Tiresias

For the 2010 Alabama All-State Middle School Choir, the 2010 Salem-Keizer All City Honors Choir, and the Macalester College Choral Department, Eugene Rogers, conductor. Text by Marisha Chamberlain.

Tiresias, the most famous prophet of ancient Greek mythology, is featured in stories about the King of Thebes, Oedipus, and Odysseus. They spent portions of their life as a woman and portions as man, portions seeing and blind, and were granted the gift of seven lifespans. Tiresias thus became a liminal figure–arbitrating the spaces between male and female, sightedness and nonsightedness, mortality and immortality, and human and divine. Their experiences gave them extraordinary depth of perception from all perspectives, and though Tiresias’ prophecies were often very brief and sometimes enigmatic, they were never wrong. As usual with prophetic figures, it was (and still is) up to the people consulting the prophet to figure out what was meant and how to translate the prophetic words into action.

A Man Called Tiresias
A man called Tiresias! A prophet!
Young as a blade of grass.
Old as the molten core.
Stepped to earth as a man.
Then was transformed to a woman.

Of man and of woman,
What have you come to know?
Speak to us, Tiresias.

Oh, young men and young women,
I, Tiresias,
Speak to you only in these words:
Keep close.
Keep close to each other.
Keep close.

A man called Tiresias!
A prophet whose eyes were blinded.
How could he see to speak?
He only saw more clearly.
Turned from the past.
And saw the future!

Of days past and future days,
What have you come to know?
Speak to us, Tiresias.

Oh, you children of the future,
I, Tiresias,
Speak to you only in these words:
Hold on.
Hold on together.
Hold on.

–Marisha Chamberlain

Choral