Chapter_6

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The scene represents the Grave of Agamemnon, a mound of earth in a desolate expanse. The time is afternoon. Orestes and Pylades in the garb of travellers, with swords at their sides, are discovered. Orestes’ hair is cut short, that of Pylades streams down his back. Both look grim and travel-stained. Orestes holds a long tress of hair in his hand.

Orestes

O Warder Hermês of the world beneath,

Son of the Father who is Lord of Death;

Saviour, be thou my saviour; Help in War,

Help me! I am returned from lands afar

To claim mine own. And on this headland steep

Of death, I call my Father o’er the deep

To hearken, to give ear.⁠—Behold, I bring

Out of my poverty one little thing,

To adorn thy grave, though who can touch the dead

Or wake from sleep that unuplifted head?

Yet long ago in Phôkis, where I lay

With Strophius in the hills, being cast away

In childhood, plundered by mine enemies,

And friendless, save for this man, Pylades,

I sware an oath which should for ever set

In memory those they taught me to forget:

If once I came to manhood, so I sware,

In tresses twain I would divide mine hair,

One tress for Inachos river, by whose grace

I live, and one for mourning at this place.

Which oath I here fulfil. He lays the tress of hair upon the upper part of the grave mound. O Herald, lay

Before his sight the gift I bring this day,

Who stood not by to mourn him as he fell,

Nor reached mine arms to bid the dead farewell. As he turns, he sees the Libation-Bearers approaching.

Ha!

What sight is this? What stricken multitude

Of women here in raiment sable-hued

Far-gleameth? How shall I interpret it?

Hath some new death upon my lineage lit?

Or is it to my father’s grave they go

With offerings, to appease the wrath below?

It must be. Surely ’tis Electra there,

My sister, moves alone, none like to her

In sorrow. Zeus, Oh, grant to me this day

My vengeance, and be near me in the fray!

Come, Pylades, stand further, till we know

More sure, what means this embassy of woe. Orestes and Pylades withdraw, as Electra with the Chorus of women bearing offerings for the Grave enters from the other side.

Chorus

Driven, yea, driven

I come: I bear Peace-offering to the dead,

Mine hands as blades that tear, my tresses riven,

And cheek ploughed red.

But all my years, before this day as after,

Have been fed full with weeping as with bread.

And this dumb cry of linen, as in pain,

Deep rent about my bosom, speaketh plain

Of a life long since wounded, where no laughter

Sounds nor shall sound again.

Dread, very dread,

And hair upstarting and the wrath that streams

From the heart of sleep, have first interpreted

What manner of dreams

This house hath dreamed; a voice of terror, blasting

The midnight, up from the inmost place it grew,

Shaking the women’s chambers; and the Seer,

Being sworn of God, made answer, there is here

Anger of dead men wronged, and hate outlasting

Death, against them that slew.

Craving to fly that curse

With graceless gift hither she urgeth me

—O Earth, Mother and Nurse!⁠—

She whom God hateth. But my spirit fears

To speak the word it bears.

When blood is spilt, how shall a gift set free?

O hearthstone wet with tears!

O pillars of a house broken in twain!

Without sun, without love,

Murk in the heart thereof and mist above,

For a lord slain!

The reverence of old years

Is gone, which not by battle nor by strife,

Stealing through charmèd ears,

Lifted the people’s hearts to love their King;

Gone, yet the land still fears.

For Fortune is a god and rules men’s life.

Who knows the great Wheel’s swing,

How one is smitten swift in the eyes of light;

For one affliction cries

Slow from the border of sunset; and one lies

In deedless night?

Has Earth once drunk withal

The blood of her child, Man, the avenging stain

Hardens, nor flows again.

A blind pain draweth the slayer, draweth him,

On, on, till he is filled even to the brim

With sickness of the soul to atone for all.

The shrine of maidenhood

Once broken ne’er may be unbroke again.

And where man’s life hath flowed,

All the world’s rivers in their multitude

Rolling shall strive in vain

To clean from a brother’s hand that ancient blood.

For me, God in far days

Laid hand upon my city, and herded me

From my old home to the House of Slavery,

Where all is violence, and I needs must praise,

Just or unjust,

The pleasure of them that rule, and speechless hold

The ache of a heart that rageth in the dust.

Only behind the fold

Of this still veil for a little I hide my face

And weep for the blind doings of this race,

And secret tears are in my heart, ice-cold.

Electra

Ye thrallèd women, tirers of the bower,

Since ye are with me in this suppliant hour,

Your escort giving, give your counsel too.

What speech have I for utterance, when I sue

With offerings to the dead? What word of love,

What prayer to reach my father from above?

“To dear Lord,” shall I say, “due gifts I bear

From loving mistress”⁠ ⁠… when they come from her?

I dare not. And I cannot find the word

To speak, when offerings like these are poured⁠ ⁠…

Or shall I pray him, as men’s custom is,

To send to them who pay these offices

Requital due⁠ ⁠… for murder and for pride?

Or, as in silence and in shame he died,

In shame and silence shall I pour this urn

Of offering to the dust, and pouring turn,

As men cast out some foulness they abhor,

And fling the cup, and fly, and look no more?

Share with me, Friends, this burden of strange thought.

One hate doth make us one. Oh, hide not aught

For fear of what may fall us! Destiny

Waiteth alike for them that men call free,

And them by others mastered. At thine ease

Speak, if thou knowest of wiser words than these.

Leader

As at God’s altar, since so fain thou art,

Before this Tomb I will unveil my heart.

Electra

Speak, by his grave and in the fear thereof.

Leader

Pray as thou pourest: To all hearts of love⁠ ⁠…

Electra

And who is such of all around us, who?

Leader

Thyself, and whoso hates Aigisthos true.

Electra

For thee and me alone am I to pray?

Leader

Ask thine own understanding. It will say.

Electra

Who else? What heart that with our sorrow grieves?

Leader

Forget not that⁠—far off⁠—Orestes lives.

Electra

Oh, bravely spoke! Thou counsellest not in vain.

Leader

Next; on the sinners pray, their sin made plain⁠ ⁠…

Electra

Pray what? I know not. Oh, make clear my road!

Leader

Pray that there come to them or man or god⁠ ⁠…

Electra

A judge? Or an avenger? Speak thy prayer.

Leader

Plain be thy word: one who shall slay the slayer.

Electra

But dare I? Is it no sin thus to pray?

Leader

How else? With hate thine hater to repay. Electra mounts upon the Grave Mound and makes sacrifice.

Electra

Herald most high of living and of dead,

Thou midnight Hermês, hear; and call the dread

Spirits who dwell below the Earth, my vows

To hearken and to watch my father’s house;

And Earth our Mother, who doth all things breed

And nurse, and takes again to her their seed.

And I too with thee, as I pour these streams

To wash dead hands, will call him in his dreams:

O Father, pity me; pity thine own

Orestes, and restore us to thy throne;

We are lost, we are sold like slaves: and in our stead

Lo, she hath brought thy murderer to her bed,

Aigisthos. I am like one chained alway;

Orestes wandering without house or stay;

But they are full of pride, and make turmoil

And banquet of the treasures of thy toil.

Guide thou Orestes homeward, let there be

Some chance to aid him:⁠—Father, hark to me!

And, oh, give me a heart to understand

More than my mother, and a cleaner hand!

These prayers for us; but for our enemies

This also I speak: O Father, let there rise

Against them thine Avenger, and again

The slayer in just recompense be slain.⁠—

Behold, I pray great evil, and I lay

These tokens down; yea, midmost as I pray

Against thine enemies I lay them⁠—so.

Do thou to us send blessing from below

With Zeus, and Earth, and Right which conquereth all.

These be the prayers on which mine offerings fall.

Do ye set lamentation like a wreath

Round them, and cry the triumph-song of death. She proceeds with the pouring of offerings and presently finds on the tomb the Lock of Hair. The Chorus makes lamentation before the grave.

Chorus

Let fall the tear that plashes as it dies,

Where the dead lies,

Fall on this barrèd door,

Where Good nor Evil entereth any more,

This holy, abhorrèd thing,

We turn from, praying.⁠—Lo, the milk and wine

Are poured. Awake and hear, thou awful King;

Hear in thy darkened soul, O Master mine!

Oh, for some man of might

To aid this land, some high and visible lord

Of battle, shining bright

Against Death; the great lance

Bearing deliverance,

The back-bent Scythian bow, the hilted sword

Close-held to smite and smite!

Electra

Excitedly returning from the Grave.

Behold, The offerings of the dust are ministered:

But counsel me. I bear another word.

Leader

Speak on. My spirit leaps for eagerness.

Electra

Cast on the tomb I found this shaven tress.

Leader

Who cast it there? What man or zonèd maid?

Electra

Methinks that is a riddle quickly read!

Leader

Thy thought is swift; and may thine elder know?

Electra

What head save mine would blazon thus its woe?

Leader

She that should mourn him is his enemy.

Electra

Musing, to herself.

Strange bird, but of one feather to mine eye⁠ ⁠…

Leader

With what? Oh, speak. Make thy comparison.

Electra

Look; think ye not ’tis wondrous like mine own?

Leader

Thy brother’s!⁠ ⁠… Sent in secret! Can it be?

Electra

’Tis like his long locks in my memory.

Leader

Orestes! Would he dare to walk this land?

Electra

Belike he sent it by another’s hand!

Leader

That calls for tears no less, if never more

His footstep may be set on Argos shore.

Electra

At my heart also bitterer than gall

A great wave beats. The iron hath passed thro’ all

My being; and the stormy drops that rise

Full unforbidden from these starvèd eyes,

Gazing upon this hair. ’Tis past belief

That any Argive tree hath shed this leaf.

And sure she shore it not who wrought his death,

My mother, godless, with no mother’s faith

Or kindness for her child.⁠—And yet to swear

Outright that this glad laugher is the hair

Of my beloved Orestes.⁠ ⁠… Oh, I am weak

With dreaming! Had it but a voice to speak

Like some kind messenger, I had not been

This phantom tossing in the wind between

Two fancies. Either quick it would proclaim

Its hate, if from some hater’s head it came;

Or, if it were our own, with me ’twould shed

Tears for this tomb and our great father dead⁠ ⁠…

Surely they know, these gods to whom we pray,

Through what wild seas our vessel beats her way,

And, if to save us is their will, may breed

A mighty oak-trunk from a little seed⁠ ⁠… She goes back to the Tomb, searching.

Ah see, the print of feet, a second sign!

The same feet: surely they are shaped like mine.

Surely! Two separate trails of feet are there:

He and perchance some fellow traveller.

The heels; the mark of the long muscle thrown

Athwart them on the sand⁠—just like mine own

In shape and measure. What?⁠ ⁠… Oh, all is vain;

Torment of heart and blinding of the brain! She buries her face in her hands. Orestes rises from his hiding-place and stands before her.

Orestes

Thy prayer hath borne its fruit. Hereafter tell

The gods thy thanks, and may the end be well!

Electra

What meanest thou? What hath God done for me?

Orestes

Shown thee a face which thou hast longed to see.

Electra

What face? What know’st thou of my secret heart?

Orestes

Orestes’. For that name all fire thou art.

Electra

If that be so, how am I near mine end?

Orestes

Here am I, Sister. Seek no closer friend.

Electra

Stranger! It is a plot thou lay’st for me!

Orestes

Against mine own dear life that plot would be.

Electra

Thou mock’st me! Thou would’st laugh to hear me moan!

Orestes

Who mocks thy tribulation mocks mine own.

Electra

My heart half dares foretell that thou art he⁠ ⁠…

Orestes

Nay, when I face thee plain thou wilt not see!

Oh, seeing but that shorn tress of funeral hair

Thy soul took wings and seemed to hold me there;

Then peering in my steps⁠ ⁠… thou knew’st them mine,

Thy brother’s, moulded feet and head like thine.

Set the lock here, where it was cut. Behold

This cloak I wear, thy woven work of old,

The battened ridges and the broidered braid Of lions⁠ ⁠… Electra throws herself into his arms. Hold! Ah, be not all dismayed

With joy! Our nearest is our deadliest foe.

Electra

O best beloved, O dreamed of long ago,

Seed of deliverance washed with tears as rain,

By thine own valour thou shalt build again

Our father’s House! O lightener of mine eyes,

Four places in my heart, four sanctities,

Are thine. My father in thy face and mien

Yet living: thine the love that might have been

My mother’s⁠—whom I hate, most righteously⁠—

And my poor sister’s, fiercely doomed to die,

And thou my faithful brother, who alone

Hast cared for me.⁠ ⁠… O Victory, be our own

This day, with Justice who doth hold us fast,

And Zeus most high, who saveth at the last!

Orestes

O Zeus, O Zeus, look down on our estate!

Hast seen thine eagle’s brood left desolate,

The father in the fell toils overborne

Of some foul serpent, and the young forlorn

And starved with famine, still too weak of wing

To bear to the nest their father’s harvesting?

Even so am I, O Zeus, and even so

This woman, both disfathered long ago,

Both to one exile cast, both desolate.

He was thy worshipper, thy giver great

Of sacrifice. If thou tear down his nest,

What hand like his shall glorify thy feast?

Blot out the eagle’s brood, and where again

Hast thou thy messenger to speak to men?

Blast this most royal oak, what shade shall cool

Thine altars on the death-day of the Bull?

But cherish us, and from a little seed

Thou shalt make great a House now fallen indeed.

Leader

O Children, Saviours of your father’s House,

Be silent! Children, all is perilous;

And whoso hears may idly speak of ye

To our masters; whom may I yet live to see

Dead where the pine logs ooze in fragrant fire!

Orestes

He speaks with increasing horror as he proceeds.

Oh, Loxias shall not mock my great desire,

Who spoke his divine promise, charging me

To thread this peril to the extremity:

Yea, raised his awful voice and surging told

To my hot heart of horrors stormy-cold

Till I seek out those murderers, by the road

Themselves have shown⁠—so spake he⁠—blood for blood,

In gold-rejecting rage, the wild bull’s way!

If not, for their offending I must pay

With mine own life, in torment manifold.

Of many things that rise from earth he told,

To appease the angry dead: yea, and strange forms,

On thee and me, of savage-fangèd worms,

Climbing the flesh; lichens, which eat away

Even unto nothingness our natural clay.

And when they leave him, a man’s hair is white.

For him that disobeys, he said, the night

Hath Furies, shapen of his father’s blood;

Clear-seen, with eyeball straining through the hood

Of darkness. The blind arrows of dead men

Who cried their kin for mercy and were slain,

And madness, and wild fear out of the night,

Shall spur him, rack him, till from all men’s sight

Alone he goes, out to the desert dim,

And that bronze horror clanging after him!

For such as he there is no mixing bowl,

No dear libation that binds soul to soul:

From every altar fire the unseen rage

Outbars him: none shall give him harbourage,

Nor rest beneath one roof with such an one;

Till, without worship, without love, alone

He crawls to his death, a carcase to the core

Through-rotted, and embalmed to suffer more. Collecting himself.

So spake he⁠ ⁠… God, and is one to believe

Such oracles as these? Nay, though I give

No credence, the deed now must needs be done.

So many things of power work here as one:

The God’s command; grief for my father slain;

And mine own beggary urgeth me amain,

That never shall these Argives, famed afar,

High conquerors of Troy in joyous war

Cower to⁠ ⁠… two women. For he bears, I know,

A woman’s heart.⁠ ⁠… If not, this day will show. He kneels at the Grave: Electra kneels opposite him and the Chorus gather behind.

Chorus

Ye great Apportionments of God,

The road of Righteousness make straight:

“For tongue of hate be tongue of hate

Made perfect”: thus, as falls her rod,

God’s justice crieth: “For the blow

Of death the blow of death atone.”

“On him that doeth shall be done”:

Speaks a grey word of long ago.

Orestes

O Father, Father of Doom,

What word, what deed from me,

Can waft afar to the silent room

Where thy sleep holdeth thee

A light that shall rend thy gloom?

Yet surely, the tale is told,

That tears are comfort beneath the tomb

To the great Kings of old.

Leader

No fire ravening red,

O Son, subdueth quite

The deep life of the dead;

His wrath breaks from the night.

When they weep for one who dies

His Avenger doth arise,

Yea, for father and life-giver

There is Justice, when the cries

And the tears run as a river.

Electra

O Father, hearken and save,

For my sore sorrow’s sake!

Children twain are above thy grave

Seeking for thee: Oh, wake!

Thy grave is their only home,

The beggared and outcast.

What here is well? What is saved from doom?

O Atê strong to the last!

Chorus

Yet still it may be⁠—God is strong⁠—

A changèd music shall be born

To sound above this dirge forlorn,

And the King’s House with Triumph-song

Lead home a Friend in love new-sworn.

Orestes

Would that in ancient days,

Father, some Lycian lance

Had slain thee by Ilion’s wall;

Then hadst thou left great praise

In thy House, and thy children’s glance

In the streets were marked of all:

Men had upreared for thee

A high-piled burial hill

In a land beyond the sea;

And the House could have borne its ill.

Leader

And all they who nobly died

Would have loved him in that place,

And observed him in his pride

As he passed with royal pace

To a throne at the right hand

Of the Kings of the Dark Land:

For a king he was when living,

Above all who crownèd stand

With the sceptre of lawgiving.

Electra

Nay, would thou hadst died not ever!

Not by the Ilian Gate,

Not when the others fell

Spear-broken beside the river!

If they who wrought thee hate

Had died, it had all been well:

A strange death, full of fear,

That the folk beyond far seas

Should enquire thereof, and hear;

Not of our miseries!

Chorus

My daughter, rare as gold is rare,

And blither than the skies behind

The raging of the northern wind

Are these thy prayers: for what is prayer?

Yet, be thou sure, this twofold scourge

Is heard: it pierceth to the verge

Of darkness, and your helpers now

Are wakening. These encharioted

Above us, lo, their hand is red!

Abhorrèd are they by the dead;

But none so hates as he and thou!

Orestes

Ah me, that word, that word

Stabbeth my heart, as a sword!

God, God, who sendest from below

Blind vengeance in the wake

Of sin, what deed have I to do,

With hand most weak and full of woe?

’Tis for my father’s sake!

Leader

May it be mine, may it be mine,

To dance about the blazing pine

Crying, crying,

“A man is slain, a woman dying!”

It hideth in my bosom’s core,

It beats its wings for death, for death,

A bitter wind that blows before

The prow, a hate that festereth,

A thing of horror, yet divine!

Electra

Zeus of the orphan, when

Wilt lift thy hand among men?

Let the land have a sign. Be strong,

And smite the neck from the head.

I ask for right after much wrong.

Hear me, O God! Hark to my song,

Ye Princedoms of the Dead!

Chorus

’Tis written: the shed drop doth crave

For new blood. Yea, the murdered cry

Of dead men shrieketh from the grave

To Her who out of sins gone by

Makes new sin, that the old may die.

Orestes

How? Are ye dumb, Ye Princedoms of the Dead?

O Curses of Them that perish, come hither, hither!

Look on this wreck of kings, the beaten head,

Bowed in despair, roofless, disherited!

Whither to turn, O Lord Zeus? Whither, whither?

Leader

My heart, my heart is tossed again

To see thee yielded up to pain,

Failing, failing;

Then mist is on my eyes and wailing

About mine ears, and tears as rain.

But when once more I look on thee

With power exalted, sudden-swift

A hope doth all my burden lift,

And light, and signs of things to be.

Electra

What best shall pierce thine ear; the wrongs she wrought,

Wrought upon us, upon us, she and none other?

Oh, fawn and smile: but the wrongs shall soften not,

Wrongs with a wolfish heart, by a wolf begot:

They see no smile, they reck not the name of Mother!

Chorus

With the dirge of Agbatana I beat my breast:

Like the Keeners of Kissia, I make songs of pain.

Lo, yearning of arms abundant, east and west:

Tearing they smite, again and yet again,

From above, from high; yea, God hath smitten red

This bitter bleeding bosom, this bended head.

Electra

Ho, Mother! Ho, thou, Mother,

Mine enemy, daring all!

What burial made ye here?

His people followed not,

Mourned him not, knew him not:

Enemies bare his pall:

His wife shed no tear!

Orestes

All, all dishonour, so thy story telleth it!

And for that dishonour shall the woman pay,

As the gods have willed it, as my right hand willeth it!

Then Death may take me, let me only slay!

Leader

His hands and feet, they were hacked away from him!

Yea, she that buried him, she wrought it so.

To make thy life blasted, without help or stay from him.

Thou hast it all, the defiling and shame and woe! Orestes breaks down in speechless tears.

Electra

Thou tellest the doom he died, but I saw him not;

I was far off, dishonoured and nothing worth.

Like a dog they drove me back, and the door was shut,

And alone I poured my tears to him through the earth.

I laughed not, yet rejoiced that none saw me weep.⁠—

Write this in thine heart, O Father; grave it deep.

Leader

Write! Yea, and draw the word

Deep unto that still land

Where thy soul dwells in peace.

What is, thou hast this day heard;

What shall be, reach forth thine hand

And take it! Be hard, be hard

To smite and not cease!

Orestes, Electra, and the Leader.

Orestes

Thee, thee I call. Father, be near thine own.

Electra

I also cry thee, choked with the tears that flow.

Leader

Yea, all this band, it crieth to thee as one.

All

O great King, hear us. Awake thee to the sun.

Be with us against thy foe!

Orestes

The slayer shall meet the slayer, wrong smite with wrong.

Electra

O Zeus, bless thou the murder to be this day.

Leader

(Dost hear? Oh, fear is upon me and trembling strong.)

All

The day of Fate is old, it hath lingered long;

It cometh to them that pray.

Divers Women

—Alas, alas, for the travail born in the race,

—Alas for the harp of Atê, whose strings run blood,

—The beaten bosom, the grief too wild to bear.

—The pain that gnaweth, and will not sink to sleep.

—The House hath healing for its own bitterness;

—It is here within. None other can stay the flood;

—Through bitter striving, through hate and old despair.

—Behold the Song of the Daemons of the deep!

Orestes

O Father mine, O most unkingly slain,

Grant me the lordship of thy House again.

Electra

A boon for me likewise, O Father, give;

To lay Aigisthos in his blood and live.

Orestes

So men shall honour thee with wassail high;

Else without meat or incense shalt thou lie,

Unhonoured when the dead their banquets call.

Electra

And I will pour thee offerings wondrous fair

From my stored riches for a marriage-prayer,

And this thy grave will honour more than all.

Orestes

Send back, O Earth, my sire to comfort me.

Electra

In power, in beauty, Great Persephone!

Orestes

Remember, Father, how they laved thee there!

Electra

Remember the strange weaving thou didst wear!

Orestes

A snarèd beast in chains no anvil wrought!

Electra

In coilèd webs of shame and evil thought!

Orestes

Scorn upon scorn! Oh, art thou wakenèd?

Electra

Dost rear to sunlight that belovèd head?

Orestes

Or send thine helping Vengeance to the light

To aid the faithful: or let even fight

Be joined in the same grapple as of yore,

If, conquered, thou wouldst quell thy conqueror.

Electra

Yet one last cry: O Father, hear and save!

Pity thy children cast upon thy grave:

The woman pity, and the weeping man.

Orestes

And blot not out the old race that began

With Pelops: and though slain thou art not dead!

Electra

Children are living voices for a head

Long silent, floats which hold the net and keep

The twisted line unfoundered in the deep.

Orestes

Listen: ’tis thou we weep for, none but thou:

Thyself art savèd if thou save us now.

Leader

Behold, ye have made a long and yearning praise,

This sepulchre for unlamented days

Requiting to the full. And for the rest,

Seeing now thine heart is lifted on the crest

Of courage, get thee to the deed, and see

What power the Daemon hath which guardeth thee.

Orestes

So be it. Yet methinks to know one thing

Were well. Why sent she this drink-offering?

Hoped she by late atonement to undo

That wrong eternal? A vain comfort, too,

Sent to one dead, and feeling not! My mind

Stumbles to understand what lies behind

These gifts, so puny for the deed she hath done.

Yea, though man offer all he hath to atone

For one life’s blood, ’tis written, he hath lost

That labour.⁠—But enough. Say all thou know’st.

Leader

Son, I was near her, and could mark aright.

A dream, a terror wandering in the night,

Shook her dark spirit till she spoke that word.

Orestes

What was the dream she dreamed? Speak, if ye heard.

Leader

She bore to life, she said, a Serpent Thing.

Orestes

And after? To its head thy story bring.

Leader

In swathing clothes she lapt it like a child.

Orestes

It craved for meat, that dragon of the wild?

Leader

Yes; in the dream she gave it her own breast.

Orestes

And took no scathing from the evil beast?

Leader

The milk ran into blood. So deep it bit.

Orestes

The dream is come. The man shall follow it.

Leader

And she, appalled, came shrieking out of sleep;

And many a torch, long blinded in the deep

Of darkness, in our chambers burst afire

To cheer the Queen. Then spake she her desire,

To send, as a swift medicine for the dread

That held her, these peace offerings to the dead.

Orestes

Behold, I pray this everlasting Earth,

I pray my father’s grave, they bring to birth

In fullness all this dream. And here am I

To read its heart and message flawlessly.

Seeing that this serpent, born whence I was born,

Wore the same swathing-bands these limbs had worn,

Fanged the same breast that suckled me of yore,

And through the sweet milk drew that gout of gore;

And seeing she understood, and sore afeared

Shrieked: therefore it must be that, having reared

A birth most ghastly, she in wrath shall die:

And I, the beast, the serpent, even I

Shall slay her! Be it so. The dream speaks clear.

Leader

I take thyself for mine interpreter,

And pray that this may be. But speak thy will

Who shall be doing, say, and who be still?

Orestes

’Tis simply told. This woman makes her way

Within, and ye my charges shall obey,

That they who slew by guile a man most rare,

By guile, and snarèd in the self-same snare,

May die, as Lord Apollo hath foretold,

Loxias the Seer, who never failed of old.

First, I array me in a stranger’s guise,

With all the gear of travel, and likewise

This man⁠—their guest and battle-guest of yore!

Then hither shall we come, and stand before

The courtyard gate, and call. Aye, we will teach

Our tongues an accent of Parnassian speech,

Like men in Phôkis born. And say, perchance

None of the warders with glad countenance

Will ope to us, the House being so beset

With evil: aye, what then? Then obdurate

We shall wait on, till all who pass that way

Shall make surmise against the House, and say

“What ails Aigisthos? Wherefore doth he close

His door against the traveller, if he knows

And is within?” So comes it, soon or late,

I cross the threshold of the courtyard gate;

And entering find him on my father’s throne.⁠ ⁠…

Or, say he is abroad and comes anon,

And hears, and calls for me⁠—and there am I

Before him, face to face and eye to eye;

“Whence comes the traveller?” ere he speaks it, dead

I lay him, huddled round this leaping blade!

Then shall the Curse have drunken of our gore

Her third, last, burning cup, and thirst no more.

Therefore go thou within, and watch withal

That all this chance may well and aptly fall.

For you, I charge ye of your lips take heed:

Good words or silence, as the hour may need.

While One Below his counsel shall afford

And ope to me the strait way of the sword. Orestes and Pylades depart, Electra goes into the House.

Chorus

Host on host, breedeth Earth

Things of fear and ghastly birth;

Arm on arm spreads the Sea

That full of coilèd horrors be;

And fires the sky doth multiply;

And things that crawl, and things that fly,

And they that are born in the wind can tell of the perils

Of tempest and the Wrath on high.

But, ah, the surge over-bold

Of man’s passion who hath told?

Who the Love, wild as hate,

In woman’s bosom desperate,

Which feedeth in the fields of Woe?

Where lives of mortals linkèd go

The heart of a woman is perilous past all perils

Of stars above or deeps below.

Wist ye not, O light of mind,

Her who slew her son with hate,

Thestios’ daughter desolate,

How she wrought All her thought

To one counsel, fiery-blind,

When she burned the brand of fate,

That was twin to him and brother

From the hour of that first cry

When the babe came from the mother

Till the strong man turned to die?

Wist ye not one loathed of old,

Who to win a foe did sell,

Cruel, him who loved her well;

Skylla, dyed with blood and pride,

Who craved the rings of Cretan gold

That Minos gave, too rich to tell;

Like a wolf at night she came

Where he lay with tranquil breath,

And she cut the Crest of Flame:

And, a-sudden, all was death.

But o’er all terrors on man’s tongue

The woman’s deed of Lemnos lies;

It echoes, like an evil song,

Far off, and whensoe’er there rise

New and strange sins, in dire surmise,

Men mind them of the Lemnian wrong.

Yet surely by the Sin God’s eye

Abhorreth, mortal man shall die,

And all the glory that was his.

For who shall lift that thing on high

Which God abaseth? Not amiss

I garner to my crown of woe

These sins of Woman long ago.

O lust so old, so hard of heart!

I lose me in the stories told,

Untimely. Have these walls no part

In ravening of desire, as bold

And evil as those deeds of old?

The House with dread thereof doth start

From dreaming. On, through woe or weal

A woman brooding planned her path,

Against a warrior robed in steel,

And armies trembled at his wrath.

And he is gone; and we must kneel

On a cold hearth and bow in fear

Before a woman’s trembling spear.

Lo, the sword hovereth at the throat

For Justice’ sake. It scorneth not

What the proud man to earth has trod.

Its edge is bitter to the bone;

It stabbeth on, thro’ iron, thro’ stone,

Till it reach him who hath forgot

That Ruth which is the law of God.

For Justice is an oak that yet

Standeth; and Doom the Smith doth whet

His blade in the dark. But what is this?

A child led to the House from lands

Far off, and blood upon his hands!

The great Erinys wreaks her debt,

Whose thought is as the vast abyss.

The scene now represents the front of the Palace of the Atridae, with one door leading to the main palace, another to the Women’s House. Dusk is approaching. Enter Orestes and Pylades, disguised as merchants from Phôkis, with Attendants.

Orestes

Ho, Warder! Hear! One knocketh at your gate!⁠ ⁠…

Ho, Warder, yet again! I knock and wait.⁠ ⁠…

A third time, ye within! I call ye forth;

Or counts your lord the stranger nothing worth?

A Porter

Within, opening the main door.

Enough! I hear. What stranger and wherefrom?

Orestes

Go, rouse your masters. ’Tis to them I come,

Bearing great news. And haste, for even now

Night’s darkling chariot presseth to the brow

Of heaven, and wayfarers like us must find

Quick anchorage in some resthouse for our kind.

Let one come forth who bears authority;

A woman, if God will; but if it be

A man, ’twere seemlier. With a woman, speech

Trembles and words are blinded. Man can teach

Man all his purpose and make clear his thought. Enter Clytemnestra from the House.

Clytemnestra

Strangers, your pleasure? If ye have need of aught

All that beseems this House is yours to-day,

Warm bathing and the couch that soothes away

Toil, and the tendering of righteous eyes.

Else, if ye come on some grave enterprise,

That is man’s work; and I will find the man.

Orestes

I come from Phôkis, of the Daulian clan,

And, travelling hither, bearing mine own load

Of merchandise, toward Argos, as the road

Branched, there was one who met me, both of us

Strangers to one another: Strophius,

A Phocian prince, men called him. On we strode

Together, till he asked me of my road

And prayed me thus: “Stranger, since other care

Takes thee to Argos, prithee find me there

The kin of one Orestes.⁠ ⁠… Plainly said

Is best remembered: tell them he is dead.

Forget not. And howe’er their choice may run,

To bear his ashes home, or leave their son

In a strange grave, in death an exile still,

Discover, and bring back to me their will.

Tell them his ashes lie with me, inurned

In a great jar of bronze, and richly mourned.”

So much I tell you straight, being all I heard.

Howbeit, I know not if I speak my word

To the right hearers, princes of this old

Castle. Methinks his father should be told.

Clytemnestra

Ah me,

So cometh the last wreck in spite of all!

Curse of this House, thou foe that fear’st no fall,

How dost thou spy my hidden things and mar

Their peace with keen-eyed arrows from afar,

Till all who might have loved me, all, are gone!

And now Orestes; whom I had thought upon

So wisely, walking in free ways, his gait

Unsnarèd in this poison-marsh of hate!

The one last hope, the healing and the prayer

Of this old House, ’twas writ on empty air!

Orestes

For me, in a great House and favoured thus

By fortune, ’tis by tidings prosperous

I fain were known and welcomed. Pleasantest

Of all ties is the tie of host and guest.

But my heart told me ’twere a faithless thing

To fail a comrade in accomplishing

His charge, when I had pledged both word and hand.

Clytemnestra

Not for our sorrow shall thy portion stand

The lowlier, nor thyself be less our friend.

Another would have told us; and the end

Is all one. But ’tis time that strangers who

Have spent long hours in travel should have due

Refreshment. Ho, there! Lead him to our broad

Guest-chambers, and these comrades of his road

Who follow. See they find all comfort there

To assuage their way-worn bodies. And have care

That in their tendance naught be found amiss.

Ourselves shall with our Lord consult of this

Distress, and, having yet good friends, who know

My heart, take counsel how to affront the blow. Clytemnestra goes back into the Women’s House; Attendants lead Orestes and his followers through the main door.

Leader

Ye handmaidens, arise, be bold:

See if our moving lips have power

To aid Orestes in his hour;

For sure ye loved this House of old.

Chorus

Thou holy Earth, thou holy shore

Beyond the grave, where rests his head

The Lord of Ships, the King, the Dead,

Now list, now aid, or never more!

The hour is full. The Guileful Word

Descends to wrestle for the right,

And Hermês guards the hour of night

For him that smiteth with the sword. The Nurse enters from the Women’s House, weeping.

Leader

The stranger works some mischief, it would seem!

Yonder I see Orestes’ Nurse, a-stream

With tears.⁠—How now, Kilissa, whither bound,

And Grief the unbidden partner of thy round?

Nurse

The mistress bids me call Aigisthos here

Quickly, to see these two, and learn more clear,

As man from man, the truth of what they tell.

Oh, to us slaves she makes it pitiable

And grievous, and keeps hid behind her eyes

The leaping laughter. Aye, ’tis a rich prize

For her, and for the House stark misery,

This news the travellers tell so trippingly.

And, Oh, Aigisthos, he, you may be sure,

Will laugh to hear it!⁠ ⁠… Ah, I am a poor

Old woman! Such a tangle as they were,

The troubles in this House, and hard to bear,

Long years back, and all aching in my breast!

But none that hurt like this! Through all the rest⁠ ⁠…

Well, I was sore, but lived them down and smiled.

But little Orestes, my heart’s care, the child

I took straight from his mother; and save me

He had no other nurse! And, Oh, but he

Could scream and order me to tramp the dark!

Aye, times enough, and trouble enough, and stark

Wasted at that! A small thing at the breast,

That has no sense, you tend it like a beast,

By guesswork. For he never speaks, not he,

A babe in swaddling clothes, if thirst maybe

Or hunger comes, or any natural need.

The little belly takes its way. Indeed,

’Twas oft a prophet he wanted, not a nurse;

And often enough my prophecies, of course,

Came late, and then ’twas clothes to wash and dry,

And fuller’s work as much as nurse’s. Aye,

I followed both trades, from the day when first

His father gave me Orestes to be nursed.⁠ ⁠…

And now he is dead; and strangers come and tell

The news to me. And this poor miserable

Old woman must go tell the plunderer

Who shames this house! Oh, glad he will be to hear!

Leader

How doth she bid him come? In what array?

Nurse

I take thee not.⁠ ⁠… What is it ye would say?

Leader

Comes he with spears to guard him or alone?

Nurse

She bids him bring the spearmen of the throne.

Leader

Speak not that bidding to our loathèd Lord!

“Alone, quick, fearing nothing” is the word.

So speak, and in thy heart let joy prevail!

The teller straighteneth many a crookèd tale.

Nurse

What ails thee? Are these tidings to thy mind?

Leader

The wind is cold, but Zeus may change the wind.

Nurse

How, when Orestes, our one hope, is dead?

Leader

Not yet! So much the dullest seer can read.

Nurse

What mean’st thou? There is something ye have heard!

Leader

Go, tell thy tale. Obey thy mistress’ word!

God, where He guardeth, guardeth faithfully.

Nurse

I go.⁠—May all be well, God helping me! The Nurse goes out.

Chorus

—Lo, I pray God, this day:

Father of Olympus, hear!

Grant thy fortunes healingly

Fall for them who crave to see

In this House of lust and fear,

Purity, purity.

—I have sinned not, I have spoken

In the name of Law unbroken;

Zeus, as thou art just, we pray thee

Be his guard!

All

There is One within the Gate

Of his foemen, where they wait;

Oh, prefer him, Zeus, before them

And exalt and make him great:

Two- and threefold shall he pay thee

Love’s reward.

—Seest thou one lost, alone,

Child of him who loved thee well?

As a young steed he doth go,

Maddened, in the yoke of woe:

Oh, set measure on the swell,

Forth and fro, forth and fro,

Of the beating hoofs that bear him

Through this bitter course. Oh, spare him!

By his innocence we pray thee

Be his guard!

All

There is One within the Gate

Of his foemen, where they wait;

Oh, prefer him, Zeus, before them

And exalt and make him great:

Two- and threefold shall he pay thee

Love’s reward.

—Gods of the treasure-house within,

One-hearted, where the bronzen door

On darkness gloateth and on gold:

With present cleansing wash the old

Blight of this house: and aged Sin

Amid the gloom shall breed no more!

All

And, O light of the Great Cavern, let it be

That this Man’s house look up again, and see,

Till the dead veil of scorn

And long darkness shall be torn,

And the kind faces shine and old Argolis be free!

—And, Oh, let Hermês, Maia-born,

Be near, who moveth in his kind,

As the wind blows, to help at need:

The word he speaketh none may read:

Before his eyes the Day is torn

With darkness and the Night is blind.

All

And, O Light of the Great Cavern, let it be

That this Man’s house look up again, and see,

Till the dead veil of scorn

And long darkness shall be torn,

And the kind faces shine and old Argolis be free!

—Then, then the prison shall unclose:

A wind of Freedom stream above:

A flood which faileth not, a voice

Telling of women that rejoice,

One harp in many souls, one spell

Enchanted. Ho, the ship goes well!

For me, for me, this glory grows,

And Evil flies from those I love.

All

Oh, in courage and in power,

When the deed comes and the hour,

As she crieth to thee “Son”

Let thy “Father” quell her breath!

But a stroke and it is done,

The unblamèd deed of death.

—The heart of Perseus, darkly strong,

Be lifted in thy breast to-day:

For them thou lovest in the grave,

For them on Earth, be blind, be brave:

Uphold the cloak before thine eyes

And see not while thy Gorgon dies;

But him who sowed the seed of wrong,

Go, look him in the face and slay!

All

Oh, in courage and in power,

When the deed comes and the hour,

As she crieth to thee “Son,”

Let thy “Father” quell her breath!

But a stroke and it is done,

The unblamèd deed of death. Enter from the country Aigisthos.

Aigisthos

A message called me; else I scarce had thought

To have come so quick. ’Tis a strange rumour, brought,

They tell me, by some Phocian wayfarers

In passing: strange, nor grateful to our ears.

Orestes dead! A galling load it were

And dripping blood for this poor House to bear,

Still scored and festerous with its ancient wound.

How shall I deem it? Living truth and sound?

Or tales of women, born to terrify,

That wildly leap, and up in mid-air die?

What know ye further? I would have this clear.

Leader

We heard the tale; but go within and hear

With thine own ears. A rumoured word hath weak

Force, when the man himself is there to speak.

Aigisthos

Hear him I will, and question him beside.

Was this man with Orestes when he died,

Or speaks he too from rumour? If he lies⁠ ⁠…

He cannot cheat a mind that is all eyes. He enters the House.

Chorus

Zeus, Zeus, how shall I speak, and how

Begin to pray thee and beseech?

How shall I ever mate with speech

This longing, and obtain my vow?

The edges of the blades that slay

Creep forth to battle: shall it be

Death, death for all eternity,

On Agamemnon’s House this day;

Or sudden a new light of morn,

A beacon fire for freedom won,

The old sweet rule from sire to son,

And golden Argolis reborn?

Against two conquerors all alone,

His last death-grapple, deep in blood,

Orestes joineth.⁠ ⁠… O great God,

Give victory! Death-cry of Aigisthos within. Ha! The deed is done!

Leader

How? What is wrought? Stand further from the door

Till all is over. Move apart before

Men mark, and deem us sharers in the strife.

For after this ’tis war, for death or life. The Women stand back almost unseen. A Household Slave rushes out from the main Door, and beats at the door of the Women’s House.

Slave

Ho!

Treason! Our master! Treason! Haste amain!

Treason within. Aigisthos lieth slain.

Unbar, unbar, with all the speed ye may

The women’s gates! Oh, tear the bolts away!⁠ ⁠…

God, but it needs a man, a lusty one,

To help us, when all time for help is gone!

What ho!

I babble to deaf men, and labouring cry,

To ears sleep-charmèd, words that fail and die.

Where art thou, Clytemnestra? What dost thou?⁠ ⁠…

’Fore God, ’tis like to be her own neck now,

In time’s revenge, that shivers to its fate. Enter Clytemnestra.

Clytemnestra

What wouldst thou? Why this clamour at our gate?

Slave

The dead are risen, and he that liveth slain.

Clytemnestra

Woe’s me! The riddle of thy speech is plain.

By treason we shall die, even as we slew.⁠ ⁠…

Ho, there, mine axe of battle! Let us try

Who conquereth and who falleth, he or I!⁠ ⁠…

To that meseemeth we are come, we two. Enter from the House Orestes with drawn sword.

Orestes

’Tis thou I seek. With him my work is done.

Clytemnestra

Suddenly failing.

Woe’s me!

Aigisthos, my beloved, my gallant one!

Orestes

Thou lovest him! Go then and lay thine head

Beside him. Thou shalt not betray the dead. Makes as if to stab her.

Clytemnestra

Hold, O my son! My child, dost thou not fear

To strike this breast? Hast thou not slumbered here,

Thy gums draining the milk that I did give?

Orestes

Lowering his sword.

Pylades!

What can I? Dare I let my mother live?

Pylades

Where is God’s voice from out the golden cloud

At Pytho? Where the plighted troth we vowed?

Count all the world thy foe, save God on high.

Orestes

I will obey. Thou counsellest righteously.⁠—

Follow! Upon his breast thou shalt expire

Whom, living, thou didst hold above my sire.

Go, lie in his dead arms!⁠ ⁠… This was the thing

Thou lovedst, loathing thine anointed King.

Clytemnestra

I nursed thee. I would fain grow old with thee.

Orestes

Shall one who slew my father house with me?

Clytemnestra

Child, if I sinned, Fate had her part therein.

Orestes

Then Fate is here, with the reward of sin.

Clytemnestra

Thou reck’st not of a Mother’s Curse, my child?

Orestes

Not hers who cast me out into the wild.

Clytemnestra

Cast out? I sent thee to a war-friend’s Hall.

Orestes

A free man’s heir, ye sold me like a thrall.

Clytemnestra

If thou wast sold, where is the price I got?

Orestes

The price!⁠ ⁠… For very shame I speak it not.

Clytemnestra

Speak. But tell, too, thy father’s harlotries.

Orestes

Judge not the toiler, thou who sitt’st at ease!

Clytemnestra

A woman starves with no man near, my son.

Orestes

Her man’s toil wins her bread when he is gone.

Clytemnestra

To kill thy mother, Child: is that thy will?

Orestes

I kill thee not: thyself it is doth kill.

Clytemnestra

A mother hath her Watchers: think and quail!

Orestes

How shall I ’scape my Father’s if I fail?

Clytemnestra

To herself.

Living, I cry for mercy to a tomb!

Orestes

Yea, from the grave my father speaks thy doom.

Clytemnestra

Ah God! The serpent that I bare and fed!

Orestes

Surely of truth prophetic is the dread

That walketh among dreams. Most sinfully

Thou slewest: now hath Sin her will of thee. He drives Clytemnestra before him into the Palace. The Chorus come forward again.

Leader

For these twain also in their fall I weep.

Yet, seeing Orestes now through mire so deep

Hath climbed the crest, I can but pray this eye

Of the Great House be not made blind and die.

Chorus

Judgment came in the end

To Troy and the Trojans’ lord,

(O Vengeance, heavy to fall!)

There came upon Atreus’ Hall

Lion and lion friend,

A sword came and a sword.

A walker in Pytho’s way

On the neck of her kings hath trod,

A beggar and outcast, yea,

But led by God.

Came He of the laughing lure,

The guile and the secret blow,

(O Vengeance, subtle to slay!)

But there held his hand that day

The Daughter of Zeus, the pure,

Justice yclept below.

Justice they called her name,

For where is a goodlier?

And her breath is a sword of flame

On the foes of her.

All

Cry, Ho for the perils fled,

For the end of the long dismay!

Cry, Ho for peace and bread;

For the Castle’s lifted head,

For the two defilers dead,

And the winding of Fortune’s way!

Even as Apollo gave

His charge on the Mountain, He

Who holdeth the Earth-heart Cave,

Hast thou wrought innocently

Great evil, hindered long,

Tracking thy mother’s sin⁠ ⁠…

Is the power of God hemmed in

So strangely to work with wrong?

Howbeit, let praise be given

To that which is throned in Heaven:

The Gods are strong.

And soon shall the Perfect Hour

O’er the castle’s threshold stone

Pass with his foot of power,

When out to the dark is thrown

The sin thereof and the stain

By waters that purify.

Now, now with a laughing eye

God’s fortune lieth plain;

And a cry on the wind is loud:

“The stranger that held us bowed

Is fallen again!”

All

O light of the dawn to be!

The curb is broken in twain,

And the mouth of the House set free.

Up, O thou House, and see!

Too long on the face of thee

The dust hath lain! The doors are thrown open, and Orestes discovered standing over the dead bodies of Aigisthos and Clytemnestra. The Household is grouped about him and Attendants hold the great red robe in which Agamemnon was murdered.

Orestes

He speaks with ever-increasing excitement.

Behold your linkèd conquerors! Behold

My Father’s foes, the spoilers of the fold!

Oh, lordly were these twain, when thronèd high,

And lovely now, as he who sees them lie

Can read, two lovers faithful to their troth!

They vowed to slay my father, or that both

As one should die, and both the vows were true!

And mark, all ye who hear this tale of rue,

This robe, this trap that did my father greet,

Irons of the hand and shackling of the feet!

Outstretch it north and south: cast wide for me

This man-entangler, that our Sire may see⁠—

Not mine, but He who watcheth all deeds done,

Yea, all my mother’s wickedness, the Sun⁠—

And bear me witness, when they seek some day

To judge me, that in justice I did slay

This woman: for of him I take no heed.

He hath the adulterer’s doom, by law decreed.

But she who planned this treason ’gainst her own

Husband, whose child had lived beneath her zone⁠—

Oh, child of love, now changed to hate and blood!⁠—

What is she? Asp or lamprey of the mud,

That, fangless, rotteth with her touch, so dire

That heart’s corruption and that lust like fire?

Woman? Not woman, though I speak right fair. His eyes are caught by the great red robe.

A dead man’s winding-sheet? A hunter’s snare?

A trap, a toil, a tangling of the feet.⁠ ⁠…

I think a thief would get him this, a cheat

That robs the stranger. He would snare them so,

And kill them, kill them, and his heart would glow.⁠ ⁠…

Not in my flesh, not in my house, O God,

May this thing live! Ere that, Oh, lift thy rod

And smiting blast me, dead without a child! He stops exhausted.

Chorus

O deeds of anger and of pain!

O woman miserably slain!

Alas! Alas!

And he who lives shall grieve again.

Orestes

Did she the deed or no? This robe defiled

Doth bear me witness, where its web is gored,

How deep the dye was of Aigisthos’ sword;

And blood hath joined with the old years, to spoil

The many tinctures of the broidered coil.

Oh, now I weep, now praise him where he died,

And calling on this web that pierced his side.⁠ ⁠…

Pain, pain is all my doing, all my fate,

My race, and my begetting: and I hate

This victory that sears me like a brand.⁠ ⁠…

Chorus

No mortal thro’ this life shall go

For ever portionless of woe.

Alas! Alas!

It comes to all, or swift or slow.

Orestes

Yet wait: for I would have you understand.

The end I know not. But methinks I steer

Unseeing, like some broken charioteer,

By curbless visions borne. And at my heart

A thing of terror knocketh, that will start

Sudden a-song, and she must dance to hear.

But while I am still not mad, I here declare

To all who love me, and confess, that I

Have slain my mother, not unrighteously;

Who with my father’s blood hath stained the sod

Of Argos and drawn down the wrath of God.

And the chief spell that wrought me to the deed

Is Loxias, Lord of Pytho, who decreed

His high commandment: if this thing I dare,

He lays on me no sin: if I forbear⁠ ⁠…

I cannot speak his judgment: none can know

The deeps thereof, no arrow from the bow

Out-top it. Therefore here ye see me, how

I go prepared, with wreaths and olive bough,

To kneel in supplication on the floor

Of Loxias, touch the fire that evermore

Men call the undying, and the midmost stone

Of Earth, flying this blood which is mine own.

And how these evil things were wrought, I pray

All men of Argos on an after day

Remember, and bear witness faithfully

When Meneläus comes.⁠ ⁠… And take from me,

Living or dead, a wanderer and outcast

For ever, this one word, my last, my last.⁠ ⁠…

Leader

Nay, all is well. Leave no ill omen here,

Nor bind upon thy lips the yoke of fear.

All Argos thou hast freed, and with one sweep

Two serpents’ heads hurled reeking to the deep.

Orestes

Overcome with sudden terror.

Ah! Ah!

Ye bondmaids! They are here: like Gorgons, gowned

In darkness; all bewreathed and interwound

With serpents!⁠ ⁠… I shall never rest again.

Leader

What fantasies, most father-loved of men,

Haunt thee? Be strong, thou conqueror! Have no fear!

Orestes

These are no fantasies. They are here; they are here,

The Hounds of my dead Mother, hot to kill.

Leader

The blood upon thine hand is reeking still:

For that the turmoil in thy heart is loud.

Orestes

O Lord Apollo! More and more they crowd

Close, and their eyes drip blood, most horrible!

Leader

One cleansing hast thou. Loxias can quell

Thy tempest with his touch, and set thee free.

Orestes

You cannot see them. I alone can see.

I am hunted.⁠ ⁠… I shall never rest again. Exit Orestes.

Chorus

—Farewell. May blessing guide thee among men.

—May God with love watch over thee, and heed

Thy goings and be near thee at thy need.

All

Behold a third great storm made wild

By winds of wrath within the race,

Hath shook this castle from its place.

The ravin of the murdered child

First broke Thyestes in his pride:

Second, a warrior and a King,

Chief of Achaia’s warfaring,

Was smitten in the bath and died.

And Third, this Saviour or this last

Doom from the deep. What end shall fall,

Or peace, or death outsweeping all,

When night comes and the Wrath is past? Exeunt.