiivov "Aduivt, K.r.X.f The last few lines of her soliloquy are exquisitely touching, especially those in which Aphrodite deplores her immortality, and acknowledges the supremacy of the queen of the grave over Love and Beauty. What follows is pitched at a lower key. There is too much of merely Anacreontic prettiness about the description of the bridal bed and the lamenting Loves. Aphrodite's passion reminds us of a Neapolitan Stabat Mater, in. which the frenzy of love and love-like piety are strangely blended. But the concluding picture suggests nothing nobler than a painting of Albano, in which amoretti are plentiful, and there is much elegance of composition. This remark applies * And the poor Aphrodite, with tresses unbound, All dishevelled, imsandalled, shrieks mournful and shrill . Through the dusk of the groves. The thorns, tearing her feet Gather up the red flower of her blood, which is holy, Each footstep she takes ; and the valleys repeat The sharp cry which she utters, and draw it out slowly. She calls on her spouse, her Assyrian. Translation by Mrs. Barrett Browning. -|- When, ah ! ah ! — she saw how the blood ran away And empurpled the thigh ; and, with wild hands flung out, Said with sobs, " Stay, Adonis ! unhappy one, stay ! " — Ibid. 336 THE GREEK POETS. to the rest of Bion's poetry. If Theocritus deserves to be illustrated by the finest of Greek bas-reliefs, Bion cannot claim more than an exquisitely chiselled gem. Certainly the second and third fragments are very charming ; and the lines to Hesper (fragment 16) have so much beauty that I attempt a version of them : — Hesper, thou golden light of happy love, Hesper, thou holy pride of purple eve, Moon among stars, but star beside the moon, Hail, friend ! and since the young moon sets to-night Too soon below the mountains, lend thy lamp And guide me to the shepherd whom I love. No theft I purpose ; no wayfaring man Belated would I watch and make my prey ; Love is my goal, and Love how fair it is, When friend meets friend sole in the silent night, Thou knowest, Hesper ! In Moschus we find less originality and power than belong to Bion. His Europa is an imitation of the style in which Theocritus wrote Hylas ; but the copy is frigid and affected by the style of its model. Five-and-twenty lines for instance are devoted to an elaborate description of a basket, which leaves no impression on the mind ; whereas every leaf and tendril on the cup which Theocritus introduces into the first Idyll stands out vividly before us. Nothing moreover could be more unnatural and tedious than the long speech which Europa makes when she is being carried out to sea upon the bull's back. Yet we must allow that there is spirit and beauty in the triumph of sea monsters who attend Poseidon and do honour to the chosen bride of Zeus ; Nereids riding on dolphins, and Tritons, "the deep-voiced minstrels of the sea, sounding a marriage song on their long-winding conchs." The whole of this piece is worthy of Ovid's Metamorphoses. Moschus is remarkable for occasional felicities of language. In this line for example, THE IDYLLISTS. 337 avr& Kai drptKttov TToifiaLverai IQvog bvi'igwv, an old thought receives new and subtle beauty by its ex- pression. If Megara (Idyll iv.) be really the work of Moschus, which is doubtful, it reflects more honour on him. The dialogue between the wife and mother of the maddened Heracles, after he has murdered his children and gone forth to execute fresh labours, is worthy of their tragic situation. "Epu>e SpcurirriQ again is an exquisite little poem in the Anacreontic style of Bion, fully equal to any of its models. The fame of Moschus will however depend upon the Elegy on Bion. I have already hinted that its authenticity is questioned. In my opinion it far surpasses any of his compositions in respect of definite thought and original imagination. Though the Bucolic common-places are used with obvious artificiality, and much is borrowed from Theocritus's Lament for Daphnis, yet so true and delicate a spirit is inbreathed into the old forms as to render them quite fresh. The passage which begins al ai rat /xa\ax<« every dabbler in Greek literature knows by heart. And what can be more ingenuously pathetic than the nuances of feeling expressed in these lines : — Qapnaicov rj\9c, Biiav, iron abv aro/ia ipap/iaKov ilosg. 7rwc rev tolq xsikfaffi iroTsSpap.t kovk kyXvicdvOrj ; Tig dk (Bporog roffaovrov dvdfiepog r/ Rtpaaai rot rj Sovvai \a\kovn to Qappanov; kxfvyev ipSav.* And:— rig ttote aq. ffvpiyyi peXiZtrai, & rpnroQrirs ; rig i' iirl ooig /caXu/tott,- tfi;o-tt ard/ta ; rig Bpaabg oiirwg; * There came, O Bion, poison to thy mouth, Thou didst feel poison ! how could it approach Those lips of thine, and not be turned to sweet ? Leigh Hunt. 338 THE GREEK POETS. ilairt ydp ■Kvtiu Td ad j^f/Xta K <& T ^> a ^ v ^"B^c d\u> B' iv SovaKtaai nag iwifiooKtr' doiddg.* Or again :— dxto 5* kv irerprjaiv odvptrai otti VMOTry, KfiVKiTt fiifiEiTai rd ad ;j£€i\£a.j' There is also something very touching in the third line of this strophe.: — tcuvoQ b TaiQ dyiXaiatv ipdafitog ovkzti fikXtrei, ovkst 7 eptjijtaiyffiv virb Spvalv tffitvog qSsi, d\\d Trapd JlXovriji fieXog Arj9aiov deidei.% and in the allusion made to the Sicilian girlhood of grim Per- sephone (126-129). This vein of tender and melodious senti- ment, which verges on the concetti of modern art, seems different from the style of Eurofia. To English readers, the three elegies, on Daphnis, on Adonis, and on Bion, which are severally attributed to Theocritus, Bion, and Moschus, will always be associated with the names of Milton and Shelley. There is no comparison whatever between Lycidas and Daphnis. In spite of the misplaced apparition of St. Peter, and of the frigidity which belongs to pastoral allegory, Lycidas .is a richer and more gorgeous monument of elegiac verse. The simplicity of the Theocritean dirge contrasts strangely with the varied wealth of Milton's imagery, the 'few ornaments of Greek art * Who now shall play thy pipe, oh ! most desired one ; Who lay his lips against thy reeds ? who dare it ? For still they breathe of thee, and of thy mouth, And Echo comes to seek her voices there. — Leigh Hunt. t Echo too mourned among the rocks that she Must hush, and imitate thy lips no longer. — Ibid. % No longer pipes he to the charmed herds, No longer sits under the lovely oaks, And sings ; but to the ears of Pluto now Tunes his Lethean verse . — Ibid. THE IDYLLISTS. , 339 with the intricate embroideries of modern fancy. To quote passages from these well-known poems would be superfluous ; but let a student of literature compare the passages, 77-p iroic ixp ■fiaff and S> liav Uav with Milton's paraphrase " Where were ye, nymphs, — " or the concise paragraphs about the flowers and valleys that mourned for Daphnis with the luxuriance of Milton's invocation " Return, Alpheus." When Shelley wrote Adonais, his mind was full of the elegies on Bion and Adonis. Of direct translation in his Lament there is very little ; but he has absorbed both of the Greek poems, and transmuted them into the substance of his own mind. Urania takes the place of Aphrodite — the heavenly queen, " most musical of mourners," bewails the loss of her poetical consort. Instead of loves, the couch of Adonais is surrounded by the thoughts and fancies of which he was the parent ; and, instead of gods and goddesses, the power of nature is invoked to weep for him and take him to herself. Whatever Bion and Moschus recorded as a fact becomes, consistently with the spiritualizing tendency of modern genius, symbolical in Shelley's poem. His art has alchemized the whole structure, idealizing what was material, and disembody- ing the sentiments which were incarnated in simple images. Adonais is a sublime rhapsody ; its multitudinous ideas are whirled like drops of golden rain, on which the sun of the poet's fancy gleams with ever-changing rainbow hues. In drifts and eddies they rush past, -delighting . us with their rapidity and brilliancy ; but the impression left upon our mind is vague and incomplete, when compared with the few and distinct ideas presented by the Doric Elegies. At the end of Alastor there occurs a touching reminiscence of Moschus, but the outline is less faint than in Adonais, the transmutation even more complete. Tennyson, among the poets of the nine- teenth century, owes much to the Greek idyllists. His genius appears to be in many respects akin to theirs, and the age in z 2 340 THE GREEK POETS. which he lives is not unlike the Ptolemaic period. Unfitted, perhaps, by temperament for the most impassioned lyrics, he delights in minutely finished pictures, in felicities of expression and in subtle harmonies of verse. Like Theocritus, he finds in nature and in the legends of past ages subjects congenial to his muse. (Enone and Tithonus are steeped in the golden beauty of Syracusan art. " Come down, O maid," transfers, with perfect taste, the Greek idyllic feeling to Swisss cenery ; it is a fine instance of new wine being poured successfully into old bottles, for nothing can be fresher, and not even the Thalysia is sweeter. It would be easy enough to collect minor instances which prove that the Laureate's mind is impregnated with the thoughts and feelings of the poems I have been dis- cussing. For instance, the figure, " softer than sleep," and the comparison of a strong man's muscles to smooth stones under running water, which we find in Enid; both of them occur in Theocritus. CHAPTER XL THE ANTHOLOGY. The History of its Compilation. — Collections of Meleager, Philippus, Agafhias, Cephalas, Planudes. — The Palatine MS. — The Sections of the Anthology.- — Dedicatory Epigrams. — Simonides. — Epitaphs: Real and Literary. — Callimachus. — Epigrams on Poets. — Antipater of Sidon. — Hortatory Epigrams. — Palladas. — Satiric Epigrams. — Lucillius. — Amatory Epigrams. — Meleager, Straton, Philodemus, Antipater, Rufinus, Paulus Silentiarius, Agathias, Plato. — Descriptive Epigrams. The Anthology may from some points of view be regarded as the most valuable relic of antique literature which we possess. Composed of several thousand short poems, written for the most part in the elegiac metre, at different times and by a mul- titude of authors, it is coextensive with the .whole current of Greek history, from the splendid period of the Persian War to the decadence of Christianized Byzantium. Many subjects of interest in Greek life, which would otherwise have had to be laboriously illustrated from the historians or the comic poets are here fully and melodiously set forth. If we might compare the study of Greek Literature to a journey in some splendid mountain region, then we might say with propriety that from the sparkling summits where ^Eschylus and Sophocles and Pindar sit enthroned, we turn in our less strenuous moods to gather the meadow flowers of Meleager, Palladas, Callimachus. Placing them between the leaves of the book of our memory, we possess an everlasting treasure of sweet thoughts, which will serve in after-days to remind us of those scenes of Olympian 342 THE GREEK POETS. majesty through which we travelled. The slight effusions of these minor poets are ever nearer to our hearts than the master- pieces of the noblest Greek literature. They treat with a touching limpidity and sweetness of the joys and fears and hopes and sorrows that are common to all humanity. They introduce us to the actual life of a bygone civilization, stripped of its political or religious accidents, and tell us that the Greeks of Athens or of Sidon thought and felt exactly as we feel. Even the Graffiti of Pompeii have scarcely more power to recon- • struct the past and summon as in dreams the voices and the form's of long-since buried men. There is yet another way in which the Anthology brings us closer to the Greeks than any other portion of their literature. The Lyrists express an intense and exalted mood of the race in its divine adolescence. The Tragedians exhibit the genius of Athens in its maturity. The Idyllists utter a rich nightingale note from the woods and fields of Sicily. But the Anthology carries us through all the phases of Hellenic civilization upon its uninterrupted undercurrent ofelegiac melody. The clear fresh light of the morning, the splendour of noonday, the mellow tints of sunset, and the sad grey hues of evening are all there. It is a tree which bears the leaves and buds and blossoms and fruitage of the Greek spirit on its boughs at once. Many intervals in the life of the nation which are represented by no other portion of its litera- ture — the ending, for example, of the first century before Christ — here receive a brilliant illustration. Again there is no more signal proof of the cosmopolitan nature of the later Greek culture than is afforded by the Anthology. From Rome, Alexandria, Palestine, Byzantium, no less than from the isles and cpntinent of Greece, are recruited the poets, whose works are enshrined in this precious Golden Treasury of fugitive pieces. The history of the Anthology is not without interest. By a gradual process of compilation and accretion it grew into its- THE ANTHOLOGY. 343 present form from very slight beginnings. The first impulse to collect epigrams seems to have originated in connection with archaeology. From the very earliest the Greeks were in the habit of engraving sentences, for the most part in verse, upon their temples, statues, trophies, tombs, and public monuments of all kinds. Many of these inscriptions were used by Herodotus and Thucydides- as authorities for facts and dates. But about 200 B.C. one Polemon made: a general collection of the authentic epigrams to be found upon- the public buildings of the Greek cities. After him Alcetas ■ copied the , dedicatory verses at Delphi. Similar collections are ascribed to- Mnestor and Apellas Ponticus. Aristodemus is mentioned as the compiler of the epigrams of Thebes. Philochorus performed the same service for Athens. Neoptolemus of Paros and the philosopher Euhemerus are also credited with similar antiquarian labours. So far, the collectors of epigrams had devoted themselves to historical monuments ; and of their work, in any separate form at least, no trace exists. But Meleager of Gadara (b.c. 60) conceived the notion of arranging in alphabetical order a selec- tion of lyric and erotic poetry, which he dedicated to his friend Diocles. He called this compilation by the name of rrri^avoe, each of the forty-six poets whom he admitted into his book being represented by a flower. Philip of Thessalonica in the time of Trajan, following his> example, incorporated into the garland of Meleager those epigrams. which had acquired cele- brity in the interval. About the same time or a little later, Straton of Sardis made a special anthology of poems on one class of subjects, which is • known as the fiovaa ircuSio;, and into which, besides ninetysreight of his own epigrams, he admitted many of the compositions of Meleager, Philip, and other predecessors. These collections belong to the classical period of Greek literature. But the Anthology, as we possess it, had not yet come into existence. It remained for Agathias, a Byzantine Greek of the age of Justinian, to undertake a com- 344 7 HE GREEK POETS. prehensive compilation from all the previous collections. After adding numerous poems of a date posterior to Straton, especially those of Paulus Silentiarius, Macedonius, Rufinus, and himself, he edited his kvkXoc kuriypafifiartov, divided into seven books. The first book contained dedicatory epigrams, the second de- scriptive poems, the third epitaphs, the fourth reflections on the various events of life, the fifth satires, the sixth erotic verses, the seventh exhortations to enjoyment. Upon the general outline of the Anthology as arranged ,by Agathias two subsequent col- lections were founded. Cdnstantinus Cephalas, in the tenth century, at Byzantium, and in the reign of Constantinus Por- phyrogenitus, undertook a complete revision and recombination of all pre-existing anthologies. With the patience of a literary bookworm, to whom the splendid libraries of the metropolis were accessible, he set about his work, and gave to the Greek Anthology that form which it now bears. But the vicissitudes of the Anthology did not termipate with the labours of Cephalas. Early in the fourteenth century a monk Planudes set to work upon a new edition. It appears that he contented himself with compiling and abridging from the collection of Cephalas. His principal object was to expurgate it from impurities and to supersede it by what he considered a more edifying text. Accordingly he amended, castrated, omitted, interpolated, altered, and remodelled at his own sweet will : " non magis disposuit quam mutilavit et ut ita dicam castravit hunc librum, detractis lascivioribus epigrammatis, ut ipse gloriatur," says Lascaris in the preface to his edition of the Planudean Antho- logy. Pie succeeded, however, to -the height of his desire ; for copies ceased to be made of the Anthology of Cephalas ; and when Europe in the fifteenth century awoke to the study of Greek literature, no other collection but that of Planudes was known. Fortunately for this most precious relic of antiquity, there did exist one exemplar of the Anthology of Cephalas. Having escaped the search of Poggio, Aurispa, Filelfo, Poliz- THE ANTHOLOGY. 345 iano, and of all the emissaries whom the Medici employed in ransacking the treasure-houses of Europe, this unique' manu- script was at last discovered in 1606 by Claude de Saumaise, better known as Milton's antagonist Salmasius, in the Palatine Library at Heidelberg. A glance at this treasure assured the young scholar — for Saumaise was then aged only twenty-twb — that he had made one of the most important discoveries which remained within the reach of modern students. He spent years in preparing a critical edition of its text ; but all his work was ' thrown away : for the Leyden publishers to whom he applied refused to publish the Greek without a Latin version, and death overtook him before he had completed the requisite labour. Meanwhile the famous Palatine MS. had been transferred, after the sack of Heidelberg in 1623, to the Vatican, as a pre- sent to Pope Gregory XV. Isaac Voss, the rival of Saumaise, induced one Lucas Langermann to undertake a journey to Rome, in order that he might make a faithful transcript of the MS. and publish it to the annoyance of the great French scholar. But Saumaise dying in 1653, the work, undertaken from motives of jealousy, was suspended. The MS. reposed still upon the shelves of the Vatican Library; and in 1776 the Abbe" Giuseppe Spalletti completed a trustworthy copy of its pages, which was bought by Ernest Duke of Gotha and Alten- burg for his library. In the year 1797 the MS. itself was transferred to Paris after the treaty of Tolentino ; and in 181 5 it was restored to Heidelberg, where it now reposes. Mean- while Brunck had published, from copies of this MS., the greater portion of the Anthology in his Analecta Veterum Poetarum Grmcorum ; and Jacobs between 1794 and 18 14 had edited the whole collection with minutest accuracy upon the faith of the Abbe Spalletti's exemplar. The edition of Didot, to which I shall refer in my examination of the Antho- logy,* is based not only on the labours of Brunck and Jacobs, * Paris, 1864 — 1872. The translations quoted by me are taken prin- 346 THE GREEK POETS. but also upon the MSS. of the unfortunate Chardon de la Ro- chette, who, after spending many years of his life in the illus- tration of the Anthology of Cephalas, was forced in old age to sell his collections for a small sum. They passed in 1836 into the possession of the (then) Imperial Library. The Palatine MS., which is our sole authority for the Antho- logy as arranged by Cephalas, is a 4to. parchment of 710 pages. It has been written by different hands, at different times, and on different plans of arrangement. The index does not always agree with the contents, but seems to be that of an older collection, of which the one we possess is an imperfect copy. Yet Cephalas is often mentioned, and always with affectionate reverence, by the transcribers of the MS. In one place he is called 6 /tandpiog Kal aeif/.V7)BTOG kcu TpurodriTOS av- OptMinoc, the sentiment of which words we in the middle of this nineteenth century may most cordially echo. The first section of the Anthology is devoted to Christian epigrams upon the chief religious monuments and statues of Byzantium. However these may interest the ecclesiastical student, they have no value for a critic of Greek poetry. The second section consists of a poem in hexameters upon the statues which adorned the gymnasium of Zeuxippus. Some conception may be formed, after the perusal of this very pe- destrian composition, of the art-treasures which Byzantium contained in the fifth century. Authentic portraits of the great poets and philosophers of Greece, as well as works of imagina- tion illustrative of the Iliad and the Attic tragedies, might then be studied in one place of public resort. Byzantium had become a vast museum for the ancient world. The third section is devoted to mural inscriptions from the temple of Apollonis in Cyzicus. The fourth contains the prefaces of cipally, when not original, from the collections of Wellesley (Anthobgia. Polyglotta) and Burgess (Bonn's Series), and from the Miscellanies of the 1 late J. A. Symonds, M.D. THE ANTHOLOGY. 347 Meleager, Philip, and Agathias, to their several collections. The fifth, which includes 309 epigrams, is consecrated to erotic poetry. The sixth, which numbers 358, consists of a collection of inscriptions from temples and public monu- ments, recording the illustrious actions of the Greeks or votive offerings of private persons. In the seventh we read 748 epitaphs of various sorts. The eighth carries us again into the dismal region of post-pagan literature : it contains nothing but 254 poems from the pen of Saint Gregory the Theologian. The 827 epigrams of the ninth section are called by their col- lector eiriSetKTtKci ; that is to say, they are- composed in illustra- tion of a variety of subjects, anecdotical, rhetorical, and of general interest. Perhaps this part of the whole Anthology has been the favourite of modern imitators and translators. Passing to the tenth section we find 126 semi-philosophical poems, most of which record the vanity of human life and advise mortals to make the best of their brief existence by enjoyment. The eleventh is devoted to satire. It is here that the reflex influence of Latin on Greek literature is most perceptible. The twelfth section bears the name of Straton, and exhibits in its 258 epigrams the morality of ancient Hellas under the aspect which has least attraction for modern readers. The thirteenth embraces a few epigrams in irregular metres. The fourteenth is made up of riddles and oracles. The fifteenth again has half a century of poems which could not well be catalogued elsewhere. The sixteenth contains that part of the Planudean collection which does not occur in our copy of the Anthology of Cephalas. It may be mentioned in conclusion that, with one or two very inconsiderable ex- ceptions, none of the poems of the early Greek lyrists and Gnomic writers are received into the so-called Anthology. To the student of Greek history and Greek customs, no section of the Anthology is more interesting than that which includes the i-mypafifiaTa ava.Brina.TiKa, the record of the public 348 THE GREEK POETS. and the private votive-offerings in Hellas. Here, as in a scroll spread out before us, in, the silver language of the great Simonides,* may be read the history of the achievements of the Greeks against Xerxes and his hosts. The heroes of Marathon, the heroes of Thermopylae, Megistias the soothsayer, Leonidas the king, Pausanias the general, the seamen of Salamis, the Athenian cavalry, the Spartans of Plataea, all receive their special tribute of august celebration at the hands of the poet who best knew how to suit simple words to splendid actions. Again the aTrfKr) which commemorated in Athens the patriotic tyrannicide of Aristogeiton, the statue of Pan which Miltiades after Marathon consecrated in honour of his victory, the trophies erected by Pausanias at Delphi to Phcebus, the altar to Zeus Eleutherios dedicated in common by all the Greeks, the tripod sent to Delphi by Gelon and the other tyrants of Sicily after their victory over the Carthaginians, for each and all of these Simonides was called on to compose imperishable verse. Our heart trembles even now when we read such lines as these :+ w Ztiv dyykWeiv AaietSaifiovioig on Tyoe Kti[it9a rote kuvmv pfi[ia]TpaiQ, as Cicero who renders it by legibus seems to think ? Or is it the same as orders ? J What time the Greeks with might and warlike deed, Sustained by courage in their hour of need, Drove forth the Persians, they to Zeus that frees This altar built, the free fair pride of Greece. THE ANTHOLOGY. 349 rovls. 7ro0'"E\X)/i/£e pwfty X e P°Cj *Pyp "Apijoc, siroXjutfj lpux'?? ^i\fiari 7T£i96[i£voi, Tlkpaag k£e\d.aavT€g, k\£v6epov 'RWadi Ko(T[iov icpvaavro Aibg /3wjuov 'EXevBepiov. But it is not merely within the sphere of world-famous history that the Dedicatory Epigrams are interesting. Multitudes of them introduce us to the minutest facts of private life in Greece. We see the statues of gods hung round with flowers a"nd scrolls, the shrines filled with waxen tablets, wayside chapels erected to Priapus or to Pan, the gods of the shore honoured with dripping clothes of mariners, the Paphian home of Aphrodite rich with jewels and with mirrors and with silks suspended by devout adorers of both sexes. A fashionable church in modern Italy — the Annunziata at Florence, for example, or St. Anthony at Padua — is not more crowded with pictures of people saved from accidents, with silver hearts and waxen limbs, with ribands and artificial flowers, with rosaries ■ and precious stones, and with innumerable objects that only tell their tale of bygone vows to the votary who hung them there, than were the temples of our Lady of Love in Cneidos or in Corinth. In the epigrams before us we read how hunters hung their nets to Pan, and fishermen their gear to Poseidon ; gardeners their figs and pomegranates to Priapus ; blacksmiths their hammers and tongs to Hephaestus. Stags are dedicated to Artemis and Phcebus, and corn-sheaves to Demeter, who also receives the plough, the sickle, and the oxen of farmers. A poor man offers the produce of his field to Pan; the firstfruits of the vine are set aside for Bacchus and his crew of satyrs ; Pallas obtains the shuttle of a widow who resolves to quit her life of care and turn to Aphrodite ; the eunuch Alexis offers his cymbals, drums, flutes, knife, and golden curls to Cybele. Phoebus is presented with a golden cicada, Zeus with an old ash-spear that has seen service, Ares with a shield and cuirass. A poet dedicates roses to the 35° THE GREEK POETS. maids of Helicon and laurel wreaths to Apollo. Scribe their pens and ink and pumice-stone to Hermes ; cook up their pots and pans and spits to the Mercury- kitchen. Withered crowns and revel-cups are laid up shrine of Lais : Anchises suspends his white hair to Aph Endymion his bed and coverlid to Artemis, Daphnis h to Pan. Agathias inscribes his Daphniaca to the P queen. Prexidike" has an embroidered dress to de Alkibie" offers her hair to Herd, Lais her mirror to Aph Krobylus his boy's curls to Apollo, Charixeinos his tresses to the nymphs. Meleager yields the lamp of hi hours to Venus ; Lucillius vows his hair after shipwr the sea-gods ; Evanthe" gives . her thyrsus and stag's 1 Bacchus. Women erect altars to Eleithuia and Asc after childbirth. Sophocles dedicates a thanksgiving for poetic victories. Simonides and Bacchylides recon triumphs upon votive tablets. Gallus, saved from £ consecrates his hair and vestments to the queen of Dine Prostitutes abandon their ornaments to Kupris on thei riage. The effeminate Statullion bequeaths his false cui flutes and silken wardrobe to Priapus. Sailors offer a cuttlefish to the sea-deities. An Isthmian victor susper bit, bridle, spurs, and whip to Poseidon. A boy em into manhood leaves his petasos and strigil and chlar Hermes, the god of games. Phryne" dedicates a wingei as the firstfruits of her earnings. Hadrian celebrati trophies erected by Trajan to Zeus. Theocritus wril scriptions for Uranian Aphrodite in the house of his Amphicles, for the Bacchic tripod of Damomenes, and i marble muse of Xenocles. Erinna dedicates the pict Agatharkis. Melinna, Sabasthis, and Mikythus' are guished by poems placed beneath their portraits. Th even a poem on the picture of a hernia dedicated appa in some Asklepian shrine ; and a traveller erects the I THE ANTHOLOGy. 351 image of a frog in thanksgiving for a draught of wayside water. Cleonymus consecrates the statues of the nymphs : di rafie (3?v6ti afiPpooiai pooioig OTEi(3tTt Troaoiv aei. It will be seen by this rapid enumeration that a good many of the Dedicatory Epigrams are really epideiktic or rhetorical^ that is to say, they are written on imaginary subjects. But the large majority undoubtedly record such votive offerings as were common enough in Greece with or without epigrams to grace them. What I have just said about the distinction between real and literary epigrams composed for dedications, applies still more to the epitaphs. These divide themselves into two well- marked classes — (1.) actual sepulchral inscriptions or poems written immediately upon the death of persons contemporary with the author ; and (11.) literary exercises in the composition of verses appropriate to the tomb of celebrated historical or mythical characters. To the first class belong the beautiful epitaphs of Meleager upon Clearista (i. 307), upon Heliodora (i. 365), upon Charixeinos, a boy 12 years old (i. 363), upon Antipater of Sidon (i. 355), and the three which he designed for his own grave (i. 352). Callimachus has left some perfect models in this species of composition. The epitaph on Heracleitus, a poet of Halicarnassus, which has been ex- quisitely translated by the author of Ionica, has a grace of movement and a tenderness of pathos that are unsurpassed : * * "They told me, Heracleitus, they told me you were dead ; They brought me bitter news to hear and bitter tears to shed. I wept, as I remembered, how often you and I Had tired the sun with talking and sent him down the sky. And now that thou art lying, my dear old Carian guest, A handful of grey ashes, long, long ago at rest, Still are thy pleasant voices, thy nightingales, awake, For Death, he taketh all away, but them he cannot take." 352 THE GREEK POETS. five rig, HpaxXtiTi Ttbv fibpov, eg Be jit idspv ijyayev, IpvrioBriv S' became; !lp.oTtpoi rjkiov ev \kaxy KareSvuafiev ccWol 7ro\ii/ kffrevo^iev' vvv 5' b [ikv eiv dXi irov Qeperat v'tKvg' dvri #' lkhvov ovvojxa Kflti Kfvebv aljfia vaptpxbfie9a. The following couplet upon Saon (i. 360) is marked by its perfection of brevity : t rqde 2awv 6 Aikwi/0£ 'AicdvQiog Upbv vttvov KoifiaTaf Qvolokuv firj Xeye rovg ayaQovQ. Among the genuine epitaphs by the greatest of Greek authors, none is more splendid than Plato's upon Aster (i. 402) : % I 'Aorijp 7rpiV piv tXafinfg evl £«oT(Tij> 'E^Tos - vvv Si Qavwv Xdpireig "Effirepog ev (pOtfiivoic. * Would that swift ships had never been ; for so We ne'er had wept for Sopolis : but he Dead on the waves now drifts ; while we must go Past a void tomb, a mere, name's mockery. •f Here lapped in hallowed slumber Saon lies, Asleep, not dead ; a good man never dies. J. A. Symonds, M.D. % Thou wert the morning star among the living, Ere thy fair light had fled ; x Now, having died, thou art as Hesperus giving New splendour to the dead. Shelley. THE ANTHOLOGY, 353 To Plato also is ascribed a fine monumental epigram upon the Eretrian soldiers who died at Ecbatana (i. 322) : * o"Se jtot' Aiyaioio /3apu/3pojtfoi> olfi/ia Xhtoitec 'ExPardvuv ■xtditp KiifjttS' ivi fiiaaTip. Xnipe kXuttj iron Trarplg 'Eperpta - xaiptf A6r)vai yeirowc Eu^oi'jjg- xaTpt BaKaaaa 0iAjj. Erinria's epitaph on Baucis (i. 409) deserves quotation, be- cause it is one of the few relics of the poetry of a girl whose elegiacs were rated by the ancients above Sappho's : t oraXai ical ~Sttpr)v€g efial kccl ir€v9ifts Kpuuak bang £\sig 'AtSa rav b\[yav airoStav, To7g tybv spxofievotffi Trap 1 Tjpiov it-Kars xaiptiVt air attToi TeXkOwvT' at0' erkpag iroXiog' \tiiTi fie vvp.(pav evaav £%u rdfyog etirdrs Kai to' "X&ti trariip ju' 1/caXei Bavtcida %tt)Ti yh'og Trivia, 6}g slSbjvTi' Kai bin fioi a cvvsratpig "Hptvv' Iv TVfi(3f{t yodfifi^ £%dpalie rode. Sappho herself has left the following lament for the maiden Timas (i. 367) :J * We who once left the 'JEgezn's deep-voiced shore, Lie 'neath Ecbatana's champaign, where we fell. Farewell Eretria, thou famed land of yore, And neighbour Athens, and loved sea, farewell. t Pillars of death, carved Sirens, tearful urns, In whose sad keeping my poor dust is laid, To him, who near my tomb his footsteps turns, Stranger or Greek, bid hail ; and say a maid Rests in her bloom below ; her sire the name Of Baucis gave ; her birth and lineage high ; And say her bosom friend Erinna came And on this tomb 'engraved her elegy. Elton. ^ This is the dust of Timas, whom unwed Persephone locked in her darksome bed : For her the maids who were her fellows, shore Their curls and to her tomb this tribute bore. 2 A 354 THE GREEK POETS. Tifiddog &Ss kovlq, rdv drj irpb ydp,oio Qavovaav StZaTo Qepffsfovag Kvdvsog QdXapog, dg K(ii d-TrotpOifiivag ndfjai veoQayi ffiddpip a\iK€Q IjiepTav Kparbg eQevto KOfiav. In each of these epitaphs, the untimely fading of a flower- like maiden in her prime has roused the deepest feeling of the poetess. This indeed is the chord which rings most truly in the sepulchral lyre of the Greeks. Their most genuine sorrow is for youth cut off before the joys of life were tasted. This sentiment receives, perhaps, its most pathetic though least • artistic expression in the following anonymous epitaph on a young man. The mother's love and anguish are set forth with a vividness which we should scarcely have expected from a Greek (i. 336) :* VTjX&eg St daXp,ov, tl Se pot Kal tpsyyog eSst^ag tig oXiyiuv etsuv psrpa pivvvSddia ; fj "iva \virr\ar}Q iSi pr]v j3ioroio TtktVTrjv , fitjTkpa diiXaiTjv huKpvGi Kal urovaxaig, r\ p.' itix' V /*' drirnXe Kal f/ TroXv puZfiva irarpbg tppovrida TraiSelrjg ijvvatv r/fiETepijg ; ' Merciless heaven ! why didst thou show me light For so few years and speedy in their flight ? Was it to vex by my untimely death With tears and wailings her who gave me breath ? Who bore me, and who reared me, and who wrought More for my youth with many a careful thought, Than my dead sire : he left me in his hall An orphan babe : 'twas she alone did all. My joy it was beneath grave men of laws, Just pleas to urge and win approved applause ; But from my cheek she uever plucked the flower Of charming youth, nor dressed my bridal bower, Nor sang my marriage hymn, nor saw, ah me ! My offspring shoot upon our ancient tree, That now is withered. Even in the tomb I wail Politta's woe, the gloom on gloom That swells her grief for Phronton ; since a boy Tn uain cri*» Vinri* nic pnimtru'e pmnfu 1/vir THE ANTHOLOGY. 355 og ptev y&p tvt96v re ttai opQavbv Iv jieydpomi KaXXtirtv' ri y' eftol irdvrag erXrj Kafidrovg. r) fiiv Ifiol QiXov i]tv tip' ayvdv r'tye/iovriiiiv iinrpeirifiev /ivOoig dfi0i SiKaairoXiag' aXXa fioi ov yevvwv £irede%aTO Kovptfiov dvQog r}\LKirjg eptxTqg, ov ydp,ov, ou Satdag' oiix ijiivaiov deiae wepiKXvrbv, oi TEKOg tide, Sia-7roT /tog, £K yeverjg Xetyavov ruieriptjg, rrjg izoXv9pi]vr)TOv' Xvirei 5k juc Kal reQveuiTa /xrjrpbg TLwXiTTijg Tr'evQog ae%,6fievov, QpovTtovcg yoepalg kirl QpovTiffiv, J? teke iraida uiKVfiupov, Ktvebv %dpjua QlXijg irarpiSog. The common topic of consolation in these cases of untimely death is the one which Shakspere has expressed in the Dirge for Fidele, and D'Urfey in his Dirge for Chrysostom by these four lines : Sleep, poor youth, sleep in peace, Relieved from love and mortal care ; Whilst we that pine in life's disease, Uncertain-blessed, less happy are. Lucian, speaking of a little boy who died at five years of age (i. 332), makes him cry : dXXd fie fifi icXaloig' Kal ydp (Hioroio p.ereaxov ■Kavpou Kal iravpiiiv t&v /3(oroio kgtkwj/. A little girl in another epitaph (i. 366) says to her father : "idXeo Xiirag, QewdoTf Ovarol TroXXdm SvaTvyhig. A young man, dying in the prime of life, is even envied "by Agathias (i. 384) : ejn.irr\g bXfiiog ovrog, 8g ev ve6rr]Ti jiapat/Otlg iKvye tt\v (3iotov Bdaaov dXirpoavvriv. But it is not often that we hear in the Greek Anthology a strain 2 a 2 35<5 THE GREEK POETS. of such pure and Christian music as this apocryphal epitaph on Proti:* oiic iBavtg, Ilpwn), /ierl/Si/e 8' eg d/islvova x^pov, Kai va'uiQ [laKapuv vi}aovg QaXiy ivi iroWy, iv8a nar' 'BXvaiwv iniiiov aKiQT&ea. ykyr/Gag avdtaiv Iv /ictKaicoim, kukuiv ektogBiv arravnoV ov xeipwv Xv7r£t o - ', ov xavfi\ ov vovooq IvoxXti, ov ireivgg, ov dfyog t\H a'' d\\' oMk iroBtivbg dvBpuiriDV in aoi /Si'oroc' ?w«if yap dfiefiirrtiig avyaXg iv KaBaaaXaiv 'OXvfnrov irXyjawv ovrog. Death at sea touched the Greek imagination with peculiar vividness. That a human body should toss, unburied, un- honoured, on the waves, seemed to them the last indignity. Therefore the epitaphs on Satyrus (i. 348), who exclaims : Keivif StvfjevTi Kal drpvyinp in Kup.ai vdan iiaivoiikvifi fif/t^o/tevoc Bopl y. and on Lysidike' (i. 328), of whom Zenocritus writes : \a~iTai aov aruZovatv id' aX/ivpa Siff/iopt Koiai) vavqyk ^>difiBVTjQ eiv a\l AvaiSiKrj. and on the three athletes who perished by shipwreck (i. 342), * Thou art not dead, my Prote ! thou art flown To a far country better than our own ; Thy home is now an Island of the Blest ; There 'mid Elysian meadows take thy rest : Or lightly trip along the flowery glade, Rich with the asphodels that never fade ! Nor pain, nor cold, nor toil, shall vex thee more, Nor thirst, nor hunger on that happy shore ; Nor longings vain (now that blest life is won) For such poor days as mortals here drag on ; To thee for aye a blameless life is given In the pure light:of ever-present Heaven. J. A. Symonds, M.D. THE ANTHOLOGY. 357 have a mournful wail of their own. Not very different, too, is the pathos of Therimachus struck by lightning (i. 306) :* avTO/iarai SeiXy jrort TavXwv m /3oec r/XOov l£ opeog iroXKy vupojievat %iovi' aia.1, QqpifiaxoQ di irapa SpvX rbv paKphv tvSu VTTVOV' iKQlflilQll 8' £K TTVpOQ Ovpav'lOV. It is pleasant to turn from these to epitaphs which dwell more upon the qualities of the dead than the circumstances of their death. Here is the epitaph of a slave (i. 379) : t Zuiaifiti y) wplv iovaa fiovip Tip ttutjiari dovXrj Kal Tip GiajiaTi vvv evpzv eXtvOepiijv. Here is a buffoon (i. 380) : J NqXeiTjg 'AtSijQ' kirl ffoc 5' sykXafftre QavovTi, TtVupf, Kal vexvwv Btjkb at nt/ioXoyov. Of all the literary epitaphs by far the most interesting are those written for the poets, historians, and philosophers of Greece. Reserving these for separate consideration I pass now to mention a few which belong as much to the pure epi- gram as to the epitaph. When, for example, we read two very clever poems on the daughters of Lycambes (i. 339), two again on a comically drunken old woman (i. 340, 360), and five on a man who has been first murdered and then buried by his mur- derer (i. 340), we see that, though the form of the epitaph has been adopted, clever rhetoricians, anxious only to display their * Home to their stalls at eve the oxen came Down from the mountain through the snow-wreaths deep ; But ah, Therimachus sleeps the long sleep Neath yonder oak, lulled by the levin-flame. t She who was once but in her flesh, a slave Hath for her flesh found freedom in the grave. J Hades is stern ; but when you died, he said, Smiling, "Be jester still among the dead." 358 THE GREEK POETS. skill, have been at work in rivalry. Sardanapalus, the eponym of Oriental luxury, furnishes a good subject for this style of composition. His epitaph runs thus in the Appendix Planudea (ii. 532):* iv eidtog otl QvrjTog tQVQ, tov Qvpbv at%£ repTro^iEvog QaKiyaC BavovTi aoi ovnc bvrjaig' Kal yap lyci airoBog tifu, 'Sivov /iEyaXjje fiaaikthaaq. roaa' i%ti> oats' ityayov Kal ivj3piaa, icai /ler' Ipiaroq TiDirv' ibar\V rd Se ffoXXd Kal b\/3ta Ktlva \i\tnrrau ijde aoty-fi /3ioroio irapaivtaig dvBpiiiroiaiv. We find only the fourth and fifth lines among the sepulchral epigrams of the Anthology of Cephalas (i. 334), followed by a clever parody composed by the Theban Crates. Demetrius, the Spartan coward, is another instance of this rhetorical exercise. Among the two or three which treat of him I quote the following (i. 317) :f aviic' curb irToXeiiov rpiaaavrd as SkZaro paTrip t iravra tov birXiarav Koafiov oXwXtKorcr, avrii toi tyoviav, Aa/jarpi€, avr'iRa \6yxav tlirt Sid irKarktiiv waapkva XayovwV KarOave, [trio' tx* TUi ^i^dpra tybyov' ov ydp EKEiva rjfnrXaKEVf ti deiXovg rovfibv edpe^/e yd\a. * Know well that thou art mortal : therefore raise Thy spirit high with long luxurious days. When thou art tlead, thou hast no pleasure then. I too am earth, who was a king of men O'er Nineveh. My banquets and my lust And love-delights are mine e'en in the dust ; But all those great'and glorious things are flown. True doctrine for man's life is this alone. t When homeward cowering from the fight you ran Without or sword or shield, a naked man, Your mother then, Demetrius, through your side Plunged her blood-drinking spear, nor wept, but cried : Die ; let not Sparta bear the blame ; for she Sinned not, if cowards drew their life from me ! THE ANTHOLOGY. 359 Agathias writes a very characteristic elegy on Lais (i. 315) :* ipiriav tig "Efvpriv rdfyov idpaicqv ajityi ke\£u0oi> AatSoQ apxa'fqg, wg to xdpaypa \kyW BaKpv S' liriairuaag, xaipoig yvvai, in yap aicovrjg oiKTtipti) ck y\ iv avTovojiovq ay'sKag' ovksti Koiiidauc dvB/uov fipojiqv, ovx 1 x^XuZnv, ov vufyiTbiv avpfiovg, ov iraTayzvaav li\a. uikio yap' tie 8k iroWa- KaTtoSvpai/ro Qvyavpse • Mvajioavvag, fidrrjp 8' E?o%a KaWwvra' rl avv aoiSq. Trdvra SiaitKtiioag Kal ai)v ipwri fSiov. The same poet begins another epitaph thus : rvpfiog ' KvaKpeiovrog' b Tr)'iog ev9a.de kvkvoq evSti XV iraiduiv ZwpoTaTi] fiavirj. Less cheerful are the sepulchres of the satirists. We are bidden not to wake the sleeping wasp upon the grave ot Hipponax (i. 350) : * w %eTv€ : fevye rbv %a\a'CeTrr) rafov rbv fpiKrbv 'iTTTTfiivaicrog, oiire %a refpa lap.f3ia.Zei BoviraXeiov eg arvyog, fii] irixig eyeipyg vfrJKa rbv KOip.ttip.evov, og ovd' kv oJSy vvv k£Koijcuk£1' %o\ov, vkoZovgi fieTpoig 6p6d ro^evaag tiry. And many a fount shall there distil, And many a rill refresh the flowers ; But wine shall gush in every rill, And every fount yield milky showers. Thus, shade of him whom nature taught To tune his lyre and soul to pleasure, Who gave to love his warmest thought, Who gave to love his fondest measure ; Thus, after death, if spirits feel, Thou mayest, from odours round thee streaming, A pulse of past enjoyment steal, And live again in blissful dreaming. Th. Moore. * Stranger, beware ! This grave hurls words like hail : Here dwells the dread Hipponax, dealing bale. E'en 'mid his ashes, fretful, poisonous, He shoots Iambics at slain Bupalus. Wake not the sleeping wasp : for though he's dead, Still straight and sure his crooked lines are sped. THE ANTHOLOGY. 363 The same thought is repeated with even more of descriptive energy in an epitaph on Archilochus (i. 287) : * a rbv rjfiEpov oXSe AvKdftfirjg fivp6p,£V0Q rpiaa&v iififiara Qvyarkptiiv' tfpsfia dfj irapafiuipov, bdonropE, fir/ 77-07-6 tovSe Kivi]E(TTCO£ arjjia fv\d(Tff£LQ ; rov Kvv6g' dWd ric ijv ovtoq dvfjp 6 Kvcov J AioykvrjQ. ysvog elite. Slvlottevq. oq irLQov tptctt, ; Kai fidXa* vvv Se Qavtov dtJTEpag oIkov £%ei. The epitaphs on Erinna, who died when she was only nine- teen, are charged with the thought which so often recurs when we reflect on poets like Chatterton untimely slain ; — what would not they have done, if they had lived ? (i. 275) : % * Here sleeps Archilochus by the salt sea ; Who first with viper's gall the muse did stain, And bathed mild Helicon with butchery. Lycambes weeping for his daughters three Learned this. Pass then in silence : be not fain To stir the wasps that round his grave remain. ■f Tell me, good dog, whose tomb you guard so well ? The Cynic's. True : but who that Cynic, telL. Diffgenes, of fair Sinope's race. What ! He that in a tub was wont to dwell ? Yes : but the stars are now his dwelling-place. J. A. Symonds, M.D. J These are Erinna's songs : how sweet, though slight ! — For she was but a girl of nineteen years : — Yet stronger far than what most men can write : Had Death delayed, whose fame had equalled hers ? 364 THE GREEK POETS. 6 yXviciig 'HpivV7]g ovtoq ttovoq, ou^t TroXiig filv wg av TrapQsviicag EVvEaiccuSsKcTevt;, &XX' erspwv ttoXXuiv 5vvaTh)T€poQ' si 6" 'AtSag 01 /*)) Ta%vg ijX9e, Tig av toKikov 1(7% ovojia ; Sappho rouses a louder strain of celebration (i. 276) : * Tlairipiti toi kevQuq \9b>v Ai'oXt t&v /ieto. Movaaig a9ava.TaigQva.Tav Movffav ,aeidopkvav 7 &v TLvirpig Kai'Epwc avv tin' irpa qXaicaTag, iriog oAk IxXdcraadE iravdipQiTOv fljiap amSif atyBira p,r\9ky%at6 iciv, lag ttote Movaiov kv KaXfiov GaXapoig ts^vog avEirXaffaro. * Does Sappho then beneath thy bosom rest, ^Eolian earth ? that mortal Muse, confessed Inferior only to the choir above, That foster-child of Venus and of Love ; Warm from whose lips divine Persuasion came, Greece to delight, and raise the Lesbian name. O ye, who ever twine the three-fold thread, Ye Fates, why number with the silent dead That mighty songstress, whose unrivalled powers Weave for the Muse a crown of deathless flowers ? Francis Hodgson. + Pieria's clarion, he whose weighty brain Forged many a hallowed hymn and holy strain, Pindar, here sleeps beneath the sacred earth : Hearing his songs a man might swear the brood Of Muses made them in their hour of mirth, What time round Cadmus' marriage-bed they stood. THE AATHOLOGY. 36? The very quintessence of criticism is contained in the phrases oakKiyt, ■ya^KEVTaQ, The Appendix Plamidea (ii. 590) contains another epitaph on Pindar by Antipater, which for its beautiful presentation of two legends connected with his life deserves to be quoted : * vtjipeiuiv diroaov oaXiriyti vmpiaxev ai\u>v, Toonov virkp irdaag t/cpayt aelo x«X«f ovdk p&ttjv cnraXolg trepl yeikeatv iap,bg eKelvog eirXacre KiypoSeTov, IlivSape, aeXo n'eXi. fidprvg 6 MaivaXtog KSpostg Qebg v\ivov aeiaag tov ffko Kal vofiiojy.Xijffdfjtevog dovaKtiiv. It is impossible to do justice to all these utterances on the ■early poets. — ^Eschylus (i. 281) : rpayiKov (pwvr/pa Kal dtppvosatrav aoiSqv] Trvpyuioag arifiapy irpurog iv evenly. Alcman (i. 277) : rbv xapiEvr' 'A\K/idvct, tov v)ivt)Trjp' vjxevainiv kvkvov, rbv Movadv a%ia /i&ipafievov. Stesichorus (ii. 36) t(T7T Ibycus (ii. 36) 'O/iripiKbv Of T curb pevfia eairaaaQ biKeioig, SDjirixop', Iv Kajiaroiq. ■qSv re KeiBovg, "Ipvut, Kal iraiduv avQog d]>.r\ fu£ig yoviuiv Bavarrifopog' (3/iOi avaynr]g ¥] fie TrpoaTreXufTU Tip GTvytpiji 9ava.-tp' * My sire begat me ; 'twas no fault of mine : But being born, in Hades I must pine : O birth-act that brought death ! O bitter fate That drives me to the grave disconsolate ! To nought I turn, who nothing was ere birth ; For men are nought and less than nothing worth. Then let the goblet gleam for me, my friend ; THE ANTHOLOGY. , ■ 371 oiSiv ib>v ysvofiriv irdXiv tatroixai we iragoQ ouSkf oviiv xal fir]Siv t&v iup6iru>v to yivoQ' \tiirov fioi to KinreWov aTrotTTiXfiiotrov, tToipe, Kal \v7njs aKovrtv rbv Bpofiiov irapt\t. The good sense of Cephalas placed it among the epitaphs ; for in truth it is the quintessence of the despair of the grave. Yet' its last couplet forces us to drag it from the place of tombs, and put it into the mouth of some late reveller of the decadence of Hellas. It has to my ear the ring of a drink- ing-song sung in a room with closed shutters, after the guests have departed by some sad companion, who does not know that the dawn has gone forth and the birds are aloft in the air. The shadow of night is upon him. Though Christ be risen and the sun of hope is in the sky, he is still as cheerless as Mimnermus. Here is another of the same tone (ii. 287) : * r}<*>£ t£ yjovQ irapaTTtfiirerai, tlr 1 aiiekovvrwv i/juwV iZatyviiQ rjlZu Troptpvpeog, Kai rovg./iiv rrj^ag, Toiig 6' dirTr/trae, hviovQ Ss v axpie '"■' C av iirl Kpora(j)oig jivpofioaTpvxov 'KXio8wpag tvTrXoKajiov xairqv avBojioXy arifyavoq' Nothing can be more simple than the expression, more ex- quisite than the cadence of these lines. The same may be said about the elegy on Cleariste (i. 307) : * oil ya/iov aXX' 'AtSav imw/i^iSiov iCXiapicrra os£0(fi€i'a vepBev Etyaivov b8uv. 'The thought of this next epigram recalls the song to Ageanax an Theocritus' 7th Idyll : — (ii. 402) :t ovpiog iffrrvsvaag vavraig Noroc, Si SvatpaiTig, ijfiiai fitv ifivxa-S upiraaev 'AvSpdyaBov rplg [iOLKapsg vasg, rplg d' b\f3ta KUfiara trui/rov, TSTpaKi 8' tvSaifioiv iraiiofopSiv civsfiog' * Poor Cleariste loosed her virgin zone Not for her wedding, but for Acheron ; 'Tvvas but last eve the merry pipes were swelling, And dancing footsteps thrilled the festive dwelling ; Morn changed those notes for wailings loud and long, And dirges drowned the hymeneal song ; Alas ! the very torches meant to wave Around her bridal couch, now light her to the grave ! J. A. SysroNDS, M.D. -f .Fair blows the breeze : the seamen loose the sail : — O men that know not love, your favouring gale Steals half my soul, Andragathos, from me ! Thrice lucky ships, and billows of the sea Thrice blessed, and happiest breeze that bears the boy ! ■O would I were a dolphin that my joy, Here on my shoulders ferried, might behold Rhodes, the fair island thronged with boys of gold ! 376 THE GREEK POETS. eiG' t'irjv ceXtpiQ iV tfiolg fiaaTatcTOQ tir' wfiOLQ TTopdjxtvQtiQ Effldy Ttiv y\vKV7rai8a 'Podov. These quotations are sufficient to set forth the purity of Meleager's style, though many more examples' might have been borrowed from his epigrams on the cicada, on the mosquitoes who tormented Zenophila, on Antiochus, who would have been Eros if Eros had worn the boy's petasos and chlamys. The next point to notice about him is the suggestiveness of his language, his faculty of creating the right epithets and turning the perfect phrase that suits his meaning. The fragrance of the second line in this couplet is undefinable but potent : to CVfTcptdQ Tp v XV TTCtUGal TTOTt Kill 8l' OVUptoV tiouXoig KiiXXtvg Kuxpd xXiaivo)ikvri. It is what all day-dreamers and castle-builders,- not to speak of the dreamers of the night, must fain cry out in their despair. The common motive of a lover pledging his absent mistress is elevated to a region of novel beauty by the passionate repeti- tion of words in this first line : tyX" Ka ' naXiv elire iraXiv ttoXiv 'HXiwSwpof. In the same way a very old thought receives new exquisite- ness in the last couplet of the epitaph on Heliodora : dXXd trt yovvovfiai Ta iravrpotpe rdv iravoSvpTov i)olfia (rotg KoXirotg fiarep ivayizdXiffat. The invocation to Night, which I will next quote, has its own beauty derived from the variety of images which are subtly and capriciously accumulated : 'if rodt Trap,fii)THpa QiGiv Xirofxal at vTa Kpiva, testify to the passionate love and to the purity of heart with which he greeted and studied the simplest beauties of the world. In dealing with flowers he is particularly felicitous. Most exquisite are the lines in which he describes his garland of the Greek poets and assigns to each some favourite of the garden or the field, and again those other couplets which compare the boys of Tyre to a bouquet culled by Love for Aphrodite. Baia filv d\\h polo. : these are the words in which Meleager describes the too few but precious verses of Sappho, and for his own poetry they have a peculiar propriety. Teal ^aovtriv driSoveg we may say, quoting Callimachus, when we take leave of him. His poetry has the sweetness and the splendour of the rose, the rapture and full- throated melody of the nightingale. Next in artistic excellence to Meieager among the amatory poets is Straton, a Greek of Sardis, who lived in the second century., But there are few readers who, even for the sake of his pure and perfect language, will be prepared to put up with the immodesty of his subject-matter. Straton is not so delicate and subtle in style as Meleager : but he has a mascu- line vigour and nrttete of phrase peculiar to himself. It is not possible to quote many of his epigrams. He suffers the neglect which necessarily obscures those men of genius who misuse their powers. Yet the story of the garland-weaver (ii. 396), and the address to schoolmasters (ii. 219), are too clever to be passed by without notice. The following epigram on a picture of Ganymede gives a very fair notion of Straton's style- (ii. 425):* OTEtXE Trpog alQkpa SXov, •a.7r'i^\to naloa KOfiiZiov aUre f rag tjHjivuQ ttcTreraffag TTTkpvyac, * Soar upward to the air divine : Spread broad thy pinions aquiline : Carry amid thy plumage him, Who fills Jove's beaker to the brim : THE ANTHOLOGY. 379 oteixe tov a/3pbv i\u>v Yavvp.i)ita, /tijtfl p.i9(ir)q tov Aide. ii&iaT\i>v oivoyoov KvXiKiav' ipiifco 8* alftdZat Koupov yajii^tiivvyt Tapatp pr) Ztic akyrioy tovto fiapwo/iivog. To this may be added an exhortation to pleasure in despite of death (ii. 288).* Callimachus deserves mention as a third with Meleager and Straton. His style, drier than that of Meleager, more elevated than Straton's, is marked by a frigidity of good scholarship which only at intervals warms into the fire of passionate poetry. In writing epigrams Callimachus was careful to pre- serve the pointed character of the composition. He did not merely, as is the frequent wont of Meleager, indite a short poem in elegiacs. This being the case, his- love poems, though they are many, are not equal to his epitaphs. To mention all the poets of the amatory chapters would be impossible. Their name is legion. Even Plato the divine, by right, of this epigram to Aster :f 'aaripaQ (laadpiiq aoTrjp s/joc' (IBs yevoifiqv ovpavbg wc 7roXX.oic 6/iftaaiv tig ol j3\kiru>. Take care that neither crooked claw Make the boy's' thigh or bosom raw ; For Jove will wish thee sorry speed If thou molest his Ganymede. * Drink now, and love, Democrates ; for we Shall not have wine and boys eternally : Wreathe we our heads, anoint ourselves with myrrh ; Others will do this to our sepulchre : let now my living bones with wine be drenched ; Water may deluge them when I am quenched. f Gazing at stars, my star? I would that I were the welkin, Starry with infinite eyes, gazing for ever at thee ! Frederick Farrar. 380 THE GREEK POETS. And of this to Agathon : * rrfv Tpvxvv 'AyaQbJVa 8e xai ripsag ol5a G£\i]vq' Kit yap ai)v if/vxnv t$\iyiv ' EvSv/iiuiv. * Kissing Helena, together With my kiss, my soul beside it Came to my lips, and there I kept it, — ■ For the poor thing had wandered thither, To follow where the kiss should guide it. Oh cruel I to intercept it ! Shelley. t Shine forth, night-wandering, horned, and vigilant queen, Through the shy lattice shoot thy silver sheen ; Illume Callistion : for a goddess may Gaze on a pair of lovers while they play. Thou enviest her and me, I know, fair moon, For thou didst once burn for Endymion. THE ANTHOLOGY. 381 Antipater shines less in his erotic poems than in the numerous epigrams which he composed on the earlier Greek poets, especially on Anacreon, Erinna, Sappho, Pindar, Ibycus. He lived at a period when the study of the lyrists was still flou- rishing, and each of his couplets contains a fine and thoughtful piece of descriptive criticism. Another group of amatory poets must be mentioned. Agathias, Macedonius, and Paulus Silentiarius, Greeks of Byzantium about the age of Justinian, together with Rufinus, whose date is not quite certain, yield the very last fruits of the Greek genius, after it had been corrupted by the lusts of Rome and the effeminacy of the East. Very pale and hectic are the hues which give a sort of sickly beauty to their style. Their epi- grams vary between querulous lamentations over old. age and death, and highly coloured pictures of self-satisfied sensuality. Rufinus is a kind of second Straton in the firmness of his touch, the cynicism of his impudicity. The complaint of Agathias to the swallows that twittered at his window in early dawn (i. 102), his description of Rhodanthe and the vintage feast (ii. 297),* and those lines in which he has anticipated Jonson's lyric on the kiss which made the wine within the cup inebriating (i. 107), may be quoted as fair specimens of his style. Of Paulus Silentiarius I do not care to allude to more than the. poem in * We trod the brimming wine-press ankle-high, Singing wild songs of Bacchic revelry : Forth flowed the must in rills ; our cups of wood Like cockboats swam upon the honeyed flood : With these we drew, and as we filled them, quaffed, With no warm Naiad to allay the draught : But fair Rhodanthe bent above the press, And the fount sparkled with her loveliness : We in our souls were shaken ; yea, each man Quaked beneath Bacchus and the Paphian. Ah me ! the one flowed at our feet in streams — The other fooled us with mere empty dreams ! 382 THE GREEK POETS. which he describes the joy of two lovers (i. 106). What Ariosto and Boiardo have dwelt on in some of their most brilliant episodes, what Giorgione has painted in the eyes of the shep- herd who envies the kiss given by Rachel to Jacob, is here compressed into eighteen lines of great literary beauty. But a man need be neither a prude nor a Puritan to turn with sad- ness and with loathing from these last autumnal blossoms on the tree of Greek beauty. The brothel and the grave are all that is left for Rufinus and his contemporaries. Over the one hangs the black shadow of death; the other is tenanted by ghosts of carnal joy : "when lust, By unchaste looks, loose gestures, and foul talk, But most by lewd and lavish acts of sin, Lets in defilement to the inward parts, The soul grows clotted by contagion, Imbodies, and imbrutes, till she quite lose The divine property of her first being. Such are those thick and gloomy shadows damp Oft seen in charnel-vaults and sepulchres, Lingering, and sitting by a new-made grave, As loth to leave the body that it loved, And linked itself by camal sensuality To a degenerate and degraded state."* One large section of the Anthology remains to be considered. It contains what are called the tVtyap/jjuara In-ctta-m-a, or poems upon various subjects chosen for their propriety for rhetorical exposition. These epigrams, the favourites of modern imita- tors, display the Greek taste in this style of composition to the best advantage. The Greeks did not regard the epigram merely as a short poem with a sting in its tail — to quote the famous couplet : Omne epigramma sit instar apis : sit aculeus illi : Sint sua mella : sit et corporis exigui.f * Comus, 463, &c. f Three things must epigrams, like bees, have all ; A sting and honey and a body small. Riley. THE ANTHOLOGY. 383 True to the derivation of the word, which means an inscription or superscription, they were satisfied if an epigram were short and gifted with the honey-dews of Helicon.* Meleager would have called his collection a Beehive, and not a Flower-garland, if he had acknowledged the justice of the definition which has just been cited. The epigrams of which I am about to speak are simply little occasional poems, fugitive pieces, Gelegen- heitsgedichte, varying in length from two to twenty lines, com- posed in elegiac metre, and determined, as to form and treat- ment, by the exigencies of the subject. Some of them, it is true, are noticeable for their point ; but point is not the same as sting. The following panegyric of Athens, for example, approximates to the epigram as it is commonly conceived (ii.i3):t yy filv tap koojioq iro^vUvSpioe, aid'spi b" aarpa, 'EWadi S' r/Se xQwv, dtde Si Ty iro\u. * A certain Cyril gives this as his definition of u. good epigram (ii. 75 ; compare No. 342 on p. 69) : TrayKaXov tor' iiriypafipa to ciaTixoV i]V Si TrapsXBys tovq rpeic, paipipdtlg koAk ^iypafifia Xiysif;. Two lines complete the epigram — or three : Write more ; you aim at epic poetry. Here the essence of this kind of poetry is said to be brevity. But nothing is said about a sting. And on the point of brevity, the Cyril, to whom this couplet is attributed, is far too stringent when judged by the best Greek standards. The modern notion of the epigram is derived from a study of Martial, whose best verses are satirical and therefore of necessity stinging. f Spring with her waving trees Adorns the earth : to heaven The pride of stars is given : Athens illustrates Greece : She on her brows doth set Of men this coronet. 384 THE GREEK FOETS. The same may be said about the lines upon the vine and the goat (ii. 15 ; compare 20) : * ktjv [is tpdygg £tti pt^av o/zwc in Kap7ro0opi) i °' K0 C apiarog , iaairac oi> yapiug ; 'Cyg It' iXaQporepog" Care dwells in houses, labour in the field, Tumultuous seas affrighting dangers yield. In foreign lands thou never canst be blessed ; If rich, thou art in fear ; if poor, distressed. In wedlock frequent discontentments swell ; Unmarried persons as in deserts dwell. How many troubles are with children born ; Yet he that wants them counts himself forlorn. Young men are wanton, and of wisdom void ; Grey hairs are cold, unfit to be employed. Who would not one of these two offers choose, Not to be born, or breath with speed to lose ? * In every way of life true pleasure flows : Immortal fame from public action grows : Within the doors is found appeasing rest ; In fields the gifts of nature are expressed. The sea brings gain, the rich abroad provide To blaze their names, the poor their wants to hide : All households best are governed by a wife ; His cares are light, who leads a single life : THE ANTHOLOGY. 3§7 rixva itoQoq, afypovriq airaig (ilog- ai veorijrf£ p(Ofia\kai f iroXiai S' ifiTtakiv tvasfSkeg' ovk apa tuiv diaauv evbt; dipetjLG, 77 to yevso~9ai firidsiror' fi to Qavuv iravra yap eoBXa pun. Some of the epigrams of this . section are written in the true style of Elegies. The following splendid Threnody by Antipater of Sidon upon the ruins of Corinth, which was imitated by Agathias in his lines on Troy, may be cited as per- fect in this style of composition (ii. 29) : * TTOV TO TTtpifSXETTTOV KCtWoQ (760, Awpl KopivGs; too arkipavoi irvpyuv, itov to. iraXai KTeava, TroTi vrjot juocicapwi', irov tfwjucira, ttov 81 dapapTei; 'S.iovipiai, \aS>v 6' at irori /ivpidSEe ; ovSi yap ovd' ix"0f, Tro\vKa)ip,opi, oho \i\uirTai, ■kclvto. de aufjifidp^/ag t&tyaytv TroKtjXOQ' fiovvai cnropBr]Toi ^friptjiSeg, 'Qxtavoio Kovpai, aSiv ayiiav p.ip.vofiiv dXicuowf It is a grand picture of the queen of pleasure in her widow- hood and desolation, mourned over by the deathless daughters of the plunging sea. Occasionally the theme of the epigram is Sweet children are delights which marriage bless ; He that hath none disturbs his thoughts the less. Strong youth can triumph in victorious deeds ; Old age the soul with pious motions feeds. All states are good, and they are falsely led Who wish to be unborn or quickly dead. Sir John Beaumont. * Where, Corinth, are thy glories now, Thy ancient wealth, thy castled brow, Thy solemn fanes, thy halls of state, Thy high-born dames, thy crowded gate ? There's not a ruin left to tell Where Corinth stood, how Corinth fell. The Nereids of thy double sea Alone remain to wail for thee. Goldwin Smith. 388 THE GREEK POETS. historical. The finest, perhaps, of this sort is a poem by Philippus on Leonidas (ii. 59) : * irovXti AtoiviScui Kariiiiv Befiag avTodd'iKTov Hep?)J£ Ix^-O'i'OU ipapti Troptpvpiqi' •ki)k viKViav S' ij\r]ir€v 6 rag 'Sirdprag iroXig jjpwg' ov 8kxo[iai irpodoTatg fiiaGbv dtpeiXo/itvov' aawig Ijiol Tvfi(3ov Koa/iog p-iyag' alpe to. TlcpcrHv Xn%m Ktic dtdtiv g t\a%tv aiptvtiris 6 icXrjpog otij) kcikoV eg di to Xtfnv ovt tvxal OvrjToig evgtoxoi ovti %Epf£. Not the least beautiful are those which describe natural objects. The following six lines are devoted to an oak-tree (ii. 14): ■X- kXujvsq diryopioi ravaijg dpvbg, ivgkiov vi[/og dvSpdffiv aKpiqrov tcavfia tyvXavaofikvoigj einrsraXoiy KEpdfUov tTTSyav&TEpot, oiKia farrStv^ oiKia TtTTiyiov, tvdioi axpepoi'tc, KrjpA tov vftErkpaifTiv VTTOKKivQkvra KOftaifftv pvaaaO', aKTivtiiv rjsXlov tpvydSa. Here again is a rustic retreat for lovers, beneath the spread- ing branches of a plane (ii. 43) : t a x\o£pd irXardviaTog IS' £>g IxpyibE fiXtivriDV opyia, TO.V Updv QvXXdda Ttivopiva' afi 8' 6 Trorrjg AkWuoc ■ iruaartu fi vr)(f>eiv /*', fi /iaSiTui jiidvuv. Amid this multitude of poems it is difficult to make a fair or representative selection. There are, however, four which I cannot well omit. The first is written by Poseidippus on a lost statue of Lysippus (ii. 584) : * rig itoQtv b w\aaTi]Q ; Sikuwvioc" ovvofia Si) ric ■ Avannrog. av 8k rig • Kaipog ■jravSa/j.a.rmp' ri-KTt 8' W aicpa ftifiriKac ; del rpoxdin. ti 8i rapaovg ■xnaalv i%ug Sitpvtig ; "ntra\i! virr/vtfuog' Xtipi 8e 8f£,iTtpy ti fhpug %vpov ; dvBpaai Ssly/ia ug aicfjije irdarjg oZvrtpog TtkiQa}. The sculptor's country? Sicyon. His name ? Lysippus. You ? Time that all things can tame. Why thus a-tiptoe ? I have halted never. Why ankle-winged ? I fly like wind for ever. But in your hand that razor ? 'Tis a pledge That I am keener than the keenest edge. 394 THE GREEK POETS. y\ Se Ku^tij ti tear' OTpiv ; viravTiaoavri XafikaBai, vfi Ala TagoiriBev $' eig ti QaXaxpa irkXci ; rbv yap ttiraZ irryvoTtri irapa9pk%avTa fie irotjaiv ovrig 19' ifieipwv SpaZerai M,oiri9ev. rovvsx' o rf^j/irijg ae SiiirXaatv ; uv eiciv vp,u>v 7 tsive Kai kv irpoQvpoig 9T}se SidaaKaXiijv. The second describes the statue of Nemesis erected near Marathon by Pheidias, that memorable work by which the greatest of sculptors recorded ^the most important crisis in the world's history (ii. 573) : * X">vkr\v fie Xi9ov TraXivav&og ix mpunirrig Xaorinrog T/iri^ae irtTpoTup.oiQ axial ( M?j5o£ lirovToiroptvatv, oirwg avSptUtKa reu^y, rijg icar' 'AOrjvaiiov avpfioXa Kafifioviqg' dig 8k SaiZojiivoiQ Mapa9' avTiKTVire Tikpaaig Kai vkeg vyporropovv x £ v[ia "Kp«"£ (Sat/iov, gXaXi /idXa, aTaliav ij/vxoTaKTJ Saicpva, txitxppoavvag v(3piffrd., ^joevoicAoTre, Xijara Xoytff/xou, ■KTCivbv irvp, ifrvxae rpavp.' doparoj/, "Epuc - Qvarolg p.iv \vaig iffrl yottiv 6 abg, ajepire, Sta/tog' V tT( P i yX^ ei S Ktxtfotc TrkfiTre \trdg avsjj,oig' ov Se fipOTOig a(j>v\aicTog hvkfkeyeg iv (ppsal TTvpffbv &8pti vvv imb auiv ofisvvviitvov daicpvwv. * Bright Cytherea thought one day To Cnidos she'd repair, Gliding across the watery way To view her image there. But when arrived, she cast around Her eyes divinely bright, And saw upon that holy ground The gazing world's delight, Amazed, she cried — while blushes told The thoughts that swelled her breast- Where did Praxiteles behold My form ? or has he guessed ? J. H. Merivale. t Weep, reckless god ; for now your hands are tied : Weep, wear your soul out with the flood of tears, Heart-robber, thief of reason, foe to pride, Winged fire, thou wound unseen the soul that sears ! Freedom from grief to us these bonds of thine, Wherein thou wailest to the deaf winds, bring : Behold ! the torch wherewith thou mad'st us pine, Beneath thy frequent tears is languishing ! 396 THE GREEK POETS. In bringing this review of the Anthology to a close I feel that I have been guilty of two errors. I have wearied the reader with quotations. Yet I have omitted countless epigrams of the purest beauty. The very riches of this flower-garden of little poems are an obstacle to its due appreciation. Each epigram in itself is perfect, and ought to be carefully and lovingly studied. But it is difficult for the critic to deal in a single essay with upwards of four thousand of these precious gems. There are many points of view which with adequate space and opportunity might have been taken for the better illustration of the epigrams. Their connection with the later literature of Greece, especially with the rhetoricians, Philos- tratus, Alciphron, and Libanius, many of whose best com- positions are epigrams in prose — as Jonson knew when he turned them into lyrics ; their still more intimate jesthetic harmony with the engraved stones and minor bas-reliefs, which bear exactly the same relation to Greek sculpture as the epigrams to the more august forms of Greek poetry ; the lives of their authors ; the historical events to which they not unfrequently allude — all these are topics for elaborate disserta- tion. Perhaps, however, the true secret of their charm is this ; that in their couplets, after listening to the choice raptures of triumphant public art, we turn aside to hear the private utterances, the harmoniously modulated whispers of a multi- tude of Greek poets telling us their inmost thoughts and feelings. The unique melodies of Meleager, the chaste and exquisite delicacy of Callimachus, the clear pure style of Straton, Plato's unearthly subtlety of phrase, Antipater's perfect polish, the good sense of Palladas, the fretful sweet- ness of Agathias, the purity of Simonides, the gravity of Poseid- ippus, the pointed grace of Philip, the few but mellow tones of Sappho and Erinna, the tenderness of Simmias, the biting wit of Lucillius, the sunny radiance of Theocritus — all these THE ANTHOLOGY. 397 good things are ours in the Anthology. But beyond these perfumes of the poets known to fame, is yet another. Over very many of the sweetest and the strongest of the epigrams is written the pathetic word alia-Korov — without a master. Hail to you, dead poets, unnamed, but dear to the Muses ! Surely with Pindar and with Anacreon and with Sappho and with Sophocles the bed of flowers is spread for you in those K black-petalled hollows of Pieria" where Ion bade farewell to Euripides. CHAPTER XII. THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. Separation between the Greeks and us. — Criticism. — Nature. — The Olive. — Greek Sculpture. — Greek Sense of Beauty. — Greek Morality. ■ — Greece, Rome, Renaissance, the Modern Spirit. The Greeks had no Past : " no hungry generations trod them down " : whereas the multitudinous associations of immense antiquity envelop all our thoughts and feelings. "0 Solon, Solon," said the priest of Egypt, "you Greeks are always children ! " The world has now grown old ; we are grey from the cradle onwards, swathed with the husks of outworn creeds, and rocked upon the lap of immemorial mysteries. The travail of the whole earth, the unsatisfied desires of many races, the anguish of the death and birth of successive civiliza- tions, have passed into our souls. Life itself has become a thousandfold more complicated and more difficult for us than it was in the springtime of the world. With the increase of the size of nations, poverty and disease and the struggle for bare existence have been aggravated. How can we then bridge over the gulf which separates us from the Greeks? How shall we, whose souls are aged and wrinkled with the long years of humanity, shake hands across the centuries with those young-eyed, young-limbed immortal children ? Can we make Criticism our Medea — bid the magnificent witch pluck leaves and flowers of Greek poetry and art and life, distilling THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 399 them for us to bathe therein and regenerate our youth like iEson? Like a young man newly come from the wrestling-ground, anointed, chapleted, and very calm, the Genius of the Greeks appears before us. Upon his soul there is no burden of the world's pain ; the whole creation that groaneth and travaileth together, has touched him with no sense of anguish ; nor has he yet felt sin. The pride and the strength of adolescence are his— audacity and endurance, swift passions and exquisite sensibilities, the alternations of sublime repose and boyish noise, grace, pliancy, and stubbornness and power, love of all fair things and splendours of the world, the frank enjoyment of the open air, free merriment, and melancholy well beloved. Of these adolescent qualities of this clear and stainless per- sonality, this conscience whole and pure and reconciled to Nature, what survives among us now ? The imagination must be strained to the uttermost before we can begin to sympathize with such a being. The blear-eyed mechanic, stifled in a hovel of our sombre northern towns, canopied through all the year with smoke, deafened with wheels that never cease to creak, stiffened by toil in one cramped posture, oblivious of the sunlight and green fields, could scarcely be taught even to envy the pure clear life of Art made perfect in Humanity, which was the pride of Hellas. His soul is gladdened, if at all, by a glimpse of things far off: the hope that went abroad across the earth so many centuries ago, has raised his eyes to heaven. How can he comprehend a mode of existence in which the world itself was adequate to all the wants of the soul, and when to yearn for more than life affords was reckoned a disease ? We may tell of blue ^Egean waves, islanded with cliffs that seem less real than clouds, whereon the temples stand, burning like gold in sunset or turning snowy fronts against the dawn. We may paint high porches of the gods, resonant with 400 THE GREEK POETS. music and gladdened with choric dances; or describe per- petual sunshine and perpetual ease, no work from year to year that might degrade the body or impair the mind, no dread of hell, no yearning after heaven, but summer-time of youth, and autumn of old age, and loveless death bewept and bravely borne.* The life of the schools, the theatre, the wrestling-ground, the law-courts; generous contests on the Pythian or Olympian plains ; victorious crowns of athletes or of patriots ; Simonid- ean epitaphs and funeral orations of Pericles for fallen heroes ; the prize of martial prowess or poetic skill ; the honour paid to the pre-eminence of beauty ; all these things admit of scholar-like enumeration. Or we may recall by fancy the olive-groves of the Academy ; discern Hymettus pale against the burnished sky, and Athens guarded by her glistening god- dess of the mighty brow, Pallas, who spreads her shield, and shakes her spear above the labyrinth of peristyles and pediments in which her children dwell. Imagination can lead us to the plane-trees on Cephisus' shore, the labours of the husbandmen who garner dues of corn and oil, the galleys in Peira;an har- bourage. Or with the Lysis and the Charmides beneath our eyes we may revisit the haunts of the wrestlers and the runners, true-born Athenians, fresh from the bath and crowned with violets, chaste,, vigorous, inured to rhythmic movements of the passions and the soul. Yet after all, when the process of an elaborate culture has * But, while we tell of these good things, we must not conceal the truth that they were planted, like exquisite exotic flowers, upon the black rank soil of slavery. That is the dark background of Greek life. Greek slaves may not have been worse off than other slaves — may indeed most probably have been better treated than the serfs of feudal Germany and . Spanish Mexico. Yet who can forget the stories of Spartan Helotry, or the torments of Syracusan stone-quarries, or the pale figure of Phsedon rescued, true-born Elean as he was, by Socrates from an Athenian brothel? THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 401 been toilsomely accomplished, when we have trained our soul to sympathize with that which is so novel and so strange and yet so natural, few of us can fairly say that we have touched the Greeks at more than one or two points. Novies Styx interfusa coercet : between us and them crawls the nine times twisted stream of Death. The history of the human race is one ; and without the Greeks we should be nothing. But just as an old man of ninety is not the same being as the boy of nine- teen, — nay, cannot even recall to memory how and what he felt when the pulse of manhood was yet gathering strength within his veins, — even so Humanity looks back upon the youth of Hellas and wonders what she was in that blest time. A few fragments yet remain from which we strive to reconstruct the past. Criticism is the product of the weakness as well as of the strength of our age. In the midst of our activity we have so little that is salient or characteristic in our life, that we are not led astray by our own individuality or tempted to interpret the past wrongly by making it square with the present. Impartial clearness of judgment in scientific research, laborious anti- quarian zeal, artistic scrupulousness in preserving the minutest details of local colouring, and an earnest craving to escape from the dreary present of common-place respectability into the spirit-stirring freedom of the past — these are qualities of the highest value which our century has brought to bear upon history. They make up in some measure for our want of the creative faculties which more productive but less scientific ages have possessed, and enable those who have but little original imagination to enjoy imaginative pleasures at second hand, by living as far as may be in the clear light of antique beauty. The sea, the hills, the plains, the sunlight of the South, to- gether with some ruins which have peopled Europe with phan- toms of dead art, and the reliques of Greek literature, are our guides in the endeavour to restore the past of Hellas. Among 2 D 402 THE GREEK POETS. rocks golden with broom-flowers, murmurous with bees> burning with anemones in spring and oleanders in summer, and odorous through all the year with thyme, we first assimilate the spirit of the Greeks. In the silence of mountain valleys,, thinly grown with arbutus and pine and oak, open at all seasons to pure air, and breaking downwards to the sea, we understand the apparition of Pan to Pheidippides, and divine the secret of an architecture which aimed at definition before all things. The Bay of Naples, the coast of Sicily, are instinct with the sense of those first settlers, who coasting round the silent promon- tories, ran their keels upon the shelving shore, and drew them up along the strand, and named Neapolis or Gela. The boys of Rome were yet in the wolfs cavern. Vesuvius was a peaceful hill on which the olive and the vine might slumber. The slopes of Pozzuoli were green with herbs, over which no lava had been poured. Wandering about Sorrento, the spirit of the Odyssey is ours: Those fishing-boats with latteen sail aresuch as bore the heroes from their ten years' toil at Troy. Those shadowy islands caught the gaze of ^Eneas straining for the promised land. Into such clefts and rents of rock strode Herakles and Jason when they sought the golden apples and the golden fleece. Look down. There gleam the green and yellow dragon-scales, coiled on the basement of the hills, and writhing to each curve and cleavage of the chasm. Is it a dream ? Do we in fact behold the mystic snake, or in the twilight do those lustrous orange-trees deceive our eyes? Nay : there are no dragons in the ravine — only thick boughs, and burnished leaves, and snowy bloom, and globes of glittering gold. Above them on the cliff sprout myrtle- rods, sacred to Love, myrtle-branches, with which Athenians wreathed their swords in honour of Harmodius. Lilies and jon- quils and hyacinths stand, each straight upon his stem, a youth, as Greeks imagined, slain by his lover's hand, or dead for love of his own loveliness, or cropped in love's despite by death, that THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 403 is the foe of love. Scarlet and white anemones are there, some bom of Adonis' blood, and some of Aphrodite's tears. All beauty fades : the flowers of earth, the bloom'of youth, man's strength, and woman's grace, all wither and relapse into the loveless and inexorable grave. This the Greeks knew, min- gling mirth with melancholy, and love with sadness, their sweetest songs with elegiac melodies. Beneath the olive-trees, among the flowers and ferns, move stately maidens and bare-chested youths. Their eyes are starry- softened or flash fire, and their lips are parted to drink in the breath of life. Some are singing in the fields, an antique world- old monotone of song. Was not the lay of Linus, the burden of juaicpou tol\ Spite S) MevaXca, some such canzonet as this? These late descendants of Greek colonists are still beauti- ful — like moving statues in the sunlight and the shadow of the boughs. Yonder tall straight girl, whose pitcher, poised upon her head, might have been filled by Electra or Chryso- themis with lustral waters for a father's tomb, carries her neck * , as nobly as a Fate of Pheidias. Her body sways upon the hips, where rests her modelled arm ; the ankle and the foot are sights to sit and gaze at through a summer's day. And where, if not here, shall we meet with Hylas and Hyacinth, with Ganymede and Hymenseus, in the flesh? As we pass, the laughter and the singing die away. Bright dresses and pliant forms are lost. We stray onward through the sheen and shade of olive-branches. The olive was Athene's gift to Hellas, and Athens carved its leaves and berries on her drachma with the head of Pallas and her owl. The light which' never leaves its foliage, silvery beneath and sparkling from the upper surface of burnished green, the delicacy of its stem, which in youth and middle and old age retains the distinction of finely accentuated form, the absence of sombre shadow on the ground beneath its branches, might well fit the olive to be the symbol of the purity of classic 2 d 2 404 THE GREEK POETS. Art. Each leaf is cut into a lance-head of brilliancy, not jagged or fanciful or woolly like the foliage of northern trees. There is here no mystery of darkness, no labyrinth of tortuous shade, no conflict of contrasted forms. Excess of light some- times fatigues the eye amid those airy branches, and we long for the reprise of gloom to which we are accustomed in our climate. But gracefulness, fertility, power, radiance, pliability, are seen in every line. The spirit of the Greeks itself is not more luminous and strong and subtle. The colour of the olive-tree, again, is delicate. Its pearly greys and softened greens in no wise interfere with the lustre which is the true distinction of the tree. Clear and faint like Guido's colours in the Ariadne of St. Luke's at Rome, distinct as the thought in a Greek epigram, the olive branches are relieved against the bright blue of the sea. The mountain slopes above are clothed by them with light as with a raiment : clinging to knoll and veil and winding creek, rippling in white undulations to the wind, they wrap the hills from feet to flank in lucid haze. Above the olives shine bare rocks in steady noon or blush with dawn and evening. Nature is naked and beautiful beneath the sun — like Aphrodite, whose raiment falls waist-downward to her sandals on the sea, but whose pure breasts and forehead are unveiled. Nature is the first, chief element by which we are enabled to conceive the spirit of the Greeks. The key to their mythology is here. Here is the secret of their sympathies, the well-spring of their deepest thoughts, the primitive potentiality of all they have achieved in art. What is Apollo but the magic of the sun, whose soul is light ? What is Aphrodite but the love- charm of the sea ? What is Pan but the mystery of Nature, the felt and hidden want pervading all? What again are those elder, dimly-discovered deities, the Titans and the brood of Time, but forces of the world as yet beyond the touch and ken of human sensibilities ? But Nature alone cannot inform THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 405 us what that spirit was. For though the Greeks grew up in scenes which we may visit, they gazed on them with Greek eyes, eyes different from ours, and dwelt upon them with Greek minds, minds how unlike our own ! Unconsciously, in their long and unsophisticated infancy, the Greeks absorbed and assimilated to their own substance that loveliness which it is left for us only to admire. Between them and ourselves — even face to face with mountain, sky, and sea, unaltered by the lapse of years — flow the rivers of Death and Lethe, and the mists of thirty centuries of human life are woven like a veil. To pierce that veil, to learn even after the most partial fashion how they transmuted the splendours of the world into aesthetic forms, is a work which involves the interrogation of their art and literature. The motives of that portion of Greek sculpture which brings us close to the incidents of Greek life, are very simple. A young man binding a fillet round his head ; a boy drawing a thorn from his foot; a girl who has been wounded in the breast, raising her arm to show where the sword smote her ; an athlete bending every sinew to discharge the quoit ; a line of level-gazing youths on prancing horses, some facing forward with straight eyes, one turning with bridle-hand held lightly to encourage his companion, another with loose mantle in the act to mount, others thrown back to rein upon their haunches passionate steeds ; a procession of draped maidens bearing urns : — SU ch are the sculptured signs by which we read the placid physical fulfilment of Greek life. That the serenity of satisfied existence 1 is an end in itself and that death in the plenitude of vigour is desirable, the reliefs of Pheidias and the ^Eginetan marbles teach us. In these simple but consummate works of art the beauty of mere health, animal enjoyment, temperance, mental vigour, and heroic daring mingle and create one splendour of a human being sensitive to all influ- ences and vital in every faculty. Excess can nowhere be 406 THE GREEK POETS. discovered. Compare with these forms for a moment the Genii painted by Michael Angelo upon the roof of the Sistine Chapel. Over them has passed the spirit with its throes : la maladie de la pens'ee is there. Of no Phcebus and no Pallas are they the servants ; but ministers of prophets and sibyls, angels of God fulfilling His word, they incarnate the wrestlings and the judgments and the resurrections of the soul. Now take a banquet-scene from some Greek vase. Along the cushioned couch lie young men, naked, crowned with myrtles : in their laps are women, and at their sides broad jars of honeyed wine. A winged Er6s hovers over them, and their lips are opened to sing a song of ancient love. Yet this is no forecast of Borgia revels in Rome, or of the French Regent's Pare aux Cerfs. When Autolycus entered the symposium of Xenophon, all tongues were stricken dumb ; man gazed at man in wonder at his bloom of adolescence. When Charmides, heading the troop of wrestlers, joined Socrates in the palaestra, the soul of the philosopher was troubled ; he saw the boy's breast within the tunic, and blushed, and felt his heart aflame. Simaetha, in the Pharmaceutria of Theocritus, beheld the curls of youths on horseback like laburnum-flowers, and their bosoms whiter than the moon. We need not embark on antiquarian or metaphysical, or historical discussions in order to understand the sense of Beauty which was inherent in the Greeks. Little hints scattered by the wayside are far more helpful. Take for example the Clouds of Aristophanes, and after reading the speech of the Dikaios Logos, stand beneath the Athlete of Lysippus,* in the Braccio Nuovo of the Vatican. " Fresh and fair in beauty-bloom you shall pass your days in the wrestling- * This statue, usually called the Apoxyomenos, may possibly be a copy in marble of the Athlete of Lysippus which Tiberius wished to remove from the Baths of Agrippa. The Romans were so angry at the thought of being deprived of their favourite, that Tiberius had to leave it where it stood. THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 407 ground, or run races beneath the sacred olive-trees, crowned with white reed, in company with a pure-hearted friend, smelling of bindweed and leisure hours and the white poplar that sheds her leaves, rejoicing in the prime of spring, when the plane-tree whispers to the lime." This life the Dikaios Logos offers to the young Athenian, if he will forego the law- courts and the lectures of the sophists and the house of the hetaira. This life rises above us imaged in the sculptor's marble. The athlete, tall and stately, tired with running, lifts one arm, and with his strigil scrapes away the oil with which he has anointed it. His fingers hold the die that tells his number in the race. Upon his features there rests no shade of care or thought, but the delicious languor of momentary fa- tigue, and the serenity of a nature in harmony with itself. A younger brother of the same lineage is the Adorante of the Berlin Museum: His eyes and arm's are raised to heaven. . Perfect in humanity, beneath the lightsome vault of heaven he stands and prays — a prayer of joy and calm thanksgiving, Greek prayer — no Roman adoration with veiled eyes and muttering lips, no Jewish prostration with the putting off of sandals on the holy ground, no Christian genuflexion like the bending of wind-smitten reeds beneath the spirit-breath of sacraments. Iamos in the mid-waves of Alpheus might have prayed thus when he heard the voice of Phoebus calling to him and promising the twofold gift of prophecy. All the statues of the athletes bear the seal and blossom of tra^poowij — that truly Greek virtue, the correlative in morals to the passion for Beauty. " When I with justice on my lips nourished," says the Dikaios Logos, " and modesty was held in honour, then a boy's voice was not heard ; but they went orderly through the streets in bands together from their quarters to the harp- player's school, uncloaked and barefoot, even though it snowed like meal." Of this sort are the two wrestling boys at Florence, whose heads and faces form in outline the ellipse 408 THE GREEK POETS. which is the basis of all beauty, and whose strained muscles exhibit the chord of masculine vigour vibrating with tense vitality. If we in England seek some living echo of this melody of curving lines, we must visit the fields where boys bathe in early morning, or the playgrounds of our public schools in summer, or the banks of the Isis when the eights are on the water, or the riding-schools of young soldiers. We cannot reconstitute the elements of Greek life : but here and there we may gain hints for adding breath and pulse and movement to Greek sculpture. The charm which the simplest things acquired under the hand of a Greek artificer may be seen in the adornment of a circular hand-mirror.* Ivy-branches, dividing both ways from the handle, surround its rim with a delicate tracery of sharp-cut leaf and corymb. The central space is occupied by four figures — on the right the boy Dionysus, who welcomes his mother in heaven, on the left Phoebus and a young Paniscus playing on the double pipes. Grace can go no further than in the attitude and the expression of this group. Dionysus is thrown backward; both his arms are raised to encircle the neck of Semele, who bends to kiss his upturned lips. A neck- lace with pendent balls defines the throat of the stripling where it meets his breast, suggesting by some touch beyond analysis the life that pulses in his veins. He has armlets too below the elbow, and his rich hair ripples in ringlets between cheek and shoulder. The little Paniscus is seated, attending only to his music, with such childish earnestness as shows that his whole soul goes forth in piping. Phcebus, half-draped and lustrous, stands erect beside a slender shaft of laurel planted on the ground. Such are the delights of Paradise to which, as Greeks imagined, a deity might welcome his earthly mother, leading her by the hand from Hades. It would be easy enough to fill a volume with such descriptions — to unlock the cabinets * Engraved in Muller's Denkmaler der alten Kunst, Plate XLI. THE GENIUS OF GREEK ART. 409 of gems and coins, or to linger over vases painted with, the single figure of a winged boy in tender red upon their black- ness, and showing the word KAAOS negligently written at the side. But it is more to the purpose to note in passing that delicate perception of associated qualities which led the Greeks to maintain a sympathy between cognate deities, while distinguish- ing to the utmost their specific attributes. Aphrodite, Eros, Dionysus, Hermes, Hermaphrodite, the Graces, the Nymphs, the Genius of Death — these, for example, though carefully individualized, are still of one kindred. They blend and mingle in a concord of separate yet interpenetrating beauties. Between the radiant Aphrodite of Melos, who in her trium- phant attitude seems to be an elder sister of the brazen-winged Victory of Brescia, and the voluptuous Aphrodite Callipyge, * a whole rhythm of finely modulated forms may be drawn out, each one of which corresponds to some mood or moment of the enamoured soul. Her immortal son in the Eros of Pheidiast is imaged as the " first of gods," Bsaiv Trpwrioroc, upstarting in his slenderness of youth from Chaos — the keen fine light of dawn dividing night from day. In the Praxitelean Cupid, that most perfect of antiques, They call the Genius of the Vatican, Which seems too beauteous to endure itself In this rough world — he becomes the deity described by Plato in the Phcedrus, an incarnation of the tenderest passion, tinged, in spite of his own radiance, with sadness. What thought has made him sorrow- ful and bowed his head ? Perhaps Theognis can tell us : — atppoveg