<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>Think you the wretch in heartfelt agony<br/>
Weeps inconsolably her perished son?<br/>
She left us with a laugh! O misery!<br/>
How thou hast ruined me, dear brother mine,<br/>
By dying! Thou hast torn from out my heart<br/>
The only hope I cherished yet, that thou<br/>
Living wouldst come hereafter to avenge<br/>
Thy father’s woes and mine. Where must I go?<br/>
Since I am left of thee and of my sire<br/>
Bereaved and lonely, and once more must be<br/>
The drudge and menial of my bitterest foes,<br/>
My father’s murderers. Say, is it well?<br/>
Nay, nevermore will I consort with these,<br/>
But sinking here before the palace gate,<br/>
Thus, friendless, I will wither out my life.<br/>
Hereat if any in the house be vexed,<br/>
Let them destroy me; for to take my life<br/>
Were kindness, and to live is only pain:<br/>
Life hath not kindled my desires with joy.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">CH. 1.</span>
O ever-blazing sun!</span><span class="chm">I 1</span><br/>
<span class="in6">O lightning of the eternal Sire!</span><br/>
<span class="in6">Can ye behold this done</span><br/>
<span class="in6">And tamely hide your all-avenging fire?</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Ah me!</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">CH. 2.</span>
<span class="in4">My daughter, why these tears?</span></span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Woe!</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">CH. 3.</span>
<span class="in4">Weep not, calm thy fears.</span></span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
You kill me.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">CH. 4.</span>
<span class="in8">How?</span></span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in6"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in16">To breathe</span></span><br/>
<span class="in6">A hope for one beneath</span><br/>
<span class="in6">So clearly sunk in death,</span><br/>
<span class="in6">’Tis to afflict me more</span><br/>
<span class="in6">Already pining sore.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 154]</span>
<span class="cnm">CH. 5.</span>
<SPAN href="#Elec_n_8" name="Elec_t_8" id="Elec_t_8">One in a woman’s toils</SPAN><span class="chm">I 2 <span class="chln">[837-870]</span></span><br/>
<SPAN href="#Elec_n_8">Was tangled,</SPAN> buried by her glittering coils,<br/>
Who now beneath—</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in12">Ah woe!</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 6.</span>
Rules with a spirit unimpaired and strong.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O dreadful!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 7.</span>
<span class="in8">Dreadful was the wrong.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
But she was quelled.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 8.</span>
<span class="in14">Ay.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in20">True!</span><br/>
That faithful mourner knew<br/>
A brother’s aid. But I<br/>
Have no man now. The one<br/>
I had, is gone, is gone.<br/>
Rapt into nothingness.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 9.</span>
Thou art wrung with sore distress.<span class="chm">II 1</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I know it. Too well I know,<br/>
Taught by a life of woe,<br/>
Where horror dwells without relief.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 10.</span>
Our eyes have seen thy grief.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Then comfort not again—</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH. 11.</span>
Whither now turns thy strain?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
One utterly bereft,<br/>
Seeing no hope is left,<br/>
Of help from hands owning the same great sire.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">CH. 12.</span>
’Tis nature’s debt.</span><span class="chm">II 2</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in18">To expire</span></span><br/>
<span class="in4">On sharp-cut dragging thongs,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">’Midst wildly trampling throngs</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Of swiftly racing hoofs, like him,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Poor hapless one?</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">CH. 13.</span>
<span class="in6">Vast, dim,</span></span><br/>
<span class="in4">And boundless was the harm.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Yea, severed from mine arm,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">By strangers kept—</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">CH. 14.</span>
<span class="in8">O pain!</span></span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Hidden he must remain,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Of me unsepulchred, unmourned, unwept.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 155]</span><span class="linenum">[871-906]</span></p>
<p class="sdn">Enter <span class="cnm">CHRYSOTHEMIS</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Driven by delight, dear sister, I am come,<br/>
Reckless of dignity, with headlong speed.<br/>
For news I bear of joy and sweet relief<br/>
From ills that drew from thee thy ceaseless moan.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Whence couldst thou hear of succour for my woes,<br/>
That close in darkness without hope of dawn?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Here is Orestes, learn it from my mouth,<br/>
As certainly as you now look on me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What? Art thou mad, unhappy one, to laugh<br/>
Over thine own calamity and mine?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
No, by our father’s hearth, I say not this<br/>
In mockery. I tell you he is come.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Me miserable! Who hath given thine ear<br/>
The word that so hath wrought on thy belief?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Myself am the eyewitness, no one else<br/>
Gained my belief, but proofs I clearly saw.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What sign hath so engrossed thine eye, poor girl?<br/>
What sight hath fired thee with this quenchless glow?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
But list to me, I pray thee, that henceforth<br/>
Thou mayest account me clear eyed, or a fool!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
By all means, if it pleasure thee, say on.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Well, I will tell thee all I saw:—I came<br/>
Unto the ancient tomb that holds our sire;<br/>
And from the topmost mound I marked a stream<br/>
Of milk fresh-flowing, and his resting place<br/>
Ringed round with garlands of all flowers that blow.<br/>
I marvelled at the sight, and peered about,<br/>
Lest some one might be nearer than we knew.<br/>
But finding all was quiet in the spot,<br/>
I ventured closer to the tomb, and there,<br/>
Hard by the limit, I beheld a curl<br/>
Of hair new shorn, with all the gloss of youth<br/>
And straight it struck my heart, as with a sense<br/>
Of something seen, ah me! long, long ago,<br/>
And told me that my sight encountered here<br/>
The token of Orestes, dearest soul<br/>
Then, clasping it, I did not cry aloud,<br/>
But straight mine eyes were filled with tears of joy.<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 156]</span><span class="linenum">[907-943]</span>
And now as much as then I feel assured<br/>
He and none else bestowed this ornament.<br/>
To whom beyond thyself and me belongs<br/>
Such consecration? And I know this well,<br/>
I did it not,—nor thou. Impossible!<br/>
Thou canst not worship even the blessèd Gods<br/>
Forth of this roof, unpunished. And, most sure,<br/>
Our mother is not minded so to act,<br/>
Nor, had she done it, could we fail to know.<br/>
This offering comes then of Orestes’ hand.<br/>
Take courage, dear one. Not one fate pursues<br/>
One house perpetually, but changeth still.<br/>
Ours was a sullen Genius, but perchance<br/>
This day begins the assurance of much good.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Oh how I pity thine infatuate mind!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Why? Dost thou find no comfort in my news?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
You know not where you roam. Far wide! far wide!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Not know? when I have seen it with mine eyes?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Dear, he is dead. Look not to him, poor girl!<br/>
Salvation comes to thee no more from him.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Oh me, unfortunate! Who told thee this?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
He who stood by and saw his life destroyed.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Amazement seizes me. Where is that man?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Right welcome to the mother there within.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Me miserable! Who then can have decked<br/>
With all those ceremonies our father’s tomb?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I cannot but suppose some hand hath brought<br/>
These gifts in memory of Orestes dead.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
O cruel fate! While I in ecstasy<br/>
Sped with such news, all ignorant, it seems,<br/>
Of our dire fortune; and, arriving, find<br/>
Fresh sorrows added to the former woe.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
It is so, sister; yet if thou wilt list<br/>
To me, thou mayest disperse this heaviness.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
What? Shall I raise the dead again to life?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I did not mean so. I am not so fond.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
What bid you then that I have power to do?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
To endure courageously what I enjoin.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 157]</span><span class="linenum">[944-981]</span>
<span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
So it make profit, I will not refuse.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Remember, without toil no plan may thrive!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
I know it, and will aid thee to my power.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Then hearken my resolve. Thou seëst now,<br/>
We have no friendly succour in the world;<br/>
But death has taken all, and we are left<br/>
Two only. I, so long as I could hear<br/>
My brother lived and flourished, still had hope<br/>
He would arise to wreak his father’s blood.<br/>
But now that he is gone, to thee I turn,<br/>
To help thy sister boldly to destroy<br/>
The guilty author of our father’s death,<br/>
Aegisthus.—Wherefore hide it from thee now?<br/>
—Yea, sister! Till what term wilt thou remain<br/>
Inactive? To what end? What hope is yet<br/>
Left standing? Surely thou hast cause to grieve,<br/>
Bobbed of thy father’s opulent heritage,<br/>
And feeling bitterly the creeping years<br/>
That find thee still a virgin and unwed.<br/>
Nay, nor imagine thou shalt ever know<br/>
That blessing. Not so careless of his life<br/>
Is King Aegisthus, as to risk the birth<br/>
Of sons from us, to his most certain fall.<br/>
But if thou wilt but follow my resolve,<br/>
First thou shalt win renown of piety<br/>
From our dead father, and our brother too,<br/>
Who rest beneath the ground, and shalt be free<br/>
For evermore in station as in birth,<br/>
And nobly matched in marriage, for the good<br/>
Draw gazers to them still. Then seest thou not<br/>
What meed of honour, if thou dost my will,<br/>
Thou shalt apportion to thyself and me?<br/>
For who, beholding us, what citizen,<br/>
What foreigner, will not extend the hand<br/>
Of admiration, and exclaim, ‘See, friends,<br/>
These scions of one stock, these noble twain,<br/>
These that have saved their father’s house from woe,<br/>
Who once when foes were mighty, set their life<br/>
Upon a cast, and stood forth to avenge<br/>
The stain of blood! Who will not love the pair<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 158]</span><span class="linenum">[981-1018]</span>
And do them reverence? Who will not give<br/>
Honour at festivals, and in the throng<br/>
Of popular resort, to these in chief,<br/>
For their high courage and their bold emprise?’<br/>
Such fame will follow us in all the world.<br/>
Living or dying, still to be renowned.<br/>
Ah, then, comply, dear sister; give thy sire<br/>
This toil—this labour to thy brother give;<br/>
End these my sufferings, end thine own regret:<br/>
The well-born cannot bear to live in shame.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
In such affairs, for those who speak and hear<br/>
Wise thoughtfulness is still the best ally.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
True, noble women, and before she spake<br/>
Sound thought should have prevented the rash talk<br/>
That now hath proved her reckless. What wild aim<br/>
Beckons thee forth in arming this design<br/>
Whereto thou wouldst demand my ministry?<br/>
Dost not perceive, thou art not man but woman,<br/>
Of strength inferior to thine enemies,—<br/>
Their Genius daily prospering more and more,<br/>
Whilst ours is dwindling into nothingness?<br/>
Who then that plots against a life so strong<br/>
Shall quit him of the danger without harm?<br/>
Take heed we do not add to our distress<br/>
Should some one hear of this our colloquy.<br/>
Small help and poor advantage ’twere for us<br/>
To win brief praise and then inglorious die.<br/>
Nay, death is not so hateful as when one<br/>
Desiring death is balked of that desire.<br/>
And I beseech thee, ere in utter ruin<br/>
We perish and make desolate our race,<br/>
Refrain thy rage. And I will guard for thee<br/>
In silence these thy words unrealized;<br/>
If thou wilt learn this wisdom from long time,<br/>
Having no strength, to bend before the strong.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Comply. Than prudence and a heedful mind,<br/>
No fairer treasure can be found for men.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Thy words have not surprised me. Well I knew<br/>
The good I offered would come back with scorn.<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 159]</span><span class="linenum">[1019-1052]</span>
I, all alone and with a single hand,<br/>
Must do this. For it shall not rest undone.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Would thou hadst been thus minded when our sire<br/>
Lay dying! In one act thou hadst compassed all.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
My spirit was the same: my mind was less.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Be such the life-long temper of thy mind!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Thine admonition augurs little aid.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Yea. For the attempt would bring me certain bane.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I envy thee thy prudence, hate thy fear.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Even when thou speak’st me fair, I will endure it.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Take heart. That never will be thine from me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Long time remains to settle that account.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I find no profit in thee. Go thy way.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Profit there is, hadst thou a mind to learn.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Go to thy mother and declare all this!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
I am not so in hatred of thy life.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Yet know the shame thou wouldst prepare for me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
No, no! Not shame, but care for thine estate.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Must I still follow as thou thinkest good?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
When thou hast wisdom, thou shalt be the guide.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
’Tis hard when error wears the garb of sense.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Right. That is the misfortune of your case.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Why? Feel you not the justice of my speech?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Justice may chance to bring me injury.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I care not, I, to live by such a rule.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Well, if you do it, you will find me wise.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Well, I will do it, nought dismayed by thee.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Speak you plain sooth? and will you not be counselled?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
No, for bad counsel is of all most hateful.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
You take the sense of nothing that I say.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Long since, not newly, my resolve is firm.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
Then I will go. Thy heart will ne’er be brought<br/>
To praise my words, nor I thine action here.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Then go within! I will not follow thee,<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 160]</span><span class="linenum">[1053-1089]</span>
Though thou desire it vehemently. None<br/>
Would be so fond to hunt on a cold trail.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CHR.</span>
If this seem wisdom to thee, then be wise<br/>
Thy way: but in the hour of misery,<br/>
When it hath caught thee, thou wilt praise my words.
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span>Exit <span class="cnm">CHRYSOTHEMIS</span></span><br/></p>
<p class="sdn"><span class="cnm">CHORUS</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="in8">Wise are the birds of air</span><span class="chm">I 1</span><br/>
<span class="in10">That with true filial care</span><br/>
<span class="in4">For those provide convenient food</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Who gave them birth, who wrought their good.</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Why will not men the like perfection prove?</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Else, by the fires above,</span><br/>
<span class="in10">And heavenly Rectitude,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Fierce recompense they shall not long elude.</span><br/>
<span class="in4">O darkling rumour, world-o’er-wandering voice</span><br/>
<span class="in4">That piercest to the shades beneath the ground,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">To dead Atrides waft a sound</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Of sad reproach, not bidding him rejoice.</span></p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="in8">Stained is the ancestral hall,</span><span class="chm">I 2</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Broken the battle-call,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">That heretofore his children twain</span><br/>
<span class="in4">In loving concord did sustain.</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Alone, deserted, vexed, Electra sails,</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Storm-tossed with rugged gales,</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Lamenting evermore</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Like piteous Philomel, and pining sore</span><br/>
<span class="in4">For her lost father;—might she but bring down</span><br/>
<span class="in4">That two-fold Fury, caring not for death,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">But ready to resign her breath,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">What maid so worthy of a sire’s renown?</span></p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="in2">None who inherit from a noble race,</span><span class="chm">II 1</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Complying with things base</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Will let their ancient glory be defiled.</span><br/>
<span class="in10">So ’twas thy choice, dear child,</span><br/>
<span class="in4"><SPAN href="#Elec_n_9" name="Elec_t_9" id="Elec_t_9">Through homeless misery</SPAN> to win a two-fold prize,</span><br/>
<span class="in10"><SPAN href="#Elec_n_10" name="Elec_t_10" id="Elec_t_10">Purging the sin and shame</SPAN></span><br/>
<span class="in10">That cloud the Argive name,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">So to be called most noble and most wise.</span></p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="dpgn">[page 161]</span>
<span class="in2">May’st thou surpass thy foes in wealth and power</span><span class="chm">II 2 <span class="chln">[1090-1123]</span></span><br/>
<span class="in10">As o’er thee now they tower!</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Since I have found thee, not in bright estate,</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Nor blessed by wayward fate,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">But through thy loyalty to Heaven’s eternal cause</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Wearing the stainless crown</span><br/>
<span class="in10">Of perfectest renown,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">And richly dowered by the mightiest laws.</span></p>
<p class="sdn">Enter <span class="cnm">ORESTES</span> and <span class="cnm">PYLADES</span>, with the urn.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Say, dames and damsels, have we heard aright,<br/>
And speed we to the goal of our desire?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
And what desire or quest hath brought thee hither?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
I seek Aegisthus’ dwelling all this while.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Welcome. The tongue that told thee hath no blame.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Which of you all will signify within<br/>
Our joint arrival,—not unwelcome here.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
This maiden, if the nearest should report.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Mistress, wilt thou go yonder and make known,<br/>
That certain Phocians on Aegisthus wait?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Oh! can it be that you are come to bring<br/>
Clear proofs of the sad rumour we have heard?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
I know not what ye have heard. Old Strophius<br/>
Charged me with tidings of Orestes’ fate.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What, stranger? How this terror steals on me!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Bearing scant remnants of his body dead<br/>
In this small vase thou seest, we bring them home.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O sorrow! thou art here: I see full well<br/>
That burden of my heart in present view.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
If thou hast tears for aught Orestes suffered,<br/>
Know that he lies within this vessel’s room.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Ah, sir! by all in Heaven, if yonder urn<br/>
Hide him, ah! give it once into my hand,<br/>
That o’er that dust I may lament and mourn<br/>
Myself and mine own house and all our woe!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Bring it and give her, whosoe’er she be.<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 162]</span><span class="linenum">[1124-1163]</span>
For not an enemy—this petition shows it—<br/>
But of his friends or kindred, is this maid.<br/>
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span>The urn is given into <span class="cnm">ELECTRA’S</span> hands</span><br/></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O monument of him whom o’er all else<br/>
I loved! sole relic of Orestes’ life,<br/>
How cold in this thy welcome is the hope<br/>
Wherein I decked thee as I sent thee forth!<br/>
Then bright was thy departure, whom I now<br/>
Bear lightly, a mere nothing, in my hands.<br/>
Would I had gone from life, ere I dispatched<br/>
Thee from my arms that saved thee to a land<br/>
Of strangers, stealing thee from death! For then<br/>
Thou hadst been quiet on that far off day,<br/>
And had thy portion in our father’s tomb<br/>
Now thou hast perished in the stranger land<br/>
Far from thy sister, lorn and comfortless<br/>
And I, O wretchedness! neither have bathed<br/>
And laid thee forth, nor from the blazing fire<br/>
Collected the sad burden, as was meet<br/>
But thou, when foreign hands have tended thee<br/>
Com’st a small handful in a narrow shell<br/>
Woe for the constant care I spent on thee<br/>
Of old all vainly, with sweet toil! For never<br/>
Wast thou thy mother’s darling, nay, but mine,<br/>
And I of all the household most thy nurse,<br/>
While ‘sister, sister,’ was thy voice to me<br/>
But now all this is vanished in one day,<br/>
Dying in thy death. Thou hast carried all away<br/>
As with a whirlwind, and art gone. No more<br/>
My father lives, thyself art lost in death,<br/>
I am dead, who lived in thee. Our enemies<br/>
Laugh loudly, and she maddens in her joy,<br/>
Our mother most unmotherly, of whom<br/>
Thy secret missives ofttimes told me, thou<br/>
Wouldst be the punisher. But that fair hope<br/>
The hapless Genius of thy lot and mine<br/>
Hath reft away, and gives thee thus to me,—<br/>
For thy loved form thy dust and fruitless shade<br/>
O bitterness! O piteous sight! Woe! woe!<br/>
Oh! sent on thy dire journey, dearest one,<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 163]</span><span class="linenum">[1164-1197]</span>
How thou hast ruined me! Thou hast indeed,<br/>
Dear brother! Then receive me to thyself,<br/>
Hide me in this thy covering, there to dwell,<br/>
Me who am nothing, with thy nothingness,<br/>
For ever! Yea, when thou wert here above,<br/>
I ever shared with thee in all, and now<br/>
I would not have thee shut me from thy tomb.<br/>
Oh! let me die and follow thee! the dead,<br/>
My mind assures me now, have no more pain.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Electra, think! Thou hadst a mortal sire,<br/>
And mortal was thy brother. Grieve not far.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
O me! What shall I speak, or which way turn<br/>
The desperate word? I cannot hold my tongue.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What pain o’ercomes thee? Wherefore speak’st thou so?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Can this be famed Electra I behold?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
No other. In sad case, as you may see</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Ah! deep indeed was this calamity!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Is’t possible that thou shouldst grieve for me?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
O ruined form! abandoned to disgrace!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
’Tis me you mean, stranger, I feel it now.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Woe ’s me! Untrimmed for bridal, hapless maid!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Why this fixed gaze, O stranger! that deep groan?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
How all unknowing was I of mine ill!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What thing hath passed to make it known to thee?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
The sight of thee attired with boundless woe.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
And yet thine eye sees little of my pain.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Can aught be still more hateful to be seen?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I have my dwelling with the murderers—</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Of whom? What evil would thy words disclose?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Of him who gave me birth. I am their slave.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Whose power compels thee to this sufferance?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
One called my mother, most unmotherly.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
How? by main force, or by degrading shames?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
By force and shames, and every kind of evil.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
And is there none to succour or prevent?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
None. Him I had, you give me here in dust.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 164]</span><span class="linenum">[1199-1229]</span>
<span class="cnm">OR.</span>
How mine eye pities thee this while, poor maid!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Know now, none ever pitied me but you.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
None ever came whose heart like sorrow wrung.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Is’t possible we have some kinsman here?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
I will tell it, if these women here be friendly.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
They are. They may be trusted. Only speak.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Let go yon vase, that thou may’st learn the whole.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Nay, by the Gods! be not so cruel, sir!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Obey me and thou shalt not come to harm.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Ah, never rob me of what most I love!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
You must not hold it.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in18">O me miserable</span><br/>
For thee, Orestes, if I lose thy tomb!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Speak no rash word. Thou hast no right to mourn.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
No right to mourn my brother who is gone?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Such utterance belongs not to thy tongue,</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Oh, am I thus dishonoured of the dead?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Far from dishonour. But this ne’er was thine.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Is’t not Orestes’ body that I bear?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Nay, but the idle dressing of a tale.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
And where is his poor body’s resting-place?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Nowhere. Seek not the living with the dead,</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
My son, what saidst thou?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in20">Nought but what is true.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Doth he yet live?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in14">If I have life in me.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Art thou Orestes?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in14">Let my signet here,</span><br/>
That was our father’s, tell thine eyes, I am.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O day of days!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in12">Time hath no happier hour.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Is it thy voice?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in12">Hearken not otherwhere.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Have my arms caught thee?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in22">Hold me so for aye!</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O dearest women, Argives of my home!<br/>
Ye see Orestes, dead in craft, but now<br/>
By that same craft delivered and preserved.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 165]</span><span class="linenum">[1230-1270]</span>
<span class="cnm">CH.</span>
We see, dear daughter, and the gladsome tear<br/>
Steals from our eye to greet the bright event.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Offspring of him I loved beyond all telling!<span class="chm">I 1</span><br/>
Ah! thou art come,—hast found me, eye to eye<br/>
Behold’st the face thou didst desire to see.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
True, I am here; but bide in silence still.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Wherefore?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Hush! speak not loud, lest one within should hearken.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
By ever-virgin Artemis, ne’er will I<br/>
Think worthy of my fear<br/>
This useless mass of woman-cowardice<br/>
Burdening the house within,<br/>
Not peering out of door.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Yet know that women too have might in war.<br/>
Of that methinks thou hast feeling evidence.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Ah me! thou hast unveiled<br/>
And thrust before my gaze<br/>
That burning load of my distress<br/>
No time will soothe, no remedy will heal.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
I know that too. But when we are face to face<br/>
With the evildoers,—then let remembrance work.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
All times alike are fit with instant pain<span class="chm">I 2</span><br/>
Justly to mind me of that dreadful day;<br/>
Even now but hardly hath my tongue been free.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Yes, that is it. Therefore preserve this boon.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Whereby?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Put limits to unseasonable talk.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Ah! brother, who, when thou art come,<br/>
Could find it meet to exchange<br/>
Language for silence, as thou bidst me do?<br/>
Since beyond hope or thought<br/>
Was this thy sight to me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
God gave me to your sight when so he willed.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O heaven of grace beyond<br/>
The joy I knew but now!<br/>
If God hath brought thee to our roof,<br/>
A miracle of bounty then is here.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 166]</span>
<span class="linenum">[]<ins class="correction" title="Note: original printing had 1071-1304">1271-1304</ins></span>
<span class="cnm">OR.</span>
I hate to curb the gladness of thy spirit,<br/>
But yet I fear this ecstasy of joy.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Oh! after all these years,<span class="chm">II</span><br/>
Now thou at length hast sped<br/>
Thy dearest advent on the wished-for way,<br/>
Do not, in all this woe<br/>
Thou seest surrounding me—</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
What means this prayer?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in20">Forbid me not my joy,</span><br/>
Nor make me lose the brightness of thy face!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Deep were my wrath at him who should attempt it.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Is my prayer heard?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in16">Why doubt it?</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in28">Friends, I learned</span><br/>
A tale beyond my thought; and hearing I restrained<br/>
My passion, voiceless in my misery,<br/>
Uttering no cry. But now<br/>
I have thee safe; now, dearest, thou art come,<br/>
With thy blest countenance, which I<br/>
Can ne’er forget, even at the worst of woe.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
A truce now to unnecessary words.<br/>
My mother’s vileness and Aegisthus’ waste,<br/>
Draining and squandering with spendthrift hand<br/>
Our patrimony, tell me not anew.<br/>
Such talk might stifle opportunity.<br/>
But teach me, as befits the present need,<br/>
What place may serve by lurking vigilance<br/>
Or sudden apparition to o’erwhelm<br/>
Our foes in the adventure of to-day.<br/>
And, when we pass within, take heedful care<br/>
Bright looks betray thee not unto our mother.<br/>
But groan as for the dire calamity<br/>
Vainly reported:—Let’s achieve success,<br/>
Then with free hearts we may rejoice and laugh.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Dear brother, wheresoe’er thy pleasure leads,<br/>
My will shall follow, since the joys I know,<br/>
Not from myself I took them, but from thee.<br/>
And ne’er would I consent thy slightest grief<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 167]</span><span class="linenum">[1305-1342]</span>
Should win for me great gain. Ill should I then<br/>
Serve the divinity of this high hour!<br/>
Thou knowest how matters in the palace stand.<br/>
Thou hast surely heard, Aegisthus is from home,<br/>
And she, our mother, is within. Nor fear<br/>
She should behold me with a smiling face.<br/>
Mine ancient hate of her hath sunk too deep.<br/>
And from the time I saw thee, tears of joy<br/>
Will cease not. Wherefore should I stint their flow?<br/>
I, who in this thy coming have beheld<br/>
Thee dead and living? Strangely hast thou wrought<br/>
On me;—that should my father come alive,<br/>
I would not think the sight were miracle,<br/>
But sober truth. Since such thy presence, then,<br/>
Lead as thy spirit prompts. For I alone<br/>
Of two things surely had achieved one,<br/>
Noble deliverance or a noble death.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Be silent; for I hear within the house<br/>
A footstep coming forth.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
(<span class="sdm">loudly</span>).
<span class="in8">Strangers, go in!</span><br/>
For none within the palace will reject<br/>
Your burden, nor be gladdened by the event.</p>
<p class="sdn">Enter the <span class="cnm">Old Man</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OLD M.</span>
O lost in folly and bereft of soul!<br/>
Is’t that your care for life hath ebbed away,<br/>
Or were you born without intelligence,<br/>
When fallen, not near, but in the midst of ill,<br/>
And that the greatest, ye perceive it not?<br/>
Had I not watched the doors this while, your deeds<br/>
Had gone within the palace ere yourselves.<br/>
But, as things are, my care hath fenced you round.<br/>
Now, then, have done with long-protracted talk,<br/>
And this insatiable outburst of joy,<br/>
And enter, for in such attempts as these<br/>
Delay is harmful: and ’tis more than time.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
But how shall I find matters there within?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OLD M.</span>
Well. You are shielded by their ignorance.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
That means you have delivered me as dead.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OLD M.</span>
Alone of dead men thou art here above.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 168]</span><span class="linenum">[1343-1375]</span>
<span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Doth this delight them, or how went the talk?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OLD M.</span>
I will report, when all is done. Meanwhile,<br/>
Know, all is well with them, even what is evil.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Who is this, brother? I beseech thee, tell.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Dost not perceive?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in16">I cannot even imagine.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Know’st not into whose hands thou gav’st me once?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Whose hands? How say you?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in24">His, who through thy care</span><br/>
Conveyed me secretly to Phocis’ plain.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
What! is this he, whom I, of all the band,<br/>
Found singly faithful in our father’s death?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
He is that man. No more!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in22">O gladsome day!</span><br/>
Dear only saviour of our father’s house,<br/>
How earnest thou hither? Art thou he indeed,<br/>
That didst preserve Orestes and myself<br/>
From many sorrows? O dear hands, kind feet,<br/>
Swift in our service,—how couldst thou so long<br/>
Be near, nor show one gleam, but didst destroy<br/>
My heart with words, hiding the loveliest deeds?<br/>
Father!—in thee methinks I see my father.<br/>
O welcome! thou of all the world to me<br/>
Most hated and most loved in one short hour.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OLD M.</span>
Enough, dear maiden! Many nights and days<br/>
Are circling hitherward, that shall reveal<br/>
In clear recountment all that came between.<br/>
<span class="in2">But to you two that stand beside I tell,</span><br/>
Now is your moment, with the Queen alone,<br/>
And none of men within; but if you pause,<br/>
Know that with others of profounder skill<br/>
You’ll have to strive, more than your present foes.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Then, Pylades, we need no more to dwell<br/>
On words, but enter on this act with speed,<br/>
First worshipping the holy shrines o’ the Gods<br/>
That were my father’s, harboured at the gate.<br/>
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span>They pass within. <span class="cnm">ELECTRA</span> remains in
an attitude of prayer</span><br/></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 169]</span><span class="linenum">[1376-1406]</span>
<span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O King Apollo! hear them graciously,<br/>
And hear me too, that with incessant hand<br/>
Honoured thee richly from my former store!<br/>
And now, fierce slayer, I importune thee,<br/>
And woo thee with such gifts as I can give,<br/>
Be kindly aidant to this enterprise,<br/>
And make the world take note, what meed of bane<br/>
Heaven still bestows on man’s iniquity.<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span><span class="cnm">ELECTRA</span> goes within</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="in4"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Lo, where the War-god moves</span><span class="chm">1</span><br/>
<span class="in4">With soft, sure footstep, on to his design,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Breathing hot slaughter of an evil feud!</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Even now the inevitable hounds that track</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Dark deeds of hideous crime</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Are gone beneath the covert of the domes.</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Not long in wavering suspense shall hang</span><br/>
<span class="in4">The dreaming presage of my wistful soul.</span></p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="in2">For lo! within is led</span><span class="chm">2</span><br/>
<span class="in4">With crafty tread the avenger of the shades,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Even to his father’s throne of ancient power,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">And in his hand the bright new-sharpened death!</span><br/>
<span class="in4">And Hermes, Maia’s son,</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Is leading him, and hath concealed the guile</span><br/>
<span class="in4">Even to the fatal end in clouds of night.</span><br/>
<span class="in4">His time of weary waiting all is o’er.</span></p>
<p class="sdn">Re-enter <span class="cnm">ELECTRA</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
O dearest women! they are even now<br/>
About it. Only bide in silence still.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
What is the present scene?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in22">She decks the vase</span><br/>
For burial, and they both are standing by.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
And wherefore hast thou darted forth?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in30">To watch</span><br/>
Aegisthus’ coming, that he enter not<br/>
At unawares.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CLY.</span>
(<span class="sdm">within</span>).<br/>
<span class="in10">Ah! ah! Woe for the house,</span><br/>
Desert of friends, and filled with hands of death!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
A cry within! Did ye not hear it, friends?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 170]</span><span class="linenum">[1407-1432]</span>
<span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Would I had not! I heard, and shivered through.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CLY.</span>
(<span class="sdm">within</span>).<br/>
Oh me! Alas, Aegisthus! where art thou?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Hark! yet again that sound!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CLY.</span>
(<span class="sdm">within</span>).
<span class="in14">O son, have pity!</span><br/>
Pity the womb that bare thee.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in18">Thou hadst none</span><br/>
For him, nor for his father, in that day.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">HALF-CH.</span>
Poor city! hapless race!<span class="chm">1</span><br/>
Thy destiny to-day<br/>
Wears thee away, away.<br/>
What morn shall see thy face?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CLY.</span>
(<span class="sdm">within</span>).
Oh, I am smitten!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in22">Give a second stroke,</span><br/>
If thou hast power.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CLY.</span>
(<span class="sdm">within</span>).
Oh me! again, again!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Would thou wert shrieking for Aegisthus too!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
The curse hath found, and they in earth who lie<br/>
Are living powers to-day.<br/>
Long dead, they drain away<br/>
The streaming blood of those who made them die.</p>
<p class="sdn">Enter <span class="cnm">ORESTES</span> and <span class="cnm">PYLADES</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg">
<span class="in0">Behold, they come, they come!</span><br/>
His red hand dripping as he moves<br/>
With drops of sacrifice the War-god loves.<br/>
My ’wildered heart is dumb.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
How is it with you, brother?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in22">If Apollo</span><br/>
Spake rightfully, the state within is well.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Wretched one, is she dead?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in22">No more have fear</span><br/>
Thou shalt be slighted by thy mother’s will.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Cease, for I see Aegisthus near in view.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
In, in again, boys!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in14">Where do ye behold</span><br/>
The tyrant?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in4">To our hand from yonder gate</span><br/>
He comes with beaming look.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 171]</span>
<span class="cnm">HALF-CH.</span>
Haste, with what speed ye may,<span class="chm">2 <span class="chln">[1433-1461]</span></span><br/>
Stand on the doorway stone,<br/>
That, having thus much done,<br/>
Ye may do all to-day.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Fear not: we will perform it.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
<span class="in22">Speed ye now:</span><br/>
Follow your thought.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in10">We are already there.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Leave matters here to me. All shall go well.
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span>Exit <span class="cnm">ORESTES</span> with <span class="cnm">PYLADES</span></span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">CH.</span>
Few words, as if in gentleness, ’twere good<br/>
To utter in his ear,<br/>
That, eager and unware,<br/>
One step may launch him on the field of blood.</p>
<p class="sdn">Enter <span class="cnm">AEGISTHUS</span>.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEGISTHUS.</span>
Which of you know where are the Phocian men<br/>
Who brought the news I hear, Orestes’ life<br/>
Hath suffered shipwreck in a chariot-race?<br/>
You, you I question, you in former time<br/>
So fearless! You methinks most feelingly<br/>
Can tell us, for it touches you most near.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I know: assure thee. Else had I not heard<br/>
The dearest of all fortunes to my heart.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Where are the strangers then? Enlighten me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Yonder. Their hostess entertained them well.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
And did they certainly report him dead?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Not only so. They showed him to our sight.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
May this clear evidence be mine to see?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
I envy not the sight that waits you there.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Against their wont thy words have given me joy.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Much joy be thine, if this be joy to thee!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Silence, I say! Wide let the gates be flung!<br/>
For all the Myceneans to behold<br/>
And all in Argolis, that if but one<br/>
Hath heretofore been buoyed on empty hopes<br/>
Fixed in Orestes, seeing him now dead,<br/>
<span class="dpgn">[page 172]</span><span class="linenum">[1462-1493]</span>
He may accept my manage, and not wait<br/>
For our stern chastisement to teach him sense.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
My lesson is already learnt: at length<br/>
I am schooled to labour with the stronger will.<br/>
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span>The body of <span class="cnm">CLYTEMNESTRA</span> is disclosed
under a veil: <span class="cnm">ORESTES</span> standing by</span><br/></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Zeus! Divine envy surely hath laid low<br/>
The form I here behold. But if the truth<br/>
Provoke Heaven’s wrath, be it unexpressed.—Unveil!<br/>
Off with all hindrance, that mine eye may see,<br/>
And I may mourn my kinsman as I should.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Thyself put forth thy hand. Not mine but thine<br/>
To look and speak with kindness to this corse.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
I will, for thou advisest well; but thou,<br/>
Call Clytemnestra, if she be within.
<span class="sdr"><span class="cnm">[</span><span class="cnm">AEGISTHUS</span> lifts the shroud</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
She is beside thee, gaze not otherwhere.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
What do I see! oh!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in16">Why so strange? Whom fear you?</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Who are the men into whose midmost toils<br/>
All hapless I am fallen?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in12">Ha! knowest thou not</span><br/>
<SPAN href="#Elec_n_11" name="Elec_t_11" id="Elec_t_11">Thou hast been taking</SPAN> living men for dead?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
I understand that saying. Woe is me!<br/>
I know, Orestes’ voice addresseth me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
A prophet! How wert thou so long deceived?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Undone, undone! Yet let me speak one word.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">EL.</span>
Brother, by Heaven, no more! Let him not speak.<br/>
When death is certain, what do men in woe<br/>
Gain from a little time? Kill him at once!<br/>
And, killed, expose him to such burial<br/>
From dogs and vultures, as beseemeth such,<br/>
Far from our view. Nought less will solace me<br/>
For the remembrance of a life of pain.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Go in and tarry not. No contest this<br/>
Of verbal question, but of life or death.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Why drive you me within? If this you do<br/>
Be noble, why must darkness hide the deed?<br/>
Why not destroy me out of hand?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="dpgn">[page 173]</span><span class="linenum">[1494-1510]</span>
<span class="cnm">OR.</span>
<span class="in20">Command not!</span><br/>
Enter, and in the place where ye cut down<br/>
My father, thou shalt yield thy life to me.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
Is there no help but this abode must see<br/>
The past and future ills of Pelops’ race?</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Thine anyhow. That I can prophesy<br/>
With perfect inspiration to thine ear.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
The skill you boast belonged not to your sire.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
You question and delay. Go in!</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
<span class="in24">Lead on.</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
Nay, go thou first.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">AEG.</span>
<span class="in14">That I may not escape thee?</span></p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">OR.</span>
No, that thou may’st not have thy wish in death.<br/>
I may not stint one drop of bitterness.<br/>
And would this doom were given without reprieve,<br/>
If any try to act beyond the law,<br/>
To kill them. Then the wicked would be few.</p>
<p class="dlg"><span class="cnm">LEADER OF CH.</span>
O seed of Atreus! how triumphantly<br/>
Through grief and hardness thou hast freedom found,<br/>
With full achievement in this onset crowned!</p>
<hr class="major" />
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