Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The Complete Aeschylus, Volume I: The Oresteia

    Page 7
    Prev Next

    shown to the two kings

      along the road; for still from the irresistible

      god-surge of strength within me

      breathes persuasion grown old with my years,

      to sing how the twin thrones joined

      as one heart in command of the Achaeans,

      130

      the youth of Hellas, driven

      with spear and arm to Troy by the ominous wing beat.

      The king of the birds to the kings

      of the ships, black eagle and a white behind it,

      in full view, hard by the palace,

      by the spear-hand, ripped open a hare

      with her unborn still swelling inside her,

      stopped from her last chance ever to escape.

      Sing sorrow, sorrow, but let the good prevail.

      And when the good seer of the army

      saw it,

      Antistrophe 1

      140

      perceiving the two kings

      weren’t of one mind, he knew that the Atreidae,

      the leaders of the fleet,

      were the ravenous destroyers of the hare,

      and so, interpreting

      the sign, he spoke: “This campaign will in time

      overrun Priam’s city,

      and Fate slaughter all of the thick herds

      of the people before the walls.

      But let no god’s jealousy before this happens

      150

      hurl into darkness the vast bit

      of the army meant to curb the mouth of Troy.

      For holy Artemis, in pity,

      is furious at her father’s flying blood-

      hounds eating in sacrifice

      the trembling hare and all her unripe young.

      The bird feast sickens her.

      Sing sorrow, sorrow, but let the good prevail.

      Beautiful as you are, and kind to the dew slick

      Epode

      cubs of ferocious lions,

      160

      ever delightful to the teat-sucking whelps

      of all beasts grazing the fields,

      grant nevertheless that the signs mean well—fraught

      though they are with evil.

      And blessed Apollo, Healer, keep her from sending

      gale winds against the ships,

      holding them fast and long at anchor, exacting

      cold, mute sacrifice,

      infection of blood strife and faithlessness. For wrath

      waits, ready to rise again,

      170

      an ever wakeful keeper of the house,

      unforgetting, secret, never

      to be denied its vengence for the child.”

      These were the mixed words

      Calchas shrieked out as he read the bird omen

      by the wayside

      for the royal house, and in harmony with these

      sing sorrow, sorrow, but let the good prevail.

      Whoever Zeus may be,

      Strophe 2

      if it pleases him by this

      180

      name to be called, by this

      name then I call to him.

      I have weighed this with that,

      and, pondering everything,

      discover nothing now

      but Zeus to cast for good

      the anxious weight of this

      unknowing from my mind.

      He who was once great, boundless

      Antistrophe 2

      in strength, unappeasable, is now

      190

      unnamed, unsung, as if

      he never was, and he

      who threw him, only to be

      thrown in turn, losing

      the third fall, he

      is gone, too, past and gone.

      But he who sings glad praise

      of Zeus’ victory

      strikes to the heart of knowledge:

      For it was Zeus who set

      Strophe 3

      200

      men on the path to wisdom

      when he decreed the fixed

      law that suffering

      alone shall be their teacher.

      Even in sleep pain drips

      down through the heart as fear,

      all night, as memory.

      We learn unwillingly.

      From the high bench of the gods

      by violence, it seems, grace comes.

      210

      And then the older of the two

      Antistrophe 3

      kings of the Achaean ships,

      not blaming the prophet, let

      his spirit blow with the hard

      winds of luck that blew

      in against him when the host

      was held fast in port

      at Aulis on the shore

      opposite Chalcis, where

      the tides crash to and fro,

      220

      their food stores dwindling,

      winds from the Strymon driving against them,

      Strophe 4

      battering ships, and bringing hunger,

      illness, and a dull, undistracted

      leisure to the men who wandered,

      neglectful of ship and cable, who

      by doing nothing doubled the time

      of the delay, the flower of Argos

      all wasting away now, withering.

      And when the seer cried Artemis was

      230

      behind this, and showed the kings

      a salve more hateful than the storm,

      so that the Atreidae threw down

      their staves against the ground and wept,

      the older prince spoke out before them:

      Antistrophe 4

      “My fate is heavy either way:

      heavy if I refuse to obey,

      and heavy too if I kill my child,

      pride of my house, staining these father’s

      hands with streams of maiden blood

      240

      spilled at the altar. Which way is free

      from evil? Can I desert my ships?

      Fail all my allies? For in the eyes

      of heaven, that they, with too eager passion,

      should crave a sacrifice, even

      of maiden blood, to still the winds,

      is right. May it all be for the best.”

      And when he secured the yoke-strap

      Strophe 5

      of necessity fast upon him,

      yielding his swerving spirit up

      250

      to a reckless blast, vile and unholy,

      from then on he was changed, his will

      annealed now to mere ruthlessness.

      For men are made bold in the throes

      of madness urging evil, in love

      with cruelty, courting sure disaster.

      And so he steeled himself into

      the sacrificer of his daughter

      to quicken a war waged for a woman

      with an early offering for his ships.

      260

      And all her prayers, her cries of Father,

      Antistrophe 5

      Father, even her girlhood, counted

      for less than nothing to the captains

      frenzied for battle, and her father,

      after praying, though she clasped

      his knees, begged him with all her heart,

      ordered his men to lift her like

      a goat, face downward, above the altar,

      robes falling all around her, and

      he had her mouth gagged, the bit yanked

      270

      roughly, stifling a cry that would

      have brought a curse down on the house.

      And with her saffron robe streaming

      Strophe 6

      down from her shoulders to the ground,

      with pitiful arrows from her eyes

      she shot each sacrificer, vivid

      as in a picture, wanting to speak,

      to call each one by name, for often

      at the rich feast in her father’s halls

      the girl had sung before the men

      280

      and
    with the pure voice of a virgin,

      at the third libation, lovingly

      had given honor to her loving

      father’s paean for healing luck.

      What happened next I neither know

      Antistrophe 6

      nor speak. The art of Calchas does not fail

      to reach fulfillment. And Justice tilts

      the scales to ensure that suffering

      is the only teacher. As for the Future,

      you will only learn it when it comes.

      290

      Till then, leave it alone. Pointless

      to grieve before there’s reason to.

      All will come clear when the dawn comes.

      The doors of the palace open, and during the following

      lines CLYTEMNESTRA and her attendants enter.

      So, may what comes from this be good,

      be as this nearest, only breast-

      work of our Apian land might wish.

      CHORUS LEADER (turning to address Clytemnestra) Obedient to your

      power, Clytemnestra,

      I’ve come straight here: when the king’s gone it’s right

      to honor the wife who keeps the throne for him.

      Whether or not it’s good news you have heard,

      300

      or offer sacrifice in hope of good news,

      I’d like to learn, though I won’t grudge your silence.

      CLYTEMNESTRA May good news only, as the saying goes,

      be born with the dawn that’s born from mother Night.

      The joy I have to tell you outruns all hope.

      The city of Priam is in Argive hands.

      CHORUS LEADER Have I heard you right? Your words outrun belief.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Achaeans hold Troy now. Is that clear enough?

      CHORUS LEADER Joy overwhelms me, swelling my eyes with tears.

      CLYTEMNESTRA Yes, and your eye attests your loyal heart.

      310

      CHORUS LEADER What proof, though, is there? Your trust is based on what?

      CLYTEMNESTRA Of course I have proof, if no god has fooled me.

      CHORUS LEADER Are you persuaded by some dream you’ve had?

      CLYTEMNESTRA I give no credence to a sleeping mind.

      CHORUS LEADER Or some vague rumor on which your hope has fed?

      CLYTEMNESTRA Do you scorn my thinking as you would a girl’s?

      CHORUS LEADER But when exactly? When was the city taken?

      CYLTEMNESTRA Last night, the mother of the light we see.

      CHORUS LEADER What kind of messenger could come so fast?

      CYLTEMNESTRA Hephaestus, flashing a bright flame down from Ida.

      320

      Beacon to beacon, the fire ran homeward, first

      shining above the island, till another shone

      from Ida to the rock of Hermes in Lemnos,

      on the crag of Zeus on Athos, then another

      went soaring out across the arching sea—

      unflagging, restless, torch after powerful torch;

      the pine now like a sunrise in the dead

      of night flared jubilantly to the watchtower

      on Mt. Macistus who, in turn, never delayed,

      or gave in heedlessly to sleep, so never

      330

      failed his duty, as the fiery current

      ran on unbroken, signaling from afar,

      over the waters of Euripus, to

      the sentinels upon Messapion.

      And they too answered light with light,

      setting a bonfire of gray brushwood blazing.

      It never dimmed, the flame, or slowed, for now

      it overleaped the plains of the Asopus,

      bright as a full moon, to Cithaeron’s rock,

      where yet another convoy was ignited.

      340

      And far ahead of them the watchmen sent

      the light that they received from far behind,

      burning a brighter blaze than was commanded;

      light shimmered in the water as it passed

      over the Gorgon Face, from shore to shore,

      and at the mountain of the wandering goats

      forged new links in the chain of fire, the men there

      gathering so much kindling together

      that a high beard of flame now passed beyond

      the headland that looks out across the gulf

      350

      of Saron till at last it plunged all the way

      to Arachne’s peak, the watch nearest the city.

      From there it swooped down on the royal house,

      this flame descendent of the fire of Ida.

      This is the course of torchbearers I arranged;

      each carrying the relay from the one before,

      and everyone victorious from the first

      to last. This is the evidence and sign

      of the news my husband sends to me from Troy.

      CHORUS LEADER Soon, lady, I’ll give the gods my thanks.

      360

      But this tale of yours fills me with so much wonder

      that I would have you tell it once again,

      through to the end, till all my wonder’s gone.

      CLYTEMNESTRA The Achaeans hold Troy in their hands today.

      The city, I think, rings with a sharp clash

      of cries that will not blend. Pour vinegar

      and oil in one bowl, and you would say

      the two like enemies shun one another;

      just so you could tell the conquered from

      the conquerors, each crying their different fates

      370

      in different voices. Here are the Trojans bending

      down over the bodies of their husbands,

      brothers; children embracing fathers, and fathers

      children, all wailing in voices no longer free

      for the loved ones they will never hold again.

      And here the Achaeans, spurred on by the work

      that sends them wandering all night, after

      the fighting’s over, their hunger now unstrictured,

      under no one’s orders, foraging

      for whatever grub they stumble on,

      380

      taking what quarters chance puts in their way.

      And even now they bed down in the houses

      that their spears have taken, free of the frost and dew,

      the open sky, sleeping the sleep of men

      the gods protect, all night, without a watch.

      Now if they only reverence the gods

      that keep the city, the shrines and holy temples

      of the conquered land, then they, the vanquishers,

      might not be vanquished in their turn. Let no

      unholy passion overwhelm them, taken

      390

      by greed to ravage what should be left alone.

      For they must still win their safe passage back

      all down the homestretch of the double course.

      Yet even if the army should return

      without offending any god, even

      if they don’t waken the anger of the dead

      for what was done to them, yes, even then

      some unseen trouble may still lie in wait.

      This is my woman’s tale. But may the good

      win out completely for all men to see.

      400

      Of all the blessings whose enjoyment I

      now pray for, this one surely is the best.

      CHORUS LEADER Well said, lady. Like a wise man.

      Since I have heard your evidence, I’m ready

      to offer thanks up to the gods. Our joy

      today is equal to the pain that made it.

      CLYTEMNESTRA exits into the palace.

      CHORUS O Zeus, high one, and kindly Night,

      holder of all

      the brightest glories over us,

      you who cast down over the towers

      410

      of Troy the smothering mesh, seamless,

      so that in no way could the old

      or young slip free


      of the enslaving wide net of

      all-conquering destruction. I stand

      in awe of great

      Zeus, lord of host and guest, who has

      accomplished this, had slowly all

      along been bending back his bow

      on Alexander, so that his bolt

      420

      should not fall short

      of the mark nor fly beyond the stars.

      Let them speak of a stroke from Zeus;

      Strophe 1

      that much can be traced, at least.

      What he decides, he accomplishes.

      Impiety to say, as some have,

      that no god ever deigns to see

      to those who trample underfoot

      the grace of things untouchable.

      The punishment for reckless daring

      430

      will be revealed to the descendents

      of the ones whose pride blows boundless, whose house

      abounds with riches far beyond

      what’s best. May I have wealth

      without the taint of trouble, enough

      to satisfy a man of sense.

      For no gold’s blinding glitter

      protects him who heedlessly

      kicks the high altar of Justice

      over out of sight.

      440

      Rapt by miserable Persuasion,

      Antistrophe 1

      the irresistible daughter of

      Destruction, who decides before-

      hand, the guilty man’s whipped on, there’s

      no antidote, the evil now

      shines candidly its garish light.

      Like bad bronze blackening when handled

      or rubbed, so he too, when brought to justice

      shows the black grain of his being

      and, foolish as a boy who runs

      450

      after a flying bird, brings down

      against his city a wasting plague.

      His fervent prayers will go unheard

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026