ONE<br >THE READING<br >APRIL 1789<br >He began hearing for the parts in the play early in April, the day<br >after the hanging of Private Handy Baker and the five other<br >Marines. His purpose was to find fO~urteen convicts for the chief<br >speaking parts. Much later he cou~l find and begin rehearsing<br >the lesser actors in their moveme~,~ about a stage which he<br >could only dimly envisage as yet, ana amongst leading players<br >he would somehow have to perfect in the coming two and a little<br >months.<br > H.E. had given him that span of time in which to bring<br > about the very first presentation of this or any other play ever<br > peflormed on this new penal planet, which so far as anyone<br > knew had gone ~rom the beginning of time till now absolutely<br > play-less and theatre-less.<br > On this morning of his first auditions, he was heavy-headed<br > kom sitting up late with Harry Brewer the Provost Marshal,<br > and from drinking with him a dangerous quantity of brandy.<br > Then, returned to his hut, he d paid for it with one of those<br > murderous old dreams he thought Dabby Bryant the witch had<br > cured him of. As long as he drank wisely and modestly, he was<br > safe from them. But in occasional drunkenness they returned,<br > deadly and perfectly discreet little dreams to do with loss, desire<br > and jealousy.<br ><br >
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