| First Voice:A game of checkers? | |
| |
| Second Voice:Well, I dont mind. | |
| |
| First Voice:I move the Will. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Youre playing it blind. | |
| |
| First Voice:Then heres the Soul. | 5 |
| |
| Second Voice:Checked by the Will. | |
| |
| First Voice:Eternal Good! | |
| |
| Second Voice:And Eternal Ill. | |
| |
| First Voice:I haste for the King row. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Save your breath. | 10 |
| |
| First Voice:I was moving Life. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Youre checked by Death. | |
| |
| First Voice:Very good, heres Moses. | |
| |
| Second Voice:And heres the Jew. | |
| |
| First Voice:My next move is Jesus. | 15 |
| |
| Second Voice:St. Paul for you! | |
| |
| First Voice:Yes, but St. Peter | |
| |
| Second Voice:You might have foreseen | |
| |
| First Voice:Youre in the King row | |
| |
| Second Voice:With Constantine! | 20 |
| |
| First Voice:Ill go back to Athens. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Well, heres the Persian. | |
| |
| First Voice:All right, the Bible. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Pray now, what version? | |
| |
| First Voice:I take up Buddha. | 25 |
| |
| Second Voice:It never will work. | |
| |
| First Voice:From the corner Mahomet. | |
| |
| Second Voice:I move the Turk. | |
| |
| First Voice:The game is tangled; where are we now? | |
| |
| Second Voice:Youre dreaming worlds. Im in the King row. | 30 |
| Move as you will, if I cant wreck you | |
| Ill thwart you, harry you, rout you, check you. | |
| |
| First Voice:Im tired. Ill send for my Son to play. | |
| I think he can beat you finally | |
| |
| Second Voice:Eh? | 35 |
| |
| First Voice:I must preside at the stars convention. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Very well, my lord, but I beg to mention | |
| Ill give this game my direct attention. | |
| |
| First Voice:A game indeed! But Truth is my quest. | |
| |
| Second Voice:Beaten, you walk away with a jest. | 40 |
I strike the table, I scatter the checkers. [A rattle of a falling table and checkers flying over a floor.] | |
| Aha! You armies and iron deckers, | |
| Races and states in a cataclysm | |
Now for a day of atheism!
[The screen vanishes and Beelzebub steps forward carrying a trumpet, which he blows faintly. Immediately Loki and Yogarindra start up from the shadows of night.] | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Good evening, Loki! | 45 |
| |
| Loki:The same to you! | |
| |
| Beelzebub:And Yogarindra! | |
| |
| Yogarindra:My greetings, too. | |
| |
| Loki:Whence came you, comrade? | |
| |
| Beelzebub:From yonder screen. | 50 |
| |
| Yogarindra:And what were you doing? | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Stirring His spleen. | |
| |
| Loki:How did you do it? | |
| |
| Beelzebub:I made it rough | |
| In a game of checkers. | 55 |
| |
| Loki:Good enough! | |
| |
| Yogarindra:I thought I heard the sounds of a battle. | |
| |
| Beelzebub:No doubt! I made the checkers rattle, | |
| Turning the table over and strewing | |
| The bits of wood like an army pursuing. | 60 |
| |
| Yogarindra:I have a game! Let us make a man. | |
| |
| Loki:My net is waiting him, if you can. | |
| |
| Yogarindra:And heres my mirror to fool him with | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Mystery, falsehood, creed and myth. | |
| |
| Loki:But no one can mold him, friend, but you. | 65 |
| |
| Beelzebub:Then to the sport without more ado. | |
| |
| Yogarindra:Hurry the work ere it grow to day. | |
| |
Beelzebub:I set me to it. Where is the clay?
[He scrapes the earth with his hands and begins to model.] | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Out of the dust, | |
| Out of the slime, | 70 |
| A little rust, | |
| And a little lime. | |
| Muscle and gristle, | |
| Mucin, stone | |
| Brayed with a pestle, | 75 |
| Fat and bone. | |
| Out of the marshes, | |
| Out of the vaults, | |
| Matter crushes | |
| Gas and salts. | 80 |
| What is this you call a mind, | |
| Flitting, drifting, pale and blind, | |
| Soul of the swamp that rides the wind? | |
| Jack-o-lantern, here you are! | |
| Dream of heaven, pine for a star, | 85 |
| Chase your brothers to and fro, | |
| Back to the swamp at last youll go. | |
| Hilloo! Hilloo! | |
| |
The Valley:Hilloo! Hilloo!
[Beelzebub in scraping up the earth turns out a skull.] | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Old one, old one. | 90 |
| Now ere I break you, | |
| Crush you and make you | |
| Clay for my use, | |
| Let me observe you: | |
| You were a bold one | 95 |
| Flat at the dome of you, | |
| Heavy the base of you, | |
| False to the home of you, | |
| Strong was the face of you, | |
| Strange to all fears. | 100 |
| Yet did the hair of you | |
| Hide what you were. | |
Now to re-nerve you [He crushes the skull between his hands and mixes it with the clay.] | |
| Now you are dust, | |
| Limestone and rust. | 105 |
| I mold and I stir | |
| And make you again. | |
| |
The Valley:Again? Again?
[In the same manner Beelzebub has fashioned several figures, standing them against the trees.] | |
| |
| Loki:Now for the breath of life. As I remember | |
| You have done right to mold your creatures first, | 110 |
| And stand them up. | |
| |
| Beelzebub:From gravitation | |
| I make the will. | |
| |
| Yogarindra:Out of sensation | |
| Comes his ill. | 115 |
| Out of my mirror | |
| Springs his error. | |
| Who was so cruel | |
| To make him the slave | |
| Of me the sorceress, you the knave, | 120 |
| And you the plotter to catch his thought, | |
| Whatever he did, whatever he sought? | |
| With a nature dual | |
| Of will and mind | |
| A thing that sees, and a thing thats blind. | 125 |
| Come! to our dance! Something hated him | |
Made us over him, therefore fated him.
[They join hands and dance.] | |
| |
| Loki:Passion, reason, custom, rules, | |
| Creeds of the churches, lore of the schools, | |
| Taint in the blood and strength of soul. | 130 |
| Flesh too weak for the wills control; | |
| Poverty, riches, pride of birth, | |
| Wailing, laughter, over the earth, | |
| Here I have you caught again, | |
| Enter my web, ye sons of men. | 135 |
| |
| Yogarindra:Look in my mirror! Isnt it real? | |
| What do you think now, what do you feel? | |
| Here is treasure of gold heaped up; | |
| Here is wine in the festal cup. | |
| Tendrils blossoming, turned to whips, | 140 |
| Love with her breasts and scarlet lips. | |
| Breathe in their nostrils. | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Falsehoods breath, | |
| Out of nothingness into death. | |
| Out of the mold, out of the rocks | 145 |
| Wonder, mockery, paradox! | |
| Soaring spirit, groveling flesh, | |
| Bait the trap, and spread the mesh. | |
| Give him hunger, lure him with truth, | |
| Give him the iris hopes of Youth. | 150 |
| Starve him, shame him, fling him down, | |
| Whirled in the vortex of the town. | |
| Break him, age him, till he curse | |
| The idiot face of the universe. | |
| Over and over we mix the clay, | 155 |
| What was dust is alive to-day. | |
| |
| The Three:Thus is the hell-born tangle wound | |
| Swiftly, swiftly round and round. | |
| |
| Beelzebub:[Waving his trumpet.] You live! Away! | |
| |
| One of the Figures:How strange and new! | 160 |
| I am I, and another, too. | |
| |
| Another Figure:I was a sun-dews leaf, but now | |
| What is this longing? | |
| |
| Another Figure:Earth below | |
| I was a seedling magnet-tipped | 165 |
| Drawn down earth | |
| |
| Another Figure:And I was gripped | |
| Electrons in a granite stone, | |
| Now I think. | |
| |
| Another Figure:Oh, how alone! | 170 |
| |
| Another Figure:My lips to thine. Through thee I find | |
| Something alone by love divined! | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Begone! No, wait. I have bethought me, friends; | |
Lets give a play. [He waves his trumpet.] | |
To yonder green rooms go.
[The figures disappear.] | 175 |
| |
| Yogarindra:Oh, yes, a play! Thats very well, I think, | |
| But who will be the audience? I must throw | |
| Illusion over all. | |
| |
| Loki:And I must shift | |
| The scenery, and tangle up the plot. | 180 |
| |
| Beelzebub:Well, so you shall! Our audience shall come | |
From yonder graves.
[He blows his trumpet slightly louder than before. The scene changes. A stage arises among the graves. The curtain is down, concealing the creatures just created, illuminated halfway up by spectral lights. Beelzebub stands before the curtain.] | |
| |
Beelzebub:[A terrific blast of the trumpet.] Who-o-o-o-o-o!
[Immediately there is a rustling as of the shells of grasshoppers stirred by a wind; and hundreds of the dead, including those who have appeared in the Anthology, hurry to the sound of the trumpet.] | |
| |
| A Voice:Gabriel! Gabriel! | |
| |
| Many Voices:The Judgment day! | 185 |
| |
| Beelzebub:Be quiet, if you please | |
| At least until the stars fall and the moon. | |
| |
Many Voices:Save us! Save us!
[Beelzebub extends his hands over the audience with a benedictory motion and restores order.] | |
| |
| Beelzebub:Ladies and gentlemen, your kind attention | |
| To my interpretation of the scene. | 190 |
| I rise to give your fancy comprehension, | |
| And analyze the parts of the machine. | |
| My mood is such that I would not deceive you, | |
| Though still a liar and the father of it, | |
| From judgments frailty I would retrieve you, | 195 |
| Though falsehood is my art and though I love it. | |
| Down in the habitations whence I rise, | |
| The roots of human sorrow boundless spread. | |
| Long have I watched them draw the strength that lies | |
| In clay made richer by the rotting dead. | 200 |
| Here is a blossom, here a twisted stalk, | |
| Here fruit that sourly withers ere its prime; | |
| And here a growth that sprawls across the walk, | |
| Food for the green worm, which it turns to slime. | |
| The ruddy apple with a core of cork | 205 |
| Springs from a root which in a hollow dangles, | |
| Not skillful husbandry nor laborious work | |
| Can save the tree which lightning breaks and tangles. | |
| Why does the bright nasturtium scarcely flower | |
| But that those insects multiply and grow, | 210 |
| Which make it food, and in the very hour | |
| In which the veinèd leafs and blossoms blow? | |
| Why does a goodly tree, while fast maturing, | |
| Turn crooked branches covered oer with scale? | |
| Why does the tree whose youth was not assuring | 215 |
| Prosper and bear while all its fellows fail? | |
| I under earth see much. I know the soil. | |
| I know where mold is heavy and where thin. | |
| I see the stones that thwart the plowmans toil, | |
| The crooked roots of what the priests call sin. | 220 |
| I know all secrets, even to the core, | |
| What seedlings will be upas, pine or laurel; | |
| It cannot change howeer the fields worked oer. | |
| Mans what he is and thats the devils moral. | |
| So with the souls of the ensuing drama | 225 |
| They sprang from certain seed in certain earth. | |
| Behold them in the devils cyclorama, | |
| Shown in their proper light for all theyre worth. | |
| Now to my task: Ill give an exhibition | |
Of mixing the ingredients of spirit. [He waves his wand.] | 230 |
| Come, crucible, perform your magic mission, | |
| Come, recreative fire, and hover near it! | |
Ill make a soul, or show how one is made. [He waves his wand again. Parti-colored flames appear.] | |
This is the woman you shall see anon! [A red flame appears.] | |
| This hectic flame makes all the world afraid: | 235 |
| It was a soldiers scourge which ate the bone. | |
| His daughter bore the lady of the action, | |
| And died at thirty-nine of scrofula. | |
| She was a creature of a sweet attraction, | |
Whose sex-obsession no one ever saw. [A purple flame appears.] | 240 |
| Lo! this denotes aristocratic strains | |
Back in the centuries of Frances glory. [A blue flame appears.] | |
| And this the will that pulls against the chains | |
| Her father strove until his hair was hoary. | |
| Sorrow and failure made his nature cold, | 245 |
| He never loved the child whose woe is shown, | |
| And hence her passion for the things which gold | |
| Brings in this world of pride, and brings alone. | |
| The human heart thats famished from its birth | |
| Turns to the grosser treasures, that is plain. | 250 |
| Thus aspiration fallen fills the earth | |
| With jungle growths of bitterness and pain. | |
| Of Celtic, Gallic fire our heroine! | |
| Courageous, cruel, passionate and proud. | |
| False, vengeful, cunning, without fear o sin. | 255 |
| A head that oft is bloody, but not bowed. | |
| Now if she meet a mansuppose our hero, | |
| With whom her chemistry shall war yet mix, | |
| As if she were her Borgia to his Nero, | |
| Twill look like one of Satans little tricks! | 260 |
| However, it must be. The worlds great garden | |
| Is not all mine. I only sow the tares. | |
| Wheat should be made immune, or else the Warden | |
| Should stop their coming in the worlds affairs. | |
| But to our hero! Long ere he was born | 265 |
| I knew what would repel him and attract. | |
| Such spirit mathematics, fig or thorn, | |
I can prognosticate before the fact. [A yellow flame appears.] | |
| This is a grandsires treason in an orchard | |
Against a maid whose nature with his mated. [Lurid flames appear.] | 270 |
| And this his memory distrait and tortured, | |
| Which marked the child with hate because she hated. | |
| Our heroines grand dame was that maids own cousin | |
| But never this our man and woman knew. | |
| The child, in time, of lovers had a dozen, | 275 |
| Then wed a gentleman upright and true. | |
| And thus our hero had a double nature: | |
| One half of him was bad, the other good. | |
| The devil must exhaust his nomenclature | |
| To make this puzzle rightly understood. | 280 |
| But when our hero and our heroine met | |
| They were at once attracted, the repulsion | |
| Was hidden under Passion, with her net | |
| Which must enmesh you ere you feel revulsion. | |
| The virus coursing in the soldiers blood, | 285 |
| The orchards ghost, the unknown kinship twixt them, | |
| Our heros mothers lovers round them stood, | |
| Shadows that smiled to see how Fate had fixed them. | |
| This twain pledge vows and marry, thats the play. | |
| And then the tragic features rise and deepen. | 290 |
| He is a tender husband. When away | |
| The serpents from the orchard slyly creep in. | |
| Our heroine, born of spirit none too loyal, | |
| Picks fruit of knowledgeleaves the tree of life. | |
| Her fancy turns to France corrupt and royal, | 295 |
| Soon she forgets her duty as a wife. | |
| You know the rest, so far as thats concerned, | |
| She met exposure and her husband slew her. | |
| He lost his reason, for the love she spurned. | |
He prized her as his ownhow slight he knew her. [He waves a wand, showing a man in a prison cell.] | 300 |
| Now here he sits condemned to mount the gallows | |
| He could not tell his storyhe is dumb. | |
| Love, says your poets, is a grace that hallows, | |
| I call it suffering and martyrdom. | |
| The judge with pointed finger says, You killed her. | 305 |
| Well, so he didbut heres the explanation; | |
| He could not give it. I, the drama-builder, | |
Show you the various truths and their relation. [He waves his wand.] | |
| Now, to begin. The curtain is ascending, | |
| They meet at tea upon a flowery lawn. | 310 |
| Fair, is it not? How sweet their souls are blending | |
| The author calls the play Laocoon. | |
| |
| A Voice:Only an earth dream. | |
| |
| Another Voice:With which we are done. | |
| A flash of a comet | 315 |
| Upon the earth stream. | |
| |
| Another Voice:A dream twice removed, | |
| A spectral confusion | |
| Of earths dread illusion. | |
| |
| A Far Voice:These are the ghosts | 320 |
| From the desolate coasts. | |
| Would you go to them? | |
| Only pursue them. | |
| Whatever enshrined is | |
| Within you is you. | 325 |
| In a place where no wind is, | |
| Out of the damps, | |
| Be ye as lamps. | |
| Flame-like aspire, | |
| To me alone true, | 330 |
The Life and the Fire.
[Beelzebub, Loki, and Yogarindra vanish. The phantasmagoria fades out. Where the dead seemed to have assembled, only heaps of leaves appear. There is the light as of dawn. Voices of Spring.] | |
| |
| First Voice:The springtime is come, the winter departed, | |
| She wakens from slumber and dances light-hearted. | |
| The sun is returning | |
| We are done with alarms, | 335 |
| Earth lifts her face burning, | |
| Held close in his arms. | |
| The sun is an eagle | |
| Who broods oer his young, | |
| The earth is his nursling | 340 |
| In whom he has flung | |
| The life-flame in seed, | |
| In blossom desire, | |
| Till fire become life, | |
| And life become fire. | 345 |
| |
| Second Voice:I slip and I vanish, | |
| I baffle your eye; | |
| I dive and I climb, | |
| I change and I fly. | |
| You have me, you lose me, | 350 |
| Who have me too well, | |
| Now find me and use me | |
| I am here in a cell. | |
| |
| Third Voice:You are there in a cell? | |
| Oh, now for a rod | 355 |
| With which to divine you | |
| |
| Second Voice:Nay, child, I am God. | |
| |
| Fourth Voice:When the waking waters rise from their beds of snow, under the hill, | |
| In little rooms of stone where they sleep when icicles reign, | |
| The April breezes scurry through woodlands, saying Fulfill! | 360 |
| Awaken roots under cover of soilit is Spring again. | |
| |
| Then the sun exults, the moon is at peace, and voices | |
| Call to the silver shadows to lift the flowers from their dreams. | |
| And a longing, longing enters my heart of sorrow, my heart that rejoices | |
| In the fleeting glimpse of a shining face, and her hair that gleams. | 365 |
| |
| I arise and follow alone for hours the winding way by the river, | |
| Hunting a vanishing light, and a solace for joy too deep. | |
| Where do you lead me, wild one, on and on forever? | |
| Over the hill, over the hill, and down to the meadows of sleep. | |
| |
| The Sun:Over the soundless depths of space for a hundred million miles | 370 |
| Speeds the soul of me, silent thunder, struck from a harp of fire. | |
| Before my eyes the planets wheel and a universe defiles, | |
| I but a luminant speck of dust upborne in a vast desire. | |
| |
| What is my universe that obeys memyself compelled to obey | |
| A power that holds me and whirls me over a path that has no end? | 375 |
| And there are my children who call me great, the giver of life and day, | |
| Myself a child who cry for life and know not whither I tend. | |
| |
| A million million suns above me, as if the curtain of night | |
| Were hung before creations flame, that shone through the weave of the cloth, | |
| Each with its worlds and worlds and worlds crying upward for light, | 380 |
| For each is drawn in its course to what?as the candle draws the moth. | |
| |
| The Milky Way:Orbits unending, | |
| Life never ending, | |
| Power without end. | |
| |
| A Voice:Wouldst thou be lord, | 385 |
| Not peace but a sword. | |
| Not hearts desire | |
| Ever aspire. | |
| Worship thy power, | |
| Conquer thy hour, | 390 |
| Sleep not but strive, | |
| So shalt thou live. | |
| |
| Infinite Depths:Infinite Law, | |
| Infinite Life. | |