The Greek Plays

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  AGAMEMNON: No! Stop! Again—a second blow has landed…

  AN INDIVIDUAL IN THE CHORUS: I think it’s done—that’s why the king is wailing.

  We must discuss what measures might be safe.

  ANOTHER: Listen to me—here’s what I recommend:

  call out a rescue force of citizens.

  1350

  ANOTHER: We ought to break in right away—that’s my view—

  and seize the proof, the sword that drips fresh blood.

  ANOTHER: I’m for a policy along those lines:

  I vote for action. Now’s no time for dawdling.

  ANOTHER: The truth is here to see: this is the prelude

  that signals despotism for the city.

  ANOTHER: They’re wide awake, they strike while we waste time.

  They’re trampling the regard we had for waiting.

  ANOTHER: I’m lost: I can’t arrive at a suggestion.

  The one who does a thing should also plan it.

  1360

  ANOTHER: I’m just as lost as you. There is no way

  to make a speech that resurrects the dead.

  ANOTHER: How could we even stand to live, condoning

  leadership that defiles the royal house?

  ANOTHER: No, it’s unbearable, and death is better,

  a gentler destiny than tyranny.

  ANOTHER: In point of fact, taking those groans as proof,

  can we divine the gentleman is dead?

  ANOTHER: Clear knowledge must precede deliberation,

  since guessing is a thing distinct from knowing.

  1370

  ANOTHER: Here I have broad majority support:

  we should make sure how Atreus’ son is doing.

  (The palace doors open and Clytemnestra is revealed, standing over two bloody corpses.)

  CLYTEMNESTRA: Though all I said before was right for then,

  I’m not ashamed to state the opposite.

  How else would someone, paying evil back

  to those disguised as friends, raise suffering’s net

  around them to a height they can’t leap over?

  I gave my full attention to this struggle

  from far back. Victory came, though that took time.

  Right where I struck, I stand, on my achievement.

  1380

  I acted—I’m not going to deny it—

  to trap him so he couldn’t fight off death.

  As if he were a school of fish, I cast

  a rich robe in inextricable circles.*48

  Twice I strike, and a double groan announces

  his legs’ collapse. He’s fallen, but I add

  a third, an extra blow, thank-offering

  to Zeus below ground, savior of cadavers.*49

  He falls, convulsively gasps out his soul,

  and spouts a headlong slaughter-gush of blood,

  1390

  striking me with dark-scarlet showers of dew,

  and I rejoice, as in wet, quickened sowings

  of Zeus’s grace, when buds emerge from labor.

  If a libation for a corpse is proper

  and right—and more than right—then this is it.

  He filled this cup of curses for the house,

  and drank it up himself when he returned.

  So there you have it, honored Argive elders.

  Be glad, or don’t—but triumph fills my heart.

  CHORUS: We’re stunned at this defiance in your mouth,

  1400

  this bragging speech above your husband’s body.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: You think you’re prodding at a female moron,

  but I don’t shake inside, addressing those

  who understand. And you can praise or blame me—

  it doesn’t matter. This is Agamemnon,

  my husband. He’s a corpse now. My right hand,

  an honest builder, made this. Here we are.

  strophe 1

  CHORUS: Woman, what evil thing—

  eatable, drinkable—that the ground or the flowing

  sea nourishes—passed through your lips?

  You’ve burned this sacrifice, earned the town’s clamorous curses;

  1410

  you have cast us off, you have cut us off, you are exiled from the city;

  to the citizens, you are abomination.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: So now you sentence me to banishment,

  allot me hatred, rumbling civic curses.

  Back then you offered him no opposition

  when he, as casual as at one death

  among the crowding and luxuriant flocks,

  sacrificed his own child, my dearest birth-pangs,

  to conjure up some blasts of air from Thrace.

  Wasn’t it that polluted criminal

  1420

  you should have driven out? You hear what I’ve done,

  and you’re a savage judge. But pay attention:

  threaten away, and know that I’m prepared

  to let the winner of a fair fight rule

  over me. But if god wills otherwise,

  you’ll learn restraint, and well, however late.

  antistrophe 1

  CHORUS: Monstrous your enterprise,

  haughty the words you spoke—and your mind, along with them,

  reels in the passion of your bloody triumph;

  and the smear of blood in your eye is unmistakable.

  All those you love must be taken in revenge

  1430

  and a wound pay back each wound that you have given.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: There’s more to hear, an oath that’s sanctified

  by Justice—realized for my child—and Ruin,*50

  And the Fury, since I slaughtered him for these:

  from now on, hope won’t pace the house of fear,

  as long as there’s a flame lit on my hearth

  by Aegisthus, who has been my champion

  this whole time, and the shield that gives me courage.

  (Indicating the two corpses at her feet)

  He lies here, after wronging me, his wife,

  and soothing every Chryseis at Troy;*51

  1440

  and here’s the seer of the signs, his captive,

  who shared his bed; rely on her for saying

  sooth—and for other services: the whore

  among the sailors’ benches. Rightly honored,

  the two of them: him, as I stated; her

  like a swan, whose song and dance were rites of death—

  his lover lying next to him. He brought

  this side-dish in—but it was for my pleasure.

  strophe 2

  CHORUS: Only, if only quickly, with no great torture,

  with no long nursing vigil,

  1450

  the end would come for us, bringing

  sleep without end, for all time—now that the man who guarded us

  close to his heart is brought down.

  He endured so much for a woman;

  now a woman has obliterated him.

  ephymnium 1

  You were out of your mind, Helen, Helen,

  annihilating great numbers, terrible numbers

  of lives beneath Troy’s walls.

  Now you’ve won the consummate, the immortal prize:

  1460

  the blood that will not wash away. It was some spirit

  of unassailable discord in the house, a husband’s anguish.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: No, don’t pray—in your distress—for your share of death.

  And do not turn your rage away toward Helen,

  calling her the one murderer of many,

  destroyer of the Danäan men’s lives,

  creator of a sorrow never to be made good.

  antistrophe 2

  CHORUS: Spirit who falls on the house, on the brace

  1470

  of Tantalus’ sons;*52 Power that grows out of women. It is a match for my life,

  overpowers me, gnaws on my hea
rt.

  Over his body she stands

  like an evil crow, singing a holy

  song off-key, and gloating.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: So now you’ve set your thoughts on the matter straight:

  you call on the spirit, gorged again and again, of this clan;

  the blood-licking lust is from him, he feeds it in the belly.

  1480

  Before the old agony stops, a new sore runs.

  strophe 3

  CHORUS: Powerful, full of hard rage

  is the spirit in your story toward this house—

  terrible, terrible fable, glutted with blighting misfortune.

  The hand of Zeus, the fearful hand

  that causes, that does everything, lies on it.

  What happens without Zeus in mortal lives?

  In all this, what did heaven not accomplish?

  ephymnium 2

  1490

  My king! Tell me, how will I weep for you, my king?

  Is there anything that my loving heart can say

  as you lie in the web this spider wove,

  panting your life out in an ungodly death?

  I grieve for your resting place—fit for no free man—

  and the death by trickery that brought you down,

  the stroke from the two-edged weapon in her hand.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: You contend that this act is mine.

  But don’t count me, then, as Agamemnon’s consort.

  1500

  This corpse’s wife is only the form you see—

  an ancient, pitiless avenger has paid this man

  for Atreus and his brutal banquet.*53

  He killed this man (indicates Agamemnon), a full-grown sacrifice to follow the young ones.

  antistrophe 3

  CHORUS: Guiltless you call yourself, in this

  murder—but who would be your witness?

  How could you do it, how? But maybe your accomplice in vengeance

  came from the father. Through channels of brothers’ blood,

  1510

  the black War-God advances,

  in his hands the judgment for the gore

  of little children, clotting as it was swallowed.

  ephymnium 2

  CHORUS: My king! Tell me, how will I weep for you, my king?

  Is there anything that my loving heart can say

  as you lie in the web this spider wove,

  panting your life out in an ungodly death?

  I grieve for your resting place—fit for no free man—

  and the death by trickery that brought you down,

  1520

  the stroke from the two-edged weapon in her hand.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: No, I don’t think that his death was slavish, that

  […]

  Didn’t he scheme catastrophe for his house?

  My little one whom he fathered, who was raised here,

  Iphigenia, bitterly mourned

  […]*54

  What was due he rendered—and he suffered it also.

  He has got nothing to bluster about in Hades

  but his death on a sword—the price of his own doings.

  strophe 4

  1530

  CHORUS: Now lost, I stand outside of deft

  and careful thinking.

  Where shall I turn, while the house falls?

  I am afraid of the rain that pounds, that shakes the home,

  a bloody rain. But now it drizzles away.

  Justice moves on, and Fate is whetting her knife

  on another stone, for another job of havoc.

  ephymnium 3

  Earth, earth, I wish you’d taken me to yourself

  before I saw this man sprawled over

  1540

  his bath with its silver sides—pathetic bed.

  Who will bury him? Who will mourn for him?

  You—would you dare? You have killed your own

  husband. Will you mourn him loudly? Will you

  perform for his ghost this favor that’s no favor,

  in return for all he’s done? Will you wrong him this way?

  Who will send out praise, with tears, at the grave for the man

  who was like a god? Who will do this work

  with the truth in his heart?

  1550

  CLYTEMNESTRA: That’s no concern of yours, nothing you need to do. By our hands.

  he fell and he died; we will bury him also—

  and not to the sound of wailing from those in the house.

  But Iphigenia will be delighted;

  his daughter will do what’s right and meet her father

  face to face at the fast-skimming ferry of wailing,

  throwing her hands around his neck to kiss him.

  antistrophe 4

  1560

  CHORUS: One insult meets another now—

  who could decide?—it’s a deadlock:

  the plunderer plundered, the killer paying in full.

  Still, while Zeus lasts on his throne, the law will last

  that what a man does, he will endure. This is laid down.

  Tell me, who’ll drive this fertile curse from the house?

  Disaster and this race are mortared together.

  CLYTEMNESTRA: It’s a truth, it’s an oracle you’ve stumbled on.

  1570

  But I’d make a pact with the Pleisthenids’*55 guardian spirit

  to be content with this—though it’s unbearable—

  granted he goes from this house and grinds another family

  to dust with these deaths—no better than suicides.

  Wholly enough for me, a tiny share of these possessions,

  if I do away with the frenzy of killing back and forth in this palace.

  (Enter Aegisthus, from the palace, surrounded by guards.)

  AEGISTHUS: O genial sun that lights the day of justice!

  At last I think the gods above look down

  on the earth’s pain and vindicate us mortals,

  1580

  now that I see the man who lies here wearing

  the robe the Furies wove—heartwarming sight!—

  and paying for the trap set by his father

  who reigned here, Atreus. That man, in plain terms,

  banished Thyestes—my own father—though

  he was his brother, from his home and city,

  when the right to rule this country was disputed.

  On his return to Atreus’ hearth for mercy,

  wretched Thyestes’ life remained secure—

  which means he didn’t bloody native ground

  1590

  with his own death. But this man’s godless father

  gave keen but unkind hospitality

  to mine. He made a show of sacrifice

  on the special day, but served up children’s flesh—

  the digits of the feet, the serried fingers

  minced in a covered dish—and sat apart.

  His unsuspecting guest reached out at once*56

  and ate, to this clan’s ruin, as you see.

  Then, when he sensed the monstrous thing he’d done,

  he fell back, howling, retching out the slaughter,

  1600

  and called down harrowing doom on Pelops’ sons.

  The table he kicked over sealed the curse:

  annihilation for the race of Pleisthenes;

  so on these grounds, he’s there to look at, fallen,

  and I’m the one who—justly—stitched this murder.

  Atreus drove out my poor father and me—

  the thirteenth born,*57 still in my baby clothes,

  and Justice brought me back when I was grown.

  I fastened this whole grim device together

  and caught him in my hand before I came here.

  1610

  Death itself would be sweet for me, since now

  he lies before me in the net of Justice.

  CHORUS: Aegisthus, I don’t honor gloating gall—
>
  you, though, now say you killed this man on purpose?

  You schemed his pitiful murder on your own?

  Be sure of what I say: when Justice comes,

  your life won’t dodge the people’s stones and curses.

  AEGISTHUS: So that’s your tone, down on the rowing bench?*58

  Those with the power are sitting at the rudder.

  You’re not too old to learn how hard a lesson

  1620

  prudent obedience can be—at your age.

  Chains and starvation are preeminent

  physicians for the mind; they even school

  elders. Why can’t you see this? You’re not blind.

  Kick back when goaded? You’ll grow sore from beatings.

  CHORUS: Woman, house-watcher, when they came from war,

  you joined your marriage bed’s defiler, plotting

  this death for the commander of the army?

  AEGISTHUS: These words will father pain to make you sob.

  You don’t have Orpheus’ eloquence*59—far from it.

  1630

  All living creatures trailed him in their joy;

  with idiotic yips you’re rousing me

  to haul you off. Soon you’ll be tamed by force.

  CHORUS: So you’re the Argives’ tyrant, who consulted

  in this man’s death, but didn’t have the courage

  to stretch your own hand out and do the killing.

  AEGISTHUS: Plainly, it was a woman’s job to trick him,

  while I, the clan’s old enemy, was suspect.

  Now I’ll deploy his property to rule

  the citizens, and set a heavy yoke

  1640

  on those who won’t obey. No barley-fattened

  show-horses here! No, hateful hunger, rooming

  with darkness, will be jailers of their weakness.

  CHORUS: Your heart was quaking—or why didn’t you

  face the man down? A woman did it for you!

  That filthy outrage to our land and gods

  killed him. But is Orestes living somewhere?

  Fortune might favor him and bring him home

  to be the champion killer of this pair.

  AEGISTHUS: You choose to say and do this—soon you’ll learn.

  CHORUS: (refusing to back down)

  1650

  Come on, then, fellow soldiers, here’s our duty!

  AEGISTHUS: (to his own bodyguard)

  You all, come on, get ready. Draw your swords.

 

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