A Prologue
(TO AN UNWRITTEN PLAY)
Characters: James Hamilton, Mary Fawcett, Rachael
Lavine, two slaves.
Place: Nevis, British West Indies. Time:
The month of April, 1756.
[A large room, with open windows,
to which are attached heavy inside wooden shutters
furnished with iron bars. Beyond the windows are
seen masses of tropical trees and foliage, green and
more brilliantly hued, filled with screaming birds
and monkeys. In the court is a fountain.
The house is half-way up the mountain, and between
the trees is a glint of the sea. The room is
severely simple. There are no curtains, carpets,
nor upholstered furniture; but there are two handsome
pieces of mahogany, a bookcase full of books bound
in old calf, a table on which are tropical fruits
and cooling drinks in earthen jugs, one or two palm-trees,
and Caribbean pottery on shelves. In one corner
is a harp.
In the distance is heard a loud menacing
roar. The sky is covered with racing clouds.
Suffusing everything is a livid light.
Mistress Fawcett is leaning on her
crutch, looking through one of the windows. Two
slaves are crouching on the floor. All are in
an intense attitude, listening. Suddenly there
is heard the quick loud firing of cannon, four guns
in rapid succession. The negroes shriek and crouch
lower as if they would insinuate their trembling bodies
through the floor. Mistress Fawcett hastily closes
the window by which she is standing, swings to and
bars its shutters. Immediately after may be heard
the sound, gradually diminishing in the distance, of
a long line of windows slammed and barred. Mistress
Fawcett attempts to move the shutters of the other
window, but the hinges are rusty and defy her feeble
strength.]
MISTRESS FAWCETT (to the slaves).
Come here. Close this window. Did you not
hear the guns? A hurricane is upon us.
THE SLAVES (crouching lower and wailing
almost unintelligibly). Oh, mistress, save us!
Send for oby doctor!
MISTRESS FAWCETT. To strangle
you with a horse-hair pie! Your obeah charlatans
are grovelling in their cellars. Only our courage
and our two hands can save us to-day. Come! (Beating
the floor with her crutch.) A hundred man slaves on
the estate, and not one to help us save the house!
Are my daughter and I to do it all? Get up! (She
menaces them with her crutch.)
THE SLAVES (not moving). Oh, mistress!
[Enter RACHAEL. She walks to
the open window and looks out.]
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Close the windows,
Rachael. I cannot. And those creatures are
empty skulls.
RACHAEL. In a moment.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. In a moment?
Open your ears. Do you want to see the roof racing
with the wind?’
RACHAEL. The hurricane is still miles away.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Great God!
How can you stand there and wait for a hurricane?
Do you realize that an hour, if this old house be not
strong enough, may see us struggling out in those
roaring waters? These desolate afflicted Caribbees!
They have tested my courage many times, and I can
go through this without flinching; but I cannot stand
that unnatural calm of yours.
RACHAEL. Do I seem calm? (She
closes and bars the window.) It is a fine sight.
We may never have such another.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Nor live to know.
RACHAEL (her back is still turned, as she shakes and
tests the window).
Well, what of that? Are you so in love with life?
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Even at sixty I am in no haste
to be blown out of it.
And if I were twenty—
RACHAEL (turning suddenly, and facing
her mother). At twenty, with forty years of nothingness
before you, cut off from all the joy of life, on an
island in the Caribbean Sea, what then? (She snaps
her fingers.) That for the worst a hurricane can do!
MISTRESS FAWCETT (uneasily).
Do not let us talk of personal things to-day.
RACHAEL. I never felt more personal.
MISTRESS FAWCETT (looking at her keenly). I believe
you are excited.
RACHAEL (she clinches her hands and
brings them up sharply to her breast). Excited!
Call it that if you like. All my life I have longed
for the hurricane, and now I feel as if it were coming
to me alone.
MISTRESS FAWCETT (evasively). I do not always
understand you, Rachel.
You are a strange girl.
RACHAEL (bursting through her assumed
composure). Strange? Because I long to feel
the mountain shaken, as I have been shaken through
four terrible weeks? Because I long to hear the
wind roar and shriek its derision of man, make his
quaking soul forget every law he ever knew, stamp
upon him, grind him to pulp—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Hush!
What are you saying? I do not know you—“the
ice-plant of the tropics,” indeed! The electricity
of this hurricane has bewitched you.
RACHAEL. That I will not deny.
(She laughs.) But I do deny that I am not myself,
whether you recognize me or not. Which self that
you have seen do you think my real one? First,
the dreaming girl, in love with books, the sun, the
sea, and a future that no man has written in books;
then, while my scalp is still aching from my newly
turned hair, I am thrust through the church doors
into the arms of a brute. A year of dumb horror,
and I run from his house in the night, to my one friend,
the mother who—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Not another
word! I believed in him! There wasn’t
a mother on St. Kitts who did not envy me. No
one could have imagined—
RACHAEL. No one but a girl of
sixteen, to whom no one would listen—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. I commanded you to hush.
RACHAEL. Command the hurricane! I will speak!
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Very well,
speak. It may be our last hour—who
knows? (She seats herself, sets her lips, and
presses her hands hard on the handle of her crutch.)
RACHAEL. Did you think you knew
me in the two years that followed, years when I was
as speechless as while in bondage to John Lavine, when
I crouched in the dark corners, fearing the light,
the sound of every man’s voice? Then health
again, and normal interests, but not hope—not
hope! At nineteen I had lived too long! You
are sixty, and you have not the vaguest idea what
that means! Then, four weeks ago—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Ah!
RACHAEL. James Hamilton came.
Ah, how unprepared I was! That I—I
should ever look upon another man except with loathing!
Sixty and twenty—perhaps somewhere between
is the age of wisdom! And the law holds me fast
to a man who is not fit to live! All nature awoke
in me and sang the hour I met Hamilton. For the
first time I loved children, and longed for them.
For the first time I saw God in man. For the first
time the future seemed vast, interminable, yet all
too short. And if I go to this man who has made
me feel great and wonderful enough to bear a demi-god,
a wretch can divorce and disgrace me! Oh, these
four terrible weeks—ecstasy, despair—ecstasy,
despair—and to the world as unblinking
as a marble in a museum! Do you wonder that I
welcome the hurricane, in which no man dare think
of any but his puny self? For the moment I am
free, and as alive, as triumphant as that great wind
outside—as eager to devastate, to fight,
to conquer, to live—to live—to
live. What do I care for civilization? If
James Hamilton were out there among the flying trees
and called to me, I would go. Hark! Listen!
Is it not magnificent?
[The hurricane is nearer and louder.
The approaching roar is varied by sudden tremendous
gusts, the hissing and splashing of water, the howling
of negroes and dogs, the wild pealing of bells.
In the room below is heard the noise of many trampling
feet, slamming of windows, and smothered exclamations.]
MISTRESS FAWCETT. The negroes
have taken refuge in the cellar—every one
of them, beyond a doubt, two hundred and more!
God grant they do not die of fright or suffocation.
It is useless to attempt to coax them up here.
These only wait until our backs are turned. Look!
[The slaves have crawled to the door
on the left. They are livid. Their tongues
hang out. Rachael runs forward, seizes them by
their long hair, and administers a severe shaking.]
RACHAEL. Wake up! Wake up!
We need your help. The windows must be watched
every moment.
[A terrible gust shakes the house.
As Rachael relaxes her hold, the slaves collapse again,
but clutch at her skirts, mumbling and wailing.
Rachael gazes at them a moment, makes a motion as if
to spurn them with her foot, then shrugs her shoulders
and opens the door.]
RACHAEL. Go. Die in your
own way. May I be granted the same privilege
some day.
[The slaves stumble out.]
MISTRESS FAWCETT. I see you recognize
no will but your own to-night. They are my slaves,
and I had bidden them stay. But in truth they
are useless; and as for you—have your little
hour. I embittered too many. It may be your
last. And—thank God!—Hamilton
is not here.
RACHAEL (with great agitation).
Where is he? At sea? Riding over the mountain—far
from shelter—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Trust any man
to take care of himself, let alone a Scot. No
doubt he is over on St. Kitts, brewing swizzle with
Will Hamilton. Will’s house is one of the
strongest in the Caribbees. Look!
[One of the heavy shutters has been
forced open by the wind, which has shattered the outer
glass. Leaves and glass fly into the room.
Rachael and her mother hurl themselves against the
heavy wooden blind. By exerting all their strength
they succeed in fastening it again. Then they
examine the other window. Mistress Fawcett sits
down, panting, holding her hand to her heart.]
RACHAEL. I will see to the other
windows. (She runs out of the room.)
MISTRESS FAWCETT. If she knew
that Hamilton was on Nevis an hour before the guns
were fired! As like as not he helped to fire them,
for he is a guest at the Fort. If I had not commanded
him to go when he came this afternoon, he would be
here now. Thank heaven, no man could breast this
hurricane and live! I know her! I know her—little
as she thinks it! Will she continue to obey me?
And after I am dead? Ah! Do I allow myself
to fear aught in this hurricane, I shall never see
the morning. (She presses her hand hard against her
heart, and composes herself.)
[Rachael returns. She pours out
a drink and forces her mother to take it, while her
own head is erect and listening. Her nostrils
dilate; one can almost see her ears quiver. The
wind increases every moment in violence. In it
may now be heard a peculiar monotonous rattle, the
agitation of seeds in the dry pods of the “giant”
tree.]
RACHAEL. Did you see? I
had but a glimpse, but hours could not have made the
picture more vivid. I could see the great
wind. The tops of the palms are flying about
like Brobdingnagian birds, their long blades darting
out like infuriated tongues. I saw the oranges
flung about in a great game of battledore and shuttlecock—as
if the hurricane remembered to play in its fury!
I saw men shrieking at the masts of a ship. Their
puny lives! Why are they not glad to die so splendid
a death?
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Thank God, Hamilton is not
here!
RACHAEL. I tell you that, if
he were, the greatest man of his time would one day
call you grandam.
MISTRESS FAWCETT (rising with energy).
Hark ye, Rachael! Calm yourself! You have
had your hour of wildness. I understand your mood—the
relief, the delight to give to the storm what you
cannot give to Hamilton. But enough! I can
stand no more. I am old. My heart is nearly
worn out. If the storm unnerves me, I am undone.
RACHAEL. Very well, mother.
I will put my soul back in its coffin—if
I can. This is a favorable moment. There
is a lull.
MISTRESS FAWCETT (she seats herself
again). Come here, Rachael. (Rachael, who
has apparently calmed herself, approaches and stands
beside her mother. She tenderly rearranges the
old woman’s hair, which fell from her cap during
her struggle with the blind.) Rachael, these hours,
I repeat, may be our last on earth. This house
is old. The hurricane may uproot it. Like
you, I am not afraid to die. Indeed, I should
welcome death to-night if I could take you with me.
Bitterer than any pain has been the thought of leaving
you alone in the world. I am glad you have broken
the silence you imposed. I never could have broken
it. I ask you now to forgive me, and I acknowledge
that I alone was responsible for the tragedy of your
married life. That I was deceived is no excuse.
I am reckoned more astute than most. I should
have known that behind that white and purring exterior
was a cruel and hideous voluptuary. But I had
known Danes all my life, and respected them, and you
were the child of my old age. I knew that I had
not long to live. But I am not making excuses.
I ask you humbly to forgive me.
RACHAEL. Forgive you! I
have been bred in philosophy, and I have always loved
you perfectly.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Ah! I
did not know. Until to-night you have been so
reticent. And silent people think—think—
RACHAEL. I have thought, but
never to blame you. And what is past is past.
I waste no time on what cannot be undone. The
soul must have its education, and part of that is
to be torn up by the roots, trampled, beaten, crucified.
Let me hope that, having had that course at the beginning
of my life, I have had it once for all.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. There are worse
things than a loveless marriage with a brute.
One is to love a man you cannot marry, and be cast
aside by him, while your heart is still alive with
the love he has sloughed off like an old skin that
has begun to chafe. And then, without friends—with
children, perhaps, the world snatching at its skirts
as it passes you—the uncommon and terrible
disgrace of divorce. Rachael!—will
you not promise me—
RACHAEL. I promise you this—in
normal mood, I will think of you first. But,
do I ever meet Hamilton when I feel as I do to-night,
I should not think—not think, I say—not
think nor care! Am I like those cattle in the
cellar? Did not Nature fashion me to love and
hate, to create and suffer—to feel as she
does to-night?
MISTRESS FAWCETT (with a long sigh).
Thank heaven, Hamilton is not here! Ah!
RACHAEL. Yes, it comes again.
[The hurricane bursts with renewed
fury. The concussions are like the impact of
artillery. Hail rattles on the roof. Trees
and roofs crash against one another in mid-air.
Suddenly the house springs and rocks. Simultaneously
there is a long horrid shriek from the negroes in the
cellar.]
RACHAEL. Has Nevis been torn from her foundations?
MISTRESS FAWCETT. It was an earthquake.
A hurricane tugs at the very roots of the earth.
Pray heaven that the fires in Nevis are out. But
we have no time to think on imaginary horrors.
Look to the windows. (As Rachael examines the windows,
Mistress Fawcett thrusts her head towards the outer
door, as if listening in an agony of apprehension.
She raises herself from the chair, her eyes expanded,
but keeps her face turned from Rachael, and says,
steadily): I think I hear the rattle of a shutter
in the dining-room. Run and see. And examine
all the other windows before you return. Remember
that if the wind gets in, the roof will go. (Rachael
runs out of the room. Immediately after there
is a loud knocking at the front door, which is on
the side of the house at present sheltered from the
direct attack of the storm. Mistress Fawcett
hobbles forward and secures more firmly the iron bar,
making it impossible for an outsider to force his
way in.)
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Who is there?
A Voice without. It is I—James Hamilton.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. You cannot enter.
HAMILTON. Not enter? I have
braved death, and worse, to come to you, knowing that
you were alone. Nor would you leave a dog out
on such a day.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. I would open
to the most desperate criminal in the islands, but
not to you. Go! Go! At once! (She turns
her head in great anxiety towards the long line of
rooms where Rachael is examining the windows.) Surely
she cannot hear us; the wind is too great. (Raising
her voice again.) You cannot enter. If my daughter
opens the door to you, it will be after violence to
me. Now will you go—or, at least, make
no further sign? You are welcome to the shelter
of the veranda until the hurricane veers, when you
can take refuge in an outhouse.
HAMILTON. You have not an outhouse
on the estate. Not one stone is upon another,
except in this house. Hardly a tree is standing.
If you send me away, it is to certain death.
MISTRESS FAWCETT (in a tone of great
distress). What shall I do? I do not wish
you so ill as that. If I admit you, will you let
me hide you? Promise me not to reveal yourself
to Rachael?
HAMILTON. I will not promise.
[Rachael enters. She raises her
head with a quick half-comprehending motion.]
RACHAEL. Who is out there?
MISTRESS FAWCETT (she turns sharply,
draws herself up, and places her back to the door).
James Hamilton.
RACHAEL. Ah! (She is about to
advance quickly, when she notes the significance of
her mother’s face and attitude.) Let him in!
MISTRESS FAWCETT. No.
RACHAEL. It is not possible!
You? Why, he must be half dead. But, of
course, you are only waiting to extract a promise from
me.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Will you make it?
RACHAEL. No.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Then he can
die out there in the storm. (Rachael laughs, and approaches
her swiftly. Mistress Fawcett raises her hand
warningly.) I shall struggle with you, and you know
that will mean my death. You may choose
between us. (Rachael utters a cry, and covers her
face with her hands. Hamilton throws himself against
the door with violence, but the iron bar guards it.)
HAMILTON. The hurricane is veering,
Mistress Fawcett. Do not you hear the
absolute stillness? In a few moments it will burst
out of the west with increased fury. Unless you
admit me, I shall stay here and meet it. I have
crawled here, wriggled here, like a snake. It
has taken me two hours to cover half a mile.
I shall not crawl back. I came here to protect
Rachael—to die with her, if inevitable—
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Or to ruin her life.
HAMILTON. That is done.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. True; but I can protect her
from worse.
RACHAEL. Very well! You
can keep him out. You cannot keep me in.
I shall not struggle with you; nor will I admit any
one to your house against your will. But if you
do not open that door—at once—I
go out by another.
MISTRESS FAWCETT. Rachael! Do I count for
nothing? I have loved you so!
Is this all you have to give me in return?
RACHAEL. I know your motive—your
love. I misprize neither. But if women loved
their mothers better than the man of their hearts there
would be the end of the race. And what is the
will of either of us against Fate? Cannot you
understand? Why was he permitted to reach me to-night?
What man has ever lived through a hurricane before?
Nature has held her breath to let him pass. Do
you suppose your puny strength can hold us apart?
Quick! Answer! (She half turns towards the door
leading into the next room.)
MISTRESS FAWCETT. You have conquered.
But wait until I am out of this room. (She falls heavily
on her crutch, and hobbles out. Rachael holds
her breath until the door closes behind her, then runs
forward and lowers the bar. Hamilton enters.
He is hatless. His long cape is torn and covered
with leaves and mould. He closes and bars the
door behind him, and Rachael, seeing him safe, and
her desire so near to fulfilment, experiences a revulsion
of feeling. She falls back, and hurriedly fetching
a pan of coals from a corner, fires them, and mixes
a punch.)
RACHAEL (hurriedly). You are
cold. You are exhausted. In a moment I will
give you a hot drink.
[Hamilton, after a long look at her,
throws himself into a chair by the table, and stares
at the floor, his hand at his head.]
HAMILTON. Thank you. I need
it. I feel as if all the hurricane were in my
head.
RACHAEL (pouring the punch into a silver goblet).
Drink.
HAMILTON. Gratefully! (He raises the goblet.)
I drink—to the hurricane.
RACHAEL (she moves restlessly about,
but remains on the other side of the table).
Tell me of your journey here. I should think you
would be gray and old! Ah, the color comes back
to your face! You are young again, already.
HAMILTON (he has drained the goblet
and set it on the table; he rises, and looks full
at her). Did you doubt that I would come?
RACHAEL (speaking lightly, and averting
her eyes). I thought you were on St. Kitts.
HAMILTON (vehemently). Still
I would have come. I knew the hurricane would
give you to me. And out there, fighting inch by
inch, the breath beaten out of my body, my arms almost
torn from their sockets, maddened by the terrible
confusion, I still knew that Nature was driving me
to you, as she has separated us since the day I came,
with her smiling, intolerable calm—
RACHAEL (still half frivolous under
the sudden wrench from tragic despair). And,
after that terrible experience, you still have love
and romance in you! I should want a warm bed,
and then—to-morrow—to-morrow—we
will sit on the terrace and watch the calm old sun
go down into the calm old sea, with not a thought for
the torn old earth—
HAMILTON. Rachael! I did not come here to
jest.
RACHAEL. I must go to my mother! She is
alone! What have I done?
HAMILTON. Stay where you are!
Do you mean that you wish you had not opened the door?
RACHAEL (she hesitates a moment, then
raises her eyes to his, and answers distinctly).
No! (She is leaning on the table, which she has deliberately
kept between them. Hamilton throws himself into
his chair, and, leaning forward, clasps her wrists
with his hands.)
HAMILTON. This hurricane is the
end of all things, or the beginning.
RACHAEL (she throws her head back,
with a gesture of triumph). The beginning!
HAMILTON. Yes, the storm has
come as a friend, not as an enemy, no matter which
way—no matter which way. (He speaks hoarsely
and slowly. There is a silence, during which
they stare at each other until both are breathless,
and the table, under the pressure of Hamilton’s
arms, slowly slips aside.)
RACHAEL. Hark!
HAMILTON. Yes; the storm returns.
[Without further warning, the hurricane
bursts out of the west with the fury of recuperated
power. The house trembles. The slaves screech
in the cellar. A deluge of water descends on
the roof. The confusion waxes louder and louder,
until it seems as if the noise alone must grind all
things to dust. Hamilton thrusts aside the table,
and takes Rachael violently in his arms. Her
laugh of delight and triumph blends curiously with
the furious noise of the hurricane.]