Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-8bhkd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-08T00:36:20.431Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Daphnis and Chloe: An Interpretation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2009

Extract

When Fielding fathered the modern English novel in 1742, he left his readers in no doubt about his intentions. The Preface to Joseph Andrews states clearly enough that his purpose was to ridicule affectation. The ancient Greek novelists were generally less explicit about their aims: of the five novels which survive complete, four are without any sort of preface, and we can only guess from the text what the authors were trying to do. Probably their sole object was to entertain. But the man who wrote the fifth, Daphnis and Chloe, was evidently a highly conscious artist with clear ideas about the purpose of his art, and he has left us a preface explaining them—or rather hinting at them, for the full meaning of his words is not immediately apparent. The aim of this article is to bring out the deeper implications of the preface, and to interpret the text in the light of them.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1960

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

page 117 note 1 Proem, 2.

page 117 note 2 i. 22. The purely verbal echoes are άτερпέστερον/τερпνόν, κτῆμα ἐς όεί/κτῆμα пᾶσιν ἀνθρώпοις.

page 118 note 1 Preface to Shakespeare.

page 118 note 2 On the title-page of his translation.

page 118 note 3 Republic, 515a, 517a.

page 118 note 4 Proem, 2.

page 118 note 5 Idyll viiGoogle Scholar, Eclogues i, ix.Google Scholar The earliest prose allegory in Greek was the Choice of Herakles, by Prodikos, a contemporary of Sokrates.

page 118 note 6 ii. 7.

page 119 note 1 Ephesiaka, Book i.

page 119 note 2 Tintern Abbey, 96.Google Scholar

page 119 note 3 i. 10–II.

page 119 note 4 i. 15.

page 119 note 5 ii. 8.

page 119 note 6 ii. 9.

page 120 note 1 iv. 40.

page 120 note 2 i. 9–10.

page 121 note 1 i. 11–13.

page 121 note 2 i. 20.

page 121 note 3 iii. 15–19.

page 121 note 4 1. 30–31.

page 121 note 5 i. 29–30.

page 121 note 6 Marriage of Heaven and Hell.

page 121 note 7 iii. 19.

page 121 note 8 31. This Latin novel is generally thought to be an adaptation of a lost Greek original, possibly by Xenophon of Ephesos.

page 121 note 9 i. 32.

page 122 note 1 ii. 26–29.

page 122 note 2 ii. 2.

page 122 note 3 ii. 23.

page 122 note 4 ii. 2O.

page 122 note 5 ii. 34.

page 122 note 6 ii. 39.

page 122 note 7 iii. 20.

page 122 note 8 iii. 23.

page 122 note 9 Cf. ii. 34: ‘But she laughed at his love, and said she didn't want a lover who was neither one thing nor the other—neither a goat nor a man.’

page 122 note 10 iii. 34.

page 123 note 1 iv. 39.