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    The Complete Aeschylus, Volume I: The Oresteia

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      earth spawns,

      Strophe 1

      catastrophic,

      670

      gruesome, and the vast arms of the sea swarm

      with brute monsters

      bent on harm, and everywhere between

      the sky and ground

      lights bloom by day in flares and sudden bolts;

      and birds and beasts

      alike can tell of the whirlwind’s whirling wrath.

      But who can describe the overweening

      pride

      Antistrophe 1

      of men? Or women

      mad with passion, reckless in their hearts,

      680

      soulmates

      to every kind of ruin that befalls us?

      Wild passion,

      unrestrained, boundless, that overcomes

      the women, perverts

      the yoke of wedlock for beasts and men alike.

      Let anyone whose mind is steady

      Strophe 2

      remember this, once he has learned

      the story of Thestius’ daughter,

      ruthless Althaea, who killed

      690

      her own son. She contrived a plot

      to burn the brand that fate assigned

      to span his life; it had been kept

      since the day he came out crying

      from his mother’s loins. Deliberately,

      deceitfully, she set on fire

      what was to have kept pace with him

      from birth to death. It glowed bright red

      before the fire blackened it.

      And they tell of another woman,

      Antistrophe 2

      700

      a hateful maiden, the bloody Scylla,

      friend to her enemies, murderous

      enemy to her dearest friend,

      her father; lured by a gold-forged necklace,

      a gift from Minos, ruthlessly,

      deliberately as Nisus kept

      on sleeping unsuspecting as

      a baby, she snipped off his lock

      of immortality, and all

      at once dark Hermes led him down.

      710

      Since I’m recalling hatreds that stopped

      Strophe 3

      at nothing, it is right

      I come at last to this hateful marriage,

      this heartbreak for the house,

      and the outrageous work of cunning

      hatched in a woman’s mind

      against the warrior, her husband,

      against a husband even

      enemies had reason to revere.

      I honor a low and steady

      720

      burning hearth within the house,

      not one that flares up wildly;

      and a woman’s sharp, unwarlike spirit

      that would never dare.

      Of all the storied crimes, the crime

      Antistrophe 3

      of Lemnos is the worst;

      yes, people everywhere all groan

      and spit out their disgust at

      the very thought, and even call

      every new horror that happens

      730

      a Lemnian crime. For such a foul

      deed hateful to the gods,

      that race has utterly died away

      in stark dishonor, since

      no one respects what the gods despise.

      Which of these tales I’ve told

      here is beside the point, unjust?

      The sharp point of the sword is poised

      Strophe 4

      near the lungs and driven down

      and through them by the force of Justice

      740

      that strikes back at all who defy her,

      flouting the majesty of Zeus,

      trampling justice underfoot.

      The base of justice is firmly set,

      Antistrophe 4

      and fate, the swordsmith, hammers out

      her sword beforehand. Now a child

      is brought to the house of ancient bloodshed

      by the far famed Erinyes

      to pay for the pollution at long last.

      ORESTES goes up to the gateway,

      accompanied by PYLADES.

      ORESTES Boy! Boy! Hey, don’t you hear me knocking? Once

      more,

      750

      is anybody home? For the third time

      won’t anyone from the house come out to greet me

      if Aegisthus would have it welcome strangers?

      SLAVE All right, all right. I hear you. Where are you from,

      stranger?

      ORESTES Tell the masters of the house that someone

      is here with news for them. Now hurry! The night’s

      dim chariot is rushing on to darkness,

      it’s time for travelers to drop anchor

      some place where a host will welcome them.

      Call whoever’s in charge inside the house

      760

      to come out here to us, the mistress, maybe,

      who runs the place, or better yet the master,

      for, out of respect, a man must veil his words

      when talking with a woman, but with a man

      he can frankly say whatever’s on his mind.

      Enter CLYTEMNESTRA.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Strangers, just say whatever it is you need,

      for we have all a house like this should have,

      warm baths, and beds to charm away fatigue,

      and the attention of judicious eyes.

      But if you two have come on graver business,

      770

      requiring more serious thought, well, that’s the work

      men do, and we will let them know about it.

      ORESTES I am a stranger, from Daulis, a town in Phocis.

      As I set out for Argos shouldering

      my own pack (at long last I can put it down),

      I fell in with a stranger who wanted to know

      my destination, and he told me his. Strophius,

      a Phocian, was the name he gave me. “Friend,”

      he says, “since you are headed anyway

      for Argos, do me this favor, won’t you? Tell

      780

      the parents of Orestes that he is dead.

      Don’t let it slip your mind. And what his people

      now want to do—if they want to bring him home,

      or bury him in a foreign land, an outcast here

      forever—carry their wishes back to me.

      For as it is, the smooth walls of a bronze

      urn now enclose the ashes of a man

      we greatly mourned.” I’ve told you all I heard.

      Whether I’m speaking with someone who may have

      authority in any of these matters,

      790

      I couldn’t say. His parent, though, should know.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Ah me! Your news destroys us top to bottom!

      O curse that stalks the house, that we can’t throw,

      is there anywhere your seeing doesn’t reach?

      Striking with well-aimed arrows from afar

      even what’s been so carefully hidden away,

      you strip me in my anguish of those I love.

      And now Orestes—prudent as he was

      to steer clear of this slough of butchery:

      you can write off whatever hope we had

      800

      in him to be the doctor who would rid

      the house of all your hideous carousing.

      ORESTES I wish, with hosts so wealthy, it could have been

      good news that made me known to you, and

      welcomed,

      for what kindness is greater than the kindness

      between a host and guest? And yet I felt

      it would have been a grave impiety

      not to have seen this task through to the end

      for Orestes’ friends, when I had promised to,

      and since I’m taken in as guest-friend here. 810

      CLYTEMNESTRA Put your mind at ease. You’ll be no less

    &
    nbsp; deserving of our hospitality,

      no less a friend to us, because of this.

      Another messenger could just as easily

      have brought the news. But now you must be tired

      from traveling all day. Time for the rest

      you’ve earned.

      (To an attendant)

      Take him and his fellow traveler

      to the men’s guest-quarters; give them everything

      a house like this can give. See to it all

      as if your very life depended on it.

      820

      In the meantime, I’ll give the ruler of the house

      all the particulars you’ve told me, and we

      will not lack friends as we deliberate

      about this terrible, sudden stroke of fate.

      Exit CLYTEMNESTRA with the others.

      CHORUS Handmaidens faithful to the house,

      when shall we sound

      the strength of our tongue to serve Orestes?

      O sacred earth, and sacred barrow

      raised high over the king’s body,

      the master of the fleet, now hear us,

      830

      now help us! Now

      is Persuasion’s time with all

      her slick deceit

      to be his second as he steps out

      onto the field, and Hermes’ time,

      lord of the dark earth, lord

      of stealthy night, to oversee

      and guide the contest

      of the swift, death-dealing sword!

      Enter ORESTES’ NURSE.

      CHORUS LEADER The stranger must be busy causing trouble:

      840

      for here’s Orestes’ nurse, in tears.

      Cilissa,

      where are you off to through the outer gate,

      with grief your unpaid traveling companion?

      NURSE The mistress orders me to tell Aegisthus

      to come and see the strangers right away,

      so he can hear for himself, man to man,

      in more detail, the news they have to tell.

      You should have seen her, the phony look of sorrow

      she put on in front of the servants, and the way

      she hid behind those sad eyes a gloating laugh

      850

      of triumph for the work done well enough

      for her—but for the house, what is it but

      the final insult of an evil that

      the stranger’s story has made all too clear.

      And that one will be glad at heart, I tell you,

      when he hears the news! O god, god! it

      was hard enough to bear, all those miseries

      mixed up together to assault the house

      of Atreus, that kept the shattered heart

      within my breast forever shattering.

      860

      But no agony I suffered was as bad as this!

      I braved the storm of all my other troubles

      best I could. But now my own Orestes!

      How I wore my life away, caring for him

      right from the moment when he came out bawling

      from his mother’s womb, oh how I nursed him,

      reared him, walked the floors with him at night,

      when his loud cries would wake me, that and more,

      the endless chores, the headaches, all of it

      I did—and for what?—that’s how you nurture such

      870

      a helpless thing, like a dumb beast, you have to

      learn how to read the weather of its moods.

      A baby still in swaddling bands can’t say

      in words whether it has to eat, or drink,

      or pee, its stomach needs what it needs when it

      needs it.

      I had to be a prophet to guess what to do,

      and often I guessed wrong, and had to scrub clean

      the baby’s clothes, both nurse and washer-woman,

      both handicrafts required of this one hand, my hand

      that took charge of Orestes for his father.

      880

      And now, O god, they tell me he is dead,

      and here I’m fetching the very man who’s ruined

      the house! He’ll savour the news, that one. You’ll see!

      CHORUS LEADER Does she tell him to come prepared in any way?

      NURSE What do you mean “prepared”? I don’t follow you.

      CHORUS LEADER With his bodyguards, I mean, or by himself.

      NURSE She says his henchmen are to come with him.

      CHORUS LEADER Don’t tell him that, not if you hate our master;

      tell him instead that he’s to come alone

      to hear the news, tell him to come quickly,

      890

      that he doesn’t need to take precautions.

      And say it cheerfully. The messenger

      can make the bent word look as if it’s straight.

      NURSE What, are you happy after news like this?

      CHORUS LEADER But what if Zeus should make our bad wind good?

      NURSE How so? Orestes, hope of the house, is gone.

      CHORUS LEADER Not yet. Only a poor prophet would say that.

      NURSE What are you saying? Have you heard something else?

      CHORUS LEADER Go give your message. Just do as you’re told.

      The gods will care for what the gods will care for.

      900

      NURSE All right, I’ll go then and do just what you say.

      And, please god, may it all be for the best.

      NURSE exits to the left.

      CHORUS Now hear my prayer, O Zeus,

      Strophe 1

      father of the Olympian gods,

      grant that the house may prosper, bring

      the just light of deliverance

      to those who long to see it. My

      every word’s been spoken for

      the sake of Justice. Protect her, Zeus.

      Zeus, Zeus, set the one inside the house

      Mesode 1

      910

      over his enemies,

      for if only you raise him up to greatness,

      twofold, three-

      fold will he pay you back, and do it gladly!

      See how the colt of a man you loved

      Antistrophe 1

      is yoked to a chariot of struggle;

      keep a firm hold on the reins

      to help him hit his stride and keep it

      so that we can see him surge

      straining forward as he gallops

      920

      down the homestretch of the course.

      And you gods within, who inhabit

      Strophe 2

      the inner rooms piled high with wealth,

      delighting in their glitter, you gods

      who feel what we feel, hear us, come

      wash clean the blood of past crimes with

      a fresh-kill act of justice! May

      old murder no longer breed in the house!

      And you, Apollo, who dwell in the

      magnificent

      Mesode 2

      great cave, grant

      930

      that this man’s house stand tall again, and that

      he see with glad eyes

      the light of freedom shine out from its dark veil.

      May Hermes help him too, in justice,

      Antistrophe 2

      he who best can see the deed

      to port, blown on a favoring breeze;

      whenever he wants, he will reveal

      what’s kept obscure, or speak obscurely;

      he is the dark before our eyes

      by night, and no less dark by day.

      940

      And then we’ll sing a far-famed song

      Strophe 3

      to celebrate our deliverance

      from bloodshed, a woman’s tune

      sung on a favoring breeze, sung shrill

      and clamorous; “Our ship goes well,”

      we’ll sing, “and our gain grows, while ruin

      keeps away from those we love.”

    &nbs
    p; And you, Orestes, when it’s time to act,

      Mesode 3

      be strong, and when

      she says to you “My son,” cry in return,

      950

      “My father” and

      accomplish a destruction none can fault.

      Harden your heart into the heart

      Antistrophe 3

      of Perseus, and for the ones

      you love below the earth, and those

      above, exact some joy at last

      from all that anger; make the house

      run red with Gorgon gore, and kill

      the man whose hands are red from killing.

      AEGISTHUS enters from the left.

      AEGISTHUS I’ve come as I was bid, and the summons

      960

      tells me there are strangers here with news

      no one would welcome of Orestes’ death.

      To add this fearful burden to the house

      still stung and festering from earlier bloodshed

      would make its deep wounds ooze and drip again.

      But how do I know the story’s really true,

      and not just words ignited by a woman’s fear,

      flaring in air a moment before it dies

      away to nothing? Can you say anything

      about this that might make it clear to me?

      970

      CHORUS LEADER Yes, we did hear the story, but you go in

      yourself and ask the strangers. A messenger’s

      report is a poor substitute for hearing

      one’s questions answered by the man himself.

      AEGISTHUS That’s what I want: to see the messenger

      and grill him carefully: was he there, did he see

      Orestes die? Or is he just repeating

      some second- or third-hand rumor? One thing’s for

      certain,

      he can’t deceive a mind that’s open-eyed.

     


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