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VII. I. 3.

WHETHER THE POET TEACHES CHARACTER
OR ACTION

Of well-governed conduct there is, as it were, a definite form, which the philosophers call right reason. Is there any form of evil conduct? No, there is not. But in the absence of such form we are either bad or else indifferent. What then does the poet teach? Does he teach actions, which arise from mental states or dispositions, the dialéσes of the Greeks? Or does he teach us how to become such men that the faculty of doing good is potent, and the principle of avoiding evil conduct is implanted?

Aristotle ruled that since poetry is comparable to that civic institution which leads us to happiness, happiness being nothing other than perfect action, the poet does not lead us to imitate character, but action. Surely he is right; we agree perfectly. But what he adds offers a little more difficulty. He says that there cannot be a tragedy without action, though there may be one without disposition. Under the circumstances, I would here translate os by 'character,' for he says that the tragic poets of his day usually constructed plots that lacked delineation of character. Thus Zeuxis the painter gave no expression of character in his work, and Polygnotus excelled in character-drawing. But if now 0os means 'an inclination to a certain course of action,' and this is excluded from tragedy, the action will be altogether fortuitous, and wholly dependent on chance. To illustrate: Orestes once committed murder by slaying his mother. Yet here there is no ques

On

tion of character, for it was not a characteristic action. the other hand, Aegisthus was a murderer in character, and so were Polymnestor, Pylades, Euclio, Pseudolus, Ballio,

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and Davus. So our inquiry is not as to whether the poet
teaches character or action, but as to whether he teaches
a mental disposition, or the outward expression of it..
Though many things are done contrary to character, they
are not done without our being disposed to do them. The
result of the inquiry is, then, that the poet teaches mental
disposition through action, so that we embrace the good and
imitate it in our conduct, and reject the evil and abstain from
that. Action, therefore, is a mode of teaching; disposition,
that which we are taught. Wherefore action is, as it were,
the pattern or medium in a plot, disposition its end. But
in civil life action is the end, and disposition its form.

If any one thinks that our distinctions are more subtle than the subject warrants, he need not take it to heart; he will find it very easy to leave the whole matter alone.

Aristotle was also illogical in attributing to tragedy alone that which was the common property of poetry, just as when he formulated metrical laws from words and the parts of words, and afterwards ignored those very laws themselves.

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INDEX

[c. is the abbreviation for cited, q. for quoted.]

Accius, c., by Horace, 44.

Achaeus, said to have mingled satyrs with heroes in tragedy, 49.
Action, whether the poet teaches character or, 82-83.

Acumen (acutum), in style, 70.

Adonima, form of pastoral, 32.

Adonis, story of, 32.

Aelian, c., 16, 30.

Aeschylus, inspired by wine, 15; method of, in dealing with history,
15; method of, criticized, 60; criticized in choice of titles, 61-
62; style of, 62; chorus in plays of, 62-64; used wrong means
to gain suspense, 66; cited on episodes, 69.

Aiyoróka, form of pastoral, 23.

Airbla, form of pastoral, 23.

Alovura, duties of, 66-67.

Alcaeus, inspired by wine, 15.

Alcman, inspired by wine, 15.

Alexamenes, said to be inventor of dialogue, 19.

Alexis, c., 35; poet of Old Comedy, 44.

Ambraciota, poet of Middle Comedy, 44.

'Aμeißeobal, meaning of, 22.

Ameipsas, Aristophanes ridiculed by, 45.

Amphion, religious poet, 16.

Anaxilas, poet of Middle Comedy, 44.

Andronicus, Livius, date of, 17; poet of Old Latin Comedy, 45;
character of plays of, 45.

'Aoidá, the Muse Пonтá so called by some, 10; threefold classification
of the word by pedants, 10.

'AπodiηYNμATIKós, mode of poetry, 19.

Apollo, originator of poetry, 15.

Apollodorus, plays of, reworked by Plautus, 46; probably tame, 66.
Aratus, natural, philosophical poet, 16.

Archippus, poet of Old Comedy, 44.

Aristonymus, Aristophanes ridiculed by, 45.

Aristophanes, inspired by wine, 15; Acharnians of, c., 39, 67; The
Frogs and The Clouds of, c., 3, 42; c., 43, 45, 62; comedy of,
lacks unity, 42-43; wit of, analyzed, 43; Aeolosicon of, c., 44;
Plutus of, c., 44; Cocalus of, c., 45; The Clouds of, calumnious,
48; often expressed hope of victory, 66; excelled in raillery,
67; parody employed by, 67; several plays of, c., to show usages
in Old Comedy, 68.

Aristotle, q., 13; on inspiration, 14; on poets and versifiers, 17; c.,
19; on the Iliad and the Odyssey, 36-37; tragedy how defined
by, 40; technical terms used by, in dramatic criticism, 62; on
the chorus in tragedy, 64–65; episodes how defined by, 69; on
character and action, 82-83; inconsistent, 83.

Arts, kinds of, 4.

Atellana, form of Latin comedy, 47; discussed, 47.
Hoos, how used by Aristotle, 82.

Bacchus, worshiped in pastorals, 30.

Ballio, possible etymology of, 35.

Borcos, or Bormus, story of, 31-32.

BOUKOλiaσTai, practices of, 27.

Brass, early accounted one of the elements in doidá, 10.

Bucolic, origin of, claimed by Sicilians, 33.

BUKOMIKά, form of pastoral, 23.

Bwкoλiaoμós, form of pastoral, 26.

Callias, Grammar of, described, 49.

Caryatis, significance of, as a surname of Diana, 24.

Ceres, worshiped in pastorals, 31.

Chaldeans, records of, how transmitted, 12.

Chapters, poetry to be divided into, 55.

Character, whether the poet teaches action or, 82-83.

Chionides, 33.

Chorus, function of, in Old Comedy, 43; succeeded by parabasis in

Middle Comedy, 44; nature and technique of, discussed, 62–65.

Chytra, satiric subjects presented at festival of, 49.

Cicero, c., 5, 10, 22; q., 58, 69; why esteemed to-day, 69.
Cleomenes, how overcome by Telesilla, 14.

Coena, etymology of, 34.

Comedy, relative excellence of, 20; sprang from pastoral poetry,
33; origin of, claimed by Sicilians, 33; refined by art, 35; songs
at cross-roads not the origin of, 35; older than tragedy, 35-36;
wrong definition of, 38; Scaliger's definition of, 38; patterned
after real life, 39; characters of, 39, 57; the three periods of,
defined and discussed, 42; characters of Old, 42-43; two
periods of Old, 42-43; Middle, defined, 43; New, defined, 44-
46; New, derived from Old, 45; Latin, classified according to
style, 45; Old, resembled mime in character, 57, 68; sub-
ject-matter of, 57; should condemn vice by illustration, 59;
subject-matter of Old, 67-68; parody in, 67-68; subject-matter
of New, 69.

Comessationes, explained, 34.

INDEX

[c. is the abbreviation for cited, q. for quoted.]

Accius, c., by Horace, 44.

Achaeus, said to have mingled satyrs with heroes in tragedy, 49.
Action, whether the poet teaches character or, 82-83.

Acumen (acutum), in style, 70.

Adonima, form of pastoral, 32.

Adonis, story of, 32.

Aelian, c., 16, 30.

Aeschylus, inspired by wine, 15; method of, in dealing with history,
15; method of, criticized, 60; criticized in choice of titles, 61–
62; style of, 62; chorus in plays of, 62-64; used wrong means
to gain suspense, 66; cited on episodes, 69.

Aiyoróλia, form of pastoral, 23.

Airbλia, form of pastoral, 23.
Aiovμvîτai, duties of, 66-67.

Alcaeus, inspired by wine, 15.

Alcman, inspired by wine, 15.

Alexamenes, said to be inventor of dialogue, 19.

Alexis, c., 35; poet of Old Comedy, 44.

Ambraciota, poet of Middle Comedy, 44.

'Aμelßeolaι, meaning of, 22.

Ameipsas, Aristophanes ridiculed by, 45.

Amphion, religious poet, 16.

Anaxilas, poet of Middle Comedy, 44.

Andronicus, Livius, date of, 17; poet of Old Latin Comedy, 45;

character of plays of, 45.

'Aoidά, the Muse Пonτá so called by some, 10; threefold classification
of the word by pedants, 10.

'AπodinnμATIKós, mode of poetry, 19.

Apollo, originator of poetry, 15.

Apollodorus, plays of, reworked by Plautus, 46; probably tame, 66.
Aratus, natural, philosophical poet, 16.

Archippus, poet of Old Comedy, 44.

Aristonymus, Aristophanes ridiculed by, 45.

Aristophanes, inspired by wine, 15; Acharnians of, c., 39, 67; The
Frogs and The Clouds of, c., 3, 42; c., 43, 45, 62; comedy of,
lacks unity, 42-43; wit of, analyzed, 43; Aeolosicon of, c., 44;
Plutus of, c., 44; Cocalus of, c., 45; The Clouds of, calumnious,
48; often expressed hope of victory, 66; excelled in raillery,
67; parody employed by, 67; several plays of, c., to show usages
in Old Comedy, 68.

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