Read Penelope and Ulysses Online
Authors: Zenovia
Music
is
heard.
‘Dance
for
Man’
(Nikos
Xylouris)
is
played
while
the
audience
is
settling
into
their
seats.
Projected
images
of
Penelope
and
Ulysses,
The
Tree,
and
the
sea
are
seen
in
conjunction
with
the
music.
Lights
slowly
come
on.
They
are
soft
and
dark
blue.
The
set
is
in
soft
night
colours
with
a
gentle
mist.
PENELOPE
and
YOUNG
PENELOPE
are
both
facing
the
audience,
looking
directly
into
the
distance,
into
the
audience.
PENELOPE
holds
her
sword
facing
downward.
YOUNG
PENELOPE
stands
beside
her.
She
speaks
the
first
two
lines
in
Greek—in
the
language
of
lost
and
found
worlds.
]
PENELOPE: [
Moves
forward
and
addresses
the
audience
.]
Exerte erthe apo to skotathi.
Exerte erthe apo to skotathi. [
You
have
come
from
the
darkness.
]
[
YOUNG
PENELOPE
moves
two
steps
forward
to
stand
by
PENELOPE
.]
YOUNG PENELOPE: You have come from darkness
to take parts of my life, to make it yours.
PENELOPE: You have come to recognise or retrieve
something that you have forgotten or lost.
YOUNG PENELOPE: You have come to see if love exists.
PENELOPE: Oh, by that I don’t mean
comfortable,
grey
, domesticated love.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I mean love that can break and shatter you
on the rocks of solitude.
BOTH: How much solitude can you bear?
PENELOPE: You have arrived at the precise time of my departure.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Ulysses, Ulysses!
Haunt me. Drive me mad with longing.
PENELOPE: I want to leave with you the despair and joy—
YOUNG PENELOPE: of a longing and searching,
of this love for this man—
PENELOPE: for no other man will do.
YOUNG PENELOPE: This love for an ideal,
this rebellious spark in my soul.
PENELOPE: This love that will not compromise
BOTH: The impossible choices of my nature and destiny.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Will you stay? Give me your hand
or at least your little finger.
PENELOPE: Please stay, so that I can pass on
the sirens’ song.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Did you know that sirens are mute?
It is their silence and solitude
that pierce the heart of your hidden world.
PENELOPE: You all know that the sirens’ song
is the opening of a man’s heart
to reveal either its fullness or emptiness.
And how much truth can you bear?
YOUNG PENELOPE: Do I have something that belongs to you?
Others seem to think that I have
something that belongs to them.
I have been kept under house arrest
by those who think that I have
something that belongs to them.
PENELOPE: Those men in my courtyard are not of my desire,
of my passion, of my deep sensuality.
They lack the salt of the sea in them.
They are not fish, only nets.
Their lives, their masculinity,
are nets used to capture the wild bird, the siren.
They would even settle for the tail of the mermaid.
They think I watch their nakedness,
while all the while I look beyond them
into the waves and turbulence
of the forever making and breaking sea.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I look to hear Ulysses.
PENELOPE: I search for the sirens
BOTH: Who have escaped the net of the hunter.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I follow the sea with my heart.
PENELOPE: Have you brought the danger
and beauty of the sea?
YOUNG PENELOPE: Once I found a bottle with a note
floating in the shallow waters
of another shipwrecked and sunken world.
BOTH: “There is the sea, and who will drink it dry?”
20
YOUNG PENELOPE: Ulysses, when we were young
you felt that I would drown
because I swam in the unmapped
and uncharted waters.
PENELOPE: I told you: in these waters
they do not throw nets.
You told me there are other dangers.
BOTH: The sea can seduce you and keep you.
PENELOPE: The sea has kept you from me.
Who can convince the sea to be reasonable?
YOUNG PENELOPE: We are like the bird and fish
that have fallen in love.
But where do we live?
In the sky? In the sea?
PENELOPE: Who would want to tame
the passion and desire
of the forever making and breaking sea?
YOUNG PENELOPE: I came from behind the sea,
and now where do I go
when it cuts me off?
PENELOPE: Do I want you to stay?
I can see you, smell you, sense you,
but something is preventing me
from touching you.
BOTH: We cannot touch,
I long for your touch. [
They
touch
their
breasts.
]
PENELOPE: We cannot touch
because we both are suspended . . .
YOUNG PENELOPE: Above or below our life together . . .
PENELOPE: But we cannot thread our lives
into the eye of time,
into the eye of the needle . . .
BOTH: That pierces the heart . . .
PENELOPE: And heat of the moment.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I know a lot about threads
and how far they stretch
and what happens
when they break and disappear.
PENELOPE: Sometimes you have to undo the tapestry
and start again.
But it is never the same.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Something has changed.
PENELOPE: Something is missing.
BOTH: Something is longing.
PENELOPE: What is missing is only the golden threads
that hook themselves into the human heart
and pull upon the other,
to an anchored and shared
destination.
It is only those threads that I weave
and spin in my arrivals and departures.
They lodge themselves in the heart.
YOUNG PENELOPE: In this pulling and tension
between what connects and separates us,
the golden thread that will not break
always pulls the anchor in my heart.
PENELOPE: We are both suspended
upon the invisible thread of a time
that does not meet the heat of the physical.
YOUNG PENELOPE: We are suspended like stars.
We watch the light of the other
but we cannot feed from each other’s heat.
Who are the philosophers who say
that the physical does not matter?
PENELOPE: I feel everything
through the longing of my body,
the longing of my deep rebellion.
BOTH: I am from another world, another time
that has burned into the fragility
of the passing moment,
the moment that has become my eternity.
YOUNG PENELOPE: For I am meant to live
from the moments I have had with you
for the rest of my life,
beyond and further
than any trained navigator can go.
PENELOPE: Ulysses, you have shipwrecked me
on an island surrounded by men
whom I must seduce
so that I can remain devoted
and faithful to you,
so that I keep you alive in me.
YOUNG PENELOPE: How do you seduce a man?
PENELOPE: Through sexual favours?
YOUNG PENELOPE: Through food and comfort?
BOTH: That is not seduction,
only a temporary need gratification
that one can get with anyone,
at any time.
PENELOPE: Seduction of all the senses.
I know the secrets of the sirens.
I know how to keep men
burning and longing.
I am from the hidden,
the unknown, the untouched.
YOUNG PENELOPE: For ten years they have lived outside me.
For ten long years they seek
my favours and choice
of one of them.
At any time they could have and can,
conquer, and steal what is not theirs.
Instead they wait for the prize.
PENELOPE: To taste and eat
from the seed of the seductress
who is both a bird and a fish.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Aren’t you glad that I learned to swim
in uncharted and unmapped waters
so that I can live
on this suspension of time, in longing?
Aren’t you glad that I swim
in uncharted and unmapped waters,
the darkest turbulence of my heart,
so that I can learn the secrets of seduction
that keep me in love and others desiring me?
PENELOPE: Like you, Ulysses, I am a navigator
and influence the burning of my vessel
so that you may see me,
but others can come and claim this fire.
YOUNG PENELOPE: Like you, Ulysses,
I seduce the senses of men . . .
PENELOPE: And influence their hearts to follow me . . .
BOTH: In preparation for their arrival and departure.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I am your love,
and yet I am unattainable
and absent from you.
PENELOPE: I am from your hidden world,
from your sunken world,
from your lost and forgotten ideals,
from the ashes of your youth,
from the sparks of your passion and desire.
YOUNG PENELOPE: I am the one you love,
the one you avoid,
the one you hide from,
the one you find too intense . . .
PENELOPE: too demanding,
too overwhelming
and yet you will not let me swim past you.
BOTH: Why do you keep me alive
in the ashes of your unspoken and unfulfilled?
YOUNG PENELOPE: Do you have any idea
the deep despair and aloneness
I retreat into
when I cannot hear your voice,
see the sea in your eyes,
feel your heat near me,
feel your heat on me and in me?
BOTH: I am Penelope the blesséd and curséd.
PENELOPE: In my courtyard
I have naked men that seek me,
and I desire and long for the absent,
the uncharted, the unmapped.
BOTH: I seek the journey of the heart.
I seek the body and seed of Ulysses.
PENELOPE: And there is my blessing and curse.
For twenty years I have ached for him,
longed for him, searched in the sea for him,
asked the sirens about the secrets of his heart.
BOTH: All remain silent.
All remain hidden,
unseen and still.
PENELOPE: Did you hear that?
There it goes again.
The creaking and moaning of a vessel
that has been on the sea for too long.
You all have come from the darkness
to take parts of my life,
to make it yours.
I have travelled into the unmapped
and uncharted worlds
of the searching, the seeking,
the deep longing of the heart.
YOUNG PENELOPE: The unfilled heart.
PENELOPE: The untouched desires.
BOTH: The fires that burn and keep me alive.
PENELOPE: I have waited for you to arrive.
You have arrived at the precise moment
of my departure.
BOTH: Will you stay?
PENELOPE: Will you take me with you when you leave?
Have you been searching
for decades or eons,
an eternity?
BOTH: “There is the sea and who will drink it dry?”
21
YOUNG PENELOPE: Have you brought
the turbulence of the sea with you,
in you?
PENELOPE: Do I want you to stay?
I can see you,
smell you, sense you,
but something is preventing me
from touching you.
YOUNG PENELOPE: The physical.
How I desire the physical.
Even my teacher Socrates understood
all experience comes through senses,
the blood of the physical.
BOTH: For I desire and know
only what is of earth,
sea, sky, and man.
PENELOPE: In my tapestry I weave the mighty breakers
that have shipwrecked me here.
YOUNG PENELOPE: In my tapestry
the salt of your tears
and seed can be tasted.