INTRODUCTORY NOTE
Aristophanes, the greatest of comic
writers in Greek and in the opinion of many, in any
language, is the only one of the Attic comedians any
of whose works has survived in complete form He was
born in Athens about the middle of the fifth century
B C, and had his first comedy produced when he was
so young that his name was withheld on account of
his youth. He is credited with over forty plays,
eleven of which survive, along with the names and
fragments of some twenty-six others. His satire
deal with political, religious, and literary topics,
and with all its humor and fancy is evidently the outcome
of profound conviction and a genuine patriotism.
The Attic comedy was produced at the festivals of
Dionysus, which were marked by great license, and to
this, rather than to the individual taste of the poet,
must be ascribed the undoubted coarseness of many
of the jests. Aristophanes seems, indeed, to
have been regarded by his contemporaries as a man of
noble character. He died shortly after the production
of his “Plutus,” in 388 B. C.
“The Frogs” was produced
the year after the death of Euripides, and laments
the decay of Greek tragedy which Aristophanes attributed
to that writer. It is an admirable example of
the brilliance of his style, and of that mingling
of wit and poetry with rollicking humor and keen satirical
point which is his chief characteristic. Here,
as elsewhere, he stands for tradition against innovation
of all kinds, whether in politics, religion, or art.
The hostility to Euripides displayed here and in several
other plays, like his attacks on Socrates, is a result
of this attitude of conservatism. The present
play is notable also as a piece of elaborate if not
over-serious literary criticism from the pen of a
great poet._
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