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The 130th Annual Meeting
of the American Philological Association
December 27-30 Washington, DC Session 3: Greek Novel December 28, 8:30 AM |
| Jean ALVARES | Eros and the Reformation of Love and Society in Longus' Daphnis and Chloe |
As
Chalk noted, Longus’ Eros more closely resembles Hesiod’s Eros and the
beneficent deities of mystery religion than bow-wielding putti. Apuleius’
Cupid is a young man whose considerably spiritualized love relationship
with Psyche benefits the world by producing Voluptas. Showing a similar
transformation, Longus establishes the muthos of Chloe, a girl who
chooses to surrender to a male who initiates her in the mysteries of Eros.
While not rejecting recent interpretations, I present a reading of D
& C as myth of divinely protected lovers initiated into a new vision
of Eros, which produces both an ideal relationship between the couple
and a new ground for society, an utopian myth that I believe deeply engages
most readers of D & C.
Longus’ romance
is both a dedication to Eros and a that
aids humanity through a new, non-tragic, beneficent vision of Eros’ operations.
His Daphnis must be seen as a counterpoint to that of Theokritos, the originator
of pastoral poetry who dies from love and for whom creation mourns. Instead
Longus’ Daphnis participates in a somewhat Aristophanic comedy, one positing
ideal solutions for old, intractable problems; for love does not
destroy this Daphnis, but instead leads to a new type of love and a social
formation.
The fact that Daphnis
and Chloe were born aristocrats, suckled by animals, raised as slaves in
the pastoral world and watched over by gods suggests their careers synthesize
these different worlds. The echo of myths of divine births are part
of a paradigm of divine beings who, incarnated in the world, by struggle
with that world bring about its reformation. The key is Chloe who, like
other romantic heroines, inspires and develops the hero, rescuing him (with
divine help) from the necessity of aggressive, destructive sexuality implied
in the muthoi of Phatta, Echo and Syrinx. A pivotal episode occurs
when Daphnis, now schooled by Lycanaeium in sexual technique, nevertheless
defers for Chloe’s sake the violence of sex until their relationship is
further deepened, rejecting the violence implied in the earlier muthoi.
The real world’s dangers are not ignored. We see exposed children, Dorcon’s
attempted rape, pirates, military invasion, slavery, and more. The pastoral
world is vulnerable, as symbolized by the ruin of vast ornamental garden
by the lust-inspired ravages of Lampis. But its altar of Dionysos (the
god of theater) remains undisturbed, whose mythic scenes underscore themes
of the romance. The willingness of Chloe and Daphnis to play the mythic
roles Eros creates for them allow others, from both city and country, to
be included during the wedding in what becomes a comedy of innocence as
the world of purely aggressive Eros is transcended.
Thus the borders between human and divine, between nature, pastoral and
city dissolve, and with it old oppositions of guilt and innocence. Earlier,
Chloe’s kiss had allowed Dorcon to die peacefully, and now even Gnathon
and Lycanaeium, along with the city folk, join the pastoral wedding, the
preliminary to Chloe’s final metamorphosis. Although Daphnis and Chloe
still frequent the pastoral world, this life is not simply a continuation
of former time, for they have learned and matured. Their life is a new
synthesis, whose continuation is suggested as their children likewise suckled
by animals, thus conferring their benefits upon the future.