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AristophanesA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Chapter Summaries & Analyses
The play begins some unspecified distance from Athens, in a desolate area or in the wilderness. Peisetairos and Euelpides enter with Peisetairos’s slaves, Manes and Xanthias, who are carrying their baggage. Both are carrying birds on their wrists: Peisetairos has a crow on his wrist, Euelpides a jackdaw.
Peisetairos and Euelpides fear that they are lost and that the man who sold them the crow and jackdaw swindled them when he promised the birds would lead them to Tereus, the mythical king who was transformed into a Hoopoe and who now rules over the birds. Euelpides, addressing the audience, explains that he and Peisetairos are fed up with the fines, lawsuits, and general drudgery of urban life in Athens and are hoping that the Hoopoe (Tereus) has discovered a place where they can lead carefree lives “while flying around” (48).
By Aristophanes
Lysistrata
Lysistrata
Aristophanes
The Acharnians
The Acharnians
Aristophanes
The Clouds
The Clouds
Aristophanes
The Ecclesiazusae
The Ecclesiazusae
Aristophanes
The Frogs
The Frogs
Aristophanes