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[416] Dionysus' temple, the Lenaeum, was situated in the district of Athens known as the _Linnae_, or Marshes, on the south side of the Acropolis.
[417] He points to the audience.
[418] A spectre, which Hecate sent to frighten men. It took all kinds of hideous shapes. It was exorcised by abuse.
[419] This was one of the monstrosities which credulity attributed to the Empusa.
[420] He is addressing a priest of Bacchus, who occupied a seat reserved for him in the first row of the audience.
[421] A verse from the Orestes of Euripides.--Hegelochus was an actor who, in a recent representation, had spoken the line in such a manner as to lend it an absurd meaning; instead of saying, [Greek: gal_en_en], which means _calm_, he had p.r.o.nounced it [Greek: gal_en], which means _a cat_.
[422] The priest of Bacchus, mentioned several verses back.
[423] High-flown expressions from Euripides' Tragedies.
[424] A second Chorus, comprised of Initiates into the Mysteries of Demeter and Dionysus.
[425] A philosopher, a native of Melos, and originally a dithyrambic poet. He was prosecuted on a charge of atheism.
[426] A comic and dithyrambic poet.
[427] This Thorycion, a toll collector at Aegina, which then belonged to Athens, had taken advantage of his position to send goods to Epidaurus, an Argolian town, thereby defrauding the treasury of the duty of 5 per cent, which was levied on every import and export.
[428] An allusion to Alcibiades, who is said to have obtained a subsidy for the Spartan fleet from Cyrus, satrap of Asia Minor.
[429] An allusion to the dithyrambic poet, Cinesias, who was accused of having sullied, by stooling against it, the pedestal of a statue of Hecate at one of the street corners of Athens.
[430] Athene.
[431] The route of the procession of the Initiate was from the Ceramicus (a district of Athens) to Eleusis, a distance of twenty-five stadia.
[432] A shaft shot at the _choragi_ by the poet, because they had failed to have new dresses made for the actors on this occasion.
[433] It was at the age of seven that children were entered on the registers of their father's tribe. Aristophanes is accusing Archidemus, who at that time was the head of the popular party, of being no citizen, because his name is not entered upon the registers of any tribe.
[434] At funerals women tore their hair, rent their garments, and beat their bosoms. Aristophanes parodies these demonstrations of grief and attributes them to the effeminate Clisthenes. Sebinus the Anaphlystian is a coined name containing an obscene allusion, implying he was in the habit of allowing connexion with himself a posteriori, and being m.a.s.t.u.r.b.a.t.ed by the other in turn.
[435] Callias, the son of Hipponicus, which the poet turns into Hippobinus, i.e. one who treads a mare, was an Athenian general, who had distinguished himself at the battle of Arginusae; he was notorious for his debauched habits, which he doubtless practised even on board his galleys. He is called a new Heracles, because of the legend that Heracles triumphed over fifty virgins in a single night; no doubt the poet alludes to some exploit of the kind here.
[436] A proverb applied to silly boasters. The Corinthians had sent an envoy to Megara, who, in order to enhance the importance of his city, incessantly repeated the phrase, "_The Corinth of Zeus_."
[437] Demeter.
[438] Tartessus was an Iberian town, near the Avernian marshes, which were said to be tenanted by reptiles, the progeny of vipers and muraenae, a kind of fish.
[439] t.i.thrasios was a part of Libya, fabled to be peopled by Gorgons.
[440] "Invoke the G.o.d" was the usual formula which immediately followed the offering of the libation in the festival of Dionysus. Here he uses the words after a libation of a new kind and induced by fear.
[441] That is, Heracles, whose temple was at Melite, a suburban deme of Athens.
[442] Whose statues were placed to make the boundaries of land.
[443] One of the Thirty Tyrants, noted for his versatility.
[444] Celon and Hyperbolus were both dead, and are therefore supposed to have become the leaders and patrons of the populace in Hades, the same as they had been on earth.
[445] Already mentioned; one of the chiefs of the popular party in 406 B.C.
[446] Heracles had carried of Cerberus.
[447] Names of Thracian slaves.
[448] As was done to unruly children; he allows every kind of torture with the exception of the mildest.
[449] A deme of Attica, where there was a temple to Heracles. No doubt those present uttered the cry "Oh! oh!" in honour of the G.o.d.
[450] He pretends it was not a cry of pain at all, but of astonishment and admiration.
[451] Pretending that it was the thorn causing him pain, and not the lash of the whip.
[452] According to the Scholiast this is a quotation from the 'Laoc.o.o.n,'
a lost play of Sophocles.
[453] A general known for his cowardice; he was accused of not being a citizen, but of Thracian origin; in 406 B.C. he was in disfavour, and he perished shortly after in a popular tumult.
[454] According to Athenian law, the accused was acquitted when the voting was equal.
[455] He had helped to establish the oligarchical government of the Four Hundred, who had just been overthrown.
[456] The fight of Arginusae; the slaves who had fought there had been accorded their freedom.--The Plataeans had had the t.i.tle of citizens since the battle of Marathon.
[457] Things were not going well for Athens at the time; it was only two years later, 404 B.C., that Lysander took the city.
[458] A demagogue; because he deceived the people, Aristophanes compares him with the washermen who cheated their clients by using some mixture that was cheaper than potash.
[459] Callistrates says that Clidemides was one of Sophocles' sons; Apollonius states him to have been an actor.
[460] Dionysus was, of course, the patron G.o.d of the drama and dramatic contests.
[461] The majestic grandeur of Aeschylus' periods, coupled with a touch of parody, is to be recognized in this piece.
[462] It is said that Euripides was the son of a fruit-seller.
[463] Euripides is constantly twitted by Aristophanes with his predilection for ragged beggars and vagabonds as characters in his plays.
[464] Bellerophon, Philoctetes, and Telephus, were all characters in different Tragedies of Euripides.
[465] Sailors, when in danger, sacrificed a black lamb to Typhon, the G.o.d of storms.