Seidensticker - Comic Elements in Euripides' Bacchae
Seidensticker - Comic Elements in Euripides' Bacchae
Seidensticker - Comic Elements in Euripides' Bacchae
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COMIC ELEMENTS IN EURIPIDES' BACCHAE*
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304 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 305
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306 BERND SElDENSTICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 307
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308 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 309
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A) Bacchae 170ff.:
After Dionysos' prologue and the opening parodos, the
action of the play starts with the entrance of the prophet
Teiresias. Following the introduction of the god and his
enthusiastic band of followers we are now about to see the
first proselytes Dionysos has made in Thebes and it will be
a strange sight: Teiresias enters the stage, calls Kadmos,
Pentheus father, out of the palace, and the two old men join
each other in the following short dialogue:
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 311
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312 BERND SEIDENS TICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 313
i76oFe-
va 6' afar, JcrAog 6ortcog aya yareQt
popQ/3d6t, x6oov ayet raXvz7rovv oaxQlr,uLaot i3txxa
At the same moment-to these cheerful dactyles-the
prophet enters the stage, slowly and cautiously, I su
since he is not guided by a young boy as in Sophocles
or Antigone, maybe searching his long way through the
parodos on to the stage with a thyrsos-stick.
Such an interpretation (and staging) of Teiresias' entrance
(if not required, certainly permitted by the text) must have a
comic effect. While it is impossible to prove that this is how
Euripides intended the scene to be staged, the other evidence
under discussion supports the hypothesis that a comic effect
is indeed what the dramatist had in mind.
Roux45 and Steidle46 think that Euripides let Teiresias enter
the stage without support to demonstrate the miraculous
metamorphosis of the old priest. Quite apart from the fact that
the continuous emphasis on their uncertainty and weakness
does not permit us to understand the rejuvenation of the two
old men with Steidle as "durchaus ernstgemeinte Folge der
Einwirkung des Gottes," lines 193, 198, and 363-66 indeed
exclude this interpretation: why-if Roux and Steidle are
right-does Kadmos think that he will have to guide Teiresias
like a child? Or why, in the very moment when they are
about to leave for Mount Kithairon, does Teiresias exhort
Kadmos:
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314 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 315
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316 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
B) Bacchae 912ff:
The mingling of the tragic and the comic is even more
obvious in a second scene of the Bacchae: the so-called
dressing scene. At the beginning of the fourth epeisodion
Dionysos summons Pentheus, dressed as a maenad with wig
and a long linen ZTir)V, out of the palace and then exposes
the complete destruction of the Oeoydxo;. Dodds (191f.) has
rightly pointed out that the third of the three long stichomythiai
between the two antagonists totally reverses their first en-
counter. In the first scene Pentheus scoffed at Dionysos'
effeminate garb and even threatened to cut off his beautiful
long locks (493) and seize the thyrsos (495). Now he is eager
to look exactly like and have the same carriage as a maenad;
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 317
54 Dodds, Bacchae, 192; Schwinge, op. cit. (supra n. 1) 403; Steidle, op.
cit. (supra n. 1) 36f.
55 Winnington-Ingram, op. cit. (supra n. 1) 118.
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318 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
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EURIPIDES' BACCHAE 319
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320 BERND SEIDENSTICKER
BERND SEIDENSTICKER
UNIVERSITY OF HAMBURG
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