LightNovesOnl.com

The Agamemnon of Aeschylus Part 9

The Agamemnon of Aeschylus - LightNovelsOnl.com

You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.

A tangle of raiment, see; A black horn, and a blow, and he falleth, full In the marble amid the water. I counsel ye.

I speak plain ... Blood in the bath and treachery!

LEADER.

No great interpreter of oracles Am I; but this, I think, some mischief spells.

What spring of good hath seercraft ever made Up from the dark to flow?

'Tis but a weaving of words, a craft of woe, To make mankind afraid.

Ca.s.sANDRA.

Poor woman! Poor dead woman! ... Yea, it is I, Poured out like water among them. Weep for me....

Ah! What is this place? Why must I come with thee....

To die, only to die?

LEADER.

Thou art borne on the breath of G.o.d, thou spirit wild, For thine own weird to wail, Like to that winged voice, that heart so sore Which, crying alway, hungereth to cry more, "Itylus, Itylus," till it sing her child Back to the nightingale.

Ca.s.sANDRA.

Oh, happy Singing Bird, so sweet, so clear!

Soft wings for her G.o.d made, And an easy pa.s.sing, without pain or tear ...

For me 'twill be torn flesh and rending blade.

SECOND ELDER.

Whence is it sprung, whence wafted on G.o.d's breath, This anguish reasonless?

This throbbing of terror shaped to melody, Moaning of evil blent with music high?

Who hath marked out for thee that mystic path Through thy woe's wilderness?

Ca.s.sANDRA.

Alas for the kiss, the kiss of Paris, his people's bane!

Alas for Scamander Water, the water my fathers drank!

Long, long ago, I played about thy bank, And was cherished and grew strong; Now by a River of Wailing, by sh.o.r.es of Pain, Soon shall I make my song.

LEADER.

How sayst thou? All too clear, This ill word thou hast laid upon thy mouth!

A babe could read thee plain.

It stabs within me like a serpent's tooth, The bitter thrilling music of her pain: I marvel as I hear.

Ca.s.sANDRA.

Alas for the toil, the toil of a City, worn unto death!

Alas for my father's wors.h.i.+p before the citadel, The flocks that bled and the tumult of their breath!

But no help from them came To save Troy Towers from falling as they fell!...

And I on the earth shall writhe, my heart aflame.

SECOND ELDER.

Dark upon dark, new ominous words of ill!

Sure there hath swept on thee some Evil Thing, Crus.h.i.+ng, which makes thee bleed And in the torment of thy vision sing These plaining death-fraught oracles ... Yet still, still, Their end I cannot read!

Ca.s.sANDRA.

[_By an effort she regains mastery of herself, and speaks directly to the Leader_.

'Fore G.o.d, mine oracle shall no more hide With veils his visage, like a new-wed bride!

A s.h.i.+ning wind out of this dark shall blow, Piercing the dawn, growing as great waves grow, To burst in the heart of sunrise ... stronger far Than this poor pain of mine. I will not mar With mists my wisdom.

Be near me as I go, Tracking the evil things of long ago, And bear me witness. For this roof, there clings Music about it, like a choir which sings One-voiced, but not well-sounding, for not good The words are. Drunken, drunken, and with blood, To make them dare the more, a revelling rout Is in the rooms, which no man shall cast out, Of sister Furies. And they weave to song, Haunting the House, its first blind deed of wrong, Spurning in turn that King's bed desecrate, Defiled, which paid a brother's sin with hate....

Hath it missed or struck, mine arrow? Am I a poor Dreamer, that begs and babbles at the door?

Give first thine oath in witness, that I know Of this great dome the sins wrought long ago.

ELDER.

And how should oath of mine, though bravely sworn, Appease thee? Yet I marvel that one born Far over seas, of alien speech, should fall So apt, as though she had lived here and seen all.

Ca.s.sANDRA.

The Seer Apollo made me too to see.

ELDER (_in a low voice_).

Was the G.o.d's heart pierced with desire for thee?

Ca.s.sANDRA.

Time was, I held it shame hereof to speak.

ELDER.

Ah, shame is for the mighty, not the weak.

Ca.s.sANDRA.

We wrestled, and his breath to me was sweet.

ELDER.

Ye came to the getting of children, as is meet?

Ca.s.sANDRA.

I swore to Loxias, and I swore a lie.

ELDER.

Already thine the gift of prophecy?

Click Like and comment to support us!

RECENTLY UPDATED NOVELS

About The Agamemnon of Aeschylus Part 9 novel

You're reading The Agamemnon of Aeschylus by Author(s): Aeschylus. This novel has been translated and updated at LightNovelsOnl.com and has already 626 views. And it would be great if you choose to read and follow your favorite novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest novels, a novel list updates everyday and free. LightNovelsOnl.com is a very smart website for reading novels online, friendly on mobile. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at [email protected] or just simply leave your comment so we'll know how to make you happy.