She uses many shrewd images, which are misinterpreted by not only the chorus but Agamemnon as well. This speech is interpreted by Agamemnon and the chorus to be a praise and a relief that her husband made it home safely. In the beginning of her speech she says “It is evil and a thing of terror when a wife sits in the house forlorn with no man by, and hears rumors that like a fever die to break again, and men come in with news of fear, and on their heels another messenger, with worse news to cry aloud here in this house,” (Agamemnon, 861-866). When she was that the rumors she hears spread like dieses, she implores an image of death and downfall. Throughout the rest of her speech she brings up rumors of death and even says that “Had Agamemnon taken all the wounds of the tale whereof was carried home to me, he had been cut full of gashes like a fishing net,” (Agamemnon, 866-868). Notice how she may seem to be praising Agamemnon but still points out how he has holes like a net. Clytemnestra also lets us know that the rumors going around the city were so intolerable that she “had to be released against her will, from the noose of suicide, more than once” (Agamemnon, 874-875). After her speech she tells the servants to strew the path of his feet with the fabrics of crimson. Agamemnon walking in the crimson tapestries is a very big metaphor. This action shows that Agamemnon has a lot of pride in himself and …show more content…
She uses ambiguous wording and then uses metaphors. She uses this deceit so that the chorus cannot interpret it correctly. Her telling us about her “exhausted grief” from waiting on Agamemnon shows us that she is just being a worried wife at home (Agamemnon, 895). She gave a thrilled praise to Agamemnon when he arrives at home. She seems at a loss of words when he arrives home because she is so thrilled buy in reality she does not care to see him anymore and she is only thrilled because now the revenge can take place. In Clytemnestra’s speech, she fails to say that she is actually relieved or that she is pleased with his return home. Her words play Agamemnon and the Chorus and they fail to ask any questions to her speech but rather just misinterpret what she is saying. What Clytemnestra says and what she means are two very different things and one of the reasons the chorus does not understand what she means is because of her deceit, which is a fourfold compellation of lies and