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<h2> 14 </h2>
<p>The tragic fear and pity may be aroused by the Spectacle; but they may
also be aroused by the very structure and incidents of the play—which
is the better way and shows the better poet. The Plot in fact should be so
framed that, even without seeing the things take place, he who simply
hears the account of them shall be filled with horror and pity at the
incidents; which is just the effect that the mere recital of the story in
<i>Oedipus</i> would have on one. To produce this same effect by means of
the Spectacle is less artistic, and requires extraneous aid. Those,
however, who make use of the Spectacle to put before us that which is
merely monstrous and not productive of fear, are wholly out of touch with
Tragedy; not every kind of pleasure should be required of a tragedy, but
only its own proper pleasure.</p>
<p>The tragic pleasure is that of pity and fear, and the poet has to produce
it by a work of imitation; it is clear, therefore, that the causes should
be included in the incidents of his story. Let us see, then, what kinds of
incident strike one as horrible, or rather as piteous. In a deed of this
description the parties must necessarily be either friends, or enemies, or
indifferent to one another. Now when enemy does it on enemy, there is
nothing to move us to pity either in his doing or in his meditating the
deed, except so far as the actual pain of the sufferer is concerned; and
the same is true when the parties are indifferent to one another. Whenever
the tragic deed, however, is done within the family—when murder or
the like is done or meditated by brother on brother, by son on father, by
mother on son, or son on mother—these are the situations the poet
should seek after. The traditional stories, accordingly, must be kept as
they are, e.g. the murder of Clytaemnestra by Orestes and of Eriphyle by
Alcmeon. At the same time even with these there is something left to the
poet himself; it is for him to devise the right way of treating them. Let
us explain more clearly what we mean by 'the right way'. The deed of
horror may be done by the doer knowingly and consciously, as in the old
poets, and in Medea's murder of her children in Euripides. Or he may do
it, but in ignorance of his relationship, and discover that afterwards, as
does the <i>Oedipus</i> in Sophocles. Here the deed is outside the play;
but it may be within it, like the act of the Alcmeon in Astydamas, or that
of the Telegonus in <i>Ulysses Wounded</i>. A third possibility is for one
meditating some deadly injury to another, in ignorance of his
relationship, to make the discovery in time to draw back. These exhaust
the possibilities, since the deed must necessarily be either done or not
done, and either knowingly or unknowingly.</p>
<p>The worst situation is when the personage is with full knowledge on the
point of doing the deed, and leaves it undone. It is odious and also
(through the absence of suffering) untragic; hence it is that no one is
made to act thus except in some few instances, e.g. Haemon and Creon in <i>Antigone</i>.
Next after this comes the actual perpetration of the deed meditated. A
better situation than that, however, is for the deed to be done in
ignorance, and the relationship discovered afterwards, since there is
nothing odious in it, and the Discovery will serve to astound us. But the
best of all is the last; what we have in <i>Cresphontes</i>, for example,
where Merope, on the point of slaying her son, recognizes him in time; in
<i>Iphigenia</i>, where sister and brother are in a like position; and in
<i>Helle</i>, where the son recognizes his mother, when on the point of
giving her up to her enemy.</p>
<p>This will explain why our tragedies are restricted (as we said just now)
to such a small number of families. It was accident rather than art that
led the poets in quest of subjects to embody this kind of incident in
their Plots. They are still obliged, accordingly, to have recourse to the
families in which such horrors have occurred.</p>
<p>On the construction of the Plot, and the kind of Plot required for
Tragedy, enough has now been said.</p>
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