READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
THE
ACROPOLIS OE ATHENS. (Restored)
CHAPTER XXIX.
LYRIC
POETRY.—THE SEVEN WISE MEN.
The interval between
776-560 b.c. presents to us a remarkable expansion of
Grecian genius in the creation of their elegiac, iambic, lyric,
choric, and nomic poetry, which was diversified in a great many ways and improved by many separate
masters. The creators of all these different styles—from Kallinus and Archilochus down to Stesichorus—fall within the two centuries here included; though Pindar
and Simonides, “the proud and high-crested bards,” who carried
lyric and choric poetry to the maximum of elaboration consistent with full poetical effect, lived in the
succeeding century, and were contemporary with
the tragedian Aeschylus. The Grecian drama, comic as well as tragic, of the fifth century b.c., combined the lyric and choric song with the living action of iambic dialogue—thus constituting the last ascending movement in the poetical genius of the race.
Reserving this for a future time, and for the history of Athens, to which it more particularly belongs, I now propose to speak only
of the poetical movement of the two earlier centuries, wherein Athens had little or no part So scanty are the remnants, unfortunately, of these earlier poets, that we can offer little except criticisms borrowed at second hand, and a few general considerations on their workings and tendency.
Archilochus and Kallinus both appear to fall about the middle of the
seventh century b.c., and it is with them that the innovations in Grecian poetry
commence. Before them, we are told, there existed nothing but
the Epos, or Dactylic Hexameter poetry of which much has been said
in my former volume—being legendary stories or adventures narrated,
together with addresses or hymns to the gods. We must recollect,
too, that this was not only the whole poetry, but the whole literature
of the age. Prose composition was altogether unknown.
Writing, if beginning to be employed as an aid to a few superior
men, was at any rate generally unused, and found no reading
public. The voice was the only communicant, and the ear the only recipient, of
all those ideas and feelings which productive minds in the community found
themselves impelled to pour out; and both voice and ear were accustomed to a musical
recitation or chant, apparently something between song and speech, with simple
rhythm and a still simpler occasional accompaniment from the primitive fourstringed harp. Such habits and requirements of the
voice and ear were, at that time, inseparably associated with the success and
popularity of the poet, and contributed doubtless to restrict the range of
subjects with which he could deal. The type was to a certain extent
consecrated, like the primitive statues of the gods, from which men only
ventured to deviate by gradual and almost unconscious innovations. Moreover,
in the first half of the seventh century b.c., that genius which had once created an Iliad and an Odyssey
was no longer to be found. The work of hexameter narrative had come to be
prosecuted by less gifted persons—by those Cyclic poets of whom I have spoken
in the preceding volumes.
Such,
as far as we can make it out amidst very uncertain evidence, was the state of
the Greek mind immediately before elegiac and lyric poets appeared; while at
the same time its experience was enlarging by the formation of new colonies,
and the communion among various states tending to increase by the free
reciprocity of religious games and festivals. There arose a demand for turning
the literature of the age (I use this word as synonymous with the poetry) to
new feelings and purposes, and for applying the rich, plastic, and musical language
of the old epic, to present passion and circumstance, social as well as
individual. Such a tendency had become obvious in Hesiod, even within the range
of hexameter verse Now the same causes which led to an enlargement of the
subjects of poetry inclined men also to vary the meter. In regard to this
latter point, there is reason to believe that the expansion of Greek music was
the immediate determining cause. For it has been already stated that the
musical scale and instruments of the Greeks, originally very narrow, were materially
enlarged by borrowing from Phrygia and Lydia, and these acquisitions seem to
have been first realized about the beginning of the seventh century b.c., through the Lesbian harper
Terpander—the Phrygian (or Greco-Phrygian) flute-player Olympus—and the Arcadian
or Boeotian flute-player Klonas. Terpander made the
important advance of exchanging the original four-stringed harp for one of
seven strings, embracing the compass of one octave or two Greek tetrachords;
while Olympus as well, as Klonas taught many new names
or tunes on the flute, to which the Greeks had before been strangers—probably
also the use of a flute of more varied musical compass. Terpander is said to
have gained the prize at the first recorded celebration of the Lacedaemonian
festival of the Karneia, in 676 b.c. This is one of the
best-ascertained points among the obscure chronology of the seventh century;
and there seem grounds for assigning Olympus and Klonas to nearly the same period, a little before
Archilochus and Kallinus. To Terpander, Olympus, and Klonas are ascribed the formation of the earliest musical names known to the inquiring
Greek of later times; to the first nomes on the harp;
to the two latter, on the flute—every nome being the
general scheme or basis of which the airs actually performed constituted so
many variations, within certain defined limits. Terpander employed "his
enlarged instrumental power as a new accompaniment to the Homeric poems, as
well as to certain epic proemia or hymns to the gods
of his own composition. But he does not seem to have departed from the hexameter
verse and the dactylic rhythm, to which the new accompaniment was probably not
quite suitable; and the idea may thus have been suggested of combining the
words also according to new rhythmical and metrical laws.
It
is certain, at least, that the age (670-600) immediately succeeding Terpander—comprising
Archilochus, Kallinus, Tyrtaeus, and Alcman, whose relations of time one to
another we have no certain means of determining, though Alcman seems to have
been the latest—presents a remarkable variety both of new meters and of new
rhythms, superinduced upon the previous Dactylic Hexameter. The first departure
from this latter is found in the elegiac verse, employed seemingly more or less
by all the four above-mentioned poets, but chiefly by the first two, and even
ascribed by some to the invention of Kallinus. Tyrtaeus in his military
march-songs employed the Anapestic meter, while in Archilochus as well as in Alcman
we find traces of a much larger range of metrical variety—iambic, trochaic,
anapestic, Ionic, etc.—sometimes even asynartetic or compound meters, anapestic
or dactylic blended with trochaic or iambic. What we have remaining from Mimnermus who comes shortly after the preceding four is
elegiac. His contemporaries Alkaeus and Sappho, besides employing most of those
meters which they found existing, invented each a peculiar stanza, which is
familiarly known under a name derived from each. In Solon, the younger
contemporary of Mimnermus, we have the elegiac,
iambic, and trochaic: in Theognis, yet later, the
elegiac only. Arion and Stesichorus appear to have been innovators in this
department, the former by his improvement in the dithyrambic chorus or circular
song and dance in honor of Dionysus—the latter by his more elaborate choric
compositions, containing not only a strophe and antistrophe, but also a third
division or epode succeeding them, pronounced by the chorus standing still.
Both Anacreon and Ibykus likewise added to the stock
of existing metrical varieties. We thus see that within the century and a half
succeeding Terpander, Greek poetry (or Greek literature, which was then the
same thing) became greatly enriched in matter as well as diversified in form.
To
a certain extent there seems to have been a real connection between the two.
New forms were essential for the expression of new wants and feelings—though the assertion that elegiac meter is especially adapted for one set of feelings, trochaic for a second, and
iambic for a third, if true at all, can only be
admitted with great latitude of exception,
when we find so many of them employed by the poets
for very different subjects—gay or
melancholy, bitter or complaining, earnest or sprightly—seemingly
with little discrimination. But the adoption
of some new meter, different from the perpetual series of
hexameters, was required when the poet
desired to do something more than recount a long story or fragment of heroic legend —when he sought to bring himself, his friends,
his enemies, his city his hopes and fears with regard to matters
recent or impending, all before the notice of
the hearer, and that too at once with brevity and animation. The Greek hexameter, like our blank verse, has all its limiting conditions bearing upon
each separate line, and presents to the hearer no predetermined resting-place or natural pause beyond. In reference
to any long composition, either epic
and dramatic, such unrestrained license is found
convenient, and the case was similar for Greek epos and drama—the single-lined iambic trimeter being generally used for the dialogue of
tragedy and comedy, just as the dactylic hexameter
had been used for the epic.
The metrical changes introduced by Archilochus and
his contemporaries may be compared to a change from
our blank verse to the rhymed couplet and quatrain. The
verse was thrown into little systems of two, three, or
four lines, with a pause at the end
of each; and the halt thus assured to, as well as
expected and relished by, the ear, was
generally coincident with a close, entire or partial, in the sense which thus came to be distributed
with greater point and effect.
The
elegiac verse, or common hexameter and pentameter (this second
line being an hexameter with the third and sixth thesis, or the
last half of the third and sixth foot suppressed, and a pause left in
place of it), as well as the epode
(or iambic trimeter followed by an iambic
dimeter) and some other binary combinations of
verse which we trace among the fragments of
Archilochus, are conceived with a view to such increase of effect
both on the ear and the mind, not less than to the direct
pleasures of novelty and variety. The iambic
meter, built upon the primitive iambus or coarse and licentious
jesting which formed a part oi some Grecian
festivals (especially of the festivals of Demeter as well
in Attica as in Paros, the native country of the poet), is only
one amongst many new paths struck out by this inventive genius. His exuberance astonishes us, when we
consider that he takes his start from little more than the simple
hexameter, in which too he was a distinguished composer—for even of the elegiac
verse he is as likely to have been the inventor as Kallinus,
just as he was the earliest popular and
successful composer of table-songs or Skolia, though
Terpander may have originated some such before him. The
entire loss of his poems, excepting some few fragments,
enables us to recognize little more than one
characteristic—the intense personality which pervaded them, as well as that
coarse, direct, and outspoken license, which afterwards lent such terrible
effect to the old comedy at Athens. His lampoons are said to have driven Lykambes, the father of Neobule,
to hang himself. Neobule had been promised to
Archilochus in marriage, but that promise was broken, and the poet assailed
both father and daughter with every species of calumny. In addition to this
disappointment, he was poor, the son of a slave-mother, and an exile From his
country Paros to the unpromising colony of Thasos. The desultory notices
respecting him betray a state of suffering combined with loose conduct which
vented itself sometimes in complaint, sometimes in libelous assault. He was at
last slain by some whom his muse had thus exasperated. His extraordinary
poetical genius finds but one voice of encomium throughout antiquity. His
triumphal song to Herakles was still popularly sung by the victors at Olympia,
near two centuries after his death, in the days of Pindar; but that majestic
and complimentary poet at once denounces the malignity, and attests the
retributive suffering of the great Parian iambist.
SIMONIDES
OF AMORGOS.
Amidst
the multifarious veins in which Archilochus displayed his genius, moralizing or
gnomic poetry is not wanting; while his contemporary Simonides of Amorgos
devotes the Iambic meter especially to this destination, afterward followed
out by Solon and Theognis. Kallinus, the earliest celebrated
elegiac poet, so far as we can judge from his few fragments, employed the
elegiac meter for exhortations of warlike patriotism; and the more ample
remains which we possess of Tyrtaeus are sermons in the same strain, preaching
to the Spartans bravery against the foe, and unanimity as well as obedience to
the law at home. They are patriotic effusions, called forth by the
circumstances of the time, and sung by single voice, with accompaniment of the
flute, to those in whose bosoms the flame of courage was to be kindled. For
though what we peruse is in verse, we are still in the tide of real and present
life, and we must suppose ourselves rather listening to an orator addressing
the citizens when danger or dissension is actually impending. It is only in the
hands of Mimnermus that elegiac verse comes to be
devoted to soft and amatory subjects. His few fragments present a vein of
passive and tender sentiment, illustrated by appropriate matter of legend, such
as would be cast into poetry in all ages, and quite different from the rhetoric
of Kallinus and Tyrtaeus.
The
poetical career of Alkman is again distinct from that of any of his
above-mentioned contemporaries. Their compositions, besides hymns to the gods,
were principally expressions of feeling intended to be sung by individuals,
though sometimes also suited for the Komus or band of
festive volunteers, assembled on some occasion of common interest: those of
Alkman were principally choric, intended for the song and accompanying dance of
the chorus, lie was a native of Sardis in Lydia, or at least his family were
so: and he appears to have come in early life to Sparta, though his genius
and mastery of the Greek language discountenance the story that he was brought
over to Sparta as a slave. The most ancient arrangement of music at Sparta,
generally ascribed to Terpander, underwent considerable alteration, not only
through the elegiac and anapestic measures of Tyrtaeus, but also through the Cretan
Thaletas and the Lydian Alkman. The harp, the instrument of Terpander, was
rivaled and in part superseded by the flute or pipe, which had been recently
rendered more effective in the hands of Olympus, Klonas,
and Polymnestus, and which gradually became, for compositions intended to raise
strong emotion, the favorite instrument of the two—being employed as
accompaniment both to the elegies of Tyrtaeus, and to the hyporchemata (songs or hymns combined with dancing) of Thaletas; also, as the stimulus and
regulator to the Spartan military march. These elegies (as has been just
remarked) were sung by one person in the midst of an assembly of listeners, and
there were doubtless other compositions intended for the individual voice. But
in general such was not the character of music and poetry at Sparta; everything
done there, both serious and recreative, was public and collective, so that the
chorus and its performance received extraordinary development.
It
has been already stated, that the chorus, with song and dance combined, constituted
an important part of divine service throughout all Greece. It was originally a
public manifestation of the citizens generally—a large proportion of them being
actively engaged in it, and receiving some training for the purpose as an
ordinary branch of education. Neither the song nor the dance under such
conditions could be otherwise than extremely simple. But in process of time,
the performance at the chief festival tended to become more elaborate and to
fall into the hands of persons expressly and professionally trained—the mass of
the citizens gradually ceasing to take active part, and being present merely as
spectators. Such was the practice which grew up in most parts of Greece, and
especially at Athens, where the dramatic chorus acquired its highest perfection.
But the drama never found admission at Sparta, and the peculiarity of Spartan
life tended much to keep up the popular chorus on its ancient footing. It
formed in fact one element in that never-ceasing drill to which the Spartans
were subject from their boyhood, and it served a purpose analogous to their
military training, in accustoming them to simultaneous and regulated movement—insomuch
that the comparison between the chorus, especially in its Pyrrhic or
war-dances, and the military enomoty, seems to
have been often dwelt upon. In the singing of the solemn paean in honor of
Apollo, at the festival of the Hyakinthia, King
Agesilaus was under the orders of the chorus-master, and sang in the place
allotted to him; while the whole body of Spartans without exception—the old,
the middle-aged, and the youth, the matrons and the virgins—were distributed in
various choric companies, and trained to harmony both of voice and motion,
which was publicly exhibited at the solemnities of the Gymnopaedia. The word dancing must be understood in
a larger sense than that in which it is now employed, and as comprising every variety of
rhythmical, accentuated, conspiring movements, or gesticulations, or postures
of the body, from the slowest to the quickest; cheironomy,
or the decorous and expressive movement of the hands, being especially practiced.
We
see thus that both at Sparta and in Crete (which
approached in respect to publicity of
individual life most nearly to Sparta) the choric
aptitudes and manifestations occupied a larger space
than in any other Grecian city. And as a certain degree of musical and rhythmical variety was essential to
meet this want, while music was never taught
to Spartan citizens individually, we further understand
how strangers like Terpander, Polymnestus, Thaletas, Tyrtaeus, Alkman, etc., were not
only received, but acquired great influence at Sparta,
in spite of the preponderant
spirit of jealous seclusion in the
Spartan character. All these masters appear
to have been effective in their own special
vocation—the training of the chorus—to
which they imparted new rhythmical action, and for which they composed new music. But Alkman
did this, and something more. He possessed
the genius of a poet, and his compositions
were read afterward with pleasure by those who could not
hear them sung or see them danced.
In the little of his poems which remains we recognize that
variety of rhythm and meter for
which he was celebrated. In this
respect he (together with the Cretan Thaletas,
who is said to have introduced a more vehement style both of music and dance, with the Cretic and Paeonic rhythm, into Sparta)
surpassed Archilochus, preparing the way for the complicated choric
movements of Stesichorus and Pindar. Some of his
fragments, too, manifest that fresh outpouring of individual
sentiment and emotion which constitutes so much of the charm of
popular poetry. Besides his touching address in old age
to the Spartan virgins, over whose song and dance
he had been accustomed to preside, he is not afraid to
speak of his hearty appetite, satisfied with simple food
and relishing a bowl of warm broth at the winter
tropic. He has attached to the spring an epithet, which comes
home to the real feelings of a poor country more than those
captivating pictures which abound in verse,
ancient as well as modern. He calls
it “the season of short fare”—the crop
of the previous year being then nearly consumed, the husbandman is
compelled to pinch himself until his new harvest comes in.
Those who recollect that in earlier periods of our
history, and in all countries where there is little accumulated stock, an exorbitant difference
is often experienced in the price of corn before and
after the harvest, will feel the justice of Alcman’s
description.
Judging
from these and from a few other fragments of
this poet, Alkman appears to have combined the life and exciting vigor of Archilochus
in the song properly so called, sung
by himself individually—with a larger knowledge of
musical and rhythmical effect in regard to the choric performance.
He composed in the Laconian dialect—a variety of the Doric
with some intermixture of Aeolisms. And it was from
him,, jointly with those other composers who figured at Sparta
during the century after Terpander,
as well as from the simultaneous development
of the choric muse in Argos, Sicyon, Arcadia, and other
parts of Peloponnesus, that the Doric dialect acquired permanent footing in
Greece, as the only proper dialect for choric
compositions. Continued by Stesichorus and Pindar, this habit
passed even to the Attic dramatists, whose choric songs are thus
in a great measure Doric, while their dialogue is Attic. At Sparta,
as well as in other parts of Peloponnesus,
the musical and rhythmical style appears to have
been fixed by Alkman and his contemporaries, and to have been tenaciously maintained, for two or three
centuries, with little or no innovation; the more so, as the
flute players at Sparta formed an hereditary
profession, who followed the routine of their fathers.
Alkman
was the last poet who
addressed himself to the popular chorus. Both Arion and Stesichorus composed for a body of trained men,
with a degree of variety and
involution such as could not be attained by a mere fraction of the people. The primitive Dithyrambus
was a round choric dance and song in honor of Dionysus, common
to Naxos, Thebes, and seemingly to many other places, at the Dionysiac
festival—a spontaneous effusion of drunken men in the hour
of revelry, wherein the poet Archilochus, “with the thunder of wine
full upon his mind,” had often taken the chief part. Its
exciting character approached to the
worship of the great mother in Asia, and stood in contrast with
the solemn and stately paean addressed to Apollo.
Arion introduced into it an alteration such as Archilochus had himself
brought about in the scurrilous Iambus. He converted it into an elaborate composition in honor of
the god, sung and danced by a chorus of
fifty persons, not only sober, but trained with great strictness;
though its rhythm and movements,
and its equipment in the character of satyrs, presented
more or less an imitation of the primitive license. Born at Methymna
in Lesbos, Arion appears as a harper, singer, and composer, much
favored by Periander at Corinth, in which
city he first “composed, denominated, and
taught the Dithyramb”, earlier than any one known to Herodotus. He did not, however,
remain permanently there, but traveled from city to city exhibiting
at the festivals for money—especially
to Sicilian and Italian Greece, where he acquired large
gains. We may here again remark how the
poets as well as the festivals served
to promote a sentiment of unity among the dispersed Greeks.
Such transfer of the Dithyramb, from the field of spontaneous nature
into the garden of art, constitutes the first stage in the
refinement of Dionysiac worship; which will hereafter be found still farther
exalted in the form of the Attic drama.
ALCAEUS
AND SAPPHO.
The
date of Arion seems about 600 b.c., shortly after Alkman: that of Stesichorus is a few years later. To the latter
the Greek chorus owed a high degree of improvement, and in particular the final
distribution of its performance into the Strophe, the Antistrophe, and the Epodus: the turn, the return, and the rest. The rhythm and
meter of the song during each strophe corresponded with that during the antistrophe,
but was varied during the epodus, and again varied
during the following strophes. Until this time the song had been monostrophic,
consisting of nothing more than one uniform stanza, repeated from the beginning
to the end of the composition; so that we may easily see how vast was the new
complication and difficulty introduced by Stesichorus—not less for the
performers than for the composer, himself at that time the teacher and trainer
of performers. Both this poet, and his contemporary the flute-player Sakadas of Argos,—who gained the prize at the first three
Pythian games founded after the sacred war,—seem to have surpassed their
predecessors in the breadth of subject which they embraced, borrowing from the
inexhaustible province of ancient legend, and expanding the choric song into a
well-sustained epical narrative. Indeed these Pythian games opened a new career
to musical composers just at the time when Sparta began to be closed against
musical novelties.
Alcaeus
and Sappho, both natives of Lesbos, appear about contemporaries with Arion b.c. 610-580.
Of their once celebrated lyric compositions, scarcely anything remains. But the
criticisms which are preserved on both of them place them in strong contrast
with Alkman, who lived and composed under the more restrictive atmosphere of
Sparta—and in considerable analogy with the turbulent vehemence of Archilochus,
though without his intense private malignity. Both Alcaeus and Sappho composed
for their own local audience, and in their own Lesbian Aeolic dialect; not
because there was any peculiar fitness in that dialect to express their vein of
sentiment, but because it was more familiar to their hearers. Sappho herself
boasts of the pre-eminence of the Lesbian bards; and the celebrity of
Terpander, Perikleitas, and Arion permits us to
suppose that there may have been before her other popular bards in the island
who did not attain to a wide Hellenic celebrity. Alkaeus included in his songs
the fiercest bursts of political feeling, the stirring alternations of war and
exile, and all the ardent relish of a susceptible man for wine and love. The
love-song seems to have formed the principal theme of Sappho, who, however,
also composed odes or songs on a great variety of other subjects, serious as
well as satirical, and is said farther to have first employed the Myxolydian
mode in music. It displays the tendency of the age to metrical and rhythmical
novelty, that Alkaeus and Sappho are said to have each invented the peculiar stanza,
well known under their respective names—combinations of the dactyl, trochee,
and iambus, analogous to the asynartetic verses of Archilochus. They by no
means confined themselves however to Alcaic and Sapphic meter. Both the one and
the other composed hymns to the gods; indeed this
is a theme common to all the lyric and choric poets, whatever may be their
peculiarities in other ways. Most of their compositions were songs for the
single voice, not for the chorus. The poetry of Alkaeus is the more worthy of
note, as it is the earliest instance of the employment of the Muse in actual
political warfare, and shows the increased hold which that motive was acquiring
on the Grecian mind.
The
nomic poets, or moralists in verse, approach by the tone of their sentiments
more to the nature of prose. They begin with Simonides of Amorgos or of Samos,
the contemporary of Archilochus. Indeed Archilochus himself devoted some
compositions to the illustrative fable, which had not been unknown even to
Hesiod. In the remains of Simonides of Amorgos we trace nothing relative to the
man personally, though he too, like Archilochus, is said to have had an
individual enemy, Orodoekides, whose character was
aspersed by his Muse. His only considerable poem extant is devoted to a survey
of the characters of women, in iambic verse, and by way of comparison with
various animals—the mare, the ass, the bee, etc. This poem follows out the
Hesiodic vein respecting the social and economical mischief usually caused by women, with some few honorable exceptions. But the
poet shows a much larger range of observation and illustration, if we compare
him with his predecessor Hesiod; moreover his
illustrations come fresh from life and reality. We find in this early iambist
the same sympathy with industry and its due rewards, which is observable in
Hesiod, together with a still more melancholy sense of the uncertainty of human
events.
Of
Solon and Theognis I have spoken in former chapters.
They reproduce in part the moralizing vein of Simonides, though with a strong
admixture of personal feeling and a direct application to passing events. The
mixture of political with social morality, which we find in both, marks their
more advanced age: Solon bears in this respect the same relation to Simonides,
as his contemporary Alkaeus bears to Archilochus. His poems, as far as we can
judge by the fragments remaining, appear to have been short occasional
effusions, with the exception of the epic poem respecting the submerged island
of Atlantis; which he began toward the close of his life, but never finished.
They are elegiac, trimeter iambic, and trochaic
tetrameter; in his hands certainly neither of these meters can be said to have
any special or separate character. If the poems of Solon are short, those of Theognis are much shorter, and are indeed so much broken
(as they stand in our present collection), as to read like separate epigrams or
bursts of feeling, which the poet had not taken the trouble to incorporate in
any definite scheme or series. They form a singular mixture of
maxim and passion—of general precept with personal affection toward the youth
Kyrnus—which surprises us if tried by the standard of literary composition, but
which seems a very genuine manifestation of an impoverished exile’s complaints
and restlessness. What remains to us of Phokylides, another of the nomic poets
nearly contemporary with Solon, is nothing more than a few maxims in
verse—couplets with the name of the author in several cases embodied in them.
Amidst
all the variety of rhythmical and metrical innovations which have been
enumerated, the ancient epic continued to be recited by the rhapsodes as
before. Some new epical compositions were aided to the existing stock: Eugammon
of Cyrene, about the 50th Olympiad (580 b.c), appears to be the last of the series. At Athens,
especially, both Solon and Peisistratus manifested great solicitude as well for
the recitation as for the correct preservation of the Iliad. Perhaps its
popularity may have been diminished by the competition of so much lyric and
choric poetry, more showy and striking in its accompaniments, as well as more
changeful in its rhythmical character. Whatever secondary effect, however,
this newer species of poetry may have derived from such helps, its primary
effect was produced by real intellectual or poetical excellence—by the
thoughts, sentiment, and expression, not by the accompaniment. For a long time
the musical composer and the poet continued generally to be one and the same person;
and besides those who have acquired sufficient distinction to reach posterity,
we cannot doubt that there were many known only to their own contemporaries.
But with all of them the instrument and the melody constituted only the
inferior part of that which was known by the name of music—altogether
subordinate to the “thoughts that breathe and words that burn.” Exactness and
variety of rhythmical pronunciation gave to the words their full effect upon a
delicate ear; but such pleasure of the ear was ancillary to the emotion of mind
arising out of the sense conveyed. Complaints are made by the poets, even so
early as 500 b.c., that the accompaniment was becoming
too prominent. But it was not until the age of the comic poet Aristophanes,
toward the end of the fifth century b.c., that the primitive relation between the instrumental accompaniment and the
words was really reversed—and loud were the complaints to which it gave rise.
The performance of the flute or harp then became more elaborate, showy, and overpowering,
while the words were so put together as to show off the player’s execution. I
notice briefly this subsequent revolution for the purpose of setting forth, by
contrast, the truly intellectual character of the original lyric and choric
poetry of Greece; and of showing how much the vague sentiment arising from mere
musical sound was lost in the more definite emotion, and in the more lasting
and reproductive combinations, generated by poetical meaning.
The
name and poetry of Solon, and the short maxims or sayings of Phokylides,
conduct us to the mention of the Seven Wise men of Greece. Solon was himself
one of the seven, and most, if not all of them were poets or composers in
verse. To most of them is ascribed also an abundance of pithy repartees,
together with one short saying or maxim peculiar to each, serving as a sort of
distinctive motto. Indeed, the test of an accomplished man about this time was
his talent for singing or reciting poetry, and for making smart and ready
answers. Respecting this constellation of Wise men—who in the next century of
Grecian history, when philosophy came to be a matter of discussion and
argumentation, were spoken of with great eulogy—all the statements are
confused, in part even contradictory. Neither the number, nor the names, are
given by all authors alike. Dikaearchus numbered ten, Hermippus seventeen: the names of Solon the Athenian,
Thales the Milesian, Pittakus the Mitylenean,
and Bias the Prienean, were comprised in all the
lists—and the remaining names as given by Plato were, Kleobulus of Lindus m Rhodes, Myson of Chenae, and Cheilon of
Sparta. We cannot certainly distribute among them the sayings or mottoes, upon
which in later days the Amphiktyons conferred the
honor of inscription in the Delphian temple—Know thyself—Nothing too much—Know
thy opportunity—Suretyship is the precursor of ruin. Bias is praised as an
excellent judge; while Myson was declared by the
Delphian oracle to be the most discreet man among the Greeks, according to the
testimony of the satirical poet Hipponax—this is the
oldest testimony (540 b.c.) which can be produced in favor of any
of the Seven. But Kleobulus of Lindus,
far from being universally extolled, is pronounced by the poet Simonides to be
a fool.
Dikaearchus, however, justly observed, that
these seven or ten persons were not Wise Men or Philosophers, in the sense
which those words bore in his day, but persons of practical discernment in
reference to man and society—of the same turn of mind as their contemporary
the fabulist Aesop, though not employing the same mode of illustration. Their
appearance forms an epoch in Grecian history, inasmuch as they are the first
persons who ever acquired an Hellenic reputation grounded on mental competency
apart from poetical genius or effect—a proof that political and social prudence
was beginning to be appreciated and admired on its own account. Solon, Pittakus, Bias, and Thales, were all men of influence—the
first two even men of ascendency—in their respective cities. Kleobulus was despot of Lindus,
and Periander (by some numbered among the seven) of Corinth. Thales stands
distinguished as the earliest name in physical philosophy, with which the
other contemporary Wise Men are not said to have meddled. Their celebrity rests
upon moral, social, and political wisdom exclusively, which came into greater
honor as the ethical feeling of the Greeks improved and as their experience
became enlarged.
In
these celebrated names we have social philosophy in its early and
infantine state—in the shape of homely sayings or admonitions, either supposed
to be self-evident, or to rest upon some great authority divine or human, but
neither accompanied by reasons nor recognizing any appeal to inquiry and
discussion as the proper test of their rectitude. From such incurious
acquiescence, the sentiment to which these admonitions owe their force, we are
partially liberated even in the poet Simonides of Keos, who (as before alluded
to) severely criticises the song of Kleobulus as well as its author. The half-century which
followed the age of Simonides (the interval between about 480-430 b.c.) broke down that sentiment more and
more, by familiarizing the public with argumentative controversy in the public
assembly, the popular judicature, and even on the dramatic stage. And the
increased self-working of the Grecian mind, thus created, manifested itself in Socrates,
who laid open all ethical and social doctrines to the scrutiny of reason, and
who first awakened among his countrymen that love of dialectics which never
left them—an analytical interest in the mental process of inquiring out, verifying,
proving and expounding truth. To this capital item of human progress, secured
through the Greeks—and through them only—to mankind generally, our attention
will be called at a later period of the history. At present it is only
mentioned in contrast with the naked, dogmatical, laconism of the Seven Wise
Men, and with the simple enforcement of the early poets—a state in which
morality has a certain place in the feelings, but no root, even among the
superior minds, in the conscious exercise of reason.
The
interval between Archilochus and Solon (660-580 b.c.) seems, as has been remarked in my former volume, to be the
period in which writing first came to be applied to Greek poems—to the Homeric
poems among the number; and shortly after the end of that period, commences the
era of compositions without meter or prose. The philosopher Pherecydes of
Syros, about. 550 b.c., is called by some the earliest
prose-writer. But no prose-writer for a considerable time afterward acquired
any celebrity—seemingly none earlier than Hekataeus of Miletus, about 510-490 b.c.—prose
being a subordinate and ineffective species of composition, not always even
perspicuous, and requiring no small practice before the power was acquired of
rendering it interesting. Down to the generation preceding Socrates, the poets
continued to be the grand leaders of the Greek mind. Until then, nothing was
taught to youth except to read, to remember, to recite musically and
rhythmically, and to comprehend, poetical composition. The comments of
preceptors addressed to their pupils may probably have become fuller and more
instructive, but the text still continued to be epic or lyric poetry. These
were the best masters for acquiring a full command of the complicated accent
and rhythm of the Greek language, so essential to an educated man in ancient
times, and so sure to be detected if not properly acquired. Not to mention the Choliambist Hipponax, who seems
to have been possessed with the devil of Achilochus,
and in part also with his genius—Anacreon, Ibykus,
Pindar, Bacchylides, Simonides, and the dramatists of
Athens, continue the line of eminent poets without intermission. After the
Persian war, the requirements of public speaking created a class of rhetorical
teachers, while the gradual spread of physical philosophy widened the range of
instruction; so that prose composition, for speech or for writing, occupied a
larger and larger share of the attention of men, and was gradually wrought up
to high perfection, such as we see for the first time in Herodotus. But before
it became thus improved, and acquired that style which was the condition of
wide-spread popularity, we may be sure that it had been silently used as a
means of recording information, and that neither the large mass of geographical
matter contained in the Periegesis of Hecataeus, nor the map first prepared by
his contemporary Anaximander, could have been presented to the world, without
the previous labors of unpretending prose writers, who set down the mere
results of their own experience. The acquisition of prose-writing, commencing
as it does about the age of Peisistratus, is not less remarkable as an evidence
of past, than as a means of future, progress.
Of
that splendid genius in sculpture and architecture, which shone forth in Greece
after the Persian invasion, the first lineaments only are discoverable between
600-500 b.c., in Corinth, Aegina, Samos, Chios,
Ephesus, etc.—enough, however, to give evidence of improvement and progress. Glaucus
of Chios is said to have discovered the art of welding iron, and Rhoecus or his son Theodoras of
Samos the art of casting copper or brass in a mold. Both these discoveries, as
far as can be made out, appear to date a little before 600 b.c. The primitive memorial
erected in honor of a god did not even pretend to be an image, but was often
nothing more than a pillar, a board, a shapeless stone, a post, etc., fixed so
as to mark and consecrate the locality, and receiving from the neighborhood
respectful care and decoration as well as worship. Sometimes there was a real
statue, though of the rudest character, carved in wood; and the families of
carvers—who from father to son, exercised this profession, represented in
Attica by the name of Daedalus and in Aegina by the name of Smilis—adhered
long with strict exactness to the consecrated type of each particular god.
Gradually the wish grew up to change the material, as well as to correct the
rudeness, of such primitive idols. Sometimes the original wood was retained as
the material, but covered in part with ivory or gold—in other cases marble or
metal was substituted. Dipoenus and Skyllis of Crete acquired renown as workers in marble about
the 50th Olympiad (580 b.c.). From them downward, a series of
names may be traced, more or less distinguished; moreover, it seems about the
same period that the earliest temple-offerings, in works of art properly so
called, commence—the golden statue of Zeus, and the large carved chest,
dedicated by the Kypselids of Corinth at Olympia. The
pious associations, however, connected with the old type were so strong, that
the hand of the artist was greatly restrained in dealing with statues of the
gods. It was in statues of men, especially in those of the victors at Olympia
and other sacred games, that genuine ideas of beauty were first aimed at and in
part attained, from whence they passed afterward to the statues of the gods.
Such statues of the athletes seem to commence somewhere between Olympiad 53-58
(568-548 b.c.).
It
is not until the same interval of time (between 600-550 B.C.) that we find any
traces of these architectural monuments by which the more important cities in
Greece afterward attracted to themselves so much renown. The two greatest
temples in Greece known to Herodotus were the Artemision at Ephesus, and the Heraeon at Samos. Of these the
former seems to have been commenced, by the Samian Theodorus,
about 600 b.c.—the
latter, begun by the Samian Rhoecus, can hardly be
traced to any higher antiquity. The first attempts to decorate Athens by such
additions proceeded from Peisistratus and his sons, near the same time. As far
as we can judge, too, in the absence of all direct evidence, the temples of
Paestum in Italy and Selinus in Sicily seem to fall in this same century. Of
painting during these early centuries, nothing can be affirmed. It never at any
time reached the same perfection as sculpture, and we may presume that its
years of infancy were at least equally rude.
The
immense development of Grecian art, subsequently, and the great perfection of
Grecian artists, are facts of great importance in the history of the human
race; while in regard to the Greeks themselves, these facts not only acted
powerfully on the taste of the people, but were also valuable indirectly as the
common boast of Hellenism, and as supplying one bond of fraternal sympathy as
well as of mutual pride, among its widely-dispersed sections. It is the paucity
and weakness of such bonds which renders the history of Greece, prior to 560 b.c, little better than a series of
parallel but isolated threads, each attached to a separate city. The increased
range of joint Hellenic feeling and action, upon which we shall presently
enter, though arising doubtless in great measure from new and common dangers
threatening many cities at once—also springs in part from those other causes
which have been enumerated in this chapter, as acting on the Grecian mind. It
proceeds from the stimulus applied to all the common feelings in religion,
art, and recreation—from the gradual formation of national festivals, appealing
in various ways to such tastes and sentiments as animated every Hellenic
bosom—from the inspirations of men of genius, poets, musicians, sculptors,
architects, who supplied more or less in every Grecian city, education for the
youth, training for the chorus, and ornament for the locality—from the gradual
expansion of science, philosophy, and rhetoric, during the coming period of
this history, which rendered one city the intellectual capital of Greece, and brought
to Socrates and Plato pupils from the most distant parts of the Grecian world.
It was this fund of common tastes, tendencies, and aptitudes, which caused the
social atoms of Hellas to gravitate toward each other, and which enabled the
Greeks to become something better and greater than an aggregate of petty
disunited communities like the Thracians or Phrygians. And the creation of such
common, extrapolitical Hellenism is the most
interesting phenomenon which the historian has to point out in the early period
now under our notice. He is called upon to dwell upon it the more forcibly
because the modern reader has generally no idea of national union without political
union—an association foreign to the Greek mind. Strange as it may seem to find
a song-writer put forward as an active instrument of union among his fellow-Helions, it is not the less true that those poets, whom we
have briefly passed in review, by enriching the common language and by
circulating from town to town either in person or in their compositions,
contributed to fan the flame of PanHellenic patriotism at a time when there
were few circumstances to co-operate with them, and when the causes tending to
perpetuate isolation seemed in the ascendant.
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