The Electra of Euripides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 75 pages of information about The Electra of Euripides.

The Electra of Euripides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 75 pages of information about The Electra of Euripides.

Thou Agamemnon’s Son, give ear!  ’Tis we. 
Castor and Polydeuces, call to thee,
God’s Horsemen and thy mother’s brethren twain. 
An Argive ship, spent with the toiling main,
We bore but now to peace, and, here withal
Being come, have seen thy mother’s bloody fall,
Our sister’s.  Righteous is her doom this day,
But not thy deed.  And Phoebus, Phoebus ...  Nay;
He is my lord; therefore I hold my peace. 
Yet though in light he dwell, no light was this
He showed to thee, but darkness!  Which do thou
Endure, as man must, chafing not.  And now
Fare forth where Zeus and Fate have laid thy life. 
  The maid Electra thou shalt give for wife
To Pylades; then turn thy head and flee
From Argos’ land.  ’Tis never more for thee
To tread this earth where thy dead mother lies. 
And, lo, in the air her Spirits, bloodhound eyes,
Most horrible yet Godlike, hard at heel
Following shall scourge thee as a burning wheel,
Speed-maddened.  Seek thou straight Athena’s land,
And round her awful image clasp thine hand,
Praying:  and she will fence them back, though hot
With flickering serpents, that they touch thee not,
Holding above thy brow her gorgon shield. 
  There is a hill in Athens, Ares’ field,
Where first for that first death by Ares done
On Halirrhothius, Poseidon’s son,
Who wronged his daughter, the great Gods of yore
Held judgment:  and true judgments evermore
Flow from that Hill, trusted of man and God. 
There shalt thou stand arraigned of this blood;
And of those judges half shall lay on thee
Death, and half pardon; so shalt thou go free. 
For Phoebus in that hour, who bade thee shed
Thy mother’s blood, shall take on his own head
The stain thereof.  And ever from that strife
The law shall hold, that when, for death or life
Of one pursued, men’s voices equal stand,
Then Mercy conquereth.—­But for thee, the band
Of Spirits dread, down, down, in very wrath,
Shall sink beside that Hill, making their path
Through a dim chasm, the which shall aye be trod
By reverent feet, where men may speak with God. 
But thou forgotten and far off shalt dwell,
By great Alpheues’ waters, in a dell
Of Arcady, where that gray Wolf-God’s wall
Stands holy.  And thy dwelling men shall call
Orestes Town.  So much to thee be spoke. 
But this dead man, Aegisthus, all the folk
Shall bear to burial in a high green grave
Of Argos.  For thy mother, she shall have
Her tomb from Menelaus, who hath come
This day, at last, to Argos, bearing home
Helen.  From Egypt comes she, and the hall
Of Proteus, and in Troy hath ne’er at all
Set foot.  ’Twas but a wraith of Helen, sent
By Zeus, to make much wrath and ravishment. 
  So forth for home, bearing the virgin bride,
Let Pylades make speed, and lead beside
Thy once-named brother, and with golden store
Stablish his house far off on Phocis’ shore. 
  Up, gird thee now to the steep Isthmian way,
Seeking Athena’s blessed rock; one day,
Thy doom of blood fulfilled and this long stress
Of penance past, thou shalt have happiness.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Electra of Euripides from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.