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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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420 THE GREEK SAGAS: GREEK LOCAL LEGENDS<br />

nant by him; the children that she bore him she loved once but now, as it is all<br />

too clear, they have become her dire enemy. I'll tell you what she is like. If she<br />

had been born a serpent or a viper, she would have been able to infect by touch<br />

alone, no need of fangs to bite, because of an inherent, venomous audacity.<br />

This robe, what am I to call it? Could I find the proper words? A trap for a<br />

wild beast, a snare for a corpse, or a covering for after the bath. One might call<br />

it a net to catch fish or one for animals or fabric to entangle the feet. The sort of<br />

thing a thief might own in order to make his living by ensnaring wayfarers and<br />

robbing them. With such a treacherous device, he could kill many, steal much,<br />

and warm his heart in comfort.<br />

May I never get this kind of woman for a wife. By the will of the gods, may<br />

I die first, childless.<br />

In the finale of the play Orestes is driven out by the Furies, frightening, with<br />

faces like Gorgons and serpents entwined in their hair. He will find salvation in<br />

the third play, the Ewnenides (as we have seen) through the agency of Apollo<br />

and Athena and a civil court of law. The righteous will of Zeus is eventually<br />

accomplished.<br />

SOPHOCLES' ELECTRA<br />

In Aeschylus' Libation Bearers, Orestes maintains center stage, determining the<br />

course of the action. True, a stirring and compelling portrait of Electra emerges,<br />

delineating characteristics with great potential for further development. Yet she<br />

exits from the play before Orestes and Pylades enter the palace, and her presence,<br />

therefore, does not dilute the power of a vengeance delivered by Orestes<br />

himself at the dictates of Apollo. All is as it should be for the central play of a<br />

trilogy entitled Oresteia.<br />

How different are the two Electras that follow! We do not know for sure<br />

whether Sophocles wrote his version before or after that of Euripides; the date<br />

for Sophocles' play is unknown, and 416 B.C. for Euripides' is only a conjecture.<br />

Because of the nature of the development in motives and characterizations and<br />

the drastic shift in religious and philosophical sentiment, Euripides' play is best<br />

considered last.<br />

Sophocles' Electra begins with the return of Orestes to Mycenae, accompanied<br />

by both his tutor and his friend Pylades, ready to set in motion his plans<br />

to exact vengeance from Aegisthus and Clytemnestra for their murder of his father<br />

Agamemnon. In Sophocles, both are the murderers, not as in Aeschylus,<br />

where Clytemnestra did the actual deed herself. Orestes clearly and succinctly<br />

emphasizes the justice of his mission, ordained by god (32-37):<br />

f<br />

ORESTES: When I went to the Pythian oracle to find out how I should win justice<br />

from the murderers of my father, Phoebus Apollo uttered this response,<br />

which I will tell you now: I alone, without men in arms, am to steal by treachery<br />

their righteous slaughter by my own hand.

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