red sumac
SCENE D
The image of a late middle-aged woman envelopes the entire screen in color. We see in her skin a mesh of fine wrinkles in sharp relief. All that is visible of her are parts of her face, the rest in deep shadow. Her hair drawn up in a bun leaks a few errant strands. She smiles bittersweetly, lost in thought, or a memory.
—MUSIC BEGINS—a choir of flutes
A soft gymnopedie is played. Each flute sounds one note of an ascending/descending Phrygian scale; some are doubled, all improvisational. One instrument quiets at the end of each poem until there is complete silence before the last poem is recited.
CHORUS LEADER
Of hunger, of thirst only chains of mountains are truly free . . . and sand & stone . . . and rain-washed bone . . .
LISBETH
Tonight, my Arion, make of my body your tensing strings, one to lull each of the dolphins that leaps within my breast As I shook my tresses out your eyes began to comb them with desire; globes were spinning and on mine, the palms that spun them Heat, first fire of a history of love: stroll through my body's oasis, pick ripened dates and let my siroccos soothe your brow The straw that broke not the camel's back but made it tremble was the wandering of your hands along my hills and valleys Never end that kiss for all the lovely beasts are kneeling before the fire with kindling in their mouths As you kiss your way to my lotus bloom let its fragrance mix with a drift of rain through the open window Fangs that woke the dream in bone, its lovely ache, hasten their delicious pain from nerve to nerve to slay then slake . . . but now to the petal-less flower no longer flies the bee where only small white spiders rest as breezes slowly rock them I have known great love, yes, I've known it; those who seek no deeper stone beneath the mica's cloudy depths see not into a lover's heart You clothed me in the dust of footsteps when you vanished: don't linger, come back and wash it away with the rain of your lilting glance . . . Are your horses trampling another's fields just now or is it only the drip of rain from eaves that ticks away the hours? How it pains me, the wound you left with your going, and yet in a sprinkling of salt, all your beauty still yet moves, a balm in racing blood . . .
Now the image onscreen tracks away to show that LISBETH sits in a wheelchair.
LISBETH
Last night you came to me in dream: I swept your hair aside to see them, eyes as blue as Machias Bay. . . and all that summer I languished till wild sumac turned its deepest red, and where we both had walked, a does instructs her yearlings...
The screen darkens. The last two poems are spoken in the dark as a round that includes the CHORUS and CHORUS LEADER.
Though this morning feels no different, O first love, what New Year's streets will hear your echoing footsetps? Though an old familiar house spins nonetheless on the axes of its well-worn ways, it's the lilacs that hold the still point still. . .
The CHORUS LEADER ends her part of the round by saying “the still point” only, omitting the final “still.”
LISBETH’s image fades, her manikin’s shortly after.