’dance
as ’twere to the music
Their own hoofs make.’
I would not seem over curious in search of an apt or inapt quotation: but nothing can be fitter than a verse of Shakespeare’s to praise at once and to describe the most typical verse of Aristophanes.
THE BIRDS.
(685-723.)
Come on then, ye dwellers by nature in darkness, and
like to the leaves’
generations,
That are little of might, that are moulded of mire,
unenduring and
shadowlike
nations,
Poor plumeless ephemerals, comfortless mortals, as
visions of creatures
fast
fleeing,
Lift up your mind unto us that are deathless, and
dateless the date of
our
being:
Us, children of heaven, us, ageless for aye, us, all
of whose thoughts
are
eternal;
That ye may from henceforth, having heard of us all
things aright as to
matters
supernal,
Of the being of birds and beginning of gods, and of
streams, and the
dark
beyond reaching,
Truthfully knowing aright, in my name bid Prodicus
pack with his preaching.
It was Chaos and Night at the first, and
the blackness of darkness, and
hell’s
broad border,
Earth was not, nor air, neither heaven; when in depths
of the womb of the
dark
without order
First thing first-born of the black-plumed Night was
a wind-egg hatched
in
her bosom,
Whence timely with seasons revolving again sweet Love
burst out as a
blossom,
Gold wings glittering forth of his back, like whirlwinds
gustily turning. He, after his wedlock with Chaos,
whose wings are of darkness, in hell
broad-burning,
For his nestlings begat him the race of us first,
and upraised us to
light
new-lighted.
And before this was not the race of the gods, until
all things by Love
were
united;
And of kind united with kind in communion of nature
the sky and the sea
are
Brought forth, and the earth, and the race of the
gods everlasting and
blest.
So that we are
Far away the most ancient of all things blest.
And that we are of Love’s
generation
There are manifest manifold signs. We have wings,
and with us have the
Loves
habitation;
And manifold fair young folk that forswore love once,
ere the bloom of
them
ended,
Have the men that pursued and desired them subdued,
by the help of us
only
befriended,
With such baits as a quail, a flamingo, a goose, or
a cock’s comb staring
and
splendid.
All best good things that befall men come
from us birds, as is plain to
all
reason:
For first we proclaim and make known to them spring,
and the winter and
autumn
in season;
Bid sow, when the crane starts clanging for Afric,