Act 2
-
-
- Scene 1:
Peter Doyle, "Yes, I will talk of Walt"
- Scene 1:
-
- DOYLE SPEAKS AS A VITAL OLD MAN
- REMINISCING ABOUT THE YOUNG MAN
- HE WAS WHEN HE MET WHITMAN;
- TO THE AUDIENCE AS SYMPATHETIC INTERVIEWERS
- WHO HAVE COME TO ASK ABOUT WHITMAN
-
DOYLE: Yes, I will talk of Walt,
nothing suits me better.
-
-
- How we met
- is a curious story.
- We felt to each other at once.
- I was a street car conductor
- in Washington.
- The night was very stormy --
- he came down to take the car --
- the storm was awful.
- Walt had his blanket --
- it was thrown around his shoulders --
- he seemed like an old sea-captain.
- He was the only passenger,
- it was a lonely night,
- so I thought
- I would go in and talk to him.
- Something in me made me do it
- and something in him
- drew me that way.
- He used to say
- there was something in me
- had the same effect on him.
- Anyway, I went into the car.
- We were familiar at once --
- I put my hand on his knee --
- we understood.
- He did not get out
- at the end of the trip --
- in fact
- went all the way back with me.
- From that time on
- we were the biggest sort of friends.
-
WHITMAN: TO DOYLE
-
-
- I think of you very often,
- dearest comrade,
- and with more calmness then when I was there--
- I find it first rate
- to know I shall return,
- and we shall be together again,
- Dear Boy.
- I don't know what I should do
- if I hadn't you to look forward to.
-
-
-
- Here in New York
- there is pretty strong enmity
- among certain classes
- toward me
- and Leaves of Grass --
- that it is a great mass of crazy talk
- and hard words,
- all tangled up,
- without sense or meaning
- (which by the by
- is, I believe,
- your judgment about it).
- But others sincerely think
- that it is a bad book,
- improper,
- and ought to be denounced
- and put down,
- and its author along with it.
-
DOYLE: TO AUDIENCE.
-
-
- Yes, Walt often spoke to me of his book.
- I would tell him
-
-
-
- DIRECTLY TO WHITMAN.
- I don't know
- what you are trying to get at.
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- And this is the idea
- I would always arrive at
- from his reply.
-
WHITMAN: All other peoples in the world
have their representatives
in literature;
here is a great big American race
with no representative.
DOYLE: He would furnish that representative.
WHITMAN: DIRECTLY TO DOYLE
-
-
- Dear Pete,
- I have made a change of base,
- from tumultuous, close-packed,
- world-like New York,
- to Providence
- this half-rural,
- third-class town.
-
-
-
- At both places I stop
- we have plenty of ripe fresh fruit
- and lots of flowers.
- Pete,
- I could now send you
- a bouquet every morning,
- far better than I used to,
- of much choicer flowers.
-
-
-
- GIVES DOYLE BOUQUET;
DOYLE HOLDS IT IN HIS ARMS
- GIVES DOYLE BOUQUET;
-
-
-
- In the evening
- I went by invitation
- to a party of ladies and gentlemen --
- mostly ladies.
- I made love to the women,
- and flatter myself
- that I created
- at least one impression --
- wretch and gay deceiver that I am.
- You would be astonished,
- my son,
- to see the capacity
- for flirtation with the girls --
- I would never have believed it of myself.
-
-
-
- Fortunate young man --
- ain't you --
- getting such instructive letters.
-
DOYLE: TO AUDIENCE
-
-
- I never knew a case
- of Walt's being bothered up
- by a woman.
- His disposition was different.
- Women in that sense
- never came into his head.
- I ought to know about him
- in those years --
- we were awful close together.
-
-
-
- Towards women generally
- Walt had a good way --
- he very easily attracted them.
- But he did that with men, too.
- It was an irresistible attraction.
- I've had many tell me --
- men and women.
- He had an easy, gentle way
- no matter who they were
- or what their sex.
-
WHITMAN: DIRECTLY TO DOYLE.
-
-
- My darling boy,
- if you are not well
- when I come back
- I will get a good room or two
- in some quiet place,
- and we will live together,
- and devote ourselves
- to making you healthier than ever.
- I have had this in my mind before
- but never broached it to you.
- My love for you
- is indestructible.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
WHITMAN'S SEXUALLY UNCONSUMMATED - PURSUIT OF DOYLE HAS LEFT HIM
DEPRESSED AND HUMILIATED.
HE DECIDES TO END THE PURSUIT;
GRABS BOUQUET HE GAVE DOYLE
AND FLINGS IT ON FLOOR.
LOOKING INTENTLY AT DOYLE:
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
-
-
-
- It is imperative
- that I remove myself
- from this incessant,
- enormous
- PERTURBATION.
-
-
-
SPEAKERS FOCUS ON DOYLE
-
SPEAKER 1: To GIVE UP ABSOLUTELY
SPEAKER 2: and for good,
SPEAKER 3: from this present hour,
SPEAKER 4: this FEVERISH,
SPEAKER 1: FLUCTUATING,
SPEAKER 2: useless,
SPEAKER 3: UNDIGNIFIED
SPEAKER 4: pursuit of P.D.
SPEAKER 1: so humiliating --
SPEAKER 2: (It cannot possibly be a success)
SPEAKER 3: LET THERE BE NO FALTERING
SPEAKER 4: avoid seeing him,
SPEAKER 1: and meeting him,
SPEAKER 2: or any talk or explanations
SPEAKER 3: or ANY MEETING WHATEVER,
SPEAKER 4: FROM THIS HOUR FOREVER,
SPEAKER 1: FOR LIFE.
SPEAKER 2: Depress the adhesive nature.
SPEAKER 3: It is in excess --
SPEAKER 4: making life a torment.
WHITMAN: All this diseased, feverish, disproportionate adhesiveness.
SPEAKER 1: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- Remember Fred Vaughan.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE
-
WHITMAN: We parted there,
you know, Pete,
at the corner of 7th Street,
Tuesday night.
-
-
- Parting though it was
- something in that hour
- left me pleasure
- and comfort for good --
- I never dreamed
- you made so much
- of having me with you
- nor that you could feel
- so downcast
- at losing me.
- I foolishly thought
- it was all on the other side.
- I now see clearly,
- that I was all wrong.
- Love to you,
- dear Pete,
- my darling boy.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING CHANGE. NIGHT. STARS.
A PAINTED, CARDBOARD MOON
MIGHT DESCEND ON A VISIBLE WIRE
- LIGHTING CHANGE. NIGHT. STARS.
-
DOYLE: TO AUDIENCE
How different Walt was then
in Washington
from the Walt of later years!
-
-
- TO WHITMAN
- I knew him to do wonderful lifting,
- running, walking.
- TO WHITMAN
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- I would go up to the Treasury building
- and wait for him to get through.
- Then we'd stroll out together,
- going wherever we happened to get.
- This occurred days in and out,
- months running.
- TO AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- TO WHITMAN
- We went plodding along the road.
- Walt always whistling
- or singing.
- We would talk of ordinary matters.
- He would recite poetry,
- especially Shakespeare
- he would hum airs
- or shout in the woods.
- He was always active, happy.
- Many of our walks
- were taken at night.
- TO WHITMAN
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- He never seemed to tire.
- When we got to the ferry
- opposite Alexandria
- I would say,
- TO AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- TO WHITMAN
- "I'll draw the line here
I won't go any further."
- TO WHITMAN
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- But he would take everything for granted --
- we would cross the river
- and walk home
- on the other side.
- TO AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- TO WHITMAN
- Walt knew all about the stars.
- He was eloquent when he talked of them.
- TO WHITMAN
-
WHITMAN: TO DOYLE
-
-
- Dear Pete,
- Dear son,
- I can almost see you
- drowsing and nodding
- and I am telling you something deep
- about the heavenly bodies
- and in the midst of it
- I look around
- and find you fast asleep
- and your head on my shoulder
- like a chunk of wood --
- an awful compliment
- to my lecturing powers.
-
-
-
- Good night, Pete --
- Good night,
- my darling son
- here is a kiss for you,
- dear boy --
- on the paper here --
- a good long one --
- I will imagine you
- with your arm around my neck
- saying
-
DOYLE: QUIETLY, TO WHITMAN
-
-
- "Goodnight, Walt" --
-
WHITMAN: and me --
"Goodnight, Pete."
-
-
- LIGHTS OUT ON DOYLE.
WHITMAN CONTINUES, ADDRESSING AUDIENCE.
WHILE WHITMAN SPEAKS
A SERIES OF PHOTOS OF HIM MAY BE PROJECTED,
TRACING IN CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER
HIS CHANGING IMAGE
FROM YOUTHFUL, EFFETE, BOHEMIAN DANDY
TO OLD, POET PROPHET.
- LIGHTS OUT ON DOYLE.
-
-
-
- Scene 2:
Walt Whitman, "Publish my name"
- Scene 2:
-
WHITMAN: Publish my name and hang up my picture
as that of the tenderest lover,
The friend the lover's portrait,
of whom his friend his lover was fondest,
Who was not proud of his songs,
but of the measureless ocean of love within him,
and freely poured it forth;
Who often walked lonesome walks
thinking of his dear friends, his lovers;
Who pensive, away from one he loved,
often lay sleepless and dissatisfied at night;
Who knew too well the sick, sick dread
lest the one he loved
might secretly be indifferent to him;
Whose happiest days
were far away through fields, on hills,
he and another wandering hand in hand,
they twain apart from other men;
-
-
- DOYLE JOINS WHITMAN,
PUTS HIS ARM AROUND WHITMAN'S SHOULDER;
WHITMAN PUTS HIS ARM AROUND DOYLE'S SHOULDER
- DOYLE JOINS WHITMAN,
-
-
-
- Who oft as he sauntered the streets,
- curved with his arm the shoulder of his friend --
- while the arm of his friend
- rested upon him also.
-
-
-
- BLACKOUT.
-
-
-
- ANOTHER OF WHITMAN'S MEN,
JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS, APPEARS AGAIN,
IN THE SPOT VACATED BY DOYLE.
SYMONDS' PHOTOGRAPH MAY BE PROJECTED
- ANOTHER OF WHITMAN'S MEN,
-
-
-
- SCENE 3:
John Addington Symonds, "I fear"
- SCENE 3:
-
-
-
- SYMONDS ADDRESSES WHITMAN DIRECTLY,
AS IF THEY ARE IN THE SAME SPACE;
WHITMAN IS SEATED WITH HORACE TRAUBEL.
- SYMONDS ADDRESSES WHITMAN DIRECTLY,
-
SYMONDS: I fear that the last time I wrote
I spoke something amiss.
I then asked you
questions about Calamus.
Since that time I have kept silent,
fearful I was ill-advised
in what I asked.
WHITMAN: TO TRAUBEL
He harps on the Calamus poems again --
always harping on "my daughter."
I suppose you might say:
TRAUBEL: Why don't you shut him up by answering him?
WHITMAN: TO AUDIENCE
-
-
- There is no logical answer to that.
- But I may ask in my turn:
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS
- "What right has he
- to ask questions anyway?"
-
-
-
- TO TRAUBEL
- Symonds' question
- comes back to me
- almost every time he writes.
- He is courteous enough about it
- that is the reason
- I do not resent him.
- But it always makes me a little testy
- to be catechized about the Leaves --
- I prefer to have the book
- answer for itself.
-
SYMONDS: TO WHITMAN.
-
-
- The reason why
- I have not published
- more than I have
- about your poems
- is that I cannot get quite
- to the bottom of Calamus.
- I wish I had your light upon it.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS REACHES OUT TO WHITMAN, BESEECHING.
-
WHITMAN: TO SYMONDS
-
-
- That question,
- he does ask it,
- again and again:
- asks it, asks it, asks it.
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS, TENDERLY.
- Anyway,
- Symonds is a royal good fellow.
- Look at the fight
- he has kept up with his body --
- his consumption --
- yes, and so far won.
- I have had my own troubles
- but Symonds is the noblest of us all.
- TO SYMONDS, TENDERLY.
-
-
-
- TO TRAUBEL
- Symonds has a few doubts
- yet to be quieted
- not doubts of me,
- doubts rather of himself.
- One of these doubts
- is about Calamus:
- TO TRAUBEL
-
SYMONDS: TO WHITMAN, PLEADING FOR A RESPONSE
-
-
- What does Calamus mean?
-
WHITMAN: That is worrying him a good deal --
my poems' involvement,
as he suspects,
in the passional relations of men with men --
the thing he reads so much of
in the literature of southern Europe
and sees something of
in his own experience.
He is always driving me about that:
SYMONDS: is that what Calamus means?
WHITMAN: because of me
or in spite of me,
SYMONDS: is that what Calamus means?
WHITMAN: TO TRAUBEL
-
-
- I have said no,
- but no does not satisfy him.
- He is very shrewd,
- very cute,
- in deadliest earnest:
- he drives me hard --
- almost compels me --
- is urgent, persistent:
- he sort of stands in the road and says:
-
SYMONDS: I won't move
till you answer my question.
WHITMAN: TO SYMONDS
-
-
- He is still asking the question.
-
SYMONDS: What the love of man for man
has been in the past
I think I know.
What you say it can and shall be
I dimly discern in your poems.
-
-
- But this hardly satisfies me
- so desirous am I
- of learning what you teach.
- Some day, perhaps,
- in your own chosen form --
- you will tell me more
- about the love of Friends.
- Till then I wait.
- Meanwhile
- you have told me more than anyone.
-
TRAUBEL: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- That's a humble letter enough.
- I don't see anything in it
- to get excited about.
-
WHITMAN: CLEARLY EXCITED
-
-
- Who's excited?
-
-
-
- TRAUBEL SHAKES HIS HEAD,
PUZZLED BY WHITMAN'S VEHEMENCE
- TRAUBEL SHAKES HIS HEAD,
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS
-
-
-
- That question,
- he does ask it.
- Anyway,
- I love Symonds.
- Who could fail to love
- a man who could write such a letter?
- I suppose he will have to be answered,
- damn, 'im!
-
-
-
- QUIETLY, TO HIMSELF
- Sometimes I wonder
- whether Symonds doesn't come under
- St. Paul's famous category --
- men leaving the natural use of women.
- QUIETLY, TO HIMSELF
-
-
-
- SYMONDS, MOVES TO A PODIUM
AND ADDRESSES AUDIENCE
AS A SYMPATHETIC CONFIDANT
- SYMONDS, MOVES TO A PODIUM
-
SYMONDS: In February 1877
I gave three lectures
on Italian history and culture
in the theatre
of the Royal Institution, London.
One day,
an old acquaintance
asked me to go with him
to a male brothel
near Regents' Park Barracks.
-
-
- A BRAWNY YOUNG SOLDIER APPEARS
-
-
-
- There,
- moved by something stronger than curiosity,
- I made an assignation
- with a brawny young soldier
- for an afternoon
- in a private room at the house.
-
-
-
- Naturally,
- I chose a day
- I was not wanted
- at the Royal Institution.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS STOPS TALKING,
TURNS TOWARD THE SOLDIER
WHO UNDRESSES SLOWLY,
WATCHING HIMSELF IN A MIRROR. - SYMONDS WATCHES THE SOLDIER
- WATCHING HIMSELF IN THE MIRROR.
- THE AUDIENCE WATCHES A MAN
- WATCHING A MAN WATCHING;
- THEN SYMONDS
DRAWS A CURTAIN OVER THE AREA WITH SOLDIER
AND TURNS BACK TO THE PODIUM
- SYMONDS STOPS TALKING,
-
-
-
- For the first time
- I shared a bed
- with one so ardently desired.
- He was a very nice fellow
- as it turned out:
- comradely and natural,
- regarding the affair
- from a business-like
- and reasonable point of view.
- For him
- it involved nothing unusual,
- nothing shameful;
- and his simple attitude,
- the not displeasing vanity
- with which he viewed
- his own physical attractions,
- and the genial sympathy
- with which he met
- the passion they aroused,
- taught me something
- about illicit sexual relations
- I had never before conceived.
- Instead of yielding to any brutal impulse,
- I thoroughly enjoyed
- the close vicinity
- of that splendid naked piece of manhood.
- Then I made him clothe himself,
- sat and smoked and talked with him,
- and felt,
- at the end of the whole transaction,
- that some of the deepest moral problems
- might be solved
- by fraternity.
- Within the sphere
- of that lawless, godless place,
- human relations --
- affections,
- reciprocal toleration,
- decencies of conduct,
- asking and yielding --
- concession and abstention --
- find a natural expression:
- perhaps more
- than in the sexual relations
- consecrated by middle-class matrimony.
-
-
-
- Meanwhile,
- I was giving my lectures.
- Very dull lectures they were,
- for my soul was not in them;
- my soul throbbed for the soldier,
- for escape
- from that droning lecture desk
- into a larger, keener existence.
- Little did I care
- what the gentlemen in frock coats
- and ladies in bonnets
- thought of my lectures.
- I knew
- the real arena was not
- in the theatre of disputations
- and explications of theories.
- It lay in a world each penetrates
- when the voice of the lecturer
- is no more heard
- in the theatre.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS TURNS AND JOINS SOLDIER,
BEHIND CURTAIN.
LIGHTS UP ON WHITMAN
WHO STEPS UP TO THE PODIUM SYMONDS VACATED:
THE VOICE OF THIS LECTURER IS HEARD IN THE THEATER
- SYMONDS TURNS AND JOINS SOLDIER,
-
-
-
- Scene 4:
Walt Whitman, "It is to the development"
- Scene 4:
-
WHITMAN: It is to the development,
identification,
and general prevalence
of that fervid comradeship,
the adhesive love
of man and man
at least rivaling
the amative love
of man and woman,
if not going beyond it,
that I look
for the counterbalance
to our materialistic,
vulgar American democracy,
and for the spiritualization thereof.
-
-
- Many will say
- it is a dream,
- and will not follow my inferences;
- but I confidently expect a time
- when there will be seen,
- running like a half-hid warp
- through all the myriad
- worldly interests of America,
- threads of manly friendship,
- fond and loving,
- pure and sweet,
- strong and life-long,
- carried to degrees
- hitherto unknown --
- not only giving tone
- to individual character,
- making it unprecedently emotional,
- muscular,
- heroic,
- and refined,
- but having the deepest relation
- to general politics.
- I say democracy infers
- such loving comradeship,
- as its most inevitable twin,
- without which
- it will be incomplete,
- in vain,
- and incapable
- of perpetuating itself.
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE.
-
-
- Scene 5:
Walt Whitman, "City of Orgies"
- Scene 5:
-
SPEAKER 1: give me now libidinous joys only!
SPEAKER 2: Give me the drench of my passions!
SPEAKER 3: Give me life coarse and rank!
-
-
- WHITMAN JOINS HIS SPEAK
-
WHITMAN: Today I go consort with nature's darlings --
tonight too.
SPEAKER 1: I am for those who believe in loose delights,
SPEAKER 2: I share the midnight orgies of young men.
SPEAKER 3: I dance with the dancers, and drink with the drinkers,
SPEAKER 4: The echoes ring with our indecent calls,
WHITMAN: I take for my love some prostitute --
I pick out some low person for my dearest friend,
SPEAKER 1: He shall be lawless rude, illiterate,
SPEAKER 2: he shall be one condemned by others for deeds done;
SPEAKER 3: I will play a part no longer --
Why should I exile myself from my companions?
SPEAKER 4: o you shunned persons!
I at least do not shun you,
WHITMAN: I come forthwith in your midst --
I will be your poet,
I will be more to you than to any of the rest.
-
-
- EDWARD CARPENTER
RESPONDS TO WHITMAN'S LAST LINES, INSPIRED.
PHOTO OF CARPENTER MAY BE PROJECTED.
HERE, CARPENTER IS 30-YEARS OLD
- EDWARD CARPENTER
-
-
-
- Scene 6:
Edward Carpenter, "There are many"
- Scene 6:
-
-
-
- CARPENTER INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO WHITMAN
-
CARPENTER: There are many here in England
to whom your words
have been the waking up to a new day.
-
-
- When I say "many"
- I do not mean a multitude
- (I wish I did)
- but many individuals
- each himself
- (or herself,
- for they are mostly women --
fluid, courageous, tender) - the centre of a new influence.
-
-
-
- Yesterday, there came
- (to mend my door)
- a young workman
- with the old divine light in his eyes,
- and perhaps,
- more than all,
- he has made me write to you.
- See, you have made the earth sacred for me.
- Because you have given me
- the ground for the love of men
- I thank you continually in my heart.
- (And others thank you
- though they do not say so.)
- For you have made men
- not ashamed
- of the noblest instinct of their nature.
- It is a pleasure to me
- to talk to you,
- for though I am a teacher,
- and speak publicly
- on issues of the day,
- there are many things
- I find it hard to say
- to anyone here.
-
WHITMAN: I wish to infuse myself among you
till I see it common for you
to walk hand in hand.
CARPENTER: Friend,
you have so infused yourself
that it is daily
more and more possible
for men to walk
hand in hand
over the whole earth.
My work is to carry on
what you have begun.
WHITMAN: TO CARPENTER
-
-
- The best of Carpenter
- is in his humanity:
- he was a university man,
- yet managed
- to save himself in time.
- So many university men
- sympathize with the struggle of the people
- but only see the battle from afar.
- Carpenter manages
- to stay in the middle of it.
-
-
-
- Carpenter is a radical of the radicals:
- a come-outer:
- one of the social fellows
- who stir up thought.
- He is a youngish man.
- What will come of his life
- is yet to be developed.
-
CARPENTER: On June 30, 1884,
in the morning,
I paid my last visit
to Whitman's small house
at 328 Mickle Street,
in Camden, New Jersey.
-
-
- We had a long and intimate conversation.
- He was very friendly and affectionate:
- sat by the open window
- while he talked about his book.
-
WHITMAN: What lies behind Leaves of Grass
is something that few, very few,
one here and there,
perhaps oftenest women,
are at all in a position to seize.
-
-
- It lies behind almost every line; but concealed,
- studiedly concealed;
- some passages
- left purposely obscure.
- There is something in my nature
- furtive like an old hen!
- You see a hen
- wandering up and down a hedgerow,
- looking apparently unconcerned,
- but presently
- she finds a concealed spot,
- and furtively lays an egg,
- and comes away
- as though nothing had happened!
- That is how I felt
- in writing Leaves of Grass.
- I think there are truths
- which it is necessary
- to envelope
- or wrap up.
-
-
-
- TWO TRUTHS STEP FORWARD.
THROUGHOUT THE NEXT EPISODE
STAFFORD, CATTELL, AND WHITMAN
MOVE AROUND EACH OTHER
IN ANOTHER TRIANGULAR DANCE
OF ATTRACTION AND RETREAT
- TWO TRUTHS STEP FORWARD.
-
-
-
- Scene 7
Walt Whitman, Harry Stafford, Ed Cattell, "The hour, night"
- Scene 7
-
-
-
- PHOTO OF STAFFORD MAY BE PROJECTED.
STAFFORD AND CATTELL
INTRODUCE THEMSELVES TO WHITMAN
- PHOTO OF STAFFORD MAY BE PROJECTED.
-
STAFFORD: Harry Stafford, eighteen-years-old.
CATTELL: Edward Cattell. Twenty-five.
STAFFORD TURNS AWAY FROM WHITMAN.
CATTELL MOVES CLOSE TO WHITMAN
AND KISSES HIM
WHITMAN: The hour, night.
Ed Cattell and I
at the front gate
by the road.
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM CATTELL
TO STAFFORD, WHO MOVES CLOSE TO WHITMAN
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM CATTELL
-
-
-
- Talk with Harry, gave him ring.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN GIVES HARRY RING:
BRIDE AND GROOM TABLEAU.
WHITMAN, PUTS HIS ARM AROUND STAFFORD,
BOTH TURN STAGE FRONT;
WHITMAN ADDRESSES JOHNSTON,
INVISIBLE IN THE AUDIENCE IN FRONT OF THEM
- WHITMAN GIVES HARRY RING:
-
-
-
- Thanks, my dear Johnston,
- for your invitation.
- to stay at your house.
- My (adopted) son,
-
-
-
- INDICATES STAFFORD
-
-
-
- a young man of eighteen,
- is with me now,
- sees to me,
- and occasionally transacts my business affairs;
- I feel somewhat at sea without him.
- Could I bring him with me,
- to share my room?
-
-
-
- WHITMAN, ARM STILL TIGHT AROUND STAFFORD,
- REFOCUSES ON JOHNSTON, IN AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- My dear Johnston, my nephew
-
-
-
- INDICATING STAFFORD
- and I when traveling
- always share the same room
- and the same bed,
- and would like best
- to do so there.
- I want to bring on a lot of my books --
- that is what my young man is for.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN SMILES CONTENTEDLY AT STAFFORD;
- STAFFORD SMILES BACK;
- THEN, WHITMAN TO HIMSELF:
-
-
-
- Evening.
- Sitting in room,
- had serious inward revelation
- about Harry.
- Saw clearly what it really meant.
- Happy and satisfied
- that this may last now
- without any more perturbation.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS TO CATTELL
-
-
-
- Ed, Don't . . .
- Do not call on me
- any more
- at the Stafford family,
- and do not call there at all
- any more.
- Don't ask me why.
- There is nothing in it
- that I think I do wrong,
- nor am ashamed of,
- but I wish it
- kept entirely
- between you and me --
-
-
-
- As to Harry,
- you know how I love him.
- Ed,
- you too
- have my unalterable love,
- and always shall have.
- I want you to come up here.
- When will you come?
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS TO STAFFORD
- WHO SITS PRACTICING HIS WRITING.
- WHITMAN SITS OPPOSITE, READING --
- A HAPPY PAIR.
-
STAFFORD: It is now a fine evening,
with an occasional gust of wind,
and the moon at times
shines out brightly.
-
-
- Mr. Whitman and I
- are sitting here
- in the room together;
- he is reading The New York Herald,
- and I am writing these lines
- for exercise
- for exercise.
-
-
-
- STAFFORD REFOCUSES
-
-
-
- It is a beautiful morning
- and you and I
- are feeling well and hearty.
PRACTICING WRITING AGAIN:
-
- My friend and I,
- he says,
- have had a happy night and morning.
-
-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
STAFFORD JUMPS UP,
POUNDS WRITING TABLE IN ANGER. - THEN, CONCILIATORY:
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE;
-
-
-
- It makes me feel so bad,
- Walt,
- to think how we spent
- the last day or two;
- and all for my temper.
- I will have to controle it
- or it will send me to the states prison
- or some other bad place.
- I know how I have served you
- on many ocassions before.
- I know it is my falt
- not yours.
- Can you forgive me
- and take me back
- and love me the same?
- I will try
- by the grace of God
- to do better.
- I cannot give you up.
- You may say
- I don't care for you,
- but I do,
- I think of you
- all the time,
- I want you to come up tomorrow night.
- I hope you will not disappoint me.
- You are all the true friend I have,
- and when I cannot have you
- I will go away someware,
- I don't know where.
-
WHITMAN: TO STAFFORD
-
-
- Not a day or night passes,
- Harry,
- but I think of you.
- Dear son,
- how I wish you could come in now,
- even but for an hour
- and take off your coat,
- and sit down in my lap.
- I want to see the creek again
- and I want to see you,
- my darling son.
-
STAFFORD: TO WHITMAN
-
-
- I will be up to see you on Thursday
- to stay all night with you,
- don't want to go to any bars then,
- want to stay in
- and talk with you,
- when I sar you,
- did not get time
- to say anything to you,
- did not have time
- to say scarcely anything.
- I want to get up to see you
- and have a good time
- for I can't let myself out here
- they are too nice for that.
-
WHITMAN: TURNS FROM STAFFORD TO CATTELL
-
-
- Meetings --
- Ed Cattell
- by the pond
- at Kirkwood moonlight nights.
-
STAFFORD: DEMANDING WHITMAN'S ATTENTION:
-
-
- I want you to have some place to go
- when I come down,
- some place where there is plenty of girls,
- I want to have some fun
- when I come down this time.
-
-
-
- STAFFORD IMPULSIVELY STRIPS OFF HIS SHIRT,
READYING HIMSELF FOR WRESTLING
- STAFFORD IMPULSIVELY STRIPS OFF HIS SHIRT,
-
-
-
- The fun I had last night
- was with a fellow
- that has been thinking for a long time
- he could throw me,
- so last night
- him and I came together
- and down he went.
-
-
-
- STAFFORD WRESTLES
WITH ANOTHER BARE-CHESTED YOUNG MAN,
THE IMAGE IS THAT
IN A THOMAS EAKINS PAINTING;
THE WRESTLERS FORM
A BRIEF, MOTIONLESS EMBRACE;
THEN, STAFFORD TRIUMPHS,
WRESTLERS BREAK APART;
STAFFORD PUTS ON HIS SHIRT
- STAFFORD WRESTLES
-
-
-
- When I am not thinking of my business
- I am thinking of what I am shielding,
- I want to try to make a man of myself,
- and do what is right.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM STAFFORD,
REFOCUSING ON CATTELL
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM STAFFORD,
-
WHITMAN: Edward Cattell with me.
STAFFORD: DEMANDING WHITMAN'S ATTENTION
-
-
- I was very lonely Saturday night,
- I wanted to come up to see you.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM CATTELL,
REFOCUSES ON STAFFORD
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM CATTELL,
-
-
-
- I wish you would
- put the ring on my finger again,
- it seems to me
- there is something wanting
- to complete our friendship.
- I have tride to study it out
- but cannot find out what it is.
- You know how you put it on --
- there was one thing
- to part it from me
- and that was death.
- I wish you would put the ring on my finger again.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM STAFFORD TO CATTELL,
WHO SPEAKS TO HIM AFFECTIONATELY
- WHITMAN TURNS AWAY FROM STAFFORD TO CATTELL,
-
CATTELL: i was glad to har from you
my loving old friend.
-
-
- i would com up to see you.
- But i cant get off a day now
- we ar so Bisse Husking Corn.
- i went to the pond to day
- and seen your old chir
- floting down the streem.
- I think of you old man.
- Think of the time
- down on the Creek.
- It seems an age
- since I last met with you
- down at the pond
- and a lovely time
- we had of it too
- old man.
- I would like to see you
- and have a talk.
- Would like to com up some Saterday
- and stay all night with you.
- i love you Walt
- and all ways will.
- i know my love is returned too.
-
-
-
- WHITMAN STAYS FOCUSED ON CATTELL.
STAFFORD SPEAKS TO WHITMAN,
DEMANDING HIS ATTENTION
- WHITMAN STAYS FOCUSED ON CATTELL.
-
STAFFORD: I cannot enjoy myself
any more at home,
-
-
- WHITMAN TURNS FROM CATTELL TO STAFFORD
-
-
-
- if I go up in my room
- I always come down feeling worse,
- for the first thing I see
- is your picture,
-
-
-
- PHOTO OF WHITMAN MAY BE PROJECTED
-
-
-
- and whenever I do anything,
- the picture
- is always looking at me,
-
-
-
- STAFFORD PUTS ON WHITE SLOUCH HAT
-
-
-
- I have been thinking
- about fifty times
- since you spoke of it
- of the suit of clothes
- I am to have
- like yours;
- I have had myself all picture out
- with a suit of gray
- and a white slouch hat on --
- the fellows will call me Walt then.
- I will have to do something
- great and good
- in honor of his name.
- What will it be?
-
-
-
- LIGHTS ON WHITMAN, WHO ADDRESSES STAFFORD
-
WHITMAN: My darling boy,
I want to see you very much.
STAFFORD: Times have become settled,
and our love sure
(although we have had
very many rough times together)
but we have stuck to each other
until we die,
I know.
WHITMAN: 62-YEARS-OLD; REMINISCING
-
-
- The occasional ridiculous little storms of the past
- I have quite discarded from memory --
- and I hope you will too --
- the other recollections
- overtop them altogether,
- and occupy the only permanent place in my heart --
- as a manly loving friendship for you does also,
- and will while life lasts.
-
-
-
- Of the past I think only
- of the comforting things --
- I go back to the times at Timber Creek
- beginning most five years ago,
- and my hobbling down the old lane
- and how I took a good turn there
- and commenced to get healthier,
- stronger.
-
-
-
- Hank,
- if I had not known you--
- if it hadn't been for you
- and our friendship
- and my going down there summers
- to the creek with you --
- and living with your folks,
- and cheering me up --
- I should not be a living man today --
- I remember these things
- and they comfort me --
- and you,
- my darling boy,
- are the central figure of them all.
- Scene 8:
- Horace Traubel, "Whitman asked me"
-
-
- HORACE TRAUBEL,
GAZING AT STAFFORD AND WHITMAN,
HEARS WHITMAN'S LAST LINES.
TRAUBEL INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO AUDIENCE.
- HORACE TRAUBEL,
-
TRAUBEL: Horace Traubel.
-
-
- Whitman asked me
- about last night's meeting,
- which sat till after 12
- in Philadelphia
- about a dozen men present.
- "Calamus" had been much discussed --
- Sulzberger questioning the comradeship
- there announced
- as verging upon
- the licentiousness of the Greek.
- Whitman took it very seriously:
-
WHITMAN: 70-YEARS-OLD-
-
- He meant the handsome Greek youth
- one for the other?
- I can see how
- it might be opened
- to such an interpretation.
- But in the ten thousand
- who for many years
- have stood ready
- to make any possible charge against me,
- none has raised this objection.
- "Calamus" is to me indispensable--
-
-
-
- LIGHTS UP ON JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS WHO,
HEARING WORD "CALAMUS, STANDS UP,
LOOKING AT WHITMAN WITH GREAT ANTICIPATION
- LIGHTS UP ON JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS WHO,
-
-
-
- not there alone
- in that one series of poems,
- but in all.
- It could no more be dispensed with
- than the ship entire.
-
-
-
- SYMONDS MOVES FRONT.
TWENTY YEARS AFTER HIS INITIAL INQUIRY ABOUT WHITMAN, HE IS STILL HOTLY PURSUING HIS QUESTIONS
ABOUT WHITMAN'S CALAMUS THEME.
- SYMONDS MOVES FRONT.
-
-
-
- Scene 9:
John Addington Symonds,
"In your conception of Comradeship"
- Scene 9:
-
-
-
- SYMONDS SPEAKS DIRECTLY AND INTENSELY
TO WHITMAN, READY, FINALLY,
FOR A SHOWDOWN WITH WHITMAN
ON THE SUBJECT OF SEX IN THE INTIMACIES
OF MEN WITH MEN.
- SYMONDS SPEAKS DIRECTLY AND INTENSELY
-
SYMONDS: In your conception of Comradeship,
do you contemplate
the possible intrusion
of those semi-sexual
emotions and actions
which do occur between men?-
-
- I do not ask
- whether you approve of them,
- or regard them
- as a necessary part of the relation.
- But I should much like to know
- whether you are prepared
- to leave them
- to the inclinations
- and the conscience
- of the individuals concerned?
- For my part,
- I hold that the present laws
- of France and Italy
- are right.
- They protect minors,
- punish violence,
- and guard against
- outrages of public decency.
- They leave individuals
- to do what they think fit.
- These principles
- are in open contradiction
- with English and American legislation.
-
-
-
- It has frequently occurred to me
- to hear your "Calamus" poems
- objected to
- as praising
- and propagating
- a passionate affection
- between men
- which might "bring people into criminality."
- I agree that some men,
- having a strong natural bias
- toward persons of their own sex,
- the enthusiasm of your "Calamus" poems
- is calculated to encourage
- ardent and physical intimacies.
- I do not agree
- that such a result
- would be absolutely prejudicial
- to social interests.
-
SPEAKERS ALL REPEAT WHITMAN'S EARLIER WORDS.
SPEAKER 1: I do not press my finger across my mouth.
SPEAKER 2: I am for those who believe in loose delights
SPEAKER 3: All themes stagnate in their vitals,
if they cannot publicly accept
and publicly name,
with specific words,
those things on which
all that is worth being here for depend.SPEAKER 4: It is to the development
of that fervid comradeship,
the adhesive love
of man and man,
that I look
for the counterbalance
of our materialistic,
vulgar American democracy.-
-
- Your questions
- about my Calamus pieces
- quite daze me.
- That the Calamus part
- has opened --
- even allowed --
- the possibility
- of such construction as mentioned
- is terrible.
- I am fain to hope
- that the pages themselves
- are not to be even blamed --
- mentioned --
- for such gratuitous
- and quite
- at the time
- undreamed
- and unreckoned
- possibility
- of morbid inferences --
- which are disavowed by me
- and seem damnable.
-
-
-
- My life,
- young manhood, mid-age
- have all been jolly
- and probably open to criticism.
- Though always unmarried
- I have had six children.
-
-
-
- IMMEDIATELY, WHITMAN'S SIX "SONS"
APPEAR AROUND HIM:
PETER DOYLE, THOMAS SAWYER,
LEWIS BROWN, DOUGLASS FOX,
HARRY STAFFORD, EDWARD CATTELL.
- IMMEDIATELY, WHITMAN'S SIX "SONS"
-
-
-
- THEN SYMONDS RESPONDS TO WHITMAN,
WITH A NOTE OF DISBELIEF AND IRONY.
- THEN SYMONDS RESPONDS TO WHITMAN,
-
SYMONDS: I am sincerely obliged to you
to know so precisely
that the "adhesiveness" of comradeship
has no interblending
with the "amativeness" of sexual love.-
-
- SYMONDS TURNS AWAY FROM WHITMAN
TO SPEAK TO EDWARD CARPENTER:
- SYMONDS TURNS AWAY FROM WHITMAN
-
-
-
- Whitman did not quite trust me perhaps.
- Afraid of being used
- to lend his influence
- to "Sods."
-
CARPENTER: TO SYMONDS
-
-
- Personally,
- having known Whitman fairly intimately,
- I do not lay great stress on that letter.
- Whitman was
- in his real disposition
- the most candid,
- but also
- the most cautious of men.
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- An attempt was made
- on this occasion
- to drive him
- into some sort of confession
- of his real nature;
- that very effort
- aroused all his resistance
- and caused him to hedge
- more than ever.
- TO AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- TO SYMONDS
- If Whitman took
- the reasonable line
- and said that,
- while not advocating
- abnormal relations
- in any way,
- he of course
- made allowance
- for possibilities in that direction
- and the occasional development
- of such relations,
- why, he knew
- that the moment he said such a thing
- he would have
- the whole American press at his heels,
- snarling and slandering.
- TO SYMONDS
-
-
-
- TO AUDIENCE
- Things are pretty bad here in England,
- but in the states
- (in such matters)
- they are ten times worse.
- TO AUDIENCE
-
-
-
- Scene 10
Gavin Arthur, "In spite of his 80 years"
- Scene 10
-
ARTHUR: ADDRESSING THE AUDIENCE AS A CLOSE FRIEND.-
-
- In spite of his 80 years,
- Edward Carpenter's eyes
- were a vivid sky-blue;
- his face was copper,
- his hair shining silver.
-
-
-
- TO CARPENTER
- I was twenty-two.
-
CARPENTER: Welcome, my boy!
-
-
- HE EMBRACES ARTHUR,
HOLDING THE HANDSOME YOUTH
ONE SECOND TOO LONG,
KISSING HIM WARMLY ON BOTH CHEEKS
- HE EMBRACES ARTHUR,
-
ARTHUR: TO AUDIENCE
-
-
- He smelled like leaves
- in an autumn forrest.
- A sort of seminal smell.
-
-
-
- CARPENTER MIMES INTRODUCTIONS
-
-
-
- He introduced me
- to his comrade George
- and George's comrade Ted.
- We talked about Walt.
- Carpenter said
-
CARPENTER: Walt would have loved you
ARTHUR: the others agreed
and my heart beat hard.-
-
- After supper Ted suggested
- a walk in the moonlight.
-
-
-
- ARTHUR AND TED WALK OUT TOGETHER
-
-
-
- We talked about Carpenter.
- Then Ted said:
-
TED: Why don't you spend the night?
It would do Eddy so much good
to sleep with
a good looking young American.ARTHUR: I would like nothing better,
I said.-
-
- We approached the fire,
- before which the Old Man was sitting.
- Ted looked down at him lovingly:
-
TED: Gavin wants to sleep with you tonight, Eddie.
Ain't you the lucky old dog?ARTHUR: The other two went up to bed.
-
-
- The old man and I sat by the fire.
- We talked again of Walt.
- I blurted out,
- half afraid to ask:
- "I suppose you slept with him?"
-
CARPENTER: Oh yes --
he regarded it
as the best way
to get together with another man.-
-
- He thought
- people should know each other
- on the physical and emotional plane
- as well as the mental.
- The best part of comrade love
- was that there was no limit
- to the number of comrades one could have.
-
ARTHUR: "How did he make love?"
I forced myself to ask.CARPENTER: I will show you.
-
-
- ARTHUR SITS STAGE CENTER;
CARPENTER IN BACK OF ARTHUR,
HOLDING HIM;
WHITMAN SITS IN BACK OF CARPENTER.
NO SEXUAL ACTIVITY IS ENACTED,
THE WORDS ARE POWERFUL ENOUGH.
- ARTHUR SITS STAGE CENTER;
-
ARTHUR: We were both naked.
We lay side by side
on our backs
holding hands.-
-
- Then he was holding my head
- in his two hands,
- making little growly noises,
- staring at me in the moonlight.
- "This is the laying on of hands,"
- I thought.
- "Walt.
- Then Edward.
- Then Me."
-
-
-
- The old man at my side
- was stroking my body
- with the most expert touch.
- I lay there in the moonlight pouring in at the window,
- giving myself up
- to the loving old man's marvelous petting.
- Every now and then
- he would bury his face
- in the hair of my chest,
- agitate a nipple
- with the end of his tongue,
- or breathe in deeply from my armpit.
- I had of course a throbbing erection
- but he ignored it
- for a long time.
- Very gradually, however,
- he got nearer and nearer,
- first with his hand
- and later with his tongue
- which was now
- flickering all over me
- like summer lightning.
- I stroked whatever part of him
- came within reach of my hand
- but felt instinctively
- this was a one-sided affair,
- he being so old
- and I so young,
- and that he enjoyed petting me
- as much as I enjoyed being petted.
- At last his hand
- was moving between my legs
- and his tongue
- was in my bellybutton.
- Then he was tickling my fundament
- just behind the balls
- and I could not hold it any longer,
- his mouth closed over the head of my penis
- and I could feel my young vitality
- flowing into his old age.
- He did not waste that life-giving fluid.
- As he said afterward:
-
CARPENTER: LECTURING A BIT, EVER THE TEACHER
-
-
- It isn't the chemical ingredients
- which are so full of vitality
- it's the electric content,
- like you get in milk
- if you drink it
- direct from the cow --
- so different from cold milk!
-
ARTHUR: I fell asleep
like a child
safe in father-mother arms,
the arms of God.-
-
- SPEAKING OF RELIGION; LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE.
-
-
-
- Scene 11
The New York Times, December 17, 1955
- Scene 11
-
SPEAKER 1: Roman Catholics of the Camden diocese
opened a campaign today
to prevent the naming
of a new Delaware River bridge
after Walt Whitman.SPEAKER 2: When asked
why Whitman was objectionable,
the Reverend Edward Lucitt,
director of the Holy Name Society,
cited a recent biography of Whitman
by Dr. Gay Wilson Allen
who had called the poetALLEN: a "homo-erotic."
SPEAKER 3: But Dr. Allen said last night
that he had no intention
of implying that Whitman
was a homosexual:ALLEN: I used the term "homo-erotic"
rather than "homosexual"
because homosexual
suggests sex perversion.-
-
- There is absolutely no evidence
- that Whitman engaged
- in any perverted practice.
- Whitman's writings show
- a strong affection for men.
- Many saints
- show the same feeling.
-
SPEAKER 4: Children of fifty-eight parochial schools
in the Camden diocese
are being asked
to submit essays
on "great men of New Jersey"
in the hope
of inspiring another name
for the bridge.-
-
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE.
PETER DOYLE TO FRONT CENTER OF STAGE
- LIGHTING/MOOD CHANGE.
-
-
-
- SCENE 12
Peter Doyle, "I have Walt's raglan here"
- SCENE 12
-
-
-
- DOYLE SPEAKS TO THE AUDIENCE
AS A GOOD FRIEND.
HERE, DOYLE IS ABOUT 50
- DOYLE SPEAKS TO THE AUDIENCE
-
DOYLE: I have Walt's raglan here.
-
-
- PUTS THE OVERCOAT ON
-
-
-
- I now and then put it on,
- lay down,
- think I am in the old times.
- Then he is with me again.
- It's the only thing I kept
- amongst many old things.
- When I get it on
- and stretched out on the old sofa
- I am very well contented.
- It is like Aladdin's lamp.
- I do not ever for a minute
- lose the old man.
- He is always near by.
- When I am in trouble --
- in a crisis --
- I ask myself
- "What would Walt have done
- under these circumstances?"
- and whatever I decide
- Walt would have done
- that I do.
-
-
-
- Towards the end
- he continued to write to me.
- He never altered his manner toward me;
- here are a few postal cards,
-
-
-
- HOLD UP POSTCARDS
-
-
-
- you will see
- they show the same old love.
- He understood me --
- I understood him.
- We loved each other deeply.
- Walt realized
- I never swerved from him.
-
-
-
- But I have talked a long while.
- Let us drink this beer together.
-
-
-
- HOLDS UP A BOTTLE
-
-
-
- It's a fearful warm day.
- You take the glasses, there;
- Now, here's to the dear old man
- and the dear old times --
- and the new times, too,
- and everyone that's to come!
-
-
-
- Scene 12
Walt Whitman, "No labor-saving machine"
- Scene 12
-
-
-
- WHITMAN SPEAKS TO AUDIENCE AS COMRADE AND LOVER
-
WHITMAN: No labor-saving machine, Nor discovery have I made,
Nor will I be able to leave behind me
any wealthy bequest to found a hospital or library,
Nor reminiscence of any deed of courage for America,
Nor literary success nor intellect,
Nor book for the bookshelf,
But a few carols vibrating through the air I leave,
For comrades and lovers.-
-
- BLACKOUT - END
-
-