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  • Roman Author Plautus
    카테고리 없음 2020. 1. 20. 23:20
    Roman Author Plautus

    Alternative Title: Publius Terentius Afer Terence, Latin in full Publius Terentius Afer, (born c. 195 bc, now in Tunisia—died 159? Bc, in or at sea), after the greatest Roman comic dramatist, the author of six verse comedies that were long regarded as models of pure Latin. Terence’s plays form the basis of the modern. Terence was taken to as a slave by Terentius Lucanus, an otherwise unknown Roman senator who was impressed by his ability and gave him a liberal education and, subsequently, his freedom.

    Reliable information about the life and dramatic career of Terence is defective. There are four sources of biographical information on him: a short, gossipy life by the Roman biographer, written nearly three centuries later; a garbled version of a commentary on the plays by the 4th-century grammarian; production notices prefixed to the texts recording details of first (and occasionally also of later) performances; and Terence’s own prologues to the plays, which, despite polemic and distortion, reveal something of his literary career. Most of the available information about Terence relates to his career as a dramatist.

    Roman author of the twelve caesarsRoman Author Plautus

    During his short life he produced six plays, to which the production notices assign the following dates: Andria ( The Andrian Girl), 166 bc; Hecyra ( The Mother-in-Law), 165 bc; Heauton timoroumenos ( The Self-Tormentor), 163 bc; Eunuchus ( The Eunuch), 161 bc; Phormio, 161 bc; Adelphi (or Adelphoe; The Brothers), 160 bc;, second production, 160 bc; Hecyra, third production, 160 bc. These dates, however, pose several problems. The Eunuchus, for example, was so successful that it achieved a repeat performance and record earnings for Terence, but the prologue that Terence wrote, presumably a year later, for the Hecyra’s third production gives the impression that he had not yet achieved any major success. Yet date schemes are even less satisfactory. From the beginning of his career, Terence was lucky to have the services of Lucius Ambivius Turpio, a leading actor who had promoted the career of Caecilius, the major comic playwright of the preceding generation.

    Now in, the actor did the same for Terence. Yet not all of Terence’s productions enjoyed success. The Hecyra failed twice: its first production broke up in an uproar when rumours were circulated among its audience of alternative entertainment by a tightrope walker and some boxers; and the audience deserted its second production for a gladiatorial performance nearby. Terence faced the hostility of jealous rivals, particularly one older playwright, Luscius Lanuvinus, who launched a series of accusations against the newcomer. The main source of was Terence’s dramatic method.

    'The works of Plautus,' writes Palmer Bovie, 'mark the real beginning of Roman literature.' In these lively new translations, which effectively communicate the vitality and verve of the originals, the plays of Plautus are accessible to a new generation. Plautus was a native of Sarsina, in Umbria, born in the earlier half of the third century B.C., and died at a very advanced age in 184. His first occupation was connected with the Roman stage, probably as a scene-shifter, and at this he saved enough money to engage in foreign trade, in which he was unsuccessful. Oct 28, 2018  The Comedies of Plautus, literally translated into English prose, with notes, by Henry Thomas Riley (1852) Works about Plautus “Plautus”, by William Smith in Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1870. Plautus and Terence by William Lucas Collins, 1873.

    Roman Author Of Metamorphoses

    It was the custom for these Roman dramatists to draw their material from earlier comedies about rich young men and the difficulties that attended their amours. The varied greatly in, ranging from the creative freedom of Plautus to the literal rendering of Luscius. Although Terence was apparently fairly faithful to his Greek models, Luscius that Terence was guilty of “contamination”— i.e., that he had incorporated material from secondary Greek sources into his plots, to their detriment. Terence sometimes did add extraneous material. In the, which, like the Eunuchus, Heauton timoroumenos, and Adelphi, was adapted from a Greek play of the same title by, he added material from another Menandrean play, the Perinthia ( The Perinthian Girl). In the Eunuchus he added to Menander’s Eunouchos two characters, a soldier and his “parasite”—a hanger-on whose flattery of and services to his patron were rewarded with free dinners—both of them from another play by Menander, the Kolax ( The Parasite).

    In the, he added an exciting scene from a play by, a contemporary of Menander. Such writers as Luscius objected to the freedom with which Terence used his models. A further allegation was that Terence’s plays were not his own work but were composed with the help of unnamed nobles. This and implausible charge is left unanswered by Terence.

    Roman Author Plautus

    Romans of a later period assumed that Terence must have with the Scipionic circle, a coterie of admirers of, named after its guiding spirit, the military commander and politician. Terence died young.

    Roman Author Virgil

    When he was 35, he visited Greece and never returned from the journey. He died either in Greece from illness or at sea by shipwreck on the return voyage. Of his family life, nothing is known, except that he left a daughter and a small but valuable estate just outside Rome on the. Modern scholars have been preoccupied with the question of the extent to which Terence was an original writer, as opposed to a mere translator of his Greek models. Positions on both sides have been vigorously maintained, but recent critical opinion seems to accept that, in the main, Terence was faithful to the plots, and characterization of his Greek originals: thus, his humanity, his individualized characters, and his sensitive approach to relationships and personal problems all may be traced to Menander, and his obsessive attention to detail in the plots of Hecyra and Phormio derives from the Greek models of those plays by Apollodorus of Carystus of the 3rd century bc.

    Nevertheless, in some important particulars he reveals himself as something more than a translator. First, he shows both originality and skill in the incorporation of material from secondary models, as well as occasionally perhaps in material of his own invention; he sews this material in with unobtrusive seams. Second, his Greek models probably had expository prologues, informing their audiences of vital facts, but Terence cut them out, leaving his audiences in the same ignorance as his characters. This omission increases the element of suspense, though the plot may become too difficult for an audience to follow, as in the Hecyra. Striving for a refined but conventional realism, Terence eliminated or reduced such unrealistic devices as the actor’s direct address to the audience. He preserved the atmosphere of his models with a nice appreciation of how much Greekness would be tolerated in Rome, omitting the unintelligible and clarifying the difficult.

    His language is a purer version of contemporary, at times shaded subtly to emphasize a character’s individual speech patterns. Because they are more realistic, his characters lack some of the vitality and panache of Plautus’ adaptations (Phormio here is a notable exception); but they are often developed in depth and with subtle psychology. Individual scenes retain their power today, especially those presenting brilliant narratives ( e.g., Chaerea’s report of his rape of the girl in the Eunuchus), civilized emotion ( e.g., Micio’s forgiveness of Aeschinus in the Adelphi, Bacchis’ renunciation of Pamphilus in the Hecyra), or clever theatrical strokes ( e.g., the double disclosure of Chremes’ bigamy in the Phormio). The influence of Terence on Roman education and on the later European theatre was very great. His language was accepted as a norm of pure Latin, and his work was studied and discussed throughout antiquity. Recommended English translations include the work of Betty Radice, The Brothers and Other Plays (1965), and Phormio and Other Plays (1967), both “Penguin Classics,” combined in one volume in 1976. Another useful English translation is The Complete Comedies of Terence: Modern Verse Translations (1974), translated by Palmer Bovie, Constance Carrier, and Douglass Parker and edited by Palmer Bovie.

    Copley’s translations were published as Roman Drama: The Plays of Plautus and Terence (1985).

    Roman Author Plautus
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