The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..

The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 548 pages of information about The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I..
spake, on that pavement, where are said to be the recesses in the midst of the globe!  O Jupiter, what pity is there? what is this contention of slaughter that comes persecuting thee wretched, to whom some evil genius casts tear upon tear, transporting to thy house the blood of thy mother which drives thee frenzied!  Thus I bewail, I bewail.  Great prosperity is not lasting among mortals; but, as the sail of the swift bark, some deity having shaken him, hath sunk him in the voracious and destructive waves of tremendous evils, as in the waves of the ocean.  For what other[6a] family ought I to reverence yet before that sprung from divine nuptials, sprung from Tantalus?—­But lo! the king! the prince Menelaus, is coming! but he is very easily discernible from the elegance of his person, as king of the house of the Tantalidae.

O thou that didst direct the army of a thousand vessels to Asia’s land, hail! but thou comest hither with good fortune, having obtained the object of thy wishes from the Gods.

MENELAUS, ORESTES, CHORUS.

MEN.  O palace, in some respect indeed I behold thee with pleasure, coming from Troy, but in other respect I groan when I see thee.  For never yet saw I any other house more completely encircled round with lamentable woes.  For I was made acquainted with the misfortune that befell Agamemnon, [and his death, by what death he perished at the hands of his wife,][6b] when I was landing my ships at Malea; but from the waves the prophet of the mariners declared unto me, the foreboding Glaucus the son of Nereus, an unerring God, who told me thus in evident form standing by me.  “Menelaus, thy brother lieth dead, having fallen in his last bath, which his wife prepared.”  But he filled both me and my sailors with many tears; but when I come to the Nauplian shore, my wife having already landed there, expecting to clasp in my friendly embraces Orestes the son of Agamemnon, and his mother, as being in prosperity, I heard from some fisherman[7] the unhallowed murder of the daughter of Tyndarus.  And now tell me, maidens, where is the son of Agamemnon, who dared these terrible deeds of evil? for he was an infant in Clytaemnestra’s arms at that time when I left the palace on my way to Troy, so that I should not know him, were I to see him.

ORES.  I, Menelaus, am Orestes, whom thou seekest, I of my own accord will declare my evils.  But first I touch thy knees in supplication, putting up prayers from my mouth, not using the sacred branch:[8] save me.  But thou art come in the very season of my sufferings.

MEN.  O ye Gods, what do I behold! whom of the dead do I see!

ORES.  Ay! well thou sayest the dead; for in my state of suffering I live not; but see the light.

MEN.  Thou wretched man, how disordered thou art in thy squalid hair!

ORES.  Not the appearance, but the deeds torment me.

MEN.  But thou glarest dreadfully with thy shriveled eyeballs.

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The Tragedies of Euripides, Volume I. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.