I want to invite anyone interested to join me in reading Aristotle’s Poetics, the foundation of Western literary criticism, influential to the present day and bizarrely dominant, almost sacred, for centuries. I hope to write about it at the end of the month, having just reread all of the Greek tragedies. Anyone who has been reading along this year will find Poetics easy going. It will raise many curious questions.
This week, the play at hand is Euripides’s late masterpiece
of despair and nihilism, Orestes (408 BCE). I had forgotten how long it was, likely the
longest of the surviving Greek plays. Euripides
makes room for the story we know from other plays, with the Furies tormenting
Orestes soon after he murders his mother:
And what had seemed so right,
as soon as done, became
evil, monstrous, wrong! (162)
New parts
of the story include a major new plotline featuring cowardly Uncle Menelaus
and shallow Aunt Helen. I have included
a photo from a 2018 Greek production of Orestes that must be the meeting
of Electra and Helen.
I want to include some quotes from William Arrowsmith’s introduction to the play:
What we get in the Orestes is, in fact, very much like what we get in Troilus and Cressida: tragedy utterly without affirmation, an image of heroic action seen as botched disfigured, and sick, carried along by the machinery and slogans of heroic action in a steady crescendo of biting irony and the rage of exposure. (106)
It is that crescendo that requires the greater length. Like Ravel’s Bolero, for the effect to
work the thing has to keep going.
It takes time, plus the big swerve in the plot when Pylades convinces
Orestes and Electra that their lives will be saved if they murder Helen and
perhaps her daughter, too, why not, after murdering your mother why not your
aunt and cousin. If we have learned
anything from the myths of the house of Atreus it is that more murders, “murder
displacing murder” (162), is always the answer.
ELECTRA: If then, seeing Helen
lying in a pool of blood, he decides he wants
his daughter’s life at least and agrees to spare you,
let the girl go. On the other hand,
if he tries to kill you in a frantic burst of rage,
you slit the girl’s throat. (180)
Electra is as nuts as any of them. The characters all start out bad and become
so much worse.
Arrowsmith calls Orestes “a kind of negative tragedy
of total turbulence” where “nothing but the sense of bitterness and alienation
survives the corrosive effect of the action” (106). The deus ex machina that ends the play is
similar to yet opposite of the one that ends Sophocles’s Philoctetes. The set, the palace, is on fire, the
characters doomed; Orestes has his sword to the throat of his cousin, on the
verge of murdering her when Apollo drops from the sky and ends the
apocalypse. Orestes and Hermione will
marry!
I imagine Apollo as one of those articulated artist’s
dummies, dangling from a rope, or some other kind of bizarre puppet, delivering
his lines through a tinny loudspeaker. “Go
and honor Peace, / loveliest of goddesses,” Apollo says as he escorts Helen to the
stars.
ORESTES: And yet, when I hear you speak,
I thought I heard the whispers of some fiend
speaking through your mouth.
But all is well
and I obey. (206)
After the performance of Orestes, Euripides went into
voluntary exile in Macedonia, about as far as he could get from Athens while
staying in Greece. He only lived for a
couple more years. He wrote at least
three more plays before his death in 406 BCE.
They were directed at the 405 Dionysian festival by his son, or perhaps
nephew. Two of them have survived. Next week, the greatest of them all: The
Bacchae.
The Bacchae and Iphigenia in Aulis are also, I
should note, now that I am paying attention, long plays, although I think not
as long as Orestes.