<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0085.tlg006.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="choral"><div type="textpart" subtype="ephymnion" n="2"><sp><l n="972">Look, the light has come,</l><l n="962a">and I am freed from the cruel curb that restrained our household.  House, rise up!  You have lain too long prostrate on the ground.
            </l></sp></div></div><milestone n="973" unit="card"/><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><stage rend="italic">Orestes with the branch and wreath of a suppliant  is disclosed standing by the bodies. With him are Pylades and  attendants who display the robe of Agamemnon</stage><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="973">Behold this pair, oppressors of the land, who murdered my father and ransacked my house!  They were majestic then, when they sat on their thrones,</l><l n="975">and are lovers even now, as one may judge by what has happened to them, and their oath holds true to their pledges.  Together they vowed a league of death against my unhappy father, and together they vowed to die, and they have kept their promise well.
   <milestone unit="para"/>But now regard again, you who hear this account of ills,</l><l n="980">the device for binding my unhappy father, with which his hands were manacled, his feet fettered.  Spread it out!  Stand around in a circle, and display this covering for a man, that the Father may see—not mine, but he who surveys all this, the Sun—</l><l n="985">that he may see the impious work of my own mother, that he may be my witness in court that I justly pursued this death, my own mother’s.  For I do not speak of Aegisthus’ death: he has suffered the penalty prescribed for adulterers.</l><milestone unit="para"/><l n="990">But she who devised this abhorrent deed against her husband, whose children she bore, a burden under her belt, a burden once dear, but now a hateful ill, as it seems: what do you think of her?  Had she been born a seasnake or a viper, I think her very touch without her bite would have caused anyone else to rot,</l><l n="995">if shamelessness and an immoral disposition could do so.  <stage rend="italic">He  again takes up the bloody robe</stage>  
               
   <milestone unit="para"/>What name shall I give it, however tactful I may be?  A trap for a wild beast?  Or a shroud for a corpse in his bier,<note anchored="true" n="998" resp="Smyth"><foreign xml:lang="grc">δροίτης κατασκήνωμα</foreign> also means <gloss>curtain of a bath.</gloss></note> wrapped around his feet?  No, rather it is a net: you might call it a hunting net, or robes to entangle a man’s feet.</l><l n="1000">This would be the kind of thing a highwayman might posses, who deceives strangers and earns his living by robbery, and with this cunning snare he might kill many men and warm his own heart greatly.
   <milestone unit="para"/>May such a woman not live with me in my house!</l><l n="1005">Before that may the gods grant me to perish childless!
            </l></sp><milestone n="1007" unit="card"/><div type="textpart" subtype="anapests"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1007">Alas!  Alas!  Sorrowful work!  You were done in by a wretched death.  Alas!  Alas!  And for the survivor also suffering blossoms.
            </l></sp><milestone n="1010" unit="card"/><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="1010">Did she do the deed or not? No, this is my witness, dyed by Aegisthus’ sword.  This is a stain of blood that helps time to spoil the many tinctures of embroidered fabric.
   <milestone unit="para"/>Now at last I speak his praises.  Now at last I am present to lament him, as I address this web that wrought my father’s death.</l><l n="1015">Yet I grieve for the deed and the punishment and for my whole clan.  My victory is an unenviable pollution.
            </l></sp></div><milestone n="1018" unit="card"/><div type="textpart" subtype="anapests"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1018">No mortal being shall pass his life unscathed, free from all suffering to the end.</l><l n="1020">Alas!  Alas!  One tribulation comes today, another tomorrow.</l></sp><milestone n="1021" unit="card"/><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="1021">But since I would have you know, for I do not know how it will end: I think I am a charioteer driving my team far beyond the course.  For my ungoverned wits are whirling me away overmastered, and at my heart fear wishes to sing and dance to a tune of wrath.</l><l n="1025">But while I am still in my senses, I proclaim to those who hold me dear and declare that not without justice did I slay my mother, the unclean murderess of my father, and a thing loathed by the gods.
   <milestone unit="para"/>And for the spells that gave me the courage for this deed I count Loxias, the prophet of <placeName key="tgn,7010770">Pytho</placeName>,</l><l n="1030">my chief source.  It was he who declared that, if I did this thing, I would be acquitted of wrongdoing.  But if I refrained—I will not name the penalty; for no bowshot could reach such a height of anguish.
   <milestone unit="para"/>And now observe me, how armed with this branch and wreath I go as a suppliant, an outcast for the shedding of kindred blood, to the temple set square on the womb of the earth,</l><l n="1035">the precinct of Loxias, and to the bright fire said to be imperishable.<note anchored="true" n="1037" resp="Smyth">In the Delphic shrine there was an undying fire.</note> To no other hearth did Loxias bid me turn.  And as to the manner in which this evil deed was wrought, I charge all men of <placeName key="perseus,Argos">Argos</placeName> in time to come to bear me witness.</l><l n="1040">I go forth a wanderer, estranged from this land, leaving this repute behind, in life or death.
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1044">And you have done well.  Therefore do not yoke your tongue to an ill-omened speech, nor let your lips give vent to evil forebodings,</l><l n="1045">since you have freed the whole realm of <placeName key="perseus,Argos">Argos</placeName> by lopping off the heads of two serpents with a fortunate stroke.
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="1048">Ah, ah!  You handmaidens, look at them there: like Gorgons, wrapped in sable garments, entwined with</l><l n="1050">swarming snakes!  I can stay no longer.</l></sp><milestone n="1051" unit="card"/><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1051">What fantasies disturb you, dearest of sons to your father?  Wait, do not be all overcome by fear.
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="1053">To me these are no imagined troubles.  For there indeed are the hounds of wrath to avenge my mother.
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1055">It is that the blood is still fresh on your hands; this is the cause of the disorder that assails your wits.
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Orestes</speaker><l n="1057">O lord Apollo, look!  Now they come in troops, and from their eyes they drip loathsome blood!
            </l></sp><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="1059">There is one way to cleanse you: the touch of Loxias</l><l n="1060">will set you free from this affliction.</l></sp></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>