Page:Choëphoroe (Murray 1923).djvu/31

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222–241
THE CHOËPHOROE

Orestes.

Who mocks thy tribulation mocks mine own.


Electra.

My heart half dares foretell that thou art he . . .


Orestes.

Nay, when I face thee plain thou wilt not see!
Oh, seeing but that shorn tress of funeral hair
Thy soul took wings and seemed to hold me there;
Then peering in my steps . . . thou knew'st them mine,
Thy brother's, moulded feet and head like thine.
Set the lock here, where it was cut. Behold
This cloak I wear, thy woven work of old,
The battened ridges and the broidered braid
Of lions . . .

[Electra throws herself into his arms.

Hold! Ah, be not all dismayed
With joy! Our nearest is our deadliest foe.


Electra.

O best beloved, O dreamed of long ago,
Seed of deliverance washed with tears as rain,
By thine own valour thou shalt build again
Our father's House! O lightener of mine eyes,
Four places in my heart, four sanctities,
Are thine. My father in thy face and mien
Yet living: thine the love that might have been
My mother's—whom I hate, most righteously—

And my poor sister's, fiercely doomed to die,

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