Ghosts of Silver Beach Road
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Run Time: | |
Play Type: | Bare Stage, Classroom Use, Colleges, Competitions, Poetic Drama, Reader's Theater, Spoken Word Theatre |
BOB:
Wild geese flocking the Virginia coast parachute down my mother’s chimney
to nest with mallards,
their black eyes shining like berries in firelight,
bringing on sermons and elegiacs
from an astral slide through the deck of time
How the Chesapeake Bay screams within me
Back come the shingled cottage and a gibbous moon
over Silver Beach Road,
tall pines grown feverish in wind, swaying
with psionic rhythm
I lift from shadows my brothers and cousins tumbling from their beds:
a vegetable garden, darkness so deep I can’t see my hands,
my father’s anger, boiling over,
my mother, close to dying, breaking water and blood
on the front porch steps
before a brother came
This is my Brother Bill
(Bill steps forward)
And this is the Ghost of my sister
(Sister steps forward)
BILL:
the murmuring beach at night under shivering stars,
limp sailors, impaled by spars
and rusted bolts from the wreckage of freighters,
whisper of tuck, taffrails and mizzen, cathead and coming,
devotees of motion,
turning to bone, keeping time with the heavens
Huge splinters of ships basking in moonlight half buried in sand
speak of hulks having come from Japan and the Korean Straight
bearing wounds from battle
GHOST of SISTER:
Pirates roam the rippling tides of cloud and sky in buckle boots,
diamond crosses hanging from their necks, initialed pistols at their belts,
slung purses–fat with powder, and pantaloons of silk,
shirts tucked in to wrap their genitals and, over their shoulders,
sumptuary clothing fit for royal wives
Lightning thunders down the causeways of heaven
GHOST of SISTER and BILL:
Sleep well. I’ll most likely kill you in the morning
BOB:
Hush my people I’m sleeping dreaming
listening for the snowflakes impinging
the biosphere of my recollecting
How the bay’s insisting combers cut away the Kellams’
decks and kitchen windows until
they had almost nothing left and were killed
by common colds
I hear the drumming drumming
A 3-character poem-play that reveals the first ten years of the life of an abused child struggling on the cusp of mental illness and successfully hiding it from his dysfunctional family.
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Play Details
BOB:
Wild geese flocking the Virginia coast parachute down my mother’s chimney
to nest with mallards,
their black eyes shining like berries in firelight,
bringing on sermons and elegiacs
from an astral slide through the deck of time
How the Chesapeake Bay screams within me
Back come the shingled cottage and a gibbous moon
over Silver Beach Road,
tall pines grown feverish in wind, swaying
with psionic rhythm
I lift from shadows my brothers and cousins tumbling from their beds:
a vegetable garden, darkness so deep I can’t see my hands,
my father’s anger, boiling over,
my mother, close to dying, breaking water and blood
on the front porch steps
before a brother came
This is my Brother Bill
(Bill steps forward)
And this is the Ghost of my sister
(Sister steps forward)
BILL:
the murmuring beach at night under shivering stars,
limp sailors, impaled by spars
and rusted bolts from the wreckage of freighters,
whisper of tuck, taffrails and mizzen, cathead and coming,
devotees of motion,
turning to bone, keeping time with the heavens
Huge splinters of ships basking in moonlight half buried in sand
speak of hulks having come from Japan and the Korean Straight
bearing wounds from battle
GHOST of SISTER:
Pirates roam the rippling tides of cloud and sky in buckle boots,
diamond crosses hanging from their necks, initialed pistols at their belts,
slung purses–fat with powder, and pantaloons of silk,
shirts tucked in to wrap their genitals and, over their shoulders,
sumptuary clothing fit for royal wives
Lightning thunders down the causeways of heaven
GHOST of SISTER and BILL:
Sleep well. I’ll most likely kill you in the morning
BOB:
Hush my people I’m sleeping dreaming
listening for the snowflakes impinging
the biosphere of my recollecting
How the bay’s insisting combers cut away the Kellams’
decks and kitchen windows until
they had almost nothing left and were killed
by common colds
I hear the drumming drumming