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THE BACCHAE

by Euripides

BEHOLD, God’s Son is come unto this land  
Of heaven’s hot splendour lit to life, when she  
Of Thebes, even I, Dionysus, whom the brand  
Who bore me, Cadmus’ daughter Semelê,  
Died here. So, changed in shape from God to man,  
I walk again by Dirce’s streams and scan  
Ismenus’ shore. There by the castle side  
I see her place, the Tomb of the Lightning’s Bride,  
The wreck of smouldering chambers, and the great  
Faint wreaths of fire undying—as the hate  
Dies not, that Hera held for Semelê.  
  Aye, Cadmus bath done well; in purity  
He keeps this place apart, inviolate,  
His daughter’s sanctuary; and I have set  
My green and clustered vines to robe it round.  
  Far now behind me lies the golden ground  
Of Lydian and of Phrygian; far away  
The wide hot plains where Persian sunbeams play,  
The Bactrian war-holds, and the storm-oppressed  
Clime of the Mede, and Araby the Blest,  
And Asia all, that by the salt sea lies  
In proud embattled cities, motley-wise  
Of Hellene and Barbarian interwrought;  
And now I come to Hellas—having taught  
All the world else my dances and my rite  
Of mysteries, to show me in men’s sight  
Manifest God.  
              And first of Helene lands  
I cry this Thebes to waken; set her hands  
To clasp my wand, mine ivied javelin,  
And round her shoulders hang my wild fawn-skin.  
For they have scorned me whom it least beseemed,  
Semelê’s sisters; mocked my birth, nor deemed  
That Dionysus sprang from Dian seed.  
My mother sinned, said they; and in her need,  
With Cadmus plotting, cloaked her human shame  
With the dread name of Zeus; for that the flame  
From heaven consumed her, seeing she lied to God.  
  Thus must they vaunt; and therefore hath my rod  
On them first fallen, and stung them forth wild-eyed  
From empty chambers; the bare mountain side  
Is made their home, and all their hearts are flame.  
Yea, I have bound upon the necks of them  
The harness of my rites. And with them all  
The seed of womankind from hut and hall  
Of Thebes, hath this my magic goaded out.  
And there, with the old King’s daughters, in a rout  
Confused, they make their dwelling-place between  
The roofless rocks and shadowy pine trees green.  
Thus shall this Thebes, how sore soe’er it smart,  
Learn and forget not, till she crave her part  
In mine adoring; thus must I speak clear  
To save my mother’s fame, and crown me here  
As true God, born by Semelê to Zeus.  
 
  Now Cadmus yieldeth up his throne and use  
Of royal honour to his daughter’s son  
Pentheus; who on my body hath begun  
A war with God. He thrusteth me away  
From due drink-offering, and, when men pray,  
My name entreats not. Therefore on his own  
Head and his people’s shall my power be shown.  
Then to another land, when all things here  
Are well, must I fare onward, making clear  
My godhead’s might. But should this Theban town  
Essay with wrath and battle to drag down  
My maids, lo, in their path myself shall be,  
And maniac armies battled after me!  
For this I veil my godhead with the wan  
Form of the things that die, and walk as Man.  
 
  O Brood of Tmolus o’er the wide world flown,  
O Lydian band, my chosen and mine own,  
Damsels uplifted o’er the orient deep  
To wander where I wander, and to sleep  
Where I sleep; up, and wake the old sweet sound,  
The clang that I and mystic Rhea found,  
The Timbrel of the Mountain! Gather all  
Thebes to your song round Pentheus’ royal hall.  
I seek my new-made worshippers, to guide  
Their dances up Kithaeron’s pine clad side.  [As he departs, there comes stealing in from the left a band of fifteen Eastern Women, the light of the sunrise streaming upon their long white robes and ivy-bound hair. They wear fawn-skins over the robes, and carry some of them timbrels, some pipes and other instruments. Many bear the thyrsus or sacred Wand, made of reed ringed with ivy. They enter stealthily till they see that the place is empty, and then begin their mystic song of worship.  
 
CHORUS

A Maiden
 
From Asia, from the dayspring that uprises,  
  To Bromios ever glorying we came.  
We laboured for our Lord in many guises;  
We toiled, but the toil is as the prize is;  
  Thou Mystery, we hail thee by thy name!  
 
Another

Who lingers in the road? Who espies us?
 
  We shall hide him in his house nor be bold.  
Let the heart keep silence that defies us;  
For I sing this day to Dionysus  
  The song that is appointed from of old.  
 
All the Maidens

Oh, blessèd he in all wise,
 
  Who hath drunk the Living Fountain,  
    Whose life no folly staineth,  
      And his soul is near to God;  
Whose sins are lifted, pall-wise,  
  As he worships on the Mountain,  
    And where Cybele ordaineth,  
      Our Mother, he has trod:  
 
      His head with ivy laden  
        And his thyrsus tossing high,  
          For our God he lifts his cry;  
      “Up, O Bacchæ, wife and maiden,  
          Come, O ye Bacchæ, come;  
    Oh, bring the Joy-bestower,  
    God-seed of God the Sower,  
    Bring Bromios in his power  
          From Phrygia’s mountain dome;  
      To street and town and tower,  
            Oh, bring ye Bromios home.”  
 
Whom erst in anguish lying  
  For an unborn life’s desire,  
    As a dead thing in the Thunder  
      His mother cast to earth;  
For her heart was dying, dying,  
  In the white heart of the fire;  
    Till Zeus, the Lord of Wonder,  
      Devised new lairs of birth;  
 
        Yea, his own flesh tore to hide him,  
          And with clasps of bitter gold  
          Did a secret son enfold,  
      And the Queen knew not beside him;  
          Till the perfect hour was there;  
      Then a hornèd God was found,  
      And a God of serpents crowned;  
      And for that are serpents wound  
          In the wands his maidens bear,  
      And the songs of serpents sound  
          In the mazes of their hair.  
 
Some Maidens

All hail, O Thebes, thou nurse of Semelê!
 
  With Semelê’s wild ivy crown thy towers;  
Oh, burst in bloom of wreathing bryony,  
      Berries and leaves and flowers;  
    Uplift the dark divine wand,  
    The oak-wand and the pine-wand,  
And don thy fawn-skin, fringed in purity  
      With fleecy white, like ours.  
 
Oh, cleanse thee in the wands’ waving pride!  
  Yea, all men shall dance with us and pray,  
When Bromios his companies shall guide  
  Hillward, ever hillward, where they stay,  
    The flock of the Believing,  
    The maids from loom and weaving  
  By the magic of his breath borne away.  
 
Others

    Hail thou, O Nurse of Zeus, O Caverned Haunt
 
      Where fierce arms clanged to guard God’s cradle rare,  
    For thee of old crested Corybant  
      First woke in Cretan air  
    The wild orb of our orgies,  
    The Timbrel; and thy gorges  
Rang with this Strain; and blended Phrygian chant  
      And sweet keen pipes were there.  
 
  But the Timbrel, the Timbrel was another’s,  
    And away to Mother Rhea it must wend;  
  And to our holy singing from the Mother’s  
    The mad Satyrs carried it, to blend  
      In the dancing and the cheer  
      Of our third and perfect Year;  
And it serves Dionysus in the end!  
 
A Maiden

O glad, glad on the mountains
 
  To swoon in the race outworn,  
    When the holy fawn-skin clings,  
      And all else sweeps away,  
To the joy of the red quick fountains,  
  The blood of the hill-goat torn,  
    The glory of wild-beast ravenings,  
      Where the hill-tops catch the day;  
To the Phrygian, Lydian, mountains!  
    ’Tis Bromios leads the way.  
 
Another Maiden

Then streams the earth with milk, yea, streams
 
With wine and nectar of the bee,  
And through the air dim perfume steams  
Of Syrian frankincense; and He,  
Our leader, from his thyrsus spray  
A torchlight tosses high and higher,  
A torchlight like a beacon-fire,  
To waken all that faint and stray;  
And sets them leaping as he sings,  
His tresses rippling to the sky,  
And deep beneath the Maenad cry  
His proud voice rings:  
      “Come, O ye Bacchæ, come!”  
 
All the Maidens

Hither, O fragrant of Tmolus the Golden,
 
  Come with the voice of timbrel and drum;  
Let the cry of your joyance uplift and embolden  
  The God of the joy-cry; O Bacchanals, come!  
With pealing of pipes and with Phrygian clamour,  
  On, where the vision of holiness thrills,  
And the music climbs and the maddening glamour,  
  With the wild White Maids, to the hills, to the hills!  
Oh, then, like a colt as he runs by a river,  
  A colt by his dam, when the heart of him sings,  
With the keen limbs drawn and the fleet foot a-quiver,  
          Away the Bacchanal springs!  
 
Enter TEIRESIAS. He is an old man and blind, leaning upon a staff and moving with slow stateliness, though wearing the Ivy and the Bacchic fawn-skin.
 
TEIRESIAS

 
 
Ho, there, who keeps the gate?—Go, summon me  
Cadmus, Agênor’s son, who crossed the sea  
From Sidon and upreared this Theban hold.  
Go, whosoe’er thou art. See he be told  
Teiresias seeketh him. Himself will gauge  
Mine errand, and the compact, age with age,  
I vowed with him, grey hair with snow-white hair,  
To deck the new God’s thyrsus, and to wear  
His fawn-skin, and with ivy crown our brows.  
 
Enter CADMUS from the Castle. He is even older than TEIRESIAS, and wears the same attire.
 
CADMUS

True friend! I knew that voice of thine, that flows
 
Like mellow wisdom from a fountain wise.  
And, lo, I come prepared, in all the guise  
And harness of this God. Are we not told  
His is the soul of that dead life of old  
That sprang from mine own daughter? Surely then  
Must thou and I with all the strength of men  
Exalt him.  
            Where then shall I stand, where tread  
The dance and toss this bowed and hoary head?  
O friend, in thee is wisdom; guide my grey  
And eld-worn steps, eld-worn Teiresias.—Nay;  
I am not weak.  [At the first movement of worship his manner begins to change; a mysterious strength and exaltation enter into him.  
                Surely this arm could smite  
The wild earth with its thyrsus, day and night,  
And faint not! Sweetly and forgetfully  
The dim years fall from off me!  
 
TEIRESIAS

                                As with thee,
 
With me ’tis likewise. Light am I and young,  
And will essay the dancing and the song.  
 
CADMUS

Quick, then, our chariots to the mountain road.
 
 
TEIRESIAS

Nay; to take steeds were to mistrust the God.
 
 
CADMUS

So be it. Mine old arms shall guide thee there.
 
 
TEIRESIAS

The God himself shall guide! Have thou no care.
 
 
CADMUS

And in all Thebes shall no man dance but we?
 
 
TEIRESIAS

Aye, Thebes is blinded. Thou and I can see.
 
 
CADMUS

’Tis weary waiting; hold my hand, friend; so.
 
 
TEIRESIAS

Lo, there is mine. So linked let us go.
 
 
CADMUS

Shall things of dust the Gods’ dark ways despise?
 
 
TEIRESIAS

Or prove our wit on Heaven’s high mysteries?
 
Not thou and I! That heritage sublime  
Our sires have left us, wisdom old as time,  
No word of man, how deep soe’er his thought  
And won of subtlest toil, may bring to naught.  
  Aye, men will rail that I forgot my years,  
To dance and wreath with ivy these white hairs;  
What recks it? Seeing the God no line bath told  
To mark what man shall dance, or young or old;  
But craves his honours from mortality  
All, no man marked apart; and great shall be!  
 
CADMUS (after looking away toward the Mountain).

Teiresias, since this light thou canst not read,
 
I must be seer for thee. Here comes in speed  
Pentheus, Echîon’s son, whom I have raised  
To rule my people in my stead.—Amazed  
He seems. Stand close, and mark what we shall hear.  [The two stand back, partially concealed, while there enters in hot haste PENTHEUS, followed by a bodyguard. He is speaking to the SOLDIER in command.  
 
PENTHEUS

Scarce had I crossed our borders, when mine ear
 
Was caught by this strange rumour, that our own  
Wives, our own sisters, from their hearths are flown  
To wild and secret rites; and cluster there  
High on the shadowy hills, with dance and prayer  
To adore this new-made God, this Dionyse,  
Whate’er he be!—And in their companies  
Deep wine-jars stand, and ever and anon  
Away into the loneliness now one  
Steals forth, and now a second, maid or dame,  
Where love lies waiting, not of God! The flame,  
They say, of Bacchios wraps them. Bacchios! Nay,  
’Tis more to Aphrodite that they pray.  
  Howbeit, all that I have found, my men  
Hold bound and shackled in our dungeon den;  
The rest, I will go hunt them! Aye, and snare  
My birds with nets of iron, to quell their prayer  
And mountain song and rites of rascaldom!  
  They tell me, too, there is a stranger come,  
A man of charm and spell, from Lydian seas,  
A head all gold and cloudy fragrancies,  
A wine-red cheek, and eyes that hold the light  
Of the very Cyprian. Day and livelong night  
He haunts amid the damsels, o’er each lip  
Dangling his cup of joyance!—Let me grip  
Him once, but once, within these walls, right swift  
That wand shall cease its music, and that drift  
Of tossing curls lie still—when my rude sword  
Falls between neck and trunk! ’Tis all his word,  
This tale of Dionysus; how that same  
Babe that was blasted by the lightning flame  
With his dead mother, for that mother’s lie,  
Was re-conceived, born perfect from the thigh  
Of Zeus, and now is God! What call ye these?  
Dreams? Gibes of the unknown wanderer? Blasphemies  
That crave the very gibbet?  
                            Stay! God wot,  
Here is another marvel! See I not  
In motley fawn-skins robed the vision-seer  
Teiresias? And my mother’s father here—  
O depth of scorn!—adoring with the wand  
Of Bacchios?—Father!—Nay, mine eyes are fond;  
It is not your white heads so fancy-flown!  
It cannot be! Cast off that ivy crown,  
O mine own mother’s sire! Set free that hand  
That cowers about its staff.  
                              ’Tis thou bast planned  
This work, Teiresias! ’Tis thou must set  
Another altar and another yet  
Amongst us, watch new birds, and win more hire  
Of gold, interpreting new signs of fire!  
But for thy silver hairs, I tell thee true,  
Thou now wert sitting chained amid thy crew  
Of raving damsels, for this evil dream  
Thou hast brought us, of new Gods! When once the gleam  
Of grapes hath lit a Woman’s Festival,  
In all their prayers is no more health at all!  
 
LEADER OF THE CHORUS (the words are not heard by PENTHEUS)

Injurious King, hast thou no fear of God,
 
Nor Cadmus, sower of the Giants’ Sod,  
Life-spring to great Echîdon and to thee?  
 
TEIRESIAS

Good words, my son, come easily, when he
 
That speaks is wise, and speaks but for the right.  
Else come they never! Swift are thine, and bright  
As though with thought, yet have no thought at all.  
  Lo, this new God, whom thou dost flout withal,  
I cannot speak the greatness wherewith He  
In Hellas shall be great! Two spirits there be,  
Young Prince, that in man’s world are first of worth.  
Dêmêtêr one is named; she is the Earth—  
Call her which name thou will!—who feeds man’s frame  
With sustenance of things dry. And that which came  
Her work to perfect, second, is the Power  
From Semelê born. He found the liquid shower  
Hid in the grape. He rests man’s spirit dim  
From grieving, when the vine exalteth him.  
He giveth sleep to sink the fretful day  
In cool forgetting. Is there any way  
With man’s sore heart, save only to forget?  
  Yea, being God, the blood of him is set  
Before the Gods in sacrifice, that we  
For his sake may be blest.—And so, to thee,  
That fable shames him, how this God was knit  
Into God’s flesh? Nay, learn the truth of it,  
Cleared from the false.—When from that deadly light  
Zeus saved the babe, and up to Olympus’ height  
Raised him, and Hera’s wrath would cast him thence,  
Then Zeus devised him a divine defence.  
A fragment of the world-encircling fire  
He rent apart, and wrought to his desire  
Of shape and hue, in the image of the child,  
And gave to Hera’s rage. And so, beguiled  
By change and passing time, this tale was born,  
How the babe-god was hidden in the torn  
Flesh of his sire. He hath no shame thereby.  
  A prophet is he likewise. Prophecy  
Cleaves to all frenzy, but beyond all else  
To frenzy of prayer. Then in us verily dwells  
The God himself, and speaks the thing to be.  
Yea, and of Ares’ realm a part hath he.  
When mortal armies, mailèd and arrayed,  
Have in strange fear, or ever blade met blade,  
Fled maddened, ’tis this God hath palsied them.  
Aye, over Delphi’s rock-built diadem  
Thou yet shalt see him leaping with his train  
Of fire across the twin-peaked mountain-plain,  
Flaming the darkness with his mystic wand,  
And great in Hellas.—List and understand,  
King Pentheus! Dream not thou that force is power;  
Nor, if thou hast a thought, and that thought sour  
And sick, oh, dream not thought is wisdom!—Up,  
Receive this God to Thebes; pour forth the cup  
Of sacrifice, and pray, and wreathe thy brow.  
  Thou fearest for the damsels? Think thee now;  
How toucheth this the part of Dionyse  
To hold maids pure perforce? In them it lies,  
And their own hearts; and in the wildest rite  
Cometh no stain to her whose heart is white.  
  Nay, mark me! Thou hast thy joy, when the Gate  
Stands thronged, and Pentheus’ name is lifted great  
And high by Thebes in clamour; shall not He  
Rejoice in his due meed of majesty?  
  Howbeit, this Cadmus whom thou scorn’st and I  
Will wear His crown, and tread His dances! Aye,  
Our hairs are white, yet shall that dance be trod!  
I will not lift mine arm to war with God  
For thee nor all thy words. Madness most fell  
Is on thee, madness wrought by some dread spell,  
But not by spell nor leechcraft to be cured!  
 
CHORUS

Grey prophet, worthy of Phoebus is thy word,
 
And wise in honouring Bromios, our great God.  
 
CADMUS

My son, right well Teiresias points thy road.
 
Oh, make thine habitation here with us,  
Not lonely, against men’s uses. Hazardous  
Is this quick bird-like beating of thy thought  
Where no thought dwells.—Grant that this God be naught,  
Yet let that Naught be Somewhat in thy mouth;  
Lie boldly, and say He is! So north and south  
Shall marvel, how there sprang a thing divine  
From Semelê’s flesh, and honour all our line.  [Drawing nearer to PENTHEUS.  
  Is there not blood before thine eyes even now?  
Our lost Actaeon’s blood, whom long ago  
His own red hounds through yonder forest dim  
Tore unto death, because he vaunted him  
Against most holy Artemis? Oh, beware,  
And let me wreathe thy temples. Make thy prayer  
With us, and walk thee humbly in God’s sight.  [He makes as if to set the wreath on PENTHEUS’ head.  
 
PENTHEUS

Down with that hand! Anoint thee to thy rite,
 
Nor smear on me thy foul contagion!  [Turning upon TEIRESIAS.  
                                    This  
Thy folly’s head and prompter shall not miss  
The justice that he needs!—Go, half my guard,  
 

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