Davies, Malcolm. 2015. The Theban Epics. Hellenic Studies Series 69. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_DaviesM.The_Theban_Epics.2015.
Chapter 1. Oedipodeia
Title
Authorship
We would learn a good deal about the handling of the Oedipus legend by the Attic tragedians and later writers, and other similarly inestimable advantages would accrue, if only we possessed some reliable information as to the general contents of this early epic. Unfortunately, the number of actual fragments that we have is tiny, and no one would call them particularly informative. At least, F1 on Haemon’s death at the claws of the Sphinx tells us relatively little, and F2 on the mother of Oedipus’ children has been dismissed as no more helpful by several scholars. Other critics, however, are more sanguine, and suppose that, if combined with later sources, this latter fragment can be used to open up surprisingly wide areas of the now-vanished poem. Here, then, we already meet the two incompatible attitudes that will clash again and again in these pages: the sanguine and the skeptical. Needless to say, even the more optimistic scholars disagree among themselves, and are divided, for instance, as to which of our later sources can legitimately be combined with F2 of the Oedipodeia to produce valid evidence.
“Pisander”
At first sight, the agreement with F1 of the Oedipodeia over Haemon as one of the Sphinx’s victims might seem to support Bethe’s case. But in fact, it is the remainder of the account of the victims which undermines it. The strangely disproportionate attention (not taken into account by Lloyd-Jones [2002:4 = 2002:23] when he disputes Robert’s claim) here paid to the strictly irrelevant Eurynomus and Eioneus indicates, as Robert (1915:154) saw, a source in the form of a “mythologische Traktat” which summarized the legend of the Lapiths’ battle along much the same lines as Diodorus Siculus IV 99. This part of the scholion, then, can safely be segregated from any reconstruction of the Oedipodeia.
But Deubner’s economic hypothesis (1942:7–9 = 1982:641–643) was that between the two sentences Pisander has changed his source, and that the two different sources are to be equated with Euripides’ Chrysippus and Oedipus. The former will have supplied all the information about Laius as πρῶτος εὑρετής {5|6} of homosexuality and Hera’s punishment, indeed everything down to ἔτυψε τῆι μάστιγι τὸν Οἰδίποδα, with the obvious exception of the digression on the Sphinx considered on page 4 above.
Components of the Story
The Rape of Chrysippus
The Oracle to Laius on the Consequences of Begetting a Son
The Exposure of Oedipus
The Parricide
The Sphinx’s Riddle
καὶ τρίπον, ἀλλάσσει δὲ φυὴν μόνον ὅσσ’ ἐπὶ γαῖαν
ἑρπετὰ κινεῖται καὶ ἀν’ αἰθέρα καὶ κατὰ πόντον.
ἀλλ’ ὁπόταν τρισσοῖσιν ἐπειγόμενον ποσὶ βαίνηι,
ἔνθα τάχος γυίοισιν ἀϕαυρότατον πέλει αὐτοῦ.
The particular question that concerns us is whether Robert was right to suggest (1915:1.56–57 and 168) that the lines (or something like them) emanate from an early epic such as the Oedipodeia or the Thebais. The original publication of a papyrus fragment belonging to Euripides’ Oedipus (TrGF 5.1.573; cf. Edmunds 1981a:33n22) led Lloyd-Jones (Gnomon 35 [1963]: 447) to suppose that Robert’s thesis had been strengthened: the fragment showed that Euripides used a different version of the riddle from that cited above: this latter must then have possessed considerably more authority than the tragedian’s for it to survive so long and to be quoted by so many later authors. In the later treatment (from 1978), just cited, Lloyd-Jones displayed considerably more skepticism, largely due to his acquaintance with the second of Lesky’s articles.
The Dénouement and Its Consequences
ἣ μέγα ἔργον ἔρεξεν ἀϊδρείηισι νόοιo,
γημαμένη ὧι υἷϊ, ὁ δ’ ὃν πατέρ’ ἐξεναρίξας
γῆμεν· ἄφαρ δ’ ἀνάπυστα θεοὶ θέσαν ἀνθρώποισιν.
ἀλλ’ ὁ μὲν ἐν Θήβηι πολυηράτωι ἄλγεα πάσχων
Καδμείων ἤνασσε θεῶν ὀλοὰς διὰ βουλάς.
ἡ δ’ ἔβη εἰς Ἀΐδαο πυλάρταο κρατεροῖο,
ἁψαμένη βρόχον αἰπὺν ἀφ’ ὑψηλοῖο μελάθρου,
ὧι ἄχεϊ σχομένη. τῶι δ’ ἄλγεα κάλλιπ’ ὀπίσσω
πολλὰ μάλ’, ὅσσα τε μητρὸς Ἐρινύες ἐκτελέουσι.
Ever since Welcker (1865:2.313–314), many scholars have believed that the above lines provide, in effect, a handy summary of the latter part of the Oedipodeia. For a bibliography see Deubner (1942:34 = 1982:668n2), who himself advances further arguments in favor of the hypothesis. He has convinced many sober scholars even in recent times. Thus we find Griffin writing (1977:44n32 = 2001:375n38): “It was pointed out in antiquity (Pausanias IX 5.10) that the word ἄφαρ seems to rule out the production of children. This is the more striking as it has been shown by Deubner … that this passage of the Odyssey is based on the version of the cyclic Oedipodeia, in which Oedipus had by her [scil. his mother] two sons, Phrastor and Laonytus.” But it is my contention that Deubner has shown nothing of the sort, and that much of Griffin’s article merely underlines the implausibility of the hypothesis he here accepts. Griffin himself (1977:44 = 2002:375) has established that the Odyssean episode takes its place within a series of passages where Homer has sought to eliminate grisly details of family murder and strife. He instances as analogous the omission of the tale of Iphigenia’s sacrifice by her father and “the silence in the Odyssey about the way in which Clytemnestra died.” [9]
Fragments
F1 (see page 133 for text)
A similar picture of Theban deliberations, but without the detail of Haemon’s death in Σ Euripides Phoenician Women 45 (1.255 Schwartz) = Asclepiades FGrHist 12 F7B. These passages may all, as Vian (1963:207–208) suggests, derive from the Oedipodeia.
F2 (see page 134 for text)
Pherecydes too (FGrHist 3 F95) has a similar tale:
However, the value of the former is highly dubious (see pages 4–7 above). As for the latter, even Jacoby (ad loc., p. 416), who refuses to accept Robert’s approach to the present epic fragment, is obliged to admit of the Pherecydean version “kontaminiert hat Ph. sehr naiv, indem er aus den verschiedenen namen für die muttergattin eine reihe von ehen machte.” (Fowler ad loc. [2013:406] is a little more reluctant to accuse Pherecydes of “such an elementary lack of understanding.”) Stephanopoulos (1980:105–106) has tried to use Pherecydes’ fragment as a means to refute Robert’s interpretation of Pausanias’ words. But his first argument merely terminates in the conclusion that Oedipodeia and Thebais {22|23} are unlikely both to have called Oedipus’ wife and mother Euryganeia. Since this is no essential part of Robert’s reading of the present fragment, little is achieved by the denial. The second argument asks why, on Robert’s reckoning, Pherecydes should make Euryganeia, rather than Jocasta, bear Oedipus the four famous children. But nothing is achieved either by wondering why Pherecydes chose this rather than that form of contamination. The proliferation of extra children and wives for Oedipus is reminiscent of the way in which late authors devise increasingly numerous husbands for Helen, and increasingly numerous offspring for her and for Menelaus (cf. Griffin 1977:43 = 2001:373). Robert’s argument is at its strongest when it concerns itself with the basic significance of the Oedipus story as a whole. It is instructive to pose the question “Can we imagine the Sophoclean Oedipus marrying again?,” even though whether the epic hero begot children on his mother like his counterpart in tragedy is precisely what we are disputing, and it is equally unproven, in fact, that epic’s Oedipus blinded himself. Nevertheless, the dread and terror of the original myth surely derive from the fact that the hero marries his own mother and has children by her. The grimness of his and his offspring’s dilemma is absurdly diluted if their mother is not his too, and if Oedipus proceeds to behave like a Tacitean Claudius caelibis vitae intolerans. The introduction of additional and normal wives, for Oedipus to have normal children by, looks very like a later attempt to purge the story of some of its horror. [20]
Onasias’ Painting: LIMC VII.1s.v. “Septem” I.3 (p. 710)
Footnotes