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(Character | First woman | |
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Gender | Female | |
Age Range(s) | Young Adult (20-35), Adult (36-50), Senior (>50) | |
Type of monologue / Character is | Persuasive, Descriptive, Complaining | |
Type | Dramatic | |
Period | Ancient Greek | |
Genre | Comedy | |
Description | A woman summarizes how Euripides has ruined women's reputation |
Summary
The story takes place during the festival of Themophoria, an event where only women are allowed. The women who attend the festival decide to use the occasion to discuss how to get revenge against Euripides, the playwright who portrays women as sexually depraved and crazy. Euripides, eager to know what the women are plotting against him, sends two friends disguised as women, first Agathon and then Mnesilochus. When the women discover the fact that Mnosilochus is not a woman, they call the authorities in order to arrest him. At the end Euripides manages to rescue his friend.
In this monologue a woman summarizes all the different ways Euripides has ruined women's reputation in Athens.
In this monologue a woman summarizes all the different ways Euripides has ruined women's reputation in Athens.
Written by Administrator
Excerpt |
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FIRST WOMAN If I have asked to speak, may the goddesses bear me witness, it was not for sake of ostentation. But I have long been pained to see us women insulted by this Euripides, this son of the green-stuff woman, who loads us with every kind of indignity. Has he not hit us enough, calumniated us sufficiently, wherever there are spectators, tragedians, and a chorus? Does; he not style us adulterous, lecherous, bibulous, treacherous, and garrulous? Does he not repeat that we are all vice, that we are the curse of our husbands? So that, directly they come back from the theatre, they look at us doubtfully and go searching every nook, fearing there may be some hidden lover. We can do nothing as we used to, so many are the false ideas which he has instilled into our husbands. Is a woman weaving a garland for herself? It's because she is in love. Does she let some vase drop while going or returning to the house? her husband asks her in whose honour she has broken it: "It can only be for that Corinthian stranger." Is a maiden unwell? Straightway her brother says, "That is a colour that does not please me." And if a childless woman wishes to substitute one, the deceit can no longer be a secret, for the neighbours will insist on being present at her delivery. Formerly the old men married young girls, but they have been so calumniated that none think of them now, thanks to that line of his: "A woman is the tyrant of the old man who marries her." Again, it is because of Euripides that we are incessantly watched, that we are shut up behind bolts and bars, and that dogs are kept to frighten off the adulterers. Let that pass; but formerly it was we who had the care of the food, who fetched the flour from the storeroom, the oil and the wine; we can do it no more. Our husbands now carry little Spartan keys on their persons, made with three notches and full of malice and spite. Formerly it sufficed to purchase a ring marked with the same sign for three obols, to open the most securely sealed-up door! but now this pestilent Euripides has taught men to hang seals of worm-eaten wood about their necks. My opinion, therefore, is that we should rid ourselves of our enemy by poison or by any other means, provided he dies. That is what I announce publicly; as to certain points, which I wish to keep secret, I propose to record them on the secretary's minutes. |