The scene is the same as before.
We have given up all hope of a pirate ship rocking
on the sea. Our plot still twists us around its
little finger. The curtain rises on the tableau
of the second act. Old Petey shows again at the
window to the right.
DUKE: What done it? What done it? I
asks yer.
PATCH: Jest when everythin’ was goin’
pretty.
CAPTAIN: Jest when she was about ter hit.
DARLIN’: Me heart near stopped I
was that excited.
(The pirates sit in deep dejection.)
DUKE: The mystery o’ this
business is how the blinkin’ lantern went out.
CAPTAIN: Öl’ Petey done his part.
PATCH: He doused herself in time.
CAPTAIN: It was the lantern done it.
DUKE: When there were n’t
no light at all, the Royal ’Arry, she jest sniffed
willainy and dropped anchor.
PATCH: I was repeatin’
Smash yer devil! Smash yer devil! kinder
hurryin’ her on.
DARLIN’: I was sayin’ Now I lay me throbbin’
with excitement.
DUKE: It was n’t île.
I put île in the lantern meself. Captain,
yer seen me put in île.
CAPTAIN: I seen yer. And I swished it meself
ter be sure.
PATCH: Nothin ‘s been right
since that ol’ lady hanged me ter a gibbet.
CAPTAIN: There we was watchin
PATCH: Pop!
CAPTAIN: And all of a sudden quicker
‘n seven devils the bloomin’
lantern went all ter pieces. It ’s grog,
I says. Snakes is next. It were a comfert
to the ol’ Captain ter know that all o’
yer seen it. I seen a yeller rhinoceros once,
runnin’ along with purple mice all
alone I seen it and it kinder sickened me
o’ rum.
PATCH: Does yer think the lantern exploded?
DUKE: Did yer ever hear o’ a ship’s
lantern explodin’? I asks yer,
Captain.
CAPTAIN: Yer talks silly, Patch.
That lantern has hung fer twenty year on ol’
Flint’s ship swingin’ easy and
contented all ’round the Horn and
it ain ’t never exploded once.
DUKE: Swabs’ lanterns explode,
stoopid. Ships’ lanterns don ’t.
Captain, I feels as mournful as when Flint’s
clock did n’t tick no more and we knowed he
was took by the blessed angels.
CAPTAIN: I ain ’t meself
as gay as a cuckoo not quite I ain ’t.
PATCH: Ever since that ol lady
DUKE: Lay off on that ol’ lady!
(They sit in silence, in dejection.
All stare stupidly at the floor. For a moment
it seems as if nothing more will be said and the audience
might as well go home. But presently the Duke
sees something at the rear of the cabin. He looks
as you or I would look if we saw a yellow elephant
taking its after-dinner coffee in the sitting-room;
but, as he is a pirate, he is not frightened merely
interested and intent. He brushes his hand before
his eyes, to make sure it is no delusion not
grog or rum. Then he rises softly. He crosses
to the window. Very gently he touches the glass.
He finds it is really broken. He loosens a piece
of the shattered glass. The others are sunk in
such melancholy that they do not observe him.
He gazes through the window, studying
the direction of the broken ship’s lantern.
He traces the angle with his finger. The gesture
ends with an accusing finger pointing at Red Joe.
He whistles softly. For a moment his eye rests
upon the gun, which leans against the clock. He
has guessed the riddle. He advances casually,
but with dirk in hand. He comes in front of Joe.
Suddenly he presses the blade of his dirk against
Joe’s stomach.)
DUKE: Captain! Captain! Quick!
Tie him up!
(Joe is bound again with rope.)
DUKE: It ’s him that done it. It ’s
Red Joe.
CAPTAIN: How did he get loose?
DUKE: (as he points to the
knife on the floor). Does yer see that knife?
Does yer see Joe? I ‘m tellin’ yer.
It was him shot out the lantern.
PATCH: Did n’t I help ter tie him meself?
DUKE: Askin’ yer pardon,
Captain, but you and Patch has the brains o’
a baby aligátor. A stuffed rhinocopoterus
is pos’-lutely nothin’. Askin’
yer pardon fer speakin’ so plain.
I does all yer thinkin’ for yer. There
‘s some folks settin’ here as are fat-headed,
and thinks ships’ lanterns explode.
PATCH: Easy now, ol’ dear.
Yer alers pitchin’ inter me, ’cause I ’m
good-natered.
CAPTAIN: Red Joe, I calls yer
a dirty spy. A swab! A landlubber! Fer
one copper farthin’ I ’d ketch yer one
with this hook.
DUKE: It was me discovered him.
I asks yer, Captain, ter leave Red Joe ter me.
I hates him most perticerler.
(Betsy enters from the kitchen.)
BETSY: Did you call, Captain?
DARLIN’: Nobody ain ‘t
callin’ yer, dearie. Now jest toddle back
to the kitchen.
DUKE: This ain ’t no place
fer a leetle girl. It will give yer bad
dreams. Mince pie ‘s nothin’.
(Betsy attempts to leave the cabin
by the door that leads to the cliffs the
door at the rear of the cabin.)
DUKE: Where you goin’, Betsy?
BETSY: I ’ve an errand in the village.
DUKE: Well, yer ain ‘t
goin’. It ain ’t no night fer
a leetle girl ter be out. I ain ‘t goin’
ter have me Duchess snifflin’ with a cold.
Go to grandma! It was me discovered him, Captain.
I ‘m askin’ yer a favor. He ’s
a snooper.
PATCH: Captain, I gets rusty.
CAPTAIN: Lay off, me hearties.
Duke! Patch! I loves both o’ yer.
I loves yer equal, like two mugs o’ grog as
is full alike. Yer can pitch dice ter see which
does it.
(He places the dice cup on the
table beside the candle. The Duke and Patch take
their places. Betsy, under cover of this centered
interest, runs to Red Joe, who whispers to her.)
DUKE: I drops ’em in me
mug, so ‘s they can get a smell o’ rum.
The leetle bones is me friends. I never throws
less ’n a five spot. I makes a pint o’
shakin’ the bones till they rattles jolly.
I likes the sound o’ it even better ‘n
the blessed scrapin’ o’ a spoon what ’s
stirrin’ grog. Write it on me tombstone if
I rots ashore He was the kinder feller
as never throwed less ’n a five spot.
CAPTAIN: Go ‘long, Duke. Bones, as
is kept waitin’, sulks.
PATCH: One or three?
DUKE: One ’s enough.
I ‘m talkin’ to yer, bones. I wants
sixes, sweeties.
(As he throws Betsy jostles the
candle with her arm. It overturns and falls.
The cabin is dark. You can see her run from the
cabin and pass the windows to the left.)
DUKE: Now yer done it!
PATCH: You is all thumbs, Betsy.
CAPTAIN: Easy, mates! It
were jest an accident. Betsy, fetch a seacoal
from the hearth! Betsy! We ain ‘t goin’
ter wallop yer. Where are yer, Betsy?
DARLIN’: Come out o’ yer hidin’!
CAPTAIN: I ’ll light the candle meself.
(He takes it to the fire, lights
it and returns to the table.)
CAPTAIN: There yer are blazin’
like ol’ Petey. Yer had better sit down,
Betsy. Crack me stump, where is the girl?
PATCH: Kinder silly o’
her ter run away. We ain ’t never walloped
her.
DUKE: Women ’s silly folks.
I calls ’em ninnies. It don ’t do
no good tryin’ ter understand ’em.
Now then, ol’ lionheart, are yer ready? (He
throws.) Two fives! I ’ve done
yer, Patch.
(It is Patch’s turn. He kisses the cubes.)
PATCH: Yer as sweet as honey.
Tell me yer loves me. Me dirk is itchin’
fer yer answer. Luck ’s a lady as dotes
on me. (He throws.) A pair o’ sixes!
Does yer see it, Duke? Stick yer blinkin’
eye right down agin the table! It ’s me,
Captain. (He rises and draws his knife.) Joey
are yer ready?
JOE: God, if I were loose I ’d
take you by the dirty gullet and twist it until you
roared. I ’d kick you off my path like a
snarling cur. Of what filth does nature sometimes
compound a man! Shall a skunk walk two-legged
to infect the air? Three cowards will hang on
Wapping wharf before the month is up.
PATCH: Are n’t meanin’ us, are yer
Joey?
JOE: And I ’ll tell you more.
CAPTAIN: Ain ‘t we listenin’
to yer? Yer can talk spry, as Patch here has
a leetle job ter do, and it ‘s nearin’
bed time.
DUKE: We does n’t want
ter sit up late and lose our beauty sleep jest listenin’
to a speech.
JOE: A pirate takes his chance
of death. You guard your dirty skins by wrecking
ships upon the rocks. You dare not pit yourselves
against a breathing victim. Like carrion-crows
you sit to a vile and bloated banquet.
PATCH: Tip me the wink, Captain,
when yer has heard enough.
JOE: Stand off, you whelp! The King of England
fights in France
DUKE: Ain ’t yer ’shamed
that you is not there ter help?
JOE: I ’ll tell you why
I am not in France. I swore to his majesty that
I would clear his coast of pirates. My plans are
made. The channel is swept by gunboats.
They will close in on you tomorrow you
and all the dirty vermin that befoul these cliffs.
DUKE: He talks so big, ye ’d
think he was the King himself.
(Everyone laughs at this.
The Duke takes the cloak from the chest. In derision
he hangs it across Red Joe’s shoulders.)
DUKE: We ’ll play ch’rades.
Here ’s yer costume, Joey. There! It
fits yer like the skin o’ a snake. We makes
yer King. Yer looks like yer was paradin’
in St. James’s park, lampin’ a Duchess.
PATCH: Does yer majesty need
a new ’igh chancellor. I asks yer fer
it. I wants a fine house in London town, runnin’
ter the Strand, and peacocks struttin’ in the
garden.
CAPTAIN: King, I asks yer ter
cast yer gig on me. I ’d be a right smart
Archbishop o’ Canterbury. Me whiskers is
’clesiastical.
DUKE: I offers meself, King,
as Lord ‘Igh Admiral o’ the Navy.
I swears fluent.
DARLIN’: Has yer a Princess
vacant? I lolls graceful on a throne. (The
horrid creature spits.)
CAPTAIN: ’Vast there, me
hearties! I ‘m thinkin’ I ‘m
hearin’ the sound o’ footsteps.
DUKE: (to Patch). Did yer lordship
hear any sound?
PATCH: Askin’ your Grice’s
pardon, I did n’t ketch a thing. Did you
hear anythin’, Princess?
DARLIN’: There ‘s nothin’ come
ter me pearly ears.
CAPTAIN: Silence! I wants ter listen.
(No sound is heard.)
CAPTAIN: Well, Patch, yer had
better get yer dirk ready. I ’m uncommon
sleepy. I wants ter get ter bed.
DARLIN’: Ketch him a deep one, Patch.
PATCH: I takes it mighty kind
o’ you, Captain. Yer has alers been a lovin’
father ter me. Joey, I ’ll tell yer what
yer are. Yer the kind o’ feller I hates
most perticerler. Yer a spy! Say yer prayers,
you hissin’ snake!
(He sharpens his dirk and gayly
tests it on his whiskers.)
JOE: My wasted day is done.
In the tempest’s wrack the stars are dim and
faith ’s the only compass. Now or hereafter,
what matters it? The sun will gild the meadows
as of yesteryear. The moon will fee the world
with silver coin. And all across the earth men
will traffic on their little errands until nature
calls them home. I am a stone cast in a windy
pool where scarce a ripple shows. Life ’s
but a candle in the wind. Mine will not burn
to socket.
DUKE: He ‘s all wound up
like a clock jest tickin’ words.
CAPTAIN: Patch, Joe is tellin’
us poetical that his wick has burned right down to
the bottle. Yer had better put it out, without
more hesitatin’.
(And now, as they are intent for
the coming blow suddenly! quietly! a
woman’s hand and arm a claw, rather,
with long, thin, shrivelled fingers have
come in sight at the window with the broken glass.
It quite terrifies me as I write.
My pencil shakes. Old ladies will want to scream.
The fingers grope along the sill.
They fumble on the wall. They stretch to reach
the gun which stands beside the clock. Another
inch and they will grasp it and Red Joe will be saved.
The arm rubs against the pendulum of the clock.
It swings and the clock starts to tick. And still
no one has seen the terrible hand. And now the
fingers are thrust blindly against the gun. It
falls with a clatter on the stones. The hand
and arm disappear. But Darlin’ has seen
the swinging pendulum and shrieks.)
DUKE: Does yer see it, Captain?
PATCH: Horrers!
DUKE: It ’s never went since Flint was
hanged.
CAPTAIN: And would n’t
run till his death ‘s revenged and him layin’
peaceful in his coffin.
PATCH: Does yer think it ‘s grog?
Does all o’ yer see it?
DUKE: What done it?
(From the distance is heard a long-drawn whistle.)
CAPTAIN: What ’s that?
PATCH: It makes me jumpy.
DUKE: It ain ’t a night when folks whistles
jest fer cows and such.
Finish yer job, Patch.
PATCH: Are yer feared o’ somethin’
special, Duke?
DUKE: Feared? If we ain ’t quick,
there ‘ll be a gibbet fer all o’ us.
CAPTAIN: Ain ‘t the clock tickin’
peaceful?
PATCH: She ain ’t got no
right ter tick. It ’s like a dead man talkin’.
DUKE: Quick! Give me the
knife! I ’ll stick it in him. And when
I ’m done, we scatters. There ‘s
trouble brewin’. Termorrer night, when the
tide is out, we meets at the holler cave. And
may the devil lend a helpin’ hand. Snooper,
are yer ready? Does yer see this here blade shinin’
in the candle? In about one minute I ‘ll
be wipin’ off a streak o’ red upon me
breeks. Flint blessin’ on yer
gentle soul! yer can rest in peace!
(He approaches Joe with upraised
knife. Suddenly he cries out.)
DUKE: It ’s him the fortin-teller
mentioned. It ’s the man in a velvet cloak!
CAPTAIN: It ’s him! Me God! Me
hook!
(With a growl of rage the pirates
leap forward toward Joe, but are arrested by the sound
of running feet. Into the cabin rushes the sailor
captain, followed by three sailors. The sailor
captain cries “’Vast there!”
and the pirates turn to face his men. They put
up a fight worthy of old Flint. Darlin’,
to escape the rough-and-tumble runs half way up the
ladder. The table is overturned. The stools
are kicked across the room. Even the precious
grog is spilled. But the pirates’ valor
is insufficient. They are overpowered at last
and tied. Red Joe’s cords are cut.
Into the cabin Betsy comes running, followed by old
Meg.)
BETSY: Joe! Hal! Thank God, you are
safe.
JOE: Margaret!
SAILOR CAPTAIN: I am the captain of the Royal
Harry.
JOE: Captain, I charge you to arrest these men.
SAILOR CAPTAIN: Yes, your Royal Highness.
DUKE: Royal ’Ighness? Did yer hear
what he said?
DARLIN’: ‘Ighness nothin’.
He ’s jest a snooper.
(She sits on the floor, with her
head on the Duke’s knee. She is staunch
to the last a true cook for a pirates’
band.)
JOE: You will transport them
in chains to London to wait their sentence by a court
of law.
SAILOR CAPTAIN: Yes, your majesty.
JOE: You mistake me, Captain.
My father is the King of England. I am but the
Prince of Wales.
SAILOR CAPTAIN: Alas, sire, we
bring you heavy news. Your Royal Father, the
King of England, has been killed, fighting gloriously
on the soil of France.
JOE: Bear with me. My grief
has leaped the channel. My thought is a silent
mourner at my father’s grave. Shall a King
sink to the measure of a mound of turf for the tread
of a peasant’s foot? Where is now the ermine
robe, the glistening crown, the harness of a fighting
hour, the sceptre that marked the giddy office, the
voice, the flashing eye that stirred a coward to bravery,
the iron gauntlet shaking in the pallid face of France?
All all covered by a spadeful of country
earth. Captain, has Calais fallen to our army’s
siege? Are the French lilies plucked for England’s
boutoniere?
SAILOR CAPTAIN: Calais has fallen.
JOE: Then God be praised even
in this hard hour. By heaven’s help I throw
off the idle practice of my youth. The empty tricks
and trivial habits of the careless years, I renounce
them all. A wind has scoured the sullen clouds
of youth. My past has been a ragged garment, stained
with heedless hours. Tonight I cast it off, like
a coat that is out at elbow. My father henceforth
lives in me.
(Meg, at her entrance, has sniffed
the wasted grog. Her nose, surer than a hazel
wand, inclines above the hearth. She bends to
the lovely puddle. She employs and tastes her
dripping finger covertly, with mannerly
regard to the Prince’s rhetoric sucking
in secret his good health and happy returns, so to
speak. The liquor warms her tongue not
to drunkenness, but to ease and comfort. The hearth-stone
is her tavern chair.)
MEG: (not boisterously with
just a flip of her trickling finger, as if it were
a foaming cup). Hooray! I wants ter be
the first, yer Majesty, ter swear allegiance to yer
throne. I saw yer future in the glass. Öl’
Meg knowed yer, like she had rocked yer in the cradle.
I told yer I would come in yer hour o’ danger.
It was me reached through the winder fer the
gun ter save yer. It was me whistle that yer heard,
dearie, hurryin’ up the sailormen as Betsy went
ter fetch.
JOE: Thanks my good woman.
We grant you a pension for your love.
(She quests back to her pool of
grog. She finds a spoon. She sits to the
delicious salvage, with back against the chimney and
woolen legs out-stretched. Speeches to her are
nothing now. We cannot expect her help in winding
up our play. The burden falls on Joe. We
must be patient through a sentimental page or two.)
JOE: Ha! My velvet cloak,
which I left at Castle Crag when I laid aside the
Prince and took disguise. These unintentioned
ruffians by their dirty jest have clothed me to my
office.
SAILOR CAPTAIN: I swear my allegiance, your Majesty.
JOE: I rely on my sailors to
clear the coast and seas. But first I want your
allegiance in another high concern. Some fourteen
years ago, when I was a lad of ten, I journeyed with
my royal father to the castle of the Duke of Cornwall,
which stands high on the wind-swept coast. Its
giddy towers rise sheer above the ocean until the very
rooks nesting in the battlements grow dizzy at the
height. It is the outer bastion of the world,
laughing to scorn the ocean’s siege.
In that castle, Captain, there lived
a little girl; and she and I romped the sounding corridors
together. And once I led her to an open
’brasure in the steep-pitched wall, and
held her so that she might see the waves curling on
the rocks below. And tales of mermaids I invented,
and shipwreck and treasure buried in the noisy caverns
of the rock, where twice a day the greedy tide goes
in and out to seek its fortune. And far afield
we wandered and stood waist-deep in the golden meadows,
until the weary twilight called us home.
And I remember, when tired with play,
that her mother sang to us an old song, a lullaby.
Her voice was soft, with a gentleness that only a
mother knows who sits with drowsy children.
And to that little girl I was betrothed.
It was sworn with oath and signature that some day
I would marry her and that, when I became king of
England in the revolving years, she would be its queen.
BETSY: By what miracle did you know me, Hal?
JOE: It was the song you sang.
Your voice was the miracle that told the secret.
With unvarnished speech I woo you. I love you,
Margaret, and I ask you to be my wife.
MEG: (faintly floating
in a golden sea of grog) Hooray!
(Joe takes Betsy in his arms and kisses her.)
JOE: The magic of your lips,
my dear, is the miracle that answers me. My loyal
sailors, I present you. Margaret, Duchess of Cornwall,
Countess of Devon, Princess of the Western Marches,
by right and title possessor of all land ’twixt
Exeter and Land’s End. And now, by her
consent and the grace of God, the wife of Harry, King
of England.
CAPTAIN: Leetle Betsy, I fergives yer.
DUKE: I asks yer health, though I swings termorrer.
PATCH: And may yer live long and ’appy!
DARLIN’: We ‘re lovin’ yer,
Betsy.
BETSY: My gracious lord, for
these three years this cabin has been my home.
These are my friends the only friends I
have ever known. They fed me when I had no food
and they kept me warm against the cold. Must
they hang? I ask you to pardon them.
DARLIN’: Glory ter God!
JOE: The pardon is granted. Captain, strike
off their irons!
DARLIN’: We loves yer, Betsy.
CAPTAIN: We are fonder of yer than grog and singin’
angels.
PATCH: I thanks yer, King.
DUKE: It were jest an hour ago,
settin’ in that chair, I asks ter splice yer,
Betsy, keel ter topsail. The ol’ Duke never
thought the Countess of all them places, and the Queen
o’ England, ter boot, would ever be settin’
on his knee, pullin’ at his whiskers him
askin’ her ter name the ’appy day.
BETSY: It was a prior attachment, Duke.
CAPTAIN: We ‘ll serve yer, King, like we
served ol’ Flint.
PATCH: Top and bottom, fore and aft.
DUKE: We ‘ll brag how the
King o’ England and us has drunk grog together,
and how the Queen washed up the mugs.
MEG: (in a whisper). Hooray!
JOE: And now, Captain, lead the way. We
must speed to London.
BETSY: Good by, Duke. Some
day you will find a girl who cooks roast pig that
crackles.
DUKE: A blessin’, Betsy, on yer laughin’
eyes!
CAPTAIN: A health ter King Hal and his blushin’
bride!
ALL: King Hal! Leetle Betsy!
(With a wave of the hand Joe departs,
and with him, Betsy, who kisses her fingers to the
pirates in farewell. The sailors follow.
The pirates and Darlin’ are left. The pirates
sit at the table. They exchange glances of satisfaction.
They unbutton for a quiet evening at home. Kings
are but an episode in a pirate’s life. They
return to the happy routine of their lives. Our
adventure has circled to its start.)
PATCH: Darlin’! Me
friend, the Duke, is thirsty. Yer had better mix
another pot o’ grog. Yer does n’t
want ter be a foolish virgin and get ketched without
no grog.
DARLIN’: (at the fire). Yer
coddles yer stomich, Patch.
PATCH: The Duke, he knows a leetle
dear as is jest waitin’ ter come flutterin’
ter his lovin’ arms. I thinks it ’s
yer whiskers, Duke.
CAPTAIN: Yer can pull one, Betsy,
fer the locket that yer wears. We is laughin’
at yer, ol’ walrus.
DUKE: Kings is bigger than Dukes.
I looses without no kickin’ up. There ‘s
no one like Darlin’ fer mixin’ grog.
DARLIN’: Fer that kind word I ‘m
lovin’ yer.
(She fills the cups.)
PATCH: It ’s grog beats
off the melancholy. As soon as me pipes goes
dry, I gets homesick fer the ocean. Here
we be, Duke, thrown up at last ter rot like driftwood
on the shore. It was ’appy days when we
sailed with ol’ Flint on the Spanish Main.
CAPTAIN: ’Appy days, Patch!
ALL: ’Appy days!
(They lift their cups in memory
of a golden past. It is a contented family around
the evening candle. They are as cozy as old ladies
with their darning. Meg snores in peace as the
curtain falls.)
Our candles have burned to socket.
Our pasteboard cabin is bare and dark. No longer
do pirate flags flaunt the ghostly seas. The stormy
ocean, the dizzy cliffs of Devon, melt like an unsubstantial
pageant. Let’s put away our toys the
timber leg, the patch, the frightful hook. Once
again, despite the weary signpost of the years, we
have run on the laughing avenues of childhood.