“Whom speaks he of? Be silent—heed it not—Blot it out from thy memory!—it is evil!Oedipus. It cannot be—the clew is here; and IWill trace it through that labyrinth—my birth.Jocasta. By all the gods I warn thee; for the sakeOf thine own life beware; it is enoughFor me to hear and madden!”
Oedipus (suspecting only that the pride of his queen revolts from the thought of her husband’s birth being proved base and servile) replies,
“Nay, nay, cheer thee!Were I through three descents threefold a slave,My shame would not touch thee.Jocasta. I do implore thee,This once obey me—this once.Oedipus I will not!To truth I grope my way.Jocasta. And yet what loveSpeaks in my voice! Thine ignorance is thy bliss.Oedipus. A bliss that tortures!Jocasta. Miserable man!Oh couldst thou never learn the thing thou art!Oedipus. Will no one quicken this slow herdsman’s stepsThe unquestioned birthright of a royal nameLet this proud queen possess!Jocasta. Wo! wo! thou wretch!Wo! my last word!—words are no more for me!”
With this Jocasta rushes from the scene. Still Oedipus misconstrues her warning; he ascribes her fears to the royalty of her spirit. For himself, Fortune was his mother, and had blessed him; nor could the accident of birth destroy his inheritance from nature. The chorus give way to their hopes! their wise, their glorious Oedipus might have been born a Theban! The herdsman enters: like Tiresias, he is loath to speak. The fiery king extorts his secret. Oedipus is the son of Laius and Jocasta—at his birth the terrible prophecies of the Pythian induced his own mother to expose him on the mountains—the compassion of the herdsman saved him—saved him to become the bridegroom of his mother, the assassin of his sire. The astonishing art with which, from step to step, the audience and the victim are led to the climax of the discovery, is productive of an interest of pathos and of terror which is not equalled by the greatest masterpieces of the modern stage347, and possesses that species of anxious excitement which is wholly unparalleled in the ancient. The discovery is a true catastrophe—the physical denouement is but an adjunct to the moral one. Jocasta, on quitting the scene, had passed straight to the bridal-chamber, and there, by the couch from which had sprung a double and accursed progeny, perished by her own hands. Meanwhile, the predestined parricide, bursting into the chamber, beheld, as the last object on earth, the corpse of his wife and mother! Once more Oedipus reappears, barred for ever from the light of day. In the fury of his remorse, he “had smote the balls of his own eyes,” and the wise baffler of the sphinx, Oedipus, the haughty, the insolent, the illustrious, is a forlorn and despairing outcast. But amid all the horror of the concluding scene, a beautiful and softening light breaks forth. Blind, powerless, excommunicated, Creon, whom Oedipus accused of murder, has now become his judge and his master. The great spirit, crushed beneath its intolerable woes, is humbled to the dust; and the “wisest of mankind” implores but two favours—to be thrust from the land an exile, and once more to embrace his children. Even in translation the exquisite tenderness of this passage cannot altogether fail of its effect.
“For my fate, let it pass! My children, Creon!My sons—nay, they the bitter wants of lifeMay master—they are MEN?—my girls—my darlings—Why, never sat I at my household boardWithout their blessed looks—our very breadWe brake together; thou’lt be kind to themFor my sake, Creon—and (oh, latest prayer!)Let me but touch them—feel them with these hands,And pour such sorrow as may speak farewellO’er ills that must be theirs! By thy pure line—For thin is pure—do this, sweet prince. MethinksI should not miss these eyes, could I but touch them.What shall I say to move thee?Sobs! And do I,Oh do I hear my sweet ones? Hast thou sent,In mercy sent, my children to my arms?Speak—speak—I do not dream!Creon. They are thy children;I would not shut thee from the dear delightIn the old time they gave thee.Oedipus. Blessings on theeFor this one mercy mayst thou find aboveA kinder God than I have. Ye—where are ye?My children—come!—nearer and nearer yet,” etc.
The pathos of this scene is continued to the end; and the very last words Oedipus utters as his children cling to him, implore that they at least may not be torn away.
It is in this concluding scene that the art of the play is consummated; the horrors of the catastrophe, which, if a last impression, would have left behind a too painful and gloomy feeling, are softened down by this beautiful resort to the tenderest and holiest sources of emotion. And the pathos is rendered doubly effective, not only from the immediate contrast of the terror that preceded it, but from the masterly skill with which all display of the softer features in the character of Oedipus is reserved to the close. In the breaking up of the strong mind and the daring spirit, when empire, honour, name, are all annihilated, the heart is seen, as it were, surviving the wrecks around it, and clinging for support to the affections.
VII. In the “Oedipus at Coloneus,” the blind king is presented to us, after the lapse of years, a wanderer over the earth, unconsciously taking his refuge in the grove of the furies348—“the awful goddesses, daughters of Earth and Darkness.” His young daughter, Antigone, one of the most lovely creations of poetry, is his companion and guide; he is afterward joined by his other daughter, Ismene, whose weak and selfish character is drawn in strong contrast to the heroism and devotion of Antigone. The ancient prophecies that foretold his woes had foretold also his release. His last shelter and resting-place were to be obtained from the dread deities, and a sign of thunder, or earthquake, or lightning was to announce his parting hour. Learning the spot to which his steps had been guided, Oedipus solemnly feels that his doom approaches: thus, at the very opening of the poem, he stands before us on the verge of a mysterious grave.
The sufferings which have bowed the parricide to a premature old age349have not crushed his spirit; the softness and self-humiliation which were the first results of his awful affliction are passed away. He is grown once more vehement and passionate, from the sense of wrong; remorse still visits him, but is alternated with the yet more human feeling of resentment at the unjust severity of his doom350. His sons, who, “by a word,” might have saved him from the expulsion, penury, and wanderings he has undergone, had deserted his cause—had looked with indifferent eyes on his awful woes—had joined with Creon to expel him from the Theban land. They are the Goneril and Regan of the classic Lear, as Antigone is the Cordelia on whom he leans—a Cordelia he has never thrust from him. “When,” says Oedipus, in stern bitterness of soul,
“When my soul boiled within me—when ‘to die’Was all my prayer—and death was sweetness, yea,Had they but stoned me like a dog, I’d blessed them;Then no man rose against me—but when timeBrought its slow comfort—when my wounds were scarred—All my griefs mellow’d, and remorse itselfJudged my self-penance mightier than my sins,Thebes thrust me from her breast, and they, my sons,My blood, mine offspring, from their father shrunk:A word of theirs had saved me—one small word—They said it not—and lo! the wandering beggar!”
In the mean while, during the exile of Oedipus, strife had broken out between the brothers: Eteocles, here represented as the younger, drove out Polynices, and seized the throne; Polynices takes refuge at Argos, where he prepares war against the usurper: an oracle declares that success shall be with that party which Oedipus joins, and a mysterious blessing is pronounced on the land which contains his bones. Thus, the possession of this wild tool of fate—raised up in age to a dread and ghastly consequence—becomes the argument of the play, as his death must become the catastrophe. It is the deep and fierce revenge of Oedipus that makes the passion of the whole. According to a sublime conception, we see before us the physical Oedipus in the lowest state of destitution and misery—in rags, blindness, beggary, utter and abject impotence. But in the moral, Oedipus is all the majesty of a power still royal. The oracle has invested one, so fallen and so wretched in himself, with the power of a god—the power to confer victory on the cause he adopts, prosperity on the land that becomes his tomb. With all the revenge of age, all the grand malignity of hatred, he clings to this shadow and relic of a sceptre. Creon, aware of the oracle, comes to recall him to Thebes. The treacherous kinsman humbles himself before his victim—he is the suppliant of the beggar, who defies and spurns him. Creon avenges himself by seizing on Antigone and Ismene. Nothing can be more dramatically effective than the scene in which these last props of his age are torn from the desolate old man. They are ultimately restored to him by Theseus, whose amiable and lofty character is painted with all the partial glow of colouring which an Athenian poet would naturally lavish on the Athenian Alfred. We are next introduced to Polynices. He, like Creon, has sought Oedipus with the selfish motive of recovering his throne by means of an ally to whom the oracle promises victory. But there is in Polynices the appearance of a true penitence, and a mingled gentleness and majesty in his bearing which interests us in his fate despite his faults, and which were possibly intended by Sophocles to give a new interest to the plot of the “Antigone,” composed and exhibited long before. Oedipus is persuaded by the benevolence of Theseus, and the sweet intercession of Antigone, to admit his son. After a chant from the chorus on the ills of old age351, Polynices enters. He is struck with the wasted and miserable appearance of the old man, and bitterly reproaches his own desertion.
“But since,” he says, with almost a Christian sentiment—
“Since o’er each deed, upon the Olympian throne,Mercy sits joint presider with great Jove,Let her, oh father, also take her standWithin thy soul—and judge me! The past sinsYet have their cure—ah, would they had recall!Why are you voiceless? Speak to me, my father?Turn not away—will you not answer me?” etc.
Oedipus retains his silence in spite of the prayers of his beloved Antigone, and Polynices proceeds to narrate the wrongs he has undergone from Eteocles, and, warming with a young warrior’s ardour, paints the array that he has mustered on his behalf—promises to restore Oedipus to his palace—and, alluding to the oracle, throws himself on his father’s pardon.
Then, at last, outspeaks Oedipus, and from reproach bursts into curses.
“And now you weep; you wept not at these woesUntil you wept your own. But I—I weep not.These things are not for tears, but for Endurance.My son is like his sire—a parricide!Toil, exile, beggary—daily bread doled outFrom stranger hands—these are your gifts, my son!My nurses, guardians—they who share the want,Or earn the bread, are daughters; call them notWomen, for they to me are men. Go to!Thou art not mine—I do disclaim such issue.Behold, the eyes of the avenging GodAre o’er thee! but their ominous light delaysTo blast thee yet. March on—march on—to Thebes!Not—not for thee, the city and the throne;The earth shall first be reddened with thy blood—Thy blood and his, thy foe—thy brother! Curses!Not for the first time summoned to my wrongs—Curses! I call ye back, and make ye nowAllies with this old man!* * * * * *Yea, curses shall possess thy seat and throne,If antique Justice o’er the laws of earthReign with the thunder-god. March on to ruin!Spurned and disowned—the basest of the base—And with thee bear this burden: o’er thine headI pour a prophet’s doom; nor throne nor homeWaits on the sharpness of the levelled spear:Thy very land of refuge hath no welcome;Thine eyes have looked their last on hollow Argos.Death by a brother’s hand—dark fratricide,Murdering thyself a brother—shall be thine.Yea, while I curse thee, on the murky deepOf the primeval hell I call! PrepareThese men their home, dread Tartarus! Goddesses,Whose shrines are round me—ye avenging Furies!And thou, oh Lord of Battle, who hast stirredHate in the souls of brethren, hear me—hear me!—And now, ‘tis past!—enough!—depart and tellThe Theban people, and thy fond allies,What blessings, from his refuge with the Furies,The blind old Oedipus awards his sons!”352
As is usual with Sophocles, the terrific strength of these execrations is immediately followed by a soft and pathetic scene between Antigone and her brother. Though crushed at first by the paternal curse, the spirit of Polynices so far recovers its native courage that he will not listen to the prayer of his sister to desist from the expedition to Thebes, and to turn his armies back to Argos. “What,” he says,
“Lead back an army that could deem I trembled!”
Yet he feels the mournful persuasion that his death is doomed; and a glimpse of the plot of the “Antigone” is opened upon us by his prayer to his sister, that if he perish, they should lay him with due honours in the tomb. The exquisite loveliness of Antigone’s character touches even Polynices, and he departs, saying,
“With the gods rests the balance of our fate;But thee, at least—oh never upon theeMay evil fall! Thou art too good for sorrow!”
The chorus resume their strains, when suddenly thunder is heard, and Oedipus hails the sign that heralds him to the shades. Nothing can be conceived more appalling than this omen. It seems as if Oedipus had been spared but to curse his children and to die. He summons Theseus, tells him that his fate is at hand, and that without a guide he himself will point out the spot where he shall rest. Never may that spot be told—that secret and solemn grave shall be the charm of the land and a defence against its foes. Oedipus then turns round, and the instinct within guides him as he gropes along. His daughters and Theseus follow the blind man, amazed and awed. “Hither,” he says,
“Hither—by this way come—for this way leadsThe unseen conductor of the dead353—and sheWhom shadows call their queen!354Oh light, sweet light,Rayless to me—mine once, and even nowI feel thee palpable, round this worn form,Clinging in last embrace—I go to shroudThe waning life in the eternal Hades!”
Thus the stage is left to the chorus, and the mysterious fate of Oedipus is recited by the Nuntius, in verses which Longinus has not extolled too highly. Oedipus had led the way to a cavern, well known in legendary lore as the spot where Perithous and Theseus had pledged their faith, by the brazen steps which make one of the entrances to the infernal realms;
“Between which place and the Thorician stone—The hollow thorn, and the sepulchral pileHe sat him down.”
And when he had performed libations from the stream, and laved, and decked himself in the funeral robes, Jove thundered beneath the earth, and the old man’s daughters, aghast with horror, fell at his knees with sobs and groans.
“Then o’er them as they wept, his hands he clasped,And ‘Oh my children,’ said he, ‘from this dayYe have no more a father—all of meWithers away—the burden and the toilOf mine old age fall on ye nevermore.Sad travail have ye home for me, and yetLet one thought breathe a balm when I am gone—The thought that none upon the desolate worldLoved you as I did; and in death I leaveA happier life to you!’Thus movingly,With clinging arms and passionate sobs, the threeWept out aloud, until the sorrow grewInto a deadly hush—nor cry nor wailStarts the drear silence of the solitude.Then suddenly a bodiless voice is heardAnd fear came cold on all. They shook with awe,And horror, like a wind, stirred up their hair.Again, the voice—again—‘Ho! Oedipus, Why linger we so long?Come—hither—come.’”
Oedipus then solemnly consigns his children to Theseus, dismisses them, and Theseus alone is left with the old man.
“So groaning we depart—and when once moreWe turned our eyes to gaze, behold, the placeKnew not the man! The king alone was there,Holding his spread hands o’er averted browsAs if to shut from out the quailing gazeThe horrid aspect of some ghastly thingThat nature durst not look on. So we pausedUntil the king awakened from the terror,And to the mother Earth, and high Olympus,Seat of the gods, he breathed awe—stricken prayerBut, how the old man perished, save the king,Mortal can ne’er divine; for bolt, nor levin,Nor blasting tempest from the ocean borne,Was heard or seen; but either was he raptAloft by wings divine, or else the shades,Whose darkness never looked upon the sun,Yawned in grim mercy, and the rent abyssIngulf’d the wanderer from the living world.”
Such, sublime in its wondrous power, its appalling mystery, its dim, religious terror, is the catastrophe of the “Oedipus at Coloneus.” The lines that follow are devoted to the lamentations of the daughters, and appear wholly superfluous, unless we can consider that Sophocles desired to indicate the connexion of the “Oedipus” with the “Antigone,” by informing us that the daughters of Oedipus are to be sent to Thebes at the request of Antigone herself, who hopes, in the tender courage of her nature, that she may perhaps prevent the predicted slaughter of her brothers.
VII. Coming now to the tragedy of “Antigone,” we find the prophecy of Oedipus has been fulfilled—the brothers have fallen by the hand of each other—the Argive army has been defeated—Creon has obtained the tyranny, and interdicts, on the penalty of death, the burial of Polynices, whose corpse remains guarded and unhonoured. Antigone, mindful of her brother’s request to her in their last interview, resolves to brave the edict, and perform those rites so indispensably sacred in the eyes of a Greek. She communicates her resolution to her sister Ismene, whose character, still feeble and commonplace, is a perpetual foil to the heroism of Antigone. She acts upon her resolutions, baffles the vigilant guards, buries the corpse. Creon, on learning that his edict has been secretly disobeyed, orders the remains to be disinterred, and in a second attempt Antigone is discovered, brought before him, and condemned to death. Haemon, the son of Creon, had been affianced to Antigone. On the news of her sentence he seeks Creon, and after a violent scene between the two, which has neither the power nor the dignity common to Sophocles, departs with vague menaces. A short but most exquisite invocation to love from the chorus succeeds, and in this, it may be observed, the chorus express much left not represented in the action—they serve to impress on the spectator all the irresistible effects of the passion which the modern artist would seek to represent in some moving scene between Antigone and Haemon. The heroine herself now passes across the stage on her way to her dreadful doom, which is that of living burial in “the cavern of a rock.” She thus addresses the chorus—
“Ye, of the land wherein my fathers dwelt,Behold me journeying to my latest bourne!Time hath no morrow for these eyes. Black Orcus,Whose court hath room for all, leads my lone steps,E’en while I live, to shadows. Not for meThe nuptial blessing or the marriage hymn:Acheron, receive thy bride!(Chorus.) Honoured and mournedNor struck by slow disease or violent hand,Thy steps glide to the grave! Self-judged, like Freedom,355Thou, above mortals gifted, shalt descendAll living to the shades.Antigone. Methinks I have heard—So legends go—how Phrygian Niobe(Poor stranger) on the heights of SipylusMournfully died. The hard rock, like the tendrilsO’ the ivy, clung and crept unto her heart—Her, nevermore, dissolving into showers,Pale snows desert; and from her sorrowful eyes,As from unfailing founts adown the cliffs,Fall the eternal dews. Like her, the godLulls me to sleep, and into stone!”
Afterward she adds in her beautiful lament, “That she has one comfort —that she shall go to the grave dear to her parents and her brother.”
The grief of Antigone is in perfect harmony with her character—it betrays no repentance, no weakness—it is but the natural sorrow, of youth and womanhood, going down to that grave which had so little of hope in the old Greek religion. In an Antigone on our stage we might have demanded more reference to her lover; but the Grecian heroine names him not, and alludes rather to the loss of the woman’s lot of wedlock than the loss of the individual bridegroom. But it is not for that reason that we are to conclude, with M. Schlegel and others, that the Greek women knew not the sentiment of love. Such a notion, that has obtained an unaccountable belief, I shall hereafter show to be at variance with all the poetry of the Greeks—with their drama itself— with their modes of life—and with the very elements of that human nature, which is everywhere the same. But Sophocles, in the character of Antigone, personifies duty, not passion. It is to this, her leading individuality, that whatever might weaken the pure and statue-like effect of the creation is sacrificed. As she was to her father, so is she to her brother. The sorrows and calamities of her family have so endeared them to her heart that she has room for little else. “Formed,” as she exquisitely says of herself, “to love, not to hate,”356she lives but to devote affections the most sacred to sad and pious tasks, and the last fulfilled, she has done with earth.
When Antigone is borne away, an august personage is presented to us, whose very name to us, who usually read the Oedipus Tyrannus before the Antigone, is the foreteller of omen and doom. As in the Oedipus Tyrannus, Tiresias the soothsayer appears to announce all the terrors that ensue—so now, at the crowning desolation of that fated house, he, the solemn and mysterious surviver of such dark tragedies, is again brought upon the stage. The auguries have been evil—birds battle with each other in the air—the flame will not mount from the sacrificial victim—and the altars and hearths are full of birds and dogs, gathering to their feast on the corpse of Polynices. The soothsayer enjoins Creon not to war against the dead, and to accord the rites of burial to the prince’s body. On the obstinate refusal of Creon, Tiresias utters prophetic maledictions and departs. Creon, whose vehemence of temper is combined with a feeble character, and strongly contrasts the mighty spirit of Oedipus, repents, and is persuaded by the chorus to release Antigone from her living prison, as well as to revoke the edict which denies sepulture to Polynices. He quits the stage for that purpose, and the chorus burst into one of their most picturesque odes, an Invocation to Bacchus, thus inadequately presented to the English reader.
“Oh thou, whom earth by many a title hails,Son of the thunder-god, and wild delightOf the wild Theban maid!Whether on far Italia’s shores obey’d,Or where Eleusis joins thy solemn ritesWith the great mother’s357, in mysterious vales—Bacchus in Bacchic Thebes best known,Thy Thebes, who claims the Thyads as her daughters;Fast by the fields with warriors dragon-sown,And where Ismenus rolls his rapid waters.It saw thee, the smoke,On the horned height—358It saw thee, and brokeWith a leap into light;Where roam Corycian nymphs the glorious mountain,And all melodious flows the old Castalian fountainVocal with echoes wildly glad,The Nysian steeps with ivy clad,And shores with vineyards greenly blooming,Proclaiming, steep to shore,That Bacchus evermoreIs guardian of the race,Where he holds his dwelling-placeWith her359, beneath the breathOf the thunder’s glowing death,In the glare of her glory consuming.Oh now with healing steps along the slopeOf loved Parnassus, or in gliding motion,O’er the far-sounding deep Euboean ocean—Come! for we perish—come!—our Lord and hope!Leader of the stately choirOf the great stars, whose very breath is light,Who dost with hymns inspireVoices, oh youngest god, that sound by night;Come, with thy Maenad throng,Come with the maidens of thy Naxian isle,Who chant their Lord Bacchus—all the whileMaddening, with mystic dance, the solemn midnight long!”
At the close of the chorus the Nuntius enters to announce the catastrophe, and Eurydice, the wife of Creon, disturbed by rumours within her palace, is made an auditor of the narration. Creon and his train, after burying Polynices, repair to the cavern in which Antigone had been immured. They hear loud wailings within “that unconsecrated chamber”—it is the voice of Haemon. Creon recoils—the attendants enter—within the cavern they behold Antigone, who, in the horror of that deathlike solitude, had strangled herself with the zone of her robe; and there was her lover lying beside, his arms clasped around her waist. Creon at length advances, perceives his son, and conjures him to come forth.
“Then, glaring on his father with wild eyes,The son stood dumb, and spat upon his face,And clutched the unnatural sword—the father fled,And, wroth, as with the arm that missed a parent,The wretched man drove home unto his breastThe abhorrent steel; yet ever, while dim senseStruggled within the fast-expiring soul—Feebler, and feebler still, his stiffening armsClung to that virgin form—and every gaspOf his last breath with bloody dews distainedThe cold white cheek that was his pillow. SoLies death embracing death!”360
In the midst of this description, by a fine stroke of art, Euridice, the mother of Haemon, abruptly and silently quits the stage361. When next we hear of her, she has destroyed herself, with her last breath cursing her husband as the murderer of her child. The end of the play leaves Creon the surviver. He himself does not perish, for he himself has never excited our sympathies362. He is punished through his son and wife—they dead, our interest ceases in him, and to add his death to theirs and to that of Antigone would be bathos.
VIII. In the tragedy of “Electra,” the character of the heroine stands out in the boldest contrast to the creation of the Antigone; both are endowed with surpassing majesty and strength of nature—they are loftier than the daughters of men, their very loveliness is of an age when gods were no distant ancestors of kings—when, as in the early sculptors of Pallas, or even of Aphrodite, something of the severe and stern was deemed necessary to the realization of the divine; and the beautiful had not lost the colossal proportions of the sublime. But the strength and heroism of Antigone is derived from love—love, sober, serene, august—but still love. Electra, on the contrary, is supported and exalted above her sex by the might of her hatred. Her father, “the king of men,” foully murdered in his palace —herself compelled to consort with his assassins—to receive from their hands both charity and insult—the adulterous murderer on her father’s throne, and lord of her father’s marriage bed363—her brother a wanderer and an outcast. Such are the thoughts unceasingly before her!—her heart and soul have for years fed upon the bitterness of a resentment, at once impotent and intense, and nature itself has turned to gall. She sees not in Clytemnestra a mother, but the murderess of a father. The doubt and the compunction of the modern Hamlet are unknown to her more masculine spirit. She lives on but in the hope of her brother’s return and of revenge. The play opens with the appearance of Orestes, Pylades, and an old attendant—arrived at break of day at the habitation of the Pelopidae—“reeking with blood” —the seats of Agamemnon. Orestes, who had been saved in childhood by his sister from the designs of Clytemnestra and Aegisthus, has now returned in manhood. It is agreed that, in order to lull all suspicion in the royal adulterers, a false account of the death of Orestes by an accident in the Pythian Games shall be given to Clytemnestra; and Orestes and Pylades themselves are afterward to be introduced in the character of Phocians, bearing the ashes of the supposed dead. Meanwhile the two friends repair to the sepulchre of Agamemnon to offer libations, etc. Electra then appears, indulges her indignant lamentations at her lot, and consoles herself with the hope of her brother’s speedy return.
She is joined by her sister Chrysothemis, who is bearing sepulchral offerings to the tomb of Agamemnon; and in this interview Sophocles, with extraordinary skill and deep knowledge of human nature, contrives to excite our admiration and sympathy for the vehement Electra by contrasting her with the weak and selfish Chrysothemis. Her very bitterness against her mother is made to assume the guise of a solemn duty to her father. Her unfeminine qualities rise into courage and magnanimity—she glories in the unkindness and persecution she meets with from Clytemnestra and Aegisthus—they are proofs of her reverence to the dead. Woman as she is, she is yet the daughter of a king—she cannot submit to a usurper—“she will not, add cowardice to misery.” Chrysothemis informs Electra that on the return of Aegisthus it is resolved to consign her to a vault “where she may chant her woes unheard.” Electra learns the meditated sentence undismayed—she will not moderate her unwelcome wo—“she will not be a traitoress to those she loves.” But a dream has appalled Clytemnestra—Agamemnon has appeared to her as in life. In the vision he seemed to her to fix his sceptre on the soil, whence it sprouted up into a tree that overshadowed the whole land. Disquieted and conscience-stricken, she now sends Chrysothemis with libations to appease the manes of the dead. Electra adjures Chrysothemis not to render such expiations to scatter them to the winds or on the dust—to let them not approach the resting-place of the murdered king. Chrysothemis promises to obey the injunction, and departs. A violent and powerful scene between Clytemnestra and Electra ensues, when the attendant enters (as was agreed on) to announce the death of Orestes. In this recital he portrays the ceremony of the Pythian races in lines justly celebrated, and which, as an animated and faithful picture of an exhibition so renowned, the reader may be pleased to see, even in a feeble and cold translation. Orestes had obtained five victories in the first day—in the second he starts with nine competitors in the chariot-race—an Achaean, a Spartan, two Libyans—he himself with Thessalian steeds—a sixth from Aetolia, a Magnesian, an Enian, an Athenian, and a Boeotian complete the number.
“They took their stand where the appointed judgesHad cast their lots, and ranged the rival cars;Rang out the brazen trump! Away they bound,Cheer the hot steeds and shake the slackened reinsAs with a body the large space is filledWith the huge clangour of the rattling cars:High whirl aloft the dust-clouds; blent togetherEach presses each—and the lash rings—and loudSnort the wild steeds, and from their fiery breath,Along their manes and down the circling wheels,Scatter the flaking foam. Orestes still,Ay, as he swept around the perilous pillarLast in the course, wheel’d in the rushing axle,The left rein curbed—that on the dexter handFlung loose. So on erect the chariots rolled!Sudden the Aenian’s fierce and headlong steedsBroke from the bit—and, as the seventh time nowThe course was circled, on the Libyan carDash’d their wild fronts: then order changed to ruin:Car crashed on car—the wide Crissaean plainWas, sealike, strewn with wrecks: the Athenian saw,Slackened his speed, and, wheeling round the marge,Unscathed and skilful, in the midmost space,Left the wild tumult of that tossing storm.Behind, Orestes, hitherto the last,Had yet kept back his coursers for the close;Now one sole rival left—on, on he flew,And the sharp sound of the impelling scourgeRang in the keen ears of the flying steeds.He nears—he reaches—they are side by sideNow one—the other—by a length the victor.The courses all are past—the wheels erectAll safe—when as the hurrying coursers roundThe fatal pillar dash’d, the wretched boySlackened the left rein; on the column’s edgeCrash’d the frail axle—headlong from the car,Caught and all meshed within the reins he fell;And masterless, the mad steeds raged along!Loud from that mighty multitude aroseA shriek—a shout! But yesterday such deedsTo-day such doom! Now whirled upon the earth,Now his limbs dash’d aloft, they dragged him—thoseWild horses—till all gory from the wheelsReleased—and no man, not his nearest friends,Could in that mangled corpse have traced Orestes.They laid the body on the funeral pyre,And while we speak, the Phocian strangers bear,In a small, brazen, melancholy urn,That handful of cold ashes to which allThe grandeur of the beautiful hath shrunk.Hither they bear him—in his father’s landTo find that heritage—a tomb!”
It is much to be regretted that this passage, so fine in the original, is liable to one great objection—it has no interest as connected with the play, because the audience know that Orestes is not dead; and though the description of the race retains its animation, the report of the catastrophe loses the terror of reality, and appears but a highly-coloured and elaborate falsehood.
The reader will conceive the lamentations of Electra and the fearful joy of Clytemnestra at a narrative by which the one appears to lose a brother and a friend—the other a son and an avenging foe.
Chrysothemis joyfully returns to announce, that by the tomb of Agamemnon she discovers a lock of hair; libations yet moisten the summit of the mound, and flowers of every hue are scattered over the grave. “These,” she thinks, “are signs that Orestes is returned.” Electra, informing her of the fatal news, proposes that they, women as they are, shall attempt the terrible revenge which their brother can no longer execute. When Chrysothemis recoils and refuses, Electra still nurses the fell design. The poet has more than once, and now again with judgment, made us sensible of the mature years of Electra364; she is no passionate, wavering, and inexperienced girl, but the eldest born of the house; the guardian of the childhood of its male heir; unwedded and unloving, no soft matron cares, no tender maiden affections, have unbent the nerves of her stern, fiery, and concentrated soul. Year after year has rolled on to sharpen her hatred—to disgust her with the present—to root her to one bloody memory of the past—to sour and freeze up the gentle thoughts of womanhood—to unsex
“And fill her from the crown to the toe, topfulOf direst cruelty—make thick her bloodStop up the access and passage to remorse,”365
and fit her for one crowning deed, for which alone the daughter of the king of men lives on.
At length the pretended Phocians enter, bearing the supposed ashes of Orestes; the chief of the train addresses himself to Electra, and this is the most dramatic and touching scene in the whole tragedy. When the urn containing, as she believes, the dust of her brother, is placed in the hands of Electra, we can well overleap time and space, and see before us the great actor who brought the relics of his own son upon the stage, and shed no mimic sorrows366—we can well picture the emotions that circle round the vast audience—pity itself being mingled with the consciousness to which the audience alone are admitted, that lamentation will soon be replaced by joy, and that the living Orestes is before his sister. It is by a most subtle and delicate art that Sophocles permits this struggle between present pain and anticipated pleasure, and carries on the passion of the spectators to wait breathlessly the moment when Orestes shall be discovered. We now perceive why the poet at once, in the opening of the play, announced to us the existence and return of Orestes—why he disdained the vulgar source of interest, the gross suspense we should have felt, if we had shared the ignorance of Electra, and not been admitted to the secret we impatiently long to be communicated to her. In this scene, our superiority to Electra, in the knowledge we possess, refines and softens our compassion, blending it with hope. And most beautifully here does Sophocles remove far from us the thought of the hard hatred that hitherto animates the mourner—the strong, proud spirit is melted away—the woman and the sister alone appear. He whom she had loved more dearly than a mother—whom she had nursed, and saved, and prayed for, is “a nothing” in her hands; and the last rites it had not been hers to pay. He had been
“By strangers honoured and by strangers mourned.”
All things had vanished with him—“vanished in a day”—“vanished as by a hurricane”—she is left with her foes alone. “Admit me” (she cries), “to thy refuge—make room for me in thy home.”
In these lamentations, the cold, classic drama seems to warm into actual life. Art, exquisite because invisible, unites us at once with imperishable nature—we are no longer delighted with Poetry—we are weeping with Truth.
At length Orestes reveals himself, and now the plot draws to its catastrophe. Clytemnestra is alone in her house, preparing a caldron for the burial; Electra and the chorus are on the stage; the son—the avenger, is within; suddenly the cries of Clytemnestra are heard. Again—again! Orestes re-enters a parricide!367He retires as Aegisthus is seen approaching; and the adulterous usurper is now presented to us for the first and last time—the crowning victim of the sacrifice. He comes flushed with joy and triumph. He has heard that the dreaded Orestes is no more. Electra entertains him a few moments with words darkly and exultingly ambiguous. He orders the doors to be thrown open, that all Argos and Mycenae may see the remains of his sole rival for the throne. The scene opens. On the threshold (where, with the Greeks, the corpse of the dead was usually set out to view) lies a body covered with a veil or pall. Orestes (the supposed Phocian) stands beside.