-
(liquid dripping)
-
(loud snoring)
-
Make it fast.
-
Don't want the boys
to get wise.
-
Jees!
-
(laughs)
-
Ain't the old bastard
a riot
-
when he starts
that bull about
-
"turnin' over a new leaf"?
-
"Not a damn drink
on the house," he tells me,
-
"and all these bums have gotta
pay up their room rent
-
beginning tomorrow,"
he says.
-
(both men laughing)
-
I'm glad to pay up...
-
tomorrow.
-
And I know my fellow inmates
will promise the same.
-
They've all
a touching credulity
-
concerning tomorrows.
-
It'll be a great day
for them tomorrow,
-
The Feast of All Fools.
-
And their ships will come in
loaded to the gunwales,
-
with cancelled regrets
and promises fulfilled,
-
and clean slates
and new leases.
-
Yeah, and a ton of hope!
-
Don't mock their faith.
-
You no respect
for religion,
-
you unregenerate Wop?
-
What does it matter
if the truth is
-
that their favoring breeze
-
will have the stink
of nickel whiskey
-
on its breath?
-
And their sea
will be a growler
-
of lager and ale?
-
And their ships will long since
be looted and scuttled,
-
and sunk
on the bottom?
-
The hell with the truth.
-
The history of the world
proves that truth
-
has no bearing
on anything.
-
It's the lie of the pipe dream
that gives life to the whole
-
misbegotten mad lot of us,
-
drunk or sober.
-
The old Foolosopher,
like Hickey calls you.
-
I suppose you don't fall
for no pipe dreams.
-
No, I don't.
-
Mine are dead and buried
behind me.
-
What's before me
is the fact
-
that death
is a fine long sleep.
-
I'm damn tired,
-
and it can't come
too soon for me.
-
Yeah, just hangin' around,
hopin' you croak, ain't you?
-
Well, I'm bettin' you have
a good long wait.
-
Jees, somebody'd have
to take an ax to croak you!
-
(both chuckling)
-
Yeah, it's my bad luck to be
cursed with an iron constitution
-
that even Harry's booze
can't corrode.
-
The old Anarchist wise guy
-
that knows
all the answers.
-
Forget the anarchist
part of it.
-
I'm through with
the Movement long since.
-
I saw that,
if men wanted to be safe
-
from themselves,
-
that would mean they'd
have to give up greed.
-
I wouldn't pay
that price for liberty.
-
So I said to the world,
"God bless all here
-
"and may
the best man win...
-
and die of gluttony."
-
I took a seat
in the grand stand
-
of philosophical detachment.
-
Fall asleep
observing the cannibals
-
do their death dance.
-
Ain't I telling him
the truth, Comrade Hugo?
-
Oh, for Chrissake!
-
Don't get
that bughouse bum started!
-
(thick Russian accent)
Capitalist swine!
-
Bourgeois stool pigeons!
-
Have the slaves
no right to sleep even?
-
(giggling)
-
Hello, little Rocky,
-
little monkey face!
-
Where are your little
slave girls?
-
(giggles)
-
Don't be a fool,
loan me a dollar!
-
Damned bourgeois Wop!
-
Buy me a drink!
-
(snoring)
-
He's out again.
-
He's lucky no one don't take
his cracks serious,
-
or he'd wake up every morning
in a hospital.
-
"Nobody takes him
seriously?"
-
That's his epitaph.
-
I've been through with
the Movement long since.
-
It's been through with him.
-
And thanks to whiskey,
-
He's the only one
that doesn't know it.
-
He's goin' to pull that
slave girl stuff on me
-
once too often.
-
Hell, you'd think
I was a pimp or somethin'.
-
A pimp don't hold a job.
-
I'm a bartender!
-
Them tarts,
Margie and Pearl,
-
they're just a sideline
to pick up some extra dough.
-
Strictly business,
-
like they were fighters
-
and I was their
manager, see?
-
I fixed the cops for them,
so they can hustle
-
without gettin' pinched.
-
And I don't beat 'em up
like a pimp would.
-
They like me!
-
What if I,
I take their money?
-
Tarts can't hang on
to dough.
-
But I'm a bartender
-
and I work hard
for my living
-
in this dump.
-
Shrewd businessman
who doesn't miss
-
an opportunity
to get on in the world, huh?
-
And that's me;
-
grab another ball,
Larry.
-
You'd never think
all these bums
-
had a bed upstairs
to go to.
-
Scared if
they hit the hay
-
they wouldn't be here
when Hickey showed up,
-
and they'd miss
a couple of drinks.
-
Me, it's not so much
the hope of booze,
-
but I've got the blues.
-
And Hickey's a great one
to make a joke of everything
-
and cheer you up.
-
Yes, some kidder!
-
Remember how he works up
that gag about his wife
-
when he's cockeyed?
-
Crying over a picture
-
and then spilling in
on you all of a sudden
-
that he left her in the hay
with the iceman?
-
(chuckles)
-
Yeah, I wonder
what's happenin'.
-
You could set your watch
-
by his periodicals
before this.
-
We always got here
a couple of days
-
before Harry's
birthday party,
-
and now he's only got
'till tonight to make it.
-
This dump...
-
(chuckles)
-
is like a morgue with
all these bums passed out.
-
It's a lie, Papa!
-
(sobbing)
-
Papa!
-
Poor devil.
-
Ah, the hell with pity!
-
It does no good,
I'm through with it.
-
Dreamin' about
his old man.
-
From what
the old timers say,
-
the old gent
sure made a pile of dough
-
on a bucket-shop game
before the cops got him.
-
Jees!
-
I've seen him bad before
but never this bad.
-
Look at that get-up.
-
Sold his suit and shoes
at Solly's two days ago.
-
Solly give him two bucks
and a bum outfit.
-
Yesterday he sells the bum
one back to Solly
-
for four bits
-
and gets these rags
to put out,
-
now he's through.
-
That's Solly's
final edition
-
and he wouldn't take back
for nothin'.
-
Willie sure is
on the bottom.
-
I ain't never seen
no one so bad except Hickey
-
on end of a couple
of his bats.
-
It's a great game,
-
the pursuit of happiness.
-
I don't even know
what to do about him.
-
He called up
his old lady's lawyer,
-
like he always does
-
when Willie gets licked.
-
You remember,
-
they used to send down
a private dick
-
to give him
the rush to a cure.
-
But the lawyer
tells Harry nix.
-
The old lady is off of Willie
for keeps this time,
-
and he can go to hell.
-
(grunting)
-
There's a consolation
he hasn't got far to go.
-
Ahhhh!
-
It's a goddamned lie!
-
Nix, nix!
Oh, papa!
-
Hey, you, nix!
-
Cut out the noise!
Oh, Jesus, papa!
-
Shhh!
-
Cut out the...
-
Who's that yelling?
-
Willie, boss,
-
the Brooklyn boys
is after him.
-
Then why don't you give
the poor fella a drink
-
and keep him quiet?
-
Bejees, can't I get a wink
of sleep in my own back room?
-
Listen to the blind-eyed
old bastard, would you?
-
He give me strict orders
not to let Willie
-
hang up no more drinks,
no matter what...
-
What's that?
-
I can't hear ya.
-
You're a cockeyed liar.
-
Never refused a drink
to anyone
-
needed bad in my life.
-
Told you to use
your judgment!
-
You're too busy
thinkin' up ways to cheat me.
-
And I ain't as blind
as ya think.
-
I can still see
a cash register, bejees.
-
Oh, sure boss,
-
swell chance
of foolin' you.
-
I'm wise to you
and your sidekick, Chuck.
-
Bejees, you're burglars,
not barkeeps!
-
You'd steal the pennies
of your dead mother's eyes.
-
I'll fire both of you.
-
No one never played
Harry Hope for a sucker.
-
No one but everybody.
-
The least you could do
-
is keep things quiet.
-
Give me a drink,
Rocky.
-
Harry said
it was all right.
-
God, I need a drink.
-
Then grab it,
-
it's right under your nose.
-
Thank you.
-
When!
-
When!
-
I didn't say
"Take a bath!"
-
Jees, look!
-
He's killed
a half pint or more!
-
Leave him be,
the poor devil.
-
(belches)
-
A half pint of
that dynamite in one swig
-
will fix him for a while,
if it doesn't kill him.
-
All right by me,
it ain't my booze.
-
Who-whose booze?
-
Give me some!
-
Where's Hickey?
-
What time is it,
Rocky?
-
Getting near time
to open up.
-
Time you begun
to sweep up in the bar.
-
Never mind the time.
-
If Hickey ain't come,
-
it's time Joe
went to sleep again.
-
Hey...
-
I got a idea!
-
Say, Larry,
-
what about
that young guy, Parritt?
-
Come look you up last night
and rented a room.
-
He's upstairs asleep.
-
No hope there, Joe,
he's broke.
-
Me and Rocky
know different.
-
He had a roll when he
paid you his room rent.
-
Didn't he, Rocky?
-
Yeah, he flashed it
like he forgot
-
and then
tried to hide it quick.
-
He did, did he?
Yeah.
-
I figured
he don't belong,
-
but he said he was
a friend of yours.
-
He's a liar!
-
Ah, it's true, his...
-
his mother and I
were friends
-
a few years ago
on the coast.
-
Did you read in the papers
-
about that
bombing on the coast
-
where a few people
were killed?
-
Well, the one woman
they pinched,
-
Rosa Parritt,
is his mother.
-
They'll be coming up
for trial soon,
-
they haven't got a chance.
-
She'll get life.
-
I'm telling you all this
so you'll know why,
-
if Don acts a bit queer
and not jump on him.
-
He's her only kid.
-
Why ain't he out there
stickin' by her?
-
Must be a good reason.
-
I get it.
-
Then what kind of a sap is he
to hang on to his right name?
-
I'm telling you,
I don't know.
-
And I don't want to know!
-
The hell with the Movement
-
and everybody
connected with it.
-
(laughing)
-
If there's one thing
more than another
-
I can't stand
-
it's the sucker game
-
you and Hugo calls
"Movement."
-
Reminds me of
a damn full argument
-
me and Mose Porter
had the other night.
-
He's drunk
and I'm drunker,
-
and he says,
-
"Socialists and anarchists,
we ought to shoot 'em dead."
-
I-I said:
"Hold on, hold on."
-
"You talk as if
the socialists"
-
"and anarchists
was the same thing."
-
"Anarchist..."
-
"never works."
-
"He drinks,
he never buys,"
-
and if you do ever
get a nickel,
-
"he blows it on bombs,
-
"but he wouldn't
give you nothin'.
-
"So you can go ahead
and shoot him.
-
"But, uh, socialists...
-
"sometimes he gets a job.
-
"If he gives 10 bucks,
-
"he's bound
by his religion
-
"to split it with ya
50-50.
-
"So you don't shoot
no socialist
-
"while I'm around.
-
"Of course,
if they broke,
-
then they're no-good,
bastards, too."
-
(giggling)
-
Be God, Joe!
-
You've got all
the beauty of human nature
-
and the practical wisdom
of the world
-
in that little parable.
-
(laughing)
Sure.
-
Larry ain't the only
wise guy in this dump.
-
Eh, Joe?
-
Here's your guy.
-
Hello, Larry.
-
Hello.
-
What's up?
-
Thought you'd be asleep.
-
I couldn't make it,
-
I, uh, thought I might see
if you were around.
-
Well...
-
sit down
and join the bums then.
-
The rules of the house
are that drinks may be served
-
at all hours.
-
Oh, I get you but, uh,
hell, I'm just about broke.
-
Oh, I know,
you guys saw...
-
You think I have a roll,
don't you?
-
Well, I'll show you
you're wrong.
-
You see?
-
They're all one's.
-
See, I've got to live on this
'till I get a job.
-
So you think I made
up a phony, don't you?
-
Well, why the hell
would I do that?
-
Where would I get
a roll anyway?
-
You don't get rich doin'
what I've been doin', ask Larry.
-
You're lucky in the Movement,
you get enough to eat.
-
What's the song
and dance about?
-
We ain't said nothin'.
-
Oh... Oh, I was just tryin'
to put you right.
-
Hey, I don't want you
to think I'm a tightwad.
-
I'll buy you a drink
if you want one.
-
"If?"
-
Man, if I don't want
a drink,
-
you call the morgue
and you tell them.
-
"Come take
Joe's body away,
-
'cause he sure look dead."
-
Now gimme the bottle,
quick, Rocky,
-
before he changes
his mind.
-
I'll take a cigar
when I go in the bar.
-
What are you havin'?
-
Oh, nothin',
I'm on the wagon.
-
What's the damage?
-
15 cents.
-
That must be some booze.
-
It's cyanide
cut with carbolic acid,
-
to give it a mellow flavor.
-
Here's luck.
-
I guess I'll get back
in the bar
-
and catch
a couple of winks
-
before opening up time.
-
One-drink guy.
-
No hope till
Harry's birthday party,
-
unless Hickey
shows up.
-
If Hickey
do come later,
-
you wake me up
-
if you have to bat me
with a chair.
-
(laughing)
-
Who's Hickey?
-
A hardware drummer.
-
He's an old friend
of Harry Hope's
-
and all the gang.
-
He's a grand guy.
-
Comes here twice
a year regularly
-
on a periodical drunk,
-
and blows in
all his dough.
-
He doesn't run into anyone
he knows in his business here.
-
Oh, yes, that's what
I want, too, Larry.
-
But like I told you
last night,
-
I gotta stay undercover.
-
You did a lot of hinting,
-
but you didn't
tell me anything.
-
Well, you can guess,
can't you?
-
So what kind
of joint is this, anyway?
-
This?
-
This is
"No Chance Saloon,".
-
"Bedrock Bar,."
-
"End of The Line Café,."
-
"The Bottom of the Sea
Rathskeller."
-
Don't you notice
the beautiful calm
-
in the atmosphere?
-
That's because
this is the last harbor.
-
No one here has to worry about
where they're going next,
-
'cause they can
go no further.
-
Although even here
-
they keep up
the appearance of life
-
with a few harmless
pipe dreams
-
about their yesterdays
and tomorrows.
-
What's your
pipe dream, Larry?
-
Oh, I'm the exception...
-
I haven't any left,
thank God.
-
Don't complain
about this place,
-
you couldn't find a better
for lying low.
-
Oh, I'm glad of that.
-
I got, uh,
knocked off base
-
by that business
in the coast.
-
Since then it's been no fun
dodging around the country
-
thinking every guy you see
might be a dick.
-
You're safe here,
-
cops ignore this dump.
-
(sighs)
-
They think it's
as harmless as a graveyard.
-
And be God, you know,
they're right.
-
And it's been lonely as hell.
-
Christ, I'm glad
I found you, Larry.
-
You know, I kept,
I kept saying to myself:
-
If I can just find Larry,
he's the one guy in the world
-
who can understand.
-
"Understand" what?
-
All I've been through.
-
Oh...
-
Oh, now you're thinking,
"This guy has a hell of a nerve.
-
I haven't seen him
since he was a kid."
-
Well, I've never
forgotten you, Larry.
-
You're the one
friend of mother's
-
who ever paid any
attention to me.
-
I remember you used
to ask me questions,
-
you took what I said
seriously?
-
I guess I got the feeling
in the years you lived with us,
-
you'd sort-of, you know,
taken the place of my old man.
-
I don't suppose
you remember it.
-
Ah, I remember it
very well.
-
You were a lonely,
serious little shaver then.
-
Why didn't they
pick you up
-
when they got your mother
and the rest?
-
Oh, I wasn't around.
-
And, as soon as
I heard the news,
-
I went under cover.
-
You've noticed
my glad rags here,
-
well, I will stake to them
as a disguise,
-
and then I, you know,
hung around gambling joints
-
and pool halls,
and hooker shops.
-
Places where they wouldn't
look for a Wobblie.
-
By pretending I was a...
-
a sport.
-
Anyway, they picked up
everybody who was,
-
you know, really important,
so I guess they didn't
-
think about me
till afterwards.
-
Like you say,
the cops got them.
-
The Burns dicks
knew every move before hand.
-
Somebody in the movement
must have sold out
-
and tipped them off.
-
Yeah, it hasn't come out
who it was yet,
-
it may never come out.
-
I guess who it was must've made
a bargain with the Burns men
-
to keep him out of it.
-
Be God...
-
I hate to believe
it'd be any of that crowd.
-
All I know,
they were damned fools!
-
As stupidly greedy for power
as any capitalist they attacked,
-
but I'd have sworn there
wasn't a yellow stool pigeon
-
among 'em.
-
Yeah, they'd sworn
that, too, Larry.
-
I hope his soul
rots in hell,
-
whoever it is.
-
Yes, so do I.
-
How did you locate me?
-
Oh, through mother.
-
I told her
not to tell anyone.
-
Oh, uh, no,
she didn't tell me,
-
but she kept
all your letters.
-
I found where
she'd hid them,
-
and I sneaked up there
after she was arrested.
-
Never would've thought
she was a woman
-
who kept letters.
-
No, I wouldn't either.
-
There's nothing soft
or sentimental about mother.
-
I haven't written her
for two years,
-
or anyone else.
-
You know, it's funny she kept
in touch with you for so long.
-
When she's finished with someone
she's finished with them.
-
And you know how she feels
about the Movement.
-
Anyone that loses
their faith in it
-
is more than dead to her.
-
Yet she seemed
to forgive you.
-
She didn't.
-
She wrote to denounce me,
-
and bring the sinner
to repentance.
-
Well, then what made you leave
the Movement, Larry?
-
Was it on mother's account?
-
Who the hell put that idea
in your head?
-
Well, nothing,
it's just I remember that,
-
little fight you had with her
just before you left.
-
Well, if you do I don't,
that was 11 years ago.
-
You were only
seven years old.
-
If we quarreled
-
it was because I told her
I became convinced
-
that the Movement
-
was a beautiful
pipe dream.
-
Oh, I don't remember it
that way.
-
Well, blame it on
your imagination
-
and forget it.
-
You asked me
why I quit the Movement.
-
I had a lot of good reasons.
-
One was myself,
-
another was my comrades.
-
And the last
was that breed of swine
-
called "men in general."
-
As for myself...
-
I'd become convinced
-
after 30 years
of devotion to the cause
-
that I wasn't made for it.
-
I was born condemned
to see both sides of a question.
-
And when
you're damned that way...
-
the questions multiply
until the end,
-
they're all questions
-
and no answers.
-
As history proves,
-
to be a worldly success
at anything
-
especially revolution,
-
you've got to wear
blinders like a horse
-
and only see
what's straight ahead of you.
-
As for
my comrades
-
in the great cause,
-
I've thought about them as
Horace Walpole did about England
-
when he said
he could love it,
-
if it wasn't for
the people in it.
-
(laughing)
-
Well, that's why
I quit the cause.
-
You see, it had nothing
to do with your mother.
-
Well, but I bet mother
always thought
-
it was on her account.
-
I mean, you know her, Larry,
to hear her go on sometimes
-
you'd think
she was the Movement.
-
That's a hell of a thing to say
after what happened to her.
-
Oh, no,
it wasn't sneering.
-
I said the same thing to her
lots of times,
-
you know, to kid her.
-
I know I shouldn't now,
but I keep forgetting
-
she's jail, she...
-
seemed so real to me,
she's always been so free.
-
I don't want to even
wanna think about it.
-
So what have you been doing
all these years since you le...
-
ah, you know,
left the coast, Larry?
-
I've been a
philosophical drunken bum,
-
and proud of it.
-
I hope you've deduced
-
why I answer a lot
of impertinent questions
-
from a total stranger.
-
For that's all you are to me.
-
I have a hunch you came
to get something from me.
-
Well, I have no answers, no,
not even for myself.
-
Unless you can call
-
what Heine wrote in his poem
to Morphine an answer.
-
"Lo, sleep is good,
-
"better is death.
-
"In sooth,
the best of all,
-
were never to be born."
-
That's a hell of an answer.
-
Still, you never may know
when it might come in handy.
-
I don't suppose
you've had a chance
-
to get any news of your mother
since she was in jail?
-
Oh, no, no chance.
-
Anyway, I don't think
she really wants to talk to me.
-
See, we got in this fight
-
just before
that business happened.
-
She bawled me out because
I was going around with tarts.
-
I told her, "You always acted
the free woman",
-
you've never let
anything stop you."
-
Anyway, she told me that she
didn't give a damn what I did,
-
except she began to suspect
that I was losing interest
-
in the Movement.
-
And where you?
Sure I was.
-
I couldn't go on forever
believing that gang
-
was gonna change the world
by shooting off their loud traps
-
on soap boxes, sneaking around
trying to blow up a bridge
-
or a lousy building.
-
And then I finally got wise
-
that it was all
a crazy pipe dream.
-
And then this business
of someone selling out,
-
that's what finished me off.
-
You can understand
how I feel, can't you, Larry?
-
"The days grow hot,
O Babylon!
-
"It's cool
-
beneath thy willow trees!"
-
Goddamned stool pigeon!
-
What,
what do you mean?
-
You can't call me that!
-
(laughing)
-
Hello, little Don!
-
(laughing)
-
I didn't recognize you!
-
You've grown, big boy!
-
How's your mother?
-
Don't be a fool!
-
Loan me a dollar.
-
Buy me a drink!
-
Sure, I'll buy you
a drink, Hugo.
-
I'm sorry, got, uh,
-
I got sore at you there.
-
I ought to remember
that when you're sauced,
-
you call everyone
"stool pigeon," ah?
-
It's just no damn joke
right at this time.
-
(snores)
-
Oh, gee,
he passed out again.
-
What are you giving me
the hard look for, Larry?
-
You thought
I was gonna to hit him?
-
What do you think I am?
-
I always stood up for him
when everybody in the Movement
-
panned him for
an old drunken has-been!
-
He had the guts to serve
-
10 years in the can
in his own country,
-
got his eyes ruined
in solitary.
-
I'd like to see
some of 'em here stick that.
-
Well, they're gonna
get their chance now tha...
-
Hey, Larry, tell me
more about this dump.
-
Who are all these, uh,
these tanks in here?
-
Who's that guy over there
trying to catch pneumonia?
-
That's Captain Lewis,
-
one time hero
-
in The British Army.
-
He strips
to display that scar,
-
which he got from
a native spear,
-
whenever he's
completely plastered.
-
The bewhiskered bloke
next to him
-
is General Wetjoen,
-
who led a commando
in the war.
-
They met up when they worked
in The Boer War Spectacle
-
in the St. Louis Fair,
-
and they've been
bosom friends ever since.
-
They dream away the hours
and happy dispute
-
over the brave days
in South Africa,
-
when they were trying
to murder each other.
-
He was in it, too.
-
Correspondent for some
English paper.
-
His nickname here
is Jimmy Tomorrow.
-
But what do they do
for a living?
-
As little as possible.
-
(laughs)
-
Once in a while
one of them makes
-
a successful touch somewhere,
-
and some of them get
a few dollars a month
-
from connections at home,
-
who pay it on the condition
that they never come back.
-
The rest
live on free lunch
-
and their old friend
Harry Hope,
-
who doesn't give a damn
what a man does
-
or doesn't do,
-
as long as he likes 'em.
-
That must be a tough life.
-
Don't waste your pity.
-
They manage to stay drunk
and keep their pipe dreams,
-
and that's all they ask
out of life.
-
It isn't often
that men attain
-
the true goal
of their heart's desire.
-
And that applies
to Harry himself.
-
He's so satisfied with life
-
that he hasn't set foot
out of this place
-
since his wife died
20 years ago.
-
He has no need
of the outside world.
-
Place does a fine trade from
the market across the street
-
and the dock workers.
-
So in spite
of Harry's thirst
-
and his generous heart,
he comes out even.
-
He never worries
about hard times,
-
as long as there's
friends from the old days
-
when he was a
jitney Tammany politician
-
and the friendly brewery
that tied him over.
-
Pat McGloin, his pal
sitting beside him,
-
was a police lieutenant
in the lush times of graft,
-
when everything went,
-
but he got too greedy.
-
And when the usual reform
investigation came along,
-
he was caught red handed
-
and thrown off the force.
-
Joe there ran a colored
gambling house, and,
-
was a hell of a sport.
-
(laughs)
-
Well, that completes
our family circle of inmates,
-
except for the two barkeeps
and their girls,
-
three ladies of the pavement
that room on the third floor.
-
I never wanna see
a whore again.
-
I mean, they always
get you in dutch.
-
Why omit me from your.
-
"Who's Who
in Dipsomania," Larry?
-
It's an unpardonable
slight...
-
that's generous, stranger.
-
I trust you're generous.
-
I was born in the purple,
-
the son... hmm,
-
but unfortunately not the heir
of the late world-famous.
-
Bill Oban,
-
king of the bucket shops.
-
A revolution deposed him,
-
he was sent into exile.
-
The fact,
not to mince matters,
-
(giggling)
-
they locked him in the can
and threw away the key.
-
Alas,
-
his was
an adventurous spirit
-
that pined in confinement...
-
and so he died!
-
That's tough luck.
-
Hmm, hmm.
-
Even in Harvard
I discovered my father was...
-
well known
by reputation.
-
Although that was
sometime before
-
the district attorney
gave him
-
so much
unwelcomed publicity.
-
Even as a freshman,
I was notorious.
-
I was accepted socially,
-
with all the warm
cordiality that, uh,
-
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow,
-
who could've shown
a drunken Negress
-
dancing the can can
at high noon
-
on Brattle Street.
-
Harvard was my father's idea.
-
But I did make myself
a brilliant student!
-
A dirty trick
on my classmates...
-
inspired by revenge,
I fear.
-
And I, I, I was
a brilliant student
-
in Law School, too!
-
And my father
-
wanted a
lawyer in the family.
-
Oh, a thorough
knowledge of the law
-
close at hand
in the house,
-
to help him find
fresh ways to evade it.
-
But I discovered
-
a loophole in whiskey.
-
And so,
-
escaped his jurisdiction.
-
Speaking of whiskey,
sir, reminds me,
-
and I hope reminds you,
-
that when greeting a prince,
-
the customary salutation
is "What'll you have?"
-
Nix!
-
All you guys think
I'm made of dough!
-
Broke?
-
You haven't the thirsty look
of the impecunious.
-
I'd judge you
to be a plutocrat,
-
your pocket's stuffed
with ill-gotten gains.
-
Two or three dollars
at least.
-
Don't think we question
how you got it.
-
What do you mean
"How I got it"?
-
That's a laugh,
isn't it, Larry?
-
Him thinking me
a plutocrat?
-
When I've been in
the Movement all my life?
-
Ah, one of those,
eh?
-
Why don't you go away
and blow yourself up?
-
That's a good lad.
-
Hugo...
-
Hugo is the only
licensed preacher
-
of that gospel here.
-
Oh, dangerous
terrorist Hugo!
-
He'd as soon blow the collar
off a schooner of beer
-
as look at you.
-
Let us ignore this
useless youth, Larry,
-
And let us join in prayer
-
that Hickey,
the great salesman,
-
will soon arrive bringing
-
the blessed bourgeoisie
long green.
-
Would that Hickey
-
or Death would come, uh?
-
(laughs)
-
Meanwhile,
-
I will sing a song.
-
A beautiful old
New England folk ballad,
-
which I'd picked at Harvard
amid de debris of education.
-
* Oh
-
* Jack oh Jack
was a sailor lad *
-
* And he went to
a tavern for gin *
-
* And he rapped
and he rapped with a *
-
(loud tapping)
-
* But
-
* Never a soul
seemed in *
-
The origin of this
beautiful ditty
-
is veiled
in mystery, Larry.
-
There was a legend
bruited about
-
in Cambridge lavatories
-
that Waldo Emerson
composed it
-
during his uninformative period
as a minister
-
while he was trying
to write a sermon.
-
But my own view
-
is that it goes back
much further,
-
and Jonathan Edwards
is the author of both words
-
and the music.
-
* Oh he
rapped and rapped *
-
* And he tapped
and tapped *
-
* Enough to wake the dead
-
* 'Till he heard
a damsel *
-
(tapping)
-
* On a window
-
* Right over his head *
-
Rocky!
-
Bejees,
-
can't you keep that
crazy bastard quiet?
-
And now the influence
of a good woman
-
enters our
mariner's lifeline.
-
Well, perhaps "good"
isn't the word,
-
but very, very kind.
-
* "Oh
-
* Come up" she cried
"my sailor lad" *
-
* And you
and I'll agree *
-
* And I'll show you
the prettiest *
-
(tapping)
-
* That ever you ever
did see *
-
You see, Larry?
-
The lewd puritan touch,
obviously,
-
and it grows more marked
-
as we go on.
-
* Oh, he puts his arms
-
* Around her waist
-
* And gazed in her bright
-
* blue eyes *
-
Piano?
-
What do you think
this dump is, a dump?
-
Give him a bum's
rush upstairs.
-
Lock him in his room.
-
Come on.
-
No, please, Rocky, I'll go crazy
up in that room alone!
-
It's haunted!
-
Please, Larry,
please!
-
Let me stay here,
I'll be quiet!
-
What the hell you
doin' to him, Rocky?
-
Leave him alone...
-
as long as he's quiet.
-
Thanks, Harry,
-
you're a good scout.
-
Booze.
-
Yeah,
-
can't trust nobody.
-
Leave it to that Dago
to keep order
-
and it's like bedlam
in a cathouse!
-
Singin' and everything.
-
And you, a big barfly,
-
you're a hell
of a help to me.
-
There ain't gonna be
no more drinks on the house
-
'till hell freezes over.
-
(laughing)
-
Good God.
-
Have I been drinking
at the same table
-
with a bloody Kaffir?
-
Hello, captain,
-
you comin' up for air?
-
(laughing)
-
A "Kaffir,"
-
who's he?
-
"Kaffir,"
that's a nigger, Joe.
-
That's joke on him, Joe,
-
he don't know you.
-
He's still blind drunk.
-
A great mistake,
-
I missed him at The Battle
of Modder River.
-
With mine rifle
-
I shoot
-
damn fool Limey officers
-
by the dozen,
-
but him I miss.
-
(laughing)
-
Hey, wake up,
Cecil, you bloody fool.
-
Don't you know
your old friend Joe?
-
He's white, Joe is!
-
(laughing)
-
Oh, profound apologies,
-
Joseph, old chum.
-
Eyesight's a trifle
blurry, I'm afraid.
-
Whitest colored man
I ever knew.
-
Proud to call you
my friend.
-
Oh, I know
it's mistake, captain.
-
You here is a regular,
-
even if you
is a Limey.
-
(laughing)
-
But I don't stand for "nigger"
from nobody.
-
In the old days,
somebody calls me a "nigger"
-
he ends up in the hospital.
-
Me, in old days
in Transvaal,
-
I was so tough!
-
And strong!
-
I, I grab axle
-
of ox wagon,
-
with full load,
-
and lift like feather.
-
As for you,
-
my balmy Boer
that walks like a man,
-
I say it again,
-
It was a grave error
in our foreign policy
-
ever to set you free.
-
Well, now,
Cecil, Piet!
-
We must forget
the war.
-
Boer and Britain,
each fought fairly
-
and played the game
until the better man won,
-
and then we shook hands.
-
We are all brothers
within The Empire,
-
united beneath the flag
-
on which the sun
never sets.
-
* Ship me somewhere
-
* East of Suez
-
* Where the best
-
* Is like
the worst *
-
* Where there ain't
-
* No Ten Commandments
-
* And a man can raise
-
* A thirst
-
* On the road
-
* To Mandalay
-
* Where the flyin' fishes
-
* Play
-
* And the dawn
-
* Comes up
like thunder *
-
* Outer China
-
* 'Crost the Bay *
-
God, you're there
already, Jimmy.
-
Worst is best here,
-
and east is west,
-
and tomorrow
is yesterday.
-
What more do you want?
-
Come now, Larry,
old friend.
-
You pretend a bitter,
-
cynic philosophy,
-
but in your heart
-
you are the kindest man
among us.
-
The hell you say.
-
Tomorrow, yes.
-
It's high time
-
I got myself
straightened out.
-
I must have this suit
-
cleaned and pressed.
-
I can't look like
a tramp when I...
-
Yes, sir,
-
white folks always said
I was white.
-
In the days
when I was flush,
-
Joe Mott's the only colored man
they allows
-
in the white
gamblin' houses.
-
"You're all right, Joe,
-
you're white,"
-
they tells me.
-
(laughs)
-
They wouldn't let me
play craps, though.
-
'Cause they knew I could
make them dice behave.
-
"Any other game,
-
any limit you like, Joe,"
-
they says.
-
Man, the money I lost.
-
(chuckling)
-
Yeah...
-
look at the
Big Chief in them days.
-
He knew I was white.
-
I'd saved my dough
-
so I could start
my own gamblin' house.
-
Folks in the know
they tells me,
-
"You see the man
at the top,
-
"then you never has trouble.
-
You get Harry Hope to give you
a letter to the Chief."
-
And he does.
-
(chuckles)
-
Ain't that right,
Harry?
-
Eh?
-
Sure,
I gave you a letter.
-
I says you was white.
-
There, you see,
captain?
-
I went to see the Chief,
shakin' in my boots,
-
and there he was,
-
sittin' behind
a big desk,
-
lookin' as big
as a freight train.
-
He don't look up.
-
He keeps me
waitin' and waitin',
-
and after what seems
like an hour to me,
-
he says slow and quiet,
-
like he didn't mean no harm,
-
"You want to open a
gamblin' joint, does you, Joe?"
-
But he don't give
me no chance to answer.
-
He jumps up,
-
lookin' as big as
two freight trains,
-
and he pounds his fist
like a ham on the desk,
-
and he shouts,
-
"You black son of a bitch!
-
"Harry says you're white
and you better be white!
-
"Or there's a little iron room
up the river
-
waitin' for ya!"
-
Then he sits down,
-
and he says,
quiet again,
-
"All right, you can open,
get the hell outta here."
-
So I opens,
-
and he finds out
I was white, sure 'nuff.
-
'Cause I run
wide open for years
-
and I pays my sugar
on the dot,
-
and me and the cops
is friends.
-
Them old days!
-
Many's the night
I used to come in here.
-
(laughs)
-
This used to be a
first-class hangout for sports
-
in them days.
-
Good whiskey,
-
15 cents,
two for two bits.
-
(laughs)
-
I throws down
a $50 bill
-
like it was trash paper!
-
And I says,
-
"Drink it up,
boys,
-
I don't want the change."
-
Ain't that right,
Harry?
-
Yes,
-
and bejees,
if I ever see you throw
-
50 cents on the bar now,
-
I'd know I had
delirium tremens!
-
(men laughing)
-
Well thanks, Harry,
old chum.
-
I will have a drink,
now you mention it,
-
seeing it's so near
your birthday.
-
I sorry,
can't hear you.
-
(sighs)
-
No, I was afraid
you wouldn't.
-
I don't have
to hear you, bejees.
-
Booze is the only thing
you ever talk about.
-
True, true.
-
Yet there was a time
when my conversation
-
was more comprehensive.
-
But as I became
burdened with the years,
-
it seemed rather pointless
to discuss my other subject.
-
You can't joke with me.
-
How much room rent
do you owe me?
-
Tell me that!
-
I'm sorry.
-
(chuckles)
-
Adding always
baffled me,
-
subtraction's my forte.
-
(men laughing)
-
Oh, think
you're funny.
-
Captain, bejees,
-
showin' off your wounds.
-
Put on your clothes,
for Chrissake!
-
This ain't
no Turkish bath!
-
Lousy Limey army.
-
Took 'em years
-
to lick a gang
of Dutch hayseeds.
-
That's right, Harry,
give him hell!
-
I give you
my word of honor,
-
as an officer
and a gentleman,
-
you shall be paid
tomorrow.
-
We swear it,
Harry,
-
tomorrow without fail!
-
There you are,
Harry.
-
Sure,
what could be fairer?
-
A promise is a promise,
as I've often discovered.
-
Naming you, too...
-
old grafting flatfoot.
-
Fine company for me,
bejees!
-
Been livin' in my flat
since Christ knows when,
-
and you ain't even
got the decency
-
to get me upstairs,
where I got a good bed!
-
Kept me down here
-
waitin' for Hickey
to show up,
-
hopin' I'd blow you
to more drinks!
-
I did my damnedest
to get you up.
-
But you said
you couldn't bear the flat
-
because it was
one of those nights
-
when memory brought
-
poor old Bessie
back to you.
-
Ah, yes...
-
I remember now.
-
I could almost
see her in every room
-
just as she used to be...
-
and it's 20 years
since I...
-
Isn't a pipe dream
of yesterday a touching thing?
-
By all accounts,
20 years...
-
Bessie nagged the hell
out of him.
-
And I've never set foot
out of this house
-
since the day
I buried her.
-
Once she's gone, I didn't
give a damn for anything.
-
The boys was gonna
nominate me for Alderman.
-
Mm, Bessie wanted it,
-
and she was so proud.
-
But when she was taken,
-
I told 'em,
"No, boys, I can't do it.
-
I'm through."
-
I know, Lord,
-
why Bessie
would appreciate my grief.
-
She wouldn't want it
to keep me cooped up in here
-
all my life.
-
So I've made up my mind
to go out soon.
-
Take a walk around the ward,
-
see all the friends
I used to know.
-
Get together with the boys.
-
(hits table)
My birthday, tomorrow!
-
That'd be the right time
to turn over a new leaf!
-
60, that ain't too old.
-
The prime of life, Harry.
-
Hmm.
-
Time I took hold of myself.
-
Tomorrow
I must get my things
-
from the laundry.
-
Clean collar and shirt.
-
If I wash the ones
I've got on anymore,
-
they'll fall apart.
-
(chuckles)
-
I must make
a good appearance.
-
I've heard rumors management
-
were at their wits' end
-
and would be
only too willing
-
to have me run
the publicity department
-
for them again.
-
All I have to do
is get fixed up
-
with a decent
front tomorrow,
-
and it's as good as done.
-
Poor Jimmy's off
on his pipe dream again.
-
I'm sorry
we had to postpone
-
our trip again
this April, Piet.
-
I'd hoped
the blasted old estate
-
would be settled by then.
-
We'll make it next year,
-
even if we have to work
-
and earn
our passage money.
-
You'll stay with me
at the old place
-
just as long as you like.
-
England in April.
-
Oh, I want you
to see that, Piet.
-
I admit that the veldt
has its points,
-
but it's not home.
-
Especially home in April.
-
* We've been
together now *
-
* For 40 years
-
* And it don't seem
-
* A day too much
-
* There ain't a lady
-
* Livin' in the land
-
* As I'd swop
-
* For me dear old Dutch
-
* There ain't a lady
-
* Livin' in the land
-
* As I'd swop
-
* For me dear
-
* Old Dutch *
-
Yeah, Cecil,
I can see
-
how beautiful
it must be,
-
but I will enjoy
-
when I am home, too.
-
The veldt, ya!
-
You could put
England on it,
-
and it would look like a
-
farmer's small garden.
-
By God,
-
there is space to be free,
-
the air...
-
(sniffs)
-
like wine is,
-
you don't need booze
to be drunk.
-
I'll make my stake and
-
get my new
gamblin' house open
-
before you boys leave.
-
You gotta come
to the openin'.
-
Bejees,
Jimmy's started them off
-
smoking the same hop.
-
Be God!
-
This bughouse will drive me
stark, raving loony yet!
-
What, what'd you say?
-
Nothing, Harry.
-
I had a crazy thought
in my head.
-
Crazy is right,
-
the old wise guy.
-
Damned old fool Anarchist.
-
I-Won't-Worker!
-
You'll pay up tomorrow,
-
or I'll,
-
I'll start
a Harry Hope Revolution!
-
(chuckles)
-
I'll tie a dispossess bomb
to your tails
-
that'll blow you out
in the street!
-
(chuckles)
-
I'll, I'll make
your Movement move!
-
(men laughing)
-
Sure it's hot,
parching work
-
sittin' here laughin' at your
jokes so early in the morning...
-
on an empty stomach.
-
Who asked you
to laugh anyway?
-
Bejees, Bessie'd
never forgive me
-
if she knew I had you
living in her flat,
-
throwing ashes
and cigar butts
-
on her carpet.
-
You know her opinion
of you, Mac.
-
"That Pat McGloin
is the biggest drunken grafter
-
that ever disgraced
the police force,"
-
she used to say.
-
"If I had my way
-
"he'd get booted up
in the gutter
-
of his fat behind."
-
And sometimes she didn't say
"behind" either.
-
(laughs)
-
She didn't mean it.
-
She was angry at me because
you used to get me drunk.
-
Hmm.
-
But Bess,
-
she had a heart of gold
underneath her sharpness.
-
She knew I was innocent
-
of all the charges.
-
(slamming table with glass)
-
One moment, please.
-
Lieutenant McGloin!
-
Are you aware that
you're under oath?
-
You know what the penalty
for perjury is?
-
Come now, lieutenant.
-
Isn't it a fact
you're guilty as hell?
-
No, don't say
"How about your old man?"
-
I'm asking
the questions!
-
Gentlemen of the Jury!
-
The court
will now recess
-
while the D.A. sings out
a little ditty
-
that he learned at Harvard.
-
It was composed
in a wanton moment
-
by the Dean
of the Divinity School
-
on a moonlight night
in July, 1776,
-
while sobering up
in a Turkish bath.
-
* "Oh come up,"
-
* She cried
"my sailor lad *"
-
* And you and I'll agree
-
* And I'll show you
the prettiest *
-
(slamming table)
Rocky!
-
* Aay! *
Yi.
-
Harry, please, please!
-
Don't make Rocky
bounce me upstairs,
-
I'll go crazy alone!
-
I apologize,
-
I apologize, Mac.
-
Don't get sore,
I was only kidding you.
-
You will let me...
-
take your case?
-
Won't you, Mac?
-
Yeah, sure Willie,
-
and it'll make
your reputation.
-
Hey, Mac.
-
What the hell you thinks
happened to Hickey?
-
I hope he turns up.
-
(chuckles)
-
You remember that gag
he always pulls
-
about his wife
and the iceman?
-
(men laughing)
-
Opening time, boss.
-
Why don't you go
to bed, Boss?
-
Hickey'd never turn up
this time of the mornin'.
-
Someone's comin' now!
-
Oh, that's only
my two pigs,
-
it's about time
they showed.
-
You keep them
dumb broads quiet!
-
I'm gonna catch
a couple more winks here,
-
and I don't want no damn fool
laughin' and screechin'.
-
Hey.
-
Never thought
I'd see the day
-
when Harry Hope's
would have tarts living in.
-
What would Bessie
think, hmm?
-
But he don't let 'em use
my rooms for business.
-
Pay their rent, too,
-
which is more than
I can say for...
-
Bejees, Mac,
-
I, I'll bet
Bessie's doin' somersaults
-
in her grave!
-
(women giggling)
-
Hello.
-
Jees, Pearl.
-
This place is a morgue
-
with all these stiffs
on deck.
-
Hey, you Old Wise Guy,
-
ain't you died yet?
-
Not yet, Margie.
-
But I'm waiting impatiently
for the end.
-
Yeah.
-
Hey, who's the new guy?
-
Friend of yours?
-
Hey, kid!
-
You wanna have
a good time, huh?
-
Hey, hell with him!
-
You dumb broads!
-
Cut the loud talk!
-
Sit down before
I knock you down!
-
Ohh, you!
-
What, what, what, what?
-
(sighs)
-
Well, how do you
tramps do?
-
Ah, pretty good,
uh, Pearl?
-
Sure, we nailed
a couple of all-night guys.
-
On Sixth Avenue,
boobs from the sticks.
-
Stinko,
the both of 'em!
-
We think
we's in luck you know,
-
so we steers them
to a real hotel.
-
We figured they're too stinko
to bother us much
-
and we could cop
a good night sleep in beds
-
that ain't got cobble stones
in the mattress like the ones
-
in this dump.
Yeah,
-
but we was outta luck.
-
They didn't bother
us much that way,
-
but they wouldn't
go to sleep either, see?
-
Jees, I never heard
such gabby guys!
-
So... here we are.
-
Yeah, I see you,
-
but I don't see
no dough yet.
-
Right on the job,
ain't he, Margie?
-
Yeah, our little
business man, that's him.
-
Come on, dig!
-
What, you're scared
we're holdin' out on you?
-
Way he grabs, you'd think
it was him done the work.
-
Here you are,
grafter!
-
I hope it chokes you!
-
Hey, you dumb baby dolls
give me a pain.
-
What would you do
with money if I wasn't around?
-
Give it all
to some pimp.
-
Jees, what's
the difference?
-
Oh, didn't mean that,
Rocky.
-
A lot of difference,
get me?
-
Sure,
don't get sore.
-
Jees, can't you take
a little kiddin'?
-
Hey, come on, Rocky!
-
Pearl was only kiddin'.
-
We know you don't live off us,
you got a regular job.
-
That's why we like you,
-
you're a bartender.
-
Sure, I'm a bartender,
-
and I treat you girls
right, don't I?
-
(together)
Yeah.
-
Jees, I'm wise
you hold out on me,
-
but I know it ain't much.
-
So what the hell,
I let you get away with it.
-
(both laughing)
-
Hey, you know ought not
kid him about that stuff.
-
Serves you right
if he beats you up.
-
Jees, I'd bet he'd give you an
awful beatin' once he started.
-
Ginnies got
awful tempers.
-
Anyways,
-
we wouldn't keep no pimp
like we were regular old whores.
-
We ain't that bad.
-
Oh, no, we're tarts,
but that's all.
-
Right.
-
Ahh!
-
Hey, Rocky.
-
Cora got back
around 3:00 o'clock.
-
She woke up Chuck
-
and dragged him
outta the hay
-
to go to for a
chop suey joint.
-
Imagine him standin'
for that stuff!
-
I bet they been sittin' around
kiddin' themselves
-
with that old pipe dream
about gettin' married
-
and settlin' down
on a farm.
-
Jees, when Chuck's
on the wagon,
-
they never
lay off that dope.
-
Yeah,
-
of all the pipe dreams
in this dump,
-
they got the nuttiest.
-
They been dreamin' it
for years,
-
every time
Chuck goes on the wagon.
-
What would gettin'
married get them?
-
But the farm stuff
is the sappiest part.
-
When both of 'em have been
dragged up in this ward,
-
and ain't never been
nearer a farm
-
than Coney Island.
-
They'd get D.T.'s
-
if they ever heard
a cricket chirp.
-
I heard crickets once,
-
on my cousin's place
in Jersey,
-
I couldn't sleep a wink.
-
Jees, can you picture
a good barkeep like Chuck
-
diggin' spuds?
-
And imagine a whore
hustlin' the cows home.
-
Hey, Rocky,
-
you oughtn't
to call Cora that.
-
I mean, she may be
a tart, but...
-
Oh sure, sure,
that's all I meant, a tart.
-
Yeah, but he's right about
the damned cows, Margie.
-
I bet Cora don't know
-
which end of the cow
has the horns!
-
I'm goin' to ask her.
-
Here's your chance.
-
Hello, bums!
-
Jees...
-
the morgue
on a rainy Sunday night.
-
Hello, Old Wise Guy,
ain't you croaked yet?
-
Not yet, Cora.
-
Damned tiring
this waiting for the end.
-
Aw, go on,
you'll never die.
-
You'll have to hire someone
to croak you with an axe.
-
Hey, you dumb hooker,
-
cut the loud talk.
-
This ain't a cathouse.
-
Ohh!
-
(Maggie)
Hey, Cora, how you doin'?
-
(Pearl) Hey, Chuck,
what's happening?
-
(women giggling)
-
If I'd known this dump
was a hooker hangout,
-
I'd never come in.
-
You seem down
on the ladies.
-
I hate every bitch
that ever lived.
-
Well, you can understand
how I feel, can't you?
-
When it was gettin'
mixed up with a tart
-
that made me have
that fight with mother.
-
Well, what the hell
does it matter to you?
-
You're in the grandstand,
you're through with life.
-
I'm glad
you remember that.
-
Who's the guy with Larry?
-
A tightwad,
the hell with him.
-
Say, Cora,
-
wise me up.
-
Which end of the cow
is the horns on?
-
Aw, don't bring that up.
-
Me and this overgrown tramp's
been scrappin' about the farm.
-
He says Jersey's the best place,
and I said Long Island
-
on account it will be
near Coney.
-
And then I tells him,
-
"How do I know you're off
of periodicals for life?"
-
And I tells her
"I'm off the stuff for life."
-
Then she beefs
we won't be married a month
-
before I'll throw it
in her face she was a tart.
-
"Jees, baby,"
I tells her, "Why should I?
-
"What the hell you think
I think I'm marryin', a virgin?
-
"Why should I kick
-
"as long as you lay off it
and don't do no cheatin'
-
with the iceman or nobody?"
-
It's on the level, baby.
-
Eh?
-
Aw, you big tramp.
-
Can you tie it?
-
I'll buy a drink,
I'll do anything.
-
No, this round's on me!
-
I run into luck.
-
That's why I dragged
Chuck outta bed to celebrate.
-
It was a sailor,
I rolled him.
-
Listen,
it was a scream.
-
My dogs was givin' out
when I seen this guy
-
holdin' up a lamp post,
-
so I hurry to get him
before a cop did.
-
I says,
"Hello, handsome,
-
wanna have a good time?"
-
Jees, he was paralyzed!
-
One of them polite jags.
-
He tries to bow to me,
imagine,
-
and I had to prop him up
or he'd fell on his nose.
-
"Lady," he says,
-
"can you kindly tell me
the nearest way
-
to the Museum
of Natural History?"
-
(laughing)
-
Can you imagine?
-
It's 2:00 A.M.!
-
As if I'd know where
the dump was anyway.
-
But I says,
"Sure thing, honey boy,".
-
"I'll be only too glad."
-
So I steered him into a
side street where it was dark,
-
and propped him against a wall
and I give him a frisk.
-
And what do you
think he done?
-
I mean, Jees,
I ain't lyin',
-
he begins to laugh,
the big sap!
-
(laughing)
-
"Quit ticklin' me," he says,
-
while I was friskin' him
for his roll!
-
I near died!
-
Then I turned him 'round and
give him a shove to start him.
-
"Just keep goin',"
I told him.
-
"It's a big white building
on your right,
-
you can't miss it."
-
Ohh!
-
He must be swimmin' in
the North River yet.
-
Ain't Uncle Sam the sap
-
to trust guys like that
with dough?
-
Well, I picked 12 bucks
off of him.
-
So come on, Rocky,
set 'em up.
-
Oh, say, Chuck's kiddin'
about the iceman a minute ago
-
reminds me,
where the hell's Hickey?
-
That's what
we're all wonderin'.
-
Well, he oughta be here!
-
Me and Chuck seen him.
-
You've seen Hickey?
Yeah.
-
Hey, boss!
-
Boss, boss,
come to.
-
Cora's seen Hickey.
-
Where'd you see him,
Cora?
-
Right on the next corner,
he was standin' there.
-
We said,
"Welcome to our city!
-
"The gang's expectin' ya
with their tongues hangin' out
-
a yard long."
-
And I kidded him,
"How's the iceman, Hickey?
-
How's he doin'
at your house?"
-
And he laughs
and says, "Fine."
-
And then he says,
-
"Tell the gang
I'll be along in a minute.
-
"I'm just finishin'
figurin' out the best way
-
to save 'em
and bring 'em peace."
-
Bejees, he's thought up
a new gag!
-
(chuckles)
-
It's a wonder he didn't borrow
a Salvation Army uniform
-
and show up in that!
-
Go out and get him,
Rocky.
-
Tell him we're waitin'
to be saved!
-
Yeah, Harry,
he was only kiddin'
-
but he was funny, too,
somehow;
-
he was different
or somethin'.
-
Sure, he was sober, baby,
that's what made him different.
-
Sure!
-
Gee, ain't I dumb?
-
Dumbest broad
I ever seen.
-
Hmm.
-
Sober?
-
That's funny.
-
He's always lapped up
a good starter on his way here.
-
Well, bejees,
he won't be sober long!
-
He'll be good and ripe
for my birthday party
-
tonight at 12:00.
-
Listen, he's fixed
some new gag to pull on us.
-
We'll pretend to
let him kid us, see?
-
And we'll kid
the pants off him!
-
(all laughing)
-
(Rocky)
Here's the old son of a bitch!
-
(cheering and hollering)
Hello, gang!
-
* Oh dear old pals
-
* We're jolly old pals
-
* In all kinds
of weather *
-
* We always stick together
-
* Like we're always game
-
* Whenever the same soul
-
* Give me
for friendship *
-
* My jolly old pals
-
* And another
little drink
-
* Won't do us any harm *
-
(cheers, applause.
-
Do your duty,
Brother Rocky,
-
bring on the rat poison!
-
How goes it,
Governor?
-
Bejees, Hickey, you old bastard,
it's good to see you!
-
Hello, Mac.
-
Welcome, "boyo!"
-
Willie!
-
Hey, Hickey!
-
How you've got...
-
(laughter)
-
Hello, Joe.
-
All right, Hickey,
how you doin'?
-
Hello, Hickey,
old timer.
-
Oh, Captain Lewis!
-
General Wetjoen!
-
(playful babbling)
I said!
-
Hello, Hugo!
-
How goes it?
-
Wow, wow!
-
Too much wine underneath
the willow trees, eh?
-
Hello, Jimmy.
-
It's grand to see ya.
How's the old scout?
-
You look great.
-
Sit down, Hickey,
sit down.
-
Well, I, I...
Jimmy!
-
(laughing)
-
Bejees, it seems natural
-
to see your
ugly, grinning map.
-
This dumb broad
was tryin' to tell us
-
you'd changed,
-
but you ain't
a damned bit!
-
Tell us about yourself.
-
Bejees, Hickey,
-
you look like
a million dollars!
-
Here's your key, Hickey,
same old room.
-
Oh, thanks, Rocky.
-
I'll be goin' up
in a little while
-
and grab a snooze.
-
I haven't been able
to sleep lately,
-
I'm tired as hell.
-
A couple of hours
of good kip will fix me.
-
First time I ever heard
you worry about sleep.
-
Bejees, you never
would go to bed.
-
Get a couple of slugs
under your belt,
-
you'll forget sleeping.
-
Here's mud in your eye,
Hickey.
-
(everybody toasting)
-
Drink hearty,
boys and girls.
-
Bejees,
is that a new stunt?
-
Drinking your chaser first?
-
No, I forgot
to tell Rocky.
-
You'll have to excuse me,
boys and girls,
-
but I'm off the stuff,
for keeps.
-
(gasping, repressed laughter)
-
(Harry)
What the hell?
-
Sure, sure!
-
Joined the Salvation Army,
ain't you?
-
Been elected President
of the W.C.T.U.?
-
Take the bottle away
from him, Rocky.
-
We don't want
to tempt him into sin.
-
Eh, I know it's hard
to believe, but, uh,
-
Cora was right, Harry,
I have changed.
-
I mean
about the booze,
-
I don't need it anymore.
-
Bejees, Cora says
you was comin' here to save us.
-
Well, go on, get
this joke off your chest.
-
Start the service!
-
Sing a Goddamned hymn
if you like.
-
We'll all join
in the chorus.
-
"No drunkard can enter
this beautiful home."
-
You don't think
I'd come around here
-
peddlin' any brand
of temperance bunk, do you?
-
Just 'cause I quit the stuff
-
don't mean
I'm going Prohibition.
-
I'm not that ungrateful,
-
it's given me
too many good times.
-
So if anybody
wants to get drunk,
-
if that's the only way
they can be happy,
-
and feel at peace
with themselves,
-
why the hell
shouldn't they?
-
Hell, I know that game
from soup to nuts.
-
I wrote the book.
-
The only reason
I quit is...
-
well, I finally had
the guts to face myself
-
and throw overboard
that damned lying pipe dream
-
that'd make me miserable,
-
and do what I had to do
-
for the happiness
of all concerned.
-
Then all at once,
-
I was at peace with myself
-
and I didn't need
the booze anymore.
-
Well, what the hell?
-
Don't let me be
a wet blanket.
-
Set 'em up again, Rocky.
-
Here, keep the balls coming
until last kill,
-
then I'll ask for more.
-
Jees, a roll that'd choke
a hippopotamus.
-
Fill up, you guys!
-
That sounds more
like you, Hickey.
-
All that water-wagon bull!
-
Cut the act and have a drink,
for Chrissake.
-
It's no act, Governor,
but that don't mean
-
I'm a teetotal grouch
and can't be in the party.
-
Why else do you think
I'm here except to have a party,
-
like I've always done, and help
celebrate your birthday tonight?
-
You've all been
good pals to me,
-
best friends I've ever had.
-
And I've been thinking about you
ever since I left the house,
-
all the time I was
walking over here.
-
"Walkin'?"
-
Bejees, you mean
to say you walked?
-
I sure as hell did.
-
All the way from the wilds
of darkest Astoria.
-
I seemed to get here
before I knew it.
-
And that ought
to encourage you, Governor,
-
show you a little walk
around the ward
-
is nothin'
to be so scared about.
-
It was goin' on 12:00
when I went into the bedroom
-
to tell Evelyn I was leaving,
six hours, say.
-
No, less than that,
-
'cause I'd been standin'
on the street corner
-
some time before
Chuck and Cora came along,
-
thinkin' about all of you.
-
Of course,
I was only kidding Cora
-
with that stuff
about saving you.
-
But no,
I wasn't either,
-
but I didn't mean booze.
-
I meant save you
from pipe dreams.
-
Because I know now,
from my experience,
-
that they're the things
-
that can really poison
and ruin a guy's life
-
and keep him
from finding any peace.
-
If you knew how free
and contented I feel now.
-
Why, I'm like a new man,
-
and the cure for them
is so damned simple
-
once you got the nerve.
-
Just stop lying to yourself
and kidding yourself
-
about tomorrows.
-
Hell, this begins
to sound like a damned sermon
-
on the way to lead
the good life!
-
It's in my blood,
I guess.
-
My old man used
to whale salvation
-
into my heinie
with a birch rod.
-
He was a preacher
in the sticks of Indiana,
-
like I've told you,
-
got my knack of sales gab
from him, too.
-
He was the boy that could sell
those Hoosier hayseeds
-
building lots along
the Golden Street!
-
Now don't look at me
like that, boys and girls.
-
I'm not tryin' to sell
you a goldbrick.
-
Nothin' up my sleeves,
honest.
-
Let's take an example,
any one of you, eh?
-
Take you, Governor.
-
That walk around the ward
you never take.
-
What about it?
-
Well, you know
as well as I do, Harry,
-
everything about it.
-
Well, Bejees,
I'm going to take it!
-
Of course you are,
because I'm gonna help you.
-
I know it's the thing
that you've got to do
-
before you know
what real peace means.
-
Same thing with you,
Jimmy.
-
You're goin' have to try
and get your old job back,
-
and no tomorrows about it.
-
Ahh, I...
-
No, don't tell me,
I know all about tomorrows.
-
I wrote the book.
-
I, I don't
understand you, Hickey.
-
I admit
I've foolishly delayed,
-
but as it happens,
-
I'd just
made up my mind
-
that as soon as I could
get straightened out...
-
Fine, fine,
that's the spirit,
-
and I'm gonna help you,
Jimmy.
-
'Cause you've always been
damned kind to me,
-
and I wanna prove
how grateful I am to you.
-
When it's all over,
-
you don't have to nag
yourself any more.
-
You'll be grateful
to me, too.
-
And all the rest of you,
-
the ladies included,
-
are in the same boat,
one way or another.
-
Be God, you've hit the nail
on my head, Hickey.
-
This dump
-
is the Palace of Pipe Dreams!
-
Well, well,
-
the Old Grandstand
Foolosopher speaks, ah?
-
And you think you're
the big exception, eh?
-
Life doesn't mean a damn
to you any more.
-
You're retired
from the circus,
-
you're impatiently waiting
for the end
-
in the good old Long Sleep.
-
Well, I think a lot of you,
Larry, you old bastard,
-
and I'll try and make an
honest man out of you, too.
-
What the devil
are you hintin' at?
-
Well, you don't
have to ask me, do you,
-
wise old guy like you?
-
Just ask yourself,
I'll bet you know.
-
He's got your number
all right, Larry.
-
That's the stuff,
Hickey.
-
He's got no right
to sneak out of everything.
-
Well, hello!
-
A stranger in our midst.
-
I didn't notice you
before, brother.
-
My name's, uh, Parritt,
I'm an old friend of Larry's.
-
What are you staring at?
-
Oh, no offense, brother,
I was just trying to figure.
-
Haven't we met before...
-
some place?
-
No, it's the first time
I've been East.
-
No, you're right,
I know that's not it.
-
You see, in my game,
to be a shark at it,
-
you teach yourself
-
never to forget
a name or a face.
-
But still
I know damned well there's...
-
something that
I recognize about you.
-
We're members
of the same lodge...
-
in some way.
-
What are you
talkin' about?
-
You're nuts.
-
Don't kid me, little boy.
-
I'm a good salesman,
so damned good the firm was glad
-
to take me back
after every drunk.
-
And what made me good
was I could size up anyone.
-
But still, I don't...
-
Well, never mind.
-
I can tell you're havin'
trouble with yourself,
-
and I'll be glad
to do anything I can
-
to help a friend of Larry's.
-
Mind your own
business, Hickey.
-
He's nothing to you,
-
or to me.
-
You're keeping us all
in suspense.
-
Tell us more about
how you're going to save us.
-
Well, hell,
-
don't get sore, Larry.
-
We're old pals,
-
I've always liked you a lot,
you know that.
-
Forget it, Hickey.
-
Fine, fine...
-
Well,
that's the spirit.
-
What's the matter,
everybody?
-
Come on, drink up!
-
A little action!
-
Have another...
-
Hell, this is
a celebration!
-
Oh, forget it if anything I said
sounded too serious.
-
You think
I'm talkin' out of turn,
-
just tell me
to go chase myself.
-
(yawning)
-
No, boys and girls,
-
I'm not trying to put
anything over on you.
-
It's just
that I know now,
-
from experience,
-
what a lying pipe dream
can do to you.
-
And how damned relieved
and contented with yourself
-
you'll feel when you're
rid of it.
-
(yawning)
-
Oh, my God...
-
I'm sleepy
all of a sudden.
-
That long walk
must be gettin' to me.
-
I better go upstairs.
-
Hell of a trick
to go dead on you like this.
-
And no,
boys and girls, I've...
-
never known
what real peace was until now.
-
It's a grand feeling.
-
Like when you're sick and
suffering like hell and then...
-
doc gives you
a shot in the arm.
-
The pain goes and...
-
you drift off.
-
You let yourself go at last.
-
You sink down
to the bottom of the sea.
-
Rest in peace.
-
(keys clattering)
-
There's no further
you have to go.
-
Not one single
-
hope or dream
left to nag you.
-
But you'll all know
what I mean.
-
Excuse me,
I'll just grab 40 winks.
-
Drink up,
everybody...
-
on me.
-
Don't let me be
a wet blanket.
-
All I want
is to see you happy.
-
(dishes rattling)
-
Well, how's that, kid?
-
What the hell do I know
about flowers?
-
You can see they're pretty,
can't you, you big dummy?
-
Yeah, baby, sure,
if you like 'em,
-
they're all right with me.
-
Oh, Jees, Pearl!
-
Look at that cake, eh?
-
Come here,
look, six candles,
-
each for 10 years.
-
Oh...
-
when do we light
the candles, Rocky?
-
Ask that bughouse
Hickey.
-
"Just before Harry
come down," he says.
-
"Then Harry blows them out
with one breath, for luck."
-
(spits)
-
Hickey was gonna have
60 candles,
-
but I says "Jees, if the old guy
took that big a breath",
-
he'd croak himself."
-
Anyways, it's a nice cake,
ain't it?
-
Oh, sure,
it's all right by me.
-
But what is Harry
gonna do with a cake?
-
If he ever ate a hunk,
it'd croak him.
-
Jees, you're a dope!
-
Ain't he, Margie?
-
Yeah, dope is right.
-
You broads better watch
your step or I'll...
-
Or what?
Yeah, what, what?
-
Say, what the hell's
got into ya's?
-
It'll be 12:00 o'clock and
Harry's birthday before long.
-
I ain't lookin'
for no trouble.
-
Oh, we ain't
neither, Rocky.
-
A guy what can't see
flowers is pretty
-
must be some dumbbell.
-
Yeah, well,
if I was as dumb as you...
-
Jees, you got your
scrappin' pants on, ain't you?
-
What the hell, baby,
what's eatin' you?
-
All I'm thinkin' is,
-
"What the hell
could Harry do with flowers?"
-
He don't know a cauliflower
from a geranium.
-
Jees,
-
ever since Hickeys woke up,
you can't hold him.
-
He's taken on the party
like it was his birthday.
-
Well, he's payin'
for everything, ain't he?
-
Aw, I don't mind
the birthday stuff so much.
-
What gets my goat
-
is the way he's buttin' in
all over the place,
-
tellin' everybody
where they get off.
-
He just keeps
hintin' around.
-
Yeah, he was hintin'
to me and Margie.
-
Yeah,
the lousy drummer.
-
He just gives you an earful
of that line of bull about
-
you gotta be honest
with yourself
-
and not kid yourself,
-
and you gotta have the guts
to be what you are.
-
I told him,
-
"That's all right
for the bums in this dump.
-
"But it don't go
with me, see?
-
I don't kid myself
with no pipe dreams."
-
What are you grinnin' at?
-
Nothin'.
Nothin'.
-
It better be nothin'!
-
And don't let Hickey
put no ideas in your nuts
-
if you wanna stay healthy.
-
He's ridin' someone
every minute.
-
He's got Harry
and Jimmy Tomorrow run ragged.
-
And the rest are hidin'
in their rooms,
-
so they don't won't
have to listen to him.
-
They're all actin' cagey
with the booze, too,
-
like they was scared
if they get too drunk,
-
they might spill
their guts.
-
And everybody's getting
a prize grouch on.
-
Yeah,
-
he's been hintin' around
to me and Chuck, too.
-
You-you'd think
he suspected me and Chuck
-
had no real intention
of gettin' married.
-
You'd think he suspected
Chuck wasn't goin' to lay off
-
of periodicals,
-
or maybe
didn't even want to.
-
I told him,
"I'm on the wagon for keeps,
-
and Cora knows it."
-
And I told him:
"Sure, I know it.
-
"And Chuck ain't never goin'
to throw it in my face.
-
"I was a tart, neither.
-
"And if you think
we're just kiddin' ourselves,
-
"we'll show ya!
-
We are gettin' married
tomorrow."
-
Ain't we, honey?
-
You bet, baby.
-
Christ, Chuck!
-
Are you lettin' that bughouse
louse Hickey kid you into...
-
Nobody's kiddin' him into it,
nor me neither!
-
Hickey's right,
-
if this big tramp's
goin' to marry me,
-
he ought to do it,
and not just shoot off
-
his old bazoo about it.
-
You can't be that dumb,
Chuck.
-
Rocky, you keep
outta this, you hear?
-
And don't start beefin' about
the crickets on the farm
-
drivin' us nuts.
-
Christ, you'd think
they was elephants!
-
Ah, Rocky,
don't notice that broad.
-
You heard what she said,
right?
-
"Tomorrow, tomorrow!"
-
The same old crap.
-
Is that so?
Uh.
-
Imagine Cora a bride!
-
That's a hot one!
-
Jees, Cora,
-
if all the guys you've
stayed with was side by side,
-
you could walk on 'em
from here to Texas!
-
You can't talk to me like that,
you skinny Dago hooker!
-
I may be a tart, but I ain't a
cheap old whore like you!
-
I'll show you
who's a whore!
-
(unintelligible
loud screaming)
-
Dago whore!
-
(yelling, screaming)
-
Oh, bury it!
-
What are you, a virgin?
-
You mean you think
I'm a whore, too?
-
Yeah, me, too?
-
Now don't start nothin'!
-
I suppose it'd tickle you
if me and Margie did
-
what that louse Hickey
was hintin',
-
and come right out
and admitted we was whores!
-
Yeah.
-
It's the truth, ain't it?
-
Jees, Rocky,
-
that's a fine hell of a thing
to say to two girls
-
that's been as good
to you as Pearl and Margie!
-
Oh, oh look,
-
I-I didn't mean
to call you that, Pearl.
-
No hard feelings,
Cora.
-
There,
-
that fixes everything,
don't it?
-
Okay, Rocky,
we're whores.
-
You know what
that makes you, don't you?
-
Look out, now!
-
A lousy little pimp,
that's what.
-
I'll loin you!
-
A dirty little Ginny pimp,
that's what!
-
Yes,
-
you provin' it to us,
Pearl!
-
Sure!
-
Hickey's converted him,
-
he's given up
his pipe dream.
-
Lay off of me or I'll...
-
Oh, lay off them!
-
Harry's party ain't no time
to beat up your stable.
-
Whose stable?
-
Who do you think
you're talkin' to?
-
I ain't never
beat 'em up!
-
What do you think I am?
-
I just give 'em a slap,
like any guy would his wife,
-
if she got too gabby.
-
I'm not lookin' for no trouble
on Harry's birthday party!
-
(gasps)
-
You lousy little Ginny!
-
I'll lay off you until
the party's over,
-
if Pearl will.
-
Sure I will...
-
For Harry's sake, not yours,
you little Wop!
-
Say, listen, you!
(laughing)
-
If you don't get
no wrong I...
-
What the hell
are you laughin' at,
-
you half-dead old
stew bum?
-
At himself,
and he ought to be.
-
Jees, Hickey's
sure got his number.
-
Wake up, comrade!
-
Here's a revolution
starting all around you,
-
and you're sleeping
through it!
-
Be God, it's not
to Bakunin's ghost
-
you ought to be
prayin' your dreams,
-
but to the great
nihilist, Hickey!
-
He started a movement
that'll blow up the world!
-
You, Larry!
-
Renegade!
-
Traitor!
-
I'll have you shot!
-
Don't be a fool,
buy me a drink.
-
(laughing maniacally)
-
Bourgeois swine, Hickey!
-
He laughs like good fellow,
-
he makes jokes.
-
He dares to hint to me,
-
so I see what
he dares to think!
-
He thinks I'm finish,
-
it is too late.
-
So I do not wish
the day to come
-
because it will
not be my day.
-
Ahh?
-
I see what he thinks!
-
He thinks lies
-
even worse,
-
that I...
-
I'll have him hanged
the first one of all
-
to the first lamppost!
-
(laughing maniacally)
-
Why you so serious,
-
you little monkey-faces?
-
It's all great joke,
no?
-
So we get drunk,
-
and we laugh like hell,
-
and then we die,
-
and the pipe dream vanish!
-
(laughing)
-
But be of good cheer,
little stupid peoples!
-
"The days grow hot,
-
O Babylon!"
-
Soon,
little proletarians,
-
we will have free picnic
in the cool shade,
-
and we will eat hot dogs
-
and drink free wine
-
beneath the willow trees!
-
Like hogs, yes!
-
Like beautiful,
little hogs!
-
Goddamned liar, Hickey!
-
It's he who makes me sneer.
-
I want to sleep!
-
Hickey ain't
overlookin' no bets.
-
Tell it to
Old Wise Guy Larry,
-
who's still pretendin'
he's the one exception
-
who don't do no
pipe dreamin'!
-
I...
-
All right.
-
Take it out on me,
if it makes you more content.
-
Sure, I love every hair
of your heads,
-
my great big
beautiful baby dolls,
-
and there's nothing
I wouldn't do for you.
-
The old
Irish bunk, huh?
-
We ain't big
-
and we ain't
your baby dolls!
-
But we admit
we're beautiful,
-
huh, Margie?
Yeah, sure thing.
-
But what would he do
with beautiful dolls
-
even if he had the price,
the old goat?
-
Ahh!
-
Larry, you're okay even though
you are full of bull.
-
Sure,
you're aces with us;
-
we're nervous,
that's all.
-
It's Hickey,
that lousy drummer!
-
Why can't he be like
he's always been?
-
I ain't never seen
a guy change so.
-
What do you think
happened to him, Larry?
-
I don't know.
-
With all his gab
-
I noticed he's kept
that to himself so far.
-
Maybe he's saving
the great revelation
-
for Harry's party.
-
Oh!
-
Let him mind his own business
and I'll mind mine.
-
Yeah,
that's what I say.
-
Say, Larry,
-
where's that young friend
of yours disappeared to?
-
I don't care where he is,
-
except I wish he was
a thousand miles away!
-
He's a pest.
-
I told him,
-
"I'll take
a lot from you, Hickey,"
-
"like everyone else
in this dump,"
-
"because you always
been a grand guy."
-
"But there's things I don't take
from you nor nobody, see?"
-
"Remember that,"
-
or you'll wake up
in a hospital,
-
"or maybe worse,
-
"with your wife
and the iceman
-
walkin' slow behind ya."
-
Aw, you oughtn't make
that iceman crack, Rocky.
-
I noticed he ain't pulled
that old gag this time.
-
(gasps)
-
Do you suppose he did
catch his wife cheatin', hum?
-
Oh, that's the bunk!
-
He ain't pulled that gag
or showed a photo around
-
because he ain't drunk.
-
And if he's caught her
cheatin'
-
he'd be drunk,
wouldn't he?
-
He'd have beat her up
and then gone on the worst drunk
-
he'd ever staged.
-
Sure, Rocky's got
the right dope, baby.
-
I stood tellin' people this dump
is closed for the night
-
all I'm gonna!
-
Let Harry hire a doorman,
pay him wages, if he wants one.
-
Yeah?
-
Harry's pretty
damned good to ya.
-
Sure he is,
-
I don't mean that.
-
Anyways,
it's all right.
-
I told Schwartz,
the cop,
-
we closed for the party.
-
He'll keep folks away.
-
I wants me a big drink,
that's what.
-
Who's stoppin' yuh?
-
You can have all you want
on Hickey.
-
All right,
-
I earned all the drinks on him
I could drink in a year
-
for listenin' to his
crazy bull.
-
And here's hopin'
he gets the lockjaw.
-
I drinks on him,
but I don't drink with him.
-
No, sir,
never no more!
-
Oh, bull.
-
Hickey's all right,
what's he done to you?
-
That's my business.
-
Sure, you would think
he's all right.
-
He's a white man,
ain't he?
-
Now listen to me,
you white boys!
-
Now don't you
get it in your head
-
that I was pretendin' to be
what I ain't,
-
or that I ain't
proud to be what I am
-
you gettin' me?
-
Or you and me
is goin' to have trouble.
-
What nerve!
-
Just because
you act nice to him,
-
he gets a swelled nut...
-
if that ain't
a coon all over.
-
He talkin' fight talk, huh?
-
I'll murder the nigger.
-
Listen, listen, boys,
-
I, I'm sorry.
-
You been
good friends to me.
-
It's that Hickey,
-
he gets my head all mixed up
with craziness.
-
Oh, that's
all right, Joe.
-
The boys wasn't
takin' you serious.
-
Jees, what did I say?
-
Hickey ain't
overlookin' no bets.
-
And you gotta admit
-
he's got
the right dope.
-
I mean, on some
of the bums here.
-
He's certainly got one guy
I know sized up right.
-
Ain't he, Pearl?
-
He certainly has.
-
Cut it out,
I told ya!
-
It's nothing to me
what happened to him.
-
But I have a feeling he's dying
to tell us inside him,
-
and yet he's afraid.
-
Like that damned kid.
-
Strange the queer way
he seemed to recognize him.
-
If he's afraid,
-
that explains
why he's off booze.
-
Afraid if he got drunk,
he might tell...
-
Well, well, well!
-
Here I am
in the nick of time.
-
Well, come on, somebody,
-
give me a hand
with these packages.
-
Jees, Hickey,
-
you scared me outta
a year's growth,
-
sneakin' in like that.
-
"Sneakin'?"
-
You were all so busy
drinking in words of wisdom
-
from Old Wise Guy here,
-
you couldn't hear
anything else.
-
And from what
I heard, Larry,
-
you're not so good
-
when you start playing
Sherlock Holmes.
-
You've got me all wrong.
-
I'm not afraid
of anything now,
-
not even myself.
-
You better stick to
the part of Old Cemetery,
-
the Barker
for the Big Sleep.
-
That is, if you can still
let yourself get away with it.
-
"Old Cemetery!"
-
That's him, Hickey.
-
We'll have
to call him that.
-
Beginning to do
a lot of puzzling about me,
-
aren't you, Larry?
-
But that won't help you.
-
You've got
to think of yourself,
-
I couldn't give you
my peace.
-
You've got to find
your own,
-
all I can do
is to help you,
-
and the rest of the gang,
-
by showing you the way
to find it.
-
Oh, hire a church!
-
All right, boys and girls,
don't get sore.
-
I guess that did sound too much
like a lousy preacher.
-
Well, let's forget it
and get on with the party.
-
Is those bundles
grub, Hickey?
-
You bought enough already
to feed an army.
-
I want this to be the biggest
birthday Harry's ever had.
-
Now you and Rocky
go out in the hall
-
and bring in
the big surprise!
-
My arms are busted
lugging it.
-
Jees, you got us all
head up!
-
What is it, Hickey?
-
Wait and see!
-
I thought to myself,
-
"I'll bet this is what would
please those whores
-
more than anything."
-
Then I said to myself,
"I don't care
-
"how much money it costs,
they're worth it,
-
"they're the best
little scouts in the world,
-
"and they've always been
damned kind to me
-
when I was down and out."
-
And I meant
every word of that.
-
Well,
what's the matter?
-
Ehh...
-
Oh, I see.
-
Now look, you know I didn't
say that to offend you.
-
So don't be silly now.
-
All right,
all right.
-
Oh, look,
here it comes!
-
Hickey, what...
-
What'd you get?
-
Unveil it, boys!
-
Oh, it's champagne!
-
Oh, jees, Hickey,
if you ain't a sport!
-
I never been soused
on champagne!
-
Hey, let's get stinko!
-
Oh, you betcha my life!
-
All of us!
-
You sure is hittin'
the high spots, Hickey.
-
When I runs
my gamblin' house,
-
I drink that old bubbly
water in steins.
-
And I'm gonna drink
that way again, too,
-
as soon's I make
my stake.
-
And that ain't
no pipe dream, neither.
-
What'll we drink
it outta, Hickey?
-
There ain't no
wine glasses.
-
Well, Joe's got
the right idea, steins!
-
That's the spirit
for Harry's party.
-
We will drink wine
-
beneath the willow trees!
-
That's the spirit,
brother,
-
and let the lousy slaves
drink vinegar.
-
(chuckles)
-
Got damned liar!
-
Leave Hugo be!
-
He rotted 10 years in prison
for his faith.
-
He earned his dream!
-
Have you no decency
or pity?
-
Hello, what's this?
-
I thought you were in
the grandstand.
-
Listen, Larry,
you're gettin' me all wrong.
-
Hell, you ought
to know me better.
-
Of course I have pity,
-
but now that
I've seen the light,
-
it's not my old kind
of pity,
-
the kind yours is.
-
The kind that lets itself off
by encouraging some poor guy
-
to go on kidding himself
with a lie.
-
The kind that leaves
the poor slob worse off
-
because he feels
guiltier than ever.
-
The kind that makes
his lying hopes nag at him,
-
and reproach him until he's
a rotten skunk in his own eyes.
-
No, sir.
-
The kind of pity I feel now
is after final results
-
that really help
save the poor guy.
-
Make him contented
with what he is,
-
and quit battling himself,
-
so he can find peace
for the rest of his life.
-
Oh, I know
how you resent the way
-
I have to show you up
to yourself,
-
but you'll be grateful to me
-
when all at once
you're able to admit,
-
without feeling ashamed,
-
that all the grandstand
foolosopher bunk
-
and the waiting for
the Big Sleep stuff
-
is a pipe dream.
-
You'll be able to say
to yourself,
-
"I'm just an old man
who is scared of life,
-
"but even more
scared of dying.
-
"So I'm keeping drunk
and hanging on to life
-
at any price,
and what of it?"
-
Be God,
-
if I'm not beginning
to think you've gone mad.
-
You're a liar!
-
Now, listen, that's no way
to talk to an old pal
-
who's trying to help you.
-
Hell, if you
really wanted to die,
-
you'd just take a hop off
the fire escape, wouldn't you?
-
And if you really were
in the grandstand,
-
you wouldn't be
pitying everyone.
-
As for my being bughouse,
-
you can't crawl out of it
that way.
-
I'm too damned sane.
-
I can size up guys
and turn 'em inside out
-
better than I ever could,
-
even where they're strangers
like that Parritt kid.
-
He's licked, Larry.
-
I think there's only
one possible way out
-
you can help him take.
-
That is, if you have
the right kind of pity for him.
-
What do you mean?
-
I'm not advising him,
-
except to leave me
out of his troubles...
-
he's nothing to me.
-
You'll find
he won't agree to that.
-
He'll keep after you
until he makes you help him.
-
Because he's got
to be punished,
-
so he can
forgive himself.
-
He hasn't got the guts,
-
he can't
manage it alone.
-
And you're the only one
he can turn to.
-
For the love of God,
mind your own business.
-
How'd you know about him?
-
He's hardly
spoken to you.
-
No, that's right,
-
but I do know a lot about him
just the same.
-
I've had hell inside of me,
I can spot it in others.
-
Maybe that's what
gives me the feeling
-
there's something
familiar about him,
-
something between us.
-
No, it's more than that.
-
Tell me about him,
for example,
-
I don't imagine
he's married, is he?
-
No.
-
Hasn't he been mixed up
with some woman?
-
Oh, I don't mean trollops.
-
I mean
the old real love stuff
-
that crucifies you.
-
Maybe you're right,
-
I wouldn't be surprised.
-
I see.
-
You think I'm on the wrong track
and you're glad I am.
-
Because then I won't suspect
whatever it is he did
-
about the Great Cause.
-
That's another lie you keep
telling yourself, Larry,
-
that the good old cause
means nothing to you any more.
-
What the hell...
-
But you're wrong
about Parritt.
-
That's not
what's got him stopped,
-
it's what's behind that.
-
And it's a woman,
-
I recognize the symptoms.
-
And you're the boy
who's never wrong.
-
His trouble is he was
brought up a devout believer
-
in the Movement,
and now he's lost his faith!
-
It's a shock...
-
but he's young,
-
and he'll soon find
another dream just as good
-
or as bad.
-
All right, I'll let it go
at that, Larry.
-
He's nothing to me,
except that I'm glad he's here
-
'cause he'll help me
make you wake up to yourself.
-
I don't even like the guy,
-
or the feeling there's
anything between us.
-
But you'll find out
that I'm right just the same,
-
when you get to the final
showdown with him.
-
There'll be no showdown!
-
I don't give a tinker's...
-
Sticking to
the grandstand, eh?
-
I always knew that you'd be
the toughest of all the gang
-
to convince, Larry.
-
And along with Harry
and Jimmy Tomorrow.
-
It was you
I wanted to help the most.
-
I've always liked you a lot,
you old bastard.
-
Hey, not much time
before 12:00!
-
Well, come on, gang,
let's get going.
-
Come on, boys and girls,
let's get busy.
-
Let's see,
cake's all set.
-
And my gifts
and yours, girls.
-
It's a tie,
tie and a handkerchief.
-
Chuck and Rocky, hmm?
-
What's this for,
Hickey?
-
Harry certainly will be very
touched by your thoughts of him.
-
Now Margie and Pearl,
get back in the bar
-
and get ready
to bring the grub right in.
-
There'll be some
drinking first and some toasts.
-
My idea was to use
the wine for that,
-
so get that all set.
-
Now I'll go upstairs
and root everybody up,
-
Harry the last.
-
When you hear us coming,
somebody light the candles
-
and start playing
his favorite tune on the piano.
-
Well, come on, Cora,
everybody, let's hustle!
-
We want this to come off
in style, uh?
-
But Jees,
I gotta practice.
-
I ain't laid my mitts on a box
in God knows when.
-
Hey, Joe!
-
*
-
Oh, Jees, I've forgotten
this has-been tune.
-
Come on, Joe,
hum it so I can follow.
-
(humming)
-
Be God!
-
It's the second feast
of Belshazzar,
-
with Hickey to do
the writing on the wall!
-
Aw, shut up,
Old Cemetery!
-
Well, if it ain't
Prince Willie.
-
Gee, kid,
you look sick.
-
Get a couple
of shots in ya.
-
No, thanks, not now,
I'm-I'm-I'm tapering off.
-
It's been hell up in
that damned room, Larry.
-
The-the-the things
I've imagined!
-
(piano music, humming)
-
But...
-
I've-I've got it beat now.
-
By-by tomorrow morning I'll...
-
I'll be on the wagon.
-
And I'll, uh...
-
I'll get back my clothes
first thing.
-
Hickey's loaning
me the money.
-
And I'm goin' to do
what I always said.
-
I'm-I'm-I'm gonna go
to the D.A.'s office,
-
because he knows that I...
-
I-I really
was a brilliant student.
-
Oh, I know I can make good.
-
I-I owe a lot to Hickey.
-
He's...
-
made me wake up to myself
and see what a fool...
-
(laughs)
-
It wasn't nice to face but...
-
It's not what he says.
-
It's what you feel
behind what he hints!
-
Christ, you'd think
-
all I really wanted
to do with my life
-
was sit here
and stay drunk!
-
I'll show him!
-
You want my advice...
-
you'll put your mouth
on this bottle
-
and keep it there
-
until you don't
give a damn about Hickey.
-
(laughs)
-
That's fine advice.
-
I thought you
were my friend!
-
(piano music stops)
-
(steps approaching)
-
Gee, I'm glad
you're here, Larry.
-
That damned fool Hickey
knocked on my door.
-
I opened up because
I thought it must be you.
-
He came bustin' in and
made me come downstairs here.
-
(piano music resumes)
-
I don't know what for,
-
I don't belong at this
birthday celebration,
-
I don't know this gang,
-
and I don't wanna be
mixed up with them.
-
All I came here for
was to find you!
-
I've warned you that...
-
Can't you make Hickey
mind his own business?
-
Just now he pats me
on the shoulder,
-
like he's
sympathizing with me.
-
He says,
"I know how it is, son,
-
"but you can't hide
from yourself,
-
"not even here
on the bottom of the sea.
-
"You've gotta face the truth
and then do what must be done
-
"for your own peace
and for the happiness
-
of all concerned."
-
Now, what'd he mean
by that, Larry?
-
How the hell would I know?
-
Then he grins at me and says,
"Oh, never mind,
-
"Larry's getting
wise to himself.
-
"I think you can rely on his
help in the end.
-
"He's gonna have to choose
between living and dying,
-
"and he'll never
choose to die
-
while there's a breath
left in the old bastard!"
-
Then he laughs
like it's a joke on you.
-
Well, what do you say
to that, Larry?
-
I've got nothing to say.
-
Except you're a bigger fool
-
than he is
to listen to him.
-
Oh, is that so?
-
Well, he's no fool
where you're concerned.
-
He's got your number,
all right.
-
(piano playing continues)
-
You know
I don't mean that.
-
Larry, you know what I want most
is to be friends with you.
-
I haven't a single friend
left in the world.
-
I hoped...
-
I hoped you'd...
-
And you could, too,
without it hurting you.
-
You ought to,
for mother's sake, Larry.
-
She really loved you.
-
You loved her, too,
didn't you?
-
Leave what's dead
in its grave.
-
Oh, I suppose
because I was only a kid
-
you don't think I was
wise about you and her, uh?
-
Well, I've been wise
ever since I can remember
-
to all the guys
she's had.
-
Although she used to try
to kid me along
-
it wasn't so.
-
That's a silly stunt
-
for a free
Anarchist woman, isn't it?
-
To be ashamed
of being free!
-
Shut your damned trap!
-
Yes, I know I shouldn't
say that now.
-
I keep forgetting
she isn't free anymore.
-
You know, Larry,
you're the one of them all
-
she cared most about.
-
Anybody else who left
the Movement
-
would've been
more than dead to her,
-
but she couldn't forget you.
-
She used to make
excuses for you.
-
I used to try to get
her goat about you.
-
I'd say,
"Larry's got brains
-
and yet thinks the Movement's
a crazy pipe dream."
-
She'd blame it
on the booze getting you.
-
She'd kid herself that you'd
give up booze
-
and come back to
the Movement, tomorrow.
-
She used to say,
"Larry can't kill in himself
-
"a faith he's given
his life to,
-
not without
killing himself."
-
How about that, Larry,
what she right?
-
(Cora singing)
-
I suppose what she meant by that
was to come back to her.
-
She was always getting
the Movement
-
mixed up with herself.
-
(dishes rattling)
-
But I'm sure she really
must've loved you, Larry.
-
As much as she could love
anyone besides herself.
-
No, she wasn't even faithful
to you at that though, was she?
-
That's why you walked out
on her, isn't it?
-
I remember that last fight
you had with her.
-
I was listening.
-
I was on your side,
even if she was my mother,
-
because I liked you
so much.
-
I remember
she was putting on her
-
high-and-mighty
free-woman stuff,
-
telling you
you were still a slave
-
to bourgeois morality
and jealousy.
-
And that you thought
that the woman you loved
-
was a piece of
private property you owned.
-
And I remember you got mad,
you told her, "I don't like"
-
living with a whore,
if that's what you mean!"
-
You lie,
I never called her that!
-
And that's why
she still respects you!
-
See, 'cause you
walked out on her.
-
She got sick
of the others.
-
She just had to keep on having
lovers to prove to herself
-
how free she was.
-
Made home a lousy place.
-
I felt like you
did about it.
-
It was like living in
a whorehouse, only worse,
-
because she didn't have to make
her living at it, you know.
-
You bastard!
-
She's your mother.
-
Have you no shame?
-
No.
-
She brought me up to believe
that family-respect stuff
-
is all bourgeois,
property-owning crap.
-
Why should I be ashamed?
-
I've had enough of this!
No, Larry!
-
Please don't leave me!
-
Larry, I promise,
I only mentioned her name
-
to make you
understand better.
-
Why didn't you
come up to my room
-
like I asked you to?
-
I kept waiting...
-
We can talk over
everything up there.
-
There's nothing
to talk about.
-
But Larry, I gotta talk to you
or I'm gonna talk to Hickey!
-
I feel he knows, anyway,
-
and I'm sure
he'd understand all right,
-
but I hate his guts!
-
I'm scared of him, honest,
there's something not human
-
behind his damned grinning
and kidding.
-
Ah, you feel that too, eh?
-
But I can't go on like this,
I've gotta tell you, Larry.
-
I won't listen!
Okay, I won't!
-
Larry!
-
Who do you think
you're kidding?
-
I know damned well
you've guessed.
-
I guessed nothing.
-
No, but I want you
to guess now.
-
I'm glad you have.
-
I know now, since
Hickey's been after me,
-
that I meant you to guess
right from the start.
-
That's why I came to you.
-
I want you
to understand the reason.
-
You see,
I, I began to study
-
American history.
-
And I got admiring
Washington and Jefferson,
-
Jackson and Lincoln,
-
and I began to feel
patriotic
-
and love this country.
-
I saw it was the best
government in the world,
-
where everybody
was equal,
-
everybody had a chance.
-
And I saw all the ideas
behind the Movement,
-
they came from a lot of Russians
like Bakunin and Kropotkin.
-
They were all meant
for Europe.
-
So we didn't need them here
in a democracy,
-
the way we were
free already.
-
I didn't want this country
to be destroyed
-
for a damned
foreign pipe dream!
-
I began to feel like
I was a traitor
-
for helping
a lot of cranks and bums
-
and free women plot
to overthrow our government.
-
And I saw it was my,
my duty to my country...
-
You stinking rotten liar.
-
You think
you can fool me
-
with such hypocrite cant?
-
I don't give a damn
what you did!
-
It's on your own head,
whatever it was!
-
I don't know
and I don't want to know!
-
But Larry, I never thought
mother would be caught.
-
Please believe that,
I never would...
-
All I know is that
I am sick of living!
-
I'm through.
-
I'm drowned and contented
on the bottom of a bottle!
-
Honor or dishonor,
-
faith or treachery,
-
are nothing to me but opposites
of the same stupidity
-
that is the king
and ruler of life,
-
and in the end
-
they'll both rot into dust
-
in the same grave.
-
All things
are meaningless to me,
-
because they grin at me
-
from the one skull
of death.
-
So go away...
-
I've forgotten your mother.
-
You "old foolosopher," eh?
-
You lousy old faker!
-
For the love of God,
leave me in peace
-
the little time
that's left to me!
-
No!
-
Don't pull that pitiful
old-man junk on me!
-
You old bastard,
you'll never die
-
because there's a drink
of whiskey left!
-
You be careful how you
taunt me back into life,
-
I warn you.
-
Because I might remember
this thing called justice there,
-
and the punishment for...
-
You're as mad as Hickey...
-
just as big a liar.
-
Wait'll Hickey
gets through with you.
-
Well, hello,
"Tightwad Kid."
-
Hey, did you come
to join the party?
-
Oh, wow, boy,
don't he act bashful, Pearl?
-
Yeah, especially
with his dough.
-
(loud arguing in distance)
-
Hey, Rocky,
fighting in the hall!
-
(unintelligible shouting)
-
Don't touch me!
-
Can you beat it?
-
I heard you's two
call each other
-
every name
you can think of
-
but I never seen...
-
A swell time
to stage your first bout,
-
on Harry's birthday party!
-
What started
the scrap?
-
Nothing, old chap.
-
Our business, you know,
-
but that bloody ass, Hickey,
made some insinuation about me,
-
and the boorish Boer
had the impertinence
-
to agree with him!
-
That's a lie!
-
Hickey made joke about me,
-
and this Limey said
yes, it was true!
-
Well, sit down
the both of you!
-
And cut out
this rough stuff!
-
Jees, would you
look at those bums!
-
Like a couple of kids!
-
For God's sake, would you
kiss and make up, ah?
-
Yeah, Harry's party
begins in a minute,
-
and we don't want
no soreheads around here.
-
Oh, very well then.
-
In deference
to the occasion,
-
I apologize,
-
General Wetjoen,
-
provided
you do also.
-
I apologize,
Captain Lewis,
-
because Harry
is my good friend.
-
Aw, hell!
-
If you can't do
better than that...
-
Here's the star
boarder.
-
It's serious
this time.
-
I'm tellin' all of you,
-
that bastard Hickey's
got Harry on the hip.
-
And it ain't gonna do us
no good if he gets Harry
-
to take
that walk tomorrow.
-
He's sure to call
on Bessie's relations
-
and have a little
cry over poor old Bessie.
-
And you know
what that bitch
-
and all her family
thought of me!
-
Once Bessie's relations
get their hooks into him,
-
it'll be as tough for us
-
as if she
wasn't even gone.
-
Everything all set?
-
Ah, fine.
-
Half-a-minute to go,
-
Harry's starting down
with Jimmy now.
-
I had a hard time
getting him to move.
-
Harry don't even want to
remember it's his birthday now!
-
Oh, here they come!
-
Come on, everybody,
light the candles!
-
Cora, get ready to play,
stand up, everybody, eh?
-
Chuck, Rocky,
the wine!
-
Let's see, 12:00 o'clock
on the dot.
-
Come on, everybody,
with a "Happy Birthday, Harry!"
-
(all)
Happy Birthday, Harry!
-
Hey!
-
(Cora singing, playing piano)
-
Cut out the glad hand,
Hickey!
-
You think
I'm a sucker?
-
Bejees, I know you,
-
you sneaking,
lying drummer!
-
And all you bums,
-
what the hell
you trying to do,
-
yelling and raising
the roof?
-
You want the cops
to close the joint,
-
and take
my license away?
-
Hey,
you dumb tart,
-
quit banging that box.
-
Jees, Harry, I...
-
Bejees, the least you could do
is learn a tune.
-
You two hookers,
-
screaming at the top
of your lungs!
-
What do you think this is,
a dollar cathouse?
-
Bejees,
that's where you belong!
-
(crying)
-
Jees, Harry,
-
I never thought you'd say it
like you meant it.
-
Now, Harry, you don't want
to get sore at the gang
-
just 'cause you're upset
about yourself, hmm?
-
Look, anyway, I promised you
it'd come through all right,
-
haven't I?
-
So quit worrying.
Ahh...
-
You don't wanna
blow out the old gang
-
just when they're
congratulating you
-
on your birthday,
do you?
-
Bejees,
-
they ain't as dumb as you.
-
They know I was
only kiddin' 'em.
-
They know I appreciate
their congratulations.
-
Don't you, fellas, huh?
-
(Pat)
Yeah, sure Harry.
-
(affirmative exclamations)
-
Bejees,
I like you broads.
-
You know
I was only kiddin'.
-
Sure, we know,
Harry.
-
Sure!
-
Sure, Harry's the greatest
kidder in this dump,
-
and that's
sayin' somethin'.
-
Look how he's kidded himself
for 20 years.
-
But unless I'm wrong, Governor,
and I'm bettin' I'm not,
-
we'll soon know, eh?
-
Tomorrow morning.
-
No, by God,
it's this morning now.
-
This... this is
this morning?
-
Yes, it's the day
at last, Jimmy.
-
But don't be scared,
I'll help you,
-
I promised that.
-
I don't understand you.
-
Kindly remember
-
I'm fully capable
of settlin' my own affairs!
-
Well, isn't that exactly
what I want you to do?
-
Only watch out on the booze.
-
You've had a lot
to drink already,
-
and you don't want to let
yourself duck out of it
-
by being
too drunk to move,
-
not this time.
-
Bejees, Margie,
you know I didn't mean it.
-
It's that lousy drummer
riding me
-
that's got my goat.
-
I know, Harry,
I know.
-
Hey, come on,
look at your cake,
-
you haven't even
noticed it yet!
-
Ain't it grand?
-
Yeah, say,
that's pretty.
-
I ain't have had a cake
since Bessie...
-
And six candles, eh?
-
Mm-phm.
-
Each for 10 years, eh?
-
You got it.
-
That was
thoughtful of him.
-
He means well,
I guess...
-
The hell with this cake!
Oh, oh, wait, Harry!
-
You ain't seen
the presents
-
from me
and Margie and Cora,
-
and Chuck and Rocky.
-
And there's a watch
all engraved
-
with your name
and the date from Hickey.
-
Ah, the hell with it!
-
Bejees,
he can keep it!
-
Jees,
-
he ain't even goin'
to look at our presents!
-
Hey, hey,
come on everybody,
-
this is all wrong!
-
If someone don't put
some life in this party
-
I'm gonna go nuts!
-
Hey, Cora, come on!
-
Why don't
you bang on that box?
-
Eh...
-
ohh, play somethin'
for Harry, uh?
-
You don't have to stop
just 'cause he kidded you.
-
Yeah, now you was
playing it fine, Cora.
-
It was Bessie's
favorite tune.
-
She was always
singing it.
-
It brings her back,
I wish...
-
Yes, we've all heard
you tell us
-
that you thought
the world of her, Governor.
-
So I did, bejees...
-
everyone knows I did.
-
And bejees,
if you say I didn't...
-
Now, Governor,
I didn't say anything.
-
You're the only one that knows
the truth about that.
-
Marjorie's favorite song
was "Loch Lomond."
-
She was beautiful,
-
she had
a beautiful voice,
-
and she played the piano
beautifully.
-
You were lucky, Harry,
-
Bessie died.
-
But there are more
bitter sorrows
-
than losing
the woman one loves
-
by the hand of death.
-
Now, you needn't
go on, Jimmy.
-
We've all heard the story about
how you came back to Cape Town
-
and found her in the hay
with a staff officer.
-
We all know that you'd
like to believe that
-
that's what started you
on the booze
-
and ruined your life.
-
(crying)
-
I... I'm talking to Harry.
-
Will you kindly
keep out of...
-
(weeping)
-
My life is not ruined!
-
But I'll bet when you admit
the truth to yourself,
-
you'll confess it,
you were pretty sick
-
of her hating you
for getting drunk.
-
And I'll bet you were
really damned relieved
-
when she gave you
such a good excuse.
-
I know how it is,
Jimmy,
-
you see, I...
-
Ha!
-
So that's what
happened, is it?
-
Your iceman joke finally
came home to roost, did it?
-
Maybe you
should've remembered
-
there's truth
in the old superstition
-
that you'd better
look out what you call,
-
because in the end
it comes to you.
-
Was that a fact,
Larry?
-
Well, well.
-
Then you'd better
be careful
-
how you keep calling
for the old Big Sleep.
-
Chair.
-
Well, what are we
waiting for, boys and girls?
-
Let's get
this party rolling!
-
Chuck, Rocky,
bring on the big surprise!
-
Oh, Governor, you sit over here
at the head of the table.
-
Come on.
-
Well, sit down,
girls, sit down.
-
And I'll sit here
at the foot.
-
Real champagne, bums,
cheer up!
-
What is this,
a funeral?
-
Mixin' champagne
with Harry's redeye
-
will knock you
paralyzed!
-
Ain't you never
satisfied?
-
Order, order,
Ladies and gents!
-
Oh, yes, I am going to drink
with you this time, Larry.
-
To prove
that I'm not teetotal
-
because the booze'll
make me spill my secrets,
-
as you think.
-
I don't need
the booze anymore,
-
or anything else.
-
I just want to be sociable
and propose a toast
-
in honor of our
old friend, Harry,
-
and drink it with you.
-
Wake up our
demon bomb-tosser, Rocky.
-
We don't want any corpses
at this feast.
-
Hey, Hugo,
come up for air!
-
Don't you see
the champagne?
-
Hah.
-
We will eat birthday cake
-
and drink champagne
beneath the willow trees!
-
(chuckling)
-
(chokes)
-
This wine
is unfit to drink!
-
It has not properly
been iced!
-
Always a high-toned
swell at heart,
-
eh, Hugo?
-
Well, God help us poor bums
if you'd ever got
-
to telling us
where to get off.
-
You'd have been drinking
our blood beneath
-
(fake Russian accent)
those willow trees!
-
But here's the toast,
Ladies and gents.
-
Here's to Harry Hope,
-
who's been a friend in need
to every one of us.
-
And here's to
the old Governor,
-
the best sport
and the kindest,
-
biggest-hearted guy
in the world.
-
Come on, everybody,
to Harry!
-
Bottoms up.
-
(all)
To Harry!
-
To you, boss.
Happy Birthday!
-
Thanks, all of you.
-
Hickey,
you old son of a bitch,
-
that's white of you.
-
I know you
meant it, too.
-
Of course I meant it,
Harry, old friend.
-
And I mean it when I say
that I hope that this will be
-
the biggest day
in your life,
-
and in the lives
of everyone here,
-
and the beginning
of a new life
-
of peace and contentment.
-
And here's to that,
Harry.
-
Oh, forget
that bughouse line
-
of bull for a minute,
can't you?
-
You're right, Rocky,
I am talking too much.
-
It's Harry
we want to hear from.
-
Speech, speech, speech!
-
(all agreeing)
-
Bejees, I'm...
-
I'm no good
at speeches.
-
All I can say is
-
thanks to everybody again
-
for remembering me
on my birthday.
-
Only don't think
because I'm 60,
-
I'll be a bigger damned fool
easy mark than ever!
-
Like Hickey says,
it's gonna be a new day!
-
This dump has got to be run
like other dumps,
-
so I can make some money
and not just split even.
-
I'm sick of bein'
played for a sucker.
-
I know you're all
-
laughin' at me now
behind my back,
-
thinking to yourselves,
-
"The old, lying'
pipe-dreaming faker,
-
"we've heard his bull
-
"about takin' a walk
around the ward for years,
-
"he'll never make it!
-
"He's scared,
he's yellow,
-
"he ain't got the guts!
-
He's scared
he'll find out... ".
-
But I'll show you,
bejees!
-
And I'll show you, too,
you son of a bitch
-
of a frying-pan-peddling
bastard!
-
Hu, hu, hu,
that's the stuff, Harry!
-
Of course
you'll try to show me,
-
that's what
I want you to do.
-
Bejees...
-
all of you, forgive me.
-
I lost my temper.
-
I ain't feeling well.
-
I got a hell
of a grouch on.
-
You're as welcome
as the flowers in May!
-
Oh, sure, boss,
-
you're always aces
with us, see?
-
Listen, everybody.
-
I know you're sick
of my gabbing, but, uh,
-
I think I owe it to you
to do a little explaining
-
and apologize
for some of the rough stuff
-
I've had to pull on you.
-
I had to make you help
each other with me, eh?
-
I saw that I couldn't do
what I had to do alone.
-
Not in the time
at my disposal.
-
I knew when I came here
I wouldn't be able to stay long.
-
I'm slated to leave
on a trip.
-
Now I know
every one of you,
-
inside and out,
by heart.
-
I may have been drunk
when I've been here before,
-
but old Hickey
could never be so drunk
-
he couldn't have to see
through everybody.
-
Everybody, that is,
except himself.
-
And finally, he had to
see through himself, too.
-
Now I swear I would've
never acted this way
-
if I didn't absolutely believe
it'd be worthwhile to you
-
in the end.
-
When you're rid of
the damned guilt
-
that makes you
lie to yourselves
-
that you're something
you're not,
-
and the remorse
that nags at you
-
and makes you hide behind
lousy pipe dreams,
-
you won't give a damn
what you are anymore.
-
I wouldn't say this unless
I knew, brothers and sisters.
-
This peace is real,
it is a fact.
-
I know, because I've got it,
here, now,
-
right in front of you.
-
Well, you can see
the difference in me.
-
You remember
how I used to be.
-
Even when I had two quarts
of rotgut under my belt,
-
and joked and sang
"Sweet Adeline,"
-
I still felt like
a guilty skunk.
-
But you can see that I don't
give a damn
-
about anything anymore.
-
And I promise you,
-
by the time
this day is over,
-
I'll have every one of you
feeling the same way.
-
I guess that's about all from me
for the present, boys and girls.
-
So, let's get on
with the party.
-
(Larry)
Wait!
-
I think it would help us,
poor pipe-dreaming sinners
-
along the sawdust trail
to salvation,
-
if you told us now
what it was happened
-
that converted you
-
to this great peace
you've found.
-
I noticed you
didn't say anything
-
when I asked you
about the iceman.
-
Did this great revelation
-
of the evil habit
of dreaming about tomorrow
-
come to you after you found out
your wife was sick of you?
-
Bejees, you've hit it,
Larry.
-
I've noticed he hasn't
shown her picture around
-
this time.
-
He hasn't got it!
-
The iceman took it
away from him!
-
Jees,
look at him!
-
Who could blame her?
-
She must be hard up
to fall for an iceman!
-
Imagine a sap like him
-
advisin' me and Chuck
to get married.
-
Yeah, he done
so good with it.
-
At least I can say
that Marjorie
-
chose an officer
and a gentleman.
-
Come to look at you,
Hickey, old chap,
-
you've sprouting horns
-
like a bloody
antelope!
-
Bigger, by God,
-
like a water buffalo's!
-
(imitating buffalo sound)
-
* "Oh come up"
she cried, *
-
* "My iceman lad
-
* "And you
and I'll agree *
-
* "And I'll show you
the prettiest *
-
(banging table)
-
* "That ever you
did see" *
-
(mocking laughter)
-
Well, I'm glad to see you
get in good spirits
-
for Harry's party,
-
even if the joke
is on me.
-
Well, I'll admit
-
I always asked for it
in the old days
-
by pulling that iceman gag,
so, uh, laugh all you like.
-
(mocking laughter)
-
Well, I guess
this forces my hand,
-
by brining up the subject
of Evelyn.
-
I had wanted to wait
until the party was over,
-
But, uh,
-
you're getting the wrong idea
about poor Evelyn,
-
and I've got to stop that.
-
I'm sorry to tell you
that my dearly beloved wife
-
is dead.
-
Be God...
-
I felt he had
the touch of death on him.
-
Forgive me, Hickey...
-
I'd like to cut
my dirty tongue out.
-
Now, look everybody, you mustn't
let this be a wet blanket on.
-
Harry's birthday party.
-
You're still
getting me all wrong.
-
There's no reason...
-
You see,
I don't feel any grief.
-
I've got to feel glad,
for her sake,
-
because she's at peace;
-
she's rid of me
at last.
-
And you can imagine
what I was like being married
-
to a no-good
drunken cheater like me.
-
And there was no way
out of it for her,
-
because she loved me.
-
But now she is at peace,
-
like she always
longed to be.
-
So why should I feel sad?
-
She wouldn't want me
to feel sad.
-
Why, all that Evelyn
ever wanted out of life
-
was to make me happy.
-
Eh, nothin' now 'till
the noon rush from the market.
-
If I ain't a sap to let Chuck
kid me into workin' his time
-
so he can take
the morning off.
-
But I got sick
of arguing.
-
I says: "All right, get
married! What's it to me?"
-
(Joe sighing)
-
Some party
last night, eh?
-
It was jinxed
from the start,
-
but his tellin' about his wife
croakin' put de K.O. on it.
-
It was the birthday feast
that turned out to be a wake.
-
Him promisin' he'd cut out that
bughouse bull about peace.
-
And then he went on talkin' and
talkin' like he couldn't stop.
-
And the gang, sneakin'
upstairs, leavin' free booze
-
and eats like they
was poison.
-
He's been hoppin' from room
to room, all night.
-
He's got his Reform Wave
goin' strong this mornin'.
-
Did you notice him drag
Jimmy out the first thing
-
to get his laundry
and his clothes pressed
-
so he wouldn't have
no excuse?
-
And he give Willie
the dough
-
to buy his stuff
back from Solly's.
-
And all the rest
have been brushin'
-
and shavin' themselves
with the shakes.
-
He didn't come
to my room.
-
Afraid I might ask him
a few questions.
-
Yeah? I'd say you
was scared of him.
-
You'd lie then.
Don't let him kid you, Rocky.
-
He had his door locked,
I couldn't get in, either.
-
Yeah, who do you think
you're kiddin', Larry?
-
Like he says, if you
was so anxious to croak,
-
why wouldn't you hop off
your fire escape long ago?
-
Because it'd be a coward's
quitting, that's why.
-
He's all
quitter, Rocky.
-
He's a yellow
old faker.
-
You lying punk!
Yeah, keep out of this, you!
-
Shall I give him
the bum's rush, Larry?
-
You don't want him around,
nobody else don't.
-
No, let him stay,
I don't mind.
-
He's nothing to me.
-
You're right.
-
I have nowhere I can go now,
you're the only one
-
in the world
I can turn to.
-
Eh, you're a soft
old sap, Larry.
-
He's a no-good
louse like Hickey.
-
He don't belong!
-
I'm all in,
not a wink of sleep.
-
Larry, I'm sorry
for ridin' you.
-
But you get my goat
when you act as if
-
you didn't care a damn
what happened to me.
-
And you keep your door locked
so I can't talk to you.
-
But that was to keep
Hickey out, wasn't it?
-
I don't blame you, I'm getting
more and more to hate him.
-
More and more
scared of him.
-
Especially since he told us
about his wife being dead.
-
It's that queer
feeling he gives me
-
that I'm mixed up
with him in some way.
-
I don't know why, but it started
me thinking about mother.
-
As if she
was dead.
-
I suppose she
might as well be.
-
It must kill her when
she thinks of me.
-
I know she doesn't want to,
but... she can't help it.
-
After all,
I'm her only kid.
-
She used to spoil me,
and made a pet of me.
-
Once in a
great while...
-
when she
remembered me.
-
As if she was trying to
make up for something.
-
As if she was...
feeling guilty.
-
So I guess she must have
loved me a little,
-
even if she never let it
interfere with her freedom.
-
You know, Larry...
-
I once had a sneaking
suspicion that,
-
if the truth were
known, you were my father.
-
You damned fool!
-
Who put that insane
idea in your head?
-
Anyone in the coast crowd
could tell I never laid eyes
-
on your mother 'till
after you were born.
-
Well, I'd hardly
ask them, would I?
-
I know you're right,
though, because I asked her.
-
She brought me up to be frank
and ask her anything.
-
I was talking about how
she must feel now about me.
-
My getting through
with the Movement.
-
Oh, she'll never
forgive me for that.
-
That must be the final knockout,
if she knows that I was the one
-
who sold out...
Shut up, damn you! Shut up.
-
It'll kill her!
But Larry...
-
I never thought that they
would have caught her!
-
You've got to believe
what the only reason was.
-
Now I'll admit, what I told you
last night... that was a lie.
-
All that bunk
about feeling patriotic
-
and my duty
to my country.
-
But here's the true reason,
the only reason, Larry.
-
See, I got stuck on this
whore... and I wanted dough!
-
That's the only reason,
that's all I did it for!
-
Just the money,
honest!
-
God damn you,
shut up!
-
What the hell
is it to me?
-
What's comin' off here?
Nothing.
-
This young punk
is talking my ear off.
-
He's a worse pest
than Hickey.
-
(yawning)
Oh, yeah, Hickey.
-
Say, listen, what do you
mean about him being scared
-
you'd ask him questions?
What questions?
-
What questions? Well, you noticed
he didn't tell us what his wife died of.
-
Oh, lay off of that,
the poor guy!
-
What are you
gettin' at, anyway?
-
You don't think it's just a gag of his?
No, no I don't.
-
I'm damned sure he brought
death here with him,
-
I can smell the cold touch of it upon him.
Oh, bunk.
-
You got croakin' on
the brain, Old Cemetery.
-
Say, do you mean you think
she committed suicide
-
on account of his
cheatin' or something?
-
It wouldn't surprise me.
But that's crazy.
-
Jees, if she'd done that,
he wouldn't tell us
-
he was glad about it,
would he?
-
You know her
better than that, Larry.
-
You know she'd never
commit suicide.
-
She's like you,
she'll hang on to life
-
even when there's nothing...
And what about you?
-
Be God, if you had
any guts or decency!
-
I'd take that hop off
the fire escape
-
you're too yellow to take, I suppose, ah?
No!
-
I'm done with...
Yeah, I suppose you'd like that!
-
What the hell's
all this about?
-
What do you know
about Hickey's wife?
-
How do you know she didn't...?
He doesn't!
-
Hickey's addled
the little brains he's got.
-
Shove him back
to his table, Rocky.
-
I'm sick of him.
-
You heard Larry!
So move, quick.
-
Gee, Larry... that's
a hell of a way to treat me
-
after I've trusted you,
and I need your help.
-
Jees... if she
committed suicide,
-
you gotta feel sorry
for Hickey, huh?
-
You can understand how
he'd go bughouse, and not be
-
responsible for all the crazy
stunts he's stagin' here.
-
But how can you be
sorry for him when he says
-
he's glad she croaked?
Oh, nuts!
-
I don't get nowhere
tryin' to figure his game.
-
But I know this: He better
lay off of me and my stable.
-
Jees, Larry! What a night
them two pigs give me.
-
When the party went dead,
they pinched a couple of bottles
-
and brung them
up their room.
-
I don't get a wink
of sleep, see?
-
Just as I'd drop off
on that chair there,
-
they come down
lookin' for trouble.
-
Or else they'd raise hell
upstairs, laughin' and singin',
-
so that I'd get scared
they'd get the joint pinched
-
and go up to tell
them to can the noise.
-
And every time they'd crawl my
frame with de same old argument.
-
They'd say:
-
(imitating Maggie)
"So you agree with Hickey, do you?
-
"You dirty little Ginny!
So we're whores, are we?
-
"Well, we agree with Hickey
about you, see?
-
"You're nothin' but a lousy
pimp!" Then I'd slap them.
-
But it don't do no good!
They keep at it over and over.
-
Jees, I get the earache
just thinkin' of it.
-
"Listen," they'd say, "if we're
whores, we got a right to have
-
"a regular pimp and not stand
for no punk imitation!"
-
"We're sick of wearin'
out our dogs poundin'"
-
"the sidewalks for
a double-crossin' bartender,"
-
"when all the thanks we get
is he looks down on us."
-
"Don't expect us to work
tonight, 'cause we won't, see?"
-
"Not if the streets
were blocked with sailors!"
-
"We're goin' on strike!"
-
Whores goin' on strike!
Can you tie that?
-
They'd say:
"We're takin' a holiday.
-
"We're goin' to beat it
to Coney Island and shoot
-
"the chutes, and maybe we'll
come back and maybe we won't.
-
"And you can go to hell!"
So they put on their lids
-
and beat it, the both
of them stinko!
-
Hey, Rocky, Cora wants
a sherry flip, for her nerves.
-
"Sherry flip?"
-
Christ, she don't need nothin'
for her nerve.
-
What's she think this is, the Waldorf?
Yeah, I told her.
-
"What would we use
for sherry?"
-
And there wasn't no egg
unless she laid one.
-
(imitating Cora) She says,
"Is there a law you can't go out"
-
"and buy the makings,
you big tramp?"
-
Ah, the hell with her! She'll
drink booze or nothin'. Oh, jees!
-
A guy oughta give his
bride anything she wants
-
on her weddin' day,
I should think.
-
Pipe the bridegroom, Larry!
All dolled up for the killin'. Aw, shut up.
-
One week on that farm in Jersey,
that's what I'll give you.
-
And you'll come runnin'
in here some night yellin'
-
for a shot of booze because
the crickets is after you.
-
Oh, jees, Chuck, that
louse Hickey's certainly
-
made a prize couple
of suckers outta you.
-
I'd like to give him one sock
in the puss, just one.
-
Oh, can that!
What's he got to do with it?
-
And ain't we always
said we was gonna?
-
So we're gonna, see? And
don't give me no arguments!
-
If only Cora cut out
the beefin',
-
and she don't gimme
a minute's rest all night.
-
It's the same old stuff,
over and over.
-
(imitating Cora's voice)
Do I really want to marry her?
-
I says: "Sure, Baby, why
not?" "Yeah," she says,
-
"but after a week you'll be
thinkin' what a sap you was."
-
"You'll make that an excuse
to go off on a periodical,"
-
"and then I'll be tied
for life to a no-good soak!"
-
"And the first thing
I know you'll have me out"
-
"hustlin' again,
your own wife!"
-
Then she'd bust out cryin',
and I'd get sore.
-
"You're a liar!" I tells her,
"I ain't never taken your dough
-
"except when I was drunk
and not workin'."
-
"Yeah," she says, "and how
long will you stay sober now?
-
"Don't think you can kid me
with that water-wagon bull.
-
"I've heard it too often!"
That'd make me sore,
-
and I'd say: "Don't
call me a liar",
-
"but I wish I was drunk
right now, because if I was,
-
"you wouldn't be keepin' me
awake all night beefin'.
-
You opened your yap, I'd knock
de stuffins outta you!"
-
Then she'd yell:
"That's a sweet way"
-
"to talk to the girl you're
goin' to marry!"
-
Jees, she got me
hangin' in the ropes!
-
I'd like to get a quart
of that redeye under my belt!
-
Well, why the hell
don't you?
-
Sure, you'd like that,
wouldn'tyou? I'm wise to you.
-
You don't wanna
see me get married
-
and settle down,
like a regular guy.
-
You'd like me to stay
paralyzed all the time,
-
so I'd be like you,
a lousy pimp!
-
Listen! I don't take that
even from you, see?
-
Yeah? You wanna make
somethin' of it?
-
Don't make me laugh! I can
lick ten of you with one mitt!
-
Not with lead in
your belly, you won't!
-
Hey you, Rocky
and Chuck, cut it out!
-
Don't let that Hickey
make you crazy.
-
Keep out of our business,
you black bastard.
-
Stay where you belong,
you dirty nigger!
-
You white sons of bitches!
I'll rip your guts out!
-
(glass shattering)
-
That's it! Murder each
other, you damned loons!
-
With Hickey's
blessing!
-
Didn't I tell you he
brought death with him?
-
All right, you...
let go of that shiv,
-
and I'll put
this gun away.
-
(Hugo giggling maniacally)
-
Hello, little people!
Never mind.
-
Soon you will eat hot dogs
beneath the willow trees,
-
and drink free wine!
-
The champagne
was not properly iced.
-
Goddamned liar,
Hickey!
-
Does that prove
I want to be aristocrat?
-
I love only
the proletariat!
-
I will lead them! I will
be like a God to them!
-
They will be
my slaves!
-
I'm very drunk,
no, Larry?
-
I talk foolishness.
-
I am so drunk, Larry,
old friend, am I not?
-
I don't know
what I say.
-
I've never seen you
so paralyzed.
-
Now lay your head on
the table and sleep it off.
-
Yeah, I should sleep...
I'm too crazy drunk.
-
You right, Larry.
-
Bad luck come in the door
the day Hickey come.
-
I'm an old
gamblin' man,
-
and I knows bad luck
when I feels it.
-
But it's white
man's bad luck.
-
He can't jinx me.
-
The bread's cut, and
I finished my job.
-
Now, do I get
the drink I earned?
-
Here's the key
to my room.
-
I ain't
comin' back!
-
I'm goin' to my own
folks where I belong.
-
I'm sick and tired of messin'
around with white men.
-
(glass shattering)
What the hell?
-
I'm only savin' you
the trouble, white boy!
-
Now you don't have to break it
as soon's my back's turned,
-
so there's no
white man can kick about
-
drinkin' from
the same glass!
-
I'm tired of loafin' around
with a lot of bums.
-
I'm a gamblin' man.
-
I'm gonna get in a big crap game
and win me a big bankroll.
-
And then I'll get
the okay to open up
-
my old gamblin' house
for colored men.
-
And then maybe
I comes back here
-
sometimes to see
the bums.
-
And maybe I throws a $20 bill
down on the bar and says:
-
"Drink it up,"
and listen when
-
they all pat me
on the back and say:
-
"Joe, you sure is white,"
but I'll say:
-
"No, I'm black and
my dough is black man's dough!"
-
"And you's proud to drink with
me or you don't get no drink!"
-
Or maybe I'd just says:
"You can all go to hell!"
-
"I don't lower myself
drinkin' with no white trash."
-
And that ain't
no pipe dream.
-
I'll get the money for my stake
today, somewhere, somehow.
-
If I have to borrow
a gun and stick up
-
some white man,
I gets it!
-
You wait and see.
-
Can you beat the nerve
of that "dinge."
-
Jees, if I wasn't
dressed up I'd go out
-
and mop up the street with him.
Oh, let him go.
-
The poor old dope, him
and his gamblin' house.
-
He'll be back tonight
askin' Harry for his room
-
and bummin' me
for a ball.
-
Then I'll be the one
to smash the glass.
-
I'll loin him
his place.
-
Another guy
all dolled up.
-
Got your clothes
from Solly's, huh, Willie?
-
Now you can sell it back
to him again tomorrow. (indistinct)
-
No, I-I'm through
with that stuff.
-
You look sick, Willie; here,
take a ball, will pick you up.
-
Eh, no thanks, the only way
to stop is to stop.
-
I'd have no chance if I
went to the D.A.'s office
-
smelling of booze.
You're really goin' there?
-
I said I was,
didn't I?
-
I just came back here
to rest for a few minutes.
-
I'll show
that cheap drummer!
-
I don't need to have to have
any Dutch courage.
-
But he's, he's been very kind
and generous staking me.
-
You know, my, my
legs are a bit shaky.
-
I better sit down
a while.
-
Here's another one.
-
Hey, good morning,
gentlemen all.
-
And a jolly good
morning it is, too.
-
An eye-opener?
I think not,
-
Rocky, old chum...
not required, you know?
-
Feel extremely fit,
as a matter of fact.
-
Can't say that
I slept much, though,
-
thanks to that interfering
ass, Hickey,
-
and that stupid
bounder of a Boer.
-
I've had about all I can
take from that fellow.
-
Oh, well, it's my own
fault, I suppose, for allowing
-
a brute of a Dutch farmer
to become familiar.
-
Well, it's come
to a parting of the ways.
-
And jolly
good riddance.
-
Oh, that reminds me...
here's my key.
-
I shan't be coming back.
-
Sorry to be leaving good old
Harry and the rest of you,
-
of course, but I simply
cannot continue to live
-
under the same roof
with that fellow.
-
So Hickey's kidded the pants
off of you, too?
-
You think you're
leavin' here, huh?
-
Ja! That's what
he kids himself.
-
Yes, I'm leaving,
Rocky.
-
Not that that ass, Hickey,
has anything to do with it.
-
But been thinking
this over, you know?
-
Time I turned over
a new leaf.
-
He's gonna get a job,
that's what he says.
-
What at,
for Christ's sake?
-
Oh, anything... not manual
labor, of course.
-
Anything that calls for a bit
of brains and education.
-
I'll see a pal of mine
at the Consulate.
-
He promised me whenever
I felt an energetic fit
-
he'd get me a post
with the Cunard.
-
Clark, in the office,
something of that kind.
-
Ja! At Limey Consulate
they promise anything
-
to get rid of him when
he comes there drunk.
-
They're scared to call the
police and have him pinched,
-
because it would scandal
in the papers make
-
about a Limey
officer and gentleman.
-
I only need the post
temporarily, Rocky.
-
Means to an end,
you know.
-
Save enough for
a passage...
-
a first-class passage home,
that's the bright idea.
-
(Wetjoen laughing)
-
He's sailing back
to home, sweet home!
-
That's biggest pipe
dream of all!
-
What little brain
the poor Limey has left
-
that isn't in whiskey pickled,
Hickey has made crazy!
-
Hickey ain't made
no sucker out of you, eh?
-
You're too
foxy, huh?
-
But I bet you think you're goin'
out and land a job, too.
-
I am, ja! For me,
it is easy.
-
Because I put on
no airs of gentleman.
-
I'm not ashamed to work
with my hands.
-
I was a farmer
before the war,
-
when bloody Limey thieves
steal my country.
-
Anyone I ask for job
can see with one look
-
I have the great strength to do
work of ten ordinary mens.
-
Yes, you remember, Chuck,
he gave us a demonstration
-
of his extraordinary
muscles last night
-
when he helped
to move the piano.
-
You couldn't even
hold up your corner.
-
It was your fault the damned
box almost fell over.
-
My hands was sweaty! Could I
help that my hands slip?
-
I could do whole
weight of it lift!
-
In old days in Transvaal, I lift
loaded oxcart by the axle.
-
So, why
shouldn't I get job?
-
That longshoreman
boss, Dan, he tell me
-
any time I like,
he'd take me on.
-
And Benny, from de Market,
he promise me same!
-
You remember, Rocky, it was
one of those rare occasions
-
when the Boer
that walks like a man,
-
spelled with a double "O",
by the way,
-
was buying drinks when Dan
and Benny were stony.
-
They'd have promised
him the bloody moon!
-
(Lewis laughing)
Yeah, yuh big boob.
-
Them birds was only
kiddin' you.
-
(pounding bar) That's lie!
You will see, this morning I get job.
-
I'll show that...
bloody Limey gentleman,
-
and that liar,
Hickey!
-
And I need work
only little while
-
to save money
for my passage home.
-
I need not much money
because I am not ashamed
-
to travel steerage.
-
I don't put on
first-cabin airs!
-
And I can go home
to my country!
-
When I get there, they
will let me in! Heh!
-
There was a rumor
in South Africa
-
that a certain Boer
officer, if you can call
-
the leaders of a rabble of Dutch
farmers officers, he kept
-
advising Cronje to retreat,
and to not stand and fight.
-
And I was right!
I was right!
-
He got surrounded
at Poardeberg!
-
(giggling)
He had to surrender.
-
Good strategy, no doubt,
but a suspicion
-
grew afterwards into a
conviction among the Boers
-
that the officer's caution
was prompted by a desire
-
for his personal
escape.
-
His countrymen were
extremely savage about it,
-
and his
family disowned him.
-
So I imagine there won't be
any welcoming committee waiting
-
on the dock... nor any
delighted relatives
-
making the "veldt" ring
with their happy cries
-
of "Welcome home,
Gen. Wet..."
-
All lies!
You Goddamned Limey!
-
I also have heard rumors
of a Limey officer who
-
after the war
lost all his money
-
gambling when he
was drunk.
-
But they found out it was
regiment money, too, he lost!
-
Ah, you bloody
Dutch scum!
-
Cut it out!
Let him come!
-
I saw them come before!
Modder River, Magersfontein,
-
Spion Kopje, waving their silly
swords, so afraid they couldn't
-
show how brave
they was!
-
And I kill them with
my rifle so easy!
-
Listen to me,
you Cecil!
-
Often when I'm drunk
and kidding you I say I'm sorry
-
I missed you, but now,
by God, I am sober!
-
And I don't joke, and I say it!
(slamming table) Be God!
-
You can't say Hickey hasn't got
the miraculous touch to raise
-
the dead, when he can start
the Boer War raging again!
-
Well... it's time
I was on my merry way.
-
The early bird catches
the job, what?
-
Good-bye and good luck,
Rocky, and the rest of you.
-
By God, if that Limey
can go... I can go.
-
Well, why don't
you beat it?
-
Eh? Oh... just
been thinking.
-
Hardly the decent thing
to push off without
-
saying good-bye
to old Harry.
-
One of the best, old Harry,
and good old Jimmy.
-
They ought to be
down very soon.
-
Oh, I'm sorry.
-
I seem to be
blocking your way out.
-
No... I will wait to say
good-bye to Harry, too.
-
Jees, can you beat
them simps!
-
Oh, hell, I forgot Cora!
She'll be throwin' a fit!
-
That's right, wait on her
and spoil her, you poor sap!
-
Psst! Look here,
Parritt.
-
I'd like to have
a talk with you.
-
About what?
About the trouble you're in.
-
Oh, I know, I know,
you don't admit it.
-
And you're quite right,
that's my advice.
-
Deny everything,
Say, what the hell are you accusing me of?
-
Make no statements whatever
without consulting
-
your attorney,
keep your mouth shut.
-
Look, you can trust me,
I'm a lawyer.
-
And it's occurred to me that
you and I ought to co-operate.
-
Of course I'm... going to see
the D.A. this morning
-
about a job on his staff,
but... that may take time.
-
There may not be...
an immediate opening.
-
And meanwhile it, it would
be a good idea for me to take
-
a case or two, on my own,
just to prove that
-
my... brilliant record in law
school was no flash in the pan.
-
So, why not... retain me
as your attorney?
-
You're crazy, what do I
want with a lawyer?
-
Yeah, that's right,
don't admit anything.
-
But you can trust me, so let's
not beat about the bush.
-
You got in trouble
out on the coast, eh?
-
Now you're in hiding,
any fool can spot that.
-
You... feel safe here, and
maybe you are for a while.
-
But remember, they
get you in the end.
-
(Parritt laughing)
I know, from my father's experience.
-
Nobody could have felt
safer than he did.
-
When anybody mentioned the law
to him, he nearly died laughing.
-
But...
You crazy mutt!
-
(shouting)
You hear that, Larry?
-
This damned fool here thinks
the cops are after me!
-
I wish to God
they were.
-
And so should you, if you
had the honor of a louse!
-
Oh, and you're the guy
who kids himself he's through
-
with the Movement; you're
still in love with it!
-
You mean you're not
in trouble, Parritt?
-
I was hoping...
Eh, never mind.
-
No, no offense
meant... Parritt.
-
That's all right, Willie...
I'm not sore at you.
-
It's that damned yellow
faker that gets in my goat.
-
I think I
understand, Larry.
-
It's really mother that
you still love... isn't it?
-
In spite of that dirty
deal she gave you.
-
But what the hell
did you expect?
-
She was never true to anyone
but herself and the Movement.
-
But Larry, I can,
I can understand
-
how you still
can't help feeling.
-
See, because I still
love her too.
-
So you see,
I couldn't have
-
expected that they'd
catch her, Larry.
-
You gotta believe me that I
only sold them out just to get
-
a few lousy dollars
to blow in on a whore.
-
Now there's no
other reason, honest!
-
For the love of Christ,
will you leave me in peace!
-
If you don't keep still, you'll
be saying something soon
-
that will make you vomit
your own soul like a drink
-
of nickel rotgut
that won't stay down!
-
Larry, don't go!
You've got to help me!
-
Set 'em up, Rocky! I swore
I'd have no more drinks
-
on Hickey, if I died of drought,
but I've changed my mind!
-
Be God, he
owed it to me!
-
I'd be blind
to the world now,
-
if it was the Iceman of Death
himself treating.
-
What made me say
that, I wonder.
-
Oh, my God, it fits,
for Death was
-
the iceman that Hickey
called to his home.
-
Oh, forget
the iceman gag!
-
The poor dame
is dead!
-
Go on
and get paralyzed.
-
I'll be glad to see one bum
in this dump act natural.
-
Come and sit
here, Mac.
-
You're just the man
I wanna see.
-
If I'm to take
your case, we ought
-
to have a talk before we leave.
There'll be no talk.
-
You damned fool,
do you think I'd have
-
your father's son
for my lawyer?
-
They'd take
one look at you
-
and bounce us both
out on our necks.
-
Hmm!
I don't need a lawyer, anyway.
-
Hell with the law!
-
All I've got to do
is see the right ones,
-
get them to pass
the word.
-
They will, too,
they know I was framed.
-
And once the word
is passed,
-
it's as good as
done, law or no law!
-
Here's my key,
Rocky.
-
I'd rather sleep
in the gutter than spend
-
another night under the same
roof as that drummer.
-
Son of a drummer!
Well, you birds give me a pain.
-
It'd serve you right
if I wouldn't give
-
the keys back
to you tonight.
-
Hello, everybody!
Here we go!
-
Hi-Hi-Hickey just told us
ain't it time we beat it,
-
if we was
really goin'.
-
So we're showin' the
bastard, ain't we, honey?
-
He's comin' right down
with Harry and Jimmy.
-
Jees... them two look like they
was goin' to the electric chair!
-
Well, let's get
goin', honey.
-
Before
he comes down.
-
Sure, anything you say, baby.
Yeah?
-
Well, I say we stop at
the first regular dump
-
and, and you gotta blow me
to a sherry flip,
-
or four or five,
if I want 'em!
-
Or all bets is off!
But you got a fine bun on now!
-
Oh, cheap skate.
-
Well, here, use my money
then, if you're so stingy.
-
You'll grab it all, anyways,
right after de ceremony.
-
I know you.
-
Here, you
big tramp.
-
Keep your
lousy dough!
-
And don't show your legs off
to these bums when you're goin'
-
to be married if you don't
want a sock in the puss!
-
Oh, all right,
honey!
-
Say, why don't all you barflies
come to the weddin'?
-
Well, we're
goin', guys.
-
Say, Rocky, are you
goin' "deef"?
-
I said me and Chuck
was goin' now!
-
Well, good-bye, give
my love to Jersey.
-
Well, ain't you
even goin' to wish us
-
happiness, you dirty
little Ginny?
-
Sure...
here's hopin' you
-
don't murder each other
before next week.
-
Oh, baby, what do we
care for that pimp?
-
Here's Hickey comin'!
Let's get outta here!
-
(voices of Hickey and Harry
approaching)
-
Well, here we are, we got
this far at least.
-
Good work, Jimmy.
-
I told you you weren't half as
sick as you're pretending to be.
-
No excuse whatever
for postponing now.
-
Kindly keep your hands
to yourself.
-
I merely mentioned
I would feel more fit tomorrow.
-
But... it might as well
be today, I suppose.
-
Finish it now so it'll be dead
forever, and you'll be free.
-
Well, cheer up,
Harry.
-
You noticed your
rheumatism didn't bother you
-
coming down the stairs,
didn't you?
-
You're the damnedest
one for alibis, Governor.
-
I can't hear you...
You're a liar!
-
I've had rheumatism
on and off for 20 years.
-
Ever since Bessie died.
Yes, we all know
-
it's the kind of rheumatism
you turn on and off.
-
We're on to you,
you old faker!
-
Bejees, what are all you bums
hanging round staring at me for?
-
Why don't you get
the hell out of here
-
and 'tend to your own business,
like Hickey's told you?
-
Yes, Harry, I certainly
thought they would have
-
had the guts to have
been gone by this time.
-
Or maybe I did
have my doubts.
-
Because I know exactly
what you're up against, boys.
-
I know you'll turn into such
a coward that you'll grab
-
at any lousy excuse not
to kill your pipe dreams.
-
And yet, as I've said
over and over again,
-
it's exactly those damned
lying tomorrow dreams
-
that keep you from
making peace with yourself.
-
So you've got to kill them,
like I did mine.
-
Well, come on,
boys, get moving!
-
Who's going to start
the ball rolling?
-
Well you, captain,
and you, general.
-
You're nearest
to the door.
-
And besides, you're
old war heroes.
-
You ought to lead
this forlorn hope.
-
Well, come on, now!
And show us a little
-
of that old
Battle of The Modder River
-
spirit we've heard
so much about.
-
You can't hang around
here all day looking
-
like you were scared the street
outside would bite you.
-
Right you are, Mr. Nosey
Bloody Parker!
-
Time I pushed off.
-
Was only waiting to say good-bye
to you, Harry, old chum.
-
Good-bye, captain,
hope you have luck.
-
Oh, I'm bound to, old chap,
and the same to you.
-
By God, if that
Limey can, I can.
-
(Wetjoen grunting)
-
Well, next?
-
Come on, Mac.
-
It's a fine
summer's day.
-
That's the stuff,
Mac.
-
Good-bye, Harry, thanks
for all your kindness.
-
That's
the way, Willie.
-
Oh, the D.A.'s
a busy man, Willie.
-
You can't keep him waiting
all day, you know.
-
Good luck,
Willie.
-
Now it's your turn,
Jimmy, old pal.
-
Jimmy.
-
You can't do that to yourself,
Jimmy, old pal!
-
One drink on top
of your hangover
-
on an empty stomach,
you'll be oreyeyed.
-
Tomorrow... I'll be
in good shape tomorrow!
-
All right,
I'm going.
-
Take your hands
off me!
-
Dirty swine!
-
(laughing)
All set for an alcohol rub!
-
I... no hard feelings,
I know how he feels.
-
I wrote the book!
I've seen the day if...
-
anybody forced me
to face the truth
-
about my pipe dreams,
I'd have shot them dead!
-
Well, Governor...
Jimmy made the grade.
-
Now it's your turn.
-
Leave Harry
alone, damn you!
-
I'd make up my mind
about myself if I
-
were you, Larry,
and not bother over Harry.
-
He doesn't need anyone's bum
pity, do you, Governor?
-
No, bejees! Keep your nose
out of this, Larry.
-
I've always been going
to take this walk, ain't I?
-
You bums want to keep me locked
up in here as if I was in jail!
-
I've stood it
long enough.
-
I'll do as I
damned please, bejees.
-
You keep your nose
out too, Hickey.
-
Bejees, you'd think you was
the boss of this dump, not me.
-
What the hell's
to be scared of?
-
Sure I'm all right! Just taking
a stroll around my own ward.
-
What's the weather like outside, Rocky?
Fine day, boss.
-
Sorry I can't hear you.
-
Don't look fine
to me.
-
Looks if it'd pour down
cats and dogs any minute.
-
My rheumati...
No, no, must be my eyes.
-
Half blind, bejees.
-
Makes things look black;
I see now it's a fine day.
-
Too damned hot for a walk,
though, if you ask me, eh?
-
Well, do me good to sweat
the booze out of me.
-
But I'll have to watch out
for the damned automobiles.
-
Wasn't none of them
around the last time.
-
From what I've seen
through the window,
-
they'd run over you as
soon as look at you.
-
Well,
so long.
-
Bejees, where are you, Hickey?
It's time we got started.
-
No, no, Harry,
can't be done.
-
You got to keep a date
with yourself alone.
-
Hell of a guy
you are.
-
I thought you'd be willing
to help me across the street,
-
seeing I'm half blind!
Half "deef," too.
-
I can't hear those
damned automobiles!
-
Oh, the hell
with you!
-
I've never, never needed
no one's help and I don't now.
-
I'll take a good long walk
now I've started.
-
See all my old friends.
-
Bejees, they must have
given me up for dead.
-
But they know it was grief over
Bessie's death that made me...
-
Well, the sooner
I get started...
-
You know, Hickey,
that's what gets me.
-
I can't help thinking
the last time I went out,
-
was to Bessie's
funeral.
-
After she'd gone, I didn't
feel life was worth living.
-
I can't feel it's right for me
to go, even now, Hickey.
-
It's like I was doing
wrong to her memory.
-
Now, Governor, you
can't let yourself
-
get away with
that one any more.
-
What's that?
I can't hear you.
-
Bejees, I remember... clear as
day, the last time before she...
-
(weeping)
It was a fine Sunday morning.
-
We went out
to church together.
-
It's a great act,
Governor,
-
but I know better
and so do you.
-
You never did
want to go to church
-
or any place else
with her.
-
She was always on your neck,
wanting you to have ambition
-
and go out and do things,
when all you wanted to do
-
was to get
drunk in peace.
-
Can't hear a word
you're saying.
-
He's a God damned
liar, anyway!
-
Bejees, you son of a bitch!
If there was a mad dog out there
-
I'd go and shake hands with it
rather than stay here with you!
-
(whispering to himself)
-
Jees, he made it!
-
I'd give you 50 to 1
he'd never...
-
Oh, he stopped.
-
I'll bet you he's comin' back.
Of course he's coming back.
-
By tonight they'll
all be here again,
-
you dumbbell, that's
the whole point.
-
No, he ain't neither!
He's gone to the curb.
-
He's lookin' up and down,
scared stiff of automobiles.
-
They ain't more
than two an hour
-
comes down this street,
the old boob!
-
(door opening)
-
Bejees, give me
a drink, quick!
-
Scared me out
of a year's growth!
-
Bejees, that guy
ought to be pinched!
-
Bejees, it ain't safe
to walk in the streets!
-
Give me that bottle.
-
You seen it, didn't you, Rocky?
Seen what?
-
That automobile,
you dumb Wop!
-
Fella driving it must
be drunk or crazy.
-
He'd run right over me
if I hadn't jumped!
-
Larry, have
a drink.
-
Come on, everybody,
have a drink.
-
Have a cigar, Rocky, I know
you hardly touch it.
-
This is one time
I do touch it!
-
And I'm goin'
to get stinko, see?
-
Well, jees, Harry! I thought
you had some guts!
-
I was bettin' you'd make it
and show that four-flusher up.
-
Automobile, hell! Who
do you think you're kiddin'?
-
There was no automobile!
You just quit cold!
-
I guess I ought to know!
Bejees, it almost killed me!
-
Now, now, Governor,
don't be foolish.
-
You've faced the test
and you've come through,
-
and you're rid of that
nagging dream stuff now.
-
You know you can't
believe it any more.
-
You saw it,
didn't you, Larry?
-
Have a drink, have another!
Have all you want!
-
We'll, we'll go, go on a
grand old souse together.
-
You saw that automobile,
didn't you?
-
Sure, I saw it, Harry,
you had a narrow escape.
-
Be God, I thought
you were a goner.
-
What the hell are you
doing, Larry?
-
Remember what I told you
about the wrong kind of pity,
-
now leave him alone!
-
You'd think I was trying to harm
him, the fool way you act.
-
Why, there isn't
anything I wouldn't do
-
for Harry,
and he knows it.
-
All I wanted was to
fix it so he'd finally be
-
at peace with himself.
-
And if you'll just wait until
the final returns are in,
-
that's exactly what
I've accomplished.
-
Come on, Governor, what's
the use of being stubborn,
-
now when it's
over and dead?
-
Give up that ghost
automobile.
-
Yeah, what's
the use now?
-
It's all a lie...
no automobile.
-
Bejees, something
ran over me.
-
Must have been
myself, I guess.
-
I guess
I'll sit down.
-
Feel all in.
-
Like a corpse,
bejees.
-
Hello, Hugo,
coming up for air?
-
You stay passed out,
that's the right dope.
-
There ain't any cool
willow trees,
-
except you grow
your own in a bottle.
-
(Hugo giggling)
-
Hello, Harry.
-
Stupid proletarian
monkey-face!
-
I will drink champagne
beneath the wi-llow...
-
But the slaves must
ice it properly!
-
Goddamned Hickey!
-
Peddler pimp for
nouveau-riche capitalism!
-
When I lead the jackass mob
to the sack of Babylon,
-
I will make them hang
him to the first lamppost!
-
Good work... I'll help
pull the rope.
-
Here... have
a drink, Hugo.
-
Eh, no,
thank you.
-
I'm too crazy drunk... I hear
myself say crazy things.
-
Do not listen,
please!
-
Larry will tell you,
I've never been so crazy drunk.
-
I must
sleep it off.
-
What's the matter,
Harry? You look funny.
-
(exclamatory sighing)
-
You look dead!
-
What's happened?
I don't know you!
-
Listen... I feel
I'm dying, too.
-
Because I'm
so crazy drunk.
-
It's very necessary
that I sleep!
-
I can't sleep
here with you!
-
You look dead!
-
Another one who's begun
to enjoy your peace.
-
Oh, I know
it's rough on him
-
right now, same
as it is on Harry.
-
That's just
the first shock.
-
I promise you they'll
both be all right.
-
And you believe that?
-
I see you do,
you mad fool.
-
Of course
I believe it.
-
I know from my own
experience.
-
And now it's my
turn, I suppose?
-
What is it I'm to do to achieve
this blessed peace of yours?
-
We've discussed
all of that, Larry.
-
Just stop lying
to yourself.
-
You think when I say
I'm finished with life,
-
and tired of watching the stupid
greed of the human circus,
-
and I'll welcome closing my
eyes in the long sleep of death,
-
you think that's
a coward's lie?
-
Well, what
do you think?
-
I'm afraid
to live, am I?
-
And even more
afraid to die!
-
So I sit here
with my pride drowned
-
on the bottom of a bottle,
keeping drunk so I won't see
-
myself shaking in
my britches with fright,
-
or hear myself whining
and praying:
-
"Beloved Christ, let me live
a little longer at any price.
-
"If it's only for a few days
more, or a few hours even,
-
"have mercy, Almighty God,
and let me still clutch greedily
-
"to my yellow heart,
this sweet treasure,
-
"this jewel beyond price,
this dirty, stinking bit
-
of withered old flesh which
is my beautiful little life!"
-
You think you'll make me
admit that to myself?
-
But you just did
admit it, didn't you?
-
That's the stuff,
Hickey.
-
Show that
old yellow faker up.
-
He can't play dead
on me like this.
-
Yes, you're gonna have
to settle with him, Larry.
-
I'm leaving you
entirely in his hands.
-
And he'll do as good a job
as I could at making you
-
give up the old
grandstand bluff.
-
Close that big clam
of yours, Hickey.
-
Bejees, you're
a worse gabber
-
than that nagging
bitch, Bessie, was.
-
Jees, did you
hear that?
-
What's wrong with this booze?
There's no kick in it.
-
Jees, Larry, Hugo
had it right.
-
He does look
like he croaked.
-
Oh, don't be a damned
fool, he's all right.
-
It's just
the first shock.
-
You are all right,
aren't you, Harry?
-
I... I want to
pass out, like Hugo.
-
It's the peace of death
you've brought him.
-
That's a lie!
-
Well, well, you did manage to
get a rise out of me that time,
-
didn't you? That's just
plain damned foolishness.
-
Look at me,
I've been through it.
-
Do I look dead?
-
Just leave Harry alone
and give him time.
-
It's just the first shock,
he'll be all right.
-
He'll be
a new man, like I am.
-
How's it coming,
Governor?
-
Beginning to feel
free, aren't you?
-
Relieved and not
guilty any more?
-
Hmm, bejees! You must
have been monkeying
-
with the booze too,
you interfering bastard!
-
There's no life
in it now.
-
I wanna get drunk
and pass out.
-
I'll admit I didn't think
it'd hit him so hard.
-
He's always been a
happy-go-lucky slob,
-
like I was.
-
Well, it hit me hard, too,
but only for a minute.
-
And then I felt
as if a ton of guilt
-
had been lifted
off my mind.
-
I saw what had happened
was the only possible way
-
for the peace
of all concerned.
-
What was it happened?
Tell us that.
-
And don't try
to get out of it,
-
I want
a straight answer!
-
I think it's something you
drove someone else to do.
-
"Someone else?"
-
What did your wife
die of?
-
You've kept that
a deep secret.
-
That's not very
considerate of you, Larry.
-
But if you insist
on knowing now,
-
there's no reason
you shouldn't.
-
It was a bullet through the head
that killed poor Evelyn.
-
Who, who
the hell cares?
-
The hell with her and that
nagging old hag, Bessie!
-
Christ! You had
the right dope, Larry.
-
You drove your poor wife
to suicide, I knew it.
-
Be God, I don't blame her!
I'd almost do the same thing
-
myself to get
rid of you.
-
It's what you'd like
to drive us all to...
-
I'm sorry, Hickey,
I'm sorry.
-
I'm a rotten louse
to throw that in your face.
-
Oh, that's
all right, Larry.
-
But don't jump
to conclusions.
-
I didn't say poor Evelyn
committed suicide.
-
That's the last thing she'd
have done, while I was
-
still alive so she could take
care of me and forgive me.
-
No, if you'd known
her at all,
-
you'd never have
such a crazy suspicion.
-
No, I'm sorry to tell you
that my poor wife was killed.
-
She was murdered?
-
You're a
liar, Larry!
-
You must be crazy
to say that to me.
-
You know damn well
she's still alive.
-
"Murdered?"
Who done it?
-
Shut up, you dumb Wop! It's none
of our damned business!
-
Leave him alone.
-
Still the old
grandstand bluff?
-
Or just some more
bum pity?
-
The police don't know
who killed her yet, Rocky.
-
But I expect they will
before very long.
-
How's it coming,
Governor?
-
Getting over
the first shock?
-
Beginning to feel
free of guilt
-
and lying hopes, and at
peace with yourself?
-
Somebody croaked
your Evelyn, eh?
-
Bejees, my bets
are on the iceman!
-
But who
the hell cares?
-
Let's get drunk
and pass out.
-
Bejees, what did you do
to the booze, Hickey?
-
There's no damned
life left in it.
-
Larry, don't look
like that.
-
You've got to believe
what I told you!
-
It had nothing
to do with her!
-
It was for a few
lousy dollars, honest!
-
(banging table)
Don't be a fool! Buy me a drink!
-
But no more wine!
It is not properly iced!
-
Goddamned stupid
proletarian slaves!
-
Buy me a drink
or I'll have you shot!
-
(crying)
Please, for God's sake!
-
I am not drunk enough!
I cannot sleep!
-
Life is a crazy
monkey-face.
-
Always there's blood
beneath the willow trees!
-
I hate it!
-
I'm afraid!
-
Oh, please, please,
please!
-
I'm too crazy drunk!
I say crazy things!
-
For God's sake,
do not listen to me!
-
Do not listen
to me!
-
(weeping)
I'm afraid!
-
You're beginning
to worry me, Governor.
-
Something is holding
you up somewhere,
-
but I don't see why.
-
You've faced the truth
about yourself.
-
You've done what
you had to do
-
to kill your nagging
pipe dreams.
-
Oh, I know it
knocks you cold.
-
But only for a minute.
-
Then you'll see it was the
only possible way to peace.
-
And you'll feel happy,
like I did.
-
That's what worries me
about you, Governor.
-
It's time you began
to feel happy.
-
Come on, you
damned nigger!
-
Beat it in the back room,
it's after hours.
-
(Joe grumbling)
-
Oh, the hell with it!
Let the dump get pinched.
-
I'm through with this
lousy job, anyway.
-
Been scrappin',
huh?
-
Started off on your periodical, ain't you?
Yeah, ain't you glad?
-
That I'm out on my feet
holdin' down your job?
-
You said if I'd take your day,
you'd relieve me at 6:00.
-
And here it's
1/2 past 1:00 A.M.!
-
Well, you're takin'
over now, get me?
-
No matter how
plastered you are!
-
Ah, "plastered?"
Hell, I wish I was!
-
I've lapped up a gallon,
but it don't hit me right.
-
And the hell with the job!
I'm goin' to tell Harry
-
I'm quittin'!
Yeah? Well, I'm quittin' too.
-
I've played sucker for that
crummy blonde long enough,
-
lettin' her kid me into workin';
from now on I take it easy.
-
I'm glad you're gettin'
some sense.
-
Yeah, I hope you're
gettin' some.
-
By the way, the prize
sap you've been,
-
tendin' bar when you got two
good hustlers in your stable.
-
Yeah, but I ain't
no sap now.
-
I'll loin them, when they
get back from Coney.
-
Jees, that Cora sure
played you for a dope.
-
Feedin' you that
marriage-on-a-farm hop!
-
Yeah, Hickey got it right,
a lousy pipe dream.
-
It was her pullin' sherry
flips on me woke me up.
-
All the way
walkin' to the ferry,
-
every gin mill we come to
she'd drag me in to blow her.
-
I got thinkin' "Christ,
what won't she want when"
-
she gets the ring on
her finger and I'm hooked?
-
So I tells her at the ferry:
"Kiddo, you can go"
-
"to Jersey or to hell,
but count me out!"
-
She says it was her
told you to go to hell,
-
because you start
hittin' the booze.
-
I got thinkin' too
"Jees, won't I look sweet"
-
"with a wife that if you put
all the guys she stayed with"
-
"side by side,
they'd reach to Chicago."
-
That kind of dame,
you can't trust 'em.
-
The minute your back
is turned, they're
-
cheatin' with
the iceman or someone!
-
Hickey done me a favor,
makin' me wake up!
-
Only it was fun, kinda,
me and Cora kiddin' ourselves.
-
Say, where is that
son of a bitch Hickey?
-
I want one good sock
at day guy, just one!
-
And the next buttin' in he'll
do will be in the morgue!
-
I'll take a chance on goin'
to the chair! Piano!
-
Keep away from
him, Chuck.
-
He ain't here now, anyway;
he went out to phone, he said.
-
I got a hunch he beat it,
but if he does come back,
-
you don't know him if anyone
asks you, get me?
-
The chair, maybe that's
where he's goin'.
-
I don't know nuttin',
see? But it looks
-
like he
croaked his wife.
-
You mean she really
was cheatin' on him?
-
Then I don't blame the guy!
And who's blamin' him?
-
Is any of the gang wise?
Larry is.
-
And the boss
ought to be.
-
I tried to wise the rest
of them up to stay clear of him,
-
but they're all so licked,
I don't know if they got it.
-
Oh, I don't give a damn
what he done to his wife.
-
But if he gets the hot seat
I won't go into no mournin'.
-
Me, neither. Not after his
throwin' it in my face I'm a pimp.
-
What if I am? And what's
he done to Harry?
-
Jees, the poor
old slob is so licked
-
he can't even get drunk!
And all the gang.
-
I couldn't help feelin'
sorry for the poor bums
-
when they showed up
tonight, one by one,
-
lookin' like pooches with
their tails between their legs
-
that everyone'd been
kickin' 'till they
-
was too punch-drunk
to feel it no more.
-
Jimmy Tomorrow
was the last.
-
Schwartz, the copper,
brung him in.
-
Seen him sittin' on the
dock on West Street,
-
lookin' at the water
and cryin'.
-
Schwartz thought he was drunk,
and I let him think it.
-
But he was cold sober;
he was tryin' to jump in
-
and didn't have
the nerve, I figured it.
-
Jees, there ain't
enough guts left
-
in the whole gang
to battle a mosquito.
-
Oh, to hell with 'em!
Who cares? Gimme a drink.
-
I see you been hittin'
the redeye too.
-
Yeah, but it don't do no good,
I can't get drunk right.
-
This dirty "dinge" was able to
get his "snootful" and pass out.
-
Jees, even Hickey
can't faze a nigger.
-
You'd think he was fazed
if you'd seen him come in.
-
Stinko, and he pulled
a gun and said
-
he'd plug Hickey
for insultin' him.
-
Then he dropped it
and began to cry,
-
and said he wasn't a gamblin'
man or a tough guy no more.
-
He got drunk panhandlin' drinks
in nigger joints, I suppose.
-
I guess they felt
sorry for him.
-
He ain't got no business
in the bar after hours.
-
Why don't you
chuck him out?
-
Oh, to hell with it! Who cares?
Yeah, I don't.
-
Excuse me,
white boy.
-
I don't want to be
where I'm not wanted.
-
(Chuck)
My pig's in the back room, ain't she?
-
I wanna collect the dough
I wouldn't take this mornin',
-
like a sucker,
before she blows it.
-
(Rocky)
I'm comin', too, I'm through workin'.
-
I ain't no
lousy bartender.
-
I'm waitin', baby, dig!
Yeah.
-
I been expectin' you,
I got it all ready here.
-
Jees, imagine me
kiddin' myself
-
I wanted to marry a drunken pimp.
That's nothin', baby.
-
Imagine what a sap
I'd have been when I
-
can get your dough
just as easy without it.
-
Hello,
Old Cemetery.
-
Hello, Tightwad,
you still around?
-
Ask Larry.
-
He knows I'm here, all right,
although he's pretending not to.
-
He'd like to forget
I'm alive!
-
He's trying
to kid himself
-
with that grandstand
philosopher stuff.
-
But he knows he can't
get away with that now!
-
He kept himself
locked up in his room
-
until a while ago, alone
with a bottle of booze.
-
He couldn't
make it work, though,
-
he couldn't even get drunk!
So he had to come out.
-
There must have been
something up there
-
he's even more scared
to face than me and Hickey.
-
I guess he got looking
at the fire escape.
-
Thinking how handy it was,
if he was really sick of life
-
and only had
the nerve to die!
-
And he's been thinking
about me too, Rocky.
-
He's trying to figure a way
to get out of helping me.
-
He loved her too,
so he thinks I ought
-
to take a hop off
the fire escape.
-
For God's sake!
Can't you say something?!
-
Larry!
-
Larry... I think what
Hickey must have done
-
has got me so I don't know
any more what I did or why.
-
(crying)
I can't go on like this!
-
I've got to do
what I got to do!
-
God damn you! Are you trying
to make me your executioner?
-
Execution?
-
Then you, you
think I...
-
I don't think anything.
-
I... I suppose you think
I ought to die, uh?
-
Because I sold out
a lot of loudmouth fakers?
-
Ha!
-
Don't make me laugh!
I ought to get a medal!
-
Oh, you little sap!
-
You must still
believe in the Movement.
-
Hickey's right about
him, isn't he, Rocky?
-
An old no-good drunken
tramp, as dumb as he is,
-
ought to take a hop
off the fire escape.
-
Sure, why don't he?
Or you, or me?
-
Oh, what the hell's
the difference? Who cares?
-
What am I doin' here
with "youse" two?
-
I remember I had somethin'
on my mind to tell you, what?
-
Oh, I got it now.
-
I was thinkin' how you
was both regular guys.
-
I thinks "Ain't two guys
like them saps to be hangin'"
-
"around like a couple of stew
bums and wastin' themselves?"
-
What do you think, Parritt?
You ain't a bad-lookin' guy.
-
You could easy
make some gal
-
who's a good hustler,
and start a stable.
-
And I'll help you
and wise you up
-
to the inside dope
on the game.
-
Well,
what about it?
-
What if they do
call you a pimp?
-
I don't want anything
to do with whores!
-
I wish they were all
in jail or dead!
-
All right,
stay a bum!
-
Well, how about you,
Larry? You ain't dumb.
-
Sure, you're old,
but that don't matter.
-
All the girls think
you're aces.
-
They fall for you
like you were their uncle
-
or old man,
or somethin'.
-
They like takin'
care of you.
-
And the cops around here,
they like you too.
-
You wouldn't have to worry
where the next drink's
-
comin' from, or wear
dirty clothes.
-
Well... don't it
look good to you?
-
No, it doesn't
look good, Rocky.
-
I mean, the peace
Hickey's brought you.
-
It isn't contented
enough, if you have to
-
make a pimp
of everyone else.
-
I'm a sap to waste
my time on you.
-
A stew bum
is a stew bum.
-
Like I was sayin' to Chuck,
if anyone asks you,
-
you don't know nothin'
about Hickey, get me?
-
You never even heard
he had a wife.
-
Jees, we all ought to get drunk
and stage a celebration
-
when that bastard
goes to the chair.
-
Be God, I'll
celebrate with you.
-
Drink to his long,
long life in hell.
-
The poor devil!
-
No, that's pity,
the wrong kind.
-
He'll welcome
the chair.
-
Yes, what are you so damned
scared about death for?
-
I don't want
your lousy pity.
-
(Rocky)
I hope he don't come back, Larry.
-
We don't know
nothin' now.
-
We're only
guessin', see?
-
But if that bastard
keeps on talkin'...
-
He'll come back and
he'll keep on talking.
-
He's lost his confidence
that the peace he's sold us
-
is the real McCoy, and it's
made him uneasy about his own.
-
He'll have to prove to us...
That's a damned lie, Larry.
-
I haven't lost
confidence.
-
By God, when I made up my mind
to sell someone something
-
I thought they ought
to want, I've sold 'em.
-
I mean, I don't think is very
kind of you to make that kind
-
of a crack when I've been
doing my best to help.
-
Keep away from me,
will you?
-
I don't know nothin'
about you, see?
-
Well, how is it
coming, everybody?
-
I'm sorry I had to leave you
for a little while,
-
but there was something
I had to get finally settled.
-
It's all fixed now.
-
When are you going
to do somethin'
-
about this booze, Hickey?
We can't pass out,
-
and you
promised us peace!
-
Yes, yes!
I wonder why that is.
-
For God's sake,
Harry! You're still
-
harping on that
same damn nonsense?
-
You've kept it up
all afternoon and night,
-
and you got everybody else
singing the same crazy tune!
-
I've had about all I can
stand, that's why I phoned.
-
Excuse me, boys and girls,
I-I don't mean that.
-
It's just that I
worry about you
-
when you play dead
on me like this.
-
I was hoping by
the time I got back
-
you'd be like
you ought to be.
-
I thought you were deliberately
holding back on me before
-
when I was here, because
you didn't want to give me
-
the satisfaction of showing me
that I had the right dope!
-
And I did have, I know
from my own experience.
-
But I've explained that
a million times.
-
Now you've all done
what you needed to do.
-
By rights you should be
contented with yourself, and
-
free from the lying hopes and
nagging dreams that torment you.
-
But here you are,
sitting around like
-
a lot of stiffs
cheating the undertaker!
-
I can't figure it...
-
unless it's just your damned
stubborn pigheadedness.
-
Oh, hell... don't act
like this with me, gang!
-
You're my old pals,
the only friends I've got!
-
You know, the one
thing that I want
-
is to see you
happy before I go.
-
And there's damned
little time left now.
-
I've made a date
for 2:00 o'clock.
-
So, we've got to get busy right
away and find out what's wrong!
-
Can't you appreciate what
you've got, for God's sake?
-
Don't you see you're free
to be yourselves now,
-
without feeling
remorse or guilt,
-
or having to lie to yourselves
about reforming tomorrow?
-
Don't you see?
There is no tomorrow now!
-
You're rid of it forever,
you've killed it!
-
You don't have to care
a damn about anything any more!
-
You've finally got the game of
life licked, don't you see that?
-
Then why the hell don't you get
drunk and sing "Sweet Adeline"?
-
Why don't you laugh and
celebrate, and get pie-eyed?
-
The only reason I can think
of is you're putting on
-
this rotten half-dead act
just to get back at me,
-
because you
hate my guts.
-
God, don't do
that, gang!
-
It makes me feel like hell
to think that you hate me.
-
Makes me feel that you
suspected that I hated you.
-
But that is a lie!
-
Oh, I know I used to hate
everybody in the world
-
that wasn't as rotten
a bastard as I was,
-
but that's when I
was still living in hell!
-
Before I faced
the truth.
-
And saw the one possible way
to free poor Evelyn,
-
and give her the peace that
she'd always dreamed about.
-
Oh, put a bag over it!
To hell with Evelyn.
-
What if she
was cheatin'?
-
And who cares what you did
to her? That's your funeral.
-
We don't give
a damn, see?
-
All we want
outta you is keep
-
the hell away from us
and give us a rest!
-
The one possible way
to make up to her
-
for all that I
made her go through,
-
and get her rid
of me so that I
-
couldn't make her
suffer any more,
-
and she wouldn't have
to forgive me again.
-
I saw I couldn't do it
by killing myself,
-
like I wanted to
for a long time.
-
That would have been
the last straw for her.
-
She'd have died
of a broken heart
-
to think that I
could do that to her.
-
She'd have blamed
herself, too.
-
Or I just couldn't
run away from her.
-
She'd have died
of grief and humiliation
-
if I'd done
that to her.
-
She'd have thought
I stopped loving her.
-
You see... Evelyn
loved me, and I loved her.
-
That was the trouble.
-
Oh, it would have been easy
to find a way out
-
if she hadn't
loved me so much.
-
Or if I hadn't
loved her.
-
But as it was, there was
only one possible way.
-
I had to kill her.
-
Mad fool! Can't you
keep your mouth shut?
-
We may hate you for what
you've done this time,
-
but we remember the old times,
when you brought laughter
-
and kindness here
instead of death!
-
We don't want
to know things
-
that will make us help
send you to the chair!
-
Oh, shut up!
-
You yellow faker! Can't
you face anything?
-
Wouldn't I deserve
the chair too if I...
-
It's, it's worse
if you kill someone
-
and they have
to go on living.
-
I'd be glad
of the chair.
-
It'd wipe it out and
square me with myself.
-
I wish you'd get rid
of that bastard, Larry.
-
I can't have him
pretending there's something
-
in common between
him and me.
-
It's what's in your
heart that counts.
-
And there was love
in my heart, not hate.
-
You're a liar!
-
I don't hate her!
I couldn't!
-
And anyway, it had
nothing to do with her!
-
You ask Larry!
-
God damn you, stop shoving
your rotten soul in my lap!
-
Don't worry about
the chair, Larry.
-
I know you're still
terrified by death.
-
But when you've made peace
with yourself, like I have,
-
you won't give
a damn.
-
Listen, everybody.
-
I've made up my mind, the only
way I can clear this up for you,
-
so you'll realize how contented
and carefree you ought to feel,
-
now that I've made you
get rid of your pipe dreams,
-
is to show you what a pipe dream
did to me and Evelyn.
-
And I'm certain, if I tell you
about it from the beginning,
-
you'll appreciate what I've
done for you and why I did it.
-
And how damned grateful
you ought to be,
-
instead of hating me.
-
You see, even as
kids, Evelyn and me...
-
(banging glass on table)
All we want is to pass out and get drunk,
-
and a little peace!
-
(approving whispering
and glasses banging tables)
-
All right, if that's
the way you feel!
-
I don't want to cram
it down your throats!
-
I don't need to tell anyone,
I don't feel guilty.
-
I'm only worried
about you.
-
What did you do
to this booze?
-
That's what
we'd like to hear.
-
Ain't that right,
Jimmy?
-
Yes,
quite right.
-
It was all a stupid lie,
my nonsense about tomorrow.
-
Naturally they would never
give me my position back,
-
that I would never
dream of asking them.
-
I didn't resign, I was
fired for drunkenness.
-
And it was absurd of me
to excuse my drunkenness
-
by pretending it was my wife's
adultery that ruined my life.
-
As Hickey guessed, I was
a drunkard before that.
-
I discovered early
in life that living
-
frightened me
when I was sober.
-
I've even forgotten
why I married Marjorie.
-
I had some idea of
wanting a home, perhaps.
-
But, of course, I, I much
preferred the nearest pub.
-
Why Marjorie married me,
God knows.
-
She soon found that I much
preferred drinking all night
-
with my pals to being
at home in bed with her.
-
So naturally...
she was unfaithful.
-
And I was glad
to be free.
-
Even... grateful
to her, I think,
-
for giving me such a...
a good tragic excuse.
-
In the back room
if you wanna drink.
-
A guy named Hickman
in the back room?
-
Think I know the names...
Listen, you! This is murder.
-
It was Hickman himself
who phoned in and said
-
we'd find him here
around 2:00.
-
So that's who
he phoned to.
-
Yeah, he's in there,
and if you want
-
a confession all you
got to do is listen.
-
You can't stop
the bastard talkin'.
-
I've got to tell you,
your being this way
-
now gets my goat,
and it's all wrong!
-
It puts things
in my mind.
-
It makes me think that if I
got balled up about you,
-
then how do I know I wasn't
balled up about myself?
-
And that is just plain
damned foolishness.
-
But when you know the story
of me and Evelyn, you'll see
-
it was the only possible
way out, for her sake.
-
Only I've got to start
way back at the beginning,
-
otherwise
you won't understand.
-
You see, even as a kid
I was always restless.
-
I had to keep
on the go.
-
You've heard the old saying
that "Ministers' sons"
-
"are sons of guns?" Well,
that was me and then some.
-
Home was like a jail.
-
Listening to my old man whooping
up hell fire and scaring
-
those Hoosier suckers into
shelling out their dough
-
only handed me a laugh! Although
I gotta to hand it to him,
-
the way he sold them
nothing for something.
-
I guess I take after him,
and that's what made me
-
a good salesman;
well, like I said,
-
home was like jail,
and so was school,
-
and so was that damned
hick town.
-
The only places I liked
were the pool halls,
-
where I could smoke
Sweet Caporals
-
and mop up
a couple of beers, eh?
-
Thinking I was a
hell-on-wheels sport.
-
We had one hooker
shop in town.
-
Of course I
liked that, too.
-
Not that I hardly ever
had the entrance money.
-
My old man was
a tight old bastard.
-
But I liked to sit around in the
parlor and joke with the girls.
-
And they liked me too,
because I kid 'em along
-
and make 'em laugh.
-
And you know how
a small town is.
-
Everybody
got wise to me.
-
They said I was
a no-good tramp,
-
but I didn't give
a damn what they said.
-
I hated everybody
in the place.
-
That is,
except Evelyn.
-
And I loved Evelyn,
even as a kid.
-
And Evelyn loved me.
-
Larry, I loved mother!
No matter what she did!
-
I still do!
Yes, sir, as far back as I can remember,
-
Evelyn and I
loved each other.
-
She always
stood out for me.
-
She wouldn't believe the gossip,
or she pretended she wouldn't.
-
No one could convince her
that I was no good.
-
Evelyn was stubborn as hell
once she made up her mind.
-
You know, even when I'd admit
things and ask her forgiveness,
-
she'd make excuses for me
and defend me against myself.
-
And she'd kiss me,
she'd say that she knew
-
that I wouldn't do it again
and I said that I wouldn't.
-
And I'd promise,
I'd have to promise.
-
She was so damn
sweet and good.
-
Yet I knew
darned well...
-
No, sir, you couldn't
stop Evelyn!
-
Nothing on Earth could
shake her faith in me!
-
Even I couldn't!
-
She was a sucker
for a pipe dream.
-
Well, naturally, her family
forbid her seeing me.
-
(laughing)
-
They were one of the town's
best, rich for that hick burg.
-
They owned the trolley line
and the lumber company.
-
Strict Methodists, too;
oh, did they hate my guts!
-
Even they couldn't
stop Evelyn.
-
And she'd sneak notes to me
and we'd meet me on the side.
-
But I was getting
more restless.
-
The town was getting
more like a jail.
-
I made up my mind
to beat it.
-
I knew exactly what I wanted
to be by that time.
-
I met a lot of drummers around
the hotel, and I liked 'em.
-
They were always
telling jokes, eh?
-
They were sports, always on
the move, I liked their life.
-
And I knew I could kid people
and sell things.
-
The hitch was, how to get the
railroad fare to the Big Town?
-
Hell, I... I told
Mollie Arlington my trouble.
-
She was the Madame
of the cathouse.
-
She liked me.
-
She laughed and she said:
"Hell, I'll stake you, kid.
-
"I'll bet on you, with that grin
of yours and that line of bull
-
you ought to be able to sell
skunks for good ratters."
-
Yeah, Mollie
was all right.
-
She made me feel
confident in myself.
-
Well, I paid her back too,
first money I earned.
-
I remember sending her
a kidding letter saying
-
that I was peddling
baby carriages, and she
-
and the girls had better
get in on our bargain offer!
-
Ho, ho, ho, ho!
-
That's getting
ahead of my story.
-
That last night
before I left town...
-
I had a date
with Evelyn.
-
I got all worked up.
-
She was so pretty
and sweet and good.
-
I told her straight.
-
I said: "You better forget me,
Evelyn, for your own sake."
-
"I'm no good
and I never will be."
-
And I broke down
and cried.
-
And she just said,
looking white and scared:
-
"Why, Teddy, don't you
still love me?"
-
And I said:
"Love you?
-
"God, Evelyn, I love you more
than anything in the world.
-
And I always will."
-
And she said: "Nothing
matters, Teddy."
-
"Because nothing but death
could stop my loving you.
-
"So when you're ready you send
for me, and we'll be married.
-
"And I know I can
make you happy, Teddy.
-
"And when you're happy,
you won't want to do
-
any of those bad things
you've done any more."
-
And I said: "Of course
I won't, Evelyn."
-
And I meant it,
I believed it.
-
I loved her so much she could
make me believe anything.
-
(Harry) You married her, you caught
her cheating with the iceman,
-
and you croaked her,
and all we want
-
is to pass out
in peace, bejees!
-
(everyone whispering)
So I beat it to the Big Town!
-
I got a job easy,
it was a cinch for me
-
to make good,
I had the knack.
-
It was like a game,
sizing people up quick,
-
spotting what their pet
pipe dreams were,
-
and then kidding 'em
along that line.
-
Pretending you believed
what they wanted
-
to believe
about themselves.
-
Then they liked you,
they trusted you.
-
They want to buy something
to show their gratitude.
-
It was fun!
-
But still, all the while
I felt guilty, as though
-
I shouldn't be having such
a good time away from Evelyn.
-
In each of my letters I'd
tell her how I missed her,
-
but I'd warn her, too;
I'd tell her about my faults.
-
How I liked my booze every now
and then, and so on.
-
But you couldn't shake
Evelyn's belief in me,
-
or her dreams
about the future.
-
And then after each one
of her letters,
-
I'd be as full of
faith as she was.
-
So when I got enough saved
to start us off,
-
I sent for her
and we got married.
-
Christ, wasn't I
happy for a while!
-
And wasn't she happy.
-
I don't care what anybody says,
I'll bet there were never
-
two people who loved each
other more than me and Evelyn.
-
Not only then,
but ever afterwards.
-
In spite of everything I did.
-
Well, it's all
there at the start,
-
everything that happened
afterwards.
-
Though I never could
learn to handle temptation.
-
I'd want to reform
and mean it.
-
Then I'd promise her,
and I'd promise myself,
-
and I'd believe it.
-
I'd even tell her:
"It's the last time, Evelyn."
-
And she'd say: "I know it's
the last time, Teddy."
-
"You'll never
do it again."
-
And that's what
made it so hard!
-
That's what made me
feel such a rotten skunk!
-
Her always
forgiving me.
-
My playing around
with women, for instance.
-
It was just a harmless
good time to me.
-
It didn't
mean anything,
-
but I'd know what it
meant to her!
-
So I'd swear
to myself "Never again."
-
But you know how it is,
traveling around,
-
those damned
hotel rooms.
-
You get to seeing things
in the wall paper.
-
I'd get so damn bored,
so lonely and homesick.
-
But at the same time,
sick of home.
-
I'd feel free, I'd want
to celebrate a little.
-
Well, I never drank on the job
so it had to be dames, any tart.
-
What I'd want
was some tramp that I
-
could be myself with,
without being ashamed.
-
Someone I could tell a
dirty joke to and she'd laugh!
-
(girly giggling)
-
Jees... all
the lousy jokes
-
I've had to listen to
and pretend was funny.
-
Sometimes I'd try
a joke that I thought
-
was a real corker
on Evelyn!
-
And she'd always
make herself laugh.
-
But I could tell she thought
it was dirty and not funny.
-
And she always knew about
the tarts that I'd been with
-
when I came home
from a trip.
-
She'd kiss me and look
in my eyes, and she'd know.
-
And I could see in her eyes
her not wanting to know.
-
And telling herself: "Even if
it is true, he can't help it."
-
"They tempt him, he's
lonely, he hasn't got me.
-
"It's only his body,
he doesn't love them.
-
"I'm the only one he loves,"
and she was right, too!
-
I never loved anyone else!
Couldn't if I wanted to.
-
She forgave me even when it all
had to come out in the open.
-
You know how it is when you
keep taking chances.
-
You may be lucky
for a long time,
-
but you'll get nicked
in the end.
-
I picked up a nail
from some tart in Altoona.
-
Yeah, and she picked it up
from some guy.
-
It's all in the game.
-
I had to do a lot of lying
and stalling when I got home,
-
but it didn't do
any good.
-
The quack I went to
got all my dough,
-
and he told me I was cured,
and I believed him.
-
But I wasn't...
and poor Evelyn.
-
But she did her best to make me
believe that she fell for my lie
-
about how... traveling men
get things from drinking cups
-
on...
on trains.
-
Anyway, she
forgave me.
-
The same way she forgave me
every time I'd show up
-
after a periodical
drunk!
-
And you all knew
what I'd look like
-
after one of those,
you saw me!
-
Like something lying
in the gutter
-
that no alley cat would
lower himself to drag in!
-
Something they threw out of
the D.T. ward at Bellevue!
-
Along with the garbage,
something that should be dead!
-
But isn't.
-
Evelyn wouldn't have heard
from me in a month or more.
-
She'd been waiting
there alone.
-
The neighbors feeling
sorry for her out loud
-
and shaking
their heads.
-
That was until she got me
to move to the outskirts,
-
where there weren't
any next-door neighbors.
-
Then the door would open...
and I'd stumble...
-
looking like
what I've just said.
-
Into her home, that she always
kept so... spotless and clean.
-
And I'd sworn it would
never happen again!
-
And now I'd have
to start swearing again
-
that this was
the last time!
-
I could see disgust
having a battle in her eyes
-
with love,
but love always won!
-
She'd make her-self...
kiss me!
-
As though nothing
had happened.
-
As though I'd just come home
from a business trip.
-
She'd never complain
or bawl me out.
-
Christ, can you imagine what a
guilty skunk she made me feel!
-
If only once she admitted that
her pipe dream about tomorrow,
-
and my behaving myself
would never be any good!
-
But she wouldn't!
-
She was stubborn
as hell!
-
Once she'd set her mind on
anything, you couldn't shake
-
her faith that it had
to come true tomorrow!
-
It was the same old story, over
and over, for years and years.
-
And it kept piling up,
inside her and inside me.
-
God, can you picture
what I made her suffer?
-
And all the guilt that
she made me feel?
-
And how I
hated myself?
-
If she only hadn't been
so damned good!
-
If she'd been the same kind
of wife that I was a husband.
-
God, sometimes I used
to pray that she'd...
-
I'd even say to her:
"Go on, why don't you, Evelyn?"
-
"Serve me right, I wouldn't
mind, I'd forgive you."
-
Of course I'd pretend
I was kidding.
-
The same way
I used to joke here
-
about her being in the hay
with the iceman.
-
She'd have felt so hurt
if I'd said it seriously.
-
She'd have thought
I'd stopped loving her.
-
I suppose you think I'm a liar,
that no woman could have stood
-
all she stood
and still loved me so much.
-
That it isn't human for a woman
to be so pitying and forgiving!
-
Well, I am not lying!
-
And if you'd ever seen her,
you'd realize that I wasn't.
-
It was written
all over her face:
-
Sweetness, love,
pity, forgiveness.
-
Although, wait,
I'll... show you.
-
I always carry
her picture.
-
No, I'm forgetting...
I tore it up afterwards.
-
I didn't need it
any more.
-
Jees, Hickey!
Jees!
-
I burnt up mother's
picture, Larry.
-
Her eyes kept following
me around all the time.
-
They seemed to
be wishing I was dead!
-
It kept piling up,
like I've said.
-
I got so I thought
about it all the time.
-
And I hated myself
more and more,
-
thinking of all the wrong
I'd done to the sweetest woman
-
in the world
that loved me so much!
-
It even got so I'd curse
myself for a lousy bastard
-
every time I saw
myself in the mirror!
-
I felt such pity for her
it drove me crazy!
-
You'd never believe
it, would you, Larry?
-
A guy like me that's
knocked around so much
-
could feel such pity!
-
It got so
every night I'd...
-
wind up hiding
my face in her lap,
-
bawling and begging
for forgiveness.
-
Of course she'd always
comfort me and say:
-
"Never mind, Teddy,
I know you won't ever again."
-
Christ,
I loved her so.
-
But I began to hate
that pipe dream!
-
I began to think
I was going bughouse!
-
Because sometimes I couldn't
forgive her for forgiving me!
-
I even caught myself
hating her
-
for making me
hate myself so much!
-
You know, there's a limit
to the guilt you can feel
-
and the forgiveness
and pity you can take!
-
You have to begin blaming
somebody else, too!
-
It got so...
-
sometimes,
when she'd kiss me,
-
it was like she was
doing it on purpose...
-
to humiliate me...
-
as if she'd spit
in my face!
-
But I saw how crazy
and rotten that was of me!
-
And I just hated
myself more and more!
-
You'd never believe that I could
hate so much!
-
Ah, Larry? A good-natured,
happy-go-lucky... slob like me.
-
As the time got nearer to
when I was due to come here
-
for my drunk around Harry's
birthday, I got nearly crazy.
-
I kept swearing to her
every night that this time
-
I really wouldn't,
until I'd made it
-
a real final test
to myself and to her!
-
And she kept encouraging
me and saying:
-
"I can see you really
mean it now, Teddy."
-
"I know you'll conquer it this
time, and we'll be so happy."
-
And when she'd say
that, and kiss me...
-
I'd believe
it, too.
-
Then she'd go to bed,
-
and I'd stay up because
I couldn't sleep.
-
And I didn't want
to disturb her,
-
rolling and twisting around;
I'd get so damned lonely!
-
I'd get to thinking
how peaceful it was here.
-
Sitting around with
the old gang, getting drunk
-
and forgetting about love;
laughing and singing
-
and joking,
and swapping lies.
-
And finally I knew
I had to come.
-
And I knew if I came this time,
it would be the finish!
-
Because I'd never have
the guts to go back
-
and be forgiven again! And that
would break Evelyn's heart.
-
Because to her
that would mean...
-
I didn't love
her any more.
-
That last night
I'd driven myself crazy
-
trying to figure
a way out for her.
-
I went into
the bedroom.
-
I was going to tell her
it was the end.
-
But I couldn't
do that to her.
-
She was sound asleep.
-
And I thought
"God, if only she'd"
-
"never wake up,
she'd never know."
-
And then it came to me.
-
The one possible way out,
for her sake.
-
I remembered I'd given
her a gun for protection
-
while I was away...
it was in the bureau drawer.
-
She'd never feel any pain, she'd
never wake up from her dream.
-
So I...
-
so I killed her.
-
I may as well
confess, Larry.
-
There's no use lying any more;
you know, anyway.
-
I didn't give
a damn about the money,
-
it was because I
hated her.
-
And then I saw that
I'd always known
-
that was
the only possible way
-
to give her peace,
and free her
-
from the misery
of loving me.
-
And I saw it meant peace for me,
too, knowing she was at peace.
-
I felt as though a ton of guilt
was lifted off my mind.
-
I remember I stood by the bed
and suddenly I had to laugh.
-
I couldn't help it, and I knew
Evelyn would forgive me!
-
I remember I heard
myself speaking to her,
-
as though it was something that
I'd always wanted to say:
-
"Well, you know what you can do
with your pipe dream now,"
-
"you damned bitch!"
-
No! I never...
Yes, yes, that's it!
-
Her and that damned Movement
pipe dream! Eh, Larry? No, that's a lie!
-
Good God, I could
have never said that!
-
If I had, I'd have
gone insane!
-
Why, I loved Evelyn better
than anything in life!
-
Boys, you're
all my old pals!
-
You've known old
Hickey for years!
-
You know that
I could never...
-
Harry! Harry, you've known me
longer than anybody else!
-
You know that I must have been
insane! Don't you, Governor?
-
Who the hell cares?
-
(excited tone)
"Insane?"
-
You mean you went really insane?
Yes!
-
Or I couldn't have laughed! I
couldn't have said that to her!
-
That's enough,
Hickman!
-
You know who we are,
you're under arrest.
-
Come along and spill your guts where...
Don't touch me!
-
You owe me a break!
I phoned and made it
-
easy for you, didn't I?
Just a few minutes!
-
Harry, you know I couldn't say
that to Evelyn, don't you?
-
Unless...
And you've been crazy ever since?
-
Everything you've said and done here...
Now, Governor!
-
Up to your
old tricks, eh?
-
I see what you're
driving at, but I ca...
-
Yes, of course,
Harry!
-
Ahh!
I've been out of my mind ever since,
-
ever since
I've been here!
-
You saw I was insane,
didn't you?
-
(Moran)
Can it! I've had enough of your act.
-
Save it for the jury.
-
Now listen, you guys,
don't fall for his lies.
-
He's starting to get foxy now
and thinks he'll plead insanity.
-
But he can't
get away with that.
-
Bejees, you dumb dick!
-
You've got a crust trying
to tell us about Hickey.
-
We've known him for years,
and every one of us noticed
-
he was nutty the minute
he showed up here.
-
If you'd seen the damned-fool
things he made us do!
-
We only did
them because we...
-
because we, we hoped
he'd come out of it,
-
if we kidded him
along and humored him.
-
Ain't that right,
fellas?
-
That's right!
-
A fine bunch of rats!
-
Covering up for a dirty,
cold-blooded murderer!
-
Is that so?
-
Bejees, you know
the old story.
-
When Saint Patrick drove
the snakes out of Ireland,
-
they swam to New York
and joined the police force!
-
Ha, ha!
-
(snickering laughter)
-
You stand up for your
rights, bejees, Hickey.
-
I've still got friends
at the Hall.
-
I'll have this guy
back in uniform
-
pounding a beat,
where the only graft
-
he'll get will be stealing
tin cans from the goats.
-
(everybody laughing)
-
Listen, you cockeyed old bum!
For a plugged nickel I'd...
-
Come on, you.
Oh, I want to go, officer.
-
I can hardly
wait now.
-
I should have phoned you from
the house right afterwards.
-
It was a waste
of time coming here!
-
I've got to explain to Evelyn,
but I know she's forgiven me.
-
She knows
I was insane.
-
You've got me
all wrong, officer.
-
I want to go to
the chair.
-
Crap!
-
God, you're
a dumb dick!
-
Do you suppose I
give a damn about life now?
-
Why, you bone head.
-
I haven't got a single damned
lying hope or pipe dream left.
-
Don't worry, Hickey! They
can't give you the chair!
-
We'll testify you was crazy!
Won't we, fellas?
-
Yeah, sure.
Sure!
-
You'll be
all right, Hickey.
-
He's gone... poor
crazy son of a bitch.
-
Bejees, I need
a drink.
-
Maybe it'll have the
old kick now he's gone.
-
Yeah, boss, maybe
we can get drunk now.
-
May the chair bring him
peace at last,
-
the poor
tortured bastard!
-
Yes, but he isn't the only one
who needs peace, Larry.
-
I can't feel
sorry for him.
-
He's lucky.
-
He's through now,
it's all decided for him.
-
I wish it was
decided for me.
-
I've never been any good
at deciding things.
-
Even about selling out,
it was that tart that
-
the detective agency got after
me that put it in my mind.
-
You remember
what Mother's like, Larry.
-
She always decided
what I must do.
-
She made all
the decisions for me.
-
She doesn't like anyone
but herself to be free.
-
I suppose you think
I ought to make
-
those dicks take me
away with Hickey.
-
How could I
prove it, Larry?
-
They'd think I was nutty
'cause she's still alive!
-
You're the only one who can
understand how guilty I am.
-
Because you know her, you know
what I've done to her.
-
You're the only one
who can understand
-
that I'm much
guiltier than he is.
-
That what I did
is a much worse than murder
-
because she is dead,
and yet she has to live!
-
For a little while... but she
can't live long in jail.
-
She loves her
freedom too much.
-
I can't kid myself
like Hickey...
-
that
she's at peace.
-
As long as she lives,
she'll never be able
-
to forget what I've done
to her, not even in her sleep.
-
She'll never have
a second's peace.
-
Jesus, Larry,
say something!
-
I'm not bluffing either
that I was crazy...
-
afterwards when I
laughed and thought to myself.
-
"You know what you can do with
your freedom pipe dream now,
-
"don't you, you damned old bitch."
Go!
-
Get the hell out
of life, God damn you!
-
Before I choke it
out of you!
-
Go up... go up!
-
(sighing)
Thanks, Larry!
-
I can see now
that's the only
-
possible way I can ever
get free from her.
-
I guess I've
known that all my life.
-
(laughing nervously)
-
Oh!
-
It ought to give mother
a little comfort, too.
-
She'll finally be able
to play the incorruptible.
-
Mother of the Revolution, whose
only child is a proletariat.
-
She'll be able to say:
"Justice is done!
-
"So may all traitors die!"
She'll be able to say...
-
"I'm glad
he's dead!"
-
"Long live
the Revolution!"
-
You know her, Larry,
she's always a ham!
-
Go, for the love of Christ!
You mad tortured bastard,
-
for your own sake!
-
Thanks, Larry,
that's kind.
-
I knew you were the only one who
could understand my side of it.
-
(giggling)
-
Hello, little Don,
little monkey-face!
-
Don't be a fool,
buy me a drink.
-
Sure I will,
Hugo.
-
Tomorrow, beneath
the willow trees.
-
Stupid fool! Hickey make
you crazy, too.
-
I'm glad, Larry, they take that
crazy Hickey away to asylum.
-
He makes me
have bad dreams.
-
He makes me tell
lies about myself.
-
He makes me want to spit
on all I've ever dreamed.
-
Yes, I'm glad they
take him to asylum!
-
(sighing)
-
I don't feel
I'm dying now.
-
He was selling death to me,
that crazy salesman.
-
I think I have a
drink now, Larry.
-
Bejees, fellas, I'm feeling
the old kick or I'm a liar!
-
It's putting life
back in me.
-
It was Hickey that
kept it from...
-
Bejees, I know that sounds
crazy but he was crazy,
-
and he got all of us
as bughouse as he was.
-
It's dangerous, too.
-
Look at me, pretend
to start for a walk
-
just to keep
him quiet.
-
I knew damned well it wasn't
the right day for it.
-
The sun was broiling
-
and the streets full
of automobiles.
-
Why, I could feel
myself getting sunstroke.
-
An automobile damn
near ran over me.
-
Didn't it, Rocky?
He was watchin',
-
ask Rocky, didn't it?
The automobile, boss?
-
Sure, I seen it,
just missed you!
-
I thought you
was a goner!
-
On the word of an
honest bartender!
-
You're a bartender,
all right.
-
And no one
can say different.
-
But bejees, don't, don't
pull that honest junk.
-
You and Chuck ought to have
cards in the Burglars' Union!
-
(everybody laughing)
-
Bejees, it's good to hear
someone laugh again.
-
All the time that bastar...
Eh... poor old Hickey was here,
-
I didn't have
the heart...
-
Bejees, I'm getting drunk
and glad of it!
-
Come on, fellas,
it's on the house!
-
(man giggling)
-
Ah... that poor
old Hickey.
-
We mustn't hold him responsible
for anything he's done.
-
We'll remember him the way
we've always known him before:
-
The kindest, biggest-hearted guy
that ever wore shoe leather. Oh, yeah.
-
Yeah, the best.
Fine chap, fine chap!
-
Good luck to him
in Matteawan!
-
Come on, bottoms up!
-
Christ!
Why don't he?
-
"Why don't he"
what?
-
Ah, don't be a fool,
Hickey's gone!
-
He was crazy!
Here, have a drink.
-
What's the matter
with you, Larry?
-
You look funny.
-
What do you listen for
out in backyard?
-
Well, I thank God now
that me and Chuck did
-
all we could to humor
the poor nut.
-
Imagine us goin' off like we
really meant to get married,
-
when we ain't even
picked out the farm yet!
-
(men giggling)
-
(laughing) Sure thing, baby!
We kidded him we was serious.
-
I may as well say,
though, I detected
-
his condition almost at once!
Yeah.
-
All that talk of his
about tomorrow, for example.
-
He had the fixed idea
of the insane!
-
It only makes them
worse to cross them!
-
Same with me, Jimmy, only I
spent the day at the park.
-
I wasn't such a
damned fool as to...
-
(laughing)
-
Pic-picture my predicament
if I had gone to the consulate.
-
The pal of mine there is
a bit of a humorous blighter.
-
He'd have gotten me a job
out of pure spite.
-
So I strolled about, and finally
came to roost in the park.
-
And lo and behold,
who should be on
-
the neighboring bench
but my battlefield companion,
-
the Boer that walks
like a man!
-
(cheers and someone clapping)
-
Who, if the British Government
had taken my advice,
-
would have been removed from
his fetid corral on the "veldt"
-
straight to the baboon's cage
in the London Zoo!
-
And little children would
now be asking their nurses:
-
"Tell me, nana,
is that the Boer General?"
-
"The one with
the blue behind?"
-
(uproarious laughing)
-
No offense meant,
Piet, old chap.
-
No offense taken,
you... damned Limey!
-
(glasses clinking)
-
(laughing)
-
About the job, I felt
the same as you, Cecil.
-
(Wetjoen spits
and laughing continues)
-
What's the matter,
Larry?
-
You look scared!
-
What you listen for
out there?
-
No, sir.
-
I wasn't fool enough
to get in no crap game,
-
not while
Hickey's around.
-
The crazy people
put a jinx on you!
-
It was of no good trying
to explain to a crazy guy,
-
but it ain't
the right time!
-
Hey! You know how
getting reinstated is.
-
Bejees,
I'm cockeyed!
-
Bejees, you're
all cockeyed!
-
And bejees, we're
all all right!
-
Let's have another.
-
What's the matter,
Larry?
-
Why you keep
eyes shut?
-
Huff!
You look dead!
-
What you listen for
in backyard?
-
You crazy fool!
You give me bad dreams, too!
-
Hello there,
Hugo!
-
(rattling and laughing)
-
Welcome
to the party!
-
Yes, bejees, Hugo!
Sit down, have a drink!
-
Have ten
drinks, bejees!
-
(uncontrollable giggling)
-
Hello, little Harry!
-
Hello, nice funny
little monkey faces!
-
Goddamned stupid
bourgeois!
-
(loud cheering)
-
Soon comes
the Day of Judgment!
-
(laughing and cheering)
-
Give me
ten drinks, Harry.
-
Don't be a fool!
-
Gangway for two
good whores!
-
(everybody cheers)
-
Yeah! And we want
a drink, quick!
-
Yeah, yeah! Shake the lead
outta your pants, pimp!
-
A little service, eh?
Well, look who's here!
-
Hello there,
sweethearts.
-
Jees, I was beginnin' to
worry about you, honest!
-
Yeah? What kind
of gag is this?
-
Come on and join
the party, you broads!
-
Bejees, I'm glad
to see you!
-
Hey, what? Come on!
What's come off here?
-
Where's that
louse, Hickey?
-
(laughing)
Oh, the cops got him.
-
He's gone crazy
and croaked his wife.
-
Oh, Jees!
-
So forget about
that whore stuff.
-
I'll knock the block off
if anyone calls you whores.
-
You're tarts, and what
the hell of it?
-
You're as good
as anyone.
-
Eeeh!
So forget it, see?
-
That's our little bartender!
Ain't he, Pearl?
-
Yeah, and a cute
little Ginny at that!
-
And is he stinko!
-
Stinko is right, but he ain't
got nothin' on us!
-
Jees, Rocky, did we have
a big time at Coney!
-
Bejees, sit down,
you dumb whores!
-
Welcome home,
have a drink.
-
Have ten drinks,
bejees!
-
Bejees, this
is all right!
-
We'll make this my birthday
party, and forget the other.
-
But who's missing?
Where's the Old Wise Guy?
-
Where's Larry?
-
(Rocky)
Oh, over by the window, boss.
-
Ah?
He's got his eyes shut!
-
The old bastard's asleep!
Oh, to hell with him!
-
Let's have a drink.
-
(glasses clinking)
-
(unintelligible conversations)
-
It's the only way
out for him.
-
For the peace of all
concerned, as Hickey said.
-
God damn his yellow soul!
-
If he doesn't soon, I'll
go up and throw him off...
-
like a dog with
its guts ripped out
-
that you'd put
out of its misery!
-
(everybody laughing
and talking merrily)
-
(loud thudding noise)
-
(screaming and exclamations)
-
What the hell was that?
What the hell was that?
-
Something fell off
the fire escape.
-
A mattress,
I'll bet!
-
Some of these bums have been
sleepin' on the fire escape!
-
There ain't no...
They've got to cut it out!
-
Bejees, this, this, this
ain't no... fresh-air cure.
-
Mattresses
cost money.
-
Poor devil!
-
God rest his soul
in peace.
-
(laughing and giggling)
-
I'll never be a success in the
grandstand or anywhere else.
-
Life is too much for me.
-
I'll be a weak fool,
looking with pity
-
at the two sides of everything
'till the day I die,
-
and may that day
come soon!
-
I'm the only real convert
to death that Hickey made here.
-
From the bottom of my coward's
heart, I mean that now.
-
Hey there, Larry! Come on
over and get paralyzed!
-
What the hell you
doing, sitting there?
-
Bejees, let's sing,
let's celebrate!
-
Bejees, it's
my birthday party!
-
Bejees, I'm oreyeyed!
I want to sing!
-
* Every Sunday down
to her home we go *
-
* All the boys and all
the girls they love her so *
-
(everybody joins in)
* Always jolly heart that is true I know *
-
* She is the Sunshine
of Paradise Alley *
-
* By yon bonnie banks
and by yon bonnie braes *
-
* Where the sun shines
bright on Loch Lomond *
-
* Where me and my true love
will never meet again *
-
* On the bonny, bonny
banks of Loch Lomond *
-
* I will take the high road
and I'll take the low road *
-
* And I'll be in Scotland
before ye *
-
* But me and my true love
will never meet again *
-
(Hugo growling loudly)
* On the bonny bonny banks of Loch Lomond *
-
* "Dansons la Carmagnole!
Vive le son des canons! *
-
* "Dansons la Carmagnole! Vive
le son des canons! *
-
* "Dansons la Carmagnole!
Vive le son des canons!" *
-
"The days grow hot,
O Babylon!"
-
(cheering and chanting)
"'Tis cool beneath thy willow trees!"
-
(laughing and giggling)
-
(old timey piano music)
-
*