with the nation as a whole. Everything distinctively
Greek was expiring: fatherland, national faith,
domestic life, all nobleness of action and sentiment
were gone; poetry, history, and philosophy were inwardly
exhausted; and nothing remained to the Athenian save
the school, the fish-market, and the brothel.
It is no matter of wonder and hardly a matter of
blame, that poetry, which is destined to shed a glory
over human existence, could make nothing more out
of such a life than the Menandrian comedy presents
to us. It is at the same time very remarkable
that the poetry of this period, wherever it was able
to turn away in some degree from the corrupt Attic
life without falling into scholastic imitation, immediately
gathers strength and freshness from the ideal.
In the only remnant of the mock-heroic comedy of this
period—the -Amphitruo- of Plautus—there
breathes throughout a purer and more poetical atmosphere
than in all the other remains of the contemporary
stage. The good-natured gods treated with gentle
irony, the noble forms from the heroic world, and
the ludicrously cowardly slaves present the most wonderful
mutual contrasts; and, after the comical course of
the plot, the birth of the son of the gods amidst
thunder and lightning forms an almost grand concluding
effect But this task of turning the myths into irony
was innocent and poetical, as compared with that of
the ordinary comedy depicting the Attic life of the
period. No special accusation may be brought
from a historico-moral point of view against the
poets, nor ought it to be made matter of individual
reproach to any particular poet that he occupies the
level of his epoch: comedy was not the cause,
but the effect of the corruption that prevailed in
the national life. But it is necessary, more
especially with a view to judge correctly the influence
of these comedies on the life of the Roman people,
to point out the abyss which yawned beneath all that
polish and elegance. The coarsenesses and obscenities,
which Menander indeed in some measure avoided, but
of which there is no lack in the other poets, are
the least part of the evil. Features far worse
are, the dreadful desolation of life in which the
only oases are lovemaking and intoxication; the fearfully
prosaic atmosphere, in which anything resembling enthusiasm
is to be found only among the sharpers whose heads
have been turned by their own swindling, and who prosecute
the trade of cheating with some sort of zeal; and
above all that immoral morality, with which the pieces
of Menander in particular are garnished. Vice
is chastised, virtue is rewarded, and any peccadilloes
are covered by conversion at or after marriage.
There are pieces, such as the -Trinummus- of Plautus
and several of Terence, in which all the characters
down to the slaves possess some admixture of virtue;
all swarm with honest men who allow deception on their
behalf, with maidenly virtue wherever possible, with
lovers equally favoured and making love in company;
moral commonplaces and well-turned ethical maxims
abound. A finale of reconciliation such as that
of the -Bacchides-, where the swindling sons and the
swindled fathers by way of a good winding up all go
to carouse together in the brothel, presents a corruption
of morals thoroughly worthy of Kotzebue.