Agamemnon
Aeschylus
Aeschylus. The poetical works of Robert Browning, Volume 13. Browning, Robert, translator; Berdoe, Edward, editor. London: Smith, Elder and Co., 1889.
- The unhappy! And now, by Kokutos and Acheron’s shore
- I shall soon be, it seems, these my oracles singing once more!
- Why this word, plain too much,
- Hast thou uttered? A babe might learn of such!
- I am struck with a bloody bite — here under —
- At the fate woe-wreaking
- Of thee shrill shrieking:
- To me who hear — a wonder!
- Ah me, the toils — the toils of the city
- The wholly destroyed: ah, pity,
- Of the sacrificings my father made
- In the ramparts’ aid —
- Much slaughter of grass-fed flocks — that afforded no cure
- That the city should not, as it does now, the burthen endure!
- But I, with the soul on fire,
- Soon to the earth shall cast me and expire.
- To things, on the former consequent,
- Again hast thou given vent:
- And ’t is some evil-meaning fiend doth move thee,
- Heavily falling from above thee,