Part 16 (1/2)
P. 25, l. 577, These spoils.]--Spoils purporting to come from the Trojan War were extant in Greek temples in Aeschylus' day and later.
P. 26, l. 595, Our women's joy-cry.]--There seems to have been in Argos an old popular festival, celebrating with joy or mockery the supposed death of a man and a woman. Homer (Od. iii. 309 f.) derives it from a rejoicing by Orestes over Aigisthos and Clytemnestra; cf. below, ll. 1316 ff., p.
59; Aeschylus here and Sophocles in the _Electra_, from a celebration by Clytemnestra of the deaths of Agamemnon and Ca.s.sandra. Probably it was really some ordinary New Year and Old Year celebration to which the poets give a tragic touch. It seems to have had a woman's ”Ololugmos” in it, perhaps uttered by men. See Kaibel's note, Soph. _Electra_ 277-281.
P. 26, l. 612, Bronze be dyed like wool.]--Impossible in the literal sense, but there is after all a way of dying a sword red!
P. 27, l. 617, Menelaus.]--This digression about Menelaus is due, as similar digressions generally are when they occur in Greek plays, to the poet feeling bound to follow the tradition. Homer begins his longest account of the slaying of Agamemnon by asking ”Where was Menelaus?” (Od.
iii. 249). Agamemnon could be safely attacked because he was alone.
Menelaus was away, wrecked or wind-bound.
P. 28, l. 642, Two-fold scourge.]--Ares works his will when spear crosses spear, when man meets man. Hence ”two-fold.”
P. 29, CHORUS. The name HELENA.]--There was a controversy in Aeschylus'
day whether language, including names, was a matter of Convention or of Nature. Was it mere accident, and could you change the name of anything at will? Or was language a thing rooted in nature and fixed by G.o.d from of old? Aeschylus adopts the latter view: Why was this being called Helena?
If one had understood G.o.d's purpose one would have seen it was because she really _was_ ”Helenas”--_s.h.i.+p-destroyer_. (The Herald's story of the s.h.i.+pwreck has suggested this particular idea.) Similarly, if a hero was called Aias, and came to great sorrow, one could see that he was so called from 'Aiai,' ”Alas!”--The antistrophe seems to find a meaning in the name Paris or Alexandras, where the etymology is not so clear.
Pp. 33 ff.]--Entrance of Agamemnon. The metre of the Chorus indicates marching; so that apparently the procession takes some time to move across the orchestra and get into position. Ca.s.sandra would be dressed, as a prophetess, in a robe of white reaching to the feet, covered by an _agrenon_, or net of wool with large meshes; she would have a staff and certain fillets or crowns. The Leader welcomes the King: he explains that, though he was against the war ten years ago, and has not changed his opinion, he is a faithful servant of the King ... and that not all are equally so. He gave a similar hint to the Herald above, ll. 546-550, p.
24.
P. 35, Agamemnon.]--A hard, cold speech, full of pride in the earlier part, and turning to ominous threats at the end. Those who have dared to be false shall be broken.--At the end comes a note of fear, like the fear in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar. He is so full of triumph and success; he must be very careful not to provoke a fall.--Victory, Nike, was to the Greeks a very vivid and infectious thing. It clung to you or it deserted you. And one who was really charged with Victory, like Agamemnon, was very valuable to his friends and people. Hence they made statues of Victory wingless--so that she should not fly away. See _Four Stages of Greek Religion_, p. 138 note.
P. 36, Clytemnestra.]--A wonderful speech. It seems to me that Aeschylus'
imagination realized all the confused pa.s.sions in Clytemnestra's mind, but that his art was not yet sufficiently developed to make them all clear and explicit. She is in suspense; does Agamemnon know her guilt or not? At least, if she is to die, she wants to say something to justify or excuse herself in the eyes of the world. A touch of hysteria creeps in; why could he not have been killed in all these years? Why must he rise, like some monster from the grave, unkillable? Gradually she recovers her calm, explains clearly the suspicious point of Orestes' absence, and heaps up her words and gestures of welcome to an almost oriental fullness (which Agamemnon rebukes, ll. 918 ff., p. 39). Again, at the end, when she finds that for the time she is safe, her real feelings almost break out.
P. 38.]--What is the motive of the Crimson Tapestries? I think the tangling robe must have been in the tradition, as the murder in the bath certainly was. One motive, of course, is obvious: Clytemnestra is tempting Agamemnon to sin or ”go too far.” He tries to resist, but the splendour of an oriental homecoming seduces him and he yields. But is that enough to account for such a curious trait in the story, and one so strongly emphasized? We are told afterwards that Clytemnestra threw over her victim an ”endless web,” long and rich (p. 63), to prevent his seeing or using his arms. And I cannot help suspecting that this endless web was the same as the crimson pall.
If one tries to conjecture the origin of this curious story, it is perhaps a clue to realize that the word _droite_ means both a bath and a sarcophagus, or rather that the thing called droite, a narrow stone or marble vessel about seven feet long, was in pre-cla.s.sical and post-cla.s.sical times used as a sarcophagus, but in cla.s.sical times chiefly or solely as a bath. If among the prehistoric graves at Mycenae some later peasants discovered a royal mummy or skeleton in a sarcophagus, wrapped in a robe of royal crimson, and showing signs of violent death--such as Schliemann believed that he discovered--would they not say: ”We found the body of a King murdered in a bath, and wrapped round and round in a great robe?”
P. 39 f.]--Agamemnon is going through the process of temptation. He protests rather too often and yields.
P. 39, l. 931, Tell me but this.]--This little dialogue is very characteristic of Aeschylus. Euripides would have done it at three times the length and made all the points clear. In Aeschylus the subtlety is there, but it is not easy to follow.
P. 40, l. 945, These bound slaves.]--i.e. his shoes. The metaphor shows the trend of his unconscious mind.
P. 41, l. 950, This princess.]--This is the first time that the attention of the audience is drawn to Ca.s.sandra. She too is one of Aeschylus' silent figures. I imagine her pale, staring in front of her, almost as if in a trance, until terror seizes her at Clytemnestra's greeting in l. 1035, p.
45.
P. 41, l. 964, The cry.]--i.e. the cry of the possessed prophetess which rang from the inner sanctuary at Delphi and was interpreted by the priests.--The last two lines of the speech are plain in their meaning but hard to translate. Literally: ”when the full, or fulfilled, man walketh his home,--O Zeus the Fulfiller, fulfil my prayers.”
P. 42, l. 976.]--The victim has been drawn into the house; the Chorus sing a low boding song: every audience at a Greek tragedy would expect next to hear a death cry from within, or to see a horrified messenger rush out.
Instead of which the door opens and there is Clytemnestra: what does she want? ”Come thou also!” One victim is not enough.--In the next scene we must understand the cause of Clytemnestra's impatience. If she stays too long outside, some one will warn Agamemnon; if she leaves Ca.s.sandra, she with her second sight will warn the Chorus. If Ca.s.sandra could only be got inside all would be safe!