Bierl, Anton. 2009. Ritual and Performativity: The Chorus in Old Comedy. Hellenic Studies Series 20. Washington, DC: Center for Hellenic Studies. http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:hul.ebook:CHS_Bierl.Ritual_and_Performativity.2009.
Chapter 2. Kômos and Comedy: The Phallic Song between Ritual and Theater
The Choral Culture between Literature and Ritual: Origin or Structural Commonalities?
On the Performative Manner of Speech and Self-Reference in Ritual Choruses
Ritual Analysis of the Songs (fragment 851 PMG)
Fragment 851a PMG
τῷ θεῷ ποιεῖτε·
θέλει γὰρ ὁ θεὸς ὀρθὸς ἐσφυδωμένος
διὰ μέσου βαδίζειν.
Fragment 851b PMG
ἁπλοῦν ῥυθμὸν χέοντες αἰόλῳ μέλει,
καινὰν ἀπαρθένευτον, οὔ τι ταῖς πάρος
κεχρημέναν ᾠδαῖσιν, ἀλλ’ ἀκήρατον
κατάρχομεν τὸν ὕμνον·
The Parabasis and the Song of the Phallophoroi
- The interruption of the plot in the Aristophanic parabasis is in no way fundamental in nature. Even here elements from the plot are taken up and processed. The lack of dramatic unity and role identity is not confined to this structural element alone, but is part of the open aesthetic and the mode of perception of the genre as a whole. [118]
- Ritual and theater may certainly be present simultaneously; depending on the interpreter’s point of view and on the context, now one, now the other comes to the fore. [119]
Sifakis and Händel reject the connection between the song of the Phallophoroi and the comic parabasis on the not entirely correct basis that we are dealing here exclusively with censure and blame, while in the parabasis the “self-presentation of the chorus” is foregrounded. [120] I have attempted to show, however, to what a great extent this fragment of Semos (fragment 851b PMG) in fact contains traces of demonstrative self-presentation and self-promotion. On the other hand, blame is also a standard thematic element in the parabasis. Both coarse and aggressive ridicule and self-presentation are ritual forms and characteristic of ritual choruses. {312|313}
The Phallic Procession in a Dramatic Plot (Acharnians 241–279)—the Continued Existence of Rituality
πρόιθ’ εἰς τὸ πρόσθεν ὀλίγον, ἡ κανηφόρος.
ὁ Ξανθίας τὸν φαλλὸν ὀρθὸν στησάτω.
κατάθου τὸ κανοῦν, ὦ θύγατερ, ἵν’ ἀπαρξώμεθα.
245ΘΥ. ὦ μῆτερ, ἀνάδος δεῦρο τὴν ἐτνήρυσιν,
ἵν’ ἔτνος καταχέω τοὐλατῆρος τουτουί.
ΔΙ. καὶ μὴν καλόν γ’ ἔστ’. ὦ Διόνυσε δέσποτα,
κεχαρισμένως σοι τήνδε τὴν πομπὴν ἐμὲ
πέμψαντα καὶ θύσαντα μετὰ τῶν οἰκετῶν
250ἀγαγεῖν τυχηρῶς τὰ κατ’ ἀγροὺς Διονύσια,
στρατιᾶς ἀπαλλαχθέντα, τὰς σπονδὰς δέ μοι
καλῶς ξυνενεγκεῖν τὰς τριακοντούτιδας.
ἄγ’, ὦ θύγατερ, ὅπως τὸ κανοῦν καλὴ καλῶς
οἴσεις βλέπουσα θυμβροφάγον. ὡς μακάριος
255ὅστις σ’ ὀπύσει κἀκποήσεται γαλᾶς
σοῦ μηδὲν ἥττους βδεῖν, ἐπειδὰν ὄρθρος ᾖ.
πρόβαινε, κἀν τὤχλῳ φυλάττεσθαι σφόδρα
μή τις λαθών σου περιτράγῃ τὰ χρυσία. {315|316}
ὦ Ξανθία, σφῷν δ’ ἐστὶν ὀρθὸς ἑκτέος
260ὁ φαλλὸς ἐξόπισθε τῆς κανηφόρου·
ἐγὼ δ’ ἀκολουθῶν ᾄσομαι τὸ φαλλικόν·
σὺ δ’, ὦ γύναι, θεῶ μ’ ἀπὸ τοῦ τέγους. πρόβα.
Φαλῆς, ἑταῖρε Βακχίου,
ξύγκωμε, νυκτοπεριπλάνη-
265τε, μοιχέ, παιδεραστά,
ἕκτῳ σ’ ἔτει προσεῖπον εἰς
τὸν δῆμον ἐλθὼν ἄσμενος,
σπονδὰς ποησάμενος ἐμαυ-
τῷ, πραγμάτων τε καὶ μαχῶν
270καῖ Λαμάχων ἀπαλλαγείς.
πολλῷ γάρ ἐσθ’ ἥδιον, ὦ Φαλῆς Φαλῆς,
κλέπτουσαν εὑρόνθ’ ὡρικὴν ὑληφόρον,
τὴν Στρυμοδώρου Θρᾷτταν ἐκ τοῦ φελλέως,
μέσην λαβόντ’, ἄραντα, κατα-
275βαλόντα καταγιγαρτίσαι.
Φαλῆς Φαλῆς,
ἐὰν μεθ’ ἡμῶν ξυμπίῃς, ἐκ κραιπάλης
ἕωθεν εἰρήνης ῥοφήσεις τρύβλιον·
ἡ δ’ ἀσπὶς ἐν τῷ φεψάλῳ κρεμήσεται.
In this scene Aristophanes draws on the festive life of the polis, embeds the ritual of the phallophoria that preceded the actual theatrical performances into the plot, and blends it with the similar rites of the rural Dionysia. [127] The festival of τὰ κατ’ ἀγροὺς Διονύσια (250) is mentioned in particular because the πομπή shown on stage also leads the hero from the polis into the countryside, and thus is able to bring the idyllic picture of peace in the countryside into the theater in the city. [128] The thirty-year wine offered by Amphitheos is turned into a correspondingly sacred activity. Σπονδαί in the secondary, metaphorical meaning of peace treaty are transferred by the comic hero into actual {317|318} libations of wine in honor of the wine-god Dionysus. [129] The completion of this ritual in Dikaiopolis’ rural deme of Kholleidai (Acharnians 406) represents the tangibly expressed realization of the private peace-accord. [130] The reduction of the celebrations to one’s own oikos and deme reflects the extraordinary nature of the act, which is not based on the inclusion of the whole community. For this reason, the usual collective style of speech is abandoned in favor of a monodic delivery. The offering here is part of the ritual action, but at the same time it is also a metaphor, as in the song of the Phallophoroi, for the performance being offered. [131]
Footnotes