A PROLOGUE TO BE SPOKEN BY BETSY
Our scene is the wind-swept coast
of Devon. By day there is a wide stretch of ocean
far below, and the abutments of our stage arise from
a dizzy cliff.
The time is remote, and ships of
forgotten build stand out from Bristol in full sail
for the mines of India. But we must be loose and
free of precise date lest our plot be shamed by broken
fact. A thousand years are but as yesterday.
We make but a general gesture to the dim spaces of
the past.
The village of Clovelly climbs
in a single street a staircase, really and
it is fagged and out of breath half way. But far
above, on a stormy crag, clinging by its toes, there
stands a pirates’ hut. To this topmost
ledge fishwives sometimes scramble by day; but when
a wind shall search the crannies of the night, then
no villager would dare to climb so high.
You will seek today in vain the
pirates’ cabin. Since the adventure of
our play a thousands tempests have snarled across these
rocks. You must convince your reason that these
pinnacles of yesteryear, toppled down by storm, lie
buried in the sea.
We had hoped that our drama’s
scene might lie on a pirate ship at sea. We had
wished for a swaying mast, full-set with canvas a
typhoon to smother our stage in wind. We had
hoped to walk a victim off the plank, with the sea
roaring in the wings. But our plot deals stubbornly
with us. Alas, our pirates grow old and stiff.
They have retired, as we say, from active practice
and live in easy luxury on shore. Yet we shall
see that their villany still thrives.
How shall we select a name for
our frightful play? There is a wharf in London
that is known as Wapping. In these days that we
call the present it has sunk to common use and its
rotten timbers are piled with honest unromantic merchandise.
But once a gibbet stood on Wapping Wharf, and pirates
were hanged upon it. It was the first convenient
harborage for inbound ships to dispose of this dirty
deep-sea cargo. So it was the somber motif of
a pirate’s life his moment of reflection
after he had slit his victim’s throat.
Tonight, although your beards grow
long and Time has marked its net of wrinkles tonight,
the years spin backwards. Only the young in heart
will catch the slender meaning of our play.
We are too quick to think that
childhood passes with the years that its
fine fancy is blunted with the practice of the world.
Too long have we been taught that the clouds of glory
fade in the common day. If a man permits, a child
keeps house within his heart.
Our prologue outstays its time.
Already the captain of our pirates puts on his hook.
The evil Duke limps for practice on his wooden leg.
Presently our curtain will rise. We shall see
the pirates’ cabin, with the lighthouse in the
distance, Flint’s lantern and the ladder to the
sleeping-loft. We shall hear a storm unparalleled thunder,
lightning and a rush of wind, if it can be managed.
Then our candles burn to socket.
Our pasteboard cabin grows dark. The blustering
ocean, the dizzy cliffs of Devon, melt like an unsubstantial
pageant. Once again, despite the signpost of the
years, we have run on the “laughing avenues
of childhood."