Chapter 7

So low, rebuild the fortunes!Chorus.Hush, my children!If ye would save your father’s house, speak softly,Lest some one hear, and, with swift babblement,Inform their ears who rule; whom may I seeFlayed on a fire, with streaming pitch well fed!Orestes.Fear not. The mighty oracle of Loxias,By whose commands I dare the thing I dare,Will not deceive me. He, with shrill-voiced warning,Foretold that freezing pains through my warm liverShould torturing shoot, if backward to avengeMy father’s death, and even as he was slain,To slay the slayers, exasperate at the lossn22Of my so fair possessions. Thus to doHe gave me strict injunction: else myselfWith terrible pains, of filial zeal remiss,Should pay the fine. The evil-minded PowersBeneath the Earthn23would visit me in wrath,A leprous tetter with corrosive toothCreep o’er my skin, and fasten on my flesh,And with white scales the white hair grow, defacingMy bloom of health; and from my father’s tombRipe with avenging ire the ErinnyesShould ruthlessly invade me. Thus he spake,And through the dark his prescient eyebrow arched.n24Sharp arrows through the subterranean night,Shot by dear Shades that through the Infernal hallsRoam peaceless, madness, and vain fear o’ nights,Prick with sharp goads, and chase from street to street,With iron scourge, the meagre-wasted formOf the Fury-hunted sinner; him no shareIn festal cup awaits, or hallowed dropOf pure libation;n25the paternal wrath,Hovering unseen, shall drive him from the altar;Him shall no home receive, no lodgment hold,Unhonoured and unfriended he shall die,Withered and mummied with the hot dry plague.Such oracle divine behoves me trustWith single faith, or, be I faithless, stillThe vengeance must be done. All things concurTo point my purpose; the divine commandMy sore heart-grief for a loved father’s death,The press of want, the spoiling of my goods,The shame to see these noble citizens,Proud Troy’s destroyers, basely bent beneathThe yoke of two weak women: for he hathA woman’s soul: if not, the proof is near.Chorus.Mighty Fates, divinely guidingHuman fortunes to their end,Send this man, with Jove presiding,Whither Justice points the way.Words of bitter hatred dulyPay with bitter words: for thusWith loud cry triumphant shoutingJustice pays the sinner’s debt.Blood for blood and blow for blow,Thou shalt reap as thou didst sow;Age to age with hoary wisdomSpeaketh thus to men.n26STROPHE I.Orestes.O father, wretched father, with what airOf word or deed impelling,Shall I be strong to waft the filial prayerTo thy dim distant dwelling?There where in dark, the dead-man’s day, thou liest,n27Be our sharp wailing(Grace of the dead, and Hades’ honour highest),With thee prevailing!STROPHE II.Chorus.Son, the strong-jawed funeral fireBurns not the mind in the smoky pyre;Sleeps, but not forgets the deadTo show betimes his anger dread.For the dead the living moan,That the murderer may be known.They who mourn for parent slainShall not pour the wail in vain,Bright disclosure shall not lackWho through darkness hunts the track.ANTISTROPHE I.Electra.Hear thou our cries, O father, when for theeThe frequent tear is falling;The wailing pair o’er thy dear tomb to theeFrom their hearts’ depths are calling;The suppliant and the exile at one tombTheir sorrow showering,Helpless and hopeless; mantled round with gloom,Woe overpouring!Chorus.Nay, be calm; the god that speaksWith voice oracular shall attuneThy throat to happier notes;Instead the voice of wail funereal,Soon the jubilant shout shall shakeHis father’s halls with joy, and welcomeThe new friend to his home.STROPHE III.Orestes.If but some Lycian spear, ’neath Ilium’s walls,Had lowly laid thee,A mighty name in the Atridan hallsThou wouldst have made thee!Then hadst thou pitched thy fortune like a star,To son and grandson shining from afar;Beyond the wide-waved sea, the high-heaped moundHad told for everThy feats of battle, and with glory crownedThy high endeavour.ANTISTROPHE II.Chorus.Ah! would that thou hadst found thy endThere, where dear friend fell with friend,And marched with them to Hades dread,The monarch of the awful dead,n28Sitting beside the throne with mightOf them that rule the realms of night;For thou in life wert monarch true,Expert each kingly deed to do,Leading, with thy persuasive rod,Submissive mortals like a god.ANTISTROPHE III.Electra.Thou wert a king, no fate it was for theeTo die as others’Neath Ilium’s walls, far, far beyond the sea,With many brothers.Unworthy was the spear to drink thy blood,Where far Scamander rolls his swirling flood.Justly who slew had drawn themselves thy lot,And perished rather,And thou their timeless fate had welcomed, notThey thine, my father.Chorus.Child, thy grief begetteth visionsBrighter than gold, and overtoppingHyperborean bliss.n29Ah, here the misery rudely riots,With double lash. These twins, their helpSleeps beneath the ground; and theyWho hold dominion here, alas!With unholy sceptre sway.Woe is me! but chiefly woeChildren dear to you!STROPHE IV.Electra.Chiefly to me! Thy words shoot like an arrow,And pierce my marrow.O Jove, O Jove! that sendest from belown30The retribution slow,Against the stout heart and bold hand,That dared defy thy high command.Even though a parent feel the woe,Prepare, prepare the finished blow.STROPHE V.Chorus.Mine be soon to lift the strain,O’er the treacherous slayer slain,To shout with bitter exultation,O’er the murtherous wife’s prostration!Why should I the hate conceal,That spurs my heart with promptest zeal,Bitter thoughts, that gathering grow,Like blustering winds, that beat the plunging vessel’s prow?ANTISTROPHE IV.Orestes.O thou that flourishest, and mak’st to flourish,By thy hands perishAll they that hate me! Cleave the heads of those,That are Orestes’ foes!Pledge the land in peace to live,For injustice justice give;Ye that honoured reign below,n31Furies! prepare the crowning blow.Chorus.Wont hath been, and shall be ever,That when purple gouts bedashThe guilty ground, thenblood doth bloodDemand, and blood for blood shall flow.Fury to Havoc cries; and Havoc,The tainted track of blood pursuing,From age to age works woe.STROPHE VI.Electra.Ye powers of Hades dread!Fell Curses of the Dead,Hear, me when I call!Behold! The Atridan hall,Dashed in dishonoured fall,Lies low and graceless all.O mighty Jove, I seeMine only help in thee!ANTISTROPHE V.Chorus.Thy piteous tale doth make my heartFrom its central hold back start;Hope departs, and blackening FearRules my fancy, while I hear.And if blithe confidence awhilen32Lends my dull faith the feeble smile,Soon, soon departs that glimpse of cheer,And all my map of things is desolate and drear.ANTISTROPHE VI.Orestes.For why! our tale of wrongIn hate of parents strong,Spurneth the flatterer’s arm,Mocketh the soothing charm.The mother gave her childn33This wolfish nature wild;And I from her shall learnTo be thus harsh and stern.STROPHE VII.Chorus.Like a Persian mournern34Singing sorrow’s tale,Like a Cissian wailer,I did weep and wail.O’er my head swift-oaringCame arm on arm amain,The voice of my deploringLike the lashing rain!Sorrow’s rushing riverO’er me flooding spread,Black misfortune’s quiverEmptied on my head!Electra.Mother bold, all-daring,On a bloody bierThine own lord forth bearingSlain without a tear.Alone, unfriended he did goDown to the sunless homes below.STROPHE VIII.Orestes.Thou hast named the dire dishonor;The gods shall send swift judgment on her.By Heaven’s command,By her own son’s hand,Slain she shall lie;And I, having dealt the fated death,Myself shall die!ANTISTROPHE VII.Electra.Be the butcher’s work remembered,Mangled was he, and dismembered;Like vilest clay,She cast him away,With burial base;Mocking the son, the father brandingWith dark disgrace.ANTISTROPHE VIII.Orestes.Thou dost tell too trulyAll my father’s woe.Electra.I, the while, accountedLower than most low,Like a dog, was sunderedFrom my father’s hearth,An evil dog, and wanderedFar from seats of mirth;In my chamber weepingTears of silent woe,From rude gazers keepingGrief too great for show.Hear these words; and hearingNail them in thy soul,With steady purpose nearing,And noiseless pace, thy goal.Go where just wrath leads the way,With stout heart tread the lists to-day.STROPHE IX.Orestes.O father, help thy friends, when helping thee!Electra.My tears, if they can help, shall flow for thee.Chorus.And this whole mingled choir shall raise for theeThe sistered cry: O hear!In light of day appear,And help thy banded friends, to avenge thy foes for thee!ANTISTROPHE IX.Orestes.Now might with might engage, and right with right!Electra.And the gods justly the unjust shall smite.Chorus.n36The tremulous fear creeps o’er my frame to hearThy words; for, though long-dated,The thing divinely fatedShall surely come at last, our cloudy prayers to clear.STROPHE X.Electra.O home-bred pain,Stroke of perdition that refusesConcord with the holy Muses!O burden more than heart can bear,Disease that no physician’s careMakes sound again!ANTISTROPHE X.Orestes.So; even so.No far-sent leech this tetter uses;A home-bred surgery it chooses.I the red strife myself pursue,Pouring this dismal hymn to you,Ye gods below!Chorus.Blessed powers, propitious dwelling,Deep in subterranean darkness,Hear this pious prayer;May all trials end in triumphTo the suppliant pair!Orestes.Father, who died not as a king should die,Give me to rule, as thou didst rule, these halls.Electra.My supplication hear, thy strong help lend me,Scathless myselfn37to work Ægisthus’ harm.Orestes.Thus of the rightful feasts that soothe the ShadesThou too shalt taste,n38and not dishonoured lie,When savoury fumes mount to our country’s dead.Electra.And I my whole of heritage will offer,The blithe libations of my marriage feast.Thy tomb before all tombs I will revere.Orestes.O Earth, relax thy hold, and give my fatherTo see the fight!Electra.O Persephassa,f6sendThe Atridan forth, in beauty clad and strength.Orestes.The bath that drank thy life remember, father.Electra.The close-drawn meshes of thy death remember.Orestes.The chain, not iron-linked, that bound thee, thenWhen to the death the kingly game was hunted.Electra.Then when with treacherous folds they curtained thee.Orestes.Wake, father, wake to avenge thy speechless wrongs!Electra.Lift, father, lift thy dear-loved head sublime!Orestes.Send justice forth to work the just revenge,Like quit with like, and harm with harm repay;Thou wert the conquered then, rise now to conquer.Electra.And hear this last request, my father, lookingOn thy twin chickens nestling by thy tomb;Pity the daughter, the male seed protect,Nor let the name revered of ancient PelopsBe blotted from the Earth! Thou art not dead,Though housed in Hades, while thy children live,For children are as echoes that prolongTheir parents’ fame; the floating cork are theyThat buoyant bear the net deep sunk in the sea.Hear, father—when we weep, we weep for thee,And, saving us, thou savest thine own honour.Chorus.Well spoken both:n39and worthily fall the tearsOn this dear tomb, too long without them. Now,If to the deed thy purpose thou hast buckled,Orestes, try what speed the gods may give thee.n40Orestes.I’ll do the deed. Meanwhile not idly thisI ask of thee—what moved her soul to sendThese late libations, limping remedyFor wounds that cannot heal? A sorry graceTo feed the senseless dead with sacrifice,When we have killed the living. What she meansI scarce may guess, but the amend is lessThan the offence. All ocean poured in offeringFor the warm life-drops of one innocent manIs labour lost. Old truth thus speaks to all.How was it?Chorus.That I well may tell, for IWas with her. Hideous dreams did haunt her sleep;Night-wandering terrors scared her godless breast,That she did send these gifts to soothe the Shades.Orestes.What saw she in her dream?Chorus.She dreamt, she said,She had brought forth a serpent.Orestes.A serpent, say’st thou?Chorus.Ay! and the dragon birth portentous moved,All swaddled like a boy.Orestes.Eager for food, doubtless, the new-born monster?Chorus.The nurturing nipple herself did fearless bare.Orestes.How then? escaped the nipple from the bite?Chorus.The gouted blood did taint the milk, that flowedFrom the wounded paps.Orestes.No idle dream was this.And he who sent it was my father.Chorus.ThenShe from her sleep up started, and cried out,And many lamps, whose splendour night had blinded,Rushed forth, to wait upon their mistress’ word.Straightway she sends us with funereal gifts,A medicinal charm, if medicine beFor griefs like hers!Orestes.Now hear me, Earth profound,And my dear father’s tomb, that so this dreamMay find in me completion! Thus I read it—As left the snake the womb that once hid me,And in the clothes was swathed that once swathed me,And as it sucked the breast that suckled me,And mingled blood with milk once sucked by me,And as she groaned with horror at the sight,Thus it beseems who bore a monstrous birthNo common death to die. I am the serpentShall bite her breast. It is a truthful dream.My seer be thou. Say have I read it well?Chorus.Bravely. Now, for the rest, thy friends instructWhat things to do, and what things to refrain.Orestes.’Tis said in few. Electra, go within,And keep my counsels in wise secrecy;For, as they killed an honourable manDeceitfully, by cunning and deceitThemselves shall find the halter. Thus Apollo,A prophet never known to lie, foretold.Myself will come, like a wayfaring manAccoutred, guest and spear-guest of this house,f7With Pylades, my friend, to the court gates.We both will speak with a Parnassian voice,Aping the Phocian tongue. If then it chance(As seems most like, for this whole house with illsIs sheer possessed)n41that with a welcome greetingNo servant shall receive us, we will waitTill some one pass, and for their churlish waysRate them thus sharply. “Sirs, why dare ye shutInhospitable doors against the stranger,n42Making Ægisthus sin against the gods?”When thus I pass the threshold of his courts,And see him sitting on my father’s throne,When he shall scan me face to face, and seekTo hear my tale; ere he may say the word,Whence is the stranger?I will lay him dead,Dressing him trimly o’er with points of steel.The Fury thus, not scanted of her banquet,Shall drink unmingled blood from Pelops’ veins,The third and crowning cup.n43Now, sister, see to ’tThat all within be ordered, as shall serveMy end most fitly. Ye, when ye shall speak,Speak words of happy omen; teach your tongueBoth to be silent, and to speak in season.For what remains, his present aid I ask,Who laid on my poor wits this bloody task.n44[Exeunt.CHORAL HYMN.STROPHE I.Earth breeds a fearful progeny,n45To man a hostile band.With finny monsters teems the sea,With creeping plagues the land;And winged portents scour mid-air,And flaring lightnings fly,And storms, sublimely coursing, scareThe fields of the silent sky.ANTISTROPHE I.But Earth begets no monster direThan man’s own heart more dreaded,All-venturing woman’s dreadful ire,n46When love to woe is wedded.No mate with mate there gently dwells,There peace and joy depart,Where loveless love triumphant swells,In fearless woman’s heart.STROPHE II.This the light-witted may not know,The wise shall understand,Who hear the tale from age to age,How Thestios’ daughter, wild with rage,n47Lighted the fatal brand,The brand that burned with conscious flashesAt the cry of her new-born son;And, when the brand had burned to ashes,His measured course was run.ANTISTROPHE II.And yet a tale of bloody loveFrom hoary eld I know,How Scylla gay, in gold arrayed,n48The gift of Minos old, betrayedHer father to the foe.Sleeping all careless as he lay,She cut the immortal hair,And Hermes bore his life away,From the bold and blushless fair.STROPHE III.Ah me! not far needs fancy rangeFor tales of harshest wrong:Here, even here, damned wedlock thrives,And lawless loves are strong.Within these halls, where blazes nowNo holy hearth, a bloody vowAgainst her liege lord’s lifeShe vowed; and he, the king divine,Whose look back-drove the bristling line,Bled by a woman’s knife.ANTISTROPHE III.O woman! woman! Lemnos sawn49Your jealous fountains flow,And, when the worst of woes is named,It is a Lemnian woe.From age to age the infected tale,Far echoed by a wandering wail,To East and West shall go;And honor from the threshold hies,On which the doom god-spoken lies;n50Speak I not wisely so?STROPHE IV.Right through the heart shall pierce the blow,When Justice is the sinner’s foe,With the avenging steel;In vain with brief success they strove,Who trampled on the law of Jove,With unregarding heel.ANTISTROPHE IV.Firm is the base of Justice. Fate,With whetted knife, doth eager waitAt hoary Murder’s door;The Fury, with dark-bosomed ire,Doth send the son a mission dire,To clear the parent’s score.EnterOrestes.Orestes.What, ho! dost hear no knocking? boy! within!Is none within, boy? ho! dost hear me callThe third time at thy portal? Is ÆgisthusA man, whose ears are deaf to the strangers’ cry?Servant.(appearing at the door)Enough. I hear thee. Who thou, and whence?Orestes.Tell those within that a poor stranger waitsBefore the gate, bearer of weighty news.Speed thee; night’s dusky chariot swoopeth down,And the dark hour invites the travelling manTo fix his anchor ’neath some friendly roof.Thy mistress I would see, if here a mistressRules, or thy master rather, if a master.For with a man a man may plainly deal,But nice regard for the fine feeling earn51Oft mars the teller’s tale, when women hear.EnterClytemnestra.Clytemnestra.Strangers, speak your desire. Whate’er becomesThis house to give is free to you to share.Hot baths,n52a couch to soothe your travelled toil,Blithe welcoming eyes, and gentle tendance; theseI freely give. If aught beyond ye crave,There’s counsel with my lord. I’ll speak to him.Orestes.I am a stranger come from Phocian Daulis.When I, my burden to my back well saddled,Stood for the road accoutred, lo! a manTo me not known, nor of me knowing more,But seeing only that my feet were boundFor Argos, thus accosted me (his name,I learned, was Strophius the Phocian): Stranger,If Argos be thy purpose, bear this messageFrom me to whom it touches near. OrestesIs dead; charge well thy memory with the tale,And bring me mandate back, if so his friendsWould have him carried to his native home,Or he with us due sepulture shall find,A sojourner for ever. A brazen urnHolds all the remnant of the much-wept man,The ashes of his clay. Thus Strophius spake:And if ye are the friends, whom chiefly griefPricks for his loss, my mission’s done; at leastHis parents will be grieved to hear ’t.Electra.n53Woe’s me!Sheer down we topple from proud height; harsh fateIs ours to wrestle with. O jealous Curse,How dost thou eye us fatal from afar,And with thy well-trimmed bow shoot chiefly thereWhere thou wert least suspect! Thou hast me nowA helpless captive lorn, and reft of allMy trustiest friends. Orestes also gone,Whose feet above the miry slough most sureSeemed planted! Now our revelry of hope,The fair account that should have surgeoned woe,Is audited at nothing!n54Orestes.Would the gods,Where happy hosts, give welcome, I were guestOn a more pleasant tale! The entertainedNo greater joy can know than with good newsTo recreate his entertainer’s ears;But piety forbade, nor faith allowedTo lop the head of truth.Clytemnestra.Thou shalt not fare the worse for thy bad news,Nor be less dear to us. Hadst thou been dumb,Some other tongue had vented the sad tale.But ye have travelled weary leagues to-day,And doubtless need restoring. Take him, boy,With the attendant sharers of his travel,To the men’s chambers. See them well bestowed,And do all things as one, that for neglectShall give account. Meanwhile, our lord shall knowWhat fate hath chanced; his wit and mine shall findWhat solace may be for these news unkind.[Exeunt into the house.Chorus.When, O when, shall we, my sisters,Lift the strong full-throated hymn,To greet Orestes’ triumph? Thou,O sacred Earth, and verge reveredOf this lofty mound, where sleepsThe kingly helmsman of our State,Hear thou, and help! prevail the hourOf suasive wile, and smooth deceit!n55Herald him Hermes—lead him, thouThe nightly courier of the dead,n56Through this black business of the sword!In sooth the host hath housed a grievous guest;For see where comes Orestes’ nurse, all tears!Where goest thou, nurse, beyond our gates to walk,And why walks Grief, an unfee’d page, with thee!EnterNurse.Nurse.My mistress bids me bring Ægisthus quickly,To see the strangers face to face, that heMay of their sad tale more assurance winFrom their own mouths. Herself to us doth showA murky-visaged grief; but in her eyeTwinkles a secret joy, that time hath broughtThe consummation most devoutly wishedBy her—to us and Agamemnon’s houseMost fatal issue, if these news be true.Ægisthus, too, with a light heart will hearThese Phocian tidings. O wretched me! what weightOf mingled woes from sire to son bequeathed,Have the gods burdened us withal! Myself,How many griefs have shaken my old heart;But this o’ertops them all! The rest I bore,As best I might, with patience: but Orestes,My own dear boy, my daily, hourly care,Whom from his mother’s womb these breasts did suckle—How often did I rise o’ nights, and walkedFrom room to room, to soothe his baby cries;But all my nursing now, and all my caresFall fruitless. ’Tis a pithless thing a child,No forest whelp so helpless; one must evenWait on its humour, as the hour may bring.No voice it has to speak its fitful wants,When hunger, thirst, or Nature’s need commands.The infant’s belly asks no counsel. IWas a wise prophetess to all his wants,Though sometimes false, as others are. I wasNurse to the child, and fuller to its clothes,And both to one sad end. Alack the day!This double trade with little fruit I plied,What time I nursed Orestes for his father;For he is dead, and I must live to hear it.But I must go, and glad his heart, who livesPlague of this house, with news that make me weep.Chorus.What say’st thou, Nurse?howshall thy master come?Nurse.Howsay’st thou? how shall I receive the question?Chorus.Alone, I mean, or with his guards?Nurse.She saysHis spearmen shall attend him.Chorus.Not so, Nurse!If thou dost hate our most hate-worthy master,Tell him to come alone, without delay,To hear glad tidings with exulting heart.The bearer of a tale can make it wearWhat face he pleases.n57Nurse.Well! if thou mean’st well,Perhaps—Chorus.Perhaps that Jove may make the breezeYet veer to us.Nurse.How so? Our only hope,Orestes, is no more.Chorus.Softly, good Nurse;Thou art an evil prophet, if thou say’st so.Nurse.How? hast thou news to a different tune?Chorus.Go! go!Mind thine own business, and the gods will doWhat thing they will do.Nurse.Well! I’ll do thy bidding!The gods lead all things to a fair conclusion!CHORAL HYMN.n58STROPHE I.O thou, o’er all Olympian gods that be,Supremely swaying,With words of wisdom, when I pray to thee,Inspire my praying.We can but pray; to do, O Jove, is thine,Thou great director;Of him within, who works thy will divine,Be thou protector!Him raise, the orphaned son whom thou dost seeIn sheer prostration;Twofold and threefold he shall find from theeJust compensation.ANTISTROPHE I.But hard the toil. Yoked to the car of Fate,When harshly driven,O rein him thou! his goaded speed abateWisely from Heaven!Jove tempers all, steadies all things that reel;When wildly swervethFrom the safe line life’s burning chariot wheel,His hand preserveth.Ye gods, that guard these gold-stored halls, this dayReceive the claimant,Who comes, that old Wrong to young Right may payA purple payment.STROPHE II.Blood begets blood; but, when this blow shall fall,O thou, whose dwellingIs Delphi’s fuming throat, may this be all!Of red blood, wellingFrom guilty veins, enough. Henceforth may joyLook from the eyes of the Atridan boy,Discerning clearlyFrom his ancestral halls the clouds unrolled,That hung so drearly.ANTISTROPHE II.And thou, O Maia’s son,f8fair breezes blow,The full sail swelling!Cunning art thou through murky ways to go,To Death’s dim dwelling;Dark are the doings of the gods; and we,When they are clearest shown, but dimly see;Yet faith will followWhere Hermes leads, the leader of the dead,And thou, Apollo.EPODE.Crown ye the deed; then will I freely pourThe blithe libation,And, with pure offerings, cleanse the Atridan floorFrom desecration!Then with my prosperous hymn the lyre shall blendIts kindly chorus,And Argos shall be glad, and every friendRejoice before us!Gird thee with manhood, boy; though hard to do,It is thy father’s work; to him be true.And, when she cries—Son, wilt thou kill thyMother?Cry—Father, Father! and with that name smotherThe rising ruth. As Perseus, when he slewThe stony Dread,f9was stony-hearted, doThy mission stoutly;For him below, and her above,f10pursueThis work devoutly.The gods by thee, in righteous judgment, showTheir grace untender!Thou to the man, that dealt the deathful blow,Like death shalt render.EnterÆgisthus.Ægisthus.Not uninvited come I, having heardA rumour strange, by certain strangers brought,No pleasant tale—Orestes’ death. In sooth,A heavy fear-distilling sorrow this,More than a house may bear, whose wounds yet bleed,And ulcerate from the fangs of fate. But say,Is this a fact that looks us in the face,Or startling words of woman’s fears begotten,That shoot like meteors through the air, and die?What proof, ye maids, what proof?Chorus.Our ears have heard.But go within; thyself shalt see the man;Try well the teller, e’er thou trust the tale.Ægisthus.I’ll scan him well, and prove him close, if heHimself was at the death, or but repeatFrom blind report the news another told.It will go hard, if idle breath cheat me.My eyes are in my head, and I can see.[Exit into the house.Chorus.Jove! great Jove! What shall I say?How with pious fervour pray,That from thee the answer fairBe wafted to my friendly prayer?Now the keen-edged axe shall strike,With a life-destroying blow;Now, or, plunged in deep perdition,Agamemnon’s house sinks low,Or the hearth with hope this dayShall blaze, through all the ransomed halls,And the son his father’s wealthShall win, and with his sceptre sway.

So low, rebuild the fortunes!

Chorus.

Hush, my children!

If ye would save your father’s house, speak softly,

Lest some one hear, and, with swift babblement,

Inform their ears who rule; whom may I see

Flayed on a fire, with streaming pitch well fed!

Orestes.

Fear not. The mighty oracle of Loxias,

By whose commands I dare the thing I dare,

Will not deceive me. He, with shrill-voiced warning,

Foretold that freezing pains through my warm liver

Should torturing shoot, if backward to avenge

My father’s death, and even as he was slain,

To slay the slayers, exasperate at the lossn22

Of my so fair possessions. Thus to do

He gave me strict injunction: else myself

With terrible pains, of filial zeal remiss,

Should pay the fine. The evil-minded Powers

Beneath the Earthn23would visit me in wrath,

A leprous tetter with corrosive tooth

Creep o’er my skin, and fasten on my flesh,

And with white scales the white hair grow, defacing

My bloom of health; and from my father’s tomb

Ripe with avenging ire the Erinnyes

Should ruthlessly invade me. Thus he spake,

And through the dark his prescient eyebrow arched.n24

Sharp arrows through the subterranean night,

Shot by dear Shades that through the Infernal halls

Roam peaceless, madness, and vain fear o’ nights,

Prick with sharp goads, and chase from street to street,

With iron scourge, the meagre-wasted form

Of the Fury-hunted sinner; him no share

In festal cup awaits, or hallowed drop

Of pure libation;n25the paternal wrath,

Hovering unseen, shall drive him from the altar;

Him shall no home receive, no lodgment hold,

Unhonoured and unfriended he shall die,

Withered and mummied with the hot dry plague.

Such oracle divine behoves me trust

With single faith, or, be I faithless, still

The vengeance must be done. All things concur

To point my purpose; the divine command

My sore heart-grief for a loved father’s death,

The press of want, the spoiling of my goods,

The shame to see these noble citizens,

Proud Troy’s destroyers, basely bent beneath

The yoke of two weak women: for he hath

A woman’s soul: if not, the proof is near.

Chorus.

Mighty Fates, divinely guiding

Human fortunes to their end,

Send this man, with Jove presiding,

Whither Justice points the way.

Words of bitter hatred duly

Pay with bitter words: for thus

With loud cry triumphant shouting

Justice pays the sinner’s debt.

Blood for blood and blow for blow,

Thou shalt reap as thou didst sow;

Age to age with hoary wisdom

Speaketh thus to men.n26

STROPHE I.Orestes.

O father, wretched father, with what air

Of word or deed impelling,

Shall I be strong to waft the filial prayer

To thy dim distant dwelling?

There where in dark, the dead-man’s day, thou liest,n27

Be our sharp wailing

(Grace of the dead, and Hades’ honour highest),

With thee prevailing!

STROPHE II.Chorus.

Son, the strong-jawed funeral fire

Burns not the mind in the smoky pyre;

Sleeps, but not forgets the dead

To show betimes his anger dread.

For the dead the living moan,

That the murderer may be known.

They who mourn for parent slain

Shall not pour the wail in vain,

Bright disclosure shall not lack

Who through darkness hunts the track.

ANTISTROPHE I.Electra.

Hear thou our cries, O father, when for thee

The frequent tear is falling;

The wailing pair o’er thy dear tomb to thee

From their hearts’ depths are calling;

The suppliant and the exile at one tomb

Their sorrow showering,

Helpless and hopeless; mantled round with gloom,

Woe overpouring!

Chorus.

Nay, be calm; the god that speaks

With voice oracular shall attune

Thy throat to happier notes;

Instead the voice of wail funereal,

Soon the jubilant shout shall shake

His father’s halls with joy, and welcome

The new friend to his home.

STROPHE III.Orestes.

If but some Lycian spear, ’neath Ilium’s walls,

Had lowly laid thee,

A mighty name in the Atridan halls

Thou wouldst have made thee!

Then hadst thou pitched thy fortune like a star,

To son and grandson shining from afar;

Beyond the wide-waved sea, the high-heaped mound

Had told for ever

Thy feats of battle, and with glory crowned

Thy high endeavour.

ANTISTROPHE II.Chorus.

Ah! would that thou hadst found thy end

There, where dear friend fell with friend,

And marched with them to Hades dread,

The monarch of the awful dead,n28

Sitting beside the throne with might

Of them that rule the realms of night;

For thou in life wert monarch true,

Expert each kingly deed to do,

Leading, with thy persuasive rod,

Submissive mortals like a god.

ANTISTROPHE III.Electra.

Thou wert a king, no fate it was for thee

To die as others

’Neath Ilium’s walls, far, far beyond the sea,

With many brothers.

Unworthy was the spear to drink thy blood,

Where far Scamander rolls his swirling flood.

Justly who slew had drawn themselves thy lot,

And perished rather,

And thou their timeless fate had welcomed, not

They thine, my father.

Chorus.

Child, thy grief begetteth visions

Brighter than gold, and overtopping

Hyperborean bliss.n29

Ah, here the misery rudely riots,

With double lash. These twins, their help

Sleeps beneath the ground; and they

Who hold dominion here, alas!

With unholy sceptre sway.

Woe is me! but chiefly woe

Children dear to you!

STROPHE IV.Electra.

Chiefly to me! Thy words shoot like an arrow,

And pierce my marrow.

O Jove, O Jove! that sendest from belown30

The retribution slow,

Against the stout heart and bold hand,

That dared defy thy high command.

Even though a parent feel the woe,

Prepare, prepare the finished blow.

STROPHE V.Chorus.

Mine be soon to lift the strain,

O’er the treacherous slayer slain,

To shout with bitter exultation,

O’er the murtherous wife’s prostration!

Why should I the hate conceal,

That spurs my heart with promptest zeal,

Bitter thoughts, that gathering grow,

Like blustering winds, that beat the plunging vessel’s prow?

ANTISTROPHE IV.Orestes.

O thou that flourishest, and mak’st to flourish,

By thy hands perish

All they that hate me! Cleave the heads of those,

That are Orestes’ foes!

Pledge the land in peace to live,

For injustice justice give;

Ye that honoured reign below,n31

Furies! prepare the crowning blow.

Chorus.

Wont hath been, and shall be ever,

That when purple gouts bedash

The guilty ground, thenblood doth blood

Demand, and blood for blood shall flow.

Fury to Havoc cries; and Havoc,

The tainted track of blood pursuing,

From age to age works woe.

STROPHE VI.Electra.

Ye powers of Hades dread!

Fell Curses of the Dead,

Hear, me when I call!

Behold! The Atridan hall,

Dashed in dishonoured fall,

Lies low and graceless all.

O mighty Jove, I see

Mine only help in thee!

ANTISTROPHE V.Chorus.

Thy piteous tale doth make my heart

From its central hold back start;

Hope departs, and blackening Fear

Rules my fancy, while I hear.

And if blithe confidence awhilen32

Lends my dull faith the feeble smile,

Soon, soon departs that glimpse of cheer,

And all my map of things is desolate and drear.

ANTISTROPHE VI.Orestes.

For why! our tale of wrong

In hate of parents strong,

Spurneth the flatterer’s arm,

Mocketh the soothing charm.

The mother gave her childn33

This wolfish nature wild;

And I from her shall learn

To be thus harsh and stern.

STROPHE VII.Chorus.

Like a Persian mournern34

Singing sorrow’s tale,

Like a Cissian wailer,

I did weep and wail.

O’er my head swift-oaring

Came arm on arm amain,

The voice of my deploring

Like the lashing rain!

Sorrow’s rushing river

O’er me flooding spread,

Black misfortune’s quiver

Emptied on my head!

Electra.

Mother bold, all-daring,

On a bloody bier

Thine own lord forth bearing

Slain without a tear.

Alone, unfriended he did go

Down to the sunless homes below.

STROPHE VIII.Orestes.

Thou hast named the dire dishonor;

The gods shall send swift judgment on her.

By Heaven’s command,

By her own son’s hand,

Slain she shall lie;

And I, having dealt the fated death,

Myself shall die!

ANTISTROPHE VII.Electra.

Be the butcher’s work remembered,

Mangled was he, and dismembered;

Like vilest clay,

She cast him away,

With burial base;

Mocking the son, the father branding

With dark disgrace.

ANTISTROPHE VIII.Orestes.

Thou dost tell too truly

All my father’s woe.

Electra.

I, the while, accounted

Lower than most low,

Like a dog, was sundered

From my father’s hearth,

An evil dog, and wandered

Far from seats of mirth;

In my chamber weeping

Tears of silent woe,

From rude gazers keeping

Grief too great for show.

Hear these words; and hearing

Nail them in thy soul,

With steady purpose nearing,

And noiseless pace, thy goal.

Go where just wrath leads the way,

With stout heart tread the lists to-day.

STROPHE IX.Orestes.

O father, help thy friends, when helping thee!

Electra.

My tears, if they can help, shall flow for thee.

Chorus.

And this whole mingled choir shall raise for thee

The sistered cry: O hear!

In light of day appear,

And help thy banded friends, to avenge thy foes for thee!

ANTISTROPHE IX.Orestes.

Now might with might engage, and right with right!

Electra.

And the gods justly the unjust shall smite.

Chorus.n36

The tremulous fear creeps o’er my frame to hear

Thy words; for, though long-dated,

The thing divinely fated

Shall surely come at last, our cloudy prayers to clear.

STROPHE X.Electra.

O home-bred pain,

Stroke of perdition that refuses

Concord with the holy Muses!

O burden more than heart can bear,

Disease that no physician’s care

Makes sound again!

ANTISTROPHE X.Orestes.

So; even so.

No far-sent leech this tetter uses;

A home-bred surgery it chooses.

I the red strife myself pursue,

Pouring this dismal hymn to you,

Ye gods below!

Chorus.

Blessed powers, propitious dwelling,

Deep in subterranean darkness,

Hear this pious prayer;

May all trials end in triumph

To the suppliant pair!

Orestes.

Father, who died not as a king should die,

Give me to rule, as thou didst rule, these halls.

Electra.

My supplication hear, thy strong help lend me,

Scathless myselfn37to work Ægisthus’ harm.

Orestes.

Thus of the rightful feasts that soothe the Shades

Thou too shalt taste,n38and not dishonoured lie,

When savoury fumes mount to our country’s dead.

Electra.

And I my whole of heritage will offer,

The blithe libations of my marriage feast.

Thy tomb before all tombs I will revere.

Orestes.

O Earth, relax thy hold, and give my father

To see the fight!

Electra.

O Persephassa,f6send

The Atridan forth, in beauty clad and strength.

Orestes.

The bath that drank thy life remember, father.

Electra.

The close-drawn meshes of thy death remember.

Orestes.

The chain, not iron-linked, that bound thee, then

When to the death the kingly game was hunted.

Electra.

Then when with treacherous folds they curtained thee.

Orestes.

Wake, father, wake to avenge thy speechless wrongs!

Electra.

Lift, father, lift thy dear-loved head sublime!

Orestes.

Send justice forth to work the just revenge,

Like quit with like, and harm with harm repay;

Thou wert the conquered then, rise now to conquer.

Electra.

And hear this last request, my father, looking

On thy twin chickens nestling by thy tomb;

Pity the daughter, the male seed protect,

Nor let the name revered of ancient Pelops

Be blotted from the Earth! Thou art not dead,

Though housed in Hades, while thy children live,

For children are as echoes that prolong

Their parents’ fame; the floating cork are they

That buoyant bear the net deep sunk in the sea.

Hear, father—when we weep, we weep for thee,

And, saving us, thou savest thine own honour.

Chorus.

Well spoken both:n39and worthily fall the tears

On this dear tomb, too long without them. Now,

If to the deed thy purpose thou hast buckled,

Orestes, try what speed the gods may give thee.n40

Orestes.

I’ll do the deed. Meanwhile not idly this

I ask of thee—what moved her soul to send

These late libations, limping remedy

For wounds that cannot heal? A sorry grace

To feed the senseless dead with sacrifice,

When we have killed the living. What she means

I scarce may guess, but the amend is less

Than the offence. All ocean poured in offering

For the warm life-drops of one innocent man

Is labour lost. Old truth thus speaks to all.

How was it?

Chorus.

That I well may tell, for I

Was with her. Hideous dreams did haunt her sleep;

Night-wandering terrors scared her godless breast,

That she did send these gifts to soothe the Shades.

Orestes.

What saw she in her dream?

Chorus.

She dreamt, she said,

She had brought forth a serpent.

Orestes.

A serpent, say’st thou?

Chorus.

Ay! and the dragon birth portentous moved,

All swaddled like a boy.

Orestes.

Eager for food, doubtless, the new-born monster?

Chorus.

The nurturing nipple herself did fearless bare.

Orestes.

How then? escaped the nipple from the bite?

Chorus.

The gouted blood did taint the milk, that flowed

From the wounded paps.

Orestes.

No idle dream was this.

And he who sent it was my father.

Chorus.

Then

She from her sleep up started, and cried out,

And many lamps, whose splendour night had blinded,

Rushed forth, to wait upon their mistress’ word.

Straightway she sends us with funereal gifts,

A medicinal charm, if medicine be

For griefs like hers!

Orestes.

Now hear me, Earth profound,

And my dear father’s tomb, that so this dream

May find in me completion! Thus I read it—

As left the snake the womb that once hid me,

And in the clothes was swathed that once swathed me,

And as it sucked the breast that suckled me,

And mingled blood with milk once sucked by me,

And as she groaned with horror at the sight,

Thus it beseems who bore a monstrous birth

No common death to die. I am the serpent

Shall bite her breast. It is a truthful dream.

My seer be thou. Say have I read it well?

Chorus.

Bravely. Now, for the rest, thy friends instruct

What things to do, and what things to refrain.

Orestes.

’Tis said in few. Electra, go within,

And keep my counsels in wise secrecy;

For, as they killed an honourable man

Deceitfully, by cunning and deceit

Themselves shall find the halter. Thus Apollo,

A prophet never known to lie, foretold.

Myself will come, like a wayfaring man

Accoutred, guest and spear-guest of this house,f7

With Pylades, my friend, to the court gates.

We both will speak with a Parnassian voice,

Aping the Phocian tongue. If then it chance

(As seems most like, for this whole house with ills

Is sheer possessed)n41that with a welcome greeting

No servant shall receive us, we will wait

Till some one pass, and for their churlish ways

Rate them thus sharply. “Sirs, why dare ye shut

Inhospitable doors against the stranger,n42

Making Ægisthus sin against the gods?”

When thus I pass the threshold of his courts,

And see him sitting on my father’s throne,

When he shall scan me face to face, and seek

To hear my tale; ere he may say the word,

Whence is the stranger?I will lay him dead,

Dressing him trimly o’er with points of steel.

The Fury thus, not scanted of her banquet,

Shall drink unmingled blood from Pelops’ veins,

The third and crowning cup.n43Now, sister, see to ’t

That all within be ordered, as shall serve

My end most fitly. Ye, when ye shall speak,

Speak words of happy omen; teach your tongue

Both to be silent, and to speak in season.

For what remains, his present aid I ask,

Who laid on my poor wits this bloody task.n44[Exeunt.

CHORAL HYMN.STROPHE I.

Earth breeds a fearful progeny,n45

To man a hostile band.

With finny monsters teems the sea,

With creeping plagues the land;

And winged portents scour mid-air,

And flaring lightnings fly,

And storms, sublimely coursing, scare

The fields of the silent sky.

ANTISTROPHE I.

But Earth begets no monster dire

Than man’s own heart more dreaded,

All-venturing woman’s dreadful ire,n46

When love to woe is wedded.

No mate with mate there gently dwells,

There peace and joy depart,

Where loveless love triumphant swells,

In fearless woman’s heart.

STROPHE II.

This the light-witted may not know,

The wise shall understand,

Who hear the tale from age to age,

How Thestios’ daughter, wild with rage,n47

Lighted the fatal brand,

The brand that burned with conscious flashes

At the cry of her new-born son;

And, when the brand had burned to ashes,

His measured course was run.

ANTISTROPHE II.

And yet a tale of bloody love

From hoary eld I know,

How Scylla gay, in gold arrayed,n48

The gift of Minos old, betrayed

Her father to the foe.

Sleeping all careless as he lay,

She cut the immortal hair,

And Hermes bore his life away,

From the bold and blushless fair.

STROPHE III.

Ah me! not far needs fancy range

For tales of harshest wrong:

Here, even here, damned wedlock thrives,

And lawless loves are strong.

Within these halls, where blazes now

No holy hearth, a bloody vow

Against her liege lord’s life

She vowed; and he, the king divine,

Whose look back-drove the bristling line,

Bled by a woman’s knife.

ANTISTROPHE III.

O woman! woman! Lemnos sawn49

Your jealous fountains flow,

And, when the worst of woes is named,

It is a Lemnian woe.

From age to age the infected tale,

Far echoed by a wandering wail,

To East and West shall go;

And honor from the threshold hies,

On which the doom god-spoken lies;n50

Speak I not wisely so?

STROPHE IV.

Right through the heart shall pierce the blow,

When Justice is the sinner’s foe,

With the avenging steel;

In vain with brief success they strove,

Who trampled on the law of Jove,

With unregarding heel.

ANTISTROPHE IV.

Firm is the base of Justice. Fate,

With whetted knife, doth eager wait

At hoary Murder’s door;

The Fury, with dark-bosomed ire,

Doth send the son a mission dire,

To clear the parent’s score.

EnterOrestes.

Orestes.

What, ho! dost hear no knocking? boy! within!

Is none within, boy? ho! dost hear me call

The third time at thy portal? Is Ægisthus

A man, whose ears are deaf to the strangers’ cry?

Servant.(appearing at the door)

Enough. I hear thee. Who thou, and whence?

Orestes.

Tell those within that a poor stranger waits

Before the gate, bearer of weighty news.

Speed thee; night’s dusky chariot swoopeth down,

And the dark hour invites the travelling man

To fix his anchor ’neath some friendly roof.

Thy mistress I would see, if here a mistress

Rules, or thy master rather, if a master.

For with a man a man may plainly deal,

But nice regard for the fine feeling earn51

Oft mars the teller’s tale, when women hear.

EnterClytemnestra.

Clytemnestra.

Strangers, speak your desire. Whate’er becomes

This house to give is free to you to share.

Hot baths,n52a couch to soothe your travelled toil,

Blithe welcoming eyes, and gentle tendance; these

I freely give. If aught beyond ye crave,

There’s counsel with my lord. I’ll speak to him.

Orestes.

I am a stranger come from Phocian Daulis.

When I, my burden to my back well saddled,

Stood for the road accoutred, lo! a man

To me not known, nor of me knowing more,

But seeing only that my feet were bound

For Argos, thus accosted me (his name,

I learned, was Strophius the Phocian): Stranger,

If Argos be thy purpose, bear this message

From me to whom it touches near. Orestes

Is dead; charge well thy memory with the tale,

And bring me mandate back, if so his friends

Would have him carried to his native home,

Or he with us due sepulture shall find,

A sojourner for ever. A brazen urn

Holds all the remnant of the much-wept man,

The ashes of his clay. Thus Strophius spake:

And if ye are the friends, whom chiefly grief

Pricks for his loss, my mission’s done; at least

His parents will be grieved to hear ’t.

Electra.n53

Woe’s me!

Sheer down we topple from proud height; harsh fate

Is ours to wrestle with. O jealous Curse,

How dost thou eye us fatal from afar,

And with thy well-trimmed bow shoot chiefly there

Where thou wert least suspect! Thou hast me now

A helpless captive lorn, and reft of all

My trustiest friends. Orestes also gone,

Whose feet above the miry slough most sure

Seemed planted! Now our revelry of hope,

The fair account that should have surgeoned woe,

Is audited at nothing!n54

Orestes.

Would the gods,

Where happy hosts, give welcome, I were guest

On a more pleasant tale! The entertained

No greater joy can know than with good news

To recreate his entertainer’s ears;

But piety forbade, nor faith allowed

To lop the head of truth.

Clytemnestra.

Thou shalt not fare the worse for thy bad news,

Nor be less dear to us. Hadst thou been dumb,

Some other tongue had vented the sad tale.

But ye have travelled weary leagues to-day,

And doubtless need restoring. Take him, boy,

With the attendant sharers of his travel,

To the men’s chambers. See them well bestowed,

And do all things as one, that for neglect

Shall give account. Meanwhile, our lord shall know

What fate hath chanced; his wit and mine shall find

What solace may be for these news unkind.

[Exeunt into the house.

Chorus.

When, O when, shall we, my sisters,

Lift the strong full-throated hymn,

To greet Orestes’ triumph? Thou,

O sacred Earth, and verge revered

Of this lofty mound, where sleeps

The kingly helmsman of our State,

Hear thou, and help! prevail the hour

Of suasive wile, and smooth deceit!n55

Herald him Hermes—lead him, thou

The nightly courier of the dead,n56

Through this black business of the sword!

In sooth the host hath housed a grievous guest;

For see where comes Orestes’ nurse, all tears!

Where goest thou, nurse, beyond our gates to walk,

And why walks Grief, an unfee’d page, with thee!

EnterNurse.

Nurse.

My mistress bids me bring Ægisthus quickly,

To see the strangers face to face, that he

May of their sad tale more assurance win

From their own mouths. Herself to us doth show

A murky-visaged grief; but in her eye

Twinkles a secret joy, that time hath brought

The consummation most devoutly wished

By her—to us and Agamemnon’s house

Most fatal issue, if these news be true.

Ægisthus, too, with a light heart will hear

These Phocian tidings. O wretched me! what weight

Of mingled woes from sire to son bequeathed,

Have the gods burdened us withal! Myself,

How many griefs have shaken my old heart;

But this o’ertops them all! The rest I bore,

As best I might, with patience: but Orestes,

My own dear boy, my daily, hourly care,

Whom from his mother’s womb these breasts did suckle—

How often did I rise o’ nights, and walked

From room to room, to soothe his baby cries;

But all my nursing now, and all my cares

Fall fruitless. ’Tis a pithless thing a child,

No forest whelp so helpless; one must even

Wait on its humour, as the hour may bring.

No voice it has to speak its fitful wants,

When hunger, thirst, or Nature’s need commands.

The infant’s belly asks no counsel. I

Was a wise prophetess to all his wants,

Though sometimes false, as others are. I was

Nurse to the child, and fuller to its clothes,

And both to one sad end. Alack the day!

This double trade with little fruit I plied,

What time I nursed Orestes for his father;

For he is dead, and I must live to hear it.

But I must go, and glad his heart, who lives

Plague of this house, with news that make me weep.

Chorus.

What say’st thou, Nurse?howshall thy master come?

Nurse.

Howsay’st thou? how shall I receive the question?

Chorus.

Alone, I mean, or with his guards?

Nurse.

She says

His spearmen shall attend him.

Chorus.

Not so, Nurse!

If thou dost hate our most hate-worthy master,

Tell him to come alone, without delay,

To hear glad tidings with exulting heart.

The bearer of a tale can make it wear

What face he pleases.n57

Nurse.

Well! if thou mean’st well,

Perhaps—

Chorus.

Perhaps that Jove may make the breeze

Yet veer to us.

Nurse.

How so? Our only hope,

Orestes, is no more.

Chorus.

Softly, good Nurse;

Thou art an evil prophet, if thou say’st so.

Nurse.

How? hast thou news to a different tune?

Chorus.

Go! go!

Mind thine own business, and the gods will do

What thing they will do.

Nurse.

Well! I’ll do thy bidding!

The gods lead all things to a fair conclusion!

CHORAL HYMN.n58STROPHE I.

O thou, o’er all Olympian gods that be,

Supremely swaying,

With words of wisdom, when I pray to thee,

Inspire my praying.

We can but pray; to do, O Jove, is thine,

Thou great director;

Of him within, who works thy will divine,

Be thou protector!

Him raise, the orphaned son whom thou dost see

In sheer prostration;

Twofold and threefold he shall find from thee

Just compensation.

ANTISTROPHE I.

But hard the toil. Yoked to the car of Fate,

When harshly driven,

O rein him thou! his goaded speed abate

Wisely from Heaven!

Jove tempers all, steadies all things that reel;

When wildly swerveth

From the safe line life’s burning chariot wheel,

His hand preserveth.

Ye gods, that guard these gold-stored halls, this day

Receive the claimant,

Who comes, that old Wrong to young Right may pay

A purple payment.

STROPHE II.

Blood begets blood; but, when this blow shall fall,

O thou, whose dwelling

Is Delphi’s fuming throat, may this be all!

Of red blood, welling

From guilty veins, enough. Henceforth may joy

Look from the eyes of the Atridan boy,

Discerning clearly

From his ancestral halls the clouds unrolled,

That hung so drearly.

ANTISTROPHE II.

And thou, O Maia’s son,f8fair breezes blow,

The full sail swelling!

Cunning art thou through murky ways to go,

To Death’s dim dwelling;

Dark are the doings of the gods; and we,

When they are clearest shown, but dimly see;

Yet faith will follow

Where Hermes leads, the leader of the dead,

And thou, Apollo.

EPODE.

Crown ye the deed; then will I freely pour

The blithe libation,

And, with pure offerings, cleanse the Atridan floor

From desecration!

Then with my prosperous hymn the lyre shall blend

Its kindly chorus,

And Argos shall be glad, and every friend

Rejoice before us!

Gird thee with manhood, boy; though hard to do,

It is thy father’s work; to him be true.

And, when she cries—Son, wilt thou kill thyMother?

Cry—Father, Father! and with that name smother

The rising ruth. As Perseus, when he slew

The stony Dread,f9was stony-hearted, do

Thy mission stoutly;

For him below, and her above,f10pursue

This work devoutly.

The gods by thee, in righteous judgment, show

Their grace untender!

Thou to the man, that dealt the deathful blow,

Like death shalt render.

EnterÆgisthus.

Ægisthus.

Not uninvited come I, having heard

A rumour strange, by certain strangers brought,

No pleasant tale—Orestes’ death. In sooth,

A heavy fear-distilling sorrow this,

More than a house may bear, whose wounds yet bleed,

And ulcerate from the fangs of fate. But say,

Is this a fact that looks us in the face,

Or startling words of woman’s fears begotten,

That shoot like meteors through the air, and die?

What proof, ye maids, what proof?

Chorus.

Our ears have heard.

But go within; thyself shalt see the man;

Try well the teller, e’er thou trust the tale.

Ægisthus.

I’ll scan him well, and prove him close, if he

Himself was at the death, or but repeat

From blind report the news another told.

It will go hard, if idle breath cheat me.

My eyes are in my head, and I can see.

[Exit into the house.

Chorus.

Jove! great Jove! What shall I say?

How with pious fervour pray,

That from thee the answer fair

Be wafted to my friendly prayer?

Now the keen-edged axe shall strike,

With a life-destroying blow;

Now, or, plunged in deep perdition,

Agamemnon’s house sinks low,

Or the hearth with hope this day

Shall blaze, through all the ransomed halls,

And the son his father’s wealth

Shall win, and with his sceptre sway.


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