Comedy is, as we have said, an imitation
of characters of a lower type, not, however, in the
full sense of the word bad, the Ludicrous being merely
a subdivision of the ugly. It consists in some
defect or ugliness which is not painful or destructive.
To take an obvious example, the comic mask is ugly
and distorted, but does not imply pain.
The successive changes through which
Tragedy passed, and the authors of these changes,
are well known, whereas Comedy has had no history,
because it was not at first treated seriously.
It was late before the Archon granted a comic chorus
to a poet; the performers were till then voluntary.
Comedy had already taken definite shape when comic
poets, distinctively so called, are heard of.
Who furnished it with masks, or prologues, or increased
the number of actors,—these and other similar
details remain unknown. As for the plot, it came
originally from Sicily; but of Athenian writers Crates
was the first who, abandoning the ‘iambic’
or lampooning form, generalised his themes and plots.
Epic poetry agrees with Tragedy in
so far as it is an imitation in verse of characters
of a higher type. They differ, in that Epic poetry
admits but one kind of metre, and is narrative in
form. They differ, again, in their length:
for Tragedy endeavours, as far as possible, to confine
itself to a single revolution of the sun, or but slightly
to exceed this limit; whereas the Epic action has
no limits of time. This, then, is a second point
of difference; though at first the same freedom was
admitted in Tragedy as in Epic poetry.
Of their constituent parts some are
common to both, some peculiar to Tragedy, whoever,
therefore, knows what is good or bad Tragedy, knows
also about Epic poetry. All the elements of an
Epic poem are found in Tragedy, but the elements of
a Tragedy are not all found in the Epic poem.