Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi

Plautus Titus Maccius
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Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi

???The Project Gutenberg EBook of Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides,
Captivi, by Plautus Titus Maccius This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: Amphitryo, Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides, Captivi Amphitryon, The Comedy of Asses, The Pot of Gold, The Two Bacchises, The Captives
Author: Plautus Titus Maccius
Editor: Paul Nixon
Translator: Paul Nixon
Release Date: August 20, 2005 [EBook #16564]
Language: English/latin
Character set encoding: UTF-8
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Produced by Ted Garvin, Louise Hope and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net

[Transcribera€?s Note: Footnotes are collected at the end of each play. Where a footnote refers to an omitted passage, the verses before and after the omission have been numbered in parentheses: (182) (184) All other line numbers are from the original text.]
* * * * *
P L A U T U S
With an English Translation by
PAUL NIXON Dean of BOWDOIN COLLEGE, Maine

In Five Volumes
I
AMPHITRYON THE COMEDY OF ASSES THE POT OF GOLD THE TWO BACCHISES THE CAPTIVES

Cambridge, Massachusetts HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
London WILLIAM HEINEMANN LTD
First printed 1916
* * * * *
CONTENTS
Greek Originals of the Plays........vii Introduction.........................ix Bibliography.......................xvii I. Amphitruo, or Amphitryon..............1 II. Asinaria, or the Comedy of Asses....123 III. Aulularia, or the Pot of Gold.......231 IV. Bacchides, or the Two Bacchises.....325 V. Captivi, or the Captives............459 Index...............................569
[Transcribera€?s Note: The Index of Proper Names is not included in this e-text.]
* * * * *
THE GREEK ORIGINALS OF THE PLAYS IN THIS VOLUME
In this and each succeeding volume a summary will be given of the consensus of opinion[1] regarding the Greek originals of the plays in the volume and regarding the time of presentation in Rome of Plautusa€?s adaptations. It may be that some general readers will be glad to have even so condensed an account of these matters as will be offered them.
The original of the Amphitruo is not now thought to have been a work of the Middle Comedy but of the New Comedy, very possibly Philemona€?s ?á?o?? ???±?o?á?±. A clue to the Greek playa€?s date is found in the description of Amphitryona€?s battle with the Teloboians,[2] a battle fought after the manner of those of the Diadochi who came into prominence at the death of Alexander the Great. The date of the Plautine adaptation of this play, as in the case of the Asinaria, Aulularia, Bacchides,[3] and Captivi, is quite uncertain, beyond the fact that it no doubt belongs, like almost all of his extant work, to the last two decades of his life, 204-184 B.C. The Amphitruo is one of the five[4] plays in the first two volumes whose scene is not laid in Athens.
The á?????±?3á?1?? of a certain Demophilus,[5] otherwise unknown to us, was the onginal of the Asinaria. The assertion of Libanus that he is his mastera€?s Salus[6] is thought to be a fling at the honours decreed certain of the Diadochi, who were called, while still alive, ?£?‰??á????μ??. This possibility, together with the fact that the Pellaean[7] merchant and the Rhodian[8] Periphanes travel to Athens-- northern Greece and the Aegaean therefore being pacified and Athens at peace with Macedon--would indicate that the á?????±?3á?1?? was written while Demetrius Poliorcetes controlled Macedon, 294-288 B.C.
Very slender evidence connects the Aulularia with some unknown play of Menandera€?s in which a miser is represented ?′?μ?′?1á???? ??á?μ ???1 ??á???? á?”?1?′???? á? ?o?±?€?????? ??á?′?????1???? ???μ??‰??. Euclioa€?s distress[9] at seeing any smoke escape from his house seems at least to suggest that Plautus may have borrowed the Aulularia from Menander. The allusion to _praefectum mulierum,[10] rather than censorem_, would seem to show that in the original ?3?…???±?1?o???1 ???????? had been written; this would prove the Greek play to have been presented while Demetrius of Phalerum was in power at Athens (317-307 B.C.), where he introduced this detested office, which was done away with by 307 B.C.
Ritschl[11] has shown clearly enough that the original of the Bacchides was Menandera€?s ?”á???? á????±?€?±??á????. The fact that Athens, Samos, and Ephesus are at peace, that the Aegaean is not swept by hostile fleets, that one can travel freely between Athens and Phoeis, together with the allusion to Demetrius,[12] lead one to believe that the ?”á???? á????±?€?±??á???? was written either between the years 316-307 or 298-296 B.C.
The original of the Captivi is quite unknown, while the war between the Aetolians and Eleans gives the only clue to the date of this original. Hueffner[13] considers it probable that the war was that between Aristodemus and Alexander, and the Greek play was produced shortly after 314 B.C. Others[14] assume that the scene of the play would not be Aetolia unless Aetolia had become an important state, and that the war was therefore
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