SCRIPT

Characters:

Witch 1 - Karen Throckmorton

Witch 2 - Annie Blazejack

Witch 3 - Geddes Levenson

Tree 1 - Tom Blazejack

Tree 2 - Suzanne Levinson

Tree 3 - Rustin Levenson

Lady Macbeth - Lindsay Arber

Messenger - Chuck Throckmorton

Banquo - Sergey Feldman

Scene 1: Witches chat


001_Witch 1

The grasses of the Everglades are,

and have always been, 

moving and speaking beings.


002_Witch 2

There is a certain fragility to the wilderness of the moment 


003_Witch 3

The water level in the cypress domes is high


004_Witch 2

The Mangrove trees are so thickly packed 

that they form a cathedral of sorts


005_Witch 1

Sanctum sanctorum


006_Witch 3

An altar, for my Sisters’ eyes to gaze upon.


007_Witch 2

Before Lady Macbeth arrived, 

the upper Glade was so much muck and swamp


008_Witch 1

It was inconceivable that a people could have flourished here


009_Witch 3

The depth of swamp and the diversity of life

make this an expensive drain.


010_Witch 1

Wouldn't it be great fun to swing the pendulum, 

to swing the world, 

back and forth between water and land


011_Witch 3

By the pricking of my thumbs,

Something wicked this way comes.


012_Witch 2

Lady Macbeth!



Scene 2: A Messenger tells Lady Macbeth about the success of her tree killing project


013_Lady Macbeth

The world is a broken record. 

Every moment, every inch of the world, is a trick.

The tree-like creatures are so numerous,

so richly green, you would think there were more seasons than there are in the world!

Now is a time for killing grass, for leveling sedges, flattening dales. 

It is a time for cutting ribbons in the grass and feeding them to worms. 

For spreading-mesh fences; it is a time for budding, budding fences.


014_Messenger:

Hail Macbeth!


015_Lady Macbeth:

Hail, brave friend!

By your looks you have been digging the canal.

What news of the dredging? 

Share your knowledge of the broil

As thou didst leave it.


016_Messenger:

I was standing on a high berm overlooking the creek, 

ten feet above the seabed. 

The air above me smelled vaguely of coming rain and lichen.


017_Lady Macbeth:

What of the trees? Could we breach their snarled roots?


018_Messenger:

Doubtful it stood;

The mangrove hammock was only a foot from the edge of the berm

So thick were the boughs that my hand could not penetrate them


New trees began to creep upward, split, and multiply. 

Their trunks were as new as the day I was created. 

And they groaned with every beat of my heart. 


As trees advanced, 

The mud beneath my feet split, spread, and rippled.

Their roots engulfed us. 


019_Lady Macbeth:

Awe, awe, disgust!

You have marvell'd me.

But you must go on.


020_Messenger:

The loam was so fresh it buffeted the lungs

and we could see our lives flash before our eyes.

A few minutes passed, and we made good progress. 

Then, abruptly, something nudged against my boot, flopped over.

We did push the canal 

Through to the sea, and salt water gushed. 

Their soils were so full of liquid 

that it were impractical for any plant to take

up residence, and remain standing.

A new sound filled the clearing, 

a high, rasping sound like distant thunder but more urgent. 

The forest was falling.


021_Lady Macbeth:

The sound of their fall is the sound of our triumph over death. The sound of our victory is the groaning of trees.


022_Messenger: (Slowly, in a daze)

I have done no harm.

And yet I feel as if I had done harm.

I was a tree in the forest, and my job was to fall.

The forest had to fall, one by one.

The wood, empty. Sleep snuffed. Gone.


023_Lady Macbeth (to the audience)

He is faint. So should he look

That seems to speak things strange.



Scene 3: A conversation among Trees, and then 

A confrontation between Banquo and the Trees, and then 

The Witches arrive and make a deal with the Trees, and then, 

The Witches transform Banquo into a supernatural animal-human hybrid, and then,

An uneasy alliance between Witches and Trees


024_Tree 1:

Pale of the world, come to life;

Strange dreams, troubling dreams,

And shames yet beautiful morning-comings.

Come into the world, come into the world.


Within the volume of time I have seen

Hours dreadful and things strange, but this sore night

Hath trifled former knowings.


The same neighborhoods where a bear lurks, 

The same neighborhoods where panthers still prowl, 

and where hundreds of bird species are endangered or near-extinct: 

I have seen the lawns of estates like Rose and Ditchfield


Swarming humans:

Each new morn

A new batch comes.


025_Tree 2: 

Where do they come from?


026_Tree 3:

Their region is as a forest without a tree.


027_Tree 2:

They are free bags full of the

most elaborate water-control projects.


028_Tree 3:

Aye, and how they do march us to the mulcher.


029_Tree 2: 

'Tis said they eat each other.


Enter Banquo


030_Banquo: 

What are these

So withered and so wild in their attire,

That look not like the inhabitants of the earth,

And yet are on it? Live you? or are you aught

That man may question? You seem to understand me,


031_Tree 2:

Is it a man?


032_Tree 1:

It has a long, thin body like a slug.


033_Banquo:

I am Banquo. 


034_Tree 3:

His shiny, sugary eye looks like a gleam of candy.


035_Banquo:

My business is Lady Macbeth’s

My purpose is to discuss the propriety, or otherwise, of our

acquisition of the land.


036_Tree 3:

Young fry of treachery!


037_Tree 2:

Make all our trumpets speak; give them all breath,

Those clamorous harbingers of blood and death.


038_Tree 1:

We will have blood


039_Tree 2:

They say, blood will have blood


040_Tree 3:

All birds, including the great kite,

Will stone thee to death. Out, out,

Thou hideous worm!


041_Banquo:

Difficult woods and thickets! 

Though your bark cannot be lost,

Yet it would be tempest-tost.


It is moving, inexorably, down a landscape where the meanest blade of grass can turn to dust.

The question is not whether we should acquire it, but how to acquire it.


Let the destruction of the Everglades continue. Let the killing of the Everglades continue.

I will get thee dug, and I will put thee to sea.


042_Tree 1:

Thou art the best o' the cut-throats.


043_Tree 2:

That title is for Macbeth.


044_Tree 3:

The canal digger!

There is no end to her.


045_Tree 1:

Who would bear a grain of such seed

As this mankind

And sow it where none hath yet

Sow'd a man's seed?


046_Banquo:

Still, the land is ours.

It is also a vast, uninhabited slough, a dead-end street, a wasteland.

We will make it firm land for firm houses. 


047_Tree 2:

I find my tears fall easy down my cheeks;

They have no water in them.

The canals that flood also drain. 


Enter Witches 


048_Witch 1: 

We are twig budged with sympathy

049_Witch 2:

Yes, do ask us to help

050_Witch 3:

We could break the line of the battle.

051_Tree 1:

Who is this that appears before me?


052_Tree 3:

Strangers.


053_Tree 2:

More men?


054_Witch 1:

Stranger yet.


055_Witch 2:

There is nothing in space

That does not descend to the earth


056_Witch 3: 

I'll show you a thing you never thought you'd see. 

A light in time! A light in time!

Where you keep the stars


057_Witch 2:

The spaces where stars were wont to live.


058_Witch 3:

We keep the mystery of stars and the mystery of time.

059_Tree 3:

Art not these three sisters?

060_Witch 3

Ay, we are three of my self,

The three Strange Sisters.

061_Tree 2:

Let's not consort with them


062_Witch 2:

We’ll make of this Banquo a fresh beast,

His face lion mettled proud, but with revisions of lizards

063_Witch 1:

To the busy craft of magic we’ll make up

(chanting)

beginning, middle, and end,

descend, and stand again.

Hungry eye, let it in. Let it in.

Look like the innocent lamb,

But be the wolf of the other

World.

064_Tree 3: 

Confound all spiritual things

That labour and desire power;

Strange sisters, craft your magic.

Magical witchy sound

065_Tree 3:

Though he drink and give in the poison of luxury,

Though he wear greedy gouts of sweat,

Though he swoon with his fancy's thrill,

Yet we’ll find him baulked in his estate.

066_Tree 2:

Detritus from a kind of molting: 

a long trail of skin-like debris, husks, and sloughings.

067_Banquo:

How now?

Why do you dress me

In these strange skins?

068_Witch 2:

If you look like the serpent,

Then you are the serpent.

069_Witch 1:

If you look like the panther 

Then you are the panther

070_Witch 3:

If you look like the man 

Then you are the man

071_Witch 2:

And if you look like all of them and yet are none…

072_Witch 1:

Then you are made of water and of something alien

073_Tree 1:

Capital!

074_Banquo

(low moan)

075_Tree 2:

Ha! This moaning creature was, or had once been, human.

076_Banquo:

Breathless and refreshed as I have been…


It is that great House wherein all living things

Live together. What are living things?

All creatures that have feelings.

And feel they not?


Exit Banquo

077_Witch 3:

More can be done like this.

078_Tree 1

And vanquish Macbeth?

079_Witch 3:

We offer brightness in a formless change.


080_Witch 1:

Beacon and build another heart for our strangeness

In your garden.


081_Tree 2:

When I saw the star trails on the water I thought, This is it. 

The treaty-making, the treaty-keeping...

But you would change the very air we breathe.

082_Tree 1:

The rainy season has come and gone. Summer is over. 

We are hanging on by a thread.


083_Tree 2:

I fear a confused distress, a false happiness. 


084_Witch 1:

Then stand with us.

The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day


085_Tree 3:

We cannot breathe without opening our lungs 

And exhaling the grass and water and sky...

To breathe the witches is somber.


086_Tree 1:

We must learn to live with that something.



Scene 4: Lady Macbeth is a villain



087_Lady Macbeth:

Our deliberations have produced results. The natives of Florida are becoming

Extinct.

What, sir?

Your tongues shall speak what they think,


088_Messenger:

In deeds of power and in speech

I bring of good tidings and of bad.


089_Lady Macbeth:

Speak then to me.


090_Messenger:

Artificially the suburbs sequestered more wilderness. 


091_Lady Macbeth:

And?


092_Messenger:

Our men 

control the Everglades


093_Lady Macbeth:

Formidable foes. But how were they to know

Which was the other end of my sword? You see,

Whoever strikes first, wins.

(pause)

What bad then?


094_Messenger:

The woods are not gone, although they look so.

And they have taken our spangled Banquo.


095_Lady Macbeth:

Woe, alas! Banquo is murdered!


096_Messenger:

T’were better to be with the dead-

He grows worse and worse.

How will he look on his family when 

He may only want to eat of them?

I have seen "things else",

but I mean things that are not things.


097_Lady Macbeth:

What is't you say?


098_Messenger:

What need we fear them, when death

Looks like a picnic?

He did depart from his body, change shape,

Crawl from his skin like a drowning man. 

His spirit is an animal of the Everglades,

a shadow that rolls backwards and forwards over the marsh, writhing.

Out of his senses he ran for the wood, calling out:

“You shall spend the rest of your days

In wondering how long this place has existed.

And you too shall partake in the wonders of it.”


099_Lady Macbeth:

You have put me on edge. 

You have stirred me with your prophetic words

The field is darkening.

The foundations are shifting.

The castle is shaken.

But the ghosts don’t scare me. 

Let the killing of the Everglades be complete. 

After all, why waste a river of grass?


Scene 5: Lady Macbeth’s transformation, and 

A new state of the world


100_Lady Macbeth

The wood was alive. 

It twisted and turned under my fingernails, 

Arching its back and curling its tail;

It hung, limp and blind, like an unfed snake. 

The roots roved all around me, 

They joined in a tangled network 

To the systems of other trees.


101_Tree 1: (pointing to the witches)

Lo! here come the charmed charmers,

That smile on both the worlds


102_Witch 1:

Wood and stone have known it;

Even the humble axe and pestle agree


103_Witch 3:

In nature is a tyranny; it hath been

The untimely emptying of the happy throne

And the fall of many regents.


104_Lady Macbeth:

What are you?

A friend? A Sister?


105_Witch 2:

We come to strike against your use of trees


106_Lady Macbeth:

Things without all remedy

Should be without regard. 

What's done is done.

The world is a broken record. 

Every moment, every inch of the world, is a trick. 


107_Tree 2:

Do you not fear the witches?


108_Witch 3:

Once the rebel,

She will receive what she deserves


109_Witch 2:

And we will have what we want. Our voice is our sword.


110_Witch 1:

Come, sisters, cheer we up, give us a hand;

The mind is too full of the macrocosm,

And yet there it is, in the microcosm,

That shows you where to place

The subject of our song.


111_Witch 3:

Thrice the dolphin,

And thrice the rebel.


112_Witch 1:

Hurtful to the eye

Are the words of accuracy.

Let it in, Let it in!


113_Witch 2:

Peace! The charm's wound up.


114_Lady Macbeth:

A spell!

I smell the salt of the words

Thy letters have transported me beyond

This ignorant present, 

And whisper things my brain can neither see

Nor understand. 

O, ruin me, woo me,

And with a skein of fate

Bring me back to my senses!

Look how I sink!

(A thud. Lady Macbeth falls.)


115_Witch 1:

See to the lady.


116_Witch 3:

She fell down, and a part of her hair Is red. 

She is better; but her blood Is shed. 


117_Lady Macbeth:

Is this a grave, sir, at last?


118_Witch 1:

Nothing so grave as you were.

You will live...


Special Effects music.


119_Lady Macbeth:

This brightness is a formless rage, 

a confused distress, 

a false happiness. 

a touch of the sublime, 

a kind of innocence.


A tree? In the woods?

I’m on foot, my lord,

And so perhaps I’m bound to be.

Although -

Although the ground is polluted and the air heavy with smoke,

I dare not resist the lure of this place any longer.


This is so astounding, that in my imagination, 

with all its parts combined, I could not tell any of it…

 

I saw every kind of living creature that had ever existed on Earth. 

From marine species to reptilian and from invertebrate to arthropod.

From microscopic creatures to galactic invertebrates,

And everything in-between.


120_Tree 3:

Such bright

Sepia-tinted eyes!

Are they not the color of the sap

That gathers here?

Macbeth has leaves!

A fast-moving ripple of green-gold fuzziness.


121_Lady Macbeth:

The sisters have made us all fools.

My fingers are charged with the sun

I have no home but in the woods


122_Tree 2:

Then stand with us.

your feet are tired. 

You have been out in the woods all day.


123_Lady Macbeth:

My feet? I have forgotten how to walk.


Let me enfold thee and hold thee to my heart.

There if I grow, the harvest is your own.


Glowing noise. 


124_Witch 2:

Green leaves with reddish roots

creep across the fields; they obscure vision, obscure sight. 


125_Witch 3:

The trees feel wet against your

face as you walk; they blind, 

they crush your eardrums and tongue and

throat. 


126_Witch 1:

The downpours wash the downpains away, 


127_Witch 2:

The lungs swell and fail; your face and your body, stone and

nectar, will never be the same.


128_Lady Macbeth:

I owe my being to your strange mercy.

Here am I, Lady Macbeth, lost forever.

I went from shock to fascination to sustained blue-green light 


129_Tree 2:

I think that there are probably hundreds of people 

in the wide world who get a glimpse 

of that which is beyond words.

But then again, maybe I am just dreaming all these restless nights. 


130_Tree 1:

I can feel in my bones the breath of the world around me, and it is not my imagination.


131_Tree 2:

The stillness of the trees, 

The stillness of the water, 

The stillness of the bees, 

And the stillness of the human face 

In the middle of it all. 

It is a living creature of some sort. 


132_Tree 1:

It may be stationary, or it may be moving. 

It may be in the process of creating itself, or it may not be. 

It may be inert, or it may be active.

It may be in a hurry, or it may be slowing down. 


133_Tree 3:

The world is cauldroning away. There is no turning back, not now, not ever.


END