Enough has now been said concerning the structure
of the incidents, and the right kind of plot.
XV
In respect of Character there are four things to be
aimed at. First, and most important, it must
be good. Now any speech or action that manifests
moral purpose of any kind will be expressive of character:
the character will be good if the purpose is good.
This rule is relative to each class. Even a woman
may be good, and also a slave; though the woman may
be said to be an inferior being, and the slave quite
worthless. The second thing to aim at is propriety.
There is a type of manly valour; but valour in a woman,
or unscrupulous cleverness, is inappropriate.
Thirdly, character must be true to life: for
this is a distinct thing from goodness and propriety,
as here described. The fourth point is consistency:
for though the subject of the imitation, who suggested
the type, be inconsistent, still he must be consistently
inconsistent. As an example of motiveless degradation
of character, we have Menelaus in the Orestes:
of character indecorous and inappropriate, the lament
of Odysseus in the Scylla, and the speech of Melanippe:
of inconsistency, the Iphigenia at Aulis,—for
Iphigenia the suppliant in no way resembles her later
self.
As in the structure of the plot, so too in the portraiture
of character, the poet should always aim either at
the necessary or the probable. Thus a person
of a given character should speak or act in a given
way, by the rule either of necessity or of probability;
just as this event should follow that by necessary
or probable sequence. It is therefore evident
that the unravelling of the plot, no less than the
complication, must arise out of the plot itself, it
must not be brought about by the ’Deus ex Machina’—as
in the Medea, or in the Return of the Greeks in the
Iliad. The ‘Deus ex Machina’ should
be employed only for events external to the drama,—for
antecedent or subsequent events, which lie beyond the
range of human knowledge, and which require to be reported
or foretold; for to the gods we ascribe the power
of seeing all things. Within the action there
must be nothing irrational. If the irrational
cannot be excluded, it should be outside the scope
of the tragedy. Such is the irrational element
in the Oedipus of Sophocles.
Again, since Tragedy is an imitation of persons who
are above the common level, the example of good portrait-painters
should be followed. They, while reproducing the
distinctive form of the original, make a likeness
which is true to life and yet more beautiful.
So too the poet, in representing men who are irascible
or indolent, or have other defects of character, should
preserve the type and yet ennoble it. In this
way Achilles is portrayed by Agathon and Homer.
These then are rules the poet should observe.
Nor should he neglect those appeals to the senses,
which, though not among the essentials, are the concomitants
of poetry; for here too there is much room for error.
But of this enough has been said in our published
treatises.
Copyrights
The Poetics of Aristotle from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.