The Libation-bearers
(Aeschylus)
The Libation Bearers begins some years after the end of the Agamemnon. The play opens at the tomb of Agamemnon. Orestes enters, having grown up and returned in secret from exile. He cuts off two locks of his hair, the first dedicated to the local river as a sign that he has reached maturity, the second dedicated in mourning to his father Agamemnon. Orestes and his companion Pylades hide themselves when a chorus of women, the libation bearers of the title, enters along with Orestes' sister Electra. This chorus of slave women brings libations to pour on the grave of the dead Agamemnon, displaying the traditional signs of mourning (Cheeks marked with crimson, gashed, / nails plough furrows fresh and deep) and complaining about Clytemnestra (that godless woman) who sent them to appease the ghost of dead king. Electra asks the chorus how she should perform the rite, since Clytemnestra has sent them to lessen the spirit's wrath against her, and yet both the chorus and Electra hate her. The chorus says that Electra should pray for a man or daimon to come and kill those and Aegisthus> who killed (line 121). Electra prays that Orestes will come home, that she be granted "the discretion my mother lacks, that her own hands be kept clean and pure, and that Justice kill the killers! (lines 130-151). Electra then notices a lock of hair on the ground, and wonders whether it might belong to Orestes. Orestes steps out of hiding and a recognition scene ensues. Throughout The Libation Bearers, Aeschylus uses much of the same imagery he employed in the Agamemnon. For example, Agamemnon is still described as an eagle, while Clytemnestra is still a viper: Behold our cause! Look on the brood bereft of their eagle-sire, who died entwined in the coils of a vicious viper. Look on the starving orphans, ravaged by hunger, too young to carry their father's prey to shelter. (lines 246-250) Notice also the subtle slanting of gender perceptions here: the male eagle Agamemnon is depicted as providing "prey" (spoils of war from Troy?) to fledgling chicks, an activity normally associated with females. After a speech in which Orestes reveals that Apollo's oracle has sanctioned his attempt at revenge, Orestes, Electra and the chorus sing a long kommos <"a striking"> or lyric dialogue of lamentation. James C. Hogan notes that this lament is designed "to conjure the aid of the daimonic powers for the children as they try to reclaim the house for themselves. Their supplication subverts Clytemnestra's attempt to appease the dead and aims to capture the attention and dynamic power of the underworld for their revenge (117-118). The chorus begins the kommos by claiming that Justice (dike) screams / and demands her price for revenge: Bloody blow pays bloody / blow. 'The doer suffers,' / sounds the saying, three times old (lines 309-314). You probably will have noticed that this language echoes and even repeats the revenge-rhetoric of the Agamemnon (see lines 250-251, 532-37, 1528-9, and. According to Plato's Laws, the ancient priests said that Justice ordained that the doer of such a deed a family member> must of necessity suffer the same as he has done: if ever a man has slain his father, he must endure to suffer the same violent fate at his own children's hands . . . for of the pollution of common blood there is no other purification, nor does the stain of pollution admit of being washed off before the soul which committed the act pays back murder for murder, like for like, and thus by propitiation lays to rest the wrath of all the kindred. (quoted in Hogan 118) In the next play, The Furies (Eumenides) , we will see that the Furies also believe that Apollo's purification of Orestes is invalid: only Orestes' blood will satisfy the debt. Like Telemachus in the Odyssey (1. 272-80), Agamemnon's children wish that he had died more gloriously at Troy. They pray to Zeus and the Earth to "force vengeance / up from below, rain down Ruin" (p. 84, lines 382-83) on the murderers. The Chorus describes how Agamemnon was dishonored after death: "He was mutilated of manhood, / and she buried him like this" (lines 439-440). Apparently, Greek murderers were in the habit of cutting off the extremities of murdered people and tying them under the armpits so that the ghost of the murdered person would not pursue and haunt the murderer. After the kommos, Orestes asks his dead father for the "power over the House" (line 480)
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