History of English Humour, Vol. 1 (of 2) - With an Introduction upon Ancient Humour by Alfred Guy Kingan L'Estrange
page 56 of 321 (17%)
page 56 of 321 (17%)
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_Bdel._ "Oh, thou lubberly and ignorant fellow," as Theogenes said
when he was abusing the scavenger. Are you going to tell a story of mice and weazels among men? Like most humorists he blames in one place what he adopts in another. Plato had so high an opinion of Aristophanes that, in reply to Dionysius of Syracuse, he sent him a copy of his plays as affording the best picture of the commonwealth of Athens. This philosopher is also said to have introduced mimes--a sort of minor comedy--from Sicily, and to have esteemed their composer Sophron so highly that he kept a copy of his works under his pillow. Plato appreciated humour, was fond of writing little amatory couplets, and among the epigrams attributed to him is the following dedication of a mirror by a fading beauty, thus rendered by Prior:-- "Venus, take this votive glass, Since I am not what I was! What I shall hereafter be, Venus, let me never see!" Plato objected to violent laughter as indicative of an impulsive and ill-regulated temper, observing "that it is not suitable for men of worth, much less for the gods," the first part of which remark shows that he was not emotional, and the second that a great improvement in critical taste had taken place since the early centuries of Homer and David. As youth is romantic, and old age humorous, so in history sentiment precedes criticism and poetry attained a high degree of excellence, |
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