The Alcestis would hardly confirm
its author’s right to be acclaimed “the
most tragic of the poets.” It is doubtful
whether one can call it a tragedy at all. Yet
it remains one of the most characteristic and delightful
of Euripidean dramas, as well as, by modern standards,
the most easily actable. And I notice that many
judges who display nothing but a fierce satisfaction
in sending other plays of that author to the block
or the treadmill, show a certain human weakness in
sentencing the gentle daughter of Pelias.
The play has been interpreted in many
different ways. There is the old unsophisticated
view, well set forth in Paley’s preface of 1872.
He regards the Alcestis simply as a triumph
of pathos, especially of “that peculiar sort
of pathos which comes most home to us, with our views
and partialities for domestic life.... As for
the characters, that of Alcestis must be acknowledged
to be pre-eminently beautiful. One could almost
imagine that Euripides had not yet conceived that bad
opinion of the sex which so many of the subsequent
dramas exhibit.... But the rest are hardly well-drawn,
or, at least, pleasingly portrayed.” “The
poet might perhaps, had he pleased, have exhibited
Admetus in a more amiable point of view.”
This criticism is not very trenchant,
but its weakness is due, I think, more to timidity
of statement than to lack of perception. Paley
does see that a character may be “well-drawn”
without necessarily being “pleasing”;
and even that he may be eminently pleasing as a part
of the play while very displeasing in himself.
He sees that Euripides may have had his own reasons
for not making Admetus an ideal husband. It seems
odd that such points should need mentioning; but Greek
drama has always suffered from a school of critics
who approach a play with a greater equipment of aesthetic
theory than of dramatic perception. This is the
characteristic defect of classicism. One mark
of the school is to demand from dramatists heroes
and heroines which shall satisfy its own ideals; and,
though there was in the New Comedy a mask known to
Pollux as “The Entirely-good Young Man”
([Greek: panchraestos neaniskos]), such a character
is fortunately unknown to classical Greek drama.
The influence of this “classicist”
tradition has led to a timid and unsatisfying treatment
of the Alcestis, in which many of the most
striking and unconventional features of the whole composition
were either ignored or smoothed away. As a natural
result, various lively-minded readers proceeded to
overemphasize these particular features, and were
carried into eccentricity or paradox. Alfred Schoene,
for instance, fixing his attention on just those points
which the conventional critic passed over, decides
simply that the Alcestis is a parody, and finds
it very funny. (Die Alkestis von Euripides,
Kiel, 1895.)
I will not dwell on other criticisms
of this type. There are those who have taken
the play for a criticism of contemporary politics or
the current law of inheritance. Above all there
is the late Dr. Verrall’s famous essay in Euripides
the Rationalist, explaining it as a psychological
criticism of a supposed Delphic miracle, and arguing
that Alcestis in the play does not rise from the dead
at all. She had never really died; she only had
a sort of nervous catalepsy induced by all the “suggestion”
of death by which she was surrounded. Now Dr.
Verrall’s work, as always, stands apart.
Even if wrong, it has its own excellence, its special
insight and its extraordinary awakening power.
But in general the effect of reading many criticisms
on the Alcestis is to make a scholar realize
that, for all the seeming simplicity of the play,
competent Grecians have been strangely bewildered by
it, and that after all there is no great reason to
suppose that he himself is more sensible than his
neighbours.
This is depressing. None the
less I cannot really believe that, if we make patient
use of our available knowledge, the Alcestis
presents any startling enigma. In the first place,
it has long been known from the remnants of the ancient
Didascalia, or official notice of production, that
the Alcestis was produced as the fourth play
of a series; that is, it took the place of a Satyr-play.
It is what we may call Pro-satyric. (See the
present writer’s introduction to the Rhesus.)
And we should note for what it is worth the observation
in the ancient Greek argument: “The play
is somewhat satyr-like ([Greek: saturiphkoteron]).
It ends in rejoicing and gladness against the tragic
convention.”
Now we are of late years beginning
to understand much better what a Satyr-play was.
Satyrs have, of course, nothing to do with satire,
either etymologically or otherwise. Satyrs are
the attendant daemons who form the Komos, or revel
rout, of Dionysus. They are represented in divers
fantastic forms, the human or divine being mixed with
that of some animal, especially the horse or wild
goat. Like Dionysus himself, they are connected
in ancient religion with the Renewal of the Earth in
spring and the resurrection of the dead, a point which
students of the Alcestis may well remember.
But in general they represent mere joyous creatures
of nature, unthwarted by law and unchecked by self-control.
Two notes are especially struck by them: the passions
and the absurdity of half-drunken revellers, and the
joy and mystery of the wild things in the forest.
The rule was that after three tragedies
proper there came a play, still in tragic diction,
with a traditional saga plot and heroic characters,
in which the Chorus was formed by these Satyrs.
There was a deliberate clash, an effect of burlesque;
but of course the clash must not be too brutal.
Certain characters of the heroic saga are, so to speak,
at home with Satyrs and others are not. To take
our extant specimens of Satyr-plays, for instance:
in the Cyclops we have Odysseus, the heroic
trickster; in the fragmentary Ichneutae of Sophocles
we have the Nymph Cyllene, hiding the baby Hermes
from the chorus by the most barefaced and pleasant
lying; later no doubt there was an entrance of the
infant thief himself. Autolycus, Sisyphus, Thersites
are all Satyr-play heroes and congenial to the Satyr
atmosphere; but the most congenial of all, the one
hero who existed always in an atmosphere of Satyrs
and the Komos until Euripides made him the central
figure of a tragedy, was Heracles.
The complete Satyr-play had a hero
of this type and a Chorus of Satyrs. But the
complete type was refined away during the fifth century;
and one stage in the process produced a play with
a normal chorus but with one figure of the Satyric
or “revelling” type. One might almost
say the “comic” type if, for the moment,
we may remember that that word is directly derived
from ‘Komos.’
The Alcestis is a very clear
instance of this Pro-satyric class of play. It
has the regular tragic diction, marked here and there
(393, 756, 780, etc.) by slight extravagances
and forms of words which are sometimes epic and sometimes
over-colloquial; it has a regular saga plot, which
had already been treated by the old poet Phrynichus
in his Alcestis, a play which is now lost but
seems to have been Satyric; and it has one character
straight from the Satyr world, the heroic reveller,
Heracles. It is all in keeping that he should
arrive tired, should feast and drink and sing; should
be suddenly sobered and should go forth to battle
with Death. It is also in keeping that the contest
should have a half-grotesque and half-ghastly touch,
the grapple amid the graves and the cracking ribs.
So much for the traditional form.
As for the subject, Euripides received it from Phrynichus,
and doubtless from other sources. We cannot be
sure of the exact form of the story in Phrynichus.
But apparently it told how Admetus, King of Pherae
in Thessaly, received from Apollo a special privilege
which the God had obtained, in true Satyric style,
by making the Three Fates drunk and cajoling them.
This was that, when his appointed time for death came,
he might escape if he could find some volunteer to
die for him. His father and mother, from whom
the service might have been expected, refused to perform
it. His wife, Alcestis, though no blood relation,
handsomely undertook it and died. But it so happened
that Admetus had entertained in his house the demi-god,
Heracles; and when Heracles heard what had happened,
he went out and wrestled with Death, conquered him,
and brought Alcestis home.
Given this form and this story, the
next question is: What did Euripides make of
them? The general answer is clear: he has
applied his usual method. He accepts the story
as given in the tradition, and then represents it
in his own way. When the tradition in question
is really heroic, we know what his way is. He
preserves, and even emphasizes, the stateliness and
formality of the Attic stage conventions; but, in the
meantime, he has subjected the story and its characters
to a keener study and a more sensitive psychological
judgment than the simple things were originally meant
to bear. So that many characters which passed
as heroic, or at least presentable, in the kindly
remoteness of legend, reveal some strange weakness
when brought suddenly into the light. When the
tradition is Satyric, as here, the same process produces
almost an opposite effect. It is somewhat as
though the main plot of a gross and jolly farce were
pondered over and made more true to human character
till it emerged as a refined and rather pathetic comedy.
The making drunk of the Three Grey Sisters disappears;
one can only just see the trace of its having once
been present. The revelling of Heracles is touched
in with the lightest of hands; it is little more than
symbolic. And all the figures in the story, instead
of being left broadly comic or having their psychology
neglected, are treated delicately, sympathetically,
with just that faint touch of satire, or at least
of amusement, which is almost inseparable from a close
interest in character.
What was Admetus really like, this
gallant prince who had won the affection of such great
guests as Apollo and Heracles, and yet went round
asking other people to die for him; who, in particular,
accepted his wife’s monstrous sacrifice with
satisfaction and gratitude? The play portrays
him well. Generous, innocent, artistic, affectionate,
eloquent, impulsive, a good deal spoilt, unconsciously
insincere, and no doubt fundamentally selfish, he
hates the thought of dying and he hates losing his
wife almost as much. Why need she die? Why
could it not have been some one less important to
him? He feels with emotion what a beautiful act
it would have been for his old father. “My
boy, you have a long and happy life before you, and
for me the sands are well-nigh run out. Do not
seek to dissuade me. I will die for you.”
Admetus could compose the speech for him. A touching
scene, a noble farewell, and all the dreadful trouble
solved-so conveniently solved! And
the miserable self-blinded old man could not see it!
Euripides seems to have taken positive
pleasure in Admetus, much as Meredith did in his famous
Egoist; but Euripides all through is kinder to his
victim than Meredith is. True, Admetus is put
to obvious shame, publicly and helplessly. The
Chorus make discreet comments upon him. The Handmaid
is outspoken about him. One feels that Alcestis
herself, for all her tender kindness, has seen through
him. Finally, to make things quite clear, his
old father fights him openly, tells him home-truth
upon home-truth, tears away all his protective screens,
and leaves him with his self-respect in tatters.
It is a fearful ordeal for Admetus, and, after his
first fury, he takes it well. He comes back from
his wife’s burial a changed man. He says
not much, but enough. “I have done wrong.
I have only now learnt my lesson. I imagined
I could save my happy life by forfeiting my honour;
and the result is that I have lost both.”
I think that a careful reading of the play will show
an almost continuous process of self-discovery and
self-judgment in the mind of Admetus. He was a
man who blinded himself with words and beautiful sentiments;
but he was not thick-skinned or thick-witted.
He was not a brute or a cynic. And I think he
did learn his lesson ... not completely and for ever,
but as well as most of us learn such lessons.
The beauty of Alcestis is quite untouched
by the dramatist’s keener analysis. The
strong light only increases its effect. Yet she
is not by any means a mere blameless ideal heroine;
and the character which Euripides gives her makes
an admirable foil to that of Admetus. Where he
is passionate and romantic, she is simple and homely.
While he is still refusing to admit the facts and
beseeching her not to “desert” him, she
in a gentle but businesslike way makes him promise
to take care of the children and, above all things,
not to marry again. She could not possibly trust
Admetus’s choice. She is sure that the step-mother
would be unkind to the children. She might be
a horror and beat them . And when Admetus
has made a thrilling answer about eternal sorrow, and
the silencing of lyre and lute, and the statue who
shall be his only bride, Alcestis earnestly calls
the attention of witnesses to the fact that he has
sworn not to marry again. She is not an artist
like Admetus. There is poetry in her, because
poetry comes unconsciously out of deep feeling, but
there is no artistic eloquence. Her love, too,
is quite different from his. To him, his love
for his wife and children is a beautiful thing, a
subject to speak and sing about as well as an emotion
to feel. But her love is hardly conscious.
She does not talk about it at all. She is merely
wrapped up in the welfare of certain people, first
her husband and then he children. To a modern
romantic reader her insistence that her husband shall
not marry again seems hardly delicate. But she
does not think about romance or delicacy. To
her any neglect to ensure due protection for the children
would be as unnatural as to refuse to die for her husband.
Indeed, Professor J.L. Myres has suggested that
care for the children’s future is the guiding
motive of her whole conduct. There was first the
danger of their being left fatherless, a dire calamity
in the heroic age. She could meet that danger
by dying herself. Then followed the danger of
a stepmother. She meets that by making Admetus
swear never to marry. In the long run, I fancy,
the effect of gracious loveliness which Alcestis certainly
makes is not so much due to any words of her own as
to what the Handmaid and the Serving Man say about
her. In the final scene she is silent; necessarily
and rightly silent, for all tradition knows that those
new-risen from the dead must not speak. It will
need a long rite de passage before she can
freely commune with this world again. It is a
strange and daring scene between the three of them;
the humbled and broken-hearted husband; the triumphant
Heracles, kindly and wise, yet still touched by the
mocking and blustrous atmosphere from which he sprang;
and the silent woman who has seen the other side of
the grave. It was always her way to know things
but not to speak of them.
The other characters fall easily into
their niches. We have only to remember the old
Satyric tradition and to look at them in the light
of their historical development. Heracles indeed,
half-way on his road from the roaring reveller of
the Satyr-play to the suffering and erring deliverer
of tragedy, is a little foreign to our notions, but
quite intelligible and strangely attractive.
The same historical method seems to me to solve most
of the difficulties which have been felt about Admetus’s
hospitality. Heracles arrives at the castle just
at the moment when Alcestis is lying dead in her room;
Admetus conceals the death from him and insists on
his coming in and enjoying himself. What are we
to think of this behaviour? Is it magnificent
hospitality, or is it gross want of tact? The
answer, I think, is indicated above.
In the uncritical and boisterous atmosphere
of the Satyr-play it was natural hospitality, not
especially laudable or surprising. From the analogy
of similar stories I suspect that Admetus originally
did not know his guest, and received not so much the
reward of exceptional virtue as the blessing naturally
due to those who entertain angels unawares. If
we insist on asking whether Euripides himself, in
real life or in a play of his own free invention,
would have considered Admetus’s conduct to Heracles
entirely praiseworthy, the answer will certainly be
No, but it will have little bearing on the play.
In the Alcestis, as it stands, the famous act
of hospitality is a datum of the story. Its claims
are admitted on the strength of the tradition.
It was the act for which Admetus was specially and
marvellously rewarded; therefore, obviously, it was
an act of exceptional merit and piety. Yet the
admission is made with a smile, and more than one
suggestion is allowed to float across the scene that
in real life such conduct would be hardly wise.
Heracles, who rose to tragic rank
from a very homely cycle of myth, was apt to bring
other homely characters with him. He was a great
killer not only of malefactors but of “keres”
or bogeys, such as “Old Age” and “Ague”
and the sort of “Death” that we find in
this play. Thanatos is not a god, not at all
a King of Terrors. One may compare him with the
dancing skeleton who is called Death in mediaeval
writings. When such a figure appears on the tragic
stage one asks at once what relation he bears to Hades,
the great Olympian king of the unseen. The answer
is obvious. Thanatos is the servant of Hades,
a “priest” or sacrificer, who is sent to
fetch the appointed victims.
The other characters speak for themselves.
Certainly Pheres can be trusted to do so, though we
must remember that we see him at an unfortunate moment.
The aged monarch is not at his best, except perhaps
in mere fighting power. I doubt if he was really
as cynical as he here professes to be.
In the above criticisms I feel that
I may have done what critics are so apt to do.
I have dwelt on questions of intellectual interest
and perhaps thereby diverted attention from that quality
in the play which is the most important as well as
by far the hardest to convey; I mean the sheer beauty
and delightfulness of the writing. It is the earliest
dated play of Euripides which has come down to us.
True, he was over forty when he produced it, but it
is noticeably different from the works of his old age.
The numbers are smoother, the thought less deeply scarred,
the language more charming and less passionate.
If it be true that poetry is bred out of joy and sorrow,
one feels as if more enjoyment and less suffering had
gone to the making of the Alcestis than to that
of the later plays.