Aeschylus' Amymone
Aeschylus' Amymone
Aeschylus' Amymone
193
Aeschylus' Amymone
Dana Ferrin Sutton
dramatized the myth. Only one point can be made with assurance. In
a satyr play Amymone would not be pursued by <a satyr'. If the ob-
ject is an enforced marriage, probably the situation would be the same
as in Aeschylus' Dictyulci, in which Silenus, with the assistance of the
Chorus of Satyrs, tries to wheedle and bully Danae into a marriage.
If the object is merely rape, Amymone could have been threatened
by a gang-rape by Silenus and the entire Chorus: that they are capa-
ble of such behavior is shown by Euripides' Cyclops 179-81, where this
occurs to them as the fitting punishment for Helen.
Monumental evidence cannot be used to clarify this or any other
problem concerning the dramaturgy of Amymone. There exists a
series of Amymone satyr vases, collected and studied by Frank
Brommer,6 but for several reasons they do not constitute reliable
evidence. First, the series begins abruptly only about 440 B.C. Even
conceding that there is often an interval between the production of a
play and the appearances of vases inspired by that play, this chrono-
logical discrepancy is difficult to explain if Aeschylus' play is the
source of inspiration. Recognizing this, Brommer speculated that the
actual source was a second, otherwise unknown, Amymone play.'
Second, in just those particulars of greatest importance for recon-
structing the play-characters, setting, etc.-the vases do not agree
with each other. Hence, for example, although Amymone required a
minimal dramatis personae of Amymone, Poseidon, Silenus and the
satyrs, monumental evidence is no reliable guide to the possible
presence of additional characters.8
Third, even assuming that some one or more of these vases (but
which ones 1) accurately reflect Aeschylus' Amymone, allowance must
be made for artistic liberties. One vase, for example, depicts Amy-
mone hotly pursued by a gang of satyrs (Vienna, Kunsthistorisches
Mus. iv.lOll), but this warrants no conclusion about the situation in
6 Frank Brommer, "Amymone," AthMitt 63-64 (1938-39) 171-76 with figs. 67-70.
7 Ibid. 176.
8 Most notably, one krater (Syracuse 44 291, for which cf Beazley, ARV1 I041 no.9) adds
Aphrodite and another (Rome, Vatican Mus. U 13) Hermes. Others collected by Brommer
add Eros or a sister (or handmaiden) of Amymone. Louis Sechan, Etudes sur la tragedie
grecque dans ses rapports avec la ceramique 2 (Paris 1967) 337, shows that a Berlin amphora
(Furtwangler, Vasensamml. no.3257) sometimes thought to be inspired by Amymone is
actually an illustration of the death ofHippolytus, presumably inspired by EUripides' play.
For a paralld instance of a satyr added to a scene reflecting a tragedy, if. the lost Apulian
Iphigenia vase described by S. Reinach, Repertoire des vases peints grecs et errusques I (Paris
1922) 133.
DANA FERRIN SUTTON 195
the play. If in Amymone Silenus had designs on the girl, perhaps desir-
ing to marry her, and if he had the assistance of the Chorus, a painter
might well take the liberty of translating this into a scene in which
she is pursued by the satyrs indiscriminately.
Although the details of dramaturgy are beyond recall, clearly this
play bears a strong resemblance to another Aeschylean satyr play,
Dictyuld. 9 The general situation in both plays is the same: a woman is
in distress because she is threatened with some form of sexual bond-
age by Silenus and the satyrs, a situation from which she is saved by a
rescuer (Poseidon, Dictys). Both plays possibly concluded with a mar-
riage between the distressed woman and her savior, so that both
could have adhered to the same scheme: machinations of Silenus and
satyrs ... wrong marnage. . h t marnage.
... rescue ... fIg . 10
notable for being the only poet who can be observed inverting such
routine generic stereotypes. Possibly a Greek audience would find
such inversions amusing and this kind of humor was specifically
Aeschylean. I3
Another striking parallel between Amymone and Dictyulci is the
relationship of these two satyr plays to their respective trilogies.
Dictyulci was almost certainly presented with a Perseus trilogy con-
taining, inter alia, Polydectes. A major event in that trilogy, probably
in this play. must have been Polydectes' attempt to force Perseus'
mother Danae into an involuntary marriage. Werre-deHaas has
pointed out that Silenus' attempt to bully Danae into an enforced
marriage in Dictyulci is a parody of Polydectes' action in the trilogy.l4
The function of Dictyulci within its tetralogy is therefore to provide
comic relief by burlesquing a situation in the preceding trilogy. This
seems to fit into a more general pattern of satyr plays or other fourth-
place plays parodying a tragedy with which they were produced.
Sophocles' Ichneutai bears several striking resemblances to his Ajax,
and especially in view of the fact that both plays are by common con-
sent assigned to the middle or late 44O's. these seem best explained
according to the theory that they were written together and that
Ichneutai was intended to parody elements in Ajax.I5 Euripides'
satyric Sisyphus was produced with the Trojan trilogy of 415, and there
are reasonable grounds for suspecting that it was contrived as a parody
of a tragedy in that trilogy. Alexander. Is Above all, there are several
extremely strong resemblances between Euripides' Cyclops and
Hecuba. Polymestor's blinding is paralleled by that of Polyphemus.
both in point of general situation and details of diction. The theme of
nomos and xenia is equally prominent, and handled in an identical
way. in both plays. and both feature parallel sequences where an
appeal for mercy on idealistic grounds is parried with a brutallecture
about expediency. The various arguments advanced in favor of dating
11 There is a similar inversion in Dictyulci: our final fragment breaks off in the middle of
marching anapaests of the type usually found at the end of a play, celebrating the marriage
of Silenus and Danae. But this must be a false ending, and Dictys subsequendy reenters to
rescue Danae (Werre-deHaas, op.cit. [supra n.9] 74).
It Werre-deHaas, op.cit. (supra n.9) 74f.
16 Sutton, op.cit. (supra n.ll) 157-66; cf Arethusa 4 (1971) 60-67.
18 Gilbert Murray, "The Trojan Trilogy of Euripides," Melanges Glot~ II (Paris 1932) 646;
John Ferguson, "Tetralogies, Divine Paternity and the Plays of 414," TAPA 100 (1969) 110;
Sutton, op.cit. (supra n.ll) 166-68.
DANA FERRIN SUTTON 197
Cyclops significantly later than 424 B.C., the probable date of Hecuba
(most importantly, the higher percentage of iambic resolution in
Cyclops) can be shown to be insufficiently cogent to pose a real ob-
stacle to the conclusion that these two plays were written together,l7
In the same way, Euripides' Helen and Andromeda were both pro-
duced in 412 B.C.,IS and Helen goes over much the same dramaturgic
and thematic material as does Andromeda, although in a more light-
hearted spirit. This is an extremely odd relationship, and I do not
know of a case in which one tragedy is written as a lighthearted
equivalent, if not downright parody, of another in the same trilogy.
But this relationship would be less difficult to comprehend according
to the Wilamowitzian theory that Helen is a fourth-place prosatyric
play of the Alcestis type, and there are several reasons for so thinking,
principally because it uses a plot, themes and characterizations that
are recognizably assembled out of precisely the same stereotypes that
are the routine fare of satyr plays.
Situations in which a satyr play (or substitute for a satyr play) paro-
dies a tragedy in the same set are extreme examples of the function of
the satyr play, as admirably defined by Wilhelm Schmid: I9 "Oem
ausgereiften Satyrspiel der klassischen Zeit ist der ausgesprochen
humoristische und marchenhafte Charakter ohne personliche, ag-
gressive Satire und die parodistische Behandlung der My then eigen
... das Satyrspiel ist nicht selten, vielleicht sogar regelmassig.
demselben Stoffgebiet wie die vorangehende Inhaltstrilogie entnom-
men [wobei] sich die Tragodie gewissermassen selbst ironisiert und
sich dadurch Indemnitat flir das Obermass der leidvollen Affekte
erwirkt, die sie entfesselt hat."
Students of Aeschylus have repeatedly appreciated that, in a general
way, there is a similar relationship of parody between Amymone and
the Danaides trilogy.20 Both deal with the theme of cpvgavopla, with
the attempt of women to avoid sexual servitude forcibly imposed.
17 This is the conclusion revived in my Date of Euripides' Cyclops; see Henri Gregoire,
"L'Authenticite du Rhesus d'Euripide," AntCI 2 (1933) 131, and Eduard Delebecque,
Euripide et la Guerre du Peloponnese (Paris 1951) 165-77.
18 Schol. on Ar. Thesm. 1012, 1060.
But this is scarcely the only way in which contents of the trilogy are
parodied in the satyr play. Even if we know little about the details of
its dramaturgy, on the basis of the Amymone myth we may deduce
with reasonable assurance that the play must have contained certain
elements. By comparing these with the known contents of the trilogy,
particularly the extant Supplices, one may suggest that Amymone
parodied much more than just the general idea of cpvgavopla.
I shall begin with points of comparison between the satyr play and
the trilogy that seem sufficiently self-evident to warrant one's speak-
ing of them with virtual certainty, and then I shall discuss other pos-
sible points of comparison in what seems a decreasing order of
probability. For the sake of a complete argument, we should investi-
gate all possible ramifications of the relationship between Amymone
and its trilogy.
All of those who have commented on the relationship between the
satyr play and the trilogy have commented on the common thematic
denominator of cpvgavopla. Curiously, the equally obvious parallel of
dramatic situation has not provoked such unanimous comment. In
both the satyr play and the trilogy one or more women are beset by
one or more individuals who seek to reduce them to a situation of
sexual bondage. In Supplices the Danaids perceive their Egyptian
cousins as wanton, lascivious, even subhuman,21 which is of course
exactly how Amymone's pursuers would be portrayed in the satyr
play, a typical characterization of Silenus and the satyrs. 22 In the tril-
ogy, the pursuers have a spokesman, the Egyptian Herald, who is
boorishly, imperiously arrogant. He finds an obvious and exact paral-
lel in the satyrs' spokesman, Silenus.23 In the trilogy, the pursued
maidens cry to the gods-above all to Zeus Protector of Suppliants-
for aid, and find a protector in the king of the region, Pelasgus. In the
satyr play, Amymone cries to Poseidon for aid and finds a protector in
the god himself. In contrast to the sexual bondage the pursuers at-
tempt to impose, both the trilogy and the satyr play present the pic-
ture of a proper sexual relationship, based on consent rather than
force (Hypermestra and Lynceus, Amymone and Poseidon).
II Cf esp. 174f, 750-53, 757-59.
II! For Silenus' typical characterization, cf Guggisberg, op.cit. (supra n.3) 53-56.
23 That Silenus is capable of behaving in this hectOring way is shown, for instance, by
Soph. Ichn. 130-206. The satyrs hear Hermes' lyre and are overcome with dread. Silenus
tries to bully them back to work until he himself hears the lyre and becomes more panic-
stricken than the Chorus.
DANA FERRIN SUTTON 199
Amymone satyr vase shows an altar: the Syracusan krater Syr. 44 291.
200 AESCHYLUS' AMYMONE
heaven, impregnates the earth, and it bringeth forth for mankind the
food of flocks and herds and Demeter's gifts; and from that moist
marriage-rite the woods put on their bloom. Of all these things I am
the cause.
In the myth of Amymone, the consummation of the union of
Poseidon and Amymone leads to the discovery of the springs of Lerna
and the refertilization of Argos. Hence Amymone, like Danaides, prob-
ably contained a scene in which the ideas of proper sexuality and fruit-
fulness were closely conjoined.
On the thematic level, both the trilogy and the satyr play dealt
with sexuality. Two sexual themes common to both are rpvgavop{a
and the fertilizing powers of Eros, and we can detect a third. Both the
trilogy and the satyr play presented contrasting portraits of right and
wrong sexual relationships. In the lost plays of the trilogy, the Dan-
aids were forced to marry their cousins and killed them on the
wedding night. One, Hypermestra, refused to do this and formed a
genuine marriage with Lynceus. Hence the contrast between the rela-
tion of the Danaids and the Egyptians and that of Hypermestra and
Lynceus finds a parallel in the contrast of the relation of Amymone
and the satyrs and Amymone and Poseidon. Winnington-Ingram has
attempted to define the nature of this contrast as Eros allied with
force versus Eros allied with persuasion. 26 This is attractive, but is
probably not the only possibility. But whatever the precise thematic
nature of the contrast, we may speculate that it was the same in both
trilogy and satyr play.
A notorious problem concerning Supplices is that although the
Danaids' violent rejection of their Egyptian cousins is clear enough,
their reason for it is not. 27 This is sometimes considered a fault of the
play, but possibly their motivation was made clearer in later plays of
the trilogy. Besides the passages to which I have already alluded that
stress the bestial nature of the Egyptians, probably the most illumin-
ating is 103Q-42 (Smyth):
DANAios: May pure Artemis look upon this band in compassion,
and may wedlock never come through constraint of
Cytherea. This prize be mine enemies!
28 Garvie, op.cit. (supra n.1) 204-11; D. J. Robertson, "The End of the Supplices Trilogy of
CAMBRIDGE, ENGLAND
January, 1974
30 This is all the more possible because the tetralogy is conceivably written late enough
to employ the third actor introduced by Sophocles. If there was a trial scene, who was the
jury? The likeliest answer is the demos of Argos, not because of the analogy of Eumenides,
but because of the situation in Supplices, in which the demos, not Pelasgus, ultimately de-
cides to receive the suppliants. Cf. Anthony J. Podlecki, The Political Background of Aeschylean
Tragedy (Ann Arbor 1966) 45-52. This would provide a nice and (I think Podlecki would
concur in saying) politically significant balance.