The Emperor Jones (by Eugene O'Neill) - first half

The Emperor Jones — first half (scenes I through IV)
by Eugene O'Neill, 1922
BRUTUS JONES, Emperor
HENRY SMITHERS, a Cockney Trader
AN OLD NATIVE WOMAN
LEM, a Native Chief
SOLDIERS, adherents of LemThe Little Formless Fears; Jeff; The Negro Convicts; The Prison Guard;
The Planters; The Auctioneer; The Slaves; The Congo Witch-Doctor;
The Crocodile GodThe action of the play takes place on an island in the West Indies as yet not self-determined by White Marines. The form of native government is, for the time being, an Empire.
SCENES
SCENE I: In the palace of the Emperor Jones. Afternoon.
SCENE II: The edge of the Great Forest. Dusk.
SCENE III: In the Forest. Night.
SCENE IV: In the Forest. Night.
SCENE V: In the Forest. Night.
SCENE VI: In the Forest. Night.
SCENE VII: In the Forest. Night.
SCENE VIII: Same as Scene Two—the edge of the Great Forest. Dawn.
Scene I
The audience chamber in the palace of the Emperor—a spacious, high-ceilinged room with bare, whitewashed walls. The floor is of white tiles. In the rear, to the left of center, a wide archway giving out on a portico with white pillars. The palace is evidently situated on high ground for beyond the portico nothing can be seen but a vista of distant hills, their summits crowned with thick groves of palm trees. In the right wall, center, a smaller arched doorway leading to the living quarters of the palace. The room is bare of furniture with the exception of one huge chair made of uncut wood which stands at center, its back to rear. This is very apparently the Emperor's throne. It is painted a dazzling, eye-smiting scarlet. There is a brilliant orange cushion on the seat and another smaller one is placed on the floor to serve as a footstool. Strips of matting, dyed scarlet, lead from the foot of the throne to the two entrances. |
| It is late afternoon but the sunlight still blazes yellowly beyond the portico and there is an oppressive burden of exhausting heat in the air. |
| As the curtain rises, a native negro woman sneaks in cautiously from the entrance on the right. She is very old, dressed in cheap calico, bare-footed, a red bandana handkerchief covering all but a few stray wisps of white hair. A bundle bound in colored cloth is carried over her shoulder on a stick. She hesitates beside the doorway, peering back as if in extreme dread of being discovered. Then she begins to glide noiselessly, a step at a time, toward the doorway in the rear. At this moment, Smithers appears beneath the portico. |
| Smithers is a tall, stoop-shouldered man about forty. His bald head, perched on a long neck with an enormous Adam's apple, looks like an egg. The tropics have tanned his naturally pasty face with its small, sharp features to a sickly yellow, and native rum has painted his pointed nose to a startling red. His little, washy-blue eyes are red-rimmed and dart about him like a ferret's. His expression is one of unscrupulous meanness, cowardly and dangerous. He is dressed in a worn riding suit of dirty white drill, puttees, spurs, and wears a white cork helmet. A cartridge belt with an automatic revolver is around his waist. He carries a riding whip in his hand. He sees the woman and stops to watch her suspiciously. Then, making up his mind, he steps quickly on tiptoe into the room. The woman, looking back over her shoulder continually, does not see him until it is too late. When she does Smithers springs forward and grabs her firmly by the shoulder. She struggles to get away, fiercely but silently. |
| SMITHERS—(tightening his grasp—roughly) Easy! None o' that, me birdie. You can't wriggle out now I got me 'ooks on yer. |
| WOMAN—(seeing the uselessness of struggling, gives way to frantic terror, and sinks to the ground, embracing his knees supplicatingly) No tell him! No tell him, Mister! |
| SMITHERS—(with great curiosity) Tell 'im? (then scornfully) Oh, you mean 'is bloomin' Majesty. What's the gaime, any 'ow? What you sneakin' away for? Been stealin' a bit, I s'pose. (He taps her bundle with his riding whip significantly.) |
| WOMAN—(shaking her head vehemently) No, me no steal. |
| SMITHERS—Bloody liar! But tell me what's up. There's somethin' funny goin' on. I smelled it in the air first thing I got up this mornin'. You blacks are up to some devilment. This palace of 'is is like a bleedin' tomb. Where's all the 'ands? (The woman keeps sullenly silent. Smithers raises his whip threateningly.) Ow, yer won't, won't yer? I'll show yer what's what. |
| WOMAN—(coweringly) I tell, Mister. You no hit. They go—all go. (She makes a sweeping gesture toward the hills in the distance.) |
| SMITHERS—Run away— to the 'ills? |
| WOMAN—Yes, Mister. Him Emperor—great Father. (She |
| SMITHERS—(his astonishment giving way to an immense, |
| WOMAN—Yes. Him sleep. |
| SMITHERS—'E's bound to find out soon as wakes up. 'E's cunnin' |
| (Jones enters from the right. He is a tall, powerfully-built, |
| JONES—(not seeing anyone—greatly irritated and blinking |
| SMITHERS—(showing himself—in a manner half-afraid |
| JONES—(putting on his suavest manner, which fails to |
| SMITHERS—(coming close to enjoy his discomfiture) |
| JONES—(coldly) Funny? No. I ain't perceived nothin' |
| SMITHERS—Then yer ain't so foxy as I thought yer was. Where's |
| JONES—(imperturbably) where dey mostly runs to minute |
| SMITHERS—(stung but pretending indifference—with |
| JONES—(contemptuously) Yo' business! |
| SMITHERS—(imprudently enraged) Gawd blimey, you was |
| JONES—(his hand going to his revolver like a flash—menacingly) |
| SMITHERS—(in a cowardly whine) No 'arm meant, old |
| JONES—(condescendingly) I accepts yo' apology. (lets |
| SMITHERS—Well, blimey, I give yer a start, didn't I—when |
| JONES—No, you didn't have no s'cuse to look down on me fo' |
| SMITHERS—(furiously) It's a lie! (then trying |
| JONES—Dey's some tings I ain't got to be tole. I kin see |
| SMITHERS—(with curiosity) And I bet you got yer pile |
| JONES—(with satisfaction) I sho' has! And it's in |
| SMITHERS—(grinning) But, meanin' no 'arm, you been |
| JONES—(chuckling) No, dey ain't all dry yet. I'se |
| SMITHERS—(smiling at his secret thought) They're |
| JONES—Ain't r de Emperor? De laws don't go for him. (judicially) |
| SMITHERS—(unable to repress the genuine admiration of |
| JONES—(severely) Luck? What you mean—luck? |
| SMITHERS—I suppose you'll say as that swank about the silver |
| JONES—(with a laugh) Oh, dat silver bullet! Sho' |
| SMITHERS—You said yer'd got a charm so's no lead bullet'd |
| JONES—(proudly) I got brains and I uses 'em quick. |
| SMITHERS—Yer know they wasn't 'ardly likely to get no silver |
| JONES—(laughing) And dere all dem fool, bush niggers |
| SMITHERS—(with a sniff) Yankee bluff done it. |
| JONES—Ain't a man's talkin' big what makes him big-long |
| SMITHERS—(flushing) Never mind about me. What's this |
| JONES—It's playin' out my bluff. I has de silver bullet |
| SMITHERS—(astonished) Then you 'ad it made—'onest? |
| JONES—Sho' did. Heah she he. (He takes out his revolver, |
| SMITHERS—Let me see. (reaches out his hand for it) |
| JONES—(harshly) Keep yo' hands whar dey b'long, white |
| SMITHERS—(snarling) Gawd Nimey! Mink I'm a bleedin' |
| JONES—No, 'tain't dat. I knows you 'se scared to steal from |
| SMITHERS—(sneering) A bloomin' charm, wot? (venomously) |
| JONES—(judicially) Oh, I'se good for six months yit |
| SMITHERS—Ho! You got it all planned, ain't yer? |
| JONES—I ain't no fool. I knows dis Emperor's time is sho't. |
| SMITHERS—Where to? |
| JONES—None o' yo' business. |
| SMITHERS—Not back to the bloody States, I'll lay my oath. |
| JONES—(suspiciously) Why don't I? (then with an |
| SMITHERS—(skeptically) Ho, yes! |
| JONES—(sharply) You ain't 'sinuatin' I'se a liar, |
| SMITHERS—(hastily) No, Gawd strike me! I was only |
| JONES—(angered) How come dey're lies? |
| SMITHERS—You'd 'ave been in jail, if you 'ad, wouldn't yer |
| JONES—(with cool deadliness) You mean lynchin' 'd |
| SMITHERS—(trying to force a laugh) I was on'y spoofin' |
| JONES—(in the same tone—slightly boastful) Maybe |
| SMITHERS—(terrified) Think I'd peach on yer? Not |
| JONES—(suddenly relaxing) Sho' you has—and you |
| SMITHERS—(recovering his composure—and with it his |
| JONES—Go ahead! Shoot de piece. Must be bad news from de |
| SMITHERS—(warningly) Maybe it's gettin' time for |
| JONES—(puzzled) What's dat you say? Talk plain. |
| SMITHERS—Ain't noticed any of the guards or servants about |
| JONES—(carelessly) Dey're all out in de garden sleepin' |
| SMITHERS—(in the same mocking tone) Ring the bell |
| JONES—(startled to alertness, but preserving the same |
| SMITHERS—(watching him with malicious satisfaction, |
| JONES—(in a sudden fit of anger flings the bell clattering |
| SMITHERS—(with real admiration) Blimey, but you're |
| JONES—No use'n fussin'. When I knows de game's up I kisses |
| SMITHERS—Yes—every bleedin' man jack of 'em. |
| JONES—Den de revolution is at de post. And de Emperor better |
| SMITHERS—Goin' out to look for your 'orse? Yer won't find |
| JONES—(alarmed for a second, scratches his head, then |
| SMITHERS—Don't be so bloomin' sure of it. They'll be after |
| JONES—(scornfully) Dat fool no-count nigger! Does |
| SMITHERS—You'll 'ave to cut through the big forest—an' |
| JONES—(with indignant scorn) Look-a-heah, white man! |
| SMITHERS—(maliciously) But s'posin' somethin' 'appens |
| JONES—(decisively) Dey don't—dat's de answer. |
| SMITHERS—But, just for argyment's sake—what'd you do? |
| JONES—(frowning) I'se got five lead bullets in dis |
| SMITHERS—(jeeringly) Ho, I was fergettin' that silver |
| JONES—(gloomily) You kin bet yo' whole roll on one |
| SMITHERS—(with a mean grin) For you. That means the |
| JONES—Cer'mony? What cer'mony? |
| SMITHERS—The blacks is 'oldin' a bloody meetin', 'avin' |
| JONES—Let dem! Dey'll sho' need it! |
| SMITHERS—And they're there 'oldin' their 'eathen religious |
| JONES—(a tiny bit awed and shaken in spite of himself) |
| SMITHERS—(scenting the other's feeling—maliciously) |
| JONES—(with a contemptuous sniff) I ain't no chicken-liver |
| SMITHERS—Ho! You 'aven't give much 'eed to your Baptist |
| JONES—(vehemently) I pretends to! Sho' I pretends! |
| SMITHERS—Not me, you won't. Well, I wouldn't be in yer bloody |
| JONES—(contemptuously) You're de frightenedest man |
| SMITHERS—(maliciously) Give my regards to any ghosts |
| JONES—(grinning) If dat ghost got money, I'll tell |
| SMITHERS—(flattered) Garn! (then curiously) |
| JONES—I travels light when I wants to move fast. And I got |
| SMITHERS—(gratefully) Righto—and thanks ter yer. |
| JONES—Does you think I'd slink out de back door like a common |
| SMITHERS—(looks after him with a puzzled admiration) (Curtain) |
Scene II
The end of the plain where the Great Forest begins. The foreground is sandy, level ground dotted by a few stones and clumps of stunted bushes cowering close against the earth to escape the buffeting of the trade wind. In the rear the forest is a wall of darkness dividing the world. Only when the eye becomes accustomed to the gloom can the outlines of separate trunks of the nearest trees be made out, enormous pillars of deeper blackness. A somber monotone of wind lost in the leaves moans in the air. Yet this sound serves but to intensify the impression of the forest's relentless immobility, to form a background throwing into relief its brooding, implacable silence. |
| Jones enters from the left, walking rapidly. He stops as he nears the edge of the forest, looks around him quickly, peering into the dark as if searching for some familiar landmark. Then, apparently satisfied that he is where he ought to be, he throws himself on the ground, dog-tired. |
| Well, heah I is. In de nick o' time, too! Little mo' an' it'd be blacker'n de ace of spades heah-abouts. (He pulls a bandana handkerchief from his hip pocket and mops off his perspiring face.) Sho'! Gimme air! I'se tuckered out sho' 'nuff. Dat soft Emperor job ain't no trainin' for' a long hike ovah dat plain in de brilin' sun. (then with a chuckle) Cheah up, nigger, de worst is yet to come. (He lifts his head and stares at the forest. His chuckle peters out abruptly. In a tone of awe) My goodness, look at dem woods, will you? Dat no-count Smithers said dey'd be black an' he sho' called de turn. (Turning away from them quickly and looking down at his feet, he snatches at a chance to change the subject—solicitously.) Feet, you is holdin' up yo' end fine an' I sutinly hopes you ain't blisterin' none. It's time you git a rest. (He takes off his shoes, his eyes studiously avoiding the forest. He feels of the soles of his feet gingerly.) You is still in de pink—on'y a little mite feverish. Cool yo'selfs. Remember you done got a long journey yit befo' you. (He sits in a weary attitude, listening to the rhythmic beating of the tom-tom. He grumbles in a loud tone to cover up a growing uneasiness.) Bush niggers! Wonder dey wouldn' git sick o' beatin' dat drum. Sound louder, seem like. I wonder if dey's startin' after me? (He scrambles to his feet, looking back across the plain.) Couldn't see dem now, nohow, if dey was hundred feet away. (then shaking himself like a wet dog to get rid of these depressing thoughts) Sho', dey's miles an' miles behind. What you gittin' fidgetty about? (But he sits down and begins to lace up his shoes in great haste, all the time muttering reassuringly.) You know what? Yo' belly is empty, dat's what's de matter wid you. Come time to eat! Wid nothin' but wind on yo' stumach, o' course you feels jiggedy. Well, we eats right heah an' now soon's I gits dese pesky shoes laced up. (He finishes lacing up his shoes.) Dere! Now le's see! (gets on his hands and knees and searches the ground around him with his eyes) White stone, white stone, where is you? (He sees the first white stone and crawls to it—with satisfaction.) Heah you is! I knowed dis was de right place. Box of grub, come to me. (He turns over the stone and feels in under it—in a tone of dismay.) Ain't heah! Gorry, is I in de right place or isn't I? Dere's 'nother stone. Guess dat's it. (He scrambles to the next stone and turns it over.) Ain't heah, neither! Grub, whar is you? Ain't heah. Gorry, has I got to go hungry into dem woods—all de night? (While he is talking he scrambles from one stone to another, turning them over in frantic haste. Finally, he jumps to his feet excitedly.) Is I lost de place? Must have! But how dat happen when I was followin' de trail across de plain in broad daylight? (almost plaintively) I'se hungry, I is! I gotta git my feed. Whar's my strength gonna come from if I doesn't? Gorry, I gotta find dat grub high an' low somehow! Why it come dark so quick like dat? Can't see nothin'. (He scratches a match on his trousers and peers about him. The rate of the beat of the far-off tom-tom increases perceptibly as he does so. He mutters in a bewildered voice.) How come all dese white stones come heah when I only remembers one? (Suddenly, with a frightened gasp, he flings the match on the ground and stamps on it.) Nigger, is you gone crazy mad? Is you lightin' matches to show dem whar you is? Fo' Lawd's sake, use yo' haid. Gorry, I'se got to be careful! (He stares at the plain behind him apprehensively, his hand on his revolver.) But how come all dese white stones? And whar's dat tin box o' grub I hid all wrapped up in oil cloth? |
| (While his back is turned, the Little Formless Fears creep out from the deeper blackness of the forest. They are black, shapeless, only their glittering little eyes can be seen. If they have any describable form at all it is that of a grubworm about the size of a creeping child. They move noiselessly, but with deliberate, painful effort, striving to raise themselves on end, failing and sinking prone again. Jones turns about to face the forest. He stares up at the tops of the trees, seeking vainly to discover his whereabouts by their conformation.) |
| Can't tell nothin' from dem trees! Gorry, nothin' 'round heah look like I evah seed it befo'. I'se done lost de place sho' 'nuff! (with mournful foreboding) It's mighty queer! It's mighty queer! (with sudden forced defiance—in an angry tone) Woods, is you tryin' to put somethin' ovah on me? |
| (From the formless creatures on the ground in front of him comes a tiny gale of low mocking laughter like a rustling of leaves. They squirm upward toward him in twisted attitudes. Jones looks down, leaps backward with a yell of terror, yanking out his revolver as he does join a quavering voice.) What's dat? who's dar? What is you? Git away from me befo' I shoots you up! You don't?— |
| (He fires. There is a flash, a loud report, then silence broken only by the far-off, quickened throb of the tom-tom. The formless creatures have scurried back into the forest. Jones remains fixed in his position, listening intently. The sound of the shot, the reassuring feel of the revolver in his hand, have somewhat restored his shaken nerve. He addresses himself with renewed confidence.) |
| Dey're gone. Dat shot fix 'em. Dey was only little animals—little wild pigs, I reckon. Dey've maybe rooted out yo' grub an' eat it. Sho', you fool nigger, what you think dey is—ha'nts? (excitedly) Gorry, you give de game away when you fire dat shot. Dem niggers heah dat fo' su'tin! Time you beat it in de woods widout no long waits. (He starts for the forest—hesitates before the plunge—then urging himself in with manful resolution.) Git in, nigger! What you skeered at? Ain't nothin' dere but de trees! Git in! (He plunges boldly into the forest.) |
Scene III
In the forest. The moon has just risen. Its beams, drifting through the canopy of leaves, make a barely perceptible, suffused, eerie glow. A dense low wall of under-brush and creepers is in the nearer foreground, fencing in a small triangular clearing. Beyond this is the massed blackness of the forest like an encompassing barrier. A path is dimly discerned leading down to the clearing from left, rear, and winding away from it again toward the right. As the scene opens nothing can be distinctly made out. Except for the beating of the tom-tom, which is a trifle louder and quicker than in the previous scene, there is silence, broken every few seconds by a queer, clicking sound. Then gradually the figure of the negro, Jeff, can be discerned crouching on his haunches at the rear of the triangle. He is middle-aged, thin, brown in color, is dressed in a Pullman porter's uniform, cap, etc. He is throwing a pair of dice on the ground before him, picking them up, shaking them, casting them out with the regular, rigid, mechanical movements of an automaton. The heavy, plodding footsteps of someone approaching along the trail from the left are heard and Jones' voice, pitched in a slightly higher key and strained in a cheering effort to overcome its own tremors. |
| De moon's rizen. Does you heah dat, nigger? You gits more light from dis out. No mo' buttin' yo' fool head agin' de trunks an' scratchin' de hide off yo' legs in de bushes. Now you sees whar yo'se gwine. So cheer up! From now on you has a snap. (He steps just to the rear of the triangular clearing and mops off his face on his sleeve. He has lost his Panama hat. His face is scratched, his brilliant uniform shows several large rents.) what time's it gittin' to be, I wonder? I dassent light no match to find out. Phoo'. It's wa'm an' dats a fac'! (wearily) How long r been makin' tracks in dese woods? Must be hours an' hours. Seems like fo'evah! Yit can't be, when de moon's jes' riz. Dis am a long night fo' yo', yo' Majesty! (with a mournful chuckle) Majesty! Der ain't much majesty 'bout dis baby now. (with attempted cheerfulness) Never min'. It's all part o' de game. Dis night come to an end like everything else. And when you gits dar safe and has dat bankroll in yo' hands you laughs at all dis. (He starts to whistle but checks himself abruptly.) What yo' whistlin' for, you po' dope! Want all de won' to heah you? (He stops talking to listen.) Heah dat ole drum! Sho' gits nearer from de sound. Dey're packin' it along wid 'em. Time fo' me to move. (He takes a step forward, then stops—worriedly.) What's dat odder queer clicketty sound I heah? Den it is! Sound close! Sound like—sound like—Fo' God sake, sound like some nigger was shootin' crap! (frightenedly) I better beat it quick when I gits dem notions. (He walks quickly into the clear space—then stands transfixed as he sees Jeff in a terrified gasp.) Who dar? Who dat? Is dat you, Jeff? (starting toward the other, forgetful for a moment of his surroundings and really believing it is a living man that he sees—in a tone of happy relief) Jeff! I'se sho' mighty glad to see you! Dey tol' me you done died from dat razor cut I gives you. (stopping suddenly, bewilderedly) But how you come to be heah, nigger? (He stares fascinatedly at the other who continues his mechanical play with the dice. Jones' eyes begin to roll wildly. He stutters.) Ain't you gwine—look up—can't you speak to me? Is you—is you—a ha'nt? (He jerks out his revolver in a frenzy of terrified rage.) Nigger, I kills you dead once. Has I got to kill you agin? You take it den. (He fires. When the smoke clears away Jeff has disappeared. Jones stands trembling—then with a certain reassurance.) He's gone, anyway. Ha'nt or no ha'nt, dat shot fix him. (The beat of the far-off tom-tom is perceptibly louder and more rapid. Jones becomes conscious of it—with a start, looking back over his shoulder.) Dey's gittin' near! Dey'se comin' fast! And heah I is shootin' shots to let 'em know jes' whar I is. Oh, Gorry, I'se got to run. (Forgetting the path he plunges wildly into the underbrush in the rear and disappears in the shadow.) |
Scene IV
In the forest. A wide dirt road runs diagonally from right, front, to left, rear. Rising sheer on both sides the forest walls it in. The moon is now up. Under its light the road glimmers ghastly and unreal. It is as if the forest had stood aside momentarily to let the road pass through and accomplish its veiled purpose. This done, the forest will fold in upon itself again and the road will be no more. Jones stumbles in from the forest on the right. His uniform is ragged and torn. He looks about him with numbed surprise when he sees the road, his eyes blinking in the bright moonlight. He flops down exhaustedly and pants heavily for a while. Then with sudden anger |
| I'm meltin' wid heat! Runnin' an' runnin' an' runnin'! Damn dis heah coat! Like a strait jacket! (He tears off his coat and flings it away from him., revealing himself stripped to the waist.) Den! Dat's better! Now I kin breathe! (Looking down at his feet, the spurs catch his eye.) And to hell wid dese high-fangled spurs. Dey're what's been a-trippin' me up an' breakin' my neck. (He unstraps them and flings them away disgustedly.) Dere! I gits rid o' dem frippety Emperor trappin's an' I travels lighter. Lawd! I'se tired! (after a pause, listening to the insistent beat of the tom-tom in the distance) I must 'a put some distance between myself an' dem—runnin' like dat—and yit—dat damn drum sound jes' de same—nearer, even. Well, I guess I a'most holds my lead anyhow. Dey won't never catch up. (with a sigh) If on'y my fool legs stands up. Oh, I'se sorry I evah went in for dis. Dat Emperor job is sho' hard to shake. (He looks around him suspiciously.) How'd dis road evah git heah? Good level road, too. I never remembers seein' it befo'. (shaking his head apprehensively) Dese woods is sho' full o' de queerest things at night. (with a sudden terror) Lawd God, don't let me see no more o' dem ha'nts! Dey gits my goat! (then trying to talk himself into confidence) Ha'nts! You fool nigger, dey ain't no such things! Don't de Baptist parson tell you dat many time? Is you civilized, or is you like dese ign'rent black niggers heah? Sho'! Dat was all in yo' own head. Wasn't nothin' dere. Wasn't no Jeff! Know what? You jus' get seem' dem things 'cause yo' belly's empty and you's sick wid hunger inside. Hunger 'fects yo' head and yo' eyes. Any fool know dat. (then pleading fervently) But bless God, I don't come across no more o' dem, whatever dey is! (then cautiously) Rest! Don't talk! Rest! You needs it. Den you gits on yo' way again. (looking at the moon) Night's half gone a'most. You hits de coast in de mawning! Den you'se all safe. |
| (From the right forward a small gang of negroes enter. They are dressed in striped convict suits, their heads are shaven, one leg drags limpingly, shackled to a heavy ball and chain. Some carry picks, the others shovels. They are followed by a white man dressed in the uniform of a prison guard. A Winchester rifle is slung across his shoulders and he carries a heavy whip. At a signal from the guard they stop on the road opposite where Jones is sitting. Jones, who has been staring up at the sky, unmindful of their noiseless approach, suddenly looks down and sees them. His eyes pop out, he tries to get to his feet and fly, but sinks back, too numbed by fright to move. His voice catches in a choking prayer.) |
| Lawd Jesus! |
| (The prison guard cracks his whip—noiselessly—and at that signal all the convicts start to work on the road. They swing their picks, they shovel, but not a sound comes from their labor. Their movements, like those of Jeff in the preceding scene, are those of automatons,—rigid, slow, and mechanical. The prison guard points sternly at Jones with his whip, motions him to take his place among the other shovellers. Jones gets to his feet in a hypnotized stupor. He mumbles subserviently.) |
| Yes, suh! Yes, suh! I'se comin'. |
| (As he shuffles, dragging one foot, over to his place, he curses under his breath with rage and hatred.) |
| God damn yo' soul, I gits even wid you yit, sometime. |
| (As if there were a shovel in his hands he goes through weary, mechanical gestures of digging up dirt, and throwing it to the roadside. Suddenly the guard approaches him angrily, threateningly. He raises his whip and lashes Jones viciously across the shoulders with it. Jones winces with pain and cowers abjectly. The guard turns his back on him and walks away contemptuously. Instantly Jones straightens up. With arms upraised as if his shovel were a club in his hands he springs murderously at the unsuspecting guard. In the act of crashing down his shovel on the white man's skull, Jones suddenly becomes aware that his hands are empty. He cries despairingly.) |
| Whar's my shovel? Gimme my shovel 'till I splits his damn head! (Appealing to his fellow convicts) Gimme a shovel, one o' you, fo' God's sake! |
| (They stand fixed in motionless attitudes, their eyes on the ground. The guard seems to wait expectantly, his back turned to the attacker. Jones bellows with baffled, terrified rage, tugging frantically at his revolver.) |
| I kills you, you white debil, if it's de last thing I evah does! Ghost or debil, I kill you agin! |
| (He frees the revolver and fires point blank at the guard's back. Instantly the walls of the forest close in from both sides; the road and the figures of the convict gang are blotted out in an enshrouding darkness. The only sounds are a crashing in the underbrush as Jones leaps away in mad flight and the throbbing of the tom-tom, still far distant, but increased in volume of sound and rapidity of beat.) |
Click here to read the 2nd half of the play: scenes V through VIII





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