Follow TV Tropes

Following

Context Theatre / ErasmusMontanus

Go To

1-> "A stone cannot fly. Mother cannot fly. Therefore, mother is a stone".
2-->-- ''Erasmus''' coins a persistent meme. [[BeamMeUpScotty Or not.]]
3
4''Erasmus Montanus or Rasmus Berg'' is a comedy from by Danish-Norwegian author Creator/LudvigHolberg, and is one of the most well-known and popular Danish plays (along with ''[[Theatre/JeppeFromTheHill Jeppe paa Bjerget]]'', also by Holberg).
5
6The people in the little rural town of Bjerget are eagerly awaiting the return of Rasmus, the younger son of Jeppe and Maren Berg, who has been away at the University in Copenhagen and are now coming back to visit his family and his fiancee Lisbed, the daughter of the wealthy Jeronimus.
7
8Rasmus turns up, very proud of his newfound learning and eager to show off. He insist on being called by his latinized name Erasmus Montanus, peppers his speech with InsaneTrollLogic and GratuitousLatin and falls into disputes with just about everybody he meets. At first the townspeople are impressed and a bit confused, but when Erasmus starts to insist that the Earth is ''round'', confusion turns to horror and anger, and they denounce him, lead by Jeronimus, who will not have his daughter marry such a madman. Both his parents, his brother and Lisbed tries to make Erasmus change his mind, but he insist that he alone knows best.
9
10In the end, the townspeople enlist the help of The Lieutenant, who tricks Erasmus into joining the army. After a few hours of TrainingFromHell, Erasmus is ready to renounce all his ways and swear that "the earth is as flat as a pancake!" The humbled Erasmus is readmitted into the community and allowed to marry Lisbed.
11----
12!!This play provides examples of:
13* AbsentMindedProfessor: Erasmus after his university years. Jacob runs with it and laughs his ass off, telling how Erasmus managed to fit the trope a number of times: Almost falling off his carriage because of his antics, completely forgetting to put on his raincoat (which Jacob wisely used for himself), ignoring a dog that nearly bit him, and to top it all, walking straight into the barn, lecturing the cows. No wonder Jacob had the time of his life.
14* TheAlcoholic: Deacon-Peer has shades of this:
15-->"I only drink schnapps to help my digestion ...but I have a very weak stomach."
16* AuthorAvatar: The Lieutenant's final speech about what you ''ought'' to learn in school is very clearly Holberg's own thoughts on the subject.
17* BookDumb: Deacon-Peer obviously. Also Hieronimus, the father of Lisbeth. The point is proven when the debate on whether the earth is round or not escalates.
18* DeusExMachina: The Lieutenant, who resolves the whole plot, are not introduced until Act 5.
19* DrillSergeantNasty: Niels Corporal, giving Erasmus two hours of TrainingFromHell.
20* GratuitousLatin: Lots of it. Serves a a GeniusBonus, because a small knowledge of Latin makes the play even funnier.
21* GrayAndGrayMorality: Concerning the solution, because Erasmus has to withdraw his statement that the Earth revolves around the sun. We, and supposedly Holberg himself, know this is correct, but the peasants in the play -- ''denies it''. Erasmus might, however, have gotten his point through if he hadn`t been so blatantly ''arrogant''.
22* HonorBeforeReason: Erasmus refuses to admit that the earth is flat, despite being ostracized and his engagement broken of, because he knows that it's round. Jacob deconstructs this, pointing out that the peasants won't believe Erasmus no matter what he does, so he might as well placate them.
23* InsaneTrollLogic: This is very much Erasmus' schtick, to the point where the concept of InsaneTrollLogic is known as ''Erasmus Montanus-logic'' in Denmark. The page quote is the most quoted example, but he also "proves" that Deacon-Peer is a rooster, and that excessive drinking is the road to happiness.
24* InsufferableGenius: Erasmus again. As with InsaneTrollLogic, an InsufferableGenius is known as an ''Erasmus Montanus'' in Denmark.
25* KnowNothingKnowItAll: Deacon-Peer is very proud of his education, but for someone with just a passing knowledge of latin, or just basic knowledge of what latin ''is'', he has clearly been very poorly educated, or forgotten about everything. Among other things, he claims several latin words have their origin in danish and that the language may have changed since he studied. Being a dead language, it obviously hasn't.
26* MagicVersusScience: Closely verging on ClarkesThirdLaw, because Erasmus appears to know things that are so far out of the normal that he appears out of his wits, and is accused of having struck a DealWithTheDevil when he tries to explain why the earth is round and revolves around the sun. When he uses his syllogisms to prove that people are animals, it is perceived as true magic, and his mother ''really'' believes her son has turned her into a stone. Because of this, even the officials begin to fear Erasmus, and this, more than anything else, produces the deal with the lieutenant.
27* MamasBabyPapasMaybe: Invoked ''against'' Hieronimus by his wife. It puts him out of balance, and when he asks his daughter for support, she only confirms what her mother just said...
28* ObfuscatingStupidity: Erasmus' brother Jacob plays up his ''stupid peasant''-act, while clearly being a lot cleverer than his brother. Whenever they debate, it is always Jacob who comes out on top.
29* OnlySaneMan: Jacob again. He is the only one who realize from the beginning how silly Erasmus is acting. Later, the lieutenant also takes on this trope.
30* PlotHole: It is established in the beginning of the play that Deacon-Peer is Erasmus' old teacher and a friend of his parents. However, when Erasmus meets him, he does not seem to know who he is.
31* PragmaticHero: Jacob is a proponent of this, as he explains to his brother. Having principles (in this case, knowing the Earth to be round) is well and good, but when faced with someone who refuses to accept those principles and will make you suffer for holding to them, it's better to just go with the flow.
32* SmartPeopleKnowLatin: {{Parodied|Trope}}. The titular character's birth name is Rasmus Berg, but after studying in Copenhagen, he starts flaunting his new "knowledge" (such as his famous InsaneTrollLogic "deductions"). This includes using gratuitous Latin in his speech and insisting that people refer to him by his Latinised name Erasmus Montanus.
33* SurprisinglyRealisticOutcome: Erasmus' "debate" with the Deacon results in this, since the peasants observing have no idea what either of them are talking about. Deacon Peer is just rambling nonsense, but the better-educated Erasmus has no logical way to respond to any of it because it is ''complete nonsense''. From an outside perspective, however, it looks like Peer put Erasmus in his place, and Erasmus is just trying to save face.
34* WhamLine:
35-->"No, I can turn you into an actual soldier. You see, I am a recruitment officer, and you just took my coin. Therefore, ..."
36* WorkingClassPeopleAreMorons: Zig-zagged. From the onset, they clearly are, not understanding the clever Latin Erasmus uses, and completely disdaining the modern heliocentric paradigm. On the other hand, as Jacob states, "If we peasants were to abandon our crops and just look at stars all the time, you learned men soon would experience empty bellies..."

Top