PHILOKTETES
INTRODUCTION
SOPHOCLES AT 87
Philoktetes. First performed in 409 BCE, when Sophocles was 87 years old.
Philoktetesâwith a festering, god-given wound in his footâhas been abandoned on the desolate island of Lemnos by the Greeks under Odysseus. They couldnât stand the stench, nor his screams of pain. That was ten years ago. Since then, theyâve learned they canât take Troy without Philoktetes and the bow given to him by Heraklesânor without Neoptolemos, son of the dead Achilles. Yet Philoktetes would rather kill Odysseus than return to Troy. Itâs up to Neoptolemos, inveigled by Odysseus, to trick Philoktetes into returning. Odysseus, an opportunistic character representing the Greek army, will use any means to carry out his mission. Philoktetes and Neoptolemos, however, are constantly at sea: shifting and re-shifting amidst mixed feelings, deceptions, suspicions, and qualms as they struggle with themselves and their obscurely evolving relationship.
There are many plays within this play. Philoktetes and Neoptolemos are driven not only by unbidden psychologies but by their through lines: the specific ends they want to achieve. With the scenario given him by Odysseus, Neoptolemos is caught between playing a character, a curtailed version of himself, and being his own person. He has a tenuous grip on his role. That, plus pressure from the nakedly visceral Philoktetesâby turns friendly, even fatherly, and bitterly hostileâwill wear him down. Remarkably, there are no offstage events in this pressure cooker of a play. Everything happens in the moment, up close and personal. (The false Merchant and his tale are themselves an event, not the report of one.) Once Odysseusâs hooks are setâin Neoptolemos and, through him, in Philoktetesâthereâs no let up.
Philoktetes is a discarded veteran of the Trojan War. He is as well a generic old manâsick, smelly, cantankerous, a burden abandoned in a seemingly blank space. Yet he isnât expendable. The Greeks canât win the war without him. Further, it seems elders in general are socially necessary. Curious about former comrades, Philoktetes asks if the âold and honestâ Nestor is still aliveâadding, with the hated sons of Atreus in mind: âHeâs the one / could baffle their schemes with wise adviceâ (471â472). He wonders what future may be envisioned without the âgoodâ peopleâthe likes of Nestor, or the dead Achilles and Aias. âWhatâs to be our outlook on life / when theyâre dead, and Odysseus, / who should be dead, isnât!â (478â480).
The novice Neoptolemos and the old hand, Philoktetes, occupy the opposite poles of a historical-cum-cultural continuum that is rediscovering itself over a dead space: the âdeadnessâ is not Lemnos, however, but the cynical, soulless present of Odysseus.1 Objectively, Odysseus does have the right end in view. The goal to unite Neoptolemos, Philoketes, and Heraklesâ bow to capture Troy and so end the war is beyond question in this play. But Odysseusâs crudely instrumentalist means lack the cultural and historical integrity, the broth of trust, needed to achieve that end.
Philoktetesâ affliction is intolerable. His intransigence, exasperating. He wants to be cured but refuses to be curedâwants to...