Monday, 16 June 2008

Quartett


Valmont I thought your passion for me extinguished. Whence this sudden rekindling. And with such youthful violence. Too late in any case. You will no longer set my heart aflame. Not even once. Not anymore. I’m telling you this not without regret, Valmont. In any case there were minutes, perhaps should I say moments, a minute, that’s an eternity, where I was happy thanks to your company. I speak on my behalf, Valmont.What do I know of your feelings. And perhaps I should rather speak of minutes, in which I could use you for this, you, that was your capacity to feel something in the operation of my physiology, which seems in recollection to be a feeling of happiness. You haven’t forgotten how to operate this machine. Don’t take your hand away. Not that I would feel anything for you. It is my skin which remembers.

[by Heiner Mueller , 1980 ]

4 comments:

  1. Vollmond by Pina Bausch


    O you, heavenly custodian
    of oaths!
    Turn your gaze
    on my great grief,
    see your everlasting guilt!
    Hear my lament,
    mighty god!
    Through his most doughty deed,
    that you rightly desired,
    you sacrificed him
    who wrought it
    to the curse which had fallen on you:
    this innocent had
    to betray me
    so that I should become a woman of wisdom!

    Do I know now what is your will?

    Everything, everything,
    everything I know,
    all is now clear to me!
    I hear your ravens
    stirring too;
    with dreaded desired tidings
    I now send them both home.
    Rest, rest now, o god!

    ReplyDelete
  2. (She signs to the vassals to lift Siegfried's
    body on to the funeral pyre; at the same
    time she removes the ring from Siegfried's
    finger and gazes thoughtfully at it.)

    Now I take up
    my inheritance.
    Accursed ring,
    terrible ring,
    I take your gold
    and now I give it away.
    Wise sisters
    of the water's depths,
    you swimming daughters of the Rhine,
    I thank you for your good counsel.
    I give you
    what you crave:
    from my ashes
    take it for your own!
    The fire that consumes me
    shall cleanse the ring from the curse!
    You in the water,
    wash it away
    and keep pure
    the gleaming gold
    that was disastrously stolen from you.

    ReplyDelete
  3. (She has put on the ring
    and now turns to the funeral pyre
    on which Siegfried's body lies
    stretched. She snatches from
    one of the vassals a huge torch,)
    (swings it and points towards
    the background.)

    Fly home, you ravens!
    Recount to your master
    what you have heard here by the Rhine!
    Pass
    by Brünnhilde's rock:
    direct Loge, who still
    blazes there, to Valhalla;
    for the end of the gods
    is nigh.
    Thus do I throw this torch
    at Valhalla's vaulting towers.

    ReplyDelete
  4. (She hurls the torch into the pile of wood,
    which quickly bursts into flame. Two ravens
    fly up from the rock by the shore
    and disappear into the background.)
    (Brünnhilde catches sight of her horse,
    which two young men lead in. She runs
    towards it, takes hold of it and quickly
    unbridles it: then leans towards it
    confidentially)

    Grane, my steed,
    greetings!
    Do you too know, my friend,
    where I am leading you?
    Radiant in the fire,
    there lies your lord,
    Siegfried, my blessed hero.
    Are you neighing for joy
    to follow your friend?
    Do the laughing flames
    lure you to him?
    Feel my bosom too,
    how it burns;
    a bright fire
    fastens on my heart
    to embrace him,
    enfolded in his arms,
    to be one with him
    in the intensity of love!
    Heiajoho! Grane!
    Greet your master!
    Siegfried! Siegfried! See!
    Your wife joyfully greets you!

    ReplyDelete