Reading, Writing, Pondering: Big Life Themes, Literature, Contemporary/Historical Issues |
Obax and the Night-Riders, a Stage Play ACT TWO ACT TWO, SCENE ONE (Lights up.) (Daytime. Outdoors.) Macon, Georgia, CSA. Location: SouthWest side of city. January, 1863. CHARACTERS: James H. Burton, Superintendent of Armories, Confederate States of America Augustus Schwaab, City Engineer, Macon, Georgia, Architect of CSA Macon City Officials MAJOR SHERROD LACEY NELSON, CSA CAPTAIN JUDSON HEATH, CSA HARRALD NEALM Macon Society inc. from Wesleyan Ladies' College REVEREND PRESIDENT FISK RUFUS FISK INSTRUCTOR ARABELLA WILLIS INSTRUCTOR VONNIE ANDERSON VONDA NEALM, student ASHLEY DUMPLING, student and roommate ' Background CHARACTERS: Assorted STONEMASONS, CARPENTERS, BRICKMASONS 150 SLAVE LABORERS, inc. ALEC, WALTER, TRULEE of TALLAMASSEE PLANTATION, near Millsboro, East Georgia Ps. 118:22 he stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner. King James (VOICES of two men are heard over the low-voiced conversations throughout the crowd, the shuffle of footsteps, and the occasional rattle of chains as the bound slave laborers shift in place under the Georgia sun.) JAMES BURTON, SUPERINTENDENT OF ARMORIES, CSA: Oh, we have major plans, MR. NEALM! Major plans, indeed! You see, we are set for manufacturing of arms on a giant scale here; 177,000 square feet JUST for manufacturing! That's not to mention all the other necessities: in addition to the main building, which we will construct to two stories, we will have a smithy, a barrel-rolling department, storehouses, coal sheds, proof house, and of course living quarters for all these laborers. Those men and slaves you see out here at the edge of the crowd, farthest from the location of the Corner Stone? Those will not even make a TENTH, Sir, of the men and slave labor we will have to call in to finish this building! Our Macon Armory will be the biggest, the best, and the most efficient throughout our Confederate States! HARRALD NEALM: VERY Impressive, Superintendent! I hope you can find a place for a humble businessman and Auctioneer such as myself to become a part of this vital military and industrial endeavour! SUPERINTENDENT BURTON: Have no doubt, Sir! We need all the loyal businesspersons we can find, and you are at the very top of our list! Let us meet for refreshments after the laying of today's Corner Stone, shall we? And we will surely hammer out an agreement of benefit to us all before we are done. (Sounds of a sledgehammer on stone, calling the crowd to attention.) (SUPERINTENDENT JAMES H. BURTON strides to the new CORNER STONE, taking his place beside it and holding up both hands for attention and silence.) SUPERINTENDENT BURTON: We are gathered here today, Gentlemen (and Ladies!) to commemmorate the commencement of a most important work, a constrution that will be of immense and enormous benefit to our Beloved Cause. Today we lay the Corner Stone, the very foundation, if you will, of the great and noble CONFEDERATE STATES ARMORY of Macon, Georgia, Confederate States of America!! Ps. 118:22 The stone which the builders refused is become the head stone of the corner. King James Version (Wild applause, cheers, shouts, foot-stomping.) SUPERINTENDENT BURTON: (in a lower volume) Gentlemen (and ladies) the world will long remember, and we who are gathered here today shall never forget, the extraordinary and monumental work which is to be accomplished here on this site. We shall build (shouts) THE BIGGEST, THE BEST, THE MOST EFFICIENT MANUFACTURING ARM OF THE JUST CAUSE, THE ONLY CAUSE, THE CONFEDERACY! (Deafening applause) (At the outskirts of the crowd stand the contingent from Wesleyan Ladies' College of instructors and students. The only missing Wesleyan individual is REVEREND PRESIDENT FISK Rufus Fisk, who stands with Superintendent Burton and the City Officials of Macon, at the front, near the Corner Stone which is about to be placed.) (Those Wesleyan Ladies' College students who have family and relations in or near the City who are attending stand with them, interspersed throughout the crowd. One of these is VONDA LACEY, who has arrived at the site with the College group, but has met up with her third cousin and sort of on-site Guardian, MAJOR SHERROD LACEY NELSON.) (Standing with VONDA LACEY ` and THE MAJOR is CAPTAIN JUDSON HEATH, CSA, who has accompanied THE MAJOR to the presentation as his Aide-de-Camp.) THE CAPTAIN: Are you too warm, MISS LACEY? Would you care for a sherbet? Ah'll step ovah there, see that vendor raht past the crowd? VONDA LACEY: Ah wouldn't mahnd that at ahl, Sir, Ah thank you. THE CAPTAIN: Perhaps you'd care to step over there with me, and sit under the trees ovah theah, out of this sun? VONDA LACEY: (glances at THE MAJOR, since she is after all here unchaperoned, except for the Wesleyan College instructors, and her third cousin, THE MAJOR. But he is very intent on watching the speakers, specifically SUPERINTENDENT JAMES H. BURTON, and a second man near the Corner Stone, HARRALD NEALM. So THE MAJOR misses VONDA'S glance toward him.) (VONDA reaches up and accepts THE CAPTAIN'S arm, and they walk away from the crowd past its outskirts. He leads her to a bench under the shade trees, and then walks back to buy two sherbets from the vendor, which he then carries back to the bench and sits next to VONDA LACEY. The two sit quietly conversing, unheard, heads together, occasionally smiling or laughing, and soon are gazing into each other's eyes, oblivious to the ongoing speeches or to the Wesleyan Ladies College instructors, now eyeing them distrustfully, or to THE MAJOR, who has at last discovered that his COUSIN VONDA is no longer standing beside him.) (Lights down.) |