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Electra: "Trust dies but mistrust blossoms"
Electra: "Trust dies but mistrust blossoms"
Electra: "Trust dies but mistrust blossoms"
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Electra: "Trust dies but mistrust blossoms"

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The village of Colonus, near Athens, was, in the year 495 BC, the birthplace of Sophocles. Sophocles place in Greek Tragedy is assured. His birth places him between the two other giants of Greek tragedy; Æschylus and Euripides. He was 30 years younger than Æschylus, the reigning master of drama and was fifteen years older than Euripides, who would, in turn, usurp Sophocles. Sophocles was a handsome and agile youth and selected, at the age of sixteen, to lead with dance and lyre the chorus which celebrated the triumph of Athens and its Allies over Persia at the battle at Salamis. Sophocles career as a dramatist was marked by a victory in competition with Æschylus, under exceptional circumstances. At the time the remains of the hero Theseus were being removed by Cimon from the isle of Scyros to Athens and, at the same time, a contest involving the two dramatists was being held. Æschylus was lauded at the time as the supreme dramatist but Sophocles was popular if inexperienced. The first prize was awarded to Sophocles, greatly to the disgust of the veteran Æschylus, who taking umbrage, soon afterward departed for Sicily. By all accounts Sophocles would now write and exhibit tragedies and satyric dramas for the next sixty years. The canon of his work varies to between 120 and 180 plays, naturally a number were fillers and not of his highest standard but the prodigious output is extraordinary. In the annual Dionysia, the number of first prizes he won is put at between eighteen and twenty-four, with many more second prizes. On this basis alone Æschylus and Euripides were left a long way behind. So far from being dulled with age and toil, his powers seem only to have assumed a mellower tone, a more touching pathos, a sweeter and gentler mode of thought and expression. Sophocles was spared the misery of witnessing the final overthrow of his country, dying, at the age or around 90 after a long life full of triumphs and honours, a few months before the defeat of Aegospotami brought the downfall of his beloved Athens. This naval Battle of Aegospotami took place in 405 BC and decisively determined the outcome of the Peloponnesian War. In the battle, a Spartan fleet under Lysander destroyed the Athenian navy. This effectively ended the war, since Athens could not import grain or communicate with its empire without control of the sea. There are only seven dramas of Sophocles that have survived. It can be argued that Sophocles and his works were the high-water mark of Athenian excellence. He is rightly lauded and we can only wonder at the splendours he wrote that are now lost to us.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 10, 2017
ISBN9781787371699
Electra: "Trust dies but mistrust blossoms"

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    Electra - Sophocles .

    Electra by Sophocles

    The village of Colonus, near Athens, was, in the year 495 BC, the birthplace of Sophocles.

    Sophocles place in Greek Tragedy is assured. His birth places him between the two other giants of Greek tragedy; Æschylus and Euripides. He was 30 years younger than Æschylus, the reigning master of drama and was fifteen years older than Euripides, who would, in turn, usurp Sophocles. 

    Sophocles was a handsome and agile youth and selected, at the age of sixteen, to lead with dance and lyre the chorus which celebrated the triumph of Athens and its Allies over Persia at the battle at Salamis.

    Sophocles career as a dramatist was marked by a victory in competition with Æschylus, under exceptional circumstances. At the time the remains of the hero Theseus were being removed by Cimon from the isle of Scyros to Athens and, at the same time, a contest involving the two dramatists was being held.  Æschylus was lauded at the time as the supreme dramatist but Sophocles was popular if inexperienced. 

    The first prize was awarded to Sophocles, greatly to the disgust of the veteran Æschylus, who taking umbrage, soon afterward departed for Sicily.

    By all accounts Sophocles would now write and exhibit tragedies and satyric dramas for the next sixty years.

    The canon of his work varies to between 120 and 180 plays, naturally a number were fillers and not of his highest standard but the prodigious output is extraordinary.  In the annual Dionysia, the number of first prizes he won is put at between eighteen and twenty-four, with many more second prizes. On this basis alone Æschylus and Euripides were left a long way behind. So far from being dulled with age and toil, his powers seem only to have assumed a mellower tone, a more touching pathos, a sweeter and gentler mode of thought and expression.

    Sophocles was spared the misery of witnessing the final overthrow of his country, dying, at the age or around 90 after a long life full of triumphs and honours, a few months before the defeat of Aegospotami brought the downfall of his beloved Athens. This naval Battle of Aegospotami took place in 405 BC and decisively determined the outcome of the Peloponnesian War. In the battle, a Spartan fleet under Lysander destroyed the Athenian navy. This effectively ended the war, since Athens could not import grain or communicate with its empire without control of the sea.

    There are only seven dramas of Sophocles that have survived. 

    It can be argued that Sophocles and his works were the high-water mark of Athenian excellence.  He is rightly lauded and we can only wonder at the splendours he wrote that are now lost to us.

    Index of Contents

    The Persons

    Scene

    Introduction

    ELECTRA

    Sophocles – A Short Biography

    Sophocles – A Concise Bibliography

    THE PERSONS

    An Old Man, formerly one of the retainers of Agamemnon.

    ORESTES, son of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra.

    ELECTRA, sister of Orestes.

    CHORUS of Argive Women.

    CHRYSOTHEMIS, sister of Orestes and Electra.

    CLYTEMNESTRA.

    AEGISTHUS.

    PYLADES appears with ORESTES, but does not speak.

    SCENE

    Mycenae: before the palace of the Pelopidae.

    INTRODUCTION

    Agamemnon on his return from Troy, had been murdered by his wife Clytemnestra and her paramour Aegisthus, who had usurped the Mycenean throne. Orestes, then a child, had been rescued by his sister Electra, and sent into Phocis with the one servant who remained faithful to his old master. The son of Agamemnon now returns, being of a full age, accompanied by this same attendant and his friend Pylades, with whom he has already concerted a plan for taking vengeance on his father's murderers, in obedience to the command of Apollo.

    Orestes had been received in Phocis by Strophius, his father's friend. Another Phocian prince, named Phanoteus, was a friend of Aegisthus.

    ELECTRA

    ORESTES and the Old Man―PYLADES is present.

    OLD MAN

    Son of the king who led the Achaean host

    Erewhile beleaguering Troy, 'tis thine to day

    To see around thee what through many a year

    Thy forward spirit hath sighed for. Argolis

    Lies here before us, hallowed as the scene

    Of Io's wildering pain: yonder, the mart

    Named from the wolf slaying God, and there, to our left,

    Hera's famed temple. For we reach the bourn

    Of far renowned Mycenae, rich in gold

    And Pelops' fatal roofs before us rise,

    Haunted with many horrors, whence my hand,

    Thy murdered sire then lying in his gore,

    Received thee from thy sister, and removed

    Where I have kept thee safe and nourished thee

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