By JAMES D. WATTS JR. Scene Writer on Jan 27, 2010, at 11:41 PM Updated on 1/27 at 11:41 PM
ARTS
Kitty Roberts, who has guided Tulsa's American Theatre Company since its inception, has been named the recipient of the Mary ...
Wes Studi, whose career has included memorable performances in the films “Last of the Mohicans,” “Avatar” and “Germonino,” ...
Ukrainian pianist Vadym Kholodenko Sunday was named the winner at the 14th Van Cliburn Internationaal Piano Competition, ...
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In the prologue of "August: Osage County," Beverly Weston (played by Jon DeVries in the touring production now at the Tulsa PAC) recites a couple of snippets of T.S. Eliot's "The Hollow Men" -- in fact, the play begins and ends with quotes from that poem.
But Beverly Weston also quotes another poem, John Berryman's "The Curse," which follows:
Cedars and the westward sun.
The darkening sky. A man alone
Watches beside the fallen wall
The evening multitudes of sin
Crowd in upon us all.
For when the light fails they begin
Nocturnal sabotage among
The outcast and the loose of tongue,
The lax in walk, the murderers:
Our twilight universal curse.
Children are faultless in the wood,
Untouched. If they are later made
Scandal and index to their time,
It is that twilight brings for bread
The faculty of crime.
Only the idiot and the dead
Stand by, while who were young before
Wage insolent and guilty war
By night within that ancient house,
Immense, black, damned, anonymous.
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