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Woman of Flowers (2018)

Saunders Lewis
add. Siôn Eirian

Ⓗ 2018 Siôn Eirian
Mae angen caniatâd cyn perfformio neu recordio unrhyw ran o’r ddrama.

Act 1, Golygfa 1


ACT ONE
SCENE ONE
THE GREAT HALL, MUR Y CASTELL, ARDUDWY
In the far distance, the storm continues.

Enter LLEW.

Gwydion watches, unseen.

Llew
Rhagnell. Rhagnell!

Rhagnell
I'm coming.

Llew
Rhagnell!


Enter RHAGNELL.

Rhagnell
My Lord?

Llew
Where's Blodeuwedd? In her chamber?

Rhagnell
Her chamber? Ha! Never by choice.
I saw her walk towards the river in the woods.

Llew
Go to her, and tell her this: my gifts for Math are ready.
We'll set out now while three hours of daylight still remain.
Gwydion and all the soldiers shall accompany me.

Rhagnell
And she's to remain here?

Llew
Yes. She'd better hurry if she wants to say goodbye.

Rhagnell
I'll tell her.


Exit Rhagnell.

Arianrhod
(Voice from off.)
And you made him complete?

Gwydion
I gave him everything he lacked. Why?

Arianrhod
(Voice from off.)
Why?
You won't find a man more wretched
In the whole of Gwynedd. Still inconsolable.

Gwydion
Not so. I've given him happiness.

Arianrhod
(Voice from off.)
He's a man now. But still miserable.
He'll grow old before he's known happiness.
You've given him keys to doors
But the world he wants refuses to open for him.
Time's running out.

Gwydion
Always so forlorn. I'm tired of your self-pity.

Llew
Gwydion. Where have you been? We're ready.

Gwydion
I saved you. Protected you. Gave you a future.
You had three callous fates placed upon you
Yet I undid each one.

Llew
No one could have wished for a better friend than you, Gwydion.

Gwydion
No. Yet no-one's been more badly rewarded for friendship
Than me. There was my brother Gilfaethwy. I had to live
Among the wild animals for years because of him,
Not knowing my place in the world, one day male,
The next female, creating a freakish family.
And now you. Who knows what misfortunes
You'll bring upon me. You whose own mother
Would have destroyed you had I not intervened.

Llew
A mother's loathing outweighs an uncle's love.

Gwydion
How is that? Every ruse of hers was thwarted. When she
Denied you a name, I construed your naming.
She decreed that you shall not carry weapons,
I tricked her into arming you with her own hands.
She destined that you may never find a wife born of man:
I spun for you from wild flowers a maiden
Better than any eye has seen.

Llew
But I still haven't escaped my mother's vengeance.
Blodeuwedd isn't like other women.

Gwydion
Indeed. In all my great span of spell making
I've loved many a girl and beast – and never yet
Did I find one woman to be like another.

Llew
She won't bear my children. Isn't that so Gwydion?

Gwydion
I can't remember Arianrhod's precise words.

Llew
I can. "He won't have a wife of woman born,
And won't have children of his own".
Those words are chiselled in my memory.
Is it a fate you can't circumvent? Will you fail?

Gwydion
A child can be a mixed blessing.
The last one I had... was a wolf.
In every other way Llew, Blodeuwedd is perfection.

Llew
I'll never forget that shimmering morning
When I first saw her, naked as that dawn itself,
The dew still glistening on her white breasts,
Breasts as pure as a snowdrop's petals
When the night furls their swell. She walked,
The soul of that virgin spring in a flawless mould of flesh.
I looked at her, and she at me.
I clothed her nakedness with kisses
And these arms, these awkward arms,
Which had been empty so long, encircled her.
But she was cold, so cold. I've never seen
A trace of a blush upon her cheeks, only a pallid glow,
Like that of the moon casting its random light
On the world below. Her very blood is alien.
She won't ever belong. To anyone.
She's closer to the wild animals in the forest
Than she is to me. That's her world. You know that.

Gwydion
And I know both worlds. In these arms I've held a range
Of females, and believe me lad, on a warm spring morning
It's the same feel to the softest girl's skin and a hog's hide.

Llew
One foul night of howling gales and sleeting rain,
She ran from my bed and into the storm's rage.
I followed - full of suspicion and anger
Beneath my cloak a sword. But no one came to her.
Not even the wolves were out on such a night.
Yet there she was, dancing to the tempest's fury.

Gwydion
You can't cleave a creature from its kindred.

Llew
I was frightened and called out. But she didn't hear.
And with the wind lashing trees and splintering boughs
I was lost in a fearful world
Where the only things that held their own
Were rock and rain, the stormy dark,
And her, Blodeuwedd... I ran after her,
Shouted louder, grasped her arm...
"You've caught me" she said, suddenly sad
Like a child woken from some distant dream
"You've caught me. Let's go home."
And I saw, in that night's storm
That I had no place in her life.
Why does a heart of ice lie beneath a breast
That excites desire like the first sun of summer.


Enter Blodeuwedd.

Blodeuwedd
I received your message.

Llew
Yes lady, we must go.

Blodeuwedd
And Gwydion too?

Llew
Gwydion too.

Blodeuwedd
The day's short, and soon it'll be night.
Llew, stay here. I don't want
To spend tonight without you.

Llew
You won't be alone.
You have your maid, and many servants.

Blodeuwedd
I've never parted from you before;
It frightens me, being left here.

Llew
Since when?

Blodeuwedd
My spirit's restless. Wait for tomorrow's dawn;
The sun will speed your journey to Caer Dathl.

Llew
No. Everyone's ready. We must go,
Math the king expects us.

Blodeuwedd
Magician – am I beautiful?
Are you pleased with your work?

Gwydion
I'll tell you this, my girl. Your beauty's unmatched.
You're the masterpiece of all my magic.

Blodeuwedd
But you did me a disfavour when you chained
My free nature with flesh and sinew
And placed me in this world
Where favours must be asked of husbands
And then not granted. And these codes
That I can't comprehend. I should despise you
And yet my instinct is to like you.
You too spent summers beneath the leaves.
You know the feel of earth on flesh
And the sounds of nature's stirrings in the grass.

Gwydion
Ssh. Don't talk about that here – it shames me.

Blodeuwedd
I don't know what it is to be ashamed...
Stay with me until my lord returns. Protect me.

Llew
Come uncle, it's time to leave.

Gwydion
Farewell my little petal girl. I'm old as oak.
You'd soon tire of my company.
The heady smells of spring surround you still,
The blooms I beaded to form your features
Haven't withered. Stay young, forever. Farewell.

Blodeuwedd
Shall we three ever be together again?
My heart's heavy. Farewell.


Exit Gwydion.

Blodeuwedd
Llew
If you believed me you wouldn't go today.

Llew
My life can't be ruled on a girl's whim.

Blodeuwedd
I know the seasons better than you.
I sense each change in wind and rain and sun.
Why shouldn't I also read the seasons of a man?

Llew
Don't be afraid. I'm destined
That no harm will easily befall me.
And you be wise. Don't stray too far from home.
Don't let the woodlands tempt you out at dusk,
But stay among my people here,
Be your best Blodeuwedd. I'll only be three days.
Farewell, farewell.


Exit Llew. Enter Rhagnell.

Blodeuwedd
He didn't listen. He doesn't see.

Rhagnell
Three days, no more.

Blodeuwedd
That's all it took to make me. How much less
To unmake me. For me to become nothing again.
Llew too fears the future. And he fears me.

Rhagnell
What makes you say that, child?

Blodeuwedd
Before you came to seek me, in the woods,
I could hear them talking.

Rhagnell
Him and Gwydion. From the woods?

Blodeuwedd
I have a kestrel's eye, a bat's ear.

Rhagnell
Don't tell me that you can fly as well.

Blodeuwedd
In my dreams I do.

Rhagnell
We all do that. Even me. Who's too old to run
Or to even see my path as I used to.

Blodeuwedd
Why did they give me you as a maid?

Rhagnell
What I lack in steadiness I make up for with wisdom.
Gwydion knows that. I have the knowledge that you lack.

Blodeuwedd
Llew hates his mother. I know that.

Rhagnell
No. But she resents him. And he despairs.

Blodeuwedd
You know her history. Perhaps that's why
Gwydion chose you. You're meant to tell me.

Rhagnell
Her history is that shame begets shame.

Blodeuwedd
How? I need you to tell me.
There's a history behind my being.
But I feel I've no past and no future.
Who am I, Rhagnell?

Rhagnell
You're woman, Blodeuwedd.
That gives you enough past
And future to carry with you.
(She pauses.)
I'll tell you about Arianrhod's shame.
It will make you marvel at the world you've entered.
Arianrhod and Gwydion grew up in the court
Of their uncle, the Great King Math.
So did their brother Gilfaethwy, an evil one, by all accounts.
King Math had a foot maid. A young innocent.
Gilfaethwy raped her. The brute. And apparently
With Gwydion's help. Though I find that hard to believe.
As punishment the brothers were banished to the woods,
And turned into animals. I've heard it said
They were forced to mate with each other
And became father and mother to various beasts.
After three years, their penance done, they returned to Math's court.

Blodeuwedd
And Arianrhod?

Rhagnell
Gwydion proposed her as Math's new foot maid.
He accepted. But first, to prove her virginity
Before the assembled court she had to step over a magic wand.
Imagine her shock when during the test
She gave birth to a sturdy boy.
Math named him Dylan and he ran from the fortress
Till he found the sea and swam away.
In shame Arianrhod ran from the court but as she ran
Something small dropped from her womb.
Arianrhod didn't pause to look at it.
Gwydion picked the thing up and secreted it in a chest
In his chamber where it survived and grew.

Blodeuwedd
And became Llew?

Rhagnell
He did. Gwydion adopted him.
In her anger Arianrhod cursed the boy and decreed
He wouldn't have a name or weapons or a wife.

Blodeuwedd
My part in this.

Rhagnell
Yes, Gwydion has spent his life
Righting the wrongs Llew suffered.
Gilfaethwy died. No one mourned him.
Arianrhod lives alone, outside society.

Blodeuwedd
Poor Arianrhod. And that little foot maid.
The women fared badly in this history.

Rhagnell
Now Blodeuwedd, has that helped
You forget your own small despair?

Blodeuwedd
No Rhagnell. It's reminded me
That I was made solely for his happiness.
But now, I'll have time to dwell on my own thoughts.
My lord has gone away!

Rhagnell
Why should you be afraid? This is your fortress.
These are your lands and here your word is law.
There's no one here who doesn't love you.
I would lay down my life for you if need be.

Blodeuwedd
No. It's not men I fear
But being on my own – this solitude.
My lord has gone away!

Rhagnell
What is this?
I've heard you countless times wanting to flee
And heard you curse the man who made you wife.
Why this change?

Blodeuwedd
You'll never understand my agony.
You don't know the loneliness that gnaws.
Your world's full – you've got a home.
Loved ones, family, sisters, brothers,
You're not an alien in this world.
Wherever mankind walks, you have familiar paths
And all of Gwynedd, where your forebears lived,
Is your hearth. That's something I don't have.
There's no headstone with a family name for me
In this world I'm rootless, set apart.
That's why I fear. What's that noise?

Rhagnell
Someone far off hunting in the woods.

Blodeuwedd
My lord's gone away. Between us
There was never any passion. He knows nothing
Of the dark desires woven into my nature
And I know nothing of his nobility.
His tame mind, his joy in friendships
Yet without him and Gwydion
I'm totally adrift and unanchored
With nature's wild waves surging in my blood.
God be my witness – I don't want the blame
When this harm falls upon us.

Rhagnell
That hunt's getting closer. You can see them now.

Blodeuwedd
Yes. They're in full cry. Look!
The stag's hooves are skimming the earth
Like oars hitting spume. The scenting dogs
Bound over the trail, and thundering horses
Pound out the passing furlongs. Nature
At its glorious best, full of breathless beauty.
The hunter as one with the vibrant land –
I could love a hunter –

Rhagnell
Why d'you think they've stopped?

Blodeuwedd
The horses are exhausted, the stag's escaped.
They know that it'll soon be dark.
Where are they from d'you think?

Rhagnell
Shouldn't we offer them shelter for the night?
They're looking at our fort. Turning their horses
Towards us. Blodeuwedd?

Blodeuwedd
Yes, offer them shelter. Food. Wine.
I can't let my lord find fault with me
For turning a nobleman away
As dusk unseats the day.

Rhagnell
Lady, this is how you should be,
Full of warmth and welcome. I'll go
And talk to their lord. You, stay light of heart
Set sorrows aside.


Exit Rhagnell.

Blodeuwedd
My beating breast, has the hour come?
Freedom, excitement; these are my real masters
And my imperative is lust – the lust that drives the seed
To prise through a shroud of earth to reach the sun.
There's a shoot in me that seeks the light
And wants to flourish and burst into fruit
Without a blade to prune it back. I know
That this huntsman is an emperor of passion;
I know the music of a horn – it wasn't my husband's
Thin lips that pursed to blow those lusty calls
But stronger lips, swelling with blood red bloom,
A much more fitting match for mine.


Rhagnell returns.

Rhagnell
Lady, Gronw Pebr, Lord of Penllyn
Is the man. He waits to greet you.

Blodeuwedd
How barren are those words. A brazen bugle
Not a wench's tongue should announce that name.
Let's go to welcome him.


Exeunt.


INTERLUDE



CAER ARIANRHOD, ARFON
Enter Arianrhod.

Arianrhod
Women take in strays and strangers.
Offering solace, seeking love.
I'm drawn to the wounded and the wanting.
Perhaps to atone for failing my runt of a son.
Gwydion found some softness in her heart
And reared it. That was atonement too.
It gave Gwydion purpose. But it gave me my weakness.
I'm easily tricked.
Gwydion and Llew came to my fort disguised and
Stole from me weapons and a name
And undid my curses.
For Blodeuwedd now the danger
Is not what might be taken from her, but what she finds.
She'll feast on new fruit and hunger for more.


Exit Arianrhod.

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