Act 1
LIGHTS OFF;
WHITMAN'S FIRST WORDS
ARE HEARD IN THE DARK.
WHITMAN: Love thoughts
SPEAKER 1: love-juice,
SPEAKER 2: love-odor,
SPEAKER 3: love-yielding,
SPEAKER 4: love-climbers,
WHITMAN: and the climbing sap,
SPEAKER 1: arms and hands of love,
SPEAKER 2: lips of love,
SPEAKER 3: phallic thumb of love,
SPEAKER 4: breasts of love,
WHITMAN: bellies pressed and glued together with love.
LIGHTS ON, NIGHT.
SCENE TITLES PROJECTED:
Scene 1:
Walt Whitman, "Love-thoughts"
PHOTOS OF THE CHARACTERS
MAY BE PROJECTED.
WHITMAN AND A "BOY"
MOVE CLOSE TOGETHER,
ADDRESS EACH OTHER:
BOY: The wet of woods through the early hours.
WHITMAN: Two sleepers at night
lying close together as they sleep,
BOY: One with an arm
slanting down across
and below the waist of the other.
WHITMAN: The smell of apples,
BOY: aromas from crushed sage plant,
WHITMAN: mint,
BOY: birch bark.
WHITMAN: The boy's longings,
the glow and pressure
as he confides to me
what he was dreaming.
BOY: The dead leaf falling its spiral whirl,
falling still and content to the ground.
WHITMAN: The sensitive, orbic, underlapped brothers,
that only privileged feelers
may be intimate where they are.
BOY: The mystic amorous night.
WHITMAN: The curious roamer the hand,
roaming all over the body,
BOY: the bashful withdrawing of flesh
where the fingers soothingly pause
and edge themselves.
WHITMAN: The limpid liquid within the young man,
BOY: the vex'd corrosion
so pensive and painful,
WHITMAN: the torment,
BOY: the irritable tide
that will not be at rest,
WHITMAN: the like of the same I feel,
the like of the same in others.
-
-
- SCENE 2:
Rufus Griswold, "Once licentiousness"
- SCENE 2:
-
-
-
- RESPONDING TO THE EARLIER VERSE,
GRISWOLD APPEARS
WITH LEAVES OF GRASS;
SPEAKS TO WHITMAN:
- RESPONDING TO THE EARLIER VERSE,
-
GRISWOLD: Once licentiousness
shunned the light;
now it writes books
showing how grand and pure it is,
and prophecies
its own ultimate triumph.
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE, HOLDING UP LEAVES OF GRASS.
-
-
-
- It is impossible to imagine
- how any man's fancy
- could have conceived
- such a mass of stupid filth.
- We leave this gathering of muck
- to the laws
- which have power to suppress
- such gross obscenity.
-
-
-
- FIRE AND BRIMSTONE PROPHECY
-
-
-
- "Peccatum illud horribile,
- inter Christianos non nominandum."
-
-
-
- WHISPERS, THREATENINGLY, TO WHITMAN
-
-
-
- (That vile sin among Christians not to be named.)
-
-
-
- WHITMAN AND SPEAKERS RESPOND TO GRISWOLD.
-
-
-
- Scene 3:
Walt Whitman, "Through me"
- Scene 3:
-
WHITMAN: Through me many long dumb voices,
SPEAKER 1: voices of the interminable generations of slaves,
SPEAKER 2: voices of prostitutes and deformed persons,
SPEAKER 3: voices of the diseased and despairing,
SPEAKER 4: voices of wombs and the fatherstuff,
SPEAKER 1: voices of the rights of them the others are down upon.
WHITMAN: Through me forbidden voices,
SPEAKER 2: voices of sexes and lusts,
SPEAKER 3: voices veiled
WHITMAN: and I remove the veil,
SPEAKER 4: voices indecent
WHITMAN: by me clarified and transfigured.
SPEAKER 1: I do not press my finger across my mouth!
SPEAKER 2: I keep as delicate around the bowels
as around the head and heart,
SPEAKER 3: copulation is no more rank to me than death is.
SPEAKER 4: I believe in the flesh and the appetites,
SPEAKER 4: seeing, hearing, and feeling are miracles,
and each part and tag of me is a miracle.
WHITMAN: TO BRONSON ALCOTT
AND HENRY DAVID THOREAU,
WHO APPEAR IN THE NEXT SCENE:
-
-
- If I worship any particular thing
- it shall be some of the spread of my body;
-
SPEAKER 1: You my rich blood,
your milky stream pale strippings of my life;
SPEAKER 2: Breast that presses against other breasts
it shall be you,
SPEAKER 3: Root of washed sweet-flag,
timorous pond-snipe,
nest of guarded duplicate eggs,
it shall be you,
SPEAKER 4: Mixed tussled hay of head and beard and brawn
it shall be you,
WHITMAN: TO BRONSON ALCOTT
AND HENRY DAVID THOREAU:
-
-
- Trickling sap of maple,
- fibre of manly wheat, it shall be you;
-
SPEAKER 1: Winds whose soft-tickling genitals rub against me
it shall be you,
SPEAKER 2: Broad muscular fields,
SPEAKER 3: branches of liveoak,
SPEAKER 4: loving lounger in my winding paths,
it shall be you,
WHITMAN: TO BRONSON ALCOTT
AND HENRY DAVID THOREAU,
Hands I have taken,
face I have kissed,
mortal I have ever touched,
it shall be you.
-
-
- ALCOTT AND THOREAU
RESPOND TO WHITMAN.
- ALCOTT AND THOREAU
-
-
-
- Scene 4:
Bronson Alcott:
"This morning with Henry David Thoreau"
- Scene 4:
-
-
-
- ALCOTT ADDRESSES AUDIENCE;
THOREAU ACCOMPANIES HIM,
FOCUSING ON WHITMAN.
- ALCOTT ADDRESSES AUDIENCE;
-
ALCOTT: This morning
with Henry David Thoreau
to Brooklyn,
to see Walt Whitman.
-
-
- I find this Whitman
- likely to make his mark on Young America
- he affirming himself
- to be its representative man and poet.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN AND THOREAU
EYE EACH OTHER SUSPICIOUSLY; - ALCOTT OBSERVES.
- WHITMAN AND THOREAU
-
-
-
- Thoreau and Whitman
- each seemed planted fast in reserve,
- surveying the other curiously,
- like two beasts,
- each wondering
- what the other would do,
- whether to snap
- or run.
-
THOREAU: TO ALCOTT, INDICATING WHITMAN
-
-
- There are two or three pieces
- in his book
- which are disagreeable
- to say the least,
- simply sensual.
- He does not celebrate love at all.
- It is as if
- the beasts spoke.
- Men have been ashamed of themselves
- with reason.
- I do not wish
- his poems' sensual parts
- were not written
- but that men and women
- were so pure
- they could read them
- without harm,
- that is,
- without understanding them.
-
-
-
- TO HIMSELF; A NEW THOUGHT
-
-
-
- Of course,
- if we are shocked,
- whose experience are we reminded of?
-
-
-
- SCENE 5:
Walt Whitman, "By silence"
-
-
-
- WHITMAN RESPONDS TO THOREAU
-
WHITMAN: By silence
the pens of poets
have long connived
at the filthy law
that sex,
desires,
lusts,
organs,
acts
are unmentionable,
to be ashamed of,
driven to skulk out of literature.
SPEAKER 1: This filthy law
has to be repealed
it stands in the way
of great reforms.
SPEAKER 2: It is in the interest of women
as well as men
that there should be
no infidelism about sex,
but perfect faith.
SPEAKER 3: The present diluted deferential love
is enough to make a man vomit;
SPEAKER 4: as to manly friendship,
everywhere observed in the states,
there is not the first breath of it
to be observed in print.
WHITMAN: The body of a man or women
is so far quite unexpressed in poems;
SPEAKER 1: that body is to be expressed,
SPEAKER 2: and sex is.
WHITMAN: TO JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS,
WHO APPEARS IN NEXT SCENE
-
-
- All theories stagnate in their vitals,
- cowardly and rotten,
- if they cannot publicly accept, and publicly name,
- with specific words,
- the things on which all decency,
- all that is worth being here for
- depend.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS, INSPIRED BY WHITMAN'S WORDS,
STEPS INTO THE LIGHT.
- SYMONDS, INSPIRED BY WHITMAN'S WORDS,
-
-
-
- Scene 6:
John Addington Symonds, "Is it not strange?"
- Scene 6:
-
-
-
- HERE, SYMONDS IS TWENTY-SEVEN;
HE HAS BEEN MARRIED THREE YEARS
AND HAS TWO DAUGHTERS;
HE'S WELL-EDUCATED,
AND COMES FROM AN OLD, ENGLISH, - ARISTOCRATIC FAMILY,
BUT HE MUST WRITE
LITERARY AND ART CRITICISM
TO SUPPLEMENT HIS INHERITED INCOME
- HERE, SYMONDS IS TWENTY-SEVEN;
-
-
-
- HE INTRODUCES HIMSELF
TO THE AUDIENCE
AS A CLOSE CONFIDANT,
FULL OF INNER PASSION
- HE INTRODUCES HIMSELF
-
SYMONDS: Is it not strange I should have read
Whitman's Leaves of Grass only this week?
If I had read it years ago,
and if I had understood,
I should have been
a braver, better, different man now.
-
-
- The Leaves is not a book.
- It is a man,
- miraculous in his vigour,
- and love,
- and omniscience,
- and animalism.
- and omnivorous humanity.
-
-
-
- ELATED AT HIS RECENT DISCOVERY OF WHITMAN'S
- CELEBRATION OF LOVE BETWEEN MEN
-
-
-
- His Calamus poems
- treat the whole matter newly.
- This man has said
- what I have burned to say;
- what I should have done
- if opinion and authority
- and the contamination of vile lewdness
- had not ended in muddling my brain.
-
-
-
- WITH SLIGHT SELF-MOCKERY
-
-
-
- Yet even with these bruised wings and faded petals
- it is good to know
- that we bear in our breast
- the Psyche and Flower
- of the noblest
- most masculine Democracy.
-
-
-
- RAISING HIS ARM
TO INTRODUCE
THE WHITMAN POEM THAT FOLLOWS
- RAISING HIS ARM
-
-
-
- Behold!
- A light has risen
- which may not be denied.
- LIGHTS UP ON WHITMAN.
Scene 7:
Walt Whitman, "Alone I had thought" - AS WHITMAN SPEAKS
HE IS JOINED, ONE BY ONE,
BY A GROUP OF YOUNG MEN.
WHITMAN AND THE SPEAKERS
ADDRESS EACH OTHER
WHITMAN: Alone I had thought --
yet soon a silent troop gathers around me,SPEAKER 1: Some walk by my side, and some behind,
SPEAKER 2: and some embrace my arms or neck,
WHITMAN: They, the spirits of friends,
dead or alive --
thicker they come,
a great crowd,
and I in the middle,SPEAKER 3: Collecting,
dispensing,
singing in spring,
there I wander with them,WHITMAN: Plucking something for tokens --
something for these,
till I hit upon a name --
tossing toward whoever is near me,SPEAKER 4: Here! lilac, with a branch of pine,
SPEAKER 1: Here, out of my pocket,
some moss
which I pulled off a live-oak in Florida,
as it hung trailing down,SPEAKER 2: Here, some pinks and laurel leaves,
and a handful of sage,SPEAKER 3: And here what I now draw from the water,
wading in the pond-side,WHITMAN: (0 here I last saw him that tenderly loves me -
and returns again,
never to separate from me,
And this, 0 this
shall henceforth be
the token of comrades --
this calamus-root shall,
Interchange it, youths, with each other!
Let none render it back!)WHITMAN GIVES CALAMUS-ROOT
TO SYMONDS, WHO TAKES IT GLADLY,
HOLDING IT UP TO AUDIENCE-
-
- Scene 8:
John Addington Symonds:
"I am taking with me to London"
- Scene 8:
-
-
-
- SYMONDS ADDRESSES AUDIENCE,
HIS CONFIDANT, WITH URGENCY,
ON THE TRAIL OF CALAMUS.
- SYMONDS ADDRESSES AUDIENCE,
-
SYMONDS: I am taking with me to London
an introduction
to the American Unitarian clergyman,
Moncure Conway,
whose biography of Whitman
appeared in the Fortnightly.- From Conway I hope to learn
something more
about the innovator. - I shall not omit
- to ask Conway questions
- about the substance
- of Whitman's Calamus poems
- with a view to hearing
- what a nest for it
- there is in America.
-
-
- TIME PASSES, HE REFOCUSES;
MOOD/LIGHTING CHANGE
- TIME PASSES, HE REFOCUSES;
-
-
-
- I saw Conway.
- I could not get him
- to say anything explicit about Calamus.
- This means that Calamus
- is really very important
- and Conway refuses
- to talk it over with a stranger.
- He cannot be oblivious
- of its plainer meanings.
- If I see Conway again
- I shall consult him further
- about certain Whitman poems.
-
-
-
- FRED VAUGHAN STEPS FORWARD,
HIS WORKING CLASS DEMEANOR AND SPEECH
CONTRAST WITH
SYMONDS' ARISTOCRATIC ENGLISH.
- FRED VAUGHAN STEPS FORWARD,
-
-
-
- SCENE 9:
Fred Vaughan,
"To form the acquaintance"
-
VAUGHAN: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- To form the acquaintance
- of any Boston stage man,
- get on one of those stages
- running to Charleston Bridge,
or Chelsea Ferry. - Introduce yourself as my friend.
-
-
-
- By the way, Walt,
- what do you think of the Common?
-
-
-
- You tell me Mr. Emerson came to see you.
- I heard him lecture on Friday last.
- Though much pleased with the subject,
- I did not at all like his strained delivery.
- But Walt,
- when I thought
- how a few days before
- he had been so attentive to you,
- my heart warmed toward him very much.
- I think he has that in him
- which makes men
- capable of strong friendships.
- This theme he touched on,
- and said that
- a man whose heart was filled with Friendship,
- warm, ever-enduring,
- not-to-be-shaken-by-anything,
- was one to be set on one side
- apart from other men.
-
-
-
- VAUGHAN AND WHITMAN FORM A TABLEAU
- REPRESENTING SINCERE FRIENDS
-
-
-
- There, Walt,
- what do you think of them
- setting up you and myself
- and one or two others that we know
- in some public place,
-
-
-
- HE LOOKS AROUND THE STAGE AREA
-
-
-
- with a large placard on our breasts:
-
-
-
- VAUGHAN HOLDS UP A PLACARD
- WITH AN ORNATE SIGN:
- "SINCERE FRIENDS"
-
-
-
- Good doctrine that.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN MOVES AWAY
- FROM VAUGHAN
- TO INSPECT HIS PROOF SHEETS,
- AND TO DISTANCE HIMSELF
- FROM VAUGHAN'S INTENSE NEED
-
-
-
- I am glad, Walt,
- you are succeeding so well with your book.
- Send me some of the first proof sheets.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN RESPONDS NEGATIVELY TO VAUGHAN'S DEMAND
-
WHITMAN: TO VAUGHAN
-
-
- Are you the new person drawn toward me?
- To begin with, take warning,
I am surely far different
from what you suppose.
-
VAUGHAN: How is this, Walt?
I have written to you twice
since I heard from you.WHITMAN: Do you suppose
you will find in me your ideal?
Do you think it is so easy
to have me become your lover?VAUGHAN: What the devil is the matter?
Nothing serious I hope.WHITMAN: Do you think the friendship of me
would be unalloyed satisfaction?VAUGHAN: I cannot succeed
in hearing one word from you.
WHITMAN: Do you think I am trusty and faithful?
VAUGHAN: I swear
I would have thought you
the last man in the world to neglect me.WHITMAN: Do you see no further than this facade,
this smooth and tolerant manner of me?VAUGHAN: I was very much pleased to hear from you.
WHITMAN: Do you suppose yourself advancing on real
ground toward a real heroic man?VAUGHAN: I want to see you, Walt,
very much indeed.WHITMAN: Have you no thought 0 dreamer
that it may be all maya, illusion?VAUGHAN: I have never thought
more frequently about you.WHITMAN: o the next step may precipitate you!
VAUGHAN: Call and see me
as soon as you arrive in New York,
I have much,
very much
to talk to you about.WHITMAN: o let some past deceived one
hiss in your ears,
how many have prest on
the same as you are pressing now,
How many have fondly supposed
what you are supposing now
only to be disappointed.VAUGHAN: TIME PASSES, HE REFOCUSES;
LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE-
-
- Walt,
- I am to be married tomorrow,
- at 213 West 43rd street.
- I have invited no company.
- I want you to be there.
- Do not fail, please,
- I am very anxious you should come.
-
-
-
- FOUR YEARS PASS,
- HE REFOCUSES;
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE.
- Walt,
- my life has turned out
- a poor miserable failure.
- I have not been honest to myself,
- my family,
- nor my friends.
-
-
-
- I have written to you, Walt,
- at least once a week
- for the last four years.
- Sometimes I write long letters,
- sometimes short ones.
- I often keep them months
- before I destroy them.
- There is never a day passes
- but what I think of you.
- My love my Walt
- is with you always.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM VAUGHAN
TO A PASSING STRANGER.
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM VAUGHAN
-
- Scene 10:
Walt Whitman, "Passing Stranger!"
- Scene 10:
-
WHITMAN: Passing stranger!
You do not know how longingly
I look upon you,
You give me the pleasure of your eyes,
face, flesh, as we pass --
you take of my beard,
breast, hands, in return;
I am to think of you when I sit alone
or wake at night alone,
I am to wait --
I do not doubt I am to meet you again,
I am to see to it that I do not lose you.-
-
- LIGHT ON EACH MAN
AS HE INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO WHITMAN
- LIGHT ON EACH MAN
-
SPENCER: Daniel Spencer
WHITMAN: told me
he had never been in a fight --SPENCER: do not drink at all --
gone in Second New York Light Artillery,
deserted, returned to it.WHITMAN: Slept with me.
WILSON: David Wilson, about 19.
WHITMAN: walking up from Middaugh Street --
WILSON: work in blacksmith shop in Navy Yard --
live in Hampden StreetWHITMAN: walks together
Sunday afternoon
and night.
Slept with me.OSTRANDER: Horace Ostrander from Otsego County
60 miles west of Albany,
twenty-eight years of age.-
-
- About 1855
- went on voyage to Liverpool--
- my experiences as a green hand.
-
WHITMAN: Slept with him.
TAYLOR: Jerry Taylor,
from New Jersey,
Second Regiment.WHITMAN: Slept with me last night.
Weather soft,
cool enough,
warm enough,
heavenly.-
-
- BLACKOUT. SOUND OF DRUMS, BUGLES,
MARTIAL MUSIC; PERHAPS A FEW SHOTS IN DISTANCE
- BLACKOUT. SOUND OF DRUMS, BUGLES,
-
-
-
- Scene 11:
Walt Whitman,
Thomas Sawyer,
Lewis K. Brown,
Douglass Fox,
"Began my visits"
- Scene 11:
-
-
-
- LIGHTS UP ON WHITMAN.
IN BACKGROUND, PERHAPS, - PROJECTIONS OF CIVIL WAR PHOTOS
- LIGHTS UP ON WHITMAN.
-
WHITMAN: Began my visits
among the Army hospitals.-
-
- On the banks of the Potomac,
- a large brick mansion,
- the Lacy House,
- used as a hospital,
- only the worst cases.
- A man with his mouth blown out.
- Outdoors,
- in front,
- several dead bodies
- each covered with a brown woolen blanket,
- this war's regulation shroud.
- Nearby,
- at the foot of a tree,
- a heap
- of amputated feet,
- legs,
- arms,
- pieces of men,
- cut,
- bloody,
- black and blue,
- swelled and stinking,
- a load for a one-horse cart.
- In the garden, rear,
- a row of graves,
- a very long row of graves.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
- WHITMAN, BANTERINGLY, TO AUDIENCE
- AS HIS SOPHISTICATED,
NEW YORK LITERARY MEN-FRIENDS
-
-
-
- Have been on the battle-field among the wounded --
-
-
-
- GOES TO MISSISSIPPI CAPTAIN
-
-
-
- struck up a tremendous friends
- with a young Mississippi captain (about 19)
- that we took prisoner
- badly wounded
- at Fredericksburgh.
- He is in the hospital here,
- met him first in the Lacy House,
- his leg just cut off.
- Poor boy,
- he has suffered a great deal
- has eyes bright as a hawk,
- face pale --
- our affection is quite an affair,
- quite romantic
-
-
-
- TO YOUTH,
- WHO PUTS HIS ARM AROUND WHITMAN'S NECK,
- DRAWS HIS FACE DOWN TO KISS HIM
-
-
-
- sometimes
- when I lean over
to say I am going, - he puts his arm round my neck,
- draws my face down,
-
-
-
- WHITMAN LOOKS UP; TO NEW YORK FRIENDS
-
-
-
- quite a scene
- for the New Bowery Theater.
-
-
-
- SERIOUSLY; LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE
-
-
-
- I find the sick and dying soldiers cling to me --
- These thousands
- of badly wounded young men,
- pallid with diarrhea,
- dying with pneumonia,
- open deeper mines in me than any yet.
- I sometimes fancy myself with typhoid,
- or under the knife,
- tried by terrible tests,
- the living soul's,
- the body's tragedies,
- bursting the petty bonds of art.
- Compared to such scenes
- what are your dramas
- and poems,
- even the tearfulest?
-
-
-
- WHITMAN, SAWYER, AND BROWN
MOVE TO AND AWAY FROM EACH OTHER
IN A TRIANGULAR DANCE
OF ATTRACTION AND RETREAT.
LIGHTS UP ON SAWYER,
WHO INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO WHITMAN
- WHITMAN, SAWYER, AND BROWN
-
SAWYER: Thomas Sawyer.
-
-
- LIGHTS UP ON BROWN, WHO INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO WHITMAN
-
BROWN: Lewis K. Brown.
SAWYER: TO BROWN
-
-
- Give Walter Whitman my love and best wishes for ever;
- tell him I have got
- that little Book witch he gave me,
- and I shall always keep it
- for old acquaintance sake.
-
WHITMAN: TO SAWYER
-
-
- Tom,
- I was at Armory Hospital last evening,
- saw Lewy Brown,
-
-
-
- WHITMAN SMILES AT BROWN; GOES TO HIM
-
-
-
- sat with him a good while.
- Lew is so good,
- so affectionate --
- when I came away,
- he reached up his face,
- I put my arm around him,
- and we gave each other a long kiss,
- half a minute long.
-
-
-
- BROWN REACHES UP HIS FACE TO WHITMAN
- WHO PUTS HIS ARMS AROUND THE SOLDIER;
- THEN WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM BROWN,
- FOCUSES ON SAWYER
-
-
-
- We talked about you, Tom.
- I wish you was here.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN GLANCES AT BROWN;
- ADDRESSES SAWYER
-
-
-
- Somehow I don't find the comrade that suits me to a dot --
- and I won't have any other,
- not for good.
- I don't know how you feel about it,
- but it is the wish of my heart
- that if you should come safe
- out of this war,
- we should come together again,
- where we could make a living,
- and be true comrades
- and never be separated--
- and take Lew Brown too.
-
-
-
- BROWN JOINS WHITMAN AND SAWYER. WHITMAN ADDRESSES SAWYER
-
-
-
- If it is destined
- that we shall not meet again,
- you have my love
- whatever should keep you from me,
- no matter how many years.
-
BROWN: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- I received a letter to day from Thomas Sawyer.
- He did not mention your letter.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS TO SAWYER, ADDRESSES HIM.
-
WHITMAN: Tom,
I have not heard from you for some time.
Lewy Brown has received two letters.
Walter in Ward E has received one.-
-
- MOVES TO SAWYER.
-
-
-
- I was sorry you did not come up to my room
- and get the things
- you promised to accept from me;
-
-
-
- WHITMAN SURVEYS SAWYER'S BODY
-
SAWYER: a good strong blue shirt
a pair of drawers.WHITMAN: I should have often thought:
"Now Tom may be wearing
around his body
something from me."
Not a day passes, nor a night,
but I think of you.-
- I hope God
will put it in your heart
to bear toward me
a little of the feeling
I have for you. - SAWYER TURNS AWAY FROM WHITMAN TO
BROWN
- I hope God
-
-
- I suppose my letters sound strange to you,
- but I am only expressing
- the feelings of my heart.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS TO BROWN, WHO ADDRESSES HIM.
-
BROWN: I am sorry to hear you wer sick, Walt.
-
-
- It would be better for your health
- if you would give yourself that furlou
- but the boys about the Hospital
- could ill spare you,
- if you are as good to them
- as you wer to me.
- My leg continues to mend verry slow.
-
WHITMAN: TO BROWN
-
-
- Lewy,
- dear son and comrade,
- your photograph has been received,
- and the good sight of your face welcomer than all,
- my darling.
- o Lewy,
- how glad I should be to have you with me.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN ADDRESSES SAWYER, TURNS BACK ON BROWN
-
-
-
- Tom,
- you did not answer
- my last two letters,
- still I will write again.
- I see Lewy Brown always.
- Lewy's leg has not healed.
-
-
-
- Tom,
- I should like to know how things have gone for three months past.
- I can't understand
- why you have ceased to correspond.
- Do you want to shake me off?
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
END OF SAWYER-BROWN-WHITMAN TRIANGLE.
WHITMAN TURNS TO A NEW FRIEND,
DOUGLASS FOX,
WHO APPEARS IN LIGHT.
WHITMAN SPEAKS TOBROWN
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
-
-
-
- Lew,
- I wish you to go in Ward G
- and find a very dear friend of mine in bed 11
-
-
-
- FOX INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO AUDIENCE
-
FOX: Douglass Fox.
WHITMAN: TO BROWN, INDICATING FOX
-
-
- Tell him I sent him my best love,
- and that he must not forget me,
- though I know he never will.
-
FOX: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- You will allow me to call you Father,
- won't you?
- Both my parents are dead
- and now, Walt,
- you will be a second father to me.
-
-
-
- I have never before
- met with a man that I could love as I do you.
- Still there is nothing strange about it.
-
WHITMAN: Dear son,
I cannot bear the thought
of being separated from you--
I know I am a great fool about such things,
but I tell you the truth.-
-
- I do not think one night has passed
- when I have been at the theatre
- but what amid the play
- I would see your face before me,
- and I would realize
- how happy it would be
- if I could leave all the fun and noise
- and be with you.
- I hope you are quite well
- and with your dear wife,
- for I know you have long wished
- to be with her.
-
FOX: I have often thought
of what you told me
when I said
I am certain
I will come back to Washington.WHITMAN: A great many of the boys
have said the same
but none has returned.FOX: I am sorry it is so
but after I had thought it over
I concluded it would be better for me
to go into some business here.LIGHTING, MOOD CHANGE.
BUSH: INTRODUCING HIMSELF TO AUDIENCE.
-
-
- Alonzo S. Bush
-
-
-
- TO WHITMAN.
- I am glad to know, Walt,
- that you are once more
- in the Noted City of Washington
- So that you can go often
- and see that Friend of ours
- at Armory Square Hospital
- Lewy K. Brown
-
-
-
- BROWN JOINS BUSH IN LIGHT
-
-
-
- that fellow
- that went down on your BK,
- both so often with me.
- I wish that I could see him this evening
- and go in the Ward Master's Room
- and have some fun
- for he is a gay boy.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE; BUSH REFOCUSES
-
-
-
- I am very Sorry indeed
- to hear that after laying so long
- he is about to loose his leg.
-
-
-
- THROUGHOUT WHITMAN'S NEXT SPEECH
WE MAY OCCASIONALLY HEAR
BROWN'S GROANS AND HALF-COHERENT TALK ABOUT WHITMAN
- THROUGHOUT WHITMAN'S NEXT SPEECH
-
WHITMAN: Today,
after dinner,
Lewy Brown had his left leg amputated
five inches below the knee.I was present at the operation,
most of the time at the door.-
-
- Lewy came out of the ether.
- Then it bled.
- They thought
- an artery had opened.
- They began to cut the stitches and make a search
- but after some time concluded
- it was only surface bleeding.
- They then stitched it up again
- and Lew felt every one of these stitches.
- They did not think it safe
- to give him more ether.
-
-
-
- BROWN CRIES OUT
-
-
-
- I caught glimpses of him
- through the open door.
- At length they finished,
- and brought the boy in on his cot.
- The ether and exhaustion
- had their effect for some time.
- His face was very pale, his eyes dull.
-
-
-
- BROWN CRIES FOR "WALT"
-
-
-
- He remained very sick,
- opprest for breath,
- with deathly feeling,
- in the stomach,
- head,
- and great pain in the leg.
- As usual in such cases
- he could feel
- the lost foot and leg very plainly.
- The toes would get twisted,
- and not possible to disentangle.
-
-
-
- BROWN AGAIN CRIES FOR "WALT"
-
-
-
- About 7 o'clock in the evening
- he dozed into a sleep
- for a couple of hours.
- The rest of the night
- was very bad.
- I remained all night,
- slept on the adjoining cot.
- The same next night.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
- WHITMAN REFOCUSES
- ON DOUGLASS FOX
- AND ADDRESSES HIM
-
-
-
- Douglass,
- I have thought of you many times
- since the days there in the hospital
- during the war.
- Lewis Brown is well.
- I see him often.
- Tom Sawyer,
- (Lewy Brown's friend)
- passed safe through the war --
- but we have not heard from him now for two years.
- All the big hospitals are long broken up.
- I send you my love,
- dear friend and soldier.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
- WHITMAN REFOCUSES ON THE AUDIENCE
- AS CONFIDANT.
- WHITMAN IS AN OLD, ILL MAN HERE,
- BUT STILL FULL OF INNER FIRE.
-
-
-
- There is nothing beyond the comrade --
- the man,
- the woman:
- nothing beyond:
- even our lovers
- must be comrades:
- even our wives, husbands, mothers, fathers:
- we can't stay together, feel satisfied,
- grow bigger,
- on any other basis.
- You look on me now with the ravages
- of that war experience
- finally reducing me to powder.
- I had to give up health for it,
- but I am satisfied
- with what I got.
- I got the boys:
- the boys:
- thousands of them:
- they were,
- they are,
- they will be mine.
- I gave myself for them:
- myself:
- I got the boys:
- but for this
- I would never have had Leaves of Grass,
- the consummated book.
- I got that:
- the Leaves,
- the boys.
-
-
-
- ONE OF WHITMAN'S BOYS,
JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS,
NOW 30-YEARS OLD,
FOR THE FIRST TIME REACHES OUT TO HIM.
SYMONDS DIRECTLY ADDRESSES WHITMAN,
WHO IS SEATED WITH HORACE TRAUBEL
- ONE OF WHITMAN'S BOYS,
-
-
-
- Scene 12:
- John Addington Symonds, "When a man"
-
SYMONDS: When a man
has dedicated a poem to another man
I think he is bound
to confess the liberty.-
-
- This is my excuse
- for sending you
- the crude work
- in which you may detectsome echo
- of your Calamus theme.
-
-
-
- Since I first took up Leaves of Grass
- in a friend's rooms
- at Trinity College
- six years ago,
- your poems
- have been my constant companions.
- I have found in them
- pure air and health --
- the free breath of the world
- when often cramped by illness.
-
-
-
- What one man can do
- by communicating to those he loves
- the treasures he has found
- I have done among my friends.
- I say this to tell you,
- as simply as I can,
- how much lowe you.
-
-
-
- I am an Englishman,
- a historian and critic of art and literature,
- aged thirty,
- married,
- with three daughters.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS AND WHITMAN
IN MOTIONLESS TABLEAU
WHILE TRAUBEL INTRODUCES HIMSELF
TO AUDIENCE
- SYMONDS AND WHITMAN
-
TRAUBEL: Horace Traubel.
In the last four years of Whitman's life
I recorded his words faithfully
after daily visits.-
-
- He knew I would write of him someday.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN, RESPONDING TO SYMONDS,
SPEAKS TO TRAUBEL
- WHITMAN, RESPONDING TO SYMONDS,
-
WHITMAN: That was the first of Symonds' letters.
-
-
- ADDRESSING SYMONDS ALONG WITH TRAUBEL
-
-
-
- Symonds has always seemed to me
- a forthright man,
- unhesitating,
- without cant:
- not slushing over,
- not freezing up.
- He is warm
- (not too warm),
- a bit inquisitive,
- ingratiating.
- A Symonds letter
- is a red day for my calendar.
- I am always strangely moved by a letter from Symonds:
- it makes the day,
- it makes many days,
- sacred.
-
SYMONDS: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- Your words
- give me the keenest pleasure.
- I had not exactly expected
to hear from you. - I was beginning to dread
- that the poem I sent
- confounded your own pure feeling
- with the baser metal
- of my own nature.
- You have reassured me.
-
-
-
- For many years
- I have been attempting
- to explain in verse
- some of the forms
- of what you call "adhesiveness."
- I have traced passionate friendship
- through Greece,
- Rome,
- the medieval
- and the modern world.
-
-
-
- While engaged in this work
- I first read Leaves of Grass.
- Especially did I then learn that
- the Comradeship,
- which I conceived
- as on a par
- with the sexual feeling
- was real--
- not a delusion of distorted passions,
- not a dream of the past --
- but a vital bond
- of man to man.
-
-
-
- Yet even then
- how hard I found it --
- brought up in English feudalism,
- educated at an aristocratic school
- and over-refined university
- to be a simple human being.
- How you helped me!
-
-
-
- I have pored for continuous hours
- over the pages of Calamus
- (as I used to poor over Plato),
- longing to hear you speak,
- burning for a revelation
- of your developed meaning,
- panting to ask --
- is this what you would indicate?
- Most of all
- did I desire
- to hear from your own lips
- some story of athletic friendship
- from which to learn the truth.
- Yet I dared not address you.
- Shall I ever be permitted to question you?
-
WHITMAN: TO TRAUBEL
-
-
- Well, what do you think of that?
- Do you think that could be answered?
- You know I hate to be catechized.
-
-
-
- Symonds is right,
- no doubt,
- to ask the questions:
- I am just as much right
- if I do not answer them.
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS
- I often say to myself about Calamus
- perhaps it means more or less
- than what I thought myself.
- means different:
- perhaps I don't know
- what it all means
- perhaps never did know.
-
-
-
- TO TRAUBEL
-
-
-
- My first instinct
- about all that Symonds writes
- is violently reactionary
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS
-
-
-
- is strong and brutal for no, no, no.
- Then the thought intervenes
- that I maybe do not know all my own meanings.
- Sometime or other
- I will respond to Symonds
- definitely about Calamus.
-
-
-
- TO TRAUBEL
-
-
-
- You will be writing about Calamus some day
- and what I say
- may help to clear your ideas.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN ENDS EMPHATICALLY,
EVEN DESPERATELY. HE KNOWS
HIS SEXUAL MAN-LOVE CALAMUS POEMS
MAY WELL COMPROMISE
HIS FUTURE REPUTATION
AS REPRESENTATIVE AMERICAN MAN AND POET.
- WHITMAN ENDS EMPHATICALLY,
-
-
-
- Calamus needs clear ideas:
- it may be easily,
- innocently
- distorted.
-
End Act I
-