SCENE III.

ORESTES. IPHIGENIA. PYLADES.

ORESTES.

How! are ye come already? Sister, welcome.

Electra still is missing: some kind god

With gentle arrow send her quickly hither.

Thee, my poor friend, I must compassionate!

Come with me, come to Pluto’s gloomy throne.

There to salute our hosts like stranger guests.

IPHIGENIA.

Celestial pair, who from the realms above

By night and day shed down the beauteous light

To cheer mankind, but who may not illume

Departed spirits, save a mortal pair!

A brother’s and a sister’s anguish pity!

For thou, Diana, lov’st thy gentle brother

Beyond what earth and heaven can offer thee

And dost, with quiet yearning, ever turn

Thy virgin face to his eternal light.

Let not my only brother, found so late,

Rave in the darkness of insanity!

And is thy will, when thou didst here conceal me,

At length fulfill’d,—would’st thou to me through him,

To him through me, thy gracious aid extend,—

Oh, free him from the fetters of this curse,

Lest vainly pass the precious hours of safety.

PYLADES.

Dost thou not know us, and this sacred grove,

And this blest light, which shines not on the dead?

Dost thou not feel thy sister and thy friend,

Who hold thee living in their firm embrace?

Grasp us! we are not shadows. Mark my words!

Collect thyself,—each moment now is precious,

And our return hangs on a slender thread,

Which, as it seems, some gracious fate doth spin.

ORESTES to IPHIGENIA.

My sister, let me for the first time taste,

With open heart, pure joy within thine arms!

Ye gods, who charge the heavy clouds with dread,

And sternly gracious send the long-sought rain

With thunder and the rush of mighty winds,

A horrid deluge on the trembling earth;

Yet dissipate at length man’s dread suspense,

Exchanging timid wonder’s anxious gaze

For grateful looks and joyous songs of praise,

When in each sparkling drop which gems the leaves,

Apollo, thousand-fold, reflects his beam,

And Iris colours with a magic hand

The dusky texture of the parting clouds;

Oh, let me also in my sister’s arms,

And on the bosom of my friend, enjoy

With grateful thanks the bliss ye now bestow

My heart assures me that your curses cease.

The dread Eumenides at length retire,

The brazen gates of Tartarus I hear

Behind them closing with a thund’ring clang.

A quick’ning odour from the earth ascends,

Inviting me to chase, upon its plains,

The joys of life and deeds of high emprise.

PYLADES.

Lose not the moments which are limited!

The favouring gale, which swells our parting sail,

Must to Olympus waft our perfect joy.

Quick counsel and resolve the time demands.