stage, are very effective. In their train come
the procuresses, sometimes of the most vulgar sort,
such as one who appears in the -Curculio-, sometimes
duennas like Goethe’s old Barbara, such as Scapha
in the -Mostettaria-; and there is no lack of brothers
and comrades ready with their help. There is
great abundance and variety of parts representing
the old: there appear in turn the austere and
avaricious, the fond and tender-hearted, and the indulgent
accommodating, papas, the amorous old man, the easy
old bachelor, the jealous aged matron with her old
maid-servant who takes part with her mistress against
her master; whereas the young men’s parts are
less prominent, and neither the first lover, nor the
virtuous model son who here and there occurs, lays
claim to much significance. The servant-world—the
crafty valet, the stern house-steward, the old vigilant
tutor, the rural slave redolent of garlic, the impertinent
page—forms a transition to the very numerous
professional parts. A standing figure among
these is the jester (-parasitus-) who, in return for
permission to feast at the table of the rich, has to
entertain the guests with drolleries and charades,
or, according to circumstances, to let the potsherds
be flung at his head. This was at that time a
formal trade in Athens; and it is certainly no mere
poetical fiction which represents such a parasite
as expressly preparing himself for his work by means
of his books of witticisms and anecdotes. Favourite
parts, moreover, are those of the cook, who understands
not only how to boast of unheard-of sauces, but also
how to pilfer like a professional thief; the shameless
-leno-, complacently confessing to the practice of
every vice, of whom Ballio in the -Pseudolus- is a
model specimen; the military braggadocio, in whom we
trace a very distinct reflection of the free-lance
habits that prevailed under Alexander’s successors;
the professional sharper or sycophant, the stingy
money-changer, the solemnly silly physician, the priest,
mariner, fisherman, and the like. To these fall
to be added, lastly, the parts delineative of character
in the strict sense, such as the superstitious man
of Menander and the miser in the -Aulularia- of Plautus.
The national-Hellenic poetry has preserved, even in
this its last creation, its indestructible plastic
vigour; but the delineation of character is here copied
from without rather than reproduced from inward experience,
and the more so, the more the task approaches to the
really poetical. It is a significant circumstance
that, in the parts illustrative of character to which
we have just referred, the psychological truth is
in great part represented by abstract development
of the conception; the miser here collects the parings
of his nails and laments the tears which he sheds
as a waste of water. But the blame of this want
of depth in the portraying of character, and generally
of the whole poetical and moral hollowness of this
newer comedy, lay less with the comic writers than