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Plutus (play)
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==Plot== The play features an elderly Athenian citizen, Chremylos, and his [[slave]] Cario or Carion. Chremylos presents himself and his family as virtuous but poor, and has accordingly gone to seek advice from an [[oracle]]. The play begins as he returns to Athens from [[Pythia|Delphi]], having been instructed by [[Apollo]] to follow the first man he meets and persuade him to come home with him. That man turns out to be the god [[Plutus]] β who is, contrary to all expectations, a blind [[beggar]]. After much argument, Plutus is convinced to enter Chremylos's house, where he will have his vision restored, meaning that "wealth" will now go only to those who deserve it in one way or another. The first part of the play examines the idea that wealth is not distributed to the virtuous, or necessarily to the non-virtuous, but instead it is distributed randomly. Chremylos is convinced that if Plutus's eyesight can be restored, these wrongs can be righted, making the world a better place. The second part introduces the goddess [[Penia]] (Poverty). She counters Chremylos's arguments that it is better to be rich by arguing that without poverty there would be no slaves (as every slave would buy his freedom) and no fine goods or luxury foods (as nobody would work if everyone were rich). After Plutus's eyesight is restored at the Temple of [[Asclepius]], he formally becomes a member of Chremylos's household. At the same time, the entire world is turned upside-down economically and socially. Unsurprisingly, this gives rise to rancorous comments and claims of unfairness from those who have been deprived of their riches. In the end, the messenger god [[Hermes]] arrives to inform Chremylos and his family of the gods' anger. As in Aristophanes's ''[[The Birds (play)|The Birds]]'', the gods have been starved of sacrifices, since human beings have all directed their attention to Plutus, and they no longer pay homage to the traditional [[Twelve Olympians|Olympian gods]]. Hermes, worried about his own predicament, actually offers to work for the mortals and enters Chremylos's house as a servant on those conditions.
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