Page 7 of Seascape


  LESLIE

  Come off it!

  CHARLIE

  It’s called flux. And it’s always going on; right now, to all of us.

  SARAH (Shy)

  Is it … is it for the better?

  CHARLIE

  Is it for the better? I don’t know. Progress is a set of assumptions. It’s very beautiful down there. It’s all still, and the fish float by. It’s very beautiful.

  LESLIE

  Don’t get taken in.

  CHARLIE

  What are you going to tell me about? Slaughter and pointlessness? Come on up here. Stay. The optimists say you mustn’t look just yet, that it’s all going to work out fine, no matter what you’ve heard. The pessimists, on the other hand …

  NANCY

  It is. It all is.

  CHARLIE (Slightly mocking)

  Why?!

  NANCY

  Because I couldn’t bear to think of it otherwise, that’s why. I’m not one of these people says that I’m better than a … a rabbit; just that I’m more interesting: I use tools, I make art …

  (Turning introspective)

  … and I’m aware of my own mortality.

  (Pause)

  Very.

  (Pouting; very much like a little girl)

  All rabbits do is eat carrots.

  SARAH

  (To CHARLIE; after a little pause; sotto voce)

  What are carrots?

  CHARLIE

  (Shrugs it off; not interested)

  Oh … something you eat. They make noise.

  LESLIE (Curiously bitter)

  And tools; and art; and mortality? Do you eat them? And do they make a noise?

  CHARLIE

  (Staring hard at leslie)

  They make a noise.

  NANCY (She, too)

  What is it, Leslie?

  LESLIE (Intense and angry)

  What are these things?!

  NANCY

  Tools; art; mortality?

  CHARLIE

  They’re what separate us from the brute beast.

  NANCY (Very quiet)

  No, Charlie; don’t.

  LESLIE (Quiet, cold, and formal)

  You’ll have to forgive me, but what is brute beast?

  NANCY

  Charlie; no!

  CHARLIE (Defiant)

  Brute beast?

  LESLIE (Grim)

  I don’t like the sound of it.

  CHARLIE (Stares right at him)

  Brute beast? It’s not even aware it’s alive, much less that it’s going to die!

  LESLIE

  (Pause; then, as if to memorize the words)

  Brute. Beast. Yes?

  CHARLIE

  Right on.

  (Pause)

  LESLIE

  (Suddenly aware of all eyes on him)

  Stop it! Stop it! What are you looking at? Why don’t you mind your own business?

  NANCY

  What more do you want?

  CHARLIE (Intense)

  I don’t know what more I want.

  (To LESLIE and SARAH)

  I don’t know what I want for you. I don’t know what I feel toward you; it’s either love or loathing. Take your pick; they’re both emotions. And you’re finding out about them, aren’t you? About emotions? Well, I want you to know about all of it; I’m impatient for you. I want you to experience the whole thing! The full sweep! Maybe I envy you … down there, free from it all; down there with the beasts?

  (A pause)

  What would you do, Sarah? … if Leslie went away … for a long time … what would you do then?

  SARAH

  If he didn’t tell me where he was going?

  CHARLIE

  If he’d gone!

  (Under his breath)

  For God’s sake.

  (Back)

  If he’d taken off, and you hadn’t seen him for the longest time.

  SARAH

  I’d go look for him.

  LESLIE (Suspicious)

  What are you after?

  CHARLIE

  (To SARAH; ignoring LESLIE)

  You’d go look for him; fine. But what if you knew he was never coming back?

  (SARAH does a sharp intake of breath)

  What about that?

  NANCY

  You’re heartless, Charlie; you’re relentless and without heart.

  CHARLIE (Eyes narrowing)

  What would you do, Sarah?

  (A pause, then she begins to sob)

  SARAH

  I’d … I’d …

  CHARLIE

  You’d cry; you’d cry your eyes out.

  SARAH

  I’d … cry; I’d … I’d cry! I’d … I’d cry my eyes out! Oh … Leslie!

  LESLIE

  (Trying to comfort SARAH)

  It’s all right, Sarah!

  SARAH

  I want to go back; I don’t want to stay here any more.

  (Wailing)

  I want to go back!

  (Trying to break away)

  I want to go back!

  NANCY

  (Moves to SARAH, to comfort her)

  Oh, now, Sarah! Please!

  SARAH

  Oh, Nancy!

  (Bursts into new sobbing)

  I want to go back!

  NANCY

  Sarah!

  CHARLIE

  I’m sorry; I’m … I’m sorry.

  LESLIE

  Hey! Mister!

  (Hit)

  You’ve made her cry; she’s never done anything like that.

  (Hit)

  You made her cry!

  CHARLIE

  I’m sorry, I … stop that!

  I’m sorry; I …

  (Hit)

  … stop that!

  LESLIE

  You made her cry!

  (Hit)

  CHARLIE

  STOP IT!

  LESLIE

  I ought to tear you apart!

  CHARLIE

  Oh my God!

  (LESLIE begins to choke CHARLIE, standing behind CHARLIE, his arm around CHARLIE’s throat. It has the look of slow, massive inevitability, not fight and panic)

  NANCY

  Charlie!

  (SARAH and NANCY rush to stop it)

  SARAH

  Leslie! Stop it!

  CHARLIE

  Stop … it …

  LESLIE

  (Straining with the effort)

  You … made … her … cry … mister.

  NANCY

  Stop! Please!

  SARAH

  Leslie!

  CHARLIE (Choking)

  Help … me …

  (LESLIE suddenly lets go; CHARLIE sinks to the sand)

  LESLIE

  Don’t you talk to me about brute beast.

  SARAH (To LESLIE)

  See to him.

  LESLIE (Cold)

  Are you all right?

  CHARLIE

  Yes; yes, I am.

  (Pause)

  LESLIE

  (Attempts a quiet half joke)

  It’s … rather dangerous … up here.

  CHARLIE (Looks him in the eye)

  Everywhere.

  LESLIE

  Well. I think we’ll go back down now.

  NANCY

  (Hand out; a quiet, intense supplication)

  No!

  LESLIE

  Oh, yes. I think we must.

  NANCY

  No! You mustn’t!

  SARAH (As a comfort)

  Leslie says we must.

  (LESLIE puts his paw out)

  NANCY

  No!

  (CHARLIE takes it)

  LESLIE

  This is how we do it, is it not?

  SARAH

  (Watching; tentative)

  Such a wonderful thing to want to do.

  LESLIE (Tight; formal)

  Thank you very much.

  NANCY

  No!

  CHARLIE (Eyes aver
ted)

  You’re welcome.

  NANCY

  NO!

  LESLIE (Sighs)

  Well.

  (LESLIE and SARAH start moving up to the upstage dune to exit)

  NANCY (In place)

  Please?

  (NANCY moves to follow them)

  SARAH

  It’s all right; it’s all right.

  NANCY

  You’ll have to come back … sooner or later. You don’t have any choice. Don’t you know that? You’ll have to come back up.

  LESLIE (Sad smile)

  Do we?

  NANCY

  Yes!

  LESLIE

  Do we have to?

  NANCY

  Yes!

  LESLIE

  Do we have to?

  NANCY (Timid)

  We could help you. Please?

  LESLIE (Anger and doubt)

  How?

  CHARLIE (Sad, shy)

  Take you by the hand? You’ve got to do it—sooner or later.

  NANCY (Shy)

  We could help you.

  (LESLIE pauses; descends a step down the dune; crouches; stares at them)

  LESLIE (Straight)

  All right. Begin.

  (NANCY and CHARLIE look at each other.)

  CURTAIN

  ALSO BY EDWARD ALBEE AVAILABLE FROM THE OVERLOOK PRESS

  ALSO BY EDWARD ALBEE AVAILABLE FROM THE OVERLOOK PRESS

  THE COLLECTED PLAYS OF EEDWARD ALBEE

  VOLUME 1 (1958–1965) 978-1-58567-884-6 $25.95

  VOLUME 2 (1966–1977) 978-1-59020-053-7 $25.95

  VOLUME 3 (1978–2003) 978-1-59020-114-5 $25.95

  “A major playwright who helped to change the shape of contemporary drama here and abroad.”

  —VINCENT CANBY, THE NEW YORK TIMES

  “Albee throws the abyss in our faces with exhilarating, articulate, daring and dark, grown-up dazzle.”

  —CHICAGO TRIBUNE

  “One of the genuinely great living American dramatists.”

  —BEN BRANTLEY, THE NEW YORK TIMES

 


 

  Edward Albee, Seascape

 


 

 
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