Read Krapp's Last Tape and Other Dramatic Pieces Page 6


  ADA

  [low remote voice throughout] Yes.

  HENRY

  Have you been there long?

  ADA

  Some little time. [Pause.] Why do you stop, don’t mind me. [Pause.] Do you want me to go away? [Pause.] Where is

  Addie?

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  With her music master. [Pause.] Are you going to answer me today?

  ADA

  You shouldn’t be sitting on the cold stones, they’re bad for your growths. Raise yourself up till I slip my shawl under you. [Pause.] Is that better?

  HENRY

  No comparison, no comparison. [Pause.] Are you going to sit down beside me?

  ADA

  Yes. [No sound as she sits.] Like that? [Pause.] Or do you prefer like that? [Pause.] You don’t care. [Pause.] Chilly enough I imagine, I hope you put on your jaegers. [Pause.] Did you put on your jaegers, Henry?

  HENRY

  What happened was this, I put them on and then I took them off again and then I put them on again and then I took them off again and then I took them on again and then I—

  ADA

  Have you them on now?

  HENRY

  I don’t know. [Pause.] Hooves! [Pause. Louder.] Hooves! [Sound of hooves walking on hard road. They die rapidly away.] Again!

  [Hooves as before. Pause.]

  ADA

  Did you hear them?

  HENRY

  Not well.

  ADA

  Galloping?

  HENRY

  No. [Pause.] Could a horse mark time?

  [Pause.]

  ADA

  I’m not sure that I know what you mean.

  HENRY

  [irritably] Could a horse be trained to stand still and mark time with its four legs?

  ADA

  Oh. [Pause.] The ones I used to fancy all did. [She laughs. Pause.] Laugh, Henry, it’s not every day I crack a joke.

  [Pause.] Laugh, Henry do that for me.

  HENRY

  You wish me to laugh?

  ADA

  You laughed so charmingly once, I think that’s what first attracted me to you. That and your smile. [Pause.] Come on, it will be like old times.

  [Pause. He tries to laugh, fails.]

  HENRY

  Perhaps I should begin with the smile. [Pause for smile.]

  Did that attract you? [Pause.] Now I’ll try again. [Long horrible laugh.] Any of the old charm there?

  ADA

  Oh Henry!

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Listen to it! [Pause.] Lips and claws! [Pause.] Get away from it! Where it couldn’t get at me! The Pampas! What?

  ADA

  Calm yourself.

  HENRY

  And I live on the brink of it! Why? Professional obligations? [Brief laugh.] Reasons of health? [Brief laugh.] Family ties? [Brief laugh.] A woman? [Laugh in which she joins.] Some old grave I cannot tear myself away from? [Pause.] Listen to it! What is it like?

  ADA

  It is like an old sound I used to hear. [Pause.] It is like another time, in the same place. [Pause.] It was rough, the spray came flying over us. [Pause.] Strange it should have been rough then. [Pause.] And calm now. [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Let us get up and go.

  ADA

  Go? Where? And Addie? She would be very distressed if she came and found you had gone without her. [Pause.] What do you suppose is keeping her?

  [Smart blow of cylindrical ruler on piano case. Unsteadily, ascending and descending, Addie plays scale of A Flat Major, hands first together, then reversed. Pause.]

  MUSIC MASTER

  [Italian accent] Santa Cecilia!

  [Pause.]

  ADDIE

  Will I play my piece now please?

  [Pause. Music Master beats two bars of waltz time with ruler on piano case. Addie plays opening bars of Chopin’s 5th Waltz in A Flat Major, Music Master beating time lightly with ruler as she plays. In first chord of bass, bar 5, she plays E instead of F. Resounding blow of ruler on piano case. Addie stops playing.]

  MUSIC MASTER

  [violently] Fa!

  ADDIE

  [tearfully] What?

  MUSIC MASTER

  [violently] Eff! Eff!

  ADDIE

  [tearfully] Where?

  MUSIC MASTER

  [violently] Qua! [He thumps note.] Fa!

  [Pause. Addie begins again, Music Master beating time lightly with ruler. When she comes to bar 5 she makes same mistake. Tremendous blow of ruler on piano case. Addie stops playing, begins to wail.]

  MUSIC MASTER

  [frenziedly] Eff! Eff! [He hammers note.] Eff! [He hammers note.] Eff!

  [Hammered note, “Eff!” and Addie’s wail amplified to paroxysm, then suddenly cut off. Pause.]

  ADA

  You are silent today.

  HENRY

  It was not enough to drag her into the world, now she must play the piano.

  ADA

  She must learn. She shall learn. That—and riding.

  [Hooves walking.]

  RIDING MASTER

  Now Miss! Elbows in Miss! Hands down Miss!

  [Hooves trotting.] Now Miss! Back straight Miss! Knees in Miss! [Hooves cantering.] Now Miss! Tummy in Miss! Chin up Miss! [Hooves galloping.] Now Miss! Eyes front Miss! [Addie begins to wail.] Now Miss! Now Miss! [Galloping hooves, “Now Miss!” and Addie’s wail amplified to paroxysm, then suddenly cut off. Pause.]

  ADA

  What are you thinking of? [Pause.] I was never taught, until it was too late. All my life I regretted it.

  HENRY

  What was your strong point, I forget.

  ADA

  Oh . . . geometry I suppose, plane and solid. [Pause.] First plane, then solid. [Shingle as he gets up.] Why do you get up?

  HENRY

  I thought I might try and get as far as the water’s edge. [Pause. With a sigh.] And back. [Pause.] Stretch my old bones.

  [Pause.]

  ADA

  Well, why don’t you? [Pause.] Don’t stand there thinking about it. [Pause.] Don’t stand there staring. [Pause. He goes towards sea. Boots on shingle, say ten steps. He halts at water’s edge. Pause. Sea a little louder. Distant.] Don’t wet your good boots.

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Don’t! don’t. . . .

  [Sea suddenly rough.]

  ADA

  [twenty years earlier, imploring] Don’t! Don’t!

  HENRY

  [ditto, urgent] Darling!

  ADA

  [ditto, more feebly] Don’t!

  HENRY

  [ditto, exultantly] Darling!

  [Rough sea. Ada cries out. Cry and sea amplified, cut off. End of evocation. Pause. Sea calm. He goes back up deeply shelving beach. Boots laborious on shingle. He halts. Pause. He moves on. He halts. Pause. Sea calm and faint.]

  ADA

  Don’t stand there gaping. Sit down. [Pause. Shingle as he sits.] On the shawl. [Pause.] Are you afraid we might touch? [Pause.] Henry.

  HENRY

  Yes.

  ADA

  You should see a doctor about your talking, it’s worse, what must it be like for Addie? [Pause.] Do you know what she said to me once, when she was still quite small, she said, Mummy, why does Daddy keep on talking all the time? She heard you in the lavatory. I didn’t know what to answer.

  HENRY

  Daddy! Addie! [Pause.] I told you to tell her I was praying.

  [Pause.] Roaring prayers at God and his saints.

  ADA

  It’s very bad for the child. [Pause.] It’s silly to say it keeps you from hearing it, it doesn’t keep you from hearing it and even if it does you shouldn’t be hearing it, there must be something wrong with your brain. [Pause.]

  HENRY

  That! I shouldn’t be hearing that!

  ADA

  I don’t think you are hearing it. And if you are what’s wrong with it, it’s a l
ovely peaceful gentle soothing sound, why do you hate it? [Pause.] And if you hate it why don’t you keep away from it? Why are you always coming down here? [Pause.] There’s something wrong with your brain, you ought to see Holloway, he’s alive still, isn’t he?

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  [wildly] Thuds, I want thuds! Like this! [He fumbles in the shingle, catches up two big stones and starts dashing them together.] Stone! [Clash.] Stone! [Clash. “Stone!” and clash amplified, cut off. Pause. He throws one stone away. Sound of its fall.] That’s life! [He throws the other stone away. Sound of its fall.] Not this . . . [pause] . . . sucking!

  ADA

  And why life? [Pause.] Why life, Henry? [Pause.] Is there anyone about?

  HENRY

  Not a living soul.

  ADA

  I thought as much. [Pause.] When we longed to have it to ourselves there was always someone. Now that it does not matter the place is deserted.

  HENRY

  Yes, you were always very sensitive to being seen in gallant conversation. The least feather of smoke on the horizon and you adjusted your dress and became immersed in the Manchester Guardian. [Pause.] The hole is still there, after all these years. [Pause. Louder.] The hole is still there.

  ADA

  What hole? The earth is full of holes.

  HENRY

  Where we did it at last for the first time.

  ADA

  Ah yes, I think I remember. [Pause.] The place has not changed.

  HENRY

  Oh yes it has, I can see it. [Confidentially.] There is a levelling going on! [Pause.] What age is she now?

  ADA

  I have lost count of time.

  HENRY

  Twelve? Thirteen? [Pause.] Fourteen?

  ADA

  I really could not tell you, Henry.

  HENRY

  It took us a long time to have her. [Pause.] Years we kept hammering away at it. [Pause.] But we did it in the end. [Pause. Sigh.] We had her in the end.

  [Pause.] Listen to it! [Pause.] It’s not so bad when you get out on it. [Pause.]

  Perhaps I should have gone into the merchant navy.

  ADA

  It’s only on the surface, you know. Underneath all is as quiet as the grave. Not a sound. All day, all night, not a sound. [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Now I walk about with the gramophone. But I forgot it today.

  ADA

  There is no sense in that. [Pause.] There is no sense in trying to drown it. [Pause.] See Holloway.

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Let us go for a row.

  ADA

  A row? And Addie? She would be very distressed if she came and found you had gone for a row without her. [Pause.] Who were you with just now? [Pause.] Before you spoke to me.

  HENRY

  I was trying to be with my father.

  ADA

  Oh. [Pause.] No difficulty about that.

  HENRY

  I mean I was trying to get him to be with me. [Pause.] You seem a little cruder than usual today, Ada. [Pause.] I was asking him if he had ever met you, I couldn’t remember.

  ADA

  Well?

  HENRY

  He doesn’t answer any more.

  ADA

  I suppose you have worn him out. [Pause.] You wore him out living and now you are wearing him out dead. [Pause.] The time comes when one cannot speak to you any more. [Pause.] The time will come when no one will speak to you at all, not even complete strangers. [Pause.] You will be quite alone with your voice, there will be no other voice in the world but yours. [Pause.] Do you hear me?

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  I can’t remember if he met you.

  ADA

  You know he met me.

  HENRY

  No, Ada, I don’t know, I’m sorry, I have forgotten almost everything connected with you.

  ADA

  You weren’t there. Just your mother and sister. I had called to fetch you, as arranged. We were to go bathing together.

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  [irritably] Drive on, drive on! Why do people always stop in the middle of what they are saying?

  ADA

  None of them knew where you were. Your bed had not been slept in. They were all shouting at one another. Your sister said she would throw herself off the cliff. Your father got up and went out, slamming the door. I left soon afterwards and passed him on the road. He did not see me. He was sitting on a rock looking out to sea. I never forgot his posture. And yet it was a common one. You used to have it sometimes. Perhaps just the stillness, as if he had been turned to stone. I could never make it out.

  [Pause.]

  HENRY

  Keep on, keep on! [Imploringly.] Keep it going, Ada, every syllable is a second gained.

  ADA

  That’s all, I’m afraid. [Pause.] Go on now with your father or your stories or whatever you were doing, don’t mind me any more.

  HENRY

  I can’t! [Pause.] I can’t do it any more!

  ADA

  You were doing it a moment ago, before you spoke to me.

  HENRY

  [angrily] I can’t do it any more now! [Pause.] Christ!

  [Pause.]

  ADA

  Yes, you know what I mean, there are attitudes remain in one’s mind for reasons that are clear, the carriage of a head for example, bowed when one would have thought it should be lifted, and vice versa, or a hand suspended in mid-air, as if unowned. That kind of thing. But with your father sitting on the rock that day nothing of the kind, no detail you could put your finger on and say, How very peculiar! No, I could never make it out. Perhaps, as I said, just the great stillness of the whole body, as if all the breath had left it. [Pause.] Is this rubbish a help to you, Henry? [Pause.] I can try and go on a little if you wish. [Pause.] No? [Pause.] Then I think I’ll be getting back.

  HENRY

  Not yet! You needn’t speak. Just listen. Not even. Be with me. [Pause.] Ada! [Pause. Louder.] Ada! [Pause.] Christ!

  [Pause.] Hooves! [Pause. Louder.] Hooves! [Pause.] Christ! [Long pause.] Left soon afterwards, passed you on the road, didn’t see her, looking out to. . . . [Pause.] Can’t have been looking out to sea. [Pause.] Unless you had gone round the other side. [Pause.] Had you gone round the cliff side? [Pause.] Father! [Pause.] Must have I suppose. [Pause.] Stands watching you a moment, then on down path to tram, up on open top and sits down in front. [Pause.] Sits down in front. [Pause.] Suddenly feels uneasy and gets down again, conductor: “Changed your mind, Miss?,” goes back up path, no sign of you. [Pause.] Very unhappy and uneasy, hangs round a bit, not a soul about, cold wind coming in off sea, goes back down path and takes tram home. [Pause.] Takes tram home. [Pause.] Christ! [Pause.] “My dear Bolton. . . .” [Pause.] “If it’s an injection you want, Bolton, let down your trousers and I’ll give you one, I have a panhysterectomy at nine,” meaning of course the anaesthetic. [Pause.] Fire out, bitter cold, white world, great trouble, not a sound. [Pause.] Bolton starts playing with the curtain, no, hanging, difficult to describe, draws it back no, kind of gathers it towards him and the moon comes flooding in, then lets it fall back, heavy velvet affair, and pitch black in the room, then towards him again, white, black, white, black, Holloway: “Stop that for the love of God, Bolton, do you want to finish me?” [Pause.] Black, white, black, white, maddening thing. [Pause.] Then he suddenly strikes a match, Bolton does, lights a candle, catches it up above his head, walks over and looks Holloway full in the eye. [Pause.] Not a word, just the look, the old blue eye, very glassy, lids worn thin, lashes gone, whole thing swimming, and the candle shaking over his head. [Pause.] Tears? [Pause. Long laugh.] Good God no! [Pause.] Not a word, just the look, the old blue eye, Holloway: “If you want a shot say so and let me get to hell out of here.” [Pause.] “We’ve had this before, Bolton, don’t ask me to go through it again.” [Pause.] Bolton: “Please!” [Pause.] “Please!” [Pause.] “
Please, Holloway!” [Pause.] Candle shaking and guttering all over the place, lower now, old arm tired takes it in the other hand and holds it high again, that’s it, that was always it, night, and the embers cold, and the glim shaking in your old fist, saying, Please! Please! [Pause.] Begging. [Pause.] Of the poor. [Pause.] Ada! [Pause.] Father! [Pause.] Christ! [Pause.] Holds it high again, naughty world, fixes Holloway, eyes drowned, won’t ask again, just the look, Holloway covers his face, not a sound, white world, bitter cold, ghastly scene, old men, great trouble, no good. [Pause.] No good. [Pause.] Christ! [Pause. Shingle as he gets up. He goes towards sea. Boots on shingle. He halts. Pause. Sea a little louder.] On. [Pause. He moves on. Boots on shingle. He halts at water’s edge. Pause. Sea a little louder.] Little book. [Pause.] This evening. . . . [Pause.] Nothing this evening. [Pause.] Tomorrow . . . tomorrow . . . plumber at nine, then nothing. [Pause. Puzzled.] Plumber at nine? [Pause.] Ah yes, the waste. [Pause.] Words. [Pause.] Saturday . . . nothing. Sunday . . . Sunday . . . nothing all day. [Pause.] Nothing, all day nothing. [Pause.] All day all night nothing. [Pause.] Not a sound.