The Libation Bearers: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Second part of the [[Tragedy]] trilogy ''[[The Oresteia (Theatre)|The Oresteia]]'' by [[Aeschylus]].
Second part of the [[Tragedy]] trilogy ''[[The Oresteia]]'' by [[Aeschylus]].


Some time after [[Agamemnon (Theatre)|Agamemnon’s murder]], his son Orestes and a friend, Pylades, arrive to his grave after a long exile. Soon, they both hide as Orestes’ sister, Electra, arrives at the tomb with some slaves [[Title Drop|carrying libations]]. She sees two locks of hair in the tomb, having been left there by Orestes earlier, prompting him to come out of his hiding place and convince his sister of his identity.
Some time after [[Agamemnon|Agamemnon’s murder]], his son Orestes and a friend, Pylades, arrive to his grave after a long exile. Soon, they both hide as Orestes’ sister, Electra, arrives at the tomb with some slaves [[Title Drop|carrying libations]]. She sees two locks of hair in the tomb, having been left there by Orestes earlier, prompting him to come out of his hiding place and convince his sister of his identity.


She tells him of Aegisthus and Clytemnestra’s plot to murder Agamemnon and, after a long rant that involves summoning the spirit of their father to help them, Orestes decides to avenge his father by murdering both his mother and her lover.
She tells him of Aegisthus and Clytemnestra’s plot to murder Agamemnon and, after a long rant that involves summoning the spirit of their father to help them, Orestes decides to avenge his father by murdering both his mother and her lover.
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* [[Heroic BSOD]]: Orestes suffers this after his mother’s death.
* [[Heroic BSOD]]: Orestes suffers this after his mother’s death.
* [[I Did What I Had to Do]]: Orestes convinces himself that he must kill his mother to avenge his father.
* [[I Did What I Had to Do]]: Orestes convinces himself that he must kill his mother to avenge his father.
* [[Libation for The Dead]]: It's actually on the title.
* [[Libation for the Dead]]: It's actually on the title.
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: What he feels afterwards.
* [[My God, What Have I Done?]]: What he feels afterwards.
* [[Patricide]]: This is, actually, one of the few examples of matricide on fiction.
* [[Patricide]]: This is, actually, one of the few examples of matricide on fiction.

Revision as of 12:53, 8 April 2014

Second part of the Tragedy trilogy The Oresteia by Aeschylus.

Some time after Agamemnon’s murder, his son Orestes and a friend, Pylades, arrive to his grave after a long exile. Soon, they both hide as Orestes’ sister, Electra, arrives at the tomb with some slaves carrying libations. She sees two locks of hair in the tomb, having been left there by Orestes earlier, prompting him to come out of his hiding place and convince his sister of his identity.

She tells him of Aegisthus and Clytemnestra’s plot to murder Agamemnon and, after a long rant that involves summoning the spirit of their father to help them, Orestes decides to avenge his father by murdering both his mother and her lover.

Orestes and Pylades pretend to be wandering travelers and knock on the door, calling Aegisthus with news of Orestes’ death. Clytemnestra, delighted, goes inside to call Aegisthus, only for him to die when he meets Orestes in private. When she finds out, he threatens to kill her too, in spite of her pleading and remembering him of the fact she raised him. Orestes has troubles deciding if he has to murder her too to avenge her or not, but eventually decides the cause is just and does it. Then she wraps both corpses on Agamemnon’s cloak.

Sadly for Orestes, the cycle of violence doesn’t end there. The murder of his mother plagues him with guilt and soon starts seeing the Erinyes (anthropomorphic versions of vengueance) surrounding him, prompting him to flee in pain.


The Libation Bearers provides examples of: