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    Louis Riel and Gabriel Dumont: A Short Play

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    and advances the clock, then stands behind Gabe.].

      Gabe : Four of us rode to Montana, where Louis was teaching school.

      Saddle-sore and dry when we arrived.

      It had been a long ride

      And a hard trail.

      Riel came out of the schoolhouse

      I recognized him from the description -

      He had a prophet’s eyes

      We wondered if we were doing the right thing

      Even in a dry climate

      There are many wrong paths

      But, far to the north, a prairie fire was burning

      And behind me, dust devils were

      Erasing our old road.

      Louis: [to the audience] I think he’s almost done the history part.

      Gabe : I am. Mr. John A. McDonald sent in the troops. We fought. We lost.

      In a little place called Batoche we Métis lost forever. [He points to Louis] Dickhead here was still telling us not to fight, to negotiate. But them troops weren’t in a negotiating mood, you know.

      Louis: A slight miscalculation, possibly.

      Gabe : I escaped. They caught Louis, and put him on trial for a few petty infractions. End of the history lesson. [he walks to the clock, moves the hand back.] What were the charges, my crazy friend?

      Louis: Treason, for one, and murder. Nothing serious

      Gabe : He tried to give the west to the United States. How’s that?

      [Audience member comes out, displays sign, “Hang the Bastard!”, returns to stands.]

      Louis: I hate that sign. Anyway, I wasn’t serious. And I’m not crazy!

      Gabe : [to audience] Oh no, not crazy, not my friend Louis Riel! On our way back from Montana we had meal breaks twice a day, pee stops three times a day, and prayer stops every ten miles.

      Louis: God found me. He hasn’t found you yet, but that’s not my problem.

      Gabe : The hero of the Métis. After his first success he’d gone to Montreal. He got off the train bellowing like a bull and shouting “I’m a prophet, I’m a prophet. He spent the next two years in a nuthouse in Montreal.

      Louis: Now they’ve got a Louis Riel trail and a Louis Riel statue. I’m a hero to the Métis and practically a father of confederation. Not to mention top billing in this play of yours.

      And you, the wily Gabriel Dumont, are forgotten. [he picks up the buffalo skull, contemplates it]. Alas, poor bison. Dumont knew you well…. [turns to Gabe]

      You grew old, my friend.

      I wish I had. Tell me this:

      When the savage wind came down the Missouri

      Thundering in the night, carrying

      Boxcars of Canadian snow,

      When you sat beside the fire, gray and nodding,

      Did you dream of the time when you were young

      And the most famous of buffalo hunters?

      Did you remember the man with fiery eyes

      And his impossible, crazy dream?

      As you drifted off to sleep, did you imagine

      In the corner of the shack, you could see

      Moving shadows, crazy eyes.

      Gabe : Fame everlasting. And a noose. Was it worth it,

      Louis Riel?

      You always sought walls, Louis -

      I was after paths,

      Trails, highways, the faint mark of the last buffalo,

      The keen edge of the October wind, while

      Making my own free trail across the shortgrass land.

      This Métis was born to step over surveyor’s chain and

      Thick sisal rope

      On the day they hanged you,

      With walls and walls around you

      I rode out of the valley

      To a high grassy knoll

      Where I could sit in a medicine wheel

      And watch all the suns go down..

      They could wall in Gabriel Dumont

      Only by mountains and sky.

      After dark that day, I watched the stars

      Making their own trail across the free and endless dark.

      Louis : What can I say? Some talk to the wind, some talk to eternal fire. [looks significantly at Gabe. Looks at the audience] Who’s ever heard of Gabriel Dumont?

      Gabe : You’re trying to tell me something.

      Louis : I was chosen. God and I may have had our disagreements, but, all in all, I was chosen. I started my own church.

      Gabe: Not many remember that.

      It’s not that founding a church

      Wasn’t one of your better ideas

      But you had only the Mother Church

      As an example.

      Yes, Louis, your own church, but you couldn’t compete

      With Big Mama from Rome.

      A bit more foresight and we

      Could have had the donut franchise.

      We could have had Louis Riel’s instead of

      That damn hockey player

      And more branch parishes than the pope

      Could ever dream of.

      You were probably dropped on your head as a kid. Remember Fish Creek? The battle?

      A bullet creased my skull, tearing off

      A slab of my hair and spraying blood onto

      The grass at Fish Creek

      I looked around. The Métis were still firing

      And the laughter of the Gatling still mocked

      Our desperate petition.

      I had a sudden desire for the morning

      Along the river, the fog clearing out.

      I have a tough skull, Louis. Think: A slight

      Change in the angle of a piece of lead

      And I could have leapt up yelling,

      “Shoot me, hang me;

      God wants me!”.

      Louis: What God asked of me, I tried to do. What the people see in me, they see in me.

      There are three Riels, you know:

      The crazy prophet torching buildings

      Till he gets to jig a bit

      At the end of a rope

      The quiet boy just out of school

      Who said, “Yes, Lord, I will

      If you ask.”

      And the one they made out of me

      Ashes starting to stir

      On every wind.

      Gabe : And the husband. Or did you forget that, again.

      Louis: Heresy, treason, and madness:

      Oh, Marguerite

      My only sin.

      Was in the leaving

      Marguerite

      I left you my wool coat.

      For me

      Plant a flower

      Walk away

      Don’t look back:

      Heresy, treason, and madness

      Make fine fertilizer

      But the memory of a fire

      Brings little warmth.

      Gabe: [To audience] Louis left his wife his wool coat, and memories. It was all he had. Neither kept Marguerite warm enough; she died a few months after him.

      Louis: [Tapping Gabe on the shoulder.] Hey, did you leave Madeline any more than that? I left her my fame. Which is more than you could do.

      Gabe: Madeline. A daughter of the prairies.

      She was born in a Red River Cart, of a Scottish trader

      And an Cree woman, somewhere on the wide lands

      As the last great buffalo hunt came home

      From Montana. Twelve hundred carts, Louis,

      Of dried meat, and hides. One priest.

      I was three, then, and rode with my parents

      In another cart.

      When I was twenty-one, I was a Dumont

      There were none like us, on the prairie, but

      The buffalo were gone.

      Madeline, that young man would have hauled

      A thousand carts for you, but all you asked

      Was for a strong hand as a world rolled over us.

      Louis : You outlived your wife. You took her into exile

      in Montana.

      Gabe: After we Métis lost the war, I hid Madeline

      on an island. Then we made our way into Monta
    na.

      Early that November I looked out the window

      To see our world had become white with snow.

      I was newly an exile

      You were in the ground, Louis

      I was long ago, far away

      Madeline was reading poetry in English, by the fire

      She had the cough then

      We both knew what that meant.

      She read some Shelley, and Wordsworth

      Trying to translate it into Cree and French for me

      It made little sense

      I sang her a Blackfoot song

      She smiled at me, then we watched

      Our last winter coming in.

      Madeline died within a year of leaving Canada, of tuberculosis. She was gone. The buffalo were gone. The world didn’t need Métis any more. The white people had their eyes on the prairies. The Indians were all being herded onto the reserves. Us half-breeds - well, we were half-breeds.

      Louis : We lost. I became history. You became a footnote. I hear you joined Buffalo Bill’s Wild West Circus. The one and only Gabriel Dumont, forgotten revolutionary of the plains.

      Gabe: It was a job.

      I remember the shooting. A lot of shooting.

      There were horses galloping around and

      Dust clouds rising and

      Indians falling over

      Kerplop. Kerplop.

      Mostly Indians, of course,

      Or anybody who looked enough like one

      To qualify to be shot.

      After a year, the excitement wore off

      And I figured the good folks had had enough

      Of the wild and wily Métis Gabriel Dumont.

      I left Buffalo Bill’s show in Pennsylvania

      Riding back west

      Into my own sunset.

      Frenzy and dust. Dead natives.

      That was the problem;

      It was just too much like my first

      Wild West melodrama.

      Louis: [Points to the clock] Time’s up. Play’s over. One parting thought?

      If the soil heaves and we

      Crawl out of the crypt

      Covered in cobwebs and dust

      Dazed in the sunlight…

      Two good ol’ halfbreeds

      Planning revolutions…

      Put us back.

      Put prairie willow through our hearts,

      Duct tape over our mouths.

      Gabe: Remember this

      The prairies were made for love

      Its days for humming of bees and laughter

      In the coulees.

      On long August days

      Life is short, and every day

      Is one less day for bumblebees and love.

      Louis: If we do not offer love and laughter,

      Put us back.

      Gabe: And lock the door

      More securely this time.

      Louis: God calls. [Starts to leave.]

      Gabe : One more song for my little play. Before you go.

      They sing, to the tune of “Red River Valley”

      There are ghosts in the winds of the prairies

      There are bones in the black prairie loam

      There’s a cry in the hearts of the Métis

      For the loss of their wild prairie home

      Sing the songs that are lost now forever

      Sing songs that are over and done

      We were the hope of the Métis

      And the fire in the bright prairie sun

      We are the bones in the soil of the prairies

      We are ghosts in the winds of the night

      We’re the song that is lost now forever

      We’re the fire that once burned so bright

      Sing the songs that are lost now forever

      Sing songs that are over and done

      We were the hope of the Métis

      And the fire in the bright prairie sun

      Louis bows to audience, leaves, spotlight stays on his exit point

      Dim light on Gabe

      Gabe : [removes hat]. One day, we were revolutionaries. The next, we were only history.

      Suddenly the stage was empty

      The audience filed out, leaving

      One lone spotlight on the magician’s trapdoor

      Behind the curtain

      In the cobweb darkness

      The stage hand, hat in hand, exits.

      [Gabe exits. Fade to dark]

      End

      Write lennypoet@hotmail.ca or just Google “Lenny Everson”.

     


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