PAT & JOAN...
You two are the images of perfect twins.
You can hear echoes of that in Shakespeare, can't you, KIDSAL. "The coward dies many times
before his death..." I agree with JUDE that this could make a great movie.
The chorus ( of maidens..an interesting change) reinforce my dread of what
Apollo intends. “Such was the affliction on affliction that the Golden Lamb
brought on these halls, and death on death, woe on woe. Retribution for the Tantalids that
died of old works itself out against the house”. These ancient gods really held on to their
grudges. If anyone offended them, they would wipe out the offender and all his family to
the last generation!
I can see where Euripides could have been misunderstood in his time. He is going against some
of the rules of traditional tragedy. A perfect example is Euripides shocking disrespect for the gods. Iphigenia, with no one nearby to hear, says,
“The goddess equivocates. I like it not. If any mortal stain his hand with bloodshed, if any hand touch a woman in child-bed, or a dead body, she keeps him from her altars and counts him unclean. But she takes pleasure in sacrificial murder.” However, she backtracks on that, possibly due to her own painful and awkward position. She closes her soliloquy with the words,
“It is the men of this land, I believe, being themselves murderers, who lay their on guilt on the gods. No god, I am sure, can be evil.” That, I suspect, is Euripides giving himself a way out of any accusations of blasphemy.
Actually, I have had to come to much the same conclusion myself. I could not believe in
a God who would cause evil things to happen for his own vengeance or pleasure. It seems
clear to me that people act according to their own natures, and justify their uglier acts in the
name of some ‘noble’ cause. Or perhaps simply what they consider realism.