Реферат: Progression Towards Light Essay Research Paper Progression
seen in the second play of the trilogy, The Libation Bearers. Orestes is the
embodiment of this light, a beacon signalling a possible end in the evil that
has infected the house of Atreus. It is true that Orestes, in revenge for
Agamemnon, kills his mother Clytaemestra. Yet the darkness that is expected
from such a murder, a matricide, is negated by one of the main reasons that
Orestes commits the murder: his fear of the wrath of Apollo, who has ordered
him to commit the deadly act. Aeschylus provides Orestes with a justification
for his action in the form of the oracle from Apollo. For not only does
Orestes’ murder of his mother fail to differ greatly from Clytaemestra’s murder
of Agamemnon, but it can in fact be seen as a worse crime because of the blood
ties. Therefore, in order to convincingly prove his assertion that Orestes is
justified in killing his mother, Aeschylus must include the order from Apollo,
who by no mere coincidence is the god of light. With the divine support of the
light god on his side, Orestes is the beginning of the progressive illumination
towards goodness and order in the Oresteia.
Another example of Orestes’ introduction of light into a story of
darkness occurs later in The Libation Bearers. The chorus is describing the
dream that Clytaemestra has had of giving birth to a snake, which represents
Orestes. The chorus sings of Clytaemestra’s fear as she awakens from the
nightmare: ?She woke screaming out of her sleep, shaky with fear, as torches
kindled all about the house, out of the blind dark that had been on them? (lines
535-537). Aeschylus describes the house of Clytaemestra, the rightful house of
Atreus and the Atridae, as dark; this darkness has been caused by none other
than her own murderous deeds. She has dreamt of the coming of her son Orestes
to avenge his father, and the torches that light up the house signal this coming.
Clearly, Orestes is the man who will restore light to the house of Atreus.
Orestes is looked upon by those characters sympathetic to his plight
(namely Electra and the chorus of The Libation Bearers) as the light which will
bring an end to the evil in the house of Atreus. Soon after Orestes reveals his