The Read Online Free
  • Latest Novel
  • Hot Novel
  • Completed Novel
  • Popular Novel
  • Author List
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Young Adult
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Complete Aeschylus, Volume I: The Oresteia

    Previous Page Next Page

      of such stuffs by the Gods’ grace, king,

      is amply here for us: the palace knows

      no lack. And anyway I would have trampled

      down even more robes than these, as many, then,

      as needed, all along, had an oracle

      enjoined it, when all I thought of, dreamed of, was

      some scheme to get you safely home to me,

      body and soul. For while the root still lives,

      the leaves bring cool shade to the house again,

      uncurling, spreading, against the dogstar’s heat.

      1110

      So coming back to hearth and home, you bring

      a summer’s warmth to us in wintertime.

      And when Zeus presses wine from the green grape,

      there is at once a coolness in the house

      as the sovereign strolls again all through the palace.

      AGAMEMNON exits into the palace.

      Zeus, Zeus, sovereign accomplisher,

      accomplish this my prayer; and may what you

      are ready now to do be all your care.

      The serving women remove the tapestries and

      CLYTEMNESTRA exits into the palace after them.

      CHORUS Why, even now, this fear, ever

      Strophe 1

      unriddable, hovering

      1120

      near my heart’s foreseeing? And why

      this, too, this prophecy

      that sings unrecompensed, unasked for,

      like a perplexing dream

      that no hope seated deep within

      my heart can ever banish?

      Time has grown old since the day they threw

      the cables down onto the sand

      when the army in its ships

      first came to Ilium.

      1130

      And I have seen him, with my own eyes,

      Antistrophe 1

      seen him return, myself

      the witness, and yet still within me,

      self-inspired, chants

      the dirge the lyre shuns, dirge of the Erinys,

      dirge chanted by a mind

      bereft of hope, hope’s cherished strength.

      And it is not for nothing

      that everywhere inside me speaks

      the same disquiet, that

      1140

      my heart swirls and eddies with

      a sense of justice soon

      to be fulfilled, though I still pray

      what I expect may fall

      away, and fail to reach fulfillment.

      Well-being, at its utmost, chafes against

      Strophe 2

      what bounds it. For disease, its neighbor,

      leans hard on the wall they share,

      and a man’s fate, however straight

      the course he’s steering, even so

      1150

      can strike a hidden reef and founder.

      But if trembling foresight jettisons

      some part in proper measure of all

      the wealth a man possesses, then

      the whole house overwhelmed with excess

      will not sink, nor the hull plunge under.

      The great gift of Zeus springs

      abundant from the ploughed earth

      each year to stave off the plague of famine.

      But the lifeblood of a man, once spilled

      Antistrophe 2

      1160

      before him, blackens the ground, and who

      can enchant it back into his body?

      Even Asclepius, skilled in the art

      of bringing dead men back to life,

      Zeus struck down as a warning to us.

      And if one fate didn’t block another

      from going beyond its god-set bounds,

      my heart would overbrim my tongue,

      and pour out all of its worst forebodings.

      But, as things stand, it only mutters

      1170

      in darkness, grief-struck, hopeless

      of drawing any good at all

      from these fires burning through my mind.

      CLYTEMNESTRA enters from the palace.

      CLYTEMNESTRA You go inside now. I’m talking to you, Cassandra.

      Zeus, not unkindly, has determined you

      should share the lustral water of our house,

      standing where all the slaves crowd the altar

      of the god who guards the house’s wealth—come down

      now from the chariot and don’t be proud.

      Why even Heracles, they say, was once

      1180

      sold into slavery and had to stomach

      the gruel all slaves must eat. And yet if bad

      luck such as this should fall to anyone,

      there’s still good cause for gratitude at having

      masters whose wealth is old as well as great;

      for those who have reaped a harvest that exceeds

      their hopes are cruel to slaves beyond all measure.

      Here with us you’ll be treated as custom warrants.

      CHORUS LEADER She’s talking plainly to you, and she expects an answer.

      Caught in your tangled fate, you should obey

      1190

      her if you can, though maybe now you can’t.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Well, if she’s capable of doing any better

      than twittering like a swallow, barbarian-style,

      then she must understand me, and what I say

      will soon convince her that she’d best obey.

      CHORUS LEADER Go with her. What she orders you to do

      is best, as things stand. Get down from your seat

      there in the chariot, and do what she says.

      CLYTEMNESTRA I don’t have time to dawdle here by the door;

      the cattle are standing ready for sacrifice

      1200

      by the central hearth stone, victims for the fire,

      a joy we never hoped to have. And you,

      if you would do what I say, make no delay;

      but if the meaning of my words eludes

      your understanding, then, instead of speech,

      give me a sign with your barbarian hand.

      CHORUS LEADER I think the stranger needs someone to help

      her understand. She’s like a captured beast.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Yes, she is crazed and given over to

      the wayward bidding of a wild mind—

      1210

      too freshly torn off from her conquered city,

      she hasn’t learned yet how to bear the bridle

      until her rearing up and bucking has all

      been broken in a bloody foam. I won’t

      waste more words on her, to be insulted so.

      CLYTEMNESTRA exits into the palace.

      CHORUS LEADER I can’t be angry, though; I pity her.

      Poor girl, come on, give up your seat there

      on the carriage and, bowing to what cannot be

      resisted, yield to this new yoke that’s yours.

      CASSANDRA, who has become more and more restless

      through the preceding dialogue, suddenly leaps from

      Agamemnon’s chariot. She is wearing insignia that

      identify her as priestess of Apollo.

      CASSANDRA OTOTOTOI POPOI DA

      Kommos

      1220

      Apollo! My Apollo!

      CHORUS LEADER Why do you cry woe to Loxias?

      He is no god to come to with a dirge.

      CASSANDRA OTOTOTOI POPOI DA

      Apollo! My Apollo!

      CHORUS LEADER Once more she calls out darkly to the god

      who will not stand for any lamentation.

      CASSANDRA Apollo! My Apollo!

      God of the roadside, my destroyer,

      For you again, this second time,

      1230

      with what ease have destroyed me.

      CHORUS LEADER She is about to prophesy her sorrows—

      the god’s gift stays with her, though she’s enslaved.

      CASSANDRA Apollo! My Apollo!

      Go
    d of the roadside, my destroyer!

      Ah, where have you brought me?

      Where? What house is this?

      CHORUS LEADER To the house of Atreus. If you don’t see this,

      then I’ll tell it to you, and you’ll know.

      CASSANDRA No, to a house that hates the gods,

      1240

      one that knows by heart stories of kin

      murdering kin, a slaughterhouse

      for men, a killing floor drenched in blood.

      CHORUS LEADER The stranger has the keen scent of a hound,

      fast on a trail of blood, and blood she’ll find.

      CASSANDRA (pointing to the door of the palace) Yes, there they are—the witnesses

      I trust—look, the children are wailing

      for their own slaughter, for the flesh

      their uncle roasted, and their father ate.

      CHORUS LEADER Yes, your prophetic fame had reached our ears;

      1250

      But we are not in search of prophets here.

      CASSANDRA O god! What is she plotting now?

      What devastation? What huge evil

      lurks in this house, unbearable

      for friends, beyond all remedy,

      and no help anywhere in sight?

      CHORUS LEADER These prophesies I can’t quite follow; but

      the others, yes, the city’s all abuzz with them.

      CASSANDRA Ah, will you see this through, wretch?

      Your own husband who shares your bed?

      1260

      You wash him, soothe him, in the bath.

      How can I tell it through to the end?

      It will be done soon. She stretches out

      first one hand, then another, toward him.

      CHORUS LEADER I’ve lost the trail. Her riddles set me down

      bewildered in a dark of oracles.

      CASSANDRA Ah! Ah! what apparition shimmers

      into view? It’s a net of Hades, yes,

      but a net that is his bedmate, that shares

      the guilt of murder. Let the fierce

      1270

      gang ravenous for the house shout out

      in joy over this butchery,

      this sacrifice stoning will avenge.

      CHORUS What Erinys is this you call

      to raise her howl over the house?

      Your words drain all joy from me, and

      pale blood seeps back drop

      by drop into my heart, dripping

      as from a spear gash, when the rays

      of life darken as it sets,

      1280

      and death is near, and hurrying.

      CASSANDRA Ah! Look! There! Keep the bull away

      from the cow! She has caught him in the robe,

      and with the slick device of her black

      horn strikes, and he slumps in the roiling water.

      Bright blade flashing treachery,

      I tell you, in the murderous bath.

      CHORUS Though I can boast of no great skill

      in judging oracles, this seems

      even to me like something evil.

      1290

      And yet from oracles what good

      is ever sent to men? Through veils

      of evil, all that these wordy arts

      bring to their listeners is fear.

      CASSANDRA Oh, oh! The misery of

      my miserable fate! For it is my own

      affliction that I speak of now;

      a new cup has been all spilled out.

      Where have you brought me, unlucky one?

      For what except to share your death.

      1300

      CHORUS Your mind is cracked, seized by a god,

      and over your own fate you chant

      as harshly as, with shattered heart,

      each day, each moment of each day,

      the tawny nightingale would grieve

      throughout a life so dense with sorrow

      she could not keep from crying out

      alas, lamenting Itys, Itys.

      CASSANDRA Oh but to end life as a tuneful,

      full-throated nightingale! For the gods

      1310

      gave her a winged body and

      a life immune from wailing, while

      for me, what waits is only death

      by cutting with the sharpened spear.

      CHORUS From where, in the grip of what god

      do you suffer seizure after useless

      seizure, and with foreboding cries

      and sharp notes fashion songs of fear?

      From where, and how, have you marked out

      the boundaries along this evil-

      1320

      omened path of prophecy?

      CASSANDRA O, the love bed of Paris, deadly

      to his loved ones! O Scamander,

      river of home! Long time ago,

      ah me! I flourished by your waters.

      But soon, by other streams, beside

      Cocytus and the endless shores

      of Acheron in the world below

      I’ll wander, wailing my prophesies.

      CHORUS Why have you said this, and so plainly?

      1330

      Even a child could understand.

      Again I’m pierced by the sharp stroke

      of your cruel fate, by your shrill cries

      of sorrow it shatters me to hear.

      CASSANDRA O sorrow, sorrow of my city,

      its utter devastation! O

      the sacrifices that my father

      made before the walls, reckless

      slaughter of our grazing herds.

      But what good came of it? There was

      1340

      no cure to save the city from what

      it had to suffer. Now I, too, am

      on fire; I, too, will crash to the ground.

      CHORUS These phrases go with those before:

      some destroying spirit swoops down,

      a dead weight, on you and compels

      this dirge, these tears shot through with death,

      toward what end I do not know.

      CASSANDRA Well, then, my prophecies won’t peek again

      like some shy newlywed from behind a veil.

      1350

      No, they will blow clear as a fresh wind

      toward sunrise, and surge like a wave against the new

      light with a woe far greater than its shining.

      No riddles anymore. You be my witness,

      running beside me stride by stride as I

      sniff out the track of crimes done long ago!

      The choir that sings as one, yet sings its tunes

      discordantly and only brings on discord,

      can’t leave this house. Yes, soused on human blood

      to utter recklessness, a home-brewed,

      1360

      rioting band of Eryinyes is dwelling there,

      not easily driven out. And what they sing of,

      as they carouse from room to room, is that

      first mayhem, that ancestral sin, as one

      by one each spits on a brother’s bed

      that brought destruction to its defiler.

      Have I shot wide of the mark or have I hit it

      like a master archer? Or am I some cut-purse prophet,

      a babbler careening from door to door?

      On your oath, bear witness that I know

      1370

      the legacies of crime within this house.

      CHORUS LEADER How could an oath, however truly taken,

      cure anything? Still it astounds me that,

      though bred beyond the seas, you can describe

      what happened here, as if you had been present.

      CASSANDRA The seer Apollo charged me with this power.

      CHORUS LEADER Fired with longing for you, though a god?

      CASSANDRA I was ashamed to speak of this before.

      CHORUS LEADER While fortune lasts, we have that luxury.

      CASSANDRA He grappled hard, breathing his gift upon me.

      1380

      CHORUS LEADER And did it get as far a
    s making children?

      CASSANDRA I gave my word to Loxias, then I broke it.

      CHORUS LEADER Were you already in the grip of the god’s art?

      CASSANDRA Yes, even then I told Troy all its sorrows.

      CHORUS LEADER How then did you escape Apollo’s anger?

      CASSANDRA For my offense, I can never be believed.

      CHORUS LEADER And yet to us what you foretell seems true.

      CASSANDRA Ah! Ah! O misery! The terrible labor of

      true prophecy whirls me around, and I

      am shaken to the core with darkening preludes!

      1390

      Look there, do you see them? Can’t you see them, there

      by the house, so young, like hovering dream shapes, children

      killed by the very ones they loved, their hands

      full of the gore of their own flesh, the vitals,

      all the dripping inner parts—I see

      them holding out that pitiful weight

      of meat their father ate. Because of this,

      I tell you, there is one who plots revenge,

      a skulking lion panting in the bed,

      poised in the house, alas, against the lord’s

      1400

      return, my lord, since I now bear the yoke

      of slavery. And the great leader of the fleet,

      who leveled Ilium, is unaware

      of how the bitch tongue fawns, licking his hand,

      her ears drawn back in welcome—yet she

      will strike and slaughter with a treacherous stroke.

      Such shameless daring: the female kills the male.

      She is—what is she? by what name should I call

      that rabid beast?—two-headed serpent, or

      a Scylla coiled in the rocks, the sailors’ scourge,

     
    Previous Page Next Page
© The Read Online Free 2022~2025