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It appears, that the Poet must have been subjected to some particular disadvantages and embarrassments in the production of this play. We have seen, that in the preceding comedy of the Acharnians, Lamachus, a rising military character, had been personated on the stage, and had been addressed by name without disguise or equivocation throughout the whole of that play.—This is no longer the case in the play now before us; Nicias, Demosthenes, and Cleon himself, are in no instance addressed by name.—It should seem therefore, that some enactment must have taken place, restraining the licence of comedy in this particular; and here a distinction is to be observed, between the choral parts and the dramatic dialogue; for in this very play Cleon is most unsparingly abused by name in the choral songs.—The fact seems to have been, that the licentious privilege of the “Sacred Chorus,” consecrated by immemorial usage, and connected with the rites of Bacchus, could not be abridged by mere human authority; while the dramatic dialogue (originally derived, in all probability, from scenes in dumb show, which had been introduced to relieve the monotony of the Chorus) was regarded as mere recent invention destitute of any divine sanction, and liable to be modified and restrained by the power of the state.
With respect to Nicias and Demosthenes, the Poet could have found no difficulty in evading the new law. The masks worn by the actors presenting a caricature-likeness of each of them, would be sufficient to identify them; and it could not be supposed that either of them would be offended at being brought forward in burlesque, when the Poet's intention was evidently friendly towards them both; the whole drift of his comedy being directed against their main antagonist and rival. For the caricature in which they themselves were represented, was in no respect calculated to make them unpopular; on the contrary, the blunt heartiness, and good fellowship of the one, and the timid scrupulous piety of the other, were qualities, which in different ways recommended them respectively to the favor and good will of their fellow-citizens, and which were accordingly exhibited and impressed upon the attention of the audience, through the only medium which was consistent with the essential character of the ancient comedy.
But among the audience themselves there would undoubtedly be some gainsayers, who
if they were not silenced at the first outset, might have interrupted the attention of
others—“This is too bad” they might have said,—“The Poet will get himself into
a scrape,—Here is a manifest infraction of the new law.”—In order to obviate
this, the Poet in the first scene, before the proper subject of his comedy is developed,
but at the precise point when his individual characters (Nicias and Demosthenes)
were sufficiently marked and identified, submits the question to a theatrical
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