Agamemnon Monologues Clytemnestra

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Agamemnon Monologues Clytemnestra 7,6/10 9261 reviews

Dramatis Personae A WATCHMAN CHORUS OF ARGIVE ELDERS CLYTEMNESTRA, wife of AGAMEMNON A HERALD AGAMEMNON, King of Argos. CLYTEMNESTRA: Though much to suit the times before was said, It shames me not the opposite to speak Notes: NOTE: This monologue is reprinted from The Dramas of Aeschylus.

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Clytemnestra,, 1882 Clytemnestra was the daughter of and, the King and Queen of, making her a Spartan Princess. According to the myth, Zeus appeared to Leda in the form of a swan, seducing and impregnating her. Leda produced four offspring from two eggs: and Clytemnestra from one egg, and and from the other. Therefore, Castor and Clytemnestra were fathered by Tyndareus, whereas Helen and Polydeuces were fathered.

Her other sisters were,. Agamemnon and his brother Menelaus were in exile at the home of Tyndareus; in due time Agamemnon married Clytemnestra and Menelaus married Helen.

In a late variation, Euripides's, Clytemnestra's first husband was, King of; Agamemnon killed him and Clytemnestra's infant son, then made Clytemnestra his wife. In another version, her first husband was King of. The kings of Lydia, according to The Greek Questions, 45, having succeeded who had received from (the queen of the ) axe, carried this axe (called by Lydians) as one of their sacred insignia of office. In the tradition following the Sicilian lyric poet Stesichorus's Oresteia Clytemnestra used such a double-edged ax to assist her lover in the killing of Agamemnon (and later, to attempt to kill her son, as he arrived to avenge his father's death), as depicted on the mixing bowl (calyx krater) with the killing of Agamemnon (Early Classical Period – about 460 B.C.) by the. Mythology [ ] After went (or was taken) from Sparta to, her husband,, asked his brother Agamemnon for help. Greek forces gathered at. However, consistently weak winds prevented the fleet from sailing.

Through a subplot involving the gods and omens, the priest said the winds would be favorable if Agamemnon sacrificed his daughter to the goddess. Agamemnon persuaded Clytemnestra to send Iphigenia to him, telling her he was going to marry her to. When Iphigenia arrived at Aulis, she was sacrificed, the winds turned, and the troops set sail for Troy. The lasted ten years. During this period of Agamemnon's long absence, Clytemnestra began a love affair with Aegisthus, her husband's cousin. Whether Clytemnestra was seduced into the affair or entered into it independently differs according to the respective author of the myth. Nevertheless, Clytemnestra and Aegisthus began plotting Agamemnon's demise.

Clytemnestra was enraged by Iphigenia's murder (and presumably the earlier murder of her first husband by Agamemnon, and her subsequent rape and forced marriage). Aegisthus saw his father Thyestes betrayed by Agamemnon's father (Aegisthus was conceived specifically to take revenge on that branch of the family). Murder of Agamemnon, painting by (1817) In old versions of the story, on returning from Troy, Agamemnon is murdered by Aegisthus, the lover of his wife, Clytemnestra. In some later versions Clytemnestra helps him or does the killing herself in his own home.

Clytemnestra in the odyssey

The best-known version is that of Aeschylus: Agamemnon, having arrived at his palace with his concubine, the Trojan princess, in tow and being greeted by his wife, entered the palace for a banquet while Cassandra remained in the chariot. Clytemnestra waited until he was in the bath, and then entangled him in a cloth net and stabbed him. Trapped in the web, Agamemnon could neither escape nor resist his murderer.

Meanwhile, Cassandra saw a vision of herself and Agamemnon being murdered. Her attempts to elicit help failed (she had been cursed by that no one would believe her prophecies). She realized she was fated to die, and resolutely walked into the palace to receive her death. After the murders, Aegisthus replaced Agamemnon as king and ruled for seven years with Clytemnestra as his queen.