Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

Agésilas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Agésilas" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(June 2025) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Agésilas is a play written byPierre Corneille and published in 1666.[1][2] It was first performed in April 1666 at theHôtel de Bourgogne.

Characters

[edit]

Source:[3]

  • Agésilas, king ofSparta
  • Lysander, famous Spartan captain
  • Cotys, king ofPaphlagonia
  • Spitridate, Persian high lord
  • Mandane, sister of Spitridate
  • Elpinice, daughter of Lysander
  • Aglatide, daughter of Lysander
  • Xénoclès, lieutenant of Agésilas
  • Cléon, Greek orator fromHalicarnassus

Plot

[edit]

Source:[4]

The action takes places inEphesus. Lysander has promised to marry his daughters Elpinice and Aglatide to Cotys and Spitridate respectively but he needs the agreement of Agésilas. Cotys and Spitridate quickly realize that this arrangement doesn't suit them. In effect, Spitridate and Elpinice have fallen in love with each other, and the same is true of Cotys and Mandane. Cotys agrees to give Elpinice to Spitridate if Spitridate will give him Mandane in return. However, Spitridate is wary of this because he's afraid of offending Lysander.

For his part, Agésilas is in love with Mandane as well. He learns Lysander is plotting against him, and in response forbids the Spartan captain's daughters from marrying anyone. Agésilas knows he can't marry Mandane because Sparta wouldn't accept it, but he also can't allow Cotys and Mandane to marry either. He knows a union between the families of Cotys and Spitridate will only make him enemies.

Aglatide knows that Spitridate loves her sister and that Cotys doesn't want her hand in marriage. She prefers to hide her feelings and pretend to not care, but she actually hopes that Agésilas loves her. In effect, some years prior, he offered her his love and promised he would marry her.

Agésilas finally decides to confront Lysander and show him that he knows all of his plans. However, Agésilas does not want to bring shame to the man who allowed him to accede to the throne. So, Agésilas resolves to talk to Lysander in private, with only Agésilas' lieutenant Xénoclès present. Lysander confesses to his crimes and says he is ready to submit to his punishment, but asks for clemency for his daughters and their future husbands who were not aware of the plot.

Agésilas decides to pardon Lysander and consents to the marriage of Elpinice to Spitridate and Cotys to Mandane. To honor his promises made years prior and to avoid any plots by Lysander in the future Agésilas agrees to marry Aglatide.

Versification

[edit]

Agésilas is, along withPsyché, the only Corneille piece to use cross rhyming (ABAB) for the entire piece, along with free verse (the play mixes verses of 8 and 12 feet).

Critical reception

[edit]

Agésilas was not well received, and was not performed again after its debut in 1666.Nicolas Boileau said of it in a review: "I sawAgésilas. Alas!"[5]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Pierre Corneille".The Poetry Foundation. Retrieved2025-06-20.
  2. ^"Visegrad Literature :: The page of Corneille, Pierre, English biography".www.visegradliterature.net. Retrieved2025-06-20.
  3. ^CORNEILLE, Pierre (1666)."AGÉSILAS, TRAGÉDIE".theatre-classique.fr (in French). Retrieved2025-06-20.
  4. ^Hamilton, Charles D. (1994)."Thebes and Sparta in the fourth century : Agelisaus' Theban obsession".Ktèma.19 (1):239–258.doi:10.3406/ktema.1994.2118.
  5. ^"Épigrammes VI-VII – Nicolas Boileau | Poetica Mundi" (in French). Retrieved2025-06-20.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Agésilas&oldid=1305947737"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp