<GetPassage xmlns:tei="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns="http://chs.harvard.edu/xmlns/cts">
            <request>
                <requestName>GetPassage</requestName>
                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg005.perseus-eng2:82-150</requestUrn>
            </request>
            <reply>
                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg005.perseus-eng2:82-150</urn>
                <passage>
                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0011.tlg005.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="episode"><sp><l n="82">No, no;  before all else, let us strive to obey the commands of Loxias and from them make a fair beginning by pouring libations to your father.  For such actions bring</l><l n="85">victory within our grasp and give us mastery in all our doings.<stage>Exeunt Paedagogus on the spectators left, Orestes and Pylades on the  right.</stage>
               </l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="86"/><stage>Enter Electra, from the house.</stage><sp><speaker>Electra</speaker><l n="86">O you pure sunlight, and you air, light’s equal partner over earth, how often have you
                     heard the chords of my laments</l><l n="90">and the thudding blows against this bloodied breast at the time of gloomy night’s leaving
                     off! My accursed bed in that house of suffering there knows well already how I
                     observe my night-long rites—how often I bewail my miserable</l><l n="95">father, whom bloody Ares did not welcome with deadly gifts in a foreign land, but my mother and her bedfellow Aegisthus split his head with murderous axe, just as woodmen chop an oak.</l><l n="100">And for this crime no pitying cry bursts from any lips but mine, when you, Father, have died a death so cruel and so deserving of pity!</l></sp><milestone unit="card" n="103"/><sp><l n="103">But never will I end from cries and bitter lamentation,</l><l n="105">while I look on the stars’ glistening flashes or on this light of day. No, like the
                     nightingale, slayer of her offspring, I will wail without ceasing, and cry
                     aloud to all here at the doors of my father.<milestone unit="para"/>
                  </l><l n="110">O House of Hades and Persephone!  O Hermes of the shades!  O potent Curse, and you fearsome daughters of the gods, the Erinyes, who take note when a life is unjustly taken, when a marriage-bed is thievishly dishonored,</l><l n="115">come, help me, bring vengeance for the murder of my father and send me my brother.  I no longer have the strength to hold up alone against</l><l n="120">the load of grief that crushes me.
</l></sp></div><milestone unit="card" n="121"/><div type="textpart" subtype="choral"><div type="textpart" subtype="strophe" n="1"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="121">Ah, Electra, child of a most wretched mother, why are you always wasting away in this unsated mourning for Agamemnon, who long ago was godlessly</l><l n="125">ensnared in your false mother’s wiles and betrayed by her corrupt hand? May the one who
                        did that perish, if I may speak such a curse without breaking the gods’
                        laws.</l></sp><sp><speaker>Electra</speaker><l n="129">Ah, noble-hearted girls,</l><l n="130">you have come to relieve me in my troubles.  I know and feel it: it does not escape me.  Still I cannot leave this task undone, nor abandon this mourning for my poor father.  Ah, friends whose love responds to mine in every mood,</l><l n="135">allow me to rave as I am, oh, please, I beg you!</l></sp></div><milestone unit="card" n="137"/><div type="textpart" subtype="antistrophe" n="1"><sp><speaker>Chorus</speaker><l n="137">But never by weeping nor by prayer will you resurrect your father from the pool of Hades which receives all men.</l><l n="140">No, by grieving without end and beyond due limits you will find cureless misery and your own ruin;  in these actions there is no deliverance from evils.  Tell us, why do you pursue such suffering?</l></sp><sp><speaker>Electra</speaker><l n="145">Foolish is the child who forgets a parent’s piteous death. No, closer to my heart is the
                        mourner who eternally wails, <q type="spoken">Itys, Itys,</q> that bird mad
                        with grief, the messenger of Zeus.</l><l n="150">Ah, all-suffering Niobe, you I count divine, since you weep forever in your rocky tomb!</l></sp></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>