Jonathan Ned Katz: "Comrades and Lovers," Act I

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ENTRY IN CONSTRUCTION

Jonathan Ned Katz: "Comrades and Lovers"


ACT I, SCENE 1
[LIGHTS OFF; WHITMAN'S FIRST WORDS ARE HEARD IN THE DARK.]


WHITMAN: Love thoughts


SPEAKER 1: love-juice,


SPEAKER 2: love-odor,


SPEAKER 3: love-yielding,


SPEAKER 4: love-climbers,


WHITMAN: and the climbing sap,


SPEAKER 1: arms and hands of love,


SPEAKER 2: lips of love,


SPEAKER 3: phallic thumb of love,


SPEAKER 4: breasts of love,


WHITMAN: bellies pressed and glued together with love.


[LIGHTS ON, NIGHT.
SCENE TITLE, PROJECTED OR PRINTED ON PLACARD:
1 Walt Whitman, "Love-thoughts"
WHITMAN AND A "BOY" MOVE CLOSE TOGETHER, ADDRESS EACH OTHER.]


BOY: The wet of woods through the early hours.


WHITMAN: Two sleepers at night lying close together as they sleep,


BOY: One with an arm slanting down across and below the waist of the other.


WHITMAN: The smell of apples,


BOY: aromas from crushed sage plant,


WHITMAN: mint,


BOY: birch bark.


WHITMAN: The boy's longings,

the glow and pressure
as he confides to me
what he was dreaming.


BOY: The dead leaf tallings its spiral whirl,

falling still and content to the ground.


WHITMAN: The sensitive, orbic, underlapped brothers,

that only privileged feelers
may be intimate where they are.


BOY: The mystic amorous night.


WHITMAN: The curious roamer the hand,

roaming allover the body,


BOY: the bashful withdrawing of flesh

where the fingers soothingly pause
and edge themselves.


WHITMAN: The limpid liquid within the young man,


BOY: the vex'd corrosion

so pensive and painful,


WHITMAN: the torment,


BOY: the irritable tide

that will not be at rest,


WHITMAN: the like of the same I feel,

the like of the same in others.


[SCENE TITLE: 2 Rufus Griswold, "Once licentiousness"
RESPONDING TO THE EARLIER VERSE, GRISWOLD APPEARS WITH LEAVES OF GRASS, SPEAKS TO WHITMAN.]


GRISWOLD: Once licentiousness

shunned the light;
now it writes books
showing how grand and pure it is,
and prophecies
its own ultimate triumph.


[TO AUDIENCE, HOLDING UP LEAVES OF GRASS]


It is impossible to imagine
how any man's fancy
could have conceived
such a mass of stupid filth.
We leave this gathering of muck
to the laws
which have power to suppress
such gross obscenity.


[FIRE AND BR1MSTONE PROPHECY]


"Peccatum illud horribile,
inter Christianos non nominandum."


[WHISPERS TO WHITMAN]


(That vile sin among Christians not to be named.)


[WHITMAN AND SPEAKERS RESPOND TO GRISWOLD.
SCENE TITLE: 3 Walt Whitman, "Through me"]


WHITMAN: Through me many long dumb voices,


SPEAKER 1: voices of the interminable generations of slaves,


SPEAKER 2: voices of prostitutes and deformed persons,


SPEAKER 3: voices of the diseased and despairing,


SPEAKER 4: voices of wombs and the fatherstuff,


SPEAKER 1: voices of the rights of them the others are down upon.


WHITMAN: Through me forbidden voices,


SPEAKER 2: voices of sexes and lusts,


SPEAKER 3: voices veiled

and I remove the veil,


SPEAKER 4: voices indecent

by me clarified and transfigured.


WHITMAN: I do not press my finger across my mouth!


SPEAKER 1: keep as delicate around the bowels

as around the head and heart,


SPEAKER 2: copulation is no more rank to me than death is.


SPEAKER 3: I believe in the flesh and the appetites,


SPEAKER 4: seeing, hearing, and feeling are miracles,

and each part and tag of me is a miracle.


WHITMAN: [TO BRONSON ALCOTT AND HENRY DAVID THOREAU, WHO APPEAR IN THE NEXT SCENE]

If I worship any particular thing
it shall be some of the spread of my body;


SPEAKER 1: You my rich blood,

your milky stream pale strippings of my life;


SPEAKER 2: Breast that presses against other breasts

it shall be you,

SPEAKER 3: Root of washed sweet-flag,

timorous pond-snipe,
nest of guarded duplicate eggs,
it shall be you,


SPEAKER 4: Mixed tussled hay of head and beard and brawn

it shall be you,

WHITMAN: Trickling sap of maple,

fibre of manly wheat,
it shall be. you;


SPEAKER 1: Winds

whose soft-tickling genitals rub against me
it shall be you,


SPEAKER 2: Broad muscular fields,


SPEAKER 3: branches of liveoak,


SPEAKER 4: loving lounger in my winding paths,

it shall be you,


WHITMAN: Hands I have taken,

face I have kissed,
mortal I have ever touched,
it shall be you.


[ALCOTT AND HENRY DAVID THOREAU RESPOND TO WHITMAN
SCENE TITLE: 4 Bronson Alcott: "This morning with Henry David Thoreau"
ALCOTT ADDRESSES AUDIENCE; THOREAU ACCOMPANIES HIM, FOCUSING ON WHITMAN]


ALCOTT: This morning

with Henry David Thoreau to Brooklyn,
to see Walt Whitman.
I find this Whitman
likely to make his mark on Young America he affirming himself
to be its representative man and poet.


[WHITMAN AND THOREAU EYE EACH OTHER SUSPICIOUSLY; ALCOTT OBSERVES]


Thoreau and Whitman
each seemed planted fast in reserve,
surveying the other curiously,
like two beasts,
each wondering
what the other would do,
whether to snap
or run.


THOREAU: [TO ALCOTT, INDICATING WHITMAN]

There are two or three pieces
in his book
which are disagreeable
to say the least,
simply sensual.
He does not celebrate love at all.
It is as if
the beasts spoke.
Men have been ashamed of themselves
with reason.
I do not wish
his poems' sensual parts
were not written
but that men and women
were so pure
they could read them
without harm,
that is,
without understanding them.


[TO HIMSELF; A NEW THOUGHT]


Of course,
if we are shocked,
whose experience are we reminded of?


[TITLE: 5 Walt Whitman, "By silence"
WHITMAN RESPONDS TO THOREAU]


WHITMAN: By silence

the pens of poets
have long connived
at the filthy law
that sex,
desires,
lusts,
organs,
acts
are unmentionable,
to be ashamed of,
driven to skulk out of literature.


SPEAKER 1: This filthy law

has to be repealed
it stands in the way
of great reforms.


SPEAKER 2: It is in the interest of women

as well as men
that there should be
no infidelism about sex,
but perfect faith.


SPEAKER 3: The present diluted deferential love

is enough to make a man vomit;


SPEAKER 4: as to manly friendship,

everywhere observed in the states,
there is not the first breath of it
to be observed in print.


WHITMAN: The body of a man or women

is so far quite unexpressed in poems;


SPEAKER 1: that body is to be expressed,

and sex is.


WHITMAN: [TO JOHN ADDINGTON SYMONDS, WHO APPEARS IN NEXT SCENE]

All theories stagnate in their vitals,
cowardly and rotten,
if they cannot publicly accept, and publicly name,
with specific words,
the things on which all decency,
all that is worth being here for
depend.


[SYMONDS, INSPIRED BY WHITMAN'S WORDS, STEPS INTO THE LIGHT.
SCENE TITLE: 6 John Addington Symonds, "Is it not strange?"
HERE, SYMONDS IS TWENTYSEVEN; HE HAS BEEN MARRIED THREE YEARS AND HAS TWO DAUGHTERS; HE'S WELL-EDUCATED, AND COMES FROM AN OLD, ENGLISH, ARISTOCRATIC FAMILY, BUT HE MUST WRITE LITERARY AND ART CRITICISM TO SUPPLEMENT HIS INHERITED INCOME.
HE INTRODUCES HIMSELF TO THE AUDIENCE AS A CLOSE CONFIDANT, FULL OF INNER PASSION]


SYMONDS: Is it not strange I should have read