Euripides by moral or political purpose. Without
strictly or directly entering on the questions of
the day, and having in view throughout social rather
than political questions, Euripides in the legitimate
issues of his principles coincided with the contemporary
political and philosophical radicalism, and was the
first and chief apostle of that new cosmopolitan humanity
which broke up the old Attic national life.
This was the ground at once of that opposition which
the ungodly and un-Attic poet encountered among his
contemporaries, and of that marvellous enthusiasm,
with which the younger generation and foreigners devoted
themselves to the poet of emotion and of love, of
apophthegm and of tendency, of philosophy and of humanity.
Greek tragedy in the hands of Euripides stepped beyond
its proper sphere and consequently broke down; but
the success of the cosmopolitan poet was only promoted
by this, since at the same time the nation also stepped
beyond its sphere and broke down likewise. The
criticism of Aristophanes probably hit the truth exactly
both in a moral and in a poetical point of view; but
poetry influences the course of history not in proportion
to its absolute value, but in proportion as it is
able to forecast the spirit of the age, and in this
respect Euripides was unsurpassed. And thus
it happened, that Alexander read him diligently; that
Aristotle developed the idea of the tragic poet with
special reference to him; that the latest poetic and
plastic art in Attica as it were originated from him
(for the new Attic comedy did nothing but transfer
Euripides into a comic form, and the school of painters
which we meet with in the designs of the later vases
derived its subjects no longer from the old epics,
but from the Euripidean tragedy); and lastly that,
the more the old Hellas gave place to the new Hellenism,
the more the fame and influence of the poet increased,
and Greek life abroad, in Egypt as well as in Rome,
was directly or indirectly moulded in the main by
Euripides.
Roman Tragedy
The Hellenism of Euripides flowed to Rome through
very various channels, and probably produced a speedier
and deeper effect there by indirect means than in
the form of direct translation. The tragic drama
in Rome was not exactly later in its rise than the
comic;(39) but the far greater expense of putting
a tragedy on the stage—which was undoubtedly
felt as a consideration of moment, at least during
the Hannibalic war—as well as the nature
of the audience(40) retarded the development of tragedy.
In the comedies of Plautus the allusions to tragedies
are not very frequent, and most references of this
kind may have been taken from the originals.
The first and only influential tragedian of this
epoch was the younger contemporary of Naevius and
Plautus, Quintus Ennius (515-585), whose pieces were
already travestied by contemporary comic writers,
and were exhibited and declaimed by posterity down
to the days of the empire.