logo

Pseudolus

Plautus

Pseudolus

Plautus

  • 41-page comprehensive Study Guide
  • Chapter-by-chapter summaries and multiple sections of expert analysis
  • Featured in our Laugh-out-Loud BooksAncient Rome collections
  • The ultimate resource for assignments, engaging lessons, and lively book discussions

Pseudolus Prologue-Scene 4 Summary & Analysis

Prologue Summary

In the two-line Prologue, the speaker warns audience members to “get up and stretch your loins” (1) while they can because “[a] long play by Plautus is coming onstage next” (2). Critics have suggested that these lines were added after Plautus’s death for revival performances.

Scene 1 Summary

As Pseudolus, Simo’s slave, and Calidorus, Simo’s son, emerge from Simo’s house, Pseudolus asks a dreary Calidorus what’s troubling him. He wonders what Calidorus has written on his tablet and points out that he’s always been Calidorus’s “closest confidante” (17). Calidorus says Pseudolus “must find my heart in that wax” (33) and that like “the grass of summer” (38), he has been “quickly […] mowed down” (39).

Pseudolus, making fun of the handwriting, reads the tablet and learns that Calidorus’s lover, Phoenicium, has been sold by her pimp, Ballio, to a Macedonian soldier, who left partial payment before leaving. Phoenicium despairs that the man who is supposed to bring the rest of the payment, along with a seal that matches that left by the soldier, is coming today; she begs Calidorus to provide the rest of the payment himself so she can go with him instead.

blurred text

Unlock this
Study Guide!

Join SuperSummary to gain instant access to all 41 pages of this Study Guide and thousands of other learning resources.
Get Started
blurred text