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Contents: Prologue 1Parodos 1Lyric-scene 1Parabasis 1Episode 1Choral 1Lyric-scene 2Agon 1Choral 2Lyric-scene 3Episode 2Exodus 1 |
Aristophanes, Frogs (ed. Matthew Dillon)
Editions and translations: Greek (ed. F.W. Hall and W.M. Geldart) | English (ed. Matthew Dillon)
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Enter Dionysus on foot dressed in the skin of the Nemean Lion, and the club of Heracles in his hand, and Xanthias heavily laden on a donkey.
Xanthias
Master, should I tell one of those usual jokes
which always make the audience laugh?
Dionysus
By Zeus, say what you want--except “I'm hard pressed”
Forget that one, it's really quite annoying.
Xanthias
Nothing else witty either?
Dionysus
Anything but “What a strain!”
Xanthias
What then? Can I say the really funny one?
Dionysus
Of course,
Go right ahead--but don't let me catch you saying this.
Xanthias
What's that?
Dionysus
That you must shift your pack to ease yourself.
Xanthias
Well, can't I say I've got such a load on me,
unless someone takes it off, I'll bust a gut?
Dionysus
Please don't, unless you wish to make me sick.
Xanthias
So why should I have to carry all this stuff,
without doing any of the jokes that Phrynichus
and Lycis and Ameipsias always make
the baggage-carriers say in all their comedies?
Dionysus
Just don't. Since when I'm in the theater
and hear any of these stupid jokes,
I go away just older by a year.
Xanthias
Alas, poor wretched me! My neck
is really strained, but can't crack the joke.
Dionysus
Now is this not outrage and utter insolence,
That I myself, Dionysos, son of Winejug,
must walk, and let this fellow ride,
so he might feel no pain and bear no burden?
Xanthias
What? I bear no burden?
Dionysus
How can you bear anything? You're riding.
Xanthias
But I've got all this!
Dionysus
How so?
Xanthias
Most heavily!
Dionysus
The weight you carry- isn't it carried by the donkey?
Xanthias
Absolutely not; not what I'm holding and carrying.
Dionysus
How can you carry, for God's sake, when you
yourself are carried by another?
Xanthias
I don't know, but my shoulder's sure hard pressed.
Dionysus
Well, since you say the donkey doesn't help,
Suppose you take your turn, and carry him.
Xanthias
Unhappy wretch! Why didn't I join the navy?
Then I'd tell you to whistle a different tune!
Dionysus
You scoundrel, get on down! Here's the door
I'm walking to, the first place
I must stop.--Ho, porter! porter there, I say.
There are a total of 2 comments on and cross references to this page.
Cross references from William Watson Goodwin, Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb:
287 [Interrogative Subjunctive.]
Cross references from Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Syntax of Classical Greek:
36 [Adjectives]: tôn eiôthotôn
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This text is based on the following book(s): Aristophanes. Frogs. Matthew Dillon.
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