women of color women of words
mine eyes have seen



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by

alice dunbar-nelson

PRODUCTION HISTORY

Produced by the author at Howard High School in 1918.

CHARACTERS

Dan: The Cripple

Chris: The Younger Brother

Lucy: The Sister

Mrs. O'Neill: An Irish Neighbor

Jake: A Jewish Boy

Julia: Chris' Sweetheart

Bill Harvey: A Muleteer

Cornelia Lewis: A Settlement Worker

SETTING

The action takes place in 1918 during the First World War in a manufacturing city in the northern part of the United States.

Scene: Kitchen of a tenament. All details of furnishings emphasize sordidness--laundry tubs, range, table covered with oil cloth, pine chairs. Curtain discloses DAN in a rude imitation of a steamer chair, propped by faded pillows, his feet covered with a patch-work quilt. practable window at back.

PLAY STRUCTURE

The play occurs in one-act.

EXCERPT FROM THE PLAY

The characters have begun to argue about the involvement of blacks in the war.

DAN: (Half tears himself from the chair, the upper part ofhis body writhing, while the lower part is inert, dead.) Oh, God! If I were but whole and strong! If I could only prove to a doubting world of what stuff my people are made!

JULIA: But why, Dan, it isn't our quarrel? What have we to do with their affairs? These white people, they hate us. Only today I was sneered at when I went to help with some of their relief work. Why should you, my Chris, go to help those who hate you?

(CHRIS clasps her in his arms, and they stand, defying the others.)

HARVEY: If you could have seen the babies and girls--and old women--if you could have--

(Covers his eyes with his hand.)

CHRIS: Well, it's good for things to be evened up somewhere.

PUBLICATION HISTORY

in the following anthologies:

Works of Alice Dunbar Nelson v.3

Black Theatre USA

also published in The Crisis v.15 1918 p.271-275


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