Modern Italian Poets - Essays and Versions by William Dean Howells
page 89 of 358 (24%)
page 89 of 358 (24%)
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Thou wouldst have blood of me, and this is blood;
For thee alone--for thee alone I shed it! _El._ Orestes, Orestes--miserable brother! He hears us not! ah, he is mad! Forever, Pylades, we must go beside him. _Pyl._ Hard, Inevitable law of ruthless Fate! IV Alfieri himself wrote a critical comment on each of his tragedies, discussing their qualities and the question of their failure or success dispassionately enough. For example, he frankly says of his Maria Stuarda that it is the worst tragedy he ever wrote, and the only one that he could wish not to have written; of his Agamennone, that all the good in it came from the author and all the bad from the subject; of his Fillippo II., that it may make a very terrible impression indeed of mingled pity and horror, or that it may disgust, through the cold atrocity of Philip, even to the point of nausea. On the Orestes, we may very well consult him more at length. He declares: "This tragic action has no other motive or development, nor admits any other passion, than an implacable revenge; but the passion of revenge (though very strong by nature), having become greatly enfeebled among civilized peoples, is regarded as a vile passion, and its effects are wont to be blamed and looked upon with loathing. Nevertheless, when it is just, when the offense received is very atrocious, when the persons and the circumstances are such that no human law can indemnify the |
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