The Wasps(Classical Greek:Σφῆκες,romanized:Sphēkes) is the fourth in chronological order of the eleven surviving plays byAristophanes.It was produced at theLenaiafestival in 422 BC, duringAthens' short-lived respite from thePeloponnesian War.
The Wasps | |
---|---|
Written by | Aristophanes |
Chorus | Wasps (old men) Boys |
Characters |
Silent Roles
|
Setting | before house of Anticleon |
As in his other early plays, Aristophanes satirizes the Athenian general and demagogueCleon.He also ridicules the law courts, one of the institutions that provided Cleon his power. The play has been thought to exemplifyOld Comedy.[3]
Plot
editThe play begins with a strange scene—a large net has been spread over a house, the entry is barricaded and two slaves, Xanthias and Sosias, are sleeping in the street outside. A third man is positioned at the top of an exterior wall with a view into the inner courtyard but he too is asleep. The two slaves wake and we learn from their banter that they are keeping guard over a "monster." The man asleep above them is their master and the monster is his father—he has an unusual disease. Xanthias and Sosias challenge the audience to guess the nature of the disease. Addictions to gambling, drink and good times are suggested but they are all wrong—the father is addicted to the law court: he is aphileliastes(φιληλιαστής) or a "trialophile." The man's name isPhilocleon(which suggests that he might be addicted toCleon), and his son's name is the very opposite of this—Bdelycleon.The symptoms of the old man's addiction include irregular sleep, obsessional thinking, paranoia, poor hygiene and hoarding.[4]Counselling, medical treatment and travel have all failed to solve the problem, and now his son has turned the house into a prison to keep the old man away from the law courts.
Bdelycleon wakes and he shouts to the two slaves to be on their guard—his father is moving about. He tells them to watch the drains, for the old man can move like a mouse, but Philocleon surprises them all by emerging instead from the chimney disguised as smoke. Bdelycleon is luckily on hand to push him back inside. Other attempts at escape are also barely defeated. The household settles down for some more sleep and then the Chorus arrives—old jurors who move warily through the muddy roads and are escorted by boys with lamps through the dark. Learning of their old comrade's imprisonment, they leap to his defense and swarm around Bdelycleon and his slaves like wasps. At the end of this fray, Philocleon is still barely in his son's custody and both sides are willing to settle the issue peacefully through debate.
The debate between the Philocleon and Bdelycleon focuses on the advantages that the old man personally derives from voluntary jury service. Philocleon says he enjoys the flattering attentions of rich and powerful men who appeal to him for a favourable verdict, he enjoys the freedom to interpret the law as he pleases since his decisions are not subject to review, and his juror's pay gives him independence and authority within his own household. Bdelycleon responds to these points with the argument that jurors are in fact subject to the demands of petty officials and they get paid less than they deserve—revenues from the empire go mostly into the private treasuries of men like Cleon. These arguments have a paralysing effect on Philocleon. The chorus is won over.
Philocleon refuses to give up his old ways, so Bdelycleon offers to turn the house into a courtroom and to pay him a juror's fee to judge domestic disputes. Philocleon agrees, and a case is soon brought before him—a dispute between the household dogs. One dog (who looks like Cleon) accuses the other dog (who looks likeLaches) of stealing a Sicilian cheese and not sharing it. Witnesses for the defense include a bowl, a pestle, a cheese-grater, a brazier and a pot. As these are unable to speak, Bdelycleon says a few words for them on behalf of the accused. A group of puppies (the children of the accused) is ushered in to soften the heart of the old juror with their plaintive cries. Philocleon is not softened, but his son easily fools him into putting his vote into the urn for acquittal. The old juror is deeply shocked by the outcome of the trial—he is used to convictions—but his son promises him a good time and they exit the stage to prepare for some entertainment.
While the actors are offstage, the Chorus addresses the audience in a conventionalparabasis.It praises the author for standing up to monsters like Cleon and it chastises the audience for its failure to appreciate the merits of the author's previous play (The Clouds). It praises the older generation, evokes memories of the victory atMarathon,and bitterly deplores the gobbling up of imperial revenues by unworthy men. Father and son then return to the stage, now arguing with each other over the old man's choice of attire. He is addicted to his old juryman's cloak and his old shoes and he is suspicious of the fancy woollen garment and the fashionable Spartan footwear that Bdelycleon wants him to wear that evening to a sophisticated dinner party. The fancy clothes are forced upon him, and he is instructed in the kind of manners and conversation that the other guests will expect of him. At the party, Philocleon declares his reluctance to drink any wine—it causes trouble, he says—but Bdelycleon assures him that sophisticated men of the world can easily talk their way out of trouble, and so they depart optimistically for the evening's entertainment.
There is then a second parabasis (see Note at end of this section), in which the Chorus touches briefly on a conflict between Cleon and the author, after which a household slave arrives with news for the audience about the old man's appalling behaviour at the dinner party: Philocleon has got himself abusively drunk, he has insulted all his son's fashionable friends, and now he is assaulting anyone he meets on the way home. The slave departs as Philocleon arrives, now with aggrieved victims on his heels and a pretty flute girl on his arm. Bdelycleon appears moments later and angrily remonstrates with his father for kidnapping the flute girl from the party. Philocleon pretends that she is in fact a torch. His son isn't fooled and he tries to take the girl back to the party by force but his father knocks him down. Other people with grievances against Philocleon continue to arrive, demanding compensation and threatening legal action. He makes an ironic attempt to talk his way out of trouble like a sophisticated man of the world, but it inflames the situation further. Finally, his alarmed son drags him indoors. The Chorus sings briefly about how difficult it is for men to change their habits and it commends the son for filial devotion, after which the entire cast returns to the stage for some spirited dancing by Philocleon in a contest with the sons ofCarcinus.
Note: Some editors (such as Barrett) exchange the second parabasis (lines 1265–91) with the song (lines 1450–73) in which Bdelycleon is commended for filial devotion.
Historical background
editCleon and the Athenian jury system
editAbout two years before the performance ofThe Wasps,Athens had obtained a significant victory against its rival, Sparta, in theBattle of Sphacteria.Rightly or wrongly, most Athenians credited Cleon with this victory, and he was then at the height of his power. Constitutionally, supreme power lay with the People as voters in the assembly and as jurors in the courts, but they could be manipulated by demagogues skilled in oratory and supported by networks of satellites and informers.[5]Cleon had succeededPericlesas the dominant speaker in the assembly, and increasingly he could manipulate the courts for political and personal ends, especially in the prosecution of public officials for mismanagement of their duties.[6]
Jurors had to be citizens over the age of thirty and a corps of 6,000 was enrolled at the beginning of each year, forming a conspicuous presence about town in their short brown cloaks, with wooden staves in their hands. The work was voluntary but time-consuming and they were paid a small fee: three obols per day at the time ofThe Wasps.For many jurors, this was their major source of income and it was virtually an old-age pension. There were no judges to provide juries with legal guidance, and there was no legal appeal against a jury's verdict. Jurors came under the sway of litigious politicians like Cleon who provided them with cases to try and who were influential in persuading the Assembly to keep up their pay. However it is not necessarily true that Cleon was exploiting the system for venal or corrupt reasons, as argued inThe Wasps.[7]
Aristophanes' plays promote conservative values and support an honourable peace with Sparta, whereas Cleon was a radical democrat and a leader of the pro-war faction. Misunderstandings were inevitable. Cleon had previously attempted to prosecute Aristophanes for slandering thepoliswith his second playThe Babylonians,and though the legal result of these efforts is unknown, they appear to have sharpened the poet's satirical edge, as evidenced later in the unrelenting attack on Cleon inThe Knights.The second parabasis inThe Waspsimplies that Cleon retaliated for his drubbing inThe Knightswith yet further efforts to intimidate or prosecute Aristophanes, and the poet may have publicly yielded to this pressure for a short time.[8][9]Whatever agreement was reached with Cleon, Aristophanes gleefully reneged on it inThe Wasps,presenting Cleon as a treacherous dog manipulating a corrupted legal process for personal gain.
Some events that influencedThe Wasps
edit- 431: The Peloponnesian War commenced.
- 426: Aristophanes won first prize at theCity Dionysiawith his second play,The Babylonians(now lost), and he was subsequently prosecuted by Cleon for being the author of slanders against thepolis.
- 425: Athens obtained a significant victory against Sparta in theBattle of Sphacteriaand Cleon successfully claimed responsibility for it.
- 424: Aristophanes won first prize at theLenaiawithThe Knightsin which he lampooned Cleon mercilessly.
- 423: Athens and Sparta agreed to a one-year truce. Aristophanes' playThe Cloudscame third (i.e. last).
- 422:The Waspswas performed at the Lenaia, winning second place.
Discussion
editSome scholars regardThe Waspsas one of the greatest comedies in literature.[10][11]Various factors contribute to its appeal, as for example:
- The central figure, Philocleon, is a 'triumph of characterization';[12]
- The jurors have been considered the most vividly realized Chorus in Old Comedy;[13]
- The juror's son has been viewed as the most lifelike child in Greek drama.[14]
Philocleon is a complex character whose actions have comic significance, psychological significance and allegorical significance. When, for example, he strikes his son for taking the dancing girl away, the violence is comic because it is unexpected of an old man yet it is psychologically appropriate because he is struggling to overcome an addiction and it represents in allegorical form the theme expressed by the Chorus in the parabasis:[15]the old customs are better and more manly than the new fashions. When the play opens, Philocleon is a prisoner of his son and, when the Chorus enters, the old jurors are found to be virtual prisoners of their sons too – they rely on the boys to help them through the dark, muddy streets. TheChorus leader's boy takes full advantage of the situation, threatening to abandon his elderly father if he won't buy him some figs. The debilitating effects of old age and the dehumanizing effects of an addiction (Philocleon is said to resemble a jackdaw, a mouse, a limpet, smoke, a donkey's foal, a cut of meat, Odysseus and Nobody)[16]are somber themes that lift the action beyond the scope of a mere farce.
The Waspsand Old Comedy
editThe Waspshas been thought to exemplify all theconventions of Old Comedyat their best – structural elements that are common to most of Aristophanes' plays are all found in this play in a complete and readily identifiable form. The table below is based on one scholar's interpretation of the play's structural elements and the poetic meters associated with them.[17]
Elements | Lines | Metres | Summary | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|
prologue | 1–229 | iambic trimeter | dialogue setting the scene | conventional opening [o-.-] [o-.-] [o-.-]line 1 |
parodos | 230–47 | iambic tetrameter catalectic | Chorus enters escorted by boys | [o-.-] [o-.-] [o-.-] [o--](trochees are more usual in early plays e.g.Acharnians,Knights,Peace)line 230 |
248–72 | Euripidean 14 syllables/line | dialogue between juror and boy | a quicker form of iambic rhythm [o-.-] [o-.-] [-.-.--]line 248 | |
273–89 | complex meter | Chorus wonders about Philocleon | astrophe/antistrophepair based on ionic metron [..--] but with many variationsline 273 | |
290–316 | as before but simpler | dialogue between juror and boy | strophe/antistrophe,ionic [..--] but with fewer variations.line 290 | |
song | 317–33 | complex | solo lament by Philocleon | mainly choriamb [-..-] to 323 then anapests [..-], reflecting a change in mood.line 317 |
symmetrical scene(possibly anagon)[18] | 334–44 & 365–402 | trochaic and anapestic tetrameter catalectic | angry dialogue between actors and chorus | each half beginning with trochaic tetrameter [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-] e.g. 334–45 and ending with anapestic tetrameter [..-..-] [..-..-] [..-..-] [..--] e.g. 346–57 but with 1 anapesticpnigosadded (358–64)line 334 |
symmetrical scene | 403–60 & 461–525 | mainly trochaic tetrameter catalectic | denunciations and skirmish | trochaic tetrameters [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-] but with trochaic dimeters or 'runs' added.line 403 |
agon | 526–630 & 631–724 | songs and anapestic tetrameter catalectic | debate between father and son | strophe(526–45) andantistrophe(631–47) with iambic [.-] and choriambic [-..-] metra; spoken sections in anapestic tetrameter ending in anapesticpnigoi(546–630 & 648–724)line 526 |
song | 725–59 | anapests, iambs and dochmiacs | reflections on debate | anapestic lines 725–28, 736–42, 750–59, other lines in iambs anddochmiacs[o--.-] or [o..-.-]line 725 |
episode | 760–862 | iambic trimeter | setting up a court at home | dialogue in iambic trimeter [o-.-] [o-.-] [o-.-]line 760 |
song | 863–90 | mostly anapests | prayer consecrating the new court | iambic trimeter in 868-69 & 885–86; shortstrophe(870–74) andantistrophe(887–90) largely in iambs; anapests in 863–67 & 875–84line 863 |
episode | 891–1008 | iambic trimeter | the dog's trial | dialogue in iambic trimeter [o-.-] [o-.-] [o-.-]line 890 |
parabasis | 1009–14 | mixed | kommation | anapestic (1009–10), iambic (1011–12) and trochaic (1013–14) – an unusual lead into a parabasisline 1009 |
1015–59 | anapests | parabasis properwithpnigos | anapestic tetrameter catalectic [..-..-] [..-..-] [..-..-] [..--] ending in anapesticpnigosline 1015 | |
1060–121 | trochees | symmetrical scene | trochaicstrophe(1060–70) andantistrophe(1091–101);epirrhema(1071–90) andantepirrhema(1102–21) in trochaic tetrameter catalectic [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-o] [-.-]line 1060 | |
episode | 1122–264 | iambic trimeter | preparations for dinner party | dialogue between actors in iambic trimeter [o-.-] [o-.-] [o-.-]line 1120 |
second parabasis | 1265–91 | trochaic | symmetrical scene | trochaicstrophe(1265–74) but missing anantistrophe;epirrhema(1275–83) andantepirrhema(1284–91) featuring variation on trochaic tetrameter catalectic [-...] [-...] [-...] [-.-] (paeonic tetrameter)line 1265 |
episode | 1292–449 | mostly iambic trimeter | farcical consequences of the dinner party | dialogue in iambic trimeter but with trochaic passages (1326–31, 1335–40) spoken by the drunken Philocleonline 1292 |
song | 1450–73 | mostly iambs and choriambs | Chorus congratulates father and son | first half ofstropheandantistropheiambo-choriambiclines [o-.-] [-..-] (1450–56, 1462–68), the second half more complexline 1450 |
exodos | 1474–537 | iambic and archilochean | Philocleon in dancing mode | dialogue in iambic trimeter ending in a dance (1518–37) inarchilocheans([o-..-..-o] [-.-.--])line 1470 |
Miscellaneous
edit- In 1909, the English composerRalph Vaughan Williamscreated popularincidental musicfor the play – seeThe Wasps (Vaughan Williams).
Translations
edit- William James Hickie,1853 – prose,full text
- Benjamin B. Rogers,1924 – verse,full text
- Arthur S. Way,1934 – verse
- Douglass Parker,1962 – verse
- Alan H. Sommerstein, 1983 – prose and verse
- Unknown translator – prose:full text
- Peter Meineck,1998 – prose
- George Theodoridis, 2007 – prose:full text
- The Atticist, 2018 – prose and verse with commentary:full text
- Moses Hadas:available for digital loan
References
edit- ^Aristophanes: Lysistrata, The Acharnians, The CloudsAlan Sommerstein, Penguin Classics 1973, p. 37
- ^Aristophanes: The Frogs and Other PlaysD.Barrett (ed.), Penguin Classics 1964
- ^Amnon Kabatchnik, Blood on the Stage, 480 B.C. to 1600 A.D.: Milestone Plays of Murder, Mystery, and Mayhem, p. 55.
- ^The Waspslines 83–135
- ^Aristophanes: The Frogs and Other PlaysD.Barrett, Penguin Classics 1964, p. 35
- ^Aristophanes: WaspsD. MacDowell (ed), Oxford University Press 1971, pp. 1–2
- ^Aristophanes: WaspsD. MacDowell (ed), Oxford University Press 1971, p. 4
- ^Aristophanes: WaspsD. MacDowell (ed), Oxford University Press 1971, p. 299, note 1284–91
- ^Aristophanes: The Birds and Other PlaysD. Barrett and A. Sommerstein (ed), Penguin Classics 1978, pp. 32–33
- ^Silk, M. S. (2002).Aristophanes and the Definition of Comedy.Oxford University Press. p. 435.ISBN019925382X.
- ^MacDowell, Douglas M. (1973). "Review: The Wasps of Aristophanes".The Classical Review.23.Cambridge University Press: 133–35.doi:10.1017/s0009840x0024016x.JSTOR707813.S2CID163587619.
- ^More Essays in Greek History and LiteratureA.W.Gomme (1962), cited inAristophanes: The WaspsD. MacDowell, Oxford University Press 1971, p. 7
- ^Aristophanes' TraditionalismeW.Kassies (1963), cited inAristophanes: The WaspsD. MacDowell, Oxford University Press 1971, p. 10
- ^Aristophanes: The WaspsD. MacDowell, Oxford University Press 1971, p. 10
- ^Waspslines 1060–70
- ^The Waspslines 105–95
- ^Aristophanes: WaspsD. MacDowell (ed), Oxford University Press 1971, p. 6 and Commentary section
- ^WaspsD. MacDowell (ed), Oxford University Press 1971, p. 179 note 334–402