If you read enough of the historical articles
in this publication you might start getting the idea that
women didn’t used to drink.
Which was generally true during certain eras of human
history when society frowned on the ladies partaking in
what was thought to be a male pastime.
But there are exceptions to every rule, and if you dig
deep enough you’ll find any number of drunken heroines.
Ever heard of Long Megg? The unofficial duchess of the
Thames district in Elizabethan England? No? Too bad. She
was huge. Huge in just about every way someone
can be. Imagine Megg coming at you from down the street;
she’s close to seven feet tall and weighs a shade
better than 350 pounds. There are scars on her knuckles
from her occasional participation in boxing matches. And
she’s utterly shit-faced. And singing. With good reason—men
have come from all over Europe to see if they can out drink
her and she laid every last one of them under the table.
Would you get out of her way? Sure you would, and so did
everyone else. Nobody with any sense messed with
Long Megg.
Or how about Emily D. West Morgan? Most people know her
by her nickname, the Yellow Rose of Texas. She single-handedly
saved the nascent Republic of Texas from the predations
of Mexican president Antonio Lopez de Santa Anna — the
same Santa Anna who took the Alamo. As he marched northward
through Texas, chasing Sam Houston’s bedraggled troops,
he overtook the tiny burg of North Washington. One of his
captives was the Yellow Rose.
Santa Anna could go hardly an hour without dosing himself
with food, women and opium, and it was only a matter of
time before he worked his way to the Yellow Rose. Knowing
that Houston’s army was planning a sneak attack, she
allowed herself to be taken into Santa Anna’s tent,
where she went to work on El Presidente with several bottles
from her personal stock of champagne. When Houston’s
troops attacked, Santa Anna was so befuddled he fled into
the scrub brush wearing only a silk dressing gown. He was
captured the next day. The wily Yellow Rose of
Texas was immortalized in a song that is sung by drunken
Texans to this day.
Or Mrs. Chung, the most feared pirate in Chinese history?
She drank rice and plum wine by the gallon, including a
special cocktail of her own invention, made by soaking the
heart of a captured enemy in rice wine for a week. She’d
polish off the human-heart infused wine then fry up the
organ in a wok for dinner. At one time, Mrs. Chung’s
pirate armada was thought to be the fifth largest navy in
the world. It took the combined navies of China, England,
and the Netherlands to finally take her down. Even after
her capture she remained a popular folk hero in China, surviving
well into her eighties as the owner of one of the most popular
saloons in the country.
I could go on, trolling through history, unearthing legions
of exceptional female drunkards, but to truly appreciate
the powerful combination of estrogen and alcohol we have
to return to the very dawn of Western civilization. Long
before individuals like Megg, the Yellow Rose and Chung
made their marks in a world dominated by men, a powerful
and ferocious tribe of women ruled the vines.
The Maenads
These roistering hellions from ancient Greece were the
original lady drunkards, the templates from which all future
contenders were drawn.
They were the handmaidens of Dionysus, the god of wine,
and believe you me, if you were a god, you’d want
handmaidens like the Maenads. They intoxicated themselves
on bowl after bowl of explosively potent, blood-red wine
and spread the word of their Lord with extraordinary vigor
and diligence.
Dionysus wasn’t at all popular with Greek men when
his cult flowed out of the East and set up shop in Attica.
Athenian patriarchs were suspicious of religious rites wherein
womenfolk got all liquored-up, danced naked in the streets
and engaged in all sorts of shocking and lewd behavior.
According to legend, one Greek king in particular, Pentheus,
was particularly displeased with the Maenads, and decided
to put an end to their frightening debauchery once and for
all. He summoned a platoon of soldiers and went marching
off into the woods around Mount Cithaeron to make some arrests
and restore the status quo.
The Maenads had other ideas.
They left one soldier alive and sent him scurrying back
to town, where he told the tale to a throng of antsy spectators.
It involved blood. Lots and lots of blood. And intestines
flying all over the place. And the violent removal of heads.
And the positioning of one specific head, Pentheus’s,
atop an ash branch, and the subsequent parading of said
head through the city’s gates in the hands of a Maenad
named Agave, who, as it happened, was Pentheus’s mother. Cripes!
But that, of course, is just a legend, undoubtedly propagated
by the male chauvinist pigs of the day. In actuality, the
drunken female worshippers of Dionysus probably never tore
anyone limb from limb or trotted about with heads on sticks.
Their rites were primarily grand bouts of inebriation, followed
by hours of dancing and a slight upturn in healthy and harmless
promiscuity. But even these relatively benign acts were
enough to make the Athenian patriarchs twitchy (though the
men’s efforts at quashing the wine rites consisted
mostly of anemic speeches and impotent displays of Apollonian
piety).
The wine cult grew at a bewildering rate, and before long
it became the single most popular sect in all of Greece.
By the time Greeks had arisen to their full splendor, laying
the foundations of Western science, art, warfare and philosophy,
the cult attracted thousands of worshippers, female and
male alike, to the annual Festival of Dionysus, a week-long
bender of such gleeful decadence it’d make the worst
frat-house story you’ve ever heard seem like a particularly
banal episode of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood.
Cleopatra
Ancient history records the names of three women of such
heart-stopping beauty they have stepped into the realm of
legend: Nefertiti, ancient queen of all Egypt, the curves
of whose neck were said to cause men to faint; Helen of
Troy, who’s face launched a thousand ships; and Cleopatra,
the Egyptian monarch who almost single-handedly sank the
entire Roman Empire. Give Nefertiti and Helen their props,
for they were beauties of divine stature, but save the last
stool at the bar—the tippler’s dais, if you
will—for Cleopatra. Of the lot, she was the one true
drunkard, the tipsy North Star in our wobbly universe.
A steady intake of high-end imported wine defined Cleopatra’s
daily routine. An earthenware decanter greeted her each
morning. Another accompanied her to dreamland at night.
She drank wine with her food, on her throne, in her private
time, and between the sheets. When she wanted to relax,
she bathed in a vat of it. Under her rule, vintners wielded
more power than many priests; and why not? The vintners’ efforts
helped douse her fiery temper, while priests were just annoying.
Cleopatra was also very adept at using wine as a weapon.
As a stateswoman and politician, few rulers of either sex
have been as effective or as ruthless.
The first foreign diplomat to sway under her kohl-eyed
gaze was none other than Julius Caesar. He ventured into
Cleopatra’s realm expecting an easily manipulated
feminine daintiness; instead found himself face to face
with a woman of singular intelligence, a disarming and ribald
wit, and looks that were surely gifts from on high. He was
smitten at once, but managed to hold his libidinous horses
in check — until the wine appeared. It far surpassed
anything of Roman vintage. Several deep cups taken in combination
with Cleopatra’s many charms brought the great Caesar
to his knees. He forgot his lofty station, his wife and
the fact that he was only marginally popular back in Rome.
Julius Caesar was intoxicated in every sense of the word.
Things looked ripe for a political merger between Rome
and Egypt. With Cleopatra’s help, Caesar came to feel
that all parties would benefit from such a pact. But then
he went and got himself all stabbed to death by Brutus and
his cabal of assassins on the Ides of March in 44 B.C.
Cleopatra was, to say the least, miffed at Caesar’s
demise. Her carefully laid plans expired with the Roman
emperor, and now that the Empire was in a state of political
unrest, she had to be on guard for a Roman invasion. On
top of everything else, she was forced to marry her cousin,
in abeyance to Egyptian pharaonic custom. His name was Ptolemy
XIII, and he was all of eleven years old. For Cleopatra,
governing through a bratty child while simultaneously listening
for Roman hoofbeats was a source of never-ending stress.
Wine baths helped some, but palace servants found their
Queen in a foul temper most of the time.
She needn’t have worried. As things turned out,
the next Roman to open communications with Egypt was the
famed general Mark Antony.
The pair first met when Cleopatra sailed to Mark Antony’s
palace at Tarsus in a gold-plated barge, surrounded by wine-bearing
nymphs, and dressed as a love goddess, complete with a see-through
gown. Delectable young girls pranced about in various stages
of undress, causing more than a few ripples among Antony’s
legionnaires. Antony himself — a feared military tactician,
clever politician and philosophical stoic—fell completely
apart. He cast aside his wife and scampered off like a puppy
with Cleopatra to her palace in Alexandria.
Rome was outraged, and the Empire found itself split in
two, one half ruled by Mark Antony and Cleopatra, the other
by Caesar’s son, Octavian; civil war huffing and puffing
on the horizon.
Mark Antony, besotted and emboldened by a constant supply
of fine Egyptian wine, felt he was not only right, but invincible
to boot. He was soon disabused of his overweening notions
when an armada of Roman ships — commanded by the brilliant
sea captain, Agrippa — kicked the living shit out
of Antony and Cleopatra’s navy at the Battle of Actium.
Antony was so devastated, he killed himself with a knife
to the gut, while Cleopatra fled back to Alexandria. Sensing
her impending doom, Cleopatra took a long milk bath, then
a long wine bath, then whacked herself by enticing an asp
to bite her wrist.
There is a moral here for Lady Drunkards. The next time
you decide to crank your feminine wiles and charms up to
full volume in order to cadge a drink from some hapless
barfly, don’t feel guilty. You are channeling Cleopatra,
and she would surely approve.
Besides, you just might, in the end, wind up with the
keys to a kingdom.
—Rich English
(Note: The author
is indebted to the works of Camille Paglia, Joan Druett,
H.D.F. Kitto and Carl Kerenyi.)
Next Issue: Ladies Thirst, Part
Two: Meet
an Irish pirate queen, a pair of tipsy female buccaneers
from the Caribbean, a wildcat from the American West and
the most famous lady outlaw who ever lived.