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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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DIONYSUS, PAN, ECHO, AND NARCISSUS 279<br />

f<br />

TIRESIAS: Who attends at the gate? Summon Cadmus from the house, the son<br />

of Agenor, who came from Sidonia and fortified the city of the Thebans. Let<br />

someone go and announce that Tiresias wants to see him. He already knows for<br />

what reason I have come. I made an agreement with him, even though I am old<br />

and he is even older, to make myself a thyrsus, wear a fawnskin, and crown my<br />

head with shoots of ivy.<br />

CADMUS: My dearest friend, I knew your voice from inside the palace, and<br />

recognized the wise words of a wise man. I have come ready with the paraphernalia<br />

of the god. For since Dionysus, who has revealed himself to mortals<br />

as a god, is the son of my daughter, I must do everything in my power to magnify<br />

his greatness. Where should we go to join the others in the dance, shaking<br />

our gray heads in ecstasy? Tell me, an old man, Tiresias, for you are old too and<br />

wise. I shall never grow tired by night or by day as I strike the ground with my<br />

thyrsus. It will be a sweet pleasure to forget that we are old.<br />

TIRESIAS: You experience the same sensations as I do, for I feel young again<br />

and I shall attempt the dance.<br />

CADMUS: Shall we not proceed to the mountain by chariot?<br />

TIRESIAS: No, the god would not have as appropriate an honor.<br />

CADMUS: I will lead the way for you, two old men together.<br />

TIRESIAS: The god will lead the two of us there without any difficulty.<br />

CADMUS: Are we to be the only men of the city to dance in honor of Bacchus?<br />

TIRESIAS: We are the only ones who think the way one should; the others are<br />

wrong and perverse.<br />

CADMUS: We delay too long; give me your hand.<br />

TIRESIAS: Here it is, take hold and join our hands together.<br />

CADMUS: Being a mere mortal, I am not scornful of the gods.<br />

TIRESIAS: About the gods we have no new wise speculations. The ancestral<br />

beliefs that we hold are as old as time, and they cannot be destroyed by any argument<br />

or clever subtlety invented by profound minds. How could I help being<br />

ashamed, one will ask, as I am about to join in the dance, at my age, with<br />

an ivy wreath on my head? The god does not discriminate whether young or<br />

old must dance in his honor, but he desires to be esteemed by all alike and<br />

wishes his glory to be magnified, making no distinctions whatsoever.<br />

CADMUS: Since you are blind, Tiresias, I shall be a prophet for you, and tell<br />

you what I see. Pentheus, the son of Echion, to whom I have given my royal<br />

power in Thebes, comes in haste to this palace. How excited he is; what news<br />

has he to tell us?<br />

PENTHEUS: Although I happened to have been away from Thebes, I have<br />

heard of the new evils that beset the city; the women have abandoned our homes<br />

on the pretense of Bacchic rites, and gad about on the dark mountainside honoring<br />

by their dances the new god, Dionysus, whoever he is. Bowls full of wine<br />

stand in the midst of each group, and they sneak away one by one to solitary<br />

places where they satisfy the lust of males. Their pretext is that they are Maenad<br />

priestesses, but they put Aphrodite ahead of Bacchus. All those I have caught<br />

are kept safe with their hands tied by guards in the state prison. The others, who<br />

still roam on the mountain, I shall hunt out, including my own mother, Agave,

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