Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 16.djvu/12

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M E N M E N After his death a volume of Menagiana was published ; it was afterwards expanded into two, and, with great addi tions, into four in the Paris edition of 1715. MENANDER, the most famous Greek poet of the New Comedy, which prevailed from about the death of Alexander the Great (323 B.C.) to 250. He was born at Athens in 342, and died, it was said, by drowning in the harbour of that city (Piraeus) in 291. His social tastes induced him to write plays rather for the upper classes, and to raise comedy to a gentility which it had hardly possessed in the hands of the preceding comic poets. He was the associate, if not the pupil, of Theophrastus, who himself had been a disciple of Plato and Aristotle, and he was the intimate friend and admirer of Epicurus ; but he also enjoyed the more distinguished patronage of Demetrius Phalereus (who Avas likewise a pupil of Theophrastus), and of Ptolemy the son of Lagus. 1 His principal rival in the art Avas Philemon, who appears to have been more popular with the multitude, and for that reason probably more successful. It is said that out of a hundred comedies Menander gained the prize with but eight. All the extant plays of Terence, with the exception of the Phormio, are avowedly taken from Menander ; but some of them appear to have been adaptations and combinations of more than one plot, although Terence himself says in the prologue to the Adelphi (11) that he copied the Greek model closely, "verbum de verbo expressum extulit." Julius Caesar called Terence dimidiatus Menander, as if two halves of different plays had been fitted into one. 2 The Attic New Comedy, says Dr Wagner, 3 " may be designated as essentially domestic," i.e., as opposed to that free discussion of the politics of the day which gave to the Old Comedy the place which is held by the " leading articles " of a modern newspaper. " The stock characters were such as the stern or weak father, the son whose follies are seconded by a slave or a hungry parasite, the pettifogger, active in stirring up law suits, and the gascon ading soldier of fortune." 4 These and cognate subjects, which formed the stock-in-trade of Menander s plays, are summed up in two well-known lines of Ovid " Dum fallax serviis, durus pater, improba lena Yivct, dum mcretrix blanda, Menandros erit." It is a good remark of Dr Wagner s 5 that the last-mentioned of these, the meretrix Uanda (which probably refers especially to the Thais), " holds the most important and conspicuous part in the New Attic Comedy, while married ladies are continually represented as the plague and bore of their husbands lives." Intrigues with these, generally through the medium of a clever confidential slave, are for the most part the very point or pivot on which the plot turns. The more literary Romans greatly admired Menander as a poet. Pliny (iV. H., xxx. 1, 7) speaks of him as " Menander litterarum subtilitati sine semulo genitus." Propertius, contemplating a visit to Athens, 6 anticipates the pleasure of reading Menander in his native city "Persequar aut studium lingua;, Demostlienis arnia, Libaboque tuos, scite Menandre, sales." 1 In allusion to this Pliny writes (X. H., vii. 30, 111), "Magnum et Menamlro in comico socco testimonium regum JSgypti et Mace donia; contigit classe et per legates petito ; majus ex ipso, regice fortunes pnelata litterarum conscientia." This seems to say that Menander had been invited to the courts of Alexander and Ptolemy, as Euripides had been to that of Archelaus, king of Macedonia, but had preferred to write comedies for the Attic stage. Thus the Andria, Heautontimorumenos, and Hecyra are described severally in the tituli prefixed as Grseca or tola Gr&ca Menandru. The Eunuch and Timorumenos are each based on two plays of Menander, and the Adelphi was compiled partly from Menauder and partly from Diphilus. 3 Introduction to Terence, p. 6 (Bell, 1869). 4 Professor Jebb, Primer of Greek Literature, p. 101. 6 L tsitp., p. 7. 6 EL, iv. 21 27. He elsewhere speaks of him as "mundus Menander, neat, terse, and urbane ; and his skill in depicting the character of a fascinating Thais is alluded to here and in ii. 6, 3 : "Turba Menandrea; fuerat nee Tbaidos olim Tanta, iu qua populus lusit Erich thouius." Of this comedy, the Thais, Professor Mahaffy remarks ~ that perhaps it was the most brilliant of Menander s plays, " the manners and characters of the personage being painted with thorough experience as well as genius." Nevertheless, only five verses of this play have been preserved to us, one of which is that quoted by St Paul (1 Cor. xv. 33), "Evil communications corrupt good manners." The same critic, in praising Menander s style as the purest model of the New Attic, observes that a remarkable feature of the New Comedy was "its utter avoidance of rhetoric" (p. 489). The influence which this art had on Euripides is well known. Sophocles was not wholly exempt from a kind of rhetorical pedantry, and the speeches in Thucydides are so many exercises of the author in that art. But, as rhetoric pertained essentially to public life, it was likely to have a much less scope in scenes borrowed almost solely from social and domestic experiences. Menander, however, did not neglect the other branch of a liberal Attic education, philosophy. A follower and a friend of Epicurus, whose summum bonum was the greatest amount of enjoyment to be got out of life, he carried out in practice what he advocated by precept ; for he was. essentially the well-to-do gentleman, 8 and moved in the upper circles of Athenian society. " The philosophers of the day " (i.e., the schools and universities in our modern systems of teaching) " were still," says Professor Mahaffy, 9 viz., even during the period of the New Comedy, " the con stant butt of the dramatists." He adds that, "what is still stranger, political attacks on living personages, not excepting Alexander the Great, were freely and boldly made." On the whole, our estimate of the spirit and object of Menander must be formed rather from his imitator and copyist Terence than from the fragments which remain, about 2400 verses in all, as col lected by Meinckc in his Fragtncnta Comicorum Grsecorum. For, as Professor Mahaffy well observes, 10 the extracts made by Athenrcus, our principal authority, have reference chiefly to "the archaeology of cooks and cookery," while Stobrcus was a collector of yvSiij.a.1 or wise maxims, "a most unfortunate and worthless kind of citation. " It follows that no sound conclusions as to dramatic genius, or of the knowledge of human nature, can be drawn from detached verses preserved without the least reference to these par ticular points. The extraordinary popularity of Menander must have been due to literary merit, if not to great originality. Mr Mahaffy observes on this 11 that " there is so much of a calm gentle manly morality about his fragments, he is so excellent a teacher of the ordinary world-wisdom resignation, good temper, modera tion, friendliness that we can well understand this popularity. Copies of his plays continued long in existence, and were certainly known to Suidas and Eustathius as late as the llth and 12th cen turies, if they did not survive to a yet later period. 12 In respect of language, Menander occupies the same position in poetry which his contemporary Demosthenes does in prose. In both the New Attic is elaborated with great finish, and with much greater grammatical precision than we find in writers of the Old Attic, such as Sophocles and Thucydides. A considerable addition to the vocabulary of every-day life had now been made, as was indeed inevitable from the versatile character of the language and the genius of the people who used it. Many new verb-forms, especially the perfect active, 13 now occur, and indeed form a characteristic innovation of the style of Plato. The earlier prose was in its general vocabulary to a considerable extent poetical, and such a concurrence of short syllables as in the Platonic diroSeSoKi^ua/coTey 7 Hist. Class. Gr. Lit. , i. p. 488. 8 Pliny calls Menander " diligeutissimus luxuriae interpres," JV. //., xxxvi. 5. 9 Hist. Class. Gr. Lit., i. p. 480. 10 Ibid., p. 480. 11 Ibid., p. 487. 12 Jbid., i>. 490. 13 A curious example is aireKrayKairi, the transitive perfect of a.TroKTf(vtiv. Similarly we have the unusual forms KexpT<a (frag.

559), ty6<f>r)Ka (727), o-try/cf xu/ca (810).