tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-70758701223667209362009-03-01T12:21:28.937-08:00The Bacchae TranslationOver twenty-four hundred years later, still has the power to shock and excite: The Bacchae of Euripides translated by Michael A. Valerie! Copyright © 2005 by MIVA PublicationsEuripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-90553457735604842452008-01-24T23:21:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:48:04.635-08:00Scene 6<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Now <span style="font-size:78%;">show to the Thebans, 'u suffering woman</span>, your victory<br />Prize, the wild hunt you killed and brought here before us.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> You dwellers of the Thebans’ high-tower’d<br />Land, it is come that you may witness this kill<br />Which we daughters of Kadmos have hunted,<br />Not with snares or the Thessalonians’ streaking<br />Missiles, but with fairwhite hands outstretching fingers.<br />And so what need there be for hurling javelins<br />Or acquiring in vain the spear maker’s art?<br />We just now took this thing in our hands<br />And tore the wild beast limb from limb!<br />But where is my aged father, tell him to come outside;<br />And my son, Pentheus, have him take the tallest<br />Ladder and raise it to the top of the house, so he can nail<br />The head of this lion I caught to the roof on the triglyphs.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>KADMOS</strong> </span><br /><br />Follow me inside the house servants, follow carrying<br />The mangled corpse of Pentheus;<br />Searching everywhere for his body, I brought<br />All that I could find here in this heap, dis-<br />Covered lying in the valley ill-<br />Found, splatter’d across the folds of Kithairon.<br />I heard about th’abominous acts of my daughters from someone<br />As soon as I ‘d stepped back inside the city’s walls<br />Coming home from the revels with the old man Teiresias;<br />So I turned right back to the mountain to go<br />And get the child who’d been slaughtered by the Maenads;<br />And I saw Actaeon’s mother, Autonoe, Aristaios’<br />Wife and Ino in the bushes still raging<br />In a terrible frenzy.<br />And somebody said that Agauve was coming<br />With Bacchus’ step, and they told me no lie;<br />For I saw right there the most horrible sight…<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Father! You in particular have so much to boast over,<br />You, the one who raised the greatest crop of daughters<br />A person ever had; <span style="font-size:78%;">I mean all of them, but especially me because </span><br />Today have I given up weaving on looms and come<br />To something greater: hunting wild beasts with my hands.<br />And I’m carrying it in my arms so you can see this<br />Prize for my prowess and so it can be<br />Hung to the wall; here father, you hold it, re-<br />Joicing in my slaughter, call<br />Your friends up for a feast; you’re rich,<br />Lucky, BLESSED for what I have accomplished.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Oh grief too monstrous to be seen!<br />You’ve accomplished murder with your wretched hands,<br />A fine sacrifice you’ve brought down for the gods,<br />To invite me and all of Thebes to dinner?!<br />Poor child, you’re even worse off than I.<br />We deserved to be punished, but this, this is too much;<br />Lord Bromios has ruined us! A member of our own family…<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">ΑG</span></strong><span style="color:#ff6600;">:</span> How ill-tempered and squinty-eyed does old<br />Age make a man! I hope my son grows up to be a strong<br />Hunter like his mother, so he can chase after wild<br />Animals with the other young men of Thebes.<br />But all he wants to do<br />Is fight against the god.<br />You really must have a talk with him, father;<br />Someone call him here so he can see me in my good fortune.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Oh! Oh god! Whether you realize what it is you have done<br />Or if you stay in this state straight thru to the end,<br />Either way you’ll be sorely grieved.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> You mean people won’t <span style="font-size:78%;">think I’m blessed with</span> good fortune?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> What’s not right that is wrong with this!<br />Look first up at the sky.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Ok, why do you want me to look up at this?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Does it still look the same or is it different now?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Brighter than before; and even more shining and brilliant.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Are you still all a-flutter inside?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> I don’t <span style="font-size:78%;">know what you mean, but I think I’m coming to…think I’m</span><br />Starting to come to my senses; I remember…<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Then would you listen and answer me clearly?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> I forgot what we were just saying, daddy.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Whose house did you enter in marriage?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> You gave me away to Echion, the Sown One he’s call’d.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> And who was the boy you bore to your husband?<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Pentheus, by my union with his father.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Then whose face is it you nurse in your arms?<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> The huntresses told me it was a lion’s<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Look now at it rightly, I swear it won’t take long<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> O Aah! What do I see? What do I hold in my hands?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Look at it closely and know for yourself.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> I see greatest grief for me suffering!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> So it no longer looks to you like a lion?<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> No, but the sever’d head of my poor Penthe-us<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> You were bereaved before you realized it.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Who was it killed him? How did it get in my hands?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Gruesome recognition, how late your arrival…<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Say it; my heart is pounding at what is to come.<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> You cut him down and murder’d him yourself.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Where did he die? Was it in the house or somewhere else?<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> The very same spot where the dogs mauled Actaeon.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Why did my poor, cursed son come to Kithairon?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> He went there to mock the god and your festivals.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> How did we get to Kithairon?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> You<span style="font-size:78%;"> were out of your</span> minds!<span style="font-size:78%;"> The whole city, gripped by</span> Bacchos.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Now I see clearly: Dionysus has utterly ruined us!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Yes, insult for insult, because you didn’t believe him a god.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> And the body of my beloved son? Father?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> I gathered what I could and brought it here in this. </span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-size:100%;">(</span><span style="font-size:78%;"><em>hands her remains</em></span><span style="font-size:100%;">)</span><br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Have his limbs yet been fit back together?<br />[<span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Not yet my child, I brought him here torn to pieces.]<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> How much of my madness rubbed off on Pentheus?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> He refused like you to revere Bromios.<br />But he join’d us together in des-<br />truction; to the ruin of our houses . . .<br /><br />Am I to be then a man deprived of male heir?<br />Am I then to see the fruit of your womb<br />So foul and unnaturally murdered?<br />Oh, look at the house which you held together, my<br />Son, my palace, born of my own child;<br />A terror to your country.<br />And no one would dare dis-<br />Respect an old man, looking upon your royal crown, for<br />Always would you make them pay the proper penalty;<br />But now I am depriv’d of my home,<br />Kadmos the Great, who sowed the Theban<br />Race and reaped the most gorgeous of harvests,<br />An exile.<br /><br />Oh beloved grandson, for though you’re no longer a-<br />Live, I still count you as one of my own dearest children;<br />Never again will you reach out your hand to this cheek,<br />Flitting about calling for your mother’s<br />Father, asking me: "Has anyone hurt you grandad? Has somebody<br />Wronged you? Is there anyone ails your heart by being a pain?<br />Tell me so I can punish whoever hurt you, father."<br />But now am I wracked with suffering, and you, poor you, and<br />Your pitiful mother and her suffering sisters…<br />If there is anyone here who casts a disparaging eye<br />Upon the Divine, look now on this and know the Gods exist.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> I feel your pain Kadmos. Though your grand-<br />Child got what he deserved, it is still painful for you.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Oh father, for you see how my fortunes have changed…<br /><br /><><br /><br /><br /></span><span style="font-size:85%;"></span><div align="center"><strong><span style="font-size:85%;color:#ff0000;">ΔΙΟΝΥΣΟΣ</span></strong></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">You will turn into a<br />Snake and your wife, the War-<br />God’s daughter Harmonia, change her</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">Form<br />For that of a savage serpent.<br />And as the oracle of Zeus proclaims,</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">You and your wife will ride an ox<br />Cart heading a<br />Barbarian horde, you will</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">Pillage countless cities with an in-<br />Numerable host, but when you’ve sacked<br />Loxias</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">Apollo‘s oracle, it will mean<br />A difficult voyage home.<br />But Ares will rescue you and Har-<br />Monia, and set you both down</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">In The Isles of the Blessed.<br />I, Dionysus, foretell these things<br />Born of no mortal</span></div><div align="center"><span style="font-size:85%;">Man, but of Father Zeus.<br /></span></div><div align="center"><span style="font-size:85%;">And if you had learned to be<br />Wise when you were unwilling, you<br />Would have acquired the blessing<br />Of Zeus’ son as an ally.<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong></span><span style="color:#000000;">Κ</span></span></strong></div><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> Dionysus we beg you, we have wronged you, but<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Δ</strong>:</span> Too late you understand, <span style="font-size:78%;">you would not see when</span> you should.<br /><span style="color:#ff6600;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> We understand now, but your punishment is too harsh.<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Δ</strong>:</span> And I was insulted by you, though born a god.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> It’s not right for the gods to resemble us in their anger!<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Δ</strong>:</span> Long ago my father Zeus these things decreed.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Alas, it’s decided then: old man, we’re suffering exiles.<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>Δ</strong>:</span> Why then delay things that are unavoidable?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Oh child, what a horrible fate we’ve arrived at<br />All! You and your poor sisters and I all<br />Suffering; I will go, an old man, exiled among<br />Strangers; and yet it is foretold that I must lead<br />An army allied of barbarians into Greece with my<br />Wife, the wargod’s daughter turned into a snake,<br />And I a snake too, will come with spears against<br />Greek altars and tombs, never will I stop suffering<br />Evil, nor will I find peace sailing down<br />Acheron‘s flowing streams.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Oh father, I’ll be robbed of you in exile!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Why do you embrace me, child<br />Like a swan its milk-white parent?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> But where will I go, thrown out of my land?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> I don’t know baby; your dad’s of little help.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Goodbye palace, good bye my father’s<br />City, I must leave you for misfortune,<br />Flying from my home.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> Go now child, Aristaeos’ [dear sister, sad aunt to </span><br /><div align="left"><span style="font-size:85%;">Actaeon; oh how it pains me to see you grieving so!]</span></div><div align="left"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> I feel so bad for you father <span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Κ</strong>:</span> And I for you, dear.<br />And I weep for you &amp; your sisters.</span></div><span style="font-size:85%;">For lord Dionysus has<br />Inflicted<br />This terrible<br />Punishment upon our royal house.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Yes, because we wronged him terribly, not<br />Holding his name in honor in Thebes.<br />Goodbye father!<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">Κ</span></strong>: Goodbye my poor girl,<br />For it is with difficulty you come to this.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Take me escorts to where we will<br />Take my sisters into wretched exile;<br />Let me not set eyes upon<br />Kithairon‘s pollution<br />Nor where the thyrsus is<br />Dedicated a reminder;<br />Let other Bacchants care for these!<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>X</strong>:</span> Many are the forms of the Divine<br />And the gods brought to pass much unexpected,<br />And what was expected, not brought to pass;<br />And they did make possible th’impossible:<br />Thus did the affair turn out.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-9055345773560484245?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-69500239740758339542008-01-24T23:06:00.000-08:002008-01-24T23:19:46.224-08:00Chorus - An Hymn to Dionysus<strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">CHORVS</span></strong><br /><br />Let us dance now for Bakkhios<br />Let us now cry aloud<br />The disaster that's befall'n<br />Pentheus the serpent's son<br /><br />Who in a flowing lady's<br />Dress with a trusted fennel-rod<br />Skips flow’ry off to Hades . . .<br /><br />Oh daughters of Kadmos,<br />You've built up your far-flung<br />Fame and turned it into<br />Grief, into tears<br /><br />But blessed is the sport, to throw<br />A child’s hand dripping in blood.<br /><br />But I see Pentheus' mother Agauve rushing<br />to the house, her eyes rolling wild.<br />(<span style="font-size:85%;"><em>enter Agauve</em></span>)<br />Accept this revelband of the joyful crying god.<br />(<em><span style="font-size:85%;">hands her headband</span></em>)<br /><br /><strong><span style="color:#990000;">AGAVE</span></strong><br /><br />Bacchants of Asia!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Why do you call on me, woman?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> We come bearing in from the<br /><br />mountains a newly-cut tendril<br />and a victorious hunt!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> I see &amp; welcome you, fellow Bacchant.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> I caught this young lion without any<br />meshes, as you can see.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Where, in the forest?<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> On Kithairon<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Kithairon?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> And killed him.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Who hit him first?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> The honor was mine;<br />Ma-care Agauve, am I call'd in thiasoi.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Anyone else?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Kadmos'...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Kadmos?<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> daughters,<br />his daughters killed it with me! And it was a<br />glorious hunt;<br /><br />have now your share of the feast.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> What shall I take, suffering?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Young, the bull's cheek has just<br /><br />started to sprout a new growth<br />of hair along its chin. (<em><span style="font-size:85%;">strokes head-pike</span></em>)<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Yes, and its hair makes it look even more fearsome.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Oh, Bacchios was the hunter, wise<br />one who wisely turned the tide<br />of Maenads on the beast.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> The lord is a hunter?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Do you praise him?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Yes I do.<br /><strong></strong><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Soon the Kadmeians...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Even your son Pentheus?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> He's going to be so impressed, that his Mot-<br /><br />her caught &amp; kill'd this lion-hearted<br />prey. <span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Amazing<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>ΑG</strong>:</span> Incredibly.<br /><strong></strong><br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">Ch</span></strong>: Are you pleased?<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">ΑΓ</span></strong>: I'm ecstatic.<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Χ</strong> &amp; <strong>Α</strong></span><span style="color:#ff0000;">:</span> Fantastical, shining a-<br />chievements have been<br />accomplished by this kill.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-6950023974075833954?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-34039772575538436412008-01-24T22:47:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:40:29.487-08:00Scene 5<span style="font-size:85%;"><strong><span style="color:#ff0000;">MESSENGER<br /></span></strong><br />Oh house once considered<br />the most fortunate thru'out Hellas, home of the old<br />Sidonian who sowed the earth-born fruit of the serpent Ophis,<br />how I weep for you!<br />Though I'm just a slave, still<br />a master's misfortunes are those of his servants.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> What is it? What news do you bring from the Bacchants?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>MS</strong>:</span> Pentheus is dead, the child of father Echion.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Lord Bromios, you are the great god you appear.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>MS</strong>:</span> What did you, how can you say this? You rejoice at the mis-<br />fortunes of my master, woman?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> I sing foreign songs amidst the barbarians;<br />I no longer must cower in fear of your chains.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>MS</strong>:</span> Do you think there’re no men here in Thebes?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Dionysus, oh Dionysus, you are my strength, not<br />Thebes.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>MS</strong>:</span> Then I am sorry; but still, it's not right to delight in </span><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">misfortunes once they have happened.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Tell me, please tell me: how did he die,<br />the wicked man hatching his wicked schemes?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>MS</strong></span><span style="color:#ff0000;">:</span> When we had left the abodes of this land of Thebes<br />we crossed over the streams of the river Asopus.<br />We approached the summit of Kithairon's mount,<br />Pentheus &amp; I (for I followed my master) with<br />the Stranger who was our guide to the spectacle.<br />So we first settled in the green grass's thicket<br />keeping our footsteps quiet, our voices silent<br />so that we could see without being seen.<br />And <span style="font-size:78%;">there was a valley with</span> cliffs all around, <span style="font-size:78%;">and streams </span>running<br />thru' it, <span style="font-size:78%;">shaded by pine trees</span>; <span style="font-size:78%;">and this is where the</span> Maenads were<br />sitting, their hands busied with their pleas'rable labor.<br />Some of them were crowning their worn-out<br />thyrses, making them once again bushy with ivy;<br />and others, like mares freed from the yoke,<br />sang to each other a Bacchic tune.<br />And poor Pentheus, who couldn't see the feminine<br />mob, said: "Oh, Stranger--where we're standing I<br />can't get a good look at the counterfeit Maenads;<br />but if I go over those hills and climb up that tree,<br />I think I'll be better able to see them ob-scene."<br />And <span style="font-size:78%;">right then and there I watch't the</span> Stranger<span style="font-size:78%;"> do something amazing:</span><br />He took the tallest branch from the top of the pine<br />and pulled it all the way down to the sorrel earth;<br />and the tree was bent like a bow, or a circle whose<br />curve is inscribed by the wheel of a compass;<br />and taken the leafy branch in hand, the Stranger<br />held it to the earth: something no mere man could ever do.<br />He helped Pentheus get up on the tree<br />and fixed him there steady, his hands clinging to the<br />branches, being careful to watch he didn't shake right off.<br />And the pine stood upright in the bright air<br />with my master seated up on its back.<br />But he was more seen by than seeing the Maenads, for<br />being up there so high, he was all but invisible<br />and the Stranger was nowhere to be seen.<br />But a voice, the voice of Dionysus I guess,<br />came screaming out the sky: "My young maidens,<br />I bring you as offering the man who laughs<br />at you and I and our Worship: Punish like he deserves."<br />And as he said this, a light of sacred fire stood poised b'tween<br />heav'n 'n' earth;<br />the sky then grew quiet, and the wooded valley kept its<br />leaves silent, you couldn’t even hear an animal stirring.<br />But the Maenads, not sure if they'd heard his voice clearly,<br />stood up and looked searchingly at one another.<br />He restated his order, and this time the daughters of Kadmos<br />recognized the resounding command of Bakchios.<br />And with no less speed than a woodcock, they're<br />stomping their feet a full raging gallop,<br />his mother Agauve and her sisters together<br />through the rainswollen valley and up the<br />sides of the cliff, en-raged by the god's thund'rous strokes<br />and they see my master seated on top of the<br />pine. First they hurl'd stones at him with incredible<br />force, and climbing the rock facing, threw<br />firtree branches like javelins, while others<br />launched their thyrsus through the air, and<br /><span style="font-size:78%;">tried to hit their wretched target Pentheus; but they could not get him;<br />holding his spot</span> higher <span style="font-size:78%;">than </span>their fervor could reach,<span style="font-size:78%;"> the poor man</span><br />clung to the tree, paralyz'd with fear.<br />Finally they set about tearing the tree's<br />roots out with oak'n beams, not one piece of iron;<br />but when they were getting no results from their labor<br />Agauve said: "Stand around in a circle<br />&amp; grab on to the trunk so we can seize the wild beast,<br />in order he not spread rumors over God's sacred dances."<br />And I saw countless hands gripping at the tree as they<br />yanked it out the ground.<br />Seated up high, from high up he fell down to the<br />earth whimpering and<br />groans, for Pentheus now undertood how near the threat was.<br />His own mother presided as priestess of the<br />slaughter and started first by falling upon him; and he threw his<br />sash from off of his hair so that poor, wretched Agauve might<br />recognize, instead of kill, him.<br />And<span style="font-size:78%;"> he says to her, reaching out for her cheek, "It's me mother, your son</span><br />Pentheus, who you bore to Echion.<br />Have mercy on me mother please: don't kill your own son<br />because of his mistakes." But her<br />mouth was frothing foam, and rolling her<br />eyes twisted, unable to see what she should, for<br />she was held in Bacchios' clutches; and he did not persuade her.<br /><br />Taking his left arm in her hands, and<br />wrenching her foot to the poor man's<br />ribcage, she ripped it right off his shoulder; not by her own<br />strength, but because the God made it come off in her hands.<br />And Ino <span style="font-size:78%;">was tearing into his other side as</span> Autonoe and the entire<br />crowd of Bacchae had at him, and they shouted as one, he<br />holding <span style="font-size:78%;">himself up by the hand with his last few gasps of breath</span> as they<br />started <span style="font-size:78%;">their call: "<span style="font-size:100%;">a-lululu</span>..." One of them</span> carried his forearm, an-<br />other, a foot still in its sandal, as his body's ripped<br />open and bare ribs uncovered; <span style="font-size:78%;">and each one</span>, with blood dripping<br />hands, plays catch with Pentheus' flesh;<br />His body lies scattered in pieces across the jagged<br />rocks, and the remotest parts of the deep forest's foliage.<br /><br />His poor head, which his mother<br />happened to take by the hands and fix to the<br />top of her thyrsus, which she carries with her through<br />the mi'st of Kithairon as if it were a mountainlion's<br />after leaving her sisters to the companies of Maenads;<br />she wanders with it thruout the city, exalting in her<br />ill-fated prize, calling on her fellow hunter<br />Bak-khos her partner in the chase, the<br />Victorious One, who rewards her with<br />tears. But I must go now<br />away from this <span style="font-size:78%;">tragic scene, before Agauve</span> comes to the palace.<br />For having a mind that respects the affairs of divine ones<br />is the most beautiful thing on earth, and I think<br />it is the wisest thing someone could do.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-3403977257553843641?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-55077255901059015632008-01-24T22:33:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:33:41.275-08:00Chorus - Denouement<div align="left"><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">CHORVS</span></strong></div><div align="center"><br />Come, running hounds of Lyssa, come<br />To Kithairon where Kadmos' daughters<br />Hold their thiasoi!</div><div align="left"></div><div align="left"></div><div align="right"><br />Now drive them insane</div><span style="font-size:78%;"><div align="center"><span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span></span>against the wolf in sheep's clothing,<span style="font-size:78%;"> </div></span><p align="left">slinking away to spy on the maidens.<br /><br />His<br />mother will spot him first lying<br />in wait, &amp; she'll call to the Maenads</p><div align="center"><br />Who is this who’s searching<br />Out the daughters of Kadmos as they<br />Rush over hills?<br /></div><div align="left"></div><div align="left">He's going<br />to the mountain, going to the mountain oh Bacchae!<br /><br />Who was it that bore him?<br />He was certainly born of no<br />Woman‘s womb, but from a<br />Lioness;<br />Or was he the son of Libyan Gorgons?<br /></div><div align="center"><br />Who wicked intentions and furious rages<br />at Bacchus' services and at your mother,<br />raging in spirit,<br /></div><div align="left">Frenzied in purpose, </div><div align="center">tries overcoming by violence</div><div align="right">what is un-conquerable;</div><div align="right"></div><div align="left">Im-<br />P(r)udentopinion is death-<br />(less) by nature, un-<br />hesitating towards the divine,<br />and thinking mortal thoughts, painfree existence;</div><div align="right"><br />I do not envy cleverness, but hunt<br />wisdom joyful and the fan-<br />tastical shining resplendence of th'eternal ones;<br />Instead of the finer things, to<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>be<br />Holy day &amp; night, to toss aside acts<br />Outside of the law and honor the Divin'ties.</div><br />Let Justice shine forth against him<br />Justice, sword in hand, cut through the<br />Throat of this unrighteous, lawless,<br />Godless man;<br />Born of the land.<br /><div align="right"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-size:100%;">C<span style="font-size:85%;">ome as a b</span>ull or a</span> 5-headed dragon, like a flaming lion, appear</span>--<br /><span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-size:85%;">Come O Bacchus</span>,</span><span style="font-size:85%;"> a wild beast is hunting your</span> Bacchants<br /><span style="font-size:85%;">Cast the knot tight 'round his neck as he laughs</span><br />Crushed to death under<br />A pile of Maenads.</div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-5507725590105901563?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-1966472652647807972008-01-24T22:09:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:28:33.022-08:00Scene 4<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You who are burning to see what you should not behold<br />and who long to grab hold of what musn't be touched<br />I call you, Penthe-us: come on out outside of the palace,<br />let me've a look at you, dressed up like a Bacchic Maenad<br />so you can go spy on your mother.</span> (<em><span style="font-size:78%;">Pentheus enters</span></em>)<br /><span style="font-size:85%;">But you look more like one of Kadmos' daughters!<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh my! I think I see two suns and two<br />cities, two seven-gaited Thebes;<br />and you look like an animal leading us, for two<br />horns have sprung up from your forehead. Have you ever been<br />such a beast before? You were as fierce as fierce as a bull.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> The god’s acts in you: before you did not accept him;<br />ally'ing with us now you see what it is you should see.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Well how do I look? Standing here don't I appear<br />exactly like Ino or my mother Agauve?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Looking at you I'd swear you were they.<br />But this lock of hair has fallen out-of-place: that's not<br />where I tucked it underneath your headband.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I messed it up when I was inside, tossing my<br />head up and down, practicing being a Bacchant.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Well since you're so concern'd about it, then<br />let me brush it back for you: lift up your head.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Here, you do it for me: I'm entirely yours.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Your girdle's come undone; and the edge of your skirt doesn't<br />stretch far enough past your ankles.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Well it seems OK to me on this side, but<br />on the other one it fits my leg perfectly.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You'll think I'm your best friend when you see that you're<br />wrong and the Bacchae act modestly.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Do I look more like a Bacchant holding the thyrsus in my<br />right hand...or this one?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Always in your right hand, now<br />on your right foot...I admire you your change of o-pinion.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Then<span style="font-size:78%;"> I could even bear</span> Kithairon's <span style="font-size:78%;">valleys</span>, Bacchants<span style="font-size:78%;"> and</span> all, on<br />top of my shoulders?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You could if you wanted; earlier your heart was impure,<br />but now you have the proper mind set.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Should we bring crow-bars? Or shall I pull the mountain's<br />peaks up by hand and hoist them up over my shoulders?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Just don't destroy the Nymphs' sacred seats,<br />or the temple where Pan plays his magic'l flute.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You talk so pretty...but one mustn't over-<br />come women by force: I'll hide under leaves.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You'll hide yourself as you ought to be<br />hidden, coming to spy on the Maenads.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I think they go like birds in the hedges to en-<br />joy the most loving acts of the bedroom in bushes.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Isn't that the very thing you're here to guard against?<br />Maybe you'll catch them at it; if they don't get you first.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Take me through the countryside of Thebes, for I<br />am the only man among them that dares undertake this.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You're the only man who suffers for city, alone--<br />In fact, the trials you must undergo are now waiting<br />for you even as we speak; so follow me, I am your guid'n'<br />savior; but from here another will have to take you.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh yes, my mother...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You're going stand out from them all<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> That's what I'm going for.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You'll have to be carried back...<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> To me that sounds luxury--<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> in your mother's arms.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You're going to spoil me!...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Δ</strong>:</span> With such spoils as<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> &amp; <span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Π</strong>:</span> I deserve.<br /></span><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>D</strong></span><span style="color:#cc0000;">:</span> You clever, awful man, you have come here for such horrible<br />Reasons that your name will reach forever to heav’n.<br />Give me your hands, Agauve, you and your sisters,<br />the Daughters of Kadmos, I've brought a young man<br />for a great contest; the victor will be Bromios<br />and I, as the rest the matter will signify.</span> </div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-196647265264780797?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-6493206853183086422008-01-24T21:56:00.000-08:002008-01-24T22:09:00.608-08:00Chorus - Wisdom's Happiness<div align="right"><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>CHORVS</strong><br /></span></div><div align="right"></div><div align="right"> </div><div align="right">Shall I ever in nightlong dances<br />Shake my fairwhite foot<br />in Bacchus' madness, tossing my<br />Hair to the nightwind of heav'n?<br />Like<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>a fawn<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>frolicking races<br />through green meadow pastures<br />When it<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>flies fearful the<br />Hunt, away from the watchers<br />and their well-woven schemes.<br /><span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:78%;"><br /></span>As the hunter's cry quickens the<br />Hounds raging gallop, it takes off like a<br />shot with fleet-footed efforts,<span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:78%;"></div><div align="right"><br /></span>Along th'edge of the river, en-<br />joying the lonely wilderness<br />and forest's shade of leaves.</div><div align="right"><br />What is it to be wise? And what gift of the<br />Immortals is more gracious in humans?<br />Is it holding your hand over<br />Your enemies’ head?<br />What's right is always<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>welcome.<br /><br />Th'heavens might is scarcely set in<br />Motion, but it is not to be<br />doubted, a beacon to humans;<br />And those who honour reckless-<br />ness practice,<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>not the teachings of<br />God, but the reasonings of madmen.<br />And<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>they, hidden in chains of<br />Darkness by time's echoing footstep,<br />hunt their own wickedness, for you must never<span style="font-size:78%;"></div><div align="right"><br /></span>Never place yourself above or b'yond the law.<br />Less than nothing, then, to believe<br />that having strength is this.<span style="font-family:times new roman;"><span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></div></span></span></span><div align="right">But that which is divine &amp; holy,<br />the weight of established tradition,<br />this is in nature grounded.<br /></div><div align="right">What is being wise? And what gift of the<br />Gods is more gracious<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>in mortals?<br />Is it to hold your hand over<br />Your enemy’s head?<br />What's<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>right is always welcome.<br /><br />Blessed is the one who's fled the<br />Storm at sea and come to harbour;<br />And happy is he<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>who rises above<br />Hardships; for one may sur-<br />Pass another in wealth or in power,<br />But these are a lot hopes to<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>a lot of<br />Different people; and many end in<br />Happiness while others fail mis’rably<br />But the one<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>who's happy day-to-day,<br />Is the one<span style="font-size:85%;"> </span>who's truly blessed.</div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-649320685318308642?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-12919652294163649302008-01-24T21:01:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:24:39.686-08:00Scene 3<div align="center"><strong><span style="font-size:85%;color:#cc0000;">DIONYSOS</span></strong></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;">Barbarian women, are you so o'ercome with fear that you<br />have fallen to the ground? So it seems that you have seen<br />Bacchos shaking to pieces Pentheus' palace; but lift up your-<br />selves and take heart, put aside your body's trembling.<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">Ch</span></strong>: Oh supremest light, the joyful cry of our Bacchic worship!<br />How gladly are you looked upon in lonely isolation.<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">D</span></strong>: Did you come to such despair as they hauled me into prison<br />in fear that I not come to harm in Pentheus' dark enclosures?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> <span style="font-size:78%;">How could I not</span>? <span style="font-size:78%;">Who would</span> protect me if you met misfortune?<br />But how is it you were freed, after meeting with<span style="font-size:78%;"> an impious man</span>?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I saved myself, myself, easily, without any problem.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> But didn't he tie your hands up in knots with binding cords?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Here's how I insulted him: thinking that he'd bind me,<br />he could not touch or hold me, but still he fed on hope;<br />and in the manger where he'd led and thrown me into jail<br />all he found was a bull! So around its feet and knees he cast<br />knots, panting, pouring out sweat like he was about to die,<br />gnawing his lips in rage; and though I was too near, I<br />sat quietly watching by; and this was when Bacchos came<br />and shook apart the house, and my mother's sacred tomb was<br />lighted in flame. And when he saw, he thought the house on<br />fire and ran all over screaming to "bring water to the palace!"<br />And the servants came to help him, everyone, for nothing; for<br />when he realized what happened, thinking I was gone, he<br />grabbed <span style="font-size:78%;">a sword inside the house, and rushed to go</span> and find me,<br />when Bromios--as it seemed to me, I say only what I saw--<br />shone forth a light i' the courtyard; and he, charging after it,<br />ran and stabbed the light‘s shining, as if he might murder me.<br />And on top of it all, Bacchus caused him even more hu-<br /><span style="font-size:78%;">miliation: he razed his home to the ground, smashed it all together. So<br /></span>now he's seen how bitter are my chains, and has put aside his<br />sword &amp; collapsed from exhaustion! Cuz' although he's just a<br />man, he dared to come against a God. And so departing<br />from his home I came to you, not at all afraid of Pentheus.<br />And so it seems to me (I think I hear the tramp of feet inside)<br />that quickly<span style="font-size:78%;"> he will be</span> out front; <span style="font-size:78%;">what i'the world d'you think he'll say</span>?<br />I'll handle him easily, even if he comes huffing and puffing, for<br />a wise man is able to hold his good-nature well tempered.</span></div><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I can't believe it! The stranger, who was just now<br />held fast in chains, he's gotten away from me!<br />Oh,<br />Oh, there he is! What is this? How can you possibly<br />be here outside my house? How did you get out?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Stop right there. Place your anger on a calmer footing.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> How did you get free from your shackles and out here?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Didn't I say--<span style="font-size:78%;">or did you not hear</span>--that <span style="font-size:78%;">someone would</span> free me?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Who? Everything you say sounds the same to me.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Someone who grows for men the thick-cluster'd vine?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> An indictment, no doubt, which Dionysus thinks good.<br />[<span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> It was Dionysus himself unlock'd my chains.]<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I order that every tower in the circle be barred.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> What for? Aren't gods able even to overstep walls?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You are smart; just not in what you need be smart about.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I was born wise enough, about the things I need most be.<br />But you should first hear and learn what that man, who has<br />come from the mountains with a message for you, has<br />to say; we'll wait for you and will not run away.<br /><br /></span><span style="font-size:85%;"><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">SHEPHERD MESSENGER<br /></span></strong><br />Pentheus, sovereign of this Theban land,<br />I come from Kithairon where the gleaming falls of<br />snow stay ceaselessly upon the mountain.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> What is this news you bring with such eagerness?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Sh</strong>:</span> I have seen the queenly Bacchae, who departed from<br />this land, flailing their fair limbs wildly in haste;<br />I've come to tell you and the town, my king, what horr-<br />ible things they are doing, and even greater marvels!<br />But I want to know whether I have the freedom to<br />tell you all that goes on there or shall I clip the<br />sail of my report? I am afraid of your quick tem-<br />per and your sharp intellect and royal bearing.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I promise you'll be wholly safe from harm: now speak.<br />For there's no need to be angry at proper men.<br />The more terrible the things you say about the bacchants,<br />the stiffer the penalty that we'll force the man<br />to pay who put the women beneath his spells.<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Sh</strong>:</span> The grazing cattle herds had just climbed up<br />the rocky highland's peak, when the bright rays of<br />the sun shone down, warming th'earth, and I saw<br />three groups of women in Bacchus' chorus.<br />Autonoe led the first one with your mother<br />Agauve next, and Ino led the third chorus.<br />They were lying en masse, together in sleep, some of<br />them resting, their back against the pines, some<br />with their head cast amidst the leaves of oak<br />upon the ground, quite properly; not, as you say,<br />drunken from the mixing bowl and music of<br />the lute, out hunting Aphrodite lonesome in the wild.<br />and as she heard the bellowing of our<br />cows, your mother stood up in the midst of the<br />Bacchants, and cried aloud to rouse their body's slumber.<br />And they threw deep sleep from off their eyes, leapt<br />right up as one, women young and old, girls still un-<br />married--a miracle to see them so ordered!<br />The first thing they did was drop their hair to shoulders, tie<br />their fawnskins up, those whose knots had come undone,<br />and tie the skins off, spotted white, with snakes that licked<br />their chin and cheeks; and some held in their nursing arms<br />wild wolfcubs, or fawns, to which they gave fresh milk;<br />women with swollen breast, who had but just given<br />birth to, and abandoned, their newborn babes.<br />And as they crown'd their heads with ivy garlands laced<br />with oak and flow'ring bryony, one of them took<br />the thyrsus up, struck it against a stone, and<br />a stream of shooting water leapt right out! Another<br />Bacchant lowered to earth her fennel-rod and for<br />this one the god brought forth a flowing spring of wine.<br />For those that had desire of other drink, all they<br />had to do was claw at the earth with fingertips<br />and streams of milk shot forth, sweet flows of honey drip-<br />ping from the thyrses, so that, had you yourself been there<br />as witness to these marvels, you would have offered<br />prayers to the god you now condemn.<br /><br />And so we cowherds and sheperds came together<br />to have a competition sharing stories, since the things<br />they were doing were marvelous and strange,<br />and a wanderer in town, who spits sparks when he<br />speaks, came to us and said: "You men who live atop the<br />sacred mountain's peaks, don't you think that we<br />should chase Pentheus' mother Agauve from Bacchus'<br />revels &amp; do a favor for the king?" It seemed to us he had<br />a pretty good idea, so we hid in am-<br />bush under a cover of foliage, and at the ap-<br />pointed time they started to shake the thyrses for<br />Bacchus' rites as one calling Bromios "Iacchos:<br />the son of Zeus." The whole mountain, every one<br />of the beasts join'd in, nothing was left undisturbed by<br />th'uproar. In a frenzy, Agauve chanced to jump<br />right next to me and I leapt out to try &amp; grab her, de-<br />serting the spot where I had lain concealed.<br />And she shouted: "Oh my raging bitches, we are<br />being hunted by men, by these men; but follow<br />me, follow me armed in hand with thyrsi!"And<br />so we ran away in fear &amp; avoided being torn to<br />bits and eaten like deer by the bacchants; but they<br />attacked our cattle, barehanded, as they grazed<br />in the field, and you could see one grab and stretch<br />the legs of a young, pink-uddered calf, bellowing, as other<br />Maenads pulled and tore a full-grown heifer apart.<br />And you'd have seen ribs or cloven hooves thrown<br />up &amp; down as they dripped, hanging from<br />fir tree branches, cover'd in blood.<br />The proud bulls, which moments before had been fully<br />ready to charge, dropped their body down to earth,<br />brought down by countless maidens' hands as they<br />stripped the poor beast's flesh right off like clothes<br />in the time it'd take you to blink your highness' eye.<br />And they danced off in a whirl, flittering like birds a-<br />cross the plains beneath their feet which, by the river<br />Asopus' streams, puts forth the Thebans' fertile corn.<br /><br />And they fell upon Hysias, Erythrai, &amp; the villages below<br />Kithairon's rocky peak like an invading army that<br />attacks everything before it, pillaging<br />high and low. They kidnapped children from their homes,<br />and whatever they placed upon their shoulders stayed<br />in place without bands or bonds to hold it there;<br />atop their curls were flames which did not burn. The men,<br />enraged at being plundered by the Bacchants, took to<br />arms, a terrible sight to see, my lord, as the<br />spears that they were throwing did not make the<br />women bleed, and neither did their implements of iron or<br />bronze pierce their fairwhite flesh. But<br />the thyrses that the women's hands hurl'd forth<br />injured the men so vi'lently, that they did turn their<br />backs in fear &amp; flee: this could not be done without some god.<br /><span style="font-size:78%;">Then they</span> returned <span style="font-size:78%;">from whence</span> they <span style="font-size:78%;">came, to the</span> springs the god<br />sent up for them and washed the blood off of them-<br />selves and the drops of blood still on their cheeks were licked<br />clean off their skin by serpents' darting tongues.<br />Whoever this divinity is, I beg you master, please<br />accept him into our city, for he is<br />powerful in many ways; and I also heard<br />that he is the one who gave us the vine that gives<br />pause from pain; and if there is no wine, there'll be no more<br />Aphrodite, &amp; there is no other gift to give such pleasure to us mortals.<br /></span><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> I'm terrified to speak my words freely before<br />the tyrant, but nevertheless it must be said:<br />Dionysus truly is no less than any other god.<br /></span></div><div align="left"><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> The Bacchae's violent outrage already blazes closer,<br />approaching like wildfire, an outrage to the Greeks.<br />We must act quickly, go to the Elektran gate, order<br />every one of the heavy infantry and swift horse<br />riders to come together, as well as the light-armed<br />troops who pluck by hand the bowstring--have<br />them made ready in order that we go on campaign<br />against the bacchants, this really is too, too much:<br />to suffer what we suffer at the hands of women.</span></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You've heard my words but understood nothing,<br />Pentheus. Even after you've treated me so evilly, still,<br />I'm telling you, do not take up arms against a god.<br />Calm yourself instead. Bromios won't put up with you chasing<br />his joyful crying Bacchants from the mountains.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Don't <span style="font-size:78%;">you instruct me.</span> Rather, <span style="font-size:78%;">since you've</span> escaped <span style="font-size:78%;">with your</span></span></div><div align="center"><span style="font-size:85%;">freedom, hold on to it. Or shall I punish you again?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I would offer him sacrifice rather than kick against<br />the god's goads in anger, a piddly mortal man.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh, I'll sacrifice: with loads of feminine slaughter,<br />just like they deserve, in the valleys of Kithairon.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You will all flee in failure &amp; shame when your bronze<br />shields are turned aside by Meanad thyrses.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> This stranger we're mixed up with is impossible:<br />no matter what he suffers or does he won't shut up!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I can, sir, still put these things to right.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> By doing what? Servicing my slave girls?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I'll bring back the women with no need of violence.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong></span>: Oh god; this is a trick you’ve devised against me.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Is it a trick that I'm trying to save you by my own devices?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You're all in this together,<span style="font-size:78%;"> so you can continue being</span> bacchants.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Actually I did put this together; but it was with' god himself.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Bring me swords, shields, <span style="font-size:78%;">weapons,</span> now! And you, BE QUIET.<br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">D</span></strong><span style="color:#ff0000;">:</span> Ah? . . .<br />Do you want to see them sitting, together in the wild?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh do I! I would give an untold weight in gold to.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Why has this desire suddenly comeover you?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> But it would pain me so to see them very drunk . . .<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You'd willingly look upon what's bitter to you?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh absolutely, taking my seat silently under firtrees.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> But they'll hunt you down, even if you go in secret.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You make a good point: I'll go openly then.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Let me be your guide; you want to take a trip?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Let's go right now! I'll be angry if you make me wait.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Then cover your skin with fine linen robes. . .<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> What is this? I go from being a man to women?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> So that they don't kill you if you're seen as a man there.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You <span style="font-size:78%;">know, that is another good point</span>; have <span style="font-size:78%;">you been this smart</span> all along?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Dionysus is going to teach us his myst'ries. (<em>whispering</em>)<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> So, that thing you were talking about…<span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-size:85%;">how</span> c'w<span style="font-size:85%;">e</span> make<span style="font-size:100%;"> </span><span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:85%;">that</span> happen</span>?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I'll give you the introduction--after I come inside the house.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> What kind of dress is this? A woman's?! I'd be ashamed to. . .<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> So you no longer want to go look at the Maenads?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> What did kind of clothes did you say I've to wear?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> The hair on your head, let me lengthen it. (<em>stretches hair</em>)<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Do you have any other fashion advice for me?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Robes down to your feet and on your head, a sash.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Anything else you’d like to add to that?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> The thyrsus in your hand &amp; a dappled skin of fawn<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I could never dress up in women's clothing, I...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> But you might draw blood doing battle with the Bacchae.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Oh riight; I should go take surveillance first.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> That's so much wiser than hunting bad with evil.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> How can I get out of town without the Thebans seeing?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> We'll go by lonely roads; I'll be there to guide you.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I'd do anything to keep them from laughing at me--<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> So <span style="font-size:78%;">we'll go in the house and..</span>.<span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> <span style="font-size:78%;">I'll think</span> about what <span style="font-size:78%;">I </span>wanna do.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> So it'll be; any way I'm ready at hand.</span></div><div align="center"><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Then I'll go inside, andeither come back armed, or<br />be persuaded your suggestions.<br />(<em>enters house</em>)</span></div><div align="left"><br /><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Women, a man is being cast into the net.<br />He will come to the Bacchants and pay<br />The penalty of death. It's up to you, Dionysus,<br />For you are not far off: give us now our vengeance.<br />First drive him insane with a dizzying madness, since<br />In his right mind would he never put on women's<br />Dresses, but after he's driven out of his senses, he'll<br />Be begging me to wear one. And I want the lady to be<br />A laughing-stock to the Thebans, a s he's led through the<br />Town, far from his earlier threats, dressed<br />Up in th'adornments he'll take into Hell,<br />A<span style="font-size:78%;"> f t e</span> r he's been slaughtered by his mother,<br />He will recognize Zeus' son Dionysus, born in ritual,<br />The most terrible god--and kindest to humans.</span></div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-1291965229416364930?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-82528188230847984912008-01-24T20:29:00.000-08:002008-01-24T21:00:32.044-08:00Chorus - Prayer to the Thunder God<div align="left"><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">CHORVS</span></strong><br /><br />Daughter of Achelous, the<br />Blessed maiden, virgin Dirce,<br />you received once in your streams the<br />infant son of Thund'ring Zeus<br />when he snatched him from heavens' fire, father<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>Zeus<br />took him in his holy thigh and shouted thundering:<br /><br />"Come, Dithyrambos, enter in-<br />to this my masculine womb;<br />I will make Thebes call you by this name,<br />o Bacchic One shining forth!"<br /><br />But<br />You always, oh blessed Dirce,<br />Hold me back when I try to touch<br />th'ivy-crown'd thyrsus to your stream.</div><div align="left">Why refuse me?<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>Why do you flee?<br />By the grace of Dionysus'<br />Gift of wine, the clust'ring grape, I<br />Swear that you will be in care of Bromios.</div><div align="right"><br />It appears now, born of the<br />native land, sprung from the serpent,<br />Pentheus who father Echion<br />bore from earth, a fearsome mon-<br />ster unnatural, not at all a mortal man,<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>a<br />murderous giant--a tyrant who fights against the gods;<br />Who will soon tie me, Bromios'<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span></div><div align="right">servant, in binding knots and<br />Hold me in Pen-theus' palace<br />With my sisters, Bacchic Maenads<br />Hidden in the Prison's darkness.<br /><br />Look upon these things, oh Zeus' son<br />Dionysus, your prophets lockèd<br />Up in<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>mortal dangers of need.<br />Come to us now, shaking golden<br />Sacred staffs of Mount<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>Olympus,<br />Put a stop to this man's mur'drous arrogance<br /></div><div align="right"></div><div align="right"></div><div align="center"><br />Where on Nysa, mother of wild<br />Beasts, do you then lead with thyrsus<br />The thiasoi,<span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:130%;"> </span>Dionysus,<br />Or on Corcyrean peaks?<br />Maybe in the<span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:130%;"> </span>Wooded precints of Olympos,<br />Where Orpheus Once by playing Gorgeous music<br />With his guitar<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>Brought together<br />Trees and woodland Beasts with his songs.<br /><br />B l e s s e d P i e r i a,<br />Euios will Honor you and<br />Dancing sacred Bacchic service,<br />Overstepping The swiftflowing<br />Stream of Axios Will come leading<br /><br />Twirling Maenads and Lydias, who I hear gives hap-<br />piness to mortals, and enriches horse-pastured<br />Land wi'th' most Beaut'ous waters.<br /></div><div align="left"></div><div align="left"></div><div align="right"><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Oh!<br />Hear my voice now hear me speaking:<br />I-o Bacchae! I-o Bacchae!<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> What is this, what, from where does this cry<br />of 'Euios' come upon me?<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>D:</strong></span> Oh, now again I call on you,<br />Semele's son, the son of Zeus.<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Oh my mas-ter, oh my master--<br />Now come closer to the holy<br />thiasoi, O Bromios, Bromios!<br /></div><div align="right"></div><div align="right"></div><div align="right"></div><div align="center"><br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Shake the ground's surfaces, Mistress of Earth, quake!<br />Ah,<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>ah!<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Quickly will Pentheus' royal halls be shaken<br />Down to their foundations and Dionysus </div><div align="center">be all through the palace.<br />Honor him now<br />Oh now we do!<br />There, did you see how the beams of stone upon the<br />columns split, cracking? Bromios is stirring up<br />th'house's cry inside the walls!<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Light it aflame, burning torch of the lightning and<br />Burn it with flame, burn it down to the ground, the house!<span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:78%;"></div><div align="left"><br /></span>Ah, ah!<br /><strong><span style="color:#990000;">Ch</span></strong>: Do you see it?, behold how the<br />Flame all around Semele's sacred tomb crackles and<br />Burns, the fire lightning-struck left long ago by<br />Zeus' thund'ring.<br />Throw<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>yourselves to<br />The ground, throw your bodies<br />Trembling to the Earth!<span style="font-size:78%;"></div><div align="center"><br /></span>For your ruler will come upon these halls, turn them<br />Upsideown, your ruler Zeus' son.</div><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-8252818823084798491?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-2463394403398888992008-01-24T19:25:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:12:51.982-08:00Scene 2<span style="font-size:85%;"><strong><span style="color:#cc6600;">SERVANT</span></strong><br /><strong><span style="color:#cc6600;"></span></strong><br />Pentheus, we're here, after hunting down the prey<br />you sent us for, and we did not set out in vain.<br />This beast was tame to us and did not run away in<br />fear, but willingly he offered us up his hands, and<br />neither did he turn pale nor change his cheeks' wine-<br />tinted glow; &amp; laughing even, he allowed himself to be<br />arrested and brought here, making my task an easy one.<br />And I said in gratitude: "This is not done of my own will,<br />Stranger, but by order of Pentheus, who sent me."<br />And the Bacchae whom you jailed, who you carried<br />off and shackled with chains in common cells,<br />are gone; they've been set free and rush to their<br />festivals, shouting out: 'Bromios, divine one.'<br />The leg-irons fell off their feet all by themselves,<br />and the doors came unlocked without anyone touching them!<br />This is a man of many marvels, who has come here to Thebes,<br />full of wonder; but that's really more of your concern.<br /><br /><strong><span style="color:#660000;">PENTHEVS</span></strong><br />Release his hands; since he's already caught in my nets,<br />there's no way he could be so quick as to escape me.<br />But your body isn't unattractive, Stranger;<br />to women, that is, which is why you are here.<br />And your hair, so long; not for wrestling, flowing<br />down past your cheek: fill'd with longing.<br />And you keep your skin white like this on purpose,<br />away from the sun's rays, hunting by dark-<br />ness Aphrodite in beauty.<br />So then, you will first tell me who you are, and of what family.<br /><br /><strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">DIONYSOS</span></strong><br /><br />No, no boasting; this is easy to say;<br />you have of course heard of flowering Mt. Tmolus?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I have. It surrounds the town of Sardis.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> That's where I'm from; Lydia, my native land.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Where do you get these 'mysteries' you bring to Greece?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Dionysus himself inducted me, the son of Zeus.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Is Zeus some fellow there who gives birth to new gods?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> No, it was he who joined with Semele, here, in marriage.<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Was it by night or at sight he forced you to this?<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Seeing &amp; seen; he even gave me sacred rites.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> These rites of yours, what form do they take?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> That is forbidden a mortal unbaptized a Bacchant to know.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> To what advantage for those performing the sacrifice?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> It is unlawful for you to hear, but very worth knowing.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> You made it look like something, so I'd want to hear.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> He hates practicing the god's rites in unholiness.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Since you claim you saw the god clearly--of what sort was he?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Whatever he wanted; it wasn't I who arranged it.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong></span><span style="color:#ff0000;">:</span> Again you've deflected this; speaking well, saying nothing.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Wise words will appear foolishness--to an idiot.<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Is this the first place you have brought the god?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Everyone in foreign lands dances these sacred rites.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> That's because the<span style="font-size:78%;"> barbarians</span> have f<span style="font-size:78%;">ar le</span>ss sense than Greeks.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I<span style="font-size:78%;">n this case </span>I'd say they have a little more: cult<span style="font-size:78%;">ura</span>l differences.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Do you conduct the mysteries in the night or by day?<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>D</strong></span><span style="color:#660000;">:</span> Us'ally by night, for darkness holds reverence.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong></span><span style="color:#ff6600;">:</span> Is this thing deceitful or unwholesome towards women?<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> One might also uncover shameful things i' the day. (glare)<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> There's a heavy price to be paid for your twisting words evil.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> And for your ignorance and disrespect to the god.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> How arrogant the bacchant is, and slippery his replies!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Say what I must suffer. What terrible thing will you do?<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Well, first I will cut your graceful locks...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Sacred is my hair; I grew it for the god. (cuts hair)<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Next unhand this thyrsus here.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Take it from me yourself; I bear this for Dionysus.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> We will watch over your body inside of the prison.<br /><span style="color:#ff6666;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> The god himself will release me whenever I want.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Yes, when you call on him, standing among the bacchants.<br /><span style="color:#ff0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> Even now he sees what I suffer, for he is too near.<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> And where is he? He's not very visible, to my eyes at least.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> He is to me. But you, being wicked, cannot see...<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Seize him. He scorns me and mocks Thebes, this one.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> I tell you not to bind me, one sensible to the senseless.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> And I tell you to do it; I'm more nobly born than you.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You know not why you live, what you see, who you are...<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> I am Pentheus, Agaue's son; Echion is my father.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>D</strong>:</span> You are well suited to a name bringing p a i n.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>P</strong></span><span style="color:#ff0000;">:</span> Go shut him up near the horses' troughs,<br />so he can look upon a night in darkness.<br />There you can dance, you and the women you lead, e-<br />vile companions--we'll auction them off to the highest bidder<br />or stop this incessant thudding and beating of hand and<br />drum, using them as slaves on weaving looms!<br /><strong><span style="color:#ff0000;">D:</span></strong> I'll go willingly; for I need not suffer what's<br />not needed to suffer; but Dionysus, whom you say<br />does not exist, will make you pay for your arrog/ignor-<br />ance: for doing us harm, you bring him into chains.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-246339440339888899?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-56592142738869284622008-01-24T19:07:00.000-08:002008-01-24T19:21:42.175-08:00Chorus - Piety & Dionysus<strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">CHORVS</span></strong><br /><br />Holiness, Mother of Gods<br />Holiness, you who are borne<br />over th'earth on golden wing,<span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span><span style="font-size:78%;"></span>Do you hear what<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>Pentheus says?<br />Do you not hear the unholy<br />outrage to Bromios, the son of<span style="font-size:78%;"><br /><br /></span></span><span style="font-size:78%;"></span>Semele, the divinity who is<br />Crowned with ivy covered<br />Gladness first of immortals? Whose things are these:<br /><br />Dancing in the choruses,<br />With pipe, to laugh, make<br />Stop all of our worries<br />Whenever the grape's pleasure<br />Shimmers at the feast of Immortals, and<br />in ivy-clad festivals the<br />winebowl covers men over with slumber.<br /><br />The end result of unrestrain'd<br />Mouths and lawless folly is<br />always the gravest misfortune<br />And the good<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>&amp; peaceful life,<br />The life of understanding,<br />remains forever firm and un-<span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span><span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span>Shaken by storm: it holds up houses.<br />And though the Immortals dwell in th'<br />Etherial sky, still they watch over mortals.<br /></span><br />Cleverness is not wisdom;<br />Thinking heavenly<br />Thoughts, short life; in that case,<br />Who, in hunting greater things,<br />Would not be content with present fortune?<br />These are ways of men insane, with-<br />out understanding, so it seems to me.<br /><br /><br />Would I could come to Cyprus,<br />Aphrodite's belov'd isle<br />where the spellbinding Loves minis-<br />ter, soothing mortal souls, to<br />The river Paphos,<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>which an hun-<br />dred foreign flowing streams do feed<br />Fruitfully, without rain's drop;<br />And Pieria where the Muses<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>hold<br />their holy seat, unrivall'd beauty,<br />Olympus' sacred slope, oh!<br />Take me<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>there, Bromios, Bromios, leader<br />in Bacchus' piercing cry; there<br />the Graces, there Desire, there lawfully do the Bac-<br />chae celebrate their myst'ries.<br /><br />The god who is Zeus' son,<br />Welcomes festivities and<br />loves Peace, who showers prosperous<br />on us, nourishing the young.<br />Equally to the blessed<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>man<br />and to the poorer one he gives<br />Wine's gift of painless pleasure;<br />And<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>hates who does not care for these:<br />living a life, day and kindly nights,<br />a life of happiness, and<br />to hold a<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>heart and mind upright and wise<br />away from mens' excesses.<br />What most people consider lowly and take as their own,<br />this always I approve of.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-5659214273886928462?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-78146921884402625212008-01-24T18:17:00.000-08:002008-01-27T22:08:49.748-08:00Scene 1<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>TEIRESIAS</strong></span><br /><br />Who's at the gates? Call Kadmos from his home.<br />Agenor's son, who when he'd left the Sidonian<br />city, fortified this, the Thebans' town.<br />Well come on! Go &amp; tell him that Teiresias<br />is here: he knows what it is I've come for;<br />and what promises I've made--an old man to an elder:<br />we're to take up the thyrsus and don the sacred fawnskin,<br />wreathe around our head the leaves of shooting iv'ry.<br /><br /></span><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>KADMOS</strong><br /></span><br />Oh, Teiresias! I thought it was you: wise words from a<br />wiseman; I could hear your voice from inside.<br />And I've come, ready for this "service" to the God;<br />he is my grandson, you know, Dio-<br />nysus, who appears a god to humans;<br />inasmuch as we can make him any greater.<br />Where should we go to dance? Where do we plant our<br />feet and shake our silvered heads? Show me the way, old<br />man to old man, Teiresias. You are the wise one.<br />I could never tire, all night and day, of beating the<br />Earth with thyrsi, how happily, to forget all the<br />troubles of old age! <span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> So it's happened to you also?!<br />'Cuz I too feel young again, and want to go...dancing!<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> Shall we take a chariot to the mountain?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> What?! That would deprive the god of his due!<br />Must I take you by th'hand like a child, old man?<br />The god will convey us both there, without difficulty.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> Are we the only ones in the city serving Bacchus?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> We alone've got it right; the others, wrongly.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> This is taking too long!, put your hand in mine.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> Look, link and join our two hands to-gether.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> But what if someone says I'm not acting my age, slinking<br />off to dance i'the chorus, my head wreath'd in garlands?<br /><span style="color:#990000;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> The god does not divide from the young,<br />who it is who should dance, from the old:<br />he wants to receive his honour due from all a-<br />like, making no distinction, exalted shall he be!<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> I'm a just mortal; I've no truck wi'th'affairs of the gods.<br /><span style="color:#cc6600;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> There're no tricks when it comes to the divin'ties.<br />The customs of our ancestors--that have been handed<br />down to us thru' time--no reasoning can overthrow them!<br />Not even if it be wisdom uncover'd of the highest intentions.<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> Since you don't see this clearly, Teiresias, I<br />will play the prophet to you in plainer words:<br />Pentheus is coming here, in haste to the palace, all a-<br />flutter; Echion's son, whom I have given dominion o-<br />ver the earth; so what's the news, Pentheus?<br /><br /><strong><span style="color:#ff6600;">PENTHEVS</span></strong><br /><br />As I was abroad, away from this land, I chanced to hear<br />of some new evil come into the province;<br />that the women have left us, abandoning their homes in<br />phony Bacchic worship and that they gad about on<br />the bushy mountaintops; that this "new" god Dio-<br />nysus, whoever he really is, is honoured in their dances,<br />and that they set the sacred wine-bowls, fill'd, in the<br />midst of the thiasoi, each slinking off her sep'rate<br />way to serve males' hot lust in the woods, pre-<br />tending to be Maenads sacrificing; and so<br />they place Aphrodite on top of Bacchus.<br /><br />Well all the ones I could catch now hold their hands<br />bound as prisoners in public gaols; and those who have run-off, I<br />will hunt myself from the mountain;<br />I mean Ino and Agaue, who bore me to Echion,<br />and Actaeon's mother, Autonoe.<br />I'll fit them with hunter's nets of iron and<br />quickly put an end to these sordid, Bacchic revels.<br />And they say that some 'stranger' has come, some<br />witch-doctor, enchaunter from Lydian land,<br />who perfumes his light-brown hair, red-<br />faced in wine, with Aphrodite's gleam i' his eyes,<br />who mixes days and nights together, off'ring<br />these rites of pleasure to young maidens;<br />but if I catch him within this land, I'll<br />stop him from beating his thyrsus and flinging back his<br />curls, by chopping his neck from his head!<br />He says that Dionysus is a god, he says<br />he was taken in the thigh of Zeus, when everyone knows<br />he was torched by the lightning's flames, along with his mother,<br />for her damn-ed lies of holy unions;<br />are these not terrible lies of someone worth strangling,<br />outrages outrageous, whoever the stranger be?!<br /><br />But isn't this a sight to see . . . the diviner, cloth'd<br />in a dappled fawn's skin? If it isn't Teiresias;<br />and my own mother's father, what a laugh:<br />a bacchant complete with fennel rod! I'm dis-gusted, sire,<br />to see you, at your age, out of your senses.<br />Won't you shake the ivy off? Take your hand<br />free from the thyrsus, won't you grand-dad?<br />You put him to this, Teiresias; you introduced this<br />divinity, a new one to men, because you wanted<br />to get paid for watching the birds and offering sacrifice.<br />If your grey old age weren't here to save you, you<br />w<span style="font-size:78%;">oul</span>d <span style="font-size:78%;">be sitting there, a prisoner yourself</span>, i't<span style="font-size:78%;">he midst o</span>f <span style="font-size:78%;">the bacchants</span>,<br />leading their vile ser<span style="font-size:78%;">vices; for when</span>ever<span style="font-size:78%;"> the pleasure</span> of the grape's<br />cluster comes shimmering to women in feast, I say no-<br />thing is left wholesome in they're orgies!<br /><br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>CHORVS</strong></span><br />What an impiety! Stranger, are <span style="font-size:78%;">you so shameless before the</span> gods<br />and Kadmos, the sower of the earth-born seed? Aren't you<br />Echion's son, do you not respect his line?<br /><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> When a man who's wise in words starts his speech<br />from a proper course, it is no great task to speak well;<br />and you, spinning a tricky tongue, seem to make sense,<br />but there is no sense in what you are saying;<br />and a man who is bold, powerful and a clever speaker<br />makes for a bad citizen, if he has not the proper mind.<br />This new deity, who you make fun of,<br />not <span style="font-size:78%;">even</span> I <span style="font-size:78%;">can fully explain</span> how<span style="font-size:78%;"> great he'll be throughout</span> Greece!<br />For there are two things, young one, two, that are<br />first among humans: One is the goddess Demeter--<br />and she is earth, call her whatever you will--<br />it is she who nourishes mortals in corn and grain;<br /><span style="font-size:78%;">but</span> <span style="font-size:78%;">he who comes</span> after, Semele's<span style="font-size:78%;"> offspring, he invented them to match<br /></span>the flowing drink of the grape and introduced it to mortals;<br />it gives wretched humans pause from pain when-<br />ever they are filled with the vine's stream,<br />and sleep, as aids to forget the troubles of the day:<br />there is no other drug that cures misery.<br />Born a god, he is poured out, an offering to gods,<br />so that through him, fine things do humans possess;<br />and you mock him, that he was sewn in Zeus'<br />thigh? I will teach you how very well this is.<br />When Zeus had snatched him from the lightning-fire,<br />and carried him up to Olympos, a newborn, holy,<br />Hera wanted to toss the child out of Heav'n;<br />but Zeus contrived the sort of trick that only a god could:<br />h<span style="font-size:78%;">a</span>vi<span style="font-size:78%;">ng broke</span>n off a pi<span style="font-size:78%;">ece of th</span>'a<span style="font-size:78%;">eth</span>er <span style="font-size:78%;">that</span> en<span style="font-size:78%;">circl</span>es the earth, he<br />gave it to her, a <span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-size:85%;">pledge to keep peace</span> between</span> Dionysus and Hera;<br />and in time mortals came to say he was raised from holy thigh,<br />because they've stitched the story together; but Zeus<br />saved him from Hera's goddess eye, and they<br />have simply mixed the tale up.<br /><br />And this divinity is a prophet, for the Bacchic and Maenadic<br />worships hold a prophetic power that is sacred, for<br />when the god has come into the body full-force he<br />causes those in his ecstatic frenzy to tell what is to come;<br />And he holds some share in the nature of Ares, for<br />an army at arms, when drawn up in formation, is often<br />put to flight in fear, even before brandishing their spears.<br />And this form of madness, too, comes from Dionysus.<br />You will also see him up on the rocks at Delphi,<br />stomping with torches across its two-pronged peak,<br />leaping and shaking the Bacchic branch all<br />over Greece; but hear me well, Pentheus:<br />Boast not that power holds strength over men<br />and do not, even if it seems so to you (for your wit's diseased),<br />think you have an understanding. Admit the god to earth and<br />pour offerings and be a Bacchant and wear the iv'ry garland!<br />Dionysus does not compel women to be unchaste in<br />matters of Love; but temperence is naturally<br />present in everything always.<br />This we must examine, for an upright<br />woman will not be corrupted, even in Bacchus' service.<br />Don't you see? Aren't you delighted when people crowd your<br />gates, and the city praises shouting the name of Pentheus?<br />This man also, I believe, enjoys being honored.<br />So therefore, Kadmos and I, who you laugh at,<br />will crown ourselves with ivy and dance, a<br />pair of greying oxen; but still it must be done:<br />I <span style="font-size:78%;">will not be a h<span style="font-size:85%;">ere</span>tic fighting a</span> god <span style="font-size:78%;">and <span style="font-size:85%;">believe</span> your</span> arguments, for<br />you are most grievously mad, and there's no drug to cure your<br />sickness, though drugs are obviously the cause of it.<br /><span style="color:#ff9966;"><strong>Ch</strong>:</span> Old man, Apollo himself approves of your words;<br />you're wise to honor as great a god as Bromios.<br /><span style="color:#ff6600;"><strong>K</strong>:</span> Dear child, Teiresias has advised you soundly.<br />Come, settle with us, live not outside the law.<br />For now you are a-flitter and are thinking thoughtlessly.<br />And even if the god is, as you claim, not this man, why not con-<br />sider him so, and pretend he's one for the good of the city?<br />And so that Semele be thought to have borne a god,<br />and that honor be attached to our whole family.<br />You saw the awful fate of Aktaeon, whom the<br />ravenous hounds, that he himself raised, de-<br />voured? Who boasted, in dewy meadows, that he<br />was stronger in the hunt than Artemis. May<br />you not suffer the same. But come, I will crown your<br />head with ivy: pay the god his honor, with me.<br /><span style="color:#ff6600;"><strong>P</strong>:</span> Don't you dare touch me! Go and honour your god, don't<br />stain me with your idiocy. I'll make the teacher of your<br />foolishness pay the penalty. Someone, quickly, go;<br />and when you've come to this man's seat where he watches<br />birds and prophecies, overturn it with crowbars, wrench it free;<br />up, down, throw it together, toss his sacred bands to the<br />wind and gales; I will pain him most by doing these<br />things, and whoever goes throughout the city, track down this<br />womanish stranger who brings sickness to<br />wives and violates marriage beds, and<br />if you do catch him, bring him here, bound, so that he<br />can be stoned to death as punishment and see<br />a bitter Bacchic revelry in Thebes.<br /><span style="color:#ff6666;"><strong>T</strong>:</span> O,<span style="font-size:78%;"> wretched</span> one, you <span style="font-size:78%;">do not know what</span> on earth you are saying.<br />Now <span style="font-size:78%;">you are</span> t<span style="font-size:78%;">ru</span>ly mad; before you <span style="font-size:78%;">were just</span> out of your senses.<br />Let's go, Kadmos, and beg the god's for-<br />giveness of this man, the<br />little savage, and on behalf of the city, lest there be<br />Any unforeseen evil. But follow me with iv'y staff,<br />and try &amp; prop my body up; I will do for you the same.<br />It would be shameful for a couple of old men to fall, but still<br />it<span style="font-size:78%;"> must be done: for one must serve</span> Zeus' <span style="font-size:78%;">son Bacchos, in order that</span> Pen-<br />theus not bring pain upon the house: on your house, Kadmos.<br /><br />Not by prophetic power is this said by me,<br />but by the facts: often a fool speaks foolishly.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-7814692188440262521?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-506378202020084092008-01-24T16:44:00.000-08:002008-01-27T21:50:04.883-08:001st Chorus<strong><span style="color:#cc0000;">CHORVS</span></strong><br /><br />From sacred Tmolus<br />I departed Asian earth and hurried to<br />Bromius' sweet labour, ex-<br />hausted, tireless, crying<br />out "euhoi!" to Bacchus.<br /><br />Who's in the streets, who is there, who?<br />Let them enter sacred halls, all, keep your<br />mouths sanctified and pure, for<br />Ever do I offer the pro-<br />per songs to Dionysus.<br /><br /><br />How<br />blessed is he who's seen the<br />gods' sacred rites, who has<br />lived a life upright and brou-<br />ght his spirit clean in to the<br />mountains in the true puri-<br />fication of Bacchic ritual.<br /><br />And as he observes the orgiastic<br />services of the Great Mother, Cybele,<br />brandishing in hand the thyrsus,<br />draped with ivy garlands, he<br />pays Dionysus honor.<br /><br />Come Bacchae, Come Bacchae!<br />Bromios, a god, child of<br />God, Dionysus, whom you brought<br />Home from Phrygian peaks<br />To the wide-plained fields of<br />Greece, home, Bromios;<br /><br /><br />Whose<br />mother giving birth, of a<br />union rudely forced, bore<br />him shot from the womb<br />by Zeus' darting thunder;<br />and she stricken to cinders<br />with a bolt of lightning;<br /><br />But thundering Zeus took him im-<br />mediately to child-birth chambers and<br />fastening him tight inside his<br />thigh wih golden bands, he<br />disguises it from Hera;<br /><br />And bore him when the Fates<br />Gave to him as child the raging bull god,<br />And wreathed him 'round with serpents; and<br />So the beast-feeding Maenads wrap their wild<br />Prey up in bands of<br />Flow'ring garlands.<br /><br /><br />Ring yourselves in flowing<br />wreathes,<span style="font-family:verdana;font-size:130%;"> </span>O Theban mother of<br />Semele,<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>covered rich with<br />fruit,<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>teeming beautiful;<br /><br />Rage like a Bacchant shaking frantic branches of<br />oak or fir-tree, clothed in sacred<br />garments of fawn skin,<br />spotted, hanging<span style="font-family:verdana;"><span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-family:arial;"><span style="font-family:courier new;"><span style="font-family:webdings;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><span style="font-family:trebuchet ms;"><span style="font-family:times new roman;"><span style="font-family:lucida grande;"><span style="font-family:georgia;"><span style="font-family:verdana;"><span style="font-size:78%;"><span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span></span>white with<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>locks all<br />over; <span style="font-size:78%;"><br /><br /></span>B e<span style="font-size:85%;"> p<span style="font-size:78%;"> u </span><span style="font-size:100%;">r<span style="font-size:78%;"> </span>i</span> f i e d</span> <span style="font-family:times new roman;">&amp;</span> <span style="font-size:78%;">H</span> o<span style="font-size:78%;"> l <span style="font-family:times new roman;">y</span> </span>,<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>c<span style="font-size:85%;"> l</span><span style="font-size:78%;"> </span>e<span style="font-size:78%;"> a</span>n <span style="font-size:78%;">s e</span> d, b <span style="font-size:78%;">e <span style="font-size:85%;">f</span> <span style="font-size:85%;">o</span></span><span style="font-size:100%;">r</span> e <span style="font-family:times new roman;">t</span><span style="font-size:85%;"> <span style="font-family:verdana;">h</span></span> <span style="font-size:85%;">e</span> <span style="font-size:85%;">G</span><span style="font-size:78%;"> <span style="font-family:georgia;">o</span></span><span style="font-size:85%;">d</span><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-size:100%;">'</span>s</span><br />s<span style="font-size:85%;"> a</span> <span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-family:arial;">c </span><span style="font-family:courier new;">r<span style="font-family:verdana;"> </span></span><span style="font-family:verdana;">e</span></span> d th<span style="font-size:78%;"> </span><span style="font-family:times new roman;">y</span> <span style="font-size:85%;">r s</span> e <span style="font-size:78%;">s</span>. <span style="font-size:78%;"><br /><br /></span>Now the whole earth thunders in rhythm,<br />and the leader of your Bacchic choruses i s Bromius;<br />To<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>the mountain, to the moun-<br />tain all;<br /><br />There the whole<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>feminine<br />mob awaits, driven<br />from their cleaning and weaving<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>in-<span style="font-size:78%;"><br /></span>sane by<br />D i <span style="font-family:verdana;font-size:85%;">o</span> n<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span><span style="font-family:times new roman;">y</span> <span style="font-family:verdana;font-size:85%;">s </span><span style="font-family:times new roman;">u</span> s<br /><br /><br />Oh secret caves of the<br />Kurates, sacred streams of<br />K r e te, where the K o r y -<br />bantes first dis-<br />covered how<br />To stretch hollow<br />drum with hide and<br />In ecstatic dances they mix with the sweet<br />breath of Phrygian flutes, as they<br />Place it hand for<span style="font-family:Verdana;font-size:180%;"> </span>Mother<br />&amp;n Rhea to beat in<br />Time to<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>her worshippers' shrieking calls, t he wild<br />S a t y r s<span style="font-family:verdana;font-size:85%;"> </span>filled with the Goddess-<br />Mother,<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>as they observe the bi-<br />-ennial processions which<br />D i o n<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span><span style="font-family:times new roman;">y</span> s <span style="font-size:85%;">o</span> s<br />delights<span style="font-size:180%;"> </span>in.<br /><br /><br />When one in mountains sweet beats the<br />ground with frantic thyrsi, draped<br />in a fawn-skin garment, hunting a<br />stricken goat's blood, &amp; eats of it still bleeding, as she<br />rushes over Lydian &amp; Phrygian peaks, Lord<br />Br o m io s, (<em>euho</em>i!)<br />A<span style="font-size:85%;">s e</span>arth fl<span style="font-size:85%;">ow</span>s over w<span style="font-size:85%;">it</span>h milk <span style="font-size:85%;">and</span> wine,<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>s<span style="font-size:85%;">wee</span>t ri<span style="font-size:85%;">vule</span>ts of<br />Nectar;<span style="font-family:times new roman;font-size:130%;"> </span>(O <em>joy</em>!)<br /><br />As the one in Bacchus lifting high<br />the pine's blazing fire, sweet as<br />smoke of Syrian incense it runs<br />streaming from the torch, whir-<br />ling it races, dancing, rousing<br />the stragglers with his calls, his<br />curling locks rippling the wind as he<br />shouts<span style="font-size:130%;"> </span>back to the screaming:<br /><br />"C<em>ome</em>, O B<em>acchae</em>,<br /><em>O</em>, <em>come </em>B<em>acchae</em>!<br />W<em>ith a sapling of golden-hilled</em> T<em>molus</em><br />C<em>elebrate the</em> G<em>od</em>, Dionysus!"<br /><br />From the thundering tympani--screams, the shouting<br />women exalt the god<br />throughout Phrygian hills and valleys,<br />when the melodius lute makes their holy<br />Revels echo with song as they wander to the<br />Mountain, to the mountain, raging, when suddenly<br />J<span style="font-size:85%;">o</span>yo<span style="font-size:85%;">us</span>, <span style="font-size:85%;">the young</span> s<span style="font-size:85%;">acrifice</span> l<span style="font-size:85%;">ea</span>p<span style="font-size:85%;">s</span> <span style="font-size:85%;">willingly, as</span><span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="font-size:100%;"> if</span> t<span style="font-size:100%;">o i</span>ts</span> fe<span style="font-size:85%;">e</span>d<span style="font-size:85%;">in</span>g<br />M<span style="font-size:85%;">other</span>, it's of<span style="font-size:85%;">ferin</span>g, fl<span style="font-size:85%;">ingin</span>g <span style="font-size:85%;">tender young</span> limb in<br />Bacchic Chorus.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-50637820202008409?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7075870122366720936.post-49420246283174193252008-01-24T16:32:00.000-08:002008-01-27T21:35:23.403-08:00Introduction<span style="font-size:85%;"><span style="color:#cc0000;"><strong>DIONYSOS</strong></span><br /><br />I, Zeus' son, have come to the Thebans' land,<br />Dionysus, who Cadmus' daughter Semele once bore,<br />attended by lightning and fire. And after<br />changing from god's to mortal form, I am<br />here at Dirce's streams, Ismenos' water, to<br />see the tomb of my thunder-stricken mother;<br />here, near the homes and abodes, the smoldering<br />remains of holy fire, the still-living flame: Hera's un-<br />dying insult to my mother's memory. But I honor<br />Cadmus, who consecrated this ground, a sacred<br />monument to his daughter; which now I cover 'ro<span style="font-size:78%;">und </span><br />with a grapevine's leafy foliage.<br />And starting from the gold-studded fields of the Lydians<br />and Phrygians, the Persians' sun-burnt plains,<br />Baktrian walls and Medes' wintry land,<br />and crossing over opulent Arabia and all Asia, whose towering<br />cities and gorgeous towers lie upon brine haze,<br />teeming with Greeks and foreigners alike,<br />I came to this city first in Greece, only<br />after I had set all of Asia to dancing and<br />established there my mysteries, so I<br />could appear openly, a god to mortals.<br /><br />And Thebes is the first city I make cry out in<br />Greece, after covering my own skin with a fawn's and<br />taking in hand the thyrsus, my ivied javelin;<br />for my mother's sisters, who ought've known better,<br />claimed that Dionysus was never born from Zeus,<br />and that Semele, knocked up by some mortal<br />man, <span style="font-size:78%;">blamed her bed's violation</span> on the god<span style="font-size:78%;"> himself</span> (<span style="font-size:78%;">one of Kadmos'</span><br />tricks!); and they happily let everyone know that<br />that's why Zeus had killed her: she made the whole thing up.<br />So I drove them from their homes by stinging them in-<br />sane: they rage out of their minds on the mountain;<br />I even had them wear the livery of my rituals.<br />And Kadmos' female seed, every woman of Thebes, is driven<br />wild with them;<br />they've met up with Cadmus' daughters to sit<br />beneath the evergreens, up on the open rocks;<br />for Thebes must be taught its lesson, even if it's<br />unwilling, they have yet to be taught my Bacchic service;<br />and my mother's name, Semele, must be defended by me<br />appearing to mortals, the Divinity she<br />bore to God. So Cadmus has given the royal gift of<br />power to his grandson Pentheus; one who fights against<br />all that involves me, neglects me entirely from his<br />offerings and n prayer offers no remembrance;<br />That is why I will show myself, god that I am, to this man<br />and to the Thebans all. And, when everything here's been taken<br />care of, &amp; myself revealed, I'll be off to the next land;<br />and if the<span style="font-size:78%;"> city of the</span> Thebans, <span style="font-size:78%;">roused to arms</span>, seeks to drive my<br />Bacchae<span style="font-size:78%;"> from</span> the mountains,<span style="font-size:78%;"> I'll lead the Maenads</span> into battle my-<br />self;<br />and that is why I have assumed a mortal guise<br />and altered to human shape my form.<br /><br /><br />But you who've left Mt. Tmolus, the Lydian gate, my<br />Bacchic chorus, women of barbarian lands--whom I<br />accepted kindly as my fellow travellers: take up the<br />drums from the Phrygians' land, my foundlings of mother<br />Rhea, gather <span style="font-size:78%;">'round Pentheus'</span> royal <span style="font-size:78%;">palace</span>, make <span style="font-size:78%;">it </span>reso<span style="font-size:78%;">und</span> <span style="font-size:78%;">with a<br /></span>crashing thunder, so that all of Kadmos' city may see.<br /><br />And I will go to my Maenads in Kithairon's glens<br />to take part with them in my sacred dances.</span><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/7075870122366720936-4942024628317419325?l=euripidesofathens.blogspot.com'/></div>Euripides the Athenianhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16308870033938657795noreply@blogger.com0