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The Libation-bearers
(Aeschylus)

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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)



Resumos Relacionados


- The Libation-bearers

- Electra

- The Libation-bearers

- The Libation-bearers

- Agamemnon



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