slaves gnash their teeth as they wear its fetters.
That unbelief, which is despairing faith, speaks in
this poet with superhuman power. Of necessity
therefore the poet never attains a plastic conception
overpowering himself, and never reaches a truly poetic
effect on the whole; for which reason he was in some
measure careless as to the construction of his tragedies,
and indeed not unfrequently altogether spoiled them
in this respect by providing no central interest either
of plot or person—the slovenly fashion of
weaving the plot in the prologue, and of unravelling
it by a -Deus ex machina- or a similar platitude,
was in reality brought into vogue by Euripides.
All the effect in his case lies in the details; and
with great art certainly every effort has in this
respect been made to conceal the irreparable want
of poetic wholeness. Euripides is a master in
what are called effects; these, as a rule, have a
sensuously-sentimental colouring, and often moreover
stimulate the sensuous impression by a special high
seasoning, such as the interweaving of subjects relating
to love with murder or incest. The delineations
of Polyxena willing to die and of Phaedra pining away
under the grief of secret love, above all the splendid
picture of the mystic ecstasies of the Bacchae, are
of the greatest beauty in their kind; but they are
neither artistically nor morally pure, and the reproach
of Aristophanes, that the poet was unable to paint
a Penelope, was thoroughly well founded. Of
a kindred character is the introduction of common
compassion into the tragedy of Euripides. While
his stunted heroes or heroines, such as Menelaus in
the -Helena-, Andromache, Electra as a poor peasant’s
wife, the sick and ruined merchant Telephus, are repulsive
or ridiculous and ordinarily both, the pieces, on
the other hand, which keep more to the atmosphere of
common reality and exchange the character of tragedy
for that of the touching family-piece or that almost
of sentimental comedy, such as the -Iphigenia in Aulis-,
the -Ion-, the -Alcestis-, produce perhaps the most
pleasing effect of all his numerous works. With
equal frequency, but with less success, the poet attempts
to bring into play an intellectual interest.
Hence springs the complicated plot, which is calculated
not like the older tragedy to move the feelings, but
rather to keep curiosity on the rack; hence the dialectically
pointed dialogue, to us non-Athenians often absolutely
intolerable; hence the apophthegms, which are scattered
throughout the pieces of Euripides like flowers in
a pleasure-garden; hence above all the psychology of
Euripides, which rests by no means on direct reproduction
of human experience, but on rational reflection.
His Medea is certainly in so far painted from life,
that she is before departure properly provided with
money for her voyage; but of the struggle in the soul
between maternal love and jealousy the unbiassed reader
will not find much in Euripides. But, above
all, poetic effect is replaced in the tragedies of