The Greek Plays: Sixteen Plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides

The Greek Plays: Sixteen Plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides

The Greek Plays: Sixteen Plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides

The Greek Plays: Sixteen Plays by Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides

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Overview

A landmark anthology of the masterpieces of Greek drama, featuring all-new, highly accessible translations of some of the world’s most beloved plays, including Agamemnon, Prometheus Bound, Bacchae, Electra, Medea, Antigone, and Oedipus the King

Featuring translations by Emily Wilson, Frank Nisetich, Sarah Ruden, Rachel Kitzinger, Mary Lefkowitz, and James Romm

The great plays of Ancient Greece are among the most enduring and important legacies of the Western world. Not only is the influence of Greek drama palpable in everything from Shakespeare to modern television, the insights contained in Greek tragedy have shaped our perceptions of the nature of human life. Poets, philosophers, and politicians have long borrowed and adapted the ideas and language of Greek drama to help them make sense of their own times.

This exciting curated anthology features a cross section of the most popular—and most widely taught—plays in the Greek canon. Fresh translations into contemporary English breathe new life into the texts while capturing, as faithfully as possible, their original meaning.

This outstanding collection also offers short biographies of the playwrights, enlightening and clarifying introductions to the plays, and helpful annotations at the bottom of each page. Appendices by prominent classicists on such topics as “Greek Drama and Politics,” “The Theater of Dionysus,” and “Plato and Aristotle on Tragedy” give the reader a rich contextual background. A detailed time line of the dramas, as well as a list of adaptations of Greek drama to literature, stage, and film from the time of Seneca to the present, helps chart the history of Greek tragedy and illustrate its influence on our culture from the Roman Empire to the present day.

With a veritable who’s who of today’s most renowned and distinguished classical translators, The Greek Plays is certain to be the definitive text for years to come.

Praise for The Greek Plays

“Mary Lefkowitz and James Romm deftly have gathered strong new translations from Frank Nisetich, Sarah Ruden, Rachel Kitzinger, Emily Wilson, as well as from Mary Lefkowitz and James Romm themselves. There is a freshness and pungency in these new translations that should last a long time. I admire also the introductions to the plays and the biographies and annotations provided. Closing essays by five distinguished classicists—the brilliant Daniel Mendelsohn and the equally skilled David Rosenbloom, Joshua Billings, Mary-Kay Gamel, and Gregory Hays—all enlightened me. This seems to me a helpful light into our gathering darkness.”—Harold Bloom

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780812983098
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 09/05/2017
Series: Modern Library Classics
Pages: 864
Sales rank: 72,068
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.50(d)

About the Author

Mary Lefkowitz is the Andrew W. Mellon Professor in the Humanities emerita at Wellesley College. A recipient of the National Humanities Award, Lefkowitz is the author and editor of numerous articles and books, including Not Out of Africa: How Afrocentrism Became an Excuse to Teach Myth as History; Greek Gods, Human Lives: What We Can Learn from Myths; and Euripides & the Gods.
 
James Romm is the James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Classics at Bard College and the author of several books, including Dying Every Day: Seneca at the Court of Nero and Ghost on the Throne: The Death of Alexander the Great and the War for Crown and Empire. He has edited numerous translations of ancient Greek texts, including the Anabasis of Arrian for the volume The Campaigns of Alexander in the distinguished Landmark Series of Ancient Historians.

Read an Excerpt

Aeschylus

Aeschylus (c.525–456 b.c.) came from a propertied family in Eleusis. His first tragedies were performed in the early 490s, but it was not until 484 that he won his first victory in the competition at the City Dionysia. He fought against the Persians at Marathon in 490 and probably also at Salamis in 480. In 472 he described the battle at Salamis in his Persians, the earliest of his surviving tragedies. In 470, Hieron, the tyrant of the Greek city of Syracuse, invited Aeschylus to Sicily to stage a performance of his Women of Aetna (now lost). After returning to Athens, Aeschylus won first prize at the Great Dionysia with five of his other extant tragedies, the Seven Against Thebes (467), the Suppliants (463), and the trilogy, translated in this volume, known as the Oresteia (458), consisting of the Agamemnon, Libation Bearers, and Eumenides.

Although Aristophanes, in his comedy the Frogs (405 b.c.), satirizes Aeschylus’ style as pompous, bombastic, and sententious, in his extant dramas Aeschylus writes in a variety of modes, ranging from straightforward exposition to densely poetic language characterized by distinctive combinations of words and metaphors. The old men in the choruses of Persians and the Agamemnon use sonorous words and speak in complex rhythms that bring profundity and emotional depth to their reflections on the human condition and the inscrutability of the gods. Metrical motifs carried over from the Agamemnon reappear in the terrifying songs of the Furies in the final play of the Oresteia trilogy, the Eumenides.

In 456, Aeschylus was invited back to Sicily, and he died there. But the Athenians did not forget about him. Half a century later his dramas were so well remembered that even while making fun of his writing style, Aristophanes endorsed his work for its ethical and patriotic values, wishing that Aeschylus could be brought back to life.

Introduction to Aeschylus’ Persians

So far as we know, only three Greek tragedies dealt with recent history rather than age-old myths, and all three portrayed episodes from what we now call the Persian Wars: the twenty-year stretch of armed conflict (499–479 b.c.) that pitted various coalitions of Greek cities against the vast, wealthy, monarchic Persian Empire. The first two of these dramatic experiments were the work of Phrynichus, but both are now lost; Aeschylus’ Persians came third, in 472 b.c. It follows by only eight years the event at its core, the surprising, seemingly miraculous Greek victory over the Persian navy at the island of Salamis, off the west coast of Attica. That victory, achieved despite long odds, had saved most of Greece, and especially Athens, from a fearsome choice between annihilation and subjection to the might of imperial Persia.

It’s no accident that the Persian Wars provided the subject matter for all three of these known Greek historical dramas. The magnitude and scope of this conflict, which appeared to the Greeks to pit the manpower and wealth of all Asia against a much poorer and less populous Europe, gave it mythic dimensions even as it took place, and these only became amplified with the passage of time. Herodotus, writing about the same struggle perhaps half a century after it ended, saw it as the culmination of a millennium-long contest for supremacy between two great ethnopolitical blocs, and therefore as a major turning point in human history.

In dramatizing the naval battle off Salamis—an event he himself, and many members of his audience, had taken part in—Aeschylus closed the chronological gap that gives most Greek plays their sense of otherworldliness, but opened up a gulf of cultural distance instead. The play takes place before the palace at Susa, one of the capitals of the Persian Empire, in what is today western Iran—a place Athenians could neither visit nor visualize, a city they imagined as replete with fantastic wealth and ruled by immensely powerful monarchs. The exotic robes and soft slippers worn by the actors helped convey this distance to the original audience, perhaps along with musical phrases and choral dance steps suggesting the Far East. It has even been suggested by a modern scholar that the backdrop for the play’s production was the ornate tent-cloth beneath which the Persian king, Xerxes, camped during his invasion of Greece—one of the proudest spoils of Athenian victory. If true, this story explains how the word skēnē, originally meaning “tent,” came to denote the stage on which the dramas were played, eventually coming into English in a Latinate spelling, “scene.”

But though the play is ostensibly set at a far remove from Athens, the moral and religious ideas around which it revolves are unmistakably those central to archaic and early classical Greece. Aeschylus uses the plight of Xerxes, a defeated king stripped of both his army and his royal robes, to explore the role of hybris and atē, unsanctioned overreach and the blindness that leads to it, in the rises and falls of individuals and of nations. The Chorus of Persian elders confide their fears about atē in the play’s unique opening ode:

Kindly and wheedling at first comes reckless Atē,

but then she leads men into nets and snares;

no mortal man can jump over, or hope to escape. (96–100)

If the placement of these lines by modern editors is correct (they have been moved from their position as found in the manuscripts), they follow directly after a proud recitation of Persia’s long string of military victories, capped by the recent creation of a Persian navy. That navy, as the Chorus does not yet know but Aeschylus’ audience does, has already been smashed by the Athenian-led Greek fleet at Salamis. The “fine-stranded [ships’] cables” of which the Chorus boast have become the woven “nets” in which the gods trap those hungry for conquest.

“Cables” in the context of this play has a wider resonance than mere ships’ riggings. As Herodotus’ account of Xerxes’ invasion makes clear, the Persian land army marched into Europe by way of an enormous pontoon bridge stretched across the Straits of Hellespont (the modern Dardanelles), the place at which a mile-wide stream of salt water separated Europe from Asia. Enormous flax ropes, stretched between anchored ships, held this bridge together and effectively joined the continents. Aeschylus uses the double meaning of zeugma and related Greek words—both a “link” between two things and a “yoke” thrust upon a team of animals to subdue them—to connect this bridge to notions of enslavement and subjugation. A chariot that Atossa has dreamed of, and that she describes to the Chorus in her opening speech, is pulled by another kind of zeugma—the forcible “yoking” of two enslaved sisters, dressed to represent the peoples of Asia and Europe respectively (the European one, significantly, throws off her yoke, while the Asian one accepts it). A typically dense Aeschylean mesh of motifs begins to form around these zeug- words. Ropes, nets, ships, bridges, and yokes are woven together in this poetic tapestry, all evoking the expansionism of imperial Persia, the nation that sought (in Herodotus’ words) “to make all lands one land” (Histories 7.8ɣ).

The long stretch of time over which these themes are traced is also typically Aeschylean, reminiscent of the panhistorical scope of the Oresteia. Two generations are represented onstage, an older one to which the Chorus and queen belong, and a younger one represented by Xerxes. But Xerxes’ father, Darius, who rises spectacularly from the Underworld in ghost form at the play’s climax, seems to transcend time with his omniscience about both the past and the future. He looks back over five generations of rule that preceded his own, describing Persia’s gradual conquest of Asia as a mandate handed down from Zeus. Xerxes, in his view, has rashly exceeded that mandate by entering Europe, offending not only Zeus but Poseidon—here virtually a personification of the straits that Xerxes had bridged, the Hellespont. Aeschylus obscures the fact (or perhaps did not know) that Darius, too, in reality had built an intercontinental bridge (across the Bosporus, according to Herodotus) and campaigned in Europe, against the Scythians north of the Black Sea. The dead king is not a historical portrait so much as an incarnation of all of Persia’s past, a past that Xerxes has, in the view of the play, betrayed and partly undone.

Though Darius rages at his son’s arrogance, he also speaks of oracles that foretold the present catastrophe. Xerxes’ downfall, like that of Agamemnon and other Aeschylean heroes, is the result of both error and fate. On the whole, the Persians suggests that Xerxes is more deserving of pity than blame. The Chorus only rarely express anger toward him, and the solemn, dirgelike procession they share with him in the play’s last scene is a moving evocation of shared sorrow. Atossa’s anxiety for her child allows us to see Xerxes as a frail and vulnerable creature, a mother’s son as well as an army’s chief. The queen exits the stage (at line 851) on a touchingly domestic mission, seeking to bring her son a new robe to replace the rags he now wears. When Xerxes enters shortly thereafter, we see that her mission remains incomplete. The tattered glory of the Persian royal house cannot be restored easily, if at all.

At the heart of the play (from lines 302 to 514) stand the reports of the first Persian soldier to return from Greece, grim catalogs of horror that rank among the finest of surviving Greek messenger speeches. Aeschylus, who had himself fought at Salamis on board an Athenian ship, here demonstrates a remarkable ability to see the battle through the eyes of the enemy. Though the gods are clearly on the side of the Greeks (as signaled by the supernatural voice bidding them to charge and win their freedom), the sufferings of the Persians, both during the battle and in the retreat afterward, are presented with deep compassion and superb artistry. Here and throughout the play, Aeschylus uses sonorous roll calls of Persian casualties, their names resonant with exotic Iranian phonemes, to construct a kind of verbal memorial to the valiant dead. Though he wrote for Athenians, whose city had been razed by the Persians and who had reasons to celebrate the outcome of Salamis, Aeschylus did not indulge in triumphalism or vainglory. There is no irony in the Chorus’s final wails of woe.

The date at which the Persians was produced, 472 b.c., makes it the earliest play in this volume and, quite possibly, the earliest play among all surviving Greek tragedies. Despite this antiquity, the Persians has had great resonance in recent decades, especially as Western military engagement with the Middle East has become a more central issue. Important productions were mounted in Edinburgh in 1993 and New York in 2003, in response to the first and second Gulf Wars.

Persians

This translation is based on the text of A. F. Garvie’s edition, Aeschylus: Persae (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009).

Cast of Characters (in order of appearance)

Chorus of Persian elders

Atossa, queen of the Persians; mother of Xerxes; widow of Darius

Messenger from the retreating Persian army

Ghost of Darius, former king of the Persians; father of Xerxes

Xerxes, king of Persia

Setting: The play takes place somewhere in the city of Susa, one of the royal seats of the Persian Empire. In the background is a council chamber. A group of old men enter, marching to the anapestic rhythm of their opening lines.

Chorus: Here are we, the trusted ones

of the Persians gone to the land of Greece;

we, guards of the wealthy, gold-decked places,

chosen, as fits our age and rank,

by Xerxes himself, our lord and king,

the son of Darius,

to steward this land.

But my heart, a prophet of evil, is troubled

over the homeward return of the king

and of the army bright with gold.10

All of the might that Asia has spawned

has departed. Howling for a young husband,

[. . .]

No messengers—riders nor runners—

have come to the Persian city.

The men of Susa and Ecbatana,

and of the ancient Kissian stronghold,

have set forth and left, some on horseback,

others on shipboard, and others, foot-soldiers,

forming the tight array of war;20

Men like Amistres, Artaphrenes,

Megabates and Astaspes,

chieftains of Persia,

under-kings of the one Great King;

they are sped, heads of a mighty army,

horsemen and conquerors with the bow,

fearsome to look on, awesome in battle,

with steadfast resolve in their souls;

Artembares, stirred by the chariot’s onrush,

and Masistres, and the bow-master,30

noble Imaeus; and Pharandaces,

and Sosthanes, the driver of horses.

Others have gone, sent forth by the Nile,

that great and much-nurturing stream: Sousicanes,

Pegastagon, the scion of Egypt,

and lofty Arsames, who governs

in holy Memphis; Ariomardus,

overseer of ancient Thebes;

and treaders of marshes, now rowers of ships,

fearsome, numberless in their throng.40

Following these went the host of the Lydians,

soft-living men, who control those who dwell

on a continent’s shores; these Mitragathes

and noble Arcteus, royal commanders,

and the gold-covered city of Sardis sent out,

riding on chariots, some pulled by two teams,

others by three, dread weapons of war,

a fearsome sight to behold.

Dwellers on sacred Tmolus, they hasten

to throw a slavish yoke upon Greece;50

Mardon, Tharubis—anvils to spearheads—

and javelin-hurling Mysians.

Babylon, too,

the gold-covered city, sends forth a mixed throng

in a straggling line; these are stationed on ships,

stalwart with strength that draws back the bow.

From all of Asia there follows the race

that wields the dagger,

heeding the awesome call of the king.

Such is the flower of men now gone

from Persian land,60

for whom every corner of Asia, their nursemaid,

groans and laments with terrible longing.

Parents and wives are trembling in fear

at the long stretch of time, the accounting of days.

strophe

By now the royal, city-sacking host

has crossed the straits and gone to lands adjacent,

linking with hemp-bound raft the gap that Helle swam,70

throwing a many-bolted yoke on the neck of the sea, a new roadway.

antistrophe

Bold in assault, the leader of much-peopled Asia

drives his divine flock over the entire earth

in double advance, on foot and by sea, trusting commanders

who stay firm and true—a godlike man from a race of gold.80

strophe

He casts with his eyes the dark-blue glance of a murderous serpent;

he has great throngs of men and of ships, and he drives a Syrian chariot;

onto spear-famed men he hurls the bow-wielding war-god, Ares.

antistrophe

No one, we think, will stand up against the vast human river,

or keep out invincible waves of the sea by using stout bulwarks;90

the host of the Persians cannot be attacked; strong of heart is our race.

strophe

Our god-sent Fate, from long ago,

sends victory; it charges the Persians

with tower-toppling wars,

with whirling swarms of horsemen, and with smashings of cities.105

antistrophe

And they have learned to look upon

the briny grove of the far-faring sea110

as the raging storm-wind whips it white,

Table of Contents

Time Line (Life Spans of the Three Leading Greek Tragedians) vii

Maps viii

Preface xiii

General Introduction xvii

Aeschylus

Biographical Note 3

Introduction to Aeschylus' Persians 5

Persians, translated James Romm 9

General Introduction to Aeschylus' Oresteia 45

Introduction to Aeschylus' Agamemnon 47

The Oresteia: Agamemnon, translated Sarah Ruden 51

Introduction to Aeschylus' Libation Bearers 101

The Oresteia: Libation Bearers, translated Sarah Ruden 105

Introduction to Aeschylus' Eumenides 139

The Oresteia: Eumenides, translated Sarah Ruden 143

Introduction to Prometheus Bound (possibly by Aeschylus) 179

Prometheus Bound, translated James Romm 183

Sophocles

Biographical Note 219

Introduction to Sophocles' Oedipus the King 221

Oedipus the King, translated Frank Nisetich 225

Introduction to Sophocles' Antigone 275

Antigone, translated Frank Nisetich 279

Introduction to Sophocles' Electra 327

Electra, translated Mary Lefkowitz 331

Introduction to Sophocles' Oedipus at Colonus 377

Oedipus at Colonus, translated Frank Nisetich 381

Euripides

Biographical Note 437

Introduction to Euripides' Alcestis 439

Alcestis, translated Rachel Kitzinger 443

Introduction to Euripides' Medea 483

Medea, translated Rachel Kitzinger 487

Introduction to Euripides' Hippolytus 533

Hippolytus, translated Rachel Kitzinger 537

Introduction to Euripides' Electro 585

Electro, translated Emily Wilson 589

Introduction to Euripides' Trojan Women 633

Trojan Women, translated Emily Wilson 637

Introduction to Euripides' Helen 683

Helen, translated by Emily Wilson 687

Introduction to Euripides' Bacchae 737

Bacchae, translated Emily Wilson 741

Appendices

A "Saving the City": Tragedy in Its Civic Context Daniel Mendelsohn 789

B Material Elements and Visual Meaning David Rasenbloom 799

C Plato and Tragedy Joshua Billings 803

D Aristotle's Poetics and Greek Tragedy Gregory Hays 809

E The Postclassical Reception of Greek Tragedy Mary-Kay Gamel 815

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