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    Bakkhai


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      bakkhai

      also by anne carson

      available from new directions

      The Albertine Workout

      Antigonick

      Glass, Irony & God

      Nox

      bakkhai

      i wish i were two dogs then i could play with me

      (translator’s note on euripides’ bakkhai)

      Dionysos is god

      of the beginning

      before the beginning.

      What makes

      beginnings special?

      Think of

      your first sip of wine

      from a really good bottle.

      Opening page

      of a crime novel.

      Start

      of an idea.

      Tingle of falling in love.

      Beginnings have their own

      energy,

      ethics,

      tonality,

      colour.

      Greenish-bluish-purple

      dewy and cool

      almost transparent,

      as a ripe grape.

      Tone of alterity,

      things just about to change,

      already looking different.

      Energy headlong

      and heedless

      and shot

      like a beam. Ethics

      fantastically selfish.

      He is a young god.

      Mythologically obscure,

      always just arriving

      at some new place

      to disrupt the status quo,

      wearing the start of a smile.

      The Greeks called him “foreign”

      and staged his incursion

      into polis after polis

      in stories like the one

      in Euripides’ Bakkhai.

      A shocking play.

      Lecturing in Japan

      Stephen Hawking was asked

      not to mention that the universe

      had a beginning

      (and so likely an end)

      because it would affect

      the stockmarket.

      Speculation aside,

      we all need a prehistory.

      According to Freud,

      we do nothing but repeat it.

      Beginnings are special

      because most of them are fake.

      The new person you become

      with that first sip of wine

      was already there.

      Look at Pentheus

      twirling around in a dress,

      so pleased with his girl-guise

      he’s almost in tears.

      Are we to believe

      this desire is new?

      Why was he keeping

      that dress in the back

      of his closet anyhow?

      Costume is flesh.

      Look at Dionysos,

      plucked prematurely

      from his doomed mother’s womb

      and sewn up

      in the thigh of Zeus

      to be born again later.

      Life is a rehearsal

      for life.

      Here’s a well-known secret

      about Dionysos:

      despite all those legends

      of him as “new god”

      imported to Greece from the east,

      his name is already

      on Linear B tablets

      that date to 12th-century BC.

      Previousness

      is something a god can manage

      fairly well (“time”

      a fiction for him)

      but mortals

      less so.

      Look at those poor passionate women

      who worship this god,

      the Bakkhai,

      destroyers of livestock

      and local people

      and Pentheus the king.

      They had a prior existence once.

      The herdsman describes them

      lying at peace in the mountains

      “calm as buttons on a shirt.”

      This is the world before men.

      Then the posse arrives

      and violence begins.

      What does this tell us?

      The shock of the new

      will prepare its own unveiling

      in old and brutal ways.

      Dionysos does not

      explain or regret

      anything. He is

      pleased

      if he can cause you to perform,

      despite your plan,

      despite your politics,

      despite your neuroses,

      despite even your Dionysian theories of self,

      something quite previous,

      the desire

      before the desire,

      the lick of beginning to know you don’t know.

      If life is a stage,

      that is the show.

      Exit Dionysos.

      cast

      Dionysos

      Teiresias

      Kadmos

      Pentheus

      Guard

      Herdsman

      Servant

      Agave

      and

      Bakkhai

      bakkhai

      PROLOGUE

      [enter Dionysos]

      Dionysos:

      Here I am.

      Dionysos.

      I am

      son of Zeus, born by a lightning bolt out of Semele

      – you know this story —

      the night Zeus split her open with fire.

      In order to come here I changed my form,

      put on this suit of human presence.

      I want to visit the springs of Dirke,

      the river Ismenos.

      Look there — I see

      the tomb of my mother,

      thunderstruck Semele,

      and her ruined house still smoking

      with the live flame of Zeus.

      I’m glad

      my grandfather Kadmos named this place sacred,

      I’m glad

      he keeps it clean.

      I myself

      planted it all round with vines

      in the clear key of green.

      The story so far:

      I crossed Lydia, Phrygia, Baktria, Media, Arabia and the whole coastland of Asia

      to come here

      to this Greek city

      to make myself known:

      my rituals, my dances, my religion, my livewire self!

      I am something supernatural —

      not exactly god, ghost, spirit, angel, principle or element —

      There is no term for it in English.

      In Greek they say daimo —

      can we just use that?

      So,

      I set all Asia dancing

      and then I came here

      first

      of all the cities of Greece:

      I came to thrill you, Thebes.

      Don’t doubt I will.

      Here’s what you’ll need:

      fawnskin,

      thyrsos,

      absolute submission.

      My mother’s sisters failed to understand this — they’ve

      been going around saying

      Dionysos wasn’t born of Zeus,

      Kadmos just made that up

      after Semele slept with a perfectly ordinary person.

      It was wrong of them to say such things.

      I have stung them fr
    om their homes,

      they are gone mad upon the mountains.

      The whole bursting female seed-pod of Thebes is gone mad.

      I’ve put them in Dionysian uniform

      and they sit beneath pine trees

      staring at their own green hands.

      So they will learn,

      so Thebes must learn,

      to call me son of Zeus

      and call me

      daimon.

      Now Thebes has a new leader.

      Kadmos appointed him.

      He’s Kadmos’ grandson. Name is Pentheus.

      This man is against me.

      He does not acknowledge me in libation or prayer.

      But I am a god. I’ll show him. Him and all his Thebans.

      Then I’ll be on my way to another land in visible triumph.

      But if Thebes comes forth in anger

      to drive my Bakkhic women from the mountains

      I shall lead them as an army into battle.

      That’s why I’ve changed to mortal form —

      how do I look?

      Convincingly human?

      O dear women! My cadre, my sisterhood, my fellow travellers —

      you who left your distant lives

      to wander all the way from Lydia with me —

      lift up your tambourines!

      bang loud your drums!

      Surround Pentheus’ house with noise and let the city see you!

      I’ll go to Mt Kithairon

      and get them dancing there.

      [enter Bakkhai]

      ENTRANCE SONG OF THE BAKKHAI

      From Asia I come,

      from Tmolos I hasten,

      to this work that I love,

      to this love that I live

      calling out

      Bakkhos!

      Who is in the road?

      Who is in the way?

      Stay back,

      stand quiet.

      I shall sing Dionysos —

      I shall make the simplest sentence explode with his name!

      O

      blessed is he who,

      blessedly happy is he who

      knows the holy protocols, who

      makes his life pure, who

      joins his soul in congregation

      on the mountains of Bakkhos!

      Honouring the Mother

      and the mysteries

      with his thyrsos,

      his ivy,

      his submission to the god.

      Come, Bakkhai!

      Come Bakkhai,

      bring your god home!

      Bring Bromios down from the mountains of Phrygia

      into the wide dancing streets of Greece!

      Bromios,

      the one whose

      mother shimmered into fire

      at the moment of his birth

      when Zeus’ lightning bolt blew her apart

      and Zeus sewed the infant into his own thigh

      with golden stitches,

      secret and safe

      until the appointed time.

      Then he was born

      a god

      with horns on his head

      and snakes in his hair —

      that’s why

      the Bakkhai

      like to play with wild things even now.

      O Thebes! garland yourself

      in all the green there is —

      ivy green,

      olive green,

      fennel green,

      growing green,

      yearning green,

      wet sap green,

      new grape green,

      green of youth and green of branches,

      green of mint and green of marsh grass,

      green of tea leaves, oak and pine,

      green of washed needles and early rain,

      green of weeds and green of oceans,

      green of bottles, ferns and apples,

      green of dawn-soaked dew and slender green of roots,

      green fresh out of pools,

      green slipped under fools,

      green of the green fuse,

      green of the honeyed muse,

      green of the rough caress of ritual,

      green undaunted by reason or delirium,

      green of jealous joy,

      green of the secret holy violence of the thyrsos,

      green of the sacred iridescence of the dance —

      and let all the land of Thebes dance!

      with Dionysos leading,

      to the mountains!

      to the mountains!

      where the mob of women waits!

      They’ve forsaken their shuttles,

      they’ve left their looms,

      they’ve dropped their aprons

      and taken up their stations

      on Dionysos’ mountain!

      He has stung them out of their minds.

      Do you hear that pounding?

      Do you hear the kettledrum?

      The Korybants invented it

      to mingle with the sweet shrill voice of the flute

      and they gave it to the Mother,

      who gave it to the Satyrs,

      who gave it to us.

      We dance to a drumbeat adoring our god.

      He loves the drum!

      He is sweet upon the mountains

      when he runs from the pack,

      when he drops to the ground,

      hunting goatkill blood

      and rawflesh pleasure,

      longing for the mountains of home!

      Bromios, leader of the dance!

      EUOI!

      His ground flows with milk,

      flows with wine,

      flows with nectar of bees.

      Like smoke of incense streaming aloft

      his pinetorch blazes.

      He darts.

      He runs.

      He dances.

      He touches them to fire if they lag

      and rouses them with shouts if they wander,

      and all the while his long hair streaming on the wind

      and all the while his low voice pulsing into them,

      Run, Bakkhai!

      Run, Bakkhai!

      You amazing golden creatures!

      Sing Dionysos!

      Sing glorying your god

      in the thunder of drums!

      To the mountains! To the mountains!

      EUOI!

      EUOI!

      Look,

      there she goes,

      lost in joy,

      like a colt from its mother frisking free,

      the creature

      of Bakkhos!

      [enter Teiresias]

      Teiresias:

      You at the gates!

      Call Kadmos out — go on, tell him Teiresias is here,

      he’ll know why.

      We have an agreement, one old man with another,

      to try out this Dionysian business together —

      fawnskin, thyrsos, garlands in the hair — the complete regalia.

      [enter Kadmos from palace]

      Kadmos:

      I knew it was you, my old wise friend,

      I heard your voice.

      Look, I’ve got my gear on too — the costume of the god!

      Now the important thing is

      to promote Dionysos

      every way we can,

      he’s my daughter’s son after all.

      So where are we headed?

      I’m ready to dance or trance or toss our white heads

      or whatever comes next.

      You lead the way, Teiresias, you’re the wise one.

      I’m merely enthusiastic!

    &
    nbsp; Isn’t it fun to forget our old age?

      Teiresias:

      Yes well, what is it they say,

      you’re as young as you feel?

      Kadmos:

      We must get to the mountain.

      Should we call a cab?

      Teiresias:

      That doesn’t sound very Dionysian.

      Kadmos:

      Good point. Let’s walk. We can lean on each other.

      Teiresias:

      The god will guide us, it won’t be hard.

      Kadmos:

      We’re the only ones in the city going?

      Teiresias:

      The only ones who have any sense.

      Kadmos:

      No more delay then, take my hand.

      Teiresias:

      Here we go, arm in arm.

      Kadmos:

      I don’t believe in despising the gods,

      a mere human myself.

      Teiresias:

      And I don’t believe in philosophizing about it.

      We know he’s a daimon,

      we know there are certain traditions pertaining to that,

      traditions as old as time,

      why analyze further?

      What wisdom is in it?

      Will they say I look silly dancing around with ivy in my hair?

      Well yes, but so what?

      Dionysos didn’t specify his worshippers be young or old —

      he wants reverence from all.

      Kadmos:

      You can’t see this, Teiresias, but here’s Pentheus

      coming

      and he has a wild look.

      Wonder what’s got into him.

      [enter Pentheus]

      Pentheus:

      I was out of the country but I kept hearing rumours

      of trouble in our city.

      Of women leaving home.

      Of fake Bakkhic revels deep in the mountains.

      Of women gone crazy for someone they call

      “Dionysos”

      whoever that is —

      they say “daimon” followed by a nervous hush.

      There’s a lot of wine involved and creeping off into corners with men.

      Meanwhile they call themselves a prayer group!

      Obviously it’s just sex. I’ve put most of them in jail.

      A few escaped — Agave,

      my own mother, for example, is still at large.

      I’ve got the police on it.

      Soon have them all locked up —

      put a stop to this Bakkhic nonsense.

      But people are talking about a certain Lydian stranger hanging around too.

      A sort of magician.

      Huckster.

      Swoony type,

      long hair, bedroom eyes, cheeks like wine.

      He mingles with the young girls night and day,

      claiming to show them some sort of mystic thing,

      claiming this Dionysos is a son of god

      and was sewn up in the thigh of Zeus —

     


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