The Tree That Saved Connecticut - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Tree That Saved Connecticut Part 1 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
The Tree That Saved Connecticut.
by Henry Fisk Carlton.
_HOW TO BE A GOOD RADIO ACTOR_
The play in this book has actually been produced on the radio. Possibly you have listened to this one when you tuned in at home. The persons whose voices you heard as you listened, looked just as they did when they left their homes to go to the studio, although they were taking the parts of men and women who lived long ago and who wore costumes very different from the ones we wear today.
The persons whose voices you heard stood close together around the microphone, each one reading from a copy of the play in his hand. Since they could not be seen, they did not act parts as in other plays, but tried to make their voices show how they felt.
When you give these plays you will not need costumes and you will not need scenery, although you can easily arrange a broadcasting studio if you wish. You will not need to memorize your parts; in fact, it will not be like a real radio broadcast if you do so, and, furthermore, you will not want to, since you will each have a copy of the book in your hands. All you will need to do is to remember that you are taking the part of a radio actor, that you are to read your speeches very distinctly, and that by your voice, you will make your audience understand how you feel. In this way, you will have the fun of living through some of the great moments of history.
_HOW TO FOLLOW DIRECTIONS IN THE PLAY_
There are some directions in this play which may be new to you, but these are necessary, for you are now in a radio broadcasting studio, talking in front of a microphone. The word [_in_] means that the character is standing close to the microphone, while [_off_] indicates that he is farther away, so that his voice sounds faint. When the directions [_off, coming in_] are given, the person speaking is away from the microphone at first but gradually comes closer. The words [_mob_] or [_crowd noise_] you will understand mean the sound of many people talking in the distance.
Both the English and the dialect used help make the characters live, so the speeches have been written in the way in which these men and women would talk. This means that sometimes the character may use what seems to you unusual English. The punctuation helps, too, to make the speeches sound like real conversation; for example, you will find that a dash is often used to show that a character is talking very excitedly.
The Tree That Saved Connecticut
_CAST_
GOVERNOR TREAT LIEUTENANT ALLYN GOVERNOR ANDROS CAPTAIN WADSWORTH COLONEL BLIGH THE s.e.xTON CHARLES w.i.l.l.yS VOICE
ANNOUNCER
In the year 1661 Connecticut received from the hand of Charles the Second a very liberal charter granting to the people of the colony almost complete self-government and to the colony an enormous stretch of territory extending westward to the Pacific Ocean. For fifteen years the colony prospered under the generous charter. Then in 1676 trouble arose with the Governor of New York, Sir Edmund Andros, about the boundary line between the two colonies. Andros demanded authority over all the land west of the Connecticut River. Governor Treat of Connecticut refused to submit. Andros threatened to seize the disputed land. Treat defied him. Andros fitted out three s.h.i.+ps, embarked a military force, and set out for Saybrooke, Connecticut. Treat ordered out the militia, garrisoned the fort at Saybrooke, and waited.
Our first scene is in the fort on the morning of July 9, 1676. The Governor is at breakfast when he hears--
VOICE [_distance_]
Sail, ho!
ALL [_closer_]
Sail, ho! Here they come; call the governor [_etc._]
ALLYN [_coming in_]
Governor! Governor! The s.h.i.+ps are coming into the harbor!
TREAT
Are you certain they are the s.h.i.+ps of Governor Andros?
ALLYN
Come and see for yourself, Governor.
TREAT
Come along, then. Lieutenant Allyn, how many s.h.i.+ps did you see? [_crowd noises swell up_]
ALLYN
Only one, sir. I didn't wait for any more.
TREAT
Ah, here we are! Give me your hand while I climb to the ramparts.
ALLYN
Yes, sir! Ah! There you are, sir!
TREAT
Good!
ALL [_in_]
There's three of 'em, Governor! That's Andros, sir. No doubt o' that!
TREAT
Yes, yes, three! Andros's s.h.i.+ps! That's certain! [_calling_] Every man to his place! Load your muskets and prepare for action! Andros shall not land!
ALL
Aye! We'll stop him! Just let him try it!
Here, give me your ramrod. Have you got an extra flint? [_etc._]
TREAT
Lieutenant Allyn.
ALLYN
Yes, sir!
TREAT