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Search results for kappa,396 in Adler number:
Headword:
*karki/nos
Adler number: kappa,396
Translated headword: Carcinus, Karkinos
Vetting Status: high
Translation: An Attic poet. Someone is mocking
Carcinus’ sons[1] thus: "homebred quails, kitbag-gulleted dancers, dwarfish, bits of dung, inventers of artifices."[2] "For their father said that, one evening, a weasel had strangled [the drama which he unexpectedly possessed]."[3] He calls them quails because of their combativeness; for that [is] what quails are like. [And he calls them] "homebred" instead of effeminate, as if one were to say homebred birds. And “kitbag-gulleted”, that is long-necked; for a soldier's kitbag is an [item of] elongated wickerwork. So [it is] likely that their whole body was short but their neck long, or that they did not have a gullet, just like the kitbag; so he is mocking them for having small and round bodies. They also used to dance for their father. “Dwarfish” because very short people are called dwarfs; while very short horses [are called] naggies. And “dancers”; because their father introduced them as dancers in his dramas. And “bits of dung” instead of small and insignificant. “Dung” is the turd of goats and sheep, and the dung has the size of a broad bean. So he likens them to those, or rather not even to those, but to their bits and pieces. He humiliates them for being short. Because a part of something small is small itself or even less than small. And “inventers of artifices” from a part; because
Xenocles,[4] the son of
Carcinus, is supposed to have introduced devices and juggleries in his dramas;
Plato calls him “twelve-machine”.[5] Or because as tragic poets they brought in machines, whenever they represented gods ascending to or descending from heaven. Their father composed a drama entitled
Mice. “Unexpectedly”, that is to say with hard work.[6] And he says that “a weasel had strangled”, because weasels choke mice at night.
Greek Original:*karki/nos, poihth\s *)attiko/s. skw/ptei de/ tis *karki/nou pai=das ou(/tws: o)/rtugas oi)kogenei=s, guliau/xenas o)rxhsta/s, nannofuei=s, sfura/dwn a)pokni/smata, mhxanodi/fas. kai\ ga\r e)/fasx' o( path\r galh=n th=s e(spe/ras a)pa/gcai. le/gei de\ o)/rtugas me\n dia\ to\ e)ristiko/n: toiou=toi ga\r oi( o)/rtuges. oi)kogenei=s de\ a)nti\ tou= e)skiatrafhme/nous, w(s a)\n ei)/pois o)/rniqas oi)kogenei=s. guliau/xenas de/, toute/sti makrotraxh/lous: gu/lios ga\r stratiwtiko/n e)sti ple/gma e)pi/mhkes. kolobo\n ou)=n ei)ko\s ei)=nai au)toi=s to\ o(/lon sw=ma, to\n de\ tra/xhlon makro/n, h)\ au)xe/nas ou)k e)/xontas, kaqa/per o( gu/lios: w(s mikrou\s ou)=n kai\ goggulw/deis skw/ptei. e)xo/reuon de\ ou(=toi tw=| patri/. nannofuei=s de\ o(/ti na/nnoi le/gontai oi( koloboi\ tw=n a)nqrw/pwn: oi( de\ koloboi\ tw=n i(/ppwn i)/nnoi. o)rxhsta\s de/: ei)se/fere ga\r au)tou\s o( path\r e)n toi=s dra/masin o)rxoume/nous. sfura/dwn de\ a)pokni/smata, a)nti\ tou= tapeinou\s kai\ mikrou/s. sfura/des de/ ei)si ta\ tw=n ai)gw=n kai\ proba/twn a)popath/mata, h( de\ sfura\s kua/mou e)/xei to\ me/geqos. tau/tais ou)=n a)peika/zei au)tou/s, ma=llon de\ ou)de\ tau/tais, a)lla\ toi=s a)pokni/smasin au)tw=n kai\ a)potmh/masin. eu)teli/zei ou)=n au)tou\s dia\ to\ braxu/. h( ga\r tou= mikrou= meri\s mikra\ h)\ ou)de\n a)\n ei)/h. mhxanodi/fas de\ a)po\ me/rous: *cenoklh=s ga\r o( *karki/nou dokei= mhxana\s kai\ teratei/as ei)sa/gein e)n toi=s dra/masin: o(\n *pla/twn dwdekamh/xano/n fhsin. h)\ e)peidh\ polla/kis w(s tragw|doi\ mhxanika\ ei)se/feron, h(ni/ka qeou\s e)mimou=nto a)nerxome/nous h)\ katerxome/nous e)k tou= ou)ranou=. o( path\r de\ dra=ma e)poi/hse *mu/as. para\ prosdoki/an, toute/sti meta\ mo/xqou. galh=n de\ ei)=pen a)pa/gcai, dio/ti ai( galai= nukto\s pni/gousi tou\s mu/as.
Notes:
This entry is a commentary on
Aristophanes,
Peace 788-795, quoting the verses and then drawing on the corresponding
scholia. See also
alpha 2802,
gamma 475,
gamma 476,
epsilon 3402,
iota 385,
nu 26,
sigma 1208,
sigma 1762; also
epsilon 1147; and see below for modern scholarship on
Carcinus and his sons.
Two more tragic poets by the name of
Carcinus appear in
kappa 394; cf.
kappa 397.
[1]
Xenocles, Xenotimus and Demotimus.
[2]
Aristophanes,
Peace 788-791 (web address 1).
[3] An abridged version of
Aristophanes,
Peace 792-795 (web address 2), according to which, as it is clarified at the end of the entry, a weasel is supposed to have strangled
Mice, a drama written by
Carcinus.
[4] On
Xenocles, see also
Aristophanes,
Thesmophoriazousae 169, 441 (web addresses 3, 4),
Frogs 86 (web address 5) and the corresponding
scholia; also the
scholia to
Clouds 1261;
Xenocles’ extant fragments in Snell, p. 153.
[5]
Plato [Comicus] fr.143 K-A (134 Kock).
[6] Repeated at
pi 422.
References:
Borthwick, E.K., “The Dances of Philocleon and the Sons of Carcinus in Aristophanes’ Wasps”, CQ n.s. 18 (1968) 44-51
Olson, S.D., “Was Carcinus I a Tragic Playwright?: A Response”, CPh 92 (1997) 258-260
Rothwell, K.S. Jr., “Was Carcinus I a Tragic Playwright?”, CPh 89 (1994) 241-245
Snell, B., Tragicorum Graecorum Fragmenta, vol. 1, Göttingen 1971
Sutton, D.F., “The Theatrical Families of Athens”, AJP 108 (1987) 9-26
Associated internet addresses:
Web address 1,
Web address 2,
Web address 3,
Web address 4,
Web address 5
Keywords: biography; comedy; geography; imagery; medicine; military affairs; poetry; stagecraft; trade and manufacture; tragedy; zoology
Translated by: Ioannis Doukas on 11 August 2007@17:45:01.
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