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close and watch my way; If not, to seek my sister. For men say She dwelleth in these hills, no more a maid But wedded. I must find her house, for aid To guide our work, and learn what hath betid Of late in Argos.--Ha, the radiant lid Of Dawn's eye lifteth! Come, friend; leave we now This trodden path. Some worker of the plough, Or serving damsel at her early task Will presently come by, whom we may ask If here my sister dwells. But soft! Even now I see some bondmaid there, her death-shorn brow Bending beneath its freight of well-water. Lie close until she pass; then question her. A slave might help us well, or speak some sign Of import to this work of mine and thine. [_The two men retire into ambush._ ELECTRA _enters, returning from the well._ ELECTRA. Onward, O labouring tread, As on move the years; Onward amid thy tears, O happier dead! Let me remember. I am she, [_Strophe_ 1. Agamemnon's child, and the mother of me Clytemnestra, the evil Queen, Helen's sister. And folk, I ween, That pass in the streets call yet my name Electra.... God protect my shame! For toil, toil is a weary thing, And life is heavy about my head; And thou far off, O Father and King, In the lost lands of the dead. A bloody twain made these things be; One was thy bitterest enemy, And one the wife that lay by thee. Brother, brother, on some far shore [_Antistrophe_ 1. Hast thou a city, is there a door That knows thy footfall, Wandering One? Who left me, left me, when all our pain Was bitter about us, a father slain, And a girl that wept in her room alone. Thou couldst break me this bondage sore, Only thou, who art far away, Loose our father, and wake once more.... Zeus, Zeus, dost hear me pray?... The sleeping blood and the shame and the doom! O feet that rest not, over the foam Of distant seas, come home, come home! What boots this cruse that I carry? [_Strophe_ 2. O, set free my brow! For the gathered tears that tarry Through the day and the dark till now, Now in the dawn are free, Father, and flow beneath The floor of the world, to be As a song in she house of Death: From the rising up of the day They guide my heart alway, The silent tears unshed, And my body mourns for the dead; My cheeks bleed silently, And these bruised temples keep Their pain, remembering thee And thy bloody sleep. Be rent, O hair of mine head
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