Tug of War

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Tug of War

If the two women of Agamemnon, Clytaemnestra and Cassandra, were put to the test of Tug of War, would there be a winner or would neither win? A game of Tug of war meaning, a pull from each side of the rope until one side with out a doubt crosses a drawn line. There are similarities between the two ladies as well as several differences. The actions of the ladies and confrontations lead the town to have confused thought of each woman. Both women are strong characters having strong pulls on the rope but each shows their weaknesses and tends to lose grip. A kid’s game of Tug of War places these characters in a situation of face-to-face competition. As the chorus exclaims before Agamemnon arrives, “the good wins out, no pain can tip the scales, not now.”

There are few similarities amongst Clytaemnestra and Cassandra. Both ladies share an intimate relationship with Agamemnon and each relationship gives each woman a hard pull on each side of the rope. On Cassandra’s side of the rope she pulls for Agamemnon as his prize won after her husband Eurypylus, was killed in the Trojan War. Cassandra bore Agamemnon a set of twins as they took their journey back home to Troy. The tear in the rope did not develop until Agamemnon showed up at Troy to present his wife, Clytaemnestra, with his mistress Cassandra after his long awaited homecoming. Clytaemnestra also bore Agamemnon children, is the wife of this prideful man. In the Greek society it is believed that when married it cuts off all ties to family and friends except that of the new marriage. Not only can Clytaemnestra pull for adultery, but also for hatred of removing her form her family. Each woman now have been defied, has an even pull on the Tug of War rope ...

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...onounces a winner? Clytaemnestra gives great justice for her doing, claiming Agamemnon not being the saint the town believes. The town still has no grip on the rope but keeps the torn strings on their side as the leader exiles Clytaemnestra.

Undecided and unexplainable creates confusion as to whom the winner is proclaimed. Or does death claim a winner. If it is death that claims the winner is it the woman who died knowingly or the woman who slain the victim? Both Clytaemnestra and Cassandra hold strong sides to the war but with a rope lying in the wrong hands can only plummet to a failure to pronounce a winner. The town never reveals liking to either woman and Agamemnon pulled both sides evenly leaving the inner being of each woman to carry on the Tug of War. This is a Tug of War that places each character even knowing neither wins and everybody loses.

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