Page:Agamemnon (Murray 1920).djvu/87

vv. 1497–1520.

And criest thou still this deed hath been

My work? Nay, gaze, and have no thought

That this is Agamemnon's Queen.

'Tis He, 'tis He, hath round him wrought

This phantom of the dead man's wife;

He, the old Wrath, the Driver of Men astray,

Pursuer of Atreus for the feast defiled;

To assoil an ancient debt he hath paid this life;

A warrior and a crownèd King this day

Atones for a slain child.

—That thou art innocent herein,

What tongue dare boast? It cannot be,

Yet from the deeps of ancient sin

The Avenger may have wrought with thee.

—On the red Slayer crasheth, groping wild

For blood, more blood, to build his peace again,

And wash like water the old frozen stain

Of the torn child.

Ah, sorrow, sorrow! My King, my King!

How shall I weep, what word shall I say?

Caught in the web of this spider thing,

In foul death gasping thy life away.

Woe's me, woe's me, for this slavish lying,

The doom of craft and the lonely dying,

The iron two-edged and the hands that slay!