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  1. Sep 5, 2023 · Pseudolus is a slave belonging to Simo and his son Calidorus. His actions center on helping Calidorus regain his beloved. A quintessential trickster character, he is not just intelligent but ...

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PseudolusPseudolus - Wikipedia

    Pseudolus is a play by the ancient Roman playwright Titus Maccius Plautus. It is one of the earliest examples of Roman literature. Pseudolus was first shown in 191 B.C. during the Megalesian Festival, [1] which was a celebration for the Greek Goddess Cybele. [2] The temple for worship of Cybele in Rome was completed during the same year in time ...

  3. Calidorus, Simo’s son, and Pseudolus, Simo’s slave, discuss a letter Calidorus has received from his lover, a prostitute owned by Simo’s neighbor, Ballio.Calidorus ruefully explains that Phoenicium has been sold to a Macedonian soldier and that as soon as the soldier’s slave returns with the balance and a matching seal, she will be forced to go to him.

  4. Pseudolus sends Calidorus away to find a reliable friend so as to accomplish the first task together with him. In the fourth scene (ll. 394–414) Pseudolus delivers a soliloquy and expresses his worries. He feels uncertain that he can manage the first and especially the second task.

  5. Pseudolus’s affecting the language of a superior isn’t new: in Scene 1, as he promised Calidorus he’ll obtain the money from Simo, Pseudolus pretended to be a magistrate, stating, “I hereby decree, to all citizens assembled here” (126) that anyone who knows him should “[b]e wary of me today” (202). Pseudolus thus simultaneously draws attention to his inferior status and casts ...

  6. Sep 5, 2023 · Pseudolus assures Calidorus that he’ll just figure out some way to trick his own master, Simo, into giving them the money. A complex plot then follows, which involves creating a letter from the ...

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  8. Pseudolus acknowledges that Simia is “as wicked as me” (910) and that the gods must want to help Calidorus by sending Simia to them. Simia promises to “be a better Harpax than he is” (926). Pseudolus promises to give him “plums and perks” (947) if Simia succeeds: “Delightful delicacies, hors d’oeuvres, perfumes, liqueurs—and / A delightful lady to smother with kisses of ...

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