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vv. 40–61.

''from the Palace, bearing torches, with which they kindle incense on the altars. Among them comes, who throws herself on her knees at the central Altar in an agony of prayer''.

Presently from the further side of the open space appear the of  ''and move gradually into position in front of the Palace. The day begins to dawn''.

Ten years since Ilion's righteous foes,

The Atreidae strong,

Menelaüs and eke Agamemnon arose,

Two thrones, two sceptres, yokèd of God;

And a thousand galleys of Argos trod

The seas for the righting of wrong;

And wrath of battle about them cried,

As vultures cry,

Whose nest is plundered, and up they fly

In anguish lonely, eddying wide,

Great wings like oars in the waste of sky,

Their task gone from them, no more to keep

Watch o'er the vulture babes asleep.

But One there is who heareth on high

Some Pan or Zeus, some lost Apollo—

That keen bird-throated suffering cry

Of the stranger wronged in God's own sky;

And sendeth down, for the law transgressed,

The Wrath of the Feet that follow.

So Zeus the Watcher of Friend and Friend,

Zeus who Prevaileth, in after quest