Price £4 . Email me if you want a copy of a new radical play about the life of Robert Burns.
pburton300@live.co.uk
RHYMER RAB
Act One
Scene 1
‘Ye Jacobites
by Name’ is being played as audience
enters.
There is a blown up article
from the Glasgow Herald about Bob Dylan being most influenced by Burns ‘ poem “
A Red Red Rose” and this is projected on to a wall.
MC Enters and surveys the audience then pauses:
MC: Observations, Hints, Songs, Scraps of poetry
&c., by Robt Burness:
a man who had little art in making money, and still
less in keeping it;
But was, however, a man of some sense, a great deal
of honesty, and unbounded good-will to every creature-rational or irrational.
As he was but little indebted to scholastic education, and bred at a
plough-tail, his performances must be strongly tinctured with his unpolished,
rustic way of life: but, as I believe they are really his own, it may be of
some entertainment to a curious observer of human nature to see how a ploughman
thinks and feels under the pressure of Love, Ambition, Anxiety, Grief, with the
like cares and passions, which, however diversified by the modes and manners of
life, operate pretty much alike, I believe, in all the Species.
And now fir a wee bit o’ previous verse from
Robins’ guid friend John Syme (sweeping arm to usher John into space)
John: The Bard
Sincere ,natural peasant-bard
profound confessor of all human emotion
Singing his way into a nations' hearts
with his courage, self-worth and fierce independence
an exposer of corrupt effete
humbug ,cant and church ceremonial
impious hands on the ark of the covenant
suffering unbaptised children 'goin to the deil'
tender,indignant
good-natured, serious
wise perceiver of
voguish public favour
a persecuted prophet
both feared and revered
all the world loves you
now you're safely dead !! Exits
‘Ye Jacobites by Name’ starts up again.
MC -‘I think ye
all ken the words to this by now so join in. I’ll be given ye all a nod when I
want ye to participate later on. There’s nothing tae fear-they’re all well kent
songs.’
‘Ye Jacobites by Name’ is sung by cast as MIC is lowered into centre of
area.
Ye
Jacobites by Name
Ye Jacobites by
name, give an ear, give an ear,
Ye Jacobites by name, give an ear,
Ye Jacobites by name,
Your fautes I will proclaim,
Your doctrines I maun blame, you shall hear.
What is Right, and What is Wrang, by the law, by
the law?
What is Right and what is Wrang by the law?
What is Right, and what is Wrang?
A short sword, and a lang,
A weak arm and a strang, for to draw.
What makes heroic strife, famed afar, famed afar?
What makes heroic strife famed afar?
What makes heroic strife?
To whet th' assassin's knife,
Or hunt a Parent's life, wi' bluidy war?
Then let your schemes alone, in the state, in the state,
Then let your schemes alone in the state.
Then let your schemes alone,
Adore the rising sun,
And leave a man undone, to his fate.
|
William Burnes’ cottage-
small settle, table, bed with curtains, a few chairs and open hearth. We can
hear wind outside and rain. William Burnes enters space.
Agnes: Ye’ve done a grand job
wi’ this house William-and this inglenook- well-ony women would be proud o’ it.
William (Smiling) Aye it’s been
hard getting it right Agnes, but there’s no a house like it in Ayr. And when a think ay aw the hardships after the 45’
Agnes: Aye the Keith’s - driven off their land at
the Mearns wi’ everybody else then payin’ for the folly.
William: But it cannae affect our
laddies, Agnes. Education is the only way out of poverty for them. Our boys
will get a good education.
Agnes: But it’s so difficult now William, - wi the
banks collapsing , credit difficult to get, folks no trustin' o’ each other.
William: Aye times are hard Agnes,
but the boys will prosper wi a good education. A good Dominie is the key and I
must tak’ soundings for a local school.
Agnes: And maybe a religious manual for the boys?
William: (Lit up) : An excellent idea – Agnes – makes sure the
boys have a moral code. I’ll start on that the morn.
Agnes begins to rock in the
chair and hums – she starts to sing the’
Life and Age of Man’. William sits down to listen and gradually falls asleep.
(There is a photo of people queuing outside
Northern Rock projected on to the wall).
Scene Two
A big pop- up book stands
in the middle of a pub but is closed. William Burns enters the pub in Ayr to meet with John
Murdoch. They shake hands.
William: You’ll join me in a
drink, Sir?
John: I don’t normally partake, Sir, but if I am
going to be a tutor to your sons
then
we may seal the bargain with a dram after agreement about a curriculum
is
reached.
William: That makes sense, John. Well, I have two
sons- Robert and Gilbert. They are good, God- Fearin’ boys. Both will receive
some instruction in Religious matters (Hands John the Manual) – Perhaps you
could go over this and improve on aspects of its Grammar?
Murdoch: I would be glad to assist
Sir (Hesitates). I am of New Licht
persuasion –would that be an issue?
William: (Smiling) No quarrel
there, John. But what of a Curriculum?
Murdoch: I will teach Gilbert and
Robert how to turn verse into prose, substitute synonyms and expressions for
poetical words, supply ellipses. They will receive instruction in spelling, the
Bible, the New Testament, of course, and
‘Masson’s Collection of Prose and Verse’.
William (Smiling). That’s agreed!
Now let’s have that dram tae seal the deal.
(The two men, clink a glass
together, take a sip and walk over to the pop-up book Murdoch opens the book. Pictures pop –up of Shakespeare, Addison,
Milton, Thompson, Pope, Gray, Shenstone, Akenside. There is an image from Paradise Lost of Lucifer
falling from the sky in the centre. He has Robin’s’ face and a pair of Rae ban specs on. He descends slowly on to a
Triumph motorbike. Robin is playing a fiddle with a leer on his face. He wears
Brando’s gear from ‘The Wild One’ - his leather jacket has “Robbie“ on it.
William Burnes and John Murdoch look back to the audience while still pointing
to the book, they both point to Robert with full stretched arms and smile in
frozen time. Cardboard cut outs of Che Guevara, Dylan and Brando on motorbikes
are projected on to a back wall).
Scene Three
Robin is reading Addison aloud by
candlelight in his bedroom and successfully memorising a poem. His book
Masson’s’ looks well-worn
Robin: ‘For though in dreadful whirls we hung,
High
on the broken wave’ Repeats without looking.
Gilbert checks him :
Gilbert: We have a hard day’s work
ahead tomorrow Robin .
Robin: So, Gilly – What do you
thing o’ Murdoch – our new Dominie?
Gilbert: I like him. We can both
learn much from him Robin. Bit what are your thoughts?
Robin: (Suspicious) Aye, all that knowledge. He’s a bit pedantic
like, and the way he motions.
Gilbert: Motions ?
Robin – Aye- Like this.
Robin gets up -points
quickly as if at Blackboard and them quickly back at boys
Gilbert laughs and blows
out a candlelight giving Robert no choice but to go to a bed that they share .
Robin gets up after Gilbert is asleep , re-lights candle and looks through
books at desk, Paine’s ‘Common Sense’, Adam Smith’s ‘Theory of Moral Sentiments’, ‘A
Manual of Religious belief in an Dialogue between Father and Son’, Hume’s ‘Essay concerning Human Understanding’, ‘ The
Life of Hannibal’.’ The Man of Feeling’ by Henry Mackenzie and Blind
Harry’s Wallace. He flicks through
‘Common Sense’ and stops at one page and whispers to audience:
Robin: “Of more worth is one
honest man to society in the sight of God than all the crowned Ruffians that
ever lived.”
Continues to read-
silently.
Next morning early it’s
windy and raining, Gilbert ploughs while Robert drains and moves hard rocks.
Robin coughs and holds his back after ploughing for a while then suddenly
dances in and around Gilbert in quirky way while Gilbert begins to plough.
Gilbert smiles.
He reads out part of Holy
Fair orally at which Gilbert gives shocked laugh
Robin Recites:
But
yet, O Lord! confess I must,
At times I'm fash'd wi' fleshly lust:
An' sometimes, too, in wardly trust,
Vile self gets in:
But Thou remembers we are dust,
Defil'd wi' sin.
Gilbert
gives light applause.
Robert takes over plough.
Gilbert : It's guid Robin, but
whit are your plans for it?
Robin: Write it a’ doon,
circulate It – what else?
Gilbert: But what about the Kirk Elders
Robin?
Robin: What of them?
Gilbert: For the great crimes of
travellin’ on the Sabbath, not reading the Bible on a Sunday and getting a
servant to dig potatoes on the Sabbath Gavin Hamilton is to be excommunicated.
So what will they do to you for this if they excommunicate him for digging potatoes
?
Robin laughs.
Robin: ‘And here’s me thinkin’ it wis tae dae wi
Gavin letting people aff wi their debts’- pauses – ‘I’ll use a false
name-Ruisseux’ after Jean Jacques Rousseux.Ye’’ll give me yer thoughts when the
poem is complete Gilly?
Gilbert: Oh Aye – thoughts. The
two young men blow on their hands and fall silent to concentrate on work.
Scene Four
We hear the sound of church
bells and see people going to Kirk. Robin arrives with his family and a new
addition Betty Davidson- the maid. He is
carrying the Bible .As they are all in the process of sitting a young woman is
instructed to move her seat by a young fat, pompous aristocrat. A few people
wear black sack cloths. James and Mary Armour are in expensive pews.
Young
Aristocrat (arrogantly): You are in my pew! Remove yourself!
The
girl, embarrassed shuffles along and goes to the side of the Kirk at the back.
Robin: The arrogant rascal!
Robin
begins to stand up.
Gilly: Robin!! (Grabbing Robin
back into his seat)
Robin: (to Gilly) Pompous Ass!
This is noticed by James
Armour, Father Auld, Holy Willie and John Russell to their collective facial
displeasure at Robert Burns. (Elders always physically close to each other).
His father is both fearful and proud. Robin sits back down, still angry. The
girl smiles at Robin .He smiles back and begins
to stare at a creepy crawly on the ladies hat in the pew in front. He smiles.
He opens his Bible and reads while swinging his crossed leg to and fro as Father Auld preaches.
Father Auld: God will smite all unbelievers ! Some will
say different. Some believe in a more personal relationship with God. But here this- God is a jealous God
,God is an angry God , God does not
forgive sinners.(glances at Robin who is reading his Bible while swinging
his crossed leg even more rapidly back and forth ).Hellfire is certain for
some.(now staring at nonchalant Robin)-Absolutely certain!
Betty narrows her eyes !
Lights Out
Scene Five
Lights
Up .William and Agnes’ cottage.
There is a poem by Langston
Hughes called ‘Ballad of a Landlord’ projected on to a back wall juxtaposed
with an image of Luath and Caesar from
the ‘Twa Dogs’. William receives a letter demanding more money than is owed in
rent by the factor.
William: It’s a factors letter Agnes:
Agnes: Aye a ken. Well there’s
no’ much point keepin’ it sealed up. We’ll jist get another, even more
threaten’ .
William
slowly opens the letter and reads it to himself.
Agnes: Well?
William: The Landlord – he’s
raisin’ the rent. Says he’s no choice,
the
bank raised the interest on his loans and won’t gie him further credit.
Agnes. Oh William – bit we’re
barely makin’ ends meet now. I can’t remember the last time we ate meat. And
how is the bank collapsin’ our fault ?
William: Aye a ken Agnes. Bit it’s
pay up or get out. He’s clear about that !
Children over hear and are
tearful- Comforted by Agnes and maid Betty Davidson, William is angry at affect
on his young girls.
William (angrily) I’m going to
fight ony eviction Agnes- as God is my witness ! I’ll see the lawyer Aitkin –tomorrow !! (Crushes letter in hand)
Betty gathers children around
(two young girls and a young boy) and beckons them to sit down.
Betty: Twas on market day in the
town of Ayr a farmer from Carrick and consequently whose way lay by the very
gate of Alloway Kirk yard, in order to cross the river Doon at the old bridge,
which is about two hundred yards further on than the said gate…..
(Children
gradually stop crying, start to listen, sniffling instead. Gilly and Robin listen also.)
(continues)had
been detained by his business, till by the time he reached Alloway it was the
wizard hour between night and morning.
Betty catches Agnes’ eye
and Agnes nods and smiles while turning back to comfort William. Betty smiles
and nods back.
Scene Six
A card board cut out of
Alan Ginsburg looks on. James Armour reads out part of ‘Holy Willies Prayer’ to
his wife. This is read off large cards which she holds up and drops when he has
reached the end of each line. James puts
on half-moon specs to read.
Slow, quiet at first,
getting slightly faster, louder, angrier.
Holy Willies Prayer (first
two stanzas)
O
Thou, who in the heavens does dwell,
Who, as it pleases best Thysel',
Sends ane to heaven an' ten to hell,
A' for Thy glory,
And no for ony gude or ill
They've done afore Thee!
Starts muttering almost
inaudibly other lines while pacing up and down,
occasionally stopping, Mary
Armour dropping each card on the floor.
I bless and praise Thy matchless might,
When thousands Thou hast left in night,
That I am here afore Thy sight,
For gifts an' grace
A burning and a shining light
To a' this place.
Shock, disbelief and anger
are mixed the more he reads.
Suddenly, even louder
James : Bit listen tae this Mary….it gits even worse
!
Lord,
hear my earnest cry and pray'r,
Against that Presbyt'ry o' Ayr;
Thy strong right hand, Lord, make it bare
Upo' their heads;
Lord visit them, an' dinna spare,
For their misdeeds.
James becomes extremely
angry. Mary throws last piece of card on
floor and becomes just as angry.
Mary : But who can hae written
this?
James: It’s signed Ruisseux but
I ken whit rascals’ responsible ! Ruisseux indeed – Rab Mossgiel is behind
this!!
(They both storm off.walking
over cards)
‘Holy Willies Prayer’ is
being passed from hand to hand, individual lines being read out by Kirk Elders.
Elder’s are visibly apoplectic while
ordinary people are gleeful and shocked at the same time as they dart in and
out and dance.
Father Auld: (Curious- looking down over half-moon specs .He looks like Jeremy
Kyle): Lord,
hear my earnest cry and pray'r, Against that Presbyt'ry o' Ayr.
Willie Fisher: Thy strong right
hand, Lord, make it bare
Upo' their heads.
John Russell: Lord visit them, an'
dinna spare, for their misdeeds.
Father Auld ; The rascal !
Willie Fisher : Blasphemer !
John Russell: Rabble Rouser !
The
cast continue to dance as the lights
gradually fade and up
Robin is walking through Mauchline with his dog Luath - (carrying Blind Harry’s Wallace)
. Jean Armour is washing clothes on the ground. The dog goes in and out the
washing soiling it. Jean chases it.
Jean – Get out o’ here, ye daft
mutt. Hav ye nae idea how lang it taen me tae wash these sheets?
Robin: If ye
cared out for me lassie, ye widnae harm ma dug.
Jean : I wadnae care much for
you at ony rate!
Robin: Luath – heel!
Luath immediately follows Robin.
He walks on to meet up with Elizabeth Paton.
Lizzie: Oh Robin. (Running to him) Bit where hae ye been ?
Robin : Blame Luath here. Likes
tae get up tae mischief- don’t you ?
Lizzie: Jist like his master – (giggles)
Robin (Smiling) Aye – a bit like his Master –(looking
her up and down)- Talkin' o’ mischief – it’s a braw day fir a walk in the
woods Lizzie . Are ye up for it ?
Lizzie: You don’t waste time Robin.
Robin: Tempus fuggit and all
that , Lizzie.
Lizzie
giggles, and nods.
Robin: Well- what are we waitin’
for.
She grabs him by the arm
and they both walk off smiling.
Scene Seven
In
the cottage night time Robin and Gilly come down stairs.
William . (looking disapprovingly at
Robin, fillemont plaid hair wrapped around shoulders, buckled shoes, buckskin
breeches- a dandy). And where do you think you're going dressed like that?
Robin: Tarbolton – to the
Dancin’.
Father: You are not !
Robin. There’s nowt wrang
wi’ dancin’ Father !
William : Aye but ye ken fine whaur
it leads? Thinks I’m daft Agnes.
Agnes gives Robin a cool
look.
Robin: It’s dancin’ Father- and none of the French or English
kind neither
-but
Bab at the Bowster, Tullochgorum, Loch Erroch Side. And me and Gilly-
well-we’re thinkin o’ startin’ a bachelors club fir debatin’ -and joinin’ the Lodge in aw’-a place whaur a man can
speak his mind!
Gilly who is sitting at the
bottom of the stairs holds his head in his hands
Robins starts to dance and sing simultaneously.
“Like
midges sporting in the mottie sun, or craws prognosticating a storm in a hiarst
day” (Reaches door)
William’s eyes widen,
Gilbert tries to suppress a laugh, Agnes shakes her head.
Robin dances out the door as his fathers’ mouth drops.
In
Morton Hall Robert sees Jean and looks at her legs while couples dance and a
teacher looks on.
Robin : (To himself) Tis’ a pity
Jeanie is nae blonde- but those legs ! -the rigs o’
barley.
He
hears Neil Gow’s ‘Amang the Trees’
played (solo fiddle)
He
approaches her.
Robin : May I have the honour
Jean of this dance , tis my favourite song ?
She
smiles and nods: They start to dance.
Jean: Where’s your wee friend
this evenin’?
Robin ; Oh Luath is nae dancer
Jean, but you have done this before I see.
Jean: I have !
Robin : (smiling and raising
eyebrows) And whit else gives ye pleasure ?
Jean (smiling) Well-my favourite pastime is singing ballads.
Robin (Overjoyed) Ballads !! – ancient and modern -they are the
source of exquisite enjoyment Jean. I hope you won’t deny me the pleasure of
listening to some of them soon?
Jean smiles and nods and
they fall silent to dance more rigorously.