1/ It would have been quite interesting, I suppose, to read Orestes immediately after the Oresteia and the two Electra plays—I just couldn’t get hold of a copy at the time. Oh well.
One thing I’ve noticed is that Euripides may create plays about the same people, but the plays are not necessarily related. His Electra and Orestes are fairly consistent, though in Orestes there’s no reference to the fact that Electra has got married (per Aegisthus’s order), but Euripides has a play called Helen in which Helen never goes to Troy—it’s just a phantom. The Helen and Menelaus in Orestes, and the Helen and Menelaus in Helen are completely different characters.
2/ Euripides’s Orestes is very different from Eumenides, the last part of the Oresteia. At the risk of being reductive, I think we can say the central idea of Aeschylus’s trilogy is that violence begets violence and at some point the cycle of violence has to get cut—the plot of Eumenides is about whether Orestes can be forgiven or forever haunted by the Furies, and the debate boils down to whether a son owes more to the father or to the mother, whether the duty and desire to avenge his father can outweigh the crime of killing his mother. I’m not entirely sure what the central idea of Euripides’s play is—perhaps there isn’t one—what we have is a rather bitter, nihilist, and messy play in which violence piles upon violence, the characters turn increasingly monstrous, and then Apollo appears to provide a resolution that doesn’t resolve anything. I often feel Euripides is best in the middle: his beginnings often have some long and awkward exposition and his endings often have some awkward deus ex machina, but the middles are (usually) brilliant.
What is wrong with Pylades? And Electra?
And what kind of sick joke is it that Apollo makes Orestes marry Hermione?
3/ There are many great passages in the play:
“CHORUS […] O Zeus, listen!
What mercy is there?
Pitiful son, what is this agony,
This blood-hunt, this persecution?
There is a fiend of vengeance
That drowns your life in tears,
Sinks your house in your mother’s blood,
Destroys your mind with madness.
I mourn, I groan, I grieve.
The greatest happiness is not permanent
In the world of men;
But the storms of God rise against it,
Like a light sailing-ship they shatter it,
Terrors and disasters roll around it,
Till crashing waves close over death…”
(translated by Philip Vellacott)
4/ I can see why people say Euripides is more realistic and modern than the other ancient Greeks.
“MENELAUS Ye gods! What am I looking at? Some ghost from hell?
ORESTES You are right; terror and pain make me a living corpse.
MENELAUS This savage look, this mattered hair—I’m sorry for you.
ORESTES What you describe is outward; my torments are real.
MENELAUS Your eyes are glazed with horror; your look frightens me.
ORESTES I no longer exist; only my name is left.”
Unlike Eumenides, in Orestes, we don’t see the Furies onstage—we only see Orestes’s madness.
Euripides depicts Orestes committing the worst of sins—matricide—but gets us to understand him. He writes the scene of Orestes and Menelaus and gets us to empathise with Orestes’s anger and sense of betrayal, but at the same time we also understand why, after 10 years of war, Menelaus doesn’t want more conflict and bloodshed.
Compared to the Oresteia, the plays of Euripides are less mythic: the human beings are more active, the gods are less involved.
In Electra, it’s almost as though there’s no oracle from Apollo: we see Orestes and Electra talk about killing Clytemnestra; we see Electra urge her brother to carry on with the plan when he hesitates, like Lady Macbeth taunts and urges Macbeth; Electra also takes part in the killing, unlike the Electra of Aeschylus and Sophocles.
In Orestes, the gods don’t appear till the very end; the whole play is driven by humans; Orestes and Electra first turn to others, asking for help or intervention, as they’re facing punishment; then Pylades comes up with the idea of killing Helen and becoming heroes, celebrated for killing the woman everyone hates, rather than just known as the murderers of Clytemnestra; and Electra comes up with the plan to hold Hermione hostage as a way of bargaining with Orestes; there doesn’t seem to be any hint of the existence of the gods till the very last scene.
And when Apollo does appear, Euripides makes one think why the gods haven’t intervened earlier and prevented all the bloodshed.