Here it is, The Birds by Aristophanes (414 BCE), one of the greatest of the greats, in my opinion his peak. The play still has the usual problems that make a translator work: jokes about individual Athenians, puns piled on puns, parodies of lost plays, all of which may well have been hilarious to the Athenian audience but becomes mostly an aggravation to us. Yet The Birds is spectacular, coherent, and thought through, building layers of irony that put it among the greats of its kind of satire. Rabelais, Swift, that level.
I borrowed an image of the bird chorus from the Cambridge
Greek Plays, an 1883 production in this case.
The star is M. R. James, yes, the (eventual) ghost story writer. That must be him in the middle with the
mustache. The entrance of the chorus of
birds must have been one of the greatest moments in Athenian comedy. I typically think of the chorus as an undistinguished
mass, but this time somebody really put some money into the costumes, to the
extent that the members of the chorus are introduced individually, to allow the
audience to admire each gorgeous bird, until finally:
HOOPOE: And Jay and Pigeon. Lark, Wren, Wheater, and Turtledove. Ringdove, Stockdove, Cuckoo, and Hawk. Firecrest and Wren, Rail and Kestrel and Gull, Waxwing, Woodpecker, and Vulture…
PISTHETAIROS: Birds, Birds, billions of birds! (p. 39, Mentor edition, tr. Arrowsmith)
Still, it is the development of the satirical conceit that
elevates The Birds. Two Athenians,
sick of the corruption and war and restlessness of the city, “Athens, land of
lovely - warships” (26), seek a country
idyll, a peaceful escape, among the birds.
But one of them especially, Pisthetairos, M. R. James, brings the
energetic restlessness with him. He
turns the idyll into a Utopia, and then turns Cloudcuckooland, the Utopia, into
an empire. He conquers the gods,
becoming a god himself. I do not know what
an Athenian might have thought blasphemous, but this sounds like blasphemy.
Aristophanes has consistently been in the Athenian peace
party, and anti-imperialist. Yet in The
Birds he recognizes – perhaps in spite of himself celebrates – the energy,
the creative force that turned democratic Athens into Imperial Athens. I can see Alexander the Great, Suleiman the
Magnificent, and Harry Truman understanding the conceit – where else was all of
this energy supposed to go? Satire, real
satire, is unpleasant stuff. The
Birds is Aristophanes at his most outrageous. Comedy at its most outrageous, unsurpassed
for 2,500 years.
Next week is the beginning of another great run of Euripides
plays, beginning with Ion. I urge
you, if possible, to take a look at the 1937 translation by H. D., a fine work
of art in its own right.