Read The Haitian Trilogy: Plays: Henri Christophe, Drums and Colours, and The Haytian Earth Online
Authors: Derek Walcott
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CONTENTS
FOREWORD
The writing of these plays spans an arc of nearly forty years.
Henri Christophe,
privately printed in 1948, deals with the struggle between two guerrilla generals, afterwards kings of Haiti, Christophe and Dessalines, following the imprisonment and death in exile of Toussaint L’Ouverture, whose name meant “the breach” or “the opening.” It was written on the invitation of my brother, Roderick, and performed by a young group called the Arts Guild.
The theme of the slave revolt against French rule in Saint Domingue is also a pivotal part of the expansive design of
Drums and Colours,
commissioned for the first and only West Indian Federation, with emblematic images from Caribbean history: Columbus in chains, Millais’s painting
The Boyhood of Raleigh,
the coachman of the Breda family Toussaint L’Ouverture, and the martyrdom of George William Gordon for Jamaican independence.
The Haitian Earth
includes a scene from
Drums and Colours,
a repetition seen in a slightly altered context.
The Haitian revolution, as sordidly tyrannical as so many of its subsequent regimes tragically became, was an upheaval, a necessary rejection of the debasements endured under a civilized empire, that achieved independence. The revolution is as central to the plays as it is to the history of the island.
My debt to all those involved in their production, many no longer here, to the Arts Guild of Saint Lucia, and to the Trinidad Theatre Workshop remains incalculable. This book is for the memory of my brother.
D.W.
2001
HENRI CHRISTOPHE
A Chronicle in Seven Scenes
The play was first produced by the St. Lucia Arts Guild at St. Joseph’s Convent in Castries, St. Lucia, in 1949. Directed by Derek Walcott. Costumes by Alix Walcott.
It was later produced at Hans Crescent, London, in 1952. Directed by Errol Hill and designed by Carlyle Chang.
The cast was as follows:
GENERAL SYLLA
—
Sam Morris
GENERAL PÉTION
—
Frank Pilgrim
JEAN JACQUES DESSALINES
—
Victor Patterson
CORNEILLE BRELLE
—
John Nunez
HENRI CHRISTOPHE
—
Errol John
VASTEY
—
Errol Hill
NARRATOR
—
George Lamming
Also,
MURDERERS, SOLDIERS, CROWD
—
Roy Augier, Fred Debedin, Edric Roberts, George Griffith, Reggie Hill, Elesto Cortes, Ray Robinson, Maurice Mason, Eileen Stewart, Kenneth Monplaisir, Eustace Pollard, Lionel Ngakane, Charles Appia
(
DRUMMER
)
CAST OF CHARACTERS
GENERAL SYLLA
GENERAL PÉTION
JEAN JACQUES DESSALINES
;
later Jacques I, King of Haiti
CORNEILLE BRELLE
,
a priest; afterwards archbishop
HENRI CHRISTOPHE
,
a general; later Henri I, King of Haiti
VASTEY
,
his secretary; afterwards a baron
NUMEROUS ATTENDANTS, GENERALS, MESSENGERS, SOLDIERS, AND TWO MURDERERS
The setting is Haiti after 1803.
PART ONE
The cease of majesty
Dies not alone but like a gulf doth draw
What’s near it with it; it is a massy wheel
Fix’d on the summit of the highest mount,
To whose huge spokes ten thousand lesser things
Are mortis’d and adjoin’d; which, when it falls,
Each small annexment, petty consequence,
Attends the boist’rous ruin.
—
Hamlet
Scene 1
An interior of the Government Palace at Cap Haitien. Present are
GENERALS SYLLA
and
PÉTION. SYLLA
is an old, tired general with a wry, senile sense of humour.
PÉTION
is active and middle-aged.
SYLLA
This waiting is exhausting. It’s almost contradictory
That anything so sad can happen
In a broad afternoon.
Where’s Dessalines?
PÉTION
Dressing in the inner room,
Preparing to be valedictory
To this peace that holds its breath, to hear
What happened to Toussaint.
Today a ship arrived from France;
Anchoring in the roads, she looked sullen;
Fearing the worst, Dessalines would look decorous
To suit the occasion. But if he really dressed his hope,
It would wear black; he would like Toussaint dead.
This country that stretched, crowing to greet
The sun of history rising, will have its throat cut;
That’s the truth.
SYLLA
There’s a kind of rustle in the lower hall;
It looks like the messenger from Napoleon, but
Where is Dessalines?
PÉTION
No doubt decorating his drawers
With epaulettes. He considers kingship;
Vanity will undo him.
Here’s the messenger.
(
Enter
MESSENGER.
)
What is the sum of the news, good or bad?
SYLLA
What is Napoleon doing?
Patience will drive us mad.
(
Enter
DESSALINES.
)
This is the messenger from Napoleon
That we sent on the last ship; a veiled intensity
Inflates his bearing.
DESSALINES
Thanks. There is a crowd of marchands, fishermen
At the front gates. Are they converged in a rebellious murmur
For bread again, or waiting for news?
PÉTION
They want, as is only natural, to hear
About Toussaint.
DESSALINES
If they are rabble, make them orderly.
You smile, I do not.
PÉTION
About Toussaint … General …
DESSALINES
Of course, proceed. Be eloquent without elaboration;
Talk quickly …
MESSENGER
I have leave to speak?
After the general and liberator left his country,
By force and treachery of his ruined captains
He was taken, without satisfaction of audience or justice,
To a sullen castle, situated near the border,
Flung in a dungeon; he fretted there,
Complained of discomfort, protesting, not pleading,
As it suits a soldier, not a state buffoon.
But the black mountains and snow in the tight winter,
Whose sharpness, although cautionary in October,
Hurt his teeth, cramped in pains …
DESSALINES
Well?…
MESSENGER
He would look out past where the snow, like bread,
Settled without sound on the barred window edge
In brittle heaps. A mountain’s iron aspect, the sky
Grey as soiled milk, imprisoned his exile more.
One day he rose to stretch his bones and died.
They buried him. The cleric who did the obsequies
Informed me that he died, grace on his lips;
But that is no comfort, he is dead …
You have heard his fate …
DESSALINES
I’ll talk of fate. Have you letters
From Napoleon? How was his death received?
MESSENGER
Somewhat with courtesy, unlike the court
I see here. I expected to move iron men to tears;
You look as if I had discussed the weather.
Haiti is in the Saturday of honour, she
Is rudderless.
SYLLA
There are several captains, son.
Here is the priest. Thank you.
(
Enter
BRELLE
as the
MESSENGER
leaves.
)
Good evening,
Père
Brelle.
BRELLE
I caught the mood from the tossing murmur outside;
I can read that the man is dead.
How they loved him …
DESSALINES
We have all loved him.
We must not profane his memory with idleness.
You have done well to come, Priest.
Have a proclamation issued; I’ll append
My signature; declare a day of mourning, toll bells;
Inform your archbishop, Father Brelle, of an opulent
Obsequy for the man’s memory. As for Christophe,
Tell him I have assumed temporary rule;
Temporary—see that the word is out before he chokes
The messenger. I am now in control.
Christophe must learn to cage the jaguar hope
In the bars of restraint. You all respect
My wish?… General Pétion? Sylla? Father Brelle?
Good. Tragedy threatens me with being great,
After this little condolence, the state …
BRELLE
This is a cursory mourning;
Do tears dry up so very quickly?
DESSALINES
Habit makes a boredom of tragedy.
Even in our eyes we hold death’s annunciation,
Like Sylla, getting blind, deaths of twin light.
Let us proceed. We will enlarge our conscience, spread it
Like an open map in Father Brelle’s presence.
There are no more French:
We have dispersed their broken units, they cannot lift a finger
Against us; the country, now, is ours;
But we must not talk, delay, malinger
With words, words, not action.
SYLLA
Then you appreciate the position
That a long war, an internal, cormorant war, has left
Our treasury in?
The peasants have identified liberty with idleness;
The fallow fields cropless; the old plantations,
Plaine du Nord, Morne Rouge, Quartier Morin,
Are like grass widows, unweeded, growing thorns
And bristles, dry seeds in a parching wind.
We do not seem to be able to drive them back to work;
They speak of slavery, murmur against measures,
Strict, but satisfactory to the able administrator.
PÉTION
Give a man an education or a gun
And you lose an honest labourer.
BRELLE
Since Toussaint’s exile, I have observed the country
Has grown lax in spiritual matters, perplexing the clergy;
The ancient cults are growing like an unweeded garden over
Our pruned labours;
A stern but gentle hand is needed,
As long as the Church is not superseded.
SYLLA
We must remember Christophe;
He needs watching.
BRELLE
I do not descend to a question of enmity, I prefer
That the present holders of the keys of authority
Do not consider
Who must open the door first, rather,
Work in an amity to put our rooms in order.