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<h2> 4 </h2>
<p>It is clear that the general origin of poetry was due to two causes, each
of them part of human nature. Imitation is natural to man from childhood,
one of his advantages over the lower animals being this, that he is the
most imitative creature in the world, and learns at first by imitation.
And it is also natural for all to delight in works of imitation. The truth
of this second point is shown by experience: though the objects themselves
may be painful to see, we delight to view the most realistic
representations of them in art, the forms for example of the lowest
animals and of dead bodies. The explanation is to be found in a further
fact: to be learning something is the greatest of pleasures not only to
the philosopher but also to the rest of mankind, however small their
capacity for it; the reason of the delight in seeing the picture is that
one is at the same time learning—gathering the meaning of things,
e.g. that the man there is so-and-so; for if one has not seen the thing
before, one's pleasure will not be in the picture as an imitation of it,
but will be due to the execution or colouring or some similar cause.
Imitation, then, being natural to us—as also the sense of harmony
and rhythm, the metres being obviously species of rhythms—it was
through their original aptitude, and by a series of improvements for the
most part gradual on their first efforts, that they created poetry out of
their improvisations.</p>
<p>Poetry, however, soon broke up into two kinds according to the differences
of character in the individual poets; for the graver among them would
represent noble actions, and those of noble personages; and the meaner
sort the actions of the ignoble. The latter class produced invectives at
first, just as others did hymns and panegyrics. We know of no such poem by
any of the pre-Homeric poets, though there were probably many such writers
among them; instances, however, may be found from Homer downwards, e.g.
his <i>Margites</i>, and the similar poems of others. In this poetry of
invective its natural fitness brought an iambic metre into use; hence our
present term 'iambic', because it was the metre of their 'iambs' or
invectives against one another. The result was that the old poets became
some of them writers of heroic and others of iambic verse. Homer's
position, however, is peculiar: just as he was in the serious style the
poet of poets, standing alone not only through the literary excellence,
but also through the dramatic character of his imitations, so too he was
the first to outline for us the general forms of Comedy by producing not a
dramatic invective, but a dramatic picture of the Ridiculous; his <i>Margites</i>
in fact stands in the same relation to our comedies as the <i>Iliad</i>
and <i>Odyssey</i> to our tragedies. As soon, however, as Tragedy and
Comedy appeared in the field, those naturally drawn to the one line of
poetry became writers of comedies instead of iambs, and those naturally
drawn to the other, writers of tragedies instead of epics, because these
new modes of art were grander and of more esteem than the old.</p>
<p>If it be asked whether Tragedy is now all that it need be in its formative
elements, to consider that, and decide it theoretically and in relation to
the theatres, is a matter for another inquiry.</p>
<p>It certainly began in improvisations—as did also Comedy; the one
originating with the authors of the Dithyramb, the other with those of the
phallic songs, which still survive as institutions in many of our cities.
And its advance after that was little by little, through their improving
on whatever they had before them at each stage. It was in fact only after
a long series of changes that the movement of Tragedy stopped on its
attaining to its natural form. (1) The number of actors was first
increased to two by Aeschylus, who curtailed the business of the Chorus,
and made the dialogue, or spoken portion, take the leading part in the
play. (2) A third actor and scenery were due to Sophocles. (3) Tragedy
acquired also its magnitude. Discarding short stories and a ludicrous
diction, through its passing out of its satyric stage, it assumed, though
only at a late point in its progress, a tone of dignity; and its metre
changed then from trochaic to iambic. The reason for their original use of
the trochaic tetrameter was that their poetry was satyric and more
connected with dancing than it now is. As soon, however, as a spoken part
came in, nature herself found the appropriate metre. The iambic, we know,
is the most speakable of metres, as is shown by the fact that we very
often fall into it in conversation, whereas we rarely talk hexameters, and
only when we depart from the speaking tone of voice. (4) Another change
was a plurality of episodes or acts. As for the remaining matters, the
superadded embellishments and the account of their introduction, these
must be taken as said, as it would probably be a long piece of work to go
through the details.</p>
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<h2> 5 </h2>
<p>As for Comedy, it is (as has been observed) an imitation of men worse than
the average; worse, however, not as regards any and every sort of fault,
but only as regards one particular kind, the Ridiculous, which is a
species of the Ugly. The Ridiculous may be defined as a mistake or
deformity not productive of pain or harm to others; the mask, for
instance, that excites laughter, is something ugly and distorted without
causing pain.</p>
<p>Though the successive changes in Tragedy and their authors are not
unknown, we cannot say the same of Comedy; its early stages passed
unnoticed, because it was not as yet taken up in a serious way. It was
only at a late point in its progress that a chorus of comedians was
officially granted by the archon; they used to be mere volunteers. It had
also already certain definite forms at the time when the record of those
termed comic poets begins. Who it was who supplied it with masks, or
prologues, or a plurality of actors and the like, has remained unknown.
The invented Fable, or Plot, however, originated in Sicily, with
Epicharmus and Phormis; of Athenian poets Crates was the first to drop the
Comedy of invective and frame stories of a general and non-personal
nature, in other words, Fables or Plots.</p>
<p>Epic poetry, then, has been seen to agree with Tragedy to this extent,
that of being an imitation of serious subjects in a grand kind of verse.
It differs from it, however, (1) in that it is in one kind of verse and in
narrative form; and (2) in its length—which is due to its action
having no fixed limit of time, whereas Tragedy endeavours to keep as far
as possible within a single circuit of the sun, or something near that.
This, I say, is another point of difference between them, though at first
the practice in this respect was just the same in tragedies as in epic
poems. They differ also (3) in their constituents, some being common to
both and others peculiar to Tragedy—hence a judge of good and bad in
Tragedy is a judge of that in epic poetry also. All the parts of an epic
are included in Tragedy; but those of Tragedy are not all of them to be
found in the Epic.</p>
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