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  • Aug. 1, 1880
  • Page 39
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The Masonic Magazine, Aug. 1, 1880: Page 39

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    Article PERFORMANCE OF THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS AT BALLIOL COLLEGE, OXFORD. Page 1 of 6 →
Page 39

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Performance Of The Agamemnon Of Aeschylus At Balliol College, Oxford.

PERFORMANCE OF THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS AT BALLIOL COLLEGE , OXFORD .

WE take this interesting account of an unusual performance from tbe Guardian , a paper not much read by the majority of those who peruse the Masonic Magazine , as Ave think it refers to " an episode " in dramatic annals which may interest possibly some of our friends , and deserves to be noted and recorded in our " niaga ., " which supports all that elevates the taste , or love of the classical drama .

MORE than two thousand three hundred years ago ( in 458 B . C . ) an audience of , perhaps , 25 , 000 persons , Athenian citizens , men and women ( the latter sitting apart in tbe uppermost tiers of seats ) , with such Greeks from other cities as had come to the famous Dionysiac festiA'al , ivitnessed in the great open-air theatre of Dionysus , on tbe sloping ground at tbe south-east foot of the Acropolis , the first performance of the Agamemnon . Tbe grand "Trilogy " of which it formed the opening act was the lastas it was the crownineffort

, g of tbe sublime imagination of yEscb ylns , tbe leader of that trio of poets AA'hose works remain for a sample of the marvellous development , within the space of some fifty years , of tragic art at Athens , the originality of which development , no less than its extraordinary fertility , must ever be a subject of wonder . Tbe authors of the Agamemnon and tbe Persce , the ( Edipus Tyrannus , ancl tbe ( Edipus Goloneusthe Ion and the Iphigenia in Taurisstand bthe common consent of

, , y tAvo thousand years upon a level which , perhaps , has since been reached by one dramatic poet alone—b y the author of Macbeth and Hamlet . But when we know that the thirty-one tragedies which have been saved to us are the remnant of no less than 275 ascribed to these three poets alone ; that many of the best plays that we have were vanquished in public competition by rivals ivhose very names are lost—the ( Edipus Tyrannus , for example , the acknowledged

masterpiece of tragic structure from the clays of Aristotle to our OAVII , having only gained a second prize—and that many tragic poets , in the estimation of their contemporaries , must have been nearly on a par with iEsch yliis , Sophocles , and Euripides ; we may form some idea of the intellectual and artistic atmos-2-ihere which made such creations as the Agamemnon possible , and ivh y it is that nothing " simile aut secundum " has sprung . into being in the centuries that have passed . The tragic art reached its highest dei'elopment once for all in those far-off clays Avhen—¦ Gorgeous Tragedy

In sceptred pall came sweeping by , Presenting Thebes or Pelops' line . Or the tale of Ti-oy divine;—" rare , " indeed , as Milton felt , being that Avhich of later age

Ennobled bath the bustined stage . From 458 B . C . to 1880 A . D . is a wide stretch of years ; but wider still is the gulf that lies between tbe theatre of Dionysus and the Hall of Balliol ; Avider tbe difference between tbe spirit of both actors ancl spectators in ancient Athens and in modern Oxford . It is like the difference between tbe clear blue Grecian

“The Masonic Magazine: 1880-08-01, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01081880/page/39/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
WHAT WAS THE HERMETIC SOCIETY OF 1721 ? Article 1
A LECTURE ON THE ANTIQUITY OF LAYING CORNER STONES WITH RELIGIOUS AND MYSTICAL CEREMONIES. Article 3
WHAT'S IN A SIGN ? Article 7
WAITING: THE POET'S GUERDON. Article 9
OLD RECORDS OF THE LODGE OF PEEBLES. Article 10
THE QUARTERLY COMMUNICATIONS. Article 12
THE ASTROLOGY OF SHAKESPEARE. Article 14
CAMOENS: POET AND WARRIOR. Article 17
THE BEAUTIFUL STONE OF THE MASONIC ARCH. Article 20
THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES. Article 21
LODGE HISTORIES. Article 25
SONNET ON THE LATE LEARNED JOHN OXLEE. Article 29
THE LIVERY COMPANIES AND ART TREASURES. Article 30
"ARS QUATUOR CORONATORUM." Article 33
IN THE LONG RUN. Article 36
LITERARY AND ANTIQUARIAN GOSSIP. Article 36
PERFORMANCE OF THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS AT BALLIOL COLLEGE, OXFORD. Article 39
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Page 39

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Performance Of The Agamemnon Of Aeschylus At Balliol College, Oxford.

PERFORMANCE OF THE AGAMEMNON OF AESCHYLUS AT BALLIOL COLLEGE , OXFORD .

WE take this interesting account of an unusual performance from tbe Guardian , a paper not much read by the majority of those who peruse the Masonic Magazine , as Ave think it refers to " an episode " in dramatic annals which may interest possibly some of our friends , and deserves to be noted and recorded in our " niaga ., " which supports all that elevates the taste , or love of the classical drama .

MORE than two thousand three hundred years ago ( in 458 B . C . ) an audience of , perhaps , 25 , 000 persons , Athenian citizens , men and women ( the latter sitting apart in tbe uppermost tiers of seats ) , with such Greeks from other cities as had come to the famous Dionysiac festiA'al , ivitnessed in the great open-air theatre of Dionysus , on tbe sloping ground at tbe south-east foot of the Acropolis , the first performance of the Agamemnon . Tbe grand "Trilogy " of which it formed the opening act was the lastas it was the crownineffort

, g of tbe sublime imagination of yEscb ylns , tbe leader of that trio of poets AA'hose works remain for a sample of the marvellous development , within the space of some fifty years , of tragic art at Athens , the originality of which development , no less than its extraordinary fertility , must ever be a subject of wonder . Tbe authors of the Agamemnon and tbe Persce , the ( Edipus Tyrannus , ancl tbe ( Edipus Goloneusthe Ion and the Iphigenia in Taurisstand bthe common consent of

, , y tAvo thousand years upon a level which , perhaps , has since been reached by one dramatic poet alone—b y the author of Macbeth and Hamlet . But when we know that the thirty-one tragedies which have been saved to us are the remnant of no less than 275 ascribed to these three poets alone ; that many of the best plays that we have were vanquished in public competition by rivals ivhose very names are lost—the ( Edipus Tyrannus , for example , the acknowledged

masterpiece of tragic structure from the clays of Aristotle to our OAVII , having only gained a second prize—and that many tragic poets , in the estimation of their contemporaries , must have been nearly on a par with iEsch yliis , Sophocles , and Euripides ; we may form some idea of the intellectual and artistic atmos-2-ihere which made such creations as the Agamemnon possible , and ivh y it is that nothing " simile aut secundum " has sprung . into being in the centuries that have passed . The tragic art reached its highest dei'elopment once for all in those far-off clays Avhen—¦ Gorgeous Tragedy

In sceptred pall came sweeping by , Presenting Thebes or Pelops' line . Or the tale of Ti-oy divine;—" rare , " indeed , as Milton felt , being that Avhich of later age

Ennobled bath the bustined stage . From 458 B . C . to 1880 A . D . is a wide stretch of years ; but wider still is the gulf that lies between tbe theatre of Dionysus and the Hall of Balliol ; Avider tbe difference between tbe spirit of both actors ancl spectators in ancient Athens and in modern Oxford . It is like the difference between tbe clear blue Grecian

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