Adynaton Stylistic
Adynaton Stylistic
Adynaton Stylistic
.
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aSvvarov.2
387
GALEN O. ROWE.
388
whose oX-,ia
given by Brandt,
of
ancient
rhetoric,
although he
ring
did not cite his source.5 Subsequently
Brandt's term was found
in the rhetorical treatise of Fortunatianus,
but it had nothing
to do with the adytaton,
as modern scholars recognize it.6 The
is v7rep/oX0rX Kara TO
third and most widely accepted designation
Another
was
designation
a8'varov,
hyperbole.7
of Demetrius
hyperbole,
common with the adynaton.5
on the
impossible-type
it has little in
roU aCivvdov."
Canter
also
neglected
Ibid.,
124:
Kara
ro
dav'vaTov,
Ws
TO
ovpav4
earT7ptKe
to cite
Pirrone
he has received
(cf. O. Schultzprovenzalischen
d. n. Sprachen,
Kapv7.
Strangely
enough, after Pirrone had used the word aX0/za to describe the adynaton,
he went on to say that it was a hyperbole (which is usually a trope
not a schema), op. cit., p. 39. Canter, loc. cit., again followed Pirrone,
and his remarks formed the gist of the article in Dictionary of World
Literature, ed. Joseph T. Shipley (Paterson, New Jersey, 1960), s. v.
adynaton. Neither Pirrone nor Canter, however, include Demetrius'
example (which is found in the Iliad, IV, 443 and imitated by Horace
in Odes, I, 1, 36) in their collections of adynata. On the other hand,
the adynaton is not included in studies on the hyperbole; cf. R. Hunziker, Die Figur der Hyperbel in den Gedichten Vergils (Berlin, 1896).
It would seem that Pirrone's designation of the adynaton as a hyperbole
does not even correspond to his own conception of it. At any rate,
Schultz-Gora, op. cit., pp. 204, 205, has convincingly shown that it has
little to do with the hyperbole.
THE "ADYNATON"
AS A STYLISTIC DEVICE.
389
390
GALEN O. ROWE.
daSvvaroi9.'3
Since this proverb is not in the Eclogue, nor, for that matter,
in any of the other early collections of Greek proverbs, we may
assume that Plutarch is referring either to a lost portion of
the Eclogue or to lists of adynata which are no longer extant.
The latter view is more probable. One would expect Plutarch to
be more exact if he were referring to a specific collection, whereas
his citation leaves the impression that lists of adynaton-type
proverbs were fairly common and were regarded as a distinct
group.
The scholia frequently identify adynata in poetry as proverbs.14
The comment of one scholiast deserves special attention. Concerning an adynaton in Aristophanes' Peace (1075-6) he states,
Tr aJ8varoTv E ElTrE, and directs his reader to a similar adynaton
graphorum Graecorum (2 vols. and suppl., Gottingen, 1839-1851), hence
referred to as C. P. G.; R. Str6mberg, Greek Proverbs (Goteborg, 1954);
A. Otto, Die Sprichw6rter und sprichwortlichen Redensarten der Rimer
(Leipzig, 1890). K. Rupprecht, "IapoLtl4a," R.-E., XVIII, pt. 4, cols.
1713, 1714, states, "Einen besonders breiten Raum nehmen im griechischen Spr. die sog. csbvara ein."
12 C. P. G., I,
pp. 343-8. It is highly doubtful that Plutarch is the
author; cf. K. Ziegler, "Plutarchos," R.-E., XXI, 1, col. 880.
18Moralia, 950F. J. J. Hartman, De Plutarcho Scriptore et Philosopho
(Leiden, 1916), p. 564 labels this passage as insulsum balbumque
scioli additamentum. I have not been able to find an edition which
omits it. The recent Teubner edition, Moralia, Vol. V, fasc. 3 (Leipzig,
1960), edited by C. Hubert and M. Pohlenz, retains it. However, even
if we are dealing here with a scholiast, the fact does not substantially
weaken the case for the existence of adynaton-type collections.
14 E. g., G. Dindorf, Scholia Graeca in Homeri Iliadem ex Codicibus
Aucta et Emendata (Oxford, 1875-1888), ad Iliad, XXII, 262, 263;
E. Schwartz, Scholia in Euripidem (Berlin, 1887), ad Medea, 410; Fr.
Diibner, Scholia Graeca in Aristophanem (Paris, 1877), ad Aves, 967-8.
Cf. also Eustathii Comment. ad Homeri Iliadem et Odysseam, ed. G.
Stallbaum (photo repr., Hildesheim, 1960), ad Iliad, XXII, 262, 263;
Porphyrionis Comment. in Horatium Flaccum, ed. A. Holder (Innsbruck, 1894), ad Odes, I, 29, 10-13.
391
Op. cit.
Karl Rupprecht, "Paroemiographoi," R.-E., XVIII, 4, col. 1759.
Dutoit, op. cit., p. 154. Dutoit apparently was not interested in
tracing the adynaton's place in the theory of style. He did not adopt
any of the views of his predecessors, and instead invented his own term,
thlme, ibid., p. xii.
16
17
392
GALEN O. ROWE.
THE "ADYNATON"
AS A STYLISTIC DEVICE.
393
GALEN 0. ROTVE.
394
Herodotus,
THE "ADYNATON"
AS A STYLISTIC DEVICE.
395
GALEN 6. ROWE.
396)
UNIVERSITY
OF IOWA.
82
Ibid., I, vi.
includes proverb
with allegory under the heading of trope. Diomedes, Ars Grammatica,
II (Keil, I, 462) states, parhoemia est vulgaris proverbii usurpatio
rebus temporibusque accomodata, cum aliud significatur, quam quod
dicitur. Beda, De Tropis (Halm, p. 615), also places the proverb under
allegory.