And as long as you rule badly
   The Church must war against this evil; sadly
   I, who am your enemy, am your friend;
   You oppose my flock and rape my pastorate
   To glut your lusts: I cannot stand for this …
   CHRISTOPHE (With mounting anger)
   Stand?
   You cannot stand for this? You speak to the one who is here
   To stand for this black country; it is not yours to stand
   Or understand. I am the King, I am the state,
   I shall work for the state as I am King
   Against what any archbishop will stand for.
   BRELLE
   Then there will always be strife
   Between us; there will always be the knife
   Dividing the spiritual from the temporal,
   Dividing even to the point of blood …
   CHRISTOPHE
   Look here, white man, do you threaten me?
   BRELLE
   Or perhaps my blood, as you killed Dessalines.
   CHRISTOPHE
   I killed Dessalines and you smiled.
   BRELLE (Softly)
   I have not been a good priest.
   But I was not archbishop then, and only blood
   Could buy this comfort, and your graph to authority.
   I was a poor priest,
   But then I wanted too much; that is why
   To stop is better, Henri, than to waste. No one will pity.
   I am old, and act
   In this arena of sanity; my purposes are broad and open
   As the blue air. This is the ambition
   That drives me to the ground with hard grey hairs;
   I toyed and threatened God, demanding more than a simple death and life.
   You think me hypocrite; I wanted honour, comfort
   Beyond this muttering in the dark; that was the hope
   I had before time put on wrinkles, and now I wear
   The stubborn motley of a peevish priest.
   Henri, we are fools.
   CHRISTOPHE
   What about these letters?
   What about Pétion?
   BRELLE
   I hear many rumours.
   CHRISTOPHE
   I can kill rumours easily;
   You only have to throw a threat in their direction
   And tongues and fears fly up like a throw of birds;
   Suspicions and plots are easily brought to light:
   Truth crouches in the dark.
   The letters …
   BRELLE (Cautiously)
   What have they to do with me?
   CHRISTOPHE
   Who said anything?
   BRELLE
   Come, come, Henri, what new plot is this?
   CHRISTOPHE
   But I refuse to be caught by you into accusing.
   My accusation would mean only your refusing,
   Then what?
   (He gestures in mock helplessness.)
   BRELLE
   What am I supposed to have done?
   Write these letters?
   Whose idea, Vastey’s?
   CHRISTOPHE (Bewildered)
   Ah …
   BRELLE
   What am I guilty of?
   CHRISTOPHE
   Choose any treason.
   BRELLE
   I have one chronic treason
   Which no death can eat, and that is love.
   CHRISTOPHE
   I am not a civilised man, Father;
   I am at heart very primitive; there is that urge—
   A beast in the jungle among primitive angers
   Clawing down opposition; what is the expression—
   The instinct?
   BRELLE
   I do not know.
   I know only this love
   I have for peace, religion, and the suffering people.
   CHRISTOPHE (Tearing the letters, screaming.)
   Oh, shut that hypocrite heart,
   Gabbling of love while you mock our complexions,
   Inviting death to grow taller after dying;
   You wrote those letters, are guilty of treason.
   Old man, you have arrived at the end of a season;
   I rule now. Take your hoax,
   Your statues, and your warnings, and blessing saints
   Out of my house, and Haiti.
   BRELLE
   This is the curse of the nation,
   Eating your own stomach, where the sickness is;
   Your smell of blood offends the nostrils of God.
   CHRISTOPHE
   Perhaps the smell of sweat under my arms
   Offend that God, too, quivering His white crooked nostrils.
   Well, tell Him after death that it is honest
   As the seven words of blood broken on His flesh; tell Him
   The nigger smell, that even kings must wear,
   Is bread and wine to life.
   I am proud, I have worked and grown
   This country to its stature: tell Him that.
   BRELLE
   With hammer and hatred breaking
   What Toussaint built, exploding
   Where he created. How many dead
   Children has your love considered?
   Will you never learn the lesson
   You taught your best friend in the grammar death?
   You broke his breath like a stalk; and now you walk,
   A subtle monster lost in rooms of himself;
   Your hate walks out of screens
   With fifty murders smiling in its hand.
   You have become worse than your Dessalines;
   You have grown mad with satisfaction and despair.
   How long, King, will you continue to wear
   A cloak of blood around an ex-slave shoulder?
   CHRISTOPHE
   Slave, eh? You have never forgotten that.
   Will that never dissolve?
   I have not a conscience but a memory.
   Brelle, you have gone too far.
   BRELLE (Feeling his success.)
   Not far enough.
   We must all suffer, even you, eh, King?
   The anatomy of pity, the pearl of pain, is common suffering.
   A unity of wounds transcends the agony.
   Think how the world is suffering and you will smile;
   Think how so many kings were killed and you will feel lucky.
   You think a slave is shame …
   When I was in a seminary in Provence,
   Meditating martyrdom among the poplars,
   I thought and toyed of a bright martyrdom,
   Selling my faith for death, to blacks …
   CHRISTOPHE
   I have told you myself
   Not to refer contemptuously to my people.
   BRELLE
   They are my people too, King,
   And they are black;
   Spiritual power has never made me despotic,
   As temporal power has made you insane, neurotic;
   What kind of perverse kindness is it that denies
   Them white bread but will not let a friend call them blacks?
   CHRISTOPHE
   You say it again,
   Priest. I am tired of your complexion;
   I have had too much to do with this.
   Besides, you talk to no slave …
   BRELLE
   And you to God’s elect,
   An archbishop.
   CHRISTOPHE
   Because of my rule, and Dessalines’s dying.
   BRELLE
   What black ignorance in king and country …
   CHRISTOPHE
   Provoking me …
   But why?
   What comfort is your death,
   Perhaps you think … Oh, I see
   Rebellion, a trick with you and Pétion?
   BRELLE
   You are so lost.
   Good night.
   (BRELLE is going. He passes contemptuously by CHRISTOPHE. The stabbing is quiet and terrible, with a minimum amount of struggle.)
   CHR
ISTOPHE
   What fools! Assembling on the shelves of their lives
   Clay gods, and in a dusty room,
   Half-broken faiths that falsify,
   Building their need for comfort into religions!
   The one final thing is death, and how you die. I die crowned!
   And you, white man,
   This death beats dying; I have built
   These châteaux of my past that no time eats.
   A slave, I survive.
   Vastey … Vastey …
   VASTEY (Who has been near.)
   Yes, Henri.
   CHRISTOPHE
   We are safe now.
   VASTEY
   I know.
   CHRISTOPHE
   We have strangled memory and regret,
   But this must be the last.
   I nearly could not kill him, but when he said …
   What drums are those?
   They are coming nearer.
   Oh, Vastey, my dreams …
   Ruin, ruin, O King, ruin and blood!
   Someone has blown out the candle of the sun.
   Ruin and blood.
   Stain my eyes, my linen, I walked alone in a wood
   Of skeletons and thorns where the leaves dripped blood.
   Get this mess cleaned.
   Do you hear drums?
   VASTEY
   Forget. Try to sleep;
   We are safe, you talk like old Sylla.
   What do you hear? The wind, that lost ghost
   Under the willows, with a thread for a voice; only
   The wind; I hear it, too.
   Do you think it is Pétion?
   CHRISTOPHE
   Ah, who is Pétion?…
   I want to sleep.
   VASTEY
   Yes.
   You know they really sound like drums …
   What’s the matter?
   CHRISTOPHE
   My legs, my legs …
   I always get these pains …
   A cramp I cannot stab away.
   Help me to the throne: it will pass.
   (Fade-out.)
   Scene 3
   The scene is the same as before. It is dim. CHRISTOPHE, wearing only his general’s cloak, torn open to show his bare chest, is sprawled on the throne, muttering to himself. VASTEY, near the throne, is watching a WITCH DOCTOR fuss over skull and incense in an elaborate, unconvincing ritual.
   VASTEY
   How are our legs now?
   CHRISTOPHE
   I cannot move them …
   VASTEY
   Henri, we must leave the citadel,
   Pétion is already a day near;
   Even here, La Ferrière, is not safe.
   You must …
   CHRISTOPHE
   I know, I know.
   (He indicates the WITCH DOCTOR.)
   What is he doing?
   Tell him to stop praying to wooded mercies and get
   Me erect; tell him it is useless.
   Christ and Damballa, or any god …
   VASTEY
   Wooden gods, they are not much good;
   If I stocked all the superstitions end to end,
   Or let now a crooked prayer climb, no god
   Would excuse guilt.
   CHRISTOPHE
   Tell him to try again the rub, that mixture,
   The old herbs, the antique magic,
   That breed abortions; the weeds and smoking herbs cropped,
   Hemlock-harmful, lethe-lulling,
   Flowers of forgetting, raped from their cradles
   In smoke, mists, and weathers …
   VASTEY
   He says it is wrong to rub you again so soon.
   CHRISTOPHE
   Ah … tell him to go.
   VASTEY (Touching the WITCH DOCTOR.)
   Allez.
   CHRISTOPHE
   Ask him to leave the skull and incense …
   But go, with his gods and their wooden smiles …
   (The WITCH DOCTOR goes.)
   Well, Brelle is dead …
   VASTEY
   I stumbled on his sprawled pride in the corridor,
   He has his martyrdom.
   No one to bury him. We are alone now.
   Pétion powerful, Sylla silent.
   Dessalines dead, Christophe … cramped …
   This cramp, where is it?
   CHRISTOPHE (Irritated)
   How many times must I say?
   I don’t know; all over.
   VASTEY
   My own paralysis
   Creeps somewhere between my will
   And my regret. There are broken statues
   On my tongue, dead stale civilizations
   Breeding in my brain. You, if you could walk,
   You could see the citadel, the soldiers have left it.
   There is dust settling on the armoury,
   Shafted beams with dust rising like history in the chapel,
   Cracked windows and the vocabulary of ruin
   Littered on lawns; the gardens and menagerie, the oleander
   Groves, dead or rotten.
   CHRISTOPHE
   But regret,
   Why do you regret?
   VASTEY
   For two days, with your paralysis,
   I have lived in my huge linen rooms, eating my fears
   Like the worm gnawing on the corner
   Of the shroud of silence;
   Drinking remorse in a spoonful of soup.
   Dust on the mirrors, and floors cracking …
   When I think of the past.
   God!
   CHRISTOPHE
   You cannot stop gabbling?
   If I had legs, and an army …
   VASTEY
   And Pétion is coming waving a new constitution.
   Ragged herds follow. Oh, if he knew, or they,
   How they were marching tall into the grave, murders, fevers,
   And what responsibility the crown tightens.
   Oh God, Henri!
   CHRISTOPHE
   Do not call gods, Vastey.
   The gods are monstered children; they build
   To break, or history
   Burning biographies like rubbish, while time
   Carries their smoke like memory past the nostrils.
   Those who die hoping are grey children;
   So death, selling his wares,
   Fooled the archbishop.
   VASTEY
   But, as you said of Sylla,
   He is safe now. Dead with dignity.
   CHRISTOPHE
   He was white.
   VASTEY
   In death, Henri, the bone is anonymous;
   Complexions only grin above the skeleton;
   Under the grass the dust is an anthology of creeds and skins.
   Who can tell what that skull was?
   Was it for that we quarreled?
   CHRISTOPHE
   Yes, fool; for that Haiti bled,
   And spilled the valuable aristocratic blood
   To build these citadels for this complexion
   Signed by the sun.
   Yes, for that we killed, because some were black,
   And some were spat on.
   For that I overturned the horn of plenty,
   And harvest grey hairs and calumny;
   It is I who, history, gave them this voice to shout anarchy
   Against the King. I made this King they hate,
   Shaped out of slaves …
   What have I done, what have I done, Vastey, to deserve all this?
   VASTEY
   Dessalines, Brelle,
   The violent love of self that kills the self.
   Cathedrals and cruelties;
   The apocalypse horsemen riding down starving ranks;
   Thanks, thanks, thanks,
   Forced to the King from bleeding lips;
   Cannon and cruelty poured from the sides of ships.
   Oh, Henri, we are guilty; admit, admit, it’s time.
   CHRISTOPHE
   How dare you assume
   Such a familiar tone?r />
   The only unguent I can rub on these bones
   Is I have done what I would do again.
   VASTEY
   Is it not possible that you are sinking
   In a quicksand of safety, thinking
   Corruptions safe as the sand closes? It is not your house
   You must put in order but yourself.
   CHRISTOPHE
   You take advantage while I am weak;
   If I could flog these limbs to action—
   (The drums beat faintly, and the action, dim as it is, petrifies them both. CHRISTOPHE withdraws, slowly, a pistol from hiding, then settles it more accessibly.)
   Pétion is powerful. They are coming,
   They are coming, Vastey.
   If I could move …
   VASTEY
   You cannot tell how near they are,
   And it is thickening,
   And the châteaux are tall and dark. I must hide. I must hide.
   The light …
   Now it is dark.
   This is the room where Brelle, with music playing …
   Hither a new king, and another archbishop,
   Monotonies of history …
   We are finished, Majesty,
   We were a tragedy of success.
   CHRISTOPHE
   It was not a great life, Vastey,
   But the dying compensates it:
   No slave, but a king
   Whose exhalation is signed with meteors,
   Whose spilled blood canonizes its anarchy.
   Think of Brelle’s eyes with nothing in the pupils,
   His hands contorted on a crooked crucifix,
   Redemption, not riot, on his dusty lips;
   And consider how confessions, penultimate pieties,
   Are comical or forced. I cannot regret,
   I acted evenly.
   And I was often happy.
   VASTEY
   Happy, Henri?
   Then no contritions?
   (CHRISTOPHE picks up the pistol absently as the drums mount in tension.)
   CHRISTOPHE
   Happiness is sensual, my equerry;
   The fine meal, and the ready wife, the smile
   Between the waltzes and cadenzas, the leap of lechery
   In the wild ropes and rivers of the thighs.
   Grief with despair, ruin, the crack of time,
   Wreckage of several lives around our ankles, these lives
   Are hopes the sea rejects; time’s tidal griefs
   Rock with the moon’s knock, waves wreck our wraths,
   Hopes drown, and kings fade on the memory.
   These are the hard truths we cannot eat,
   The black anarchy of the night, with dawn
   
 
 The Haitian Trilogy: Plays: Henri Christophe, Drums and Colours, and The Haytian Earth Page 6