Song selections from The Revolution of Betsy Loring

 

c)2001-2007  Book & Lyrics:  Noelle Donfeld    Music:  Denise Wright

 

I HAVE THEM EATING OUT OF MY HAND      

ENSEMBLE        

(Billy, Rebecca, the rebels and the unsuspecting Betsy attend General Burgoyne’s party for Lord Howe.)

 

HOWE

(To Clinton)

“To borrow your unflattering analogy…”

 

Look at these pups!  They’re overawed.

Wagging their tails, they are docile and bland.

Rest assured, Henry, the dogs are declawed

I have them eating

Out of my hand.

 

(Struggling to grin, as ordered, Clinton approaches Rebecca and asks her to dance.)

 

            BILLY

            Look at them bow.  Look at them nod.

            Ostriches hiding their heads in the sand.

            All that they need is a smile and a prod.

            I have them eating

            Out of my hand.

 

                        CLINTON

                        (Widely grimacing) 

                        This is insane, frankly reviling,,

Whirling around with a peasant,

Hiding the strain, nodding and smiling.

G-d, it’s a pain to be pleasant.

 

 

                                    REBECCA

                                    “How long will you be staying in Boston, Lord Clinton?

                       

CLINTON

                        “Not long, I sincerely hope.

 

                        REBELS

                                    Clinton is strange, truly quite odd.

                                    Look at his smile.  It is almost obscene.

Somehow his grin is remarkably flawed,

Much like a pumpkin’s on Halloween.

 

(Howe sees Betsy and cuts in.)

 

            BILLY

            (Dancing with noblewoman.)

“Perhaps I shouldn’t have taken you away from your husband’s side.  I hope he’s not leaving soon.”

 

 

 

                        NOBLEWOMAN

“I’m not sure, actually.  He said he may be leaving in a week, but one never knows.”

 

            BILLY

“I hope to a more peaceful area of the colonies.”

 

                        NOBLEWOMAN

                        “I don’t know.  Is Concord more peaceful than Boston?”

 

                        BILLY

                        “Concord?  I hope so.”

 

                                    BETSY

                                    This isn’t hard being a fraud.

                                    Howe would pay court, if I gave him the chance.

                                    What will I do if I’m suddenly pawed?

                                    I’ll kick his Lordship right in the pants.

 

            BILLY AND THE REBELS

            Howe is her tool.

            Look at him drooling,

            Strutting around like a pheasant.

            Howe is a fool.

            He’ll get a schooling.

            See how it pays to be pleasant!

 

            NOBELS                                              REBELS

            Look at them bow.                                          

                                                                        What a façade.

Treated like G-d.                                              Keep nodding.

Things are progressing                         Things are progressing

Exactly as planned                                           Exactly as planned.

All that they need is                             All that they need is

A smile and a prod.                                         A smile and a prod.

I have them eating                                           I have them eating

Out of my hand.                                              Out of my hand.

 

ALL

Yes, I have them eating out of my hand.

               

HAVING TEA                       

HOWE & BETSY

           

(Betsy meets with Lord Howe ostensibly to discuss the possibility of getting her farm back from her husband who has stolen and sold it.   What she wants, in actuality, is to develop a relationship with Howe so that she can spy on him.    All but the last line are sung as asides.)

 

 

BETSY

Who would have thought,

Sitting with a general,

Sipping with a general

Would be amusing?

Never gave a single thought,

Never thought that I’d be caught

Dead here.

Instead, here

I’m sitting with a general,

A bloody British general,

A rather charming general

It’s so confusing.

Having tea with General Howe,

How’s that for fate?  Great!

Should I put some cake

Or poison on his plate?

 

            HOWE

            Who would have thought,

            Sitting with a commoner,

            Sipping with a commoner

            Would be so thrilling?

            Look at how she fills my plate,

            Seeming to appreciate

            My tea time.

            Yes, here I’m

            Sitting with a commoner,

            Sipping with a commoner,

            A quite uncommon commoner

            Who seems quite willing,

            Sharing her perceptions of

            Our affairs of state.  Fate

            Is smiling at me.

            I’d better clean my plate.

 

                        BOTH

                        Who would have thought

                        Having tea with someone who

                        Has a pointed point of view

                        Could be engaging?

                        Such a pleasant interlude,

                        Waiting while the tea is brewed.

           

Pure bliss like this is               

            Is not a very common sight.

            Some would say it isn’t right,

 

BETSY

Watching him take such delight                      

                       

BOTH

                        When war is waging.

                        Not to break the mood or be rude

                        But is this sane?

                        Plainly,

                        So it appears

                        We must have tea again.                     

 

 

STAND          

BETSY           

 

 (Realizing that she has a chance to spy on Lord Howe and other British royalists at a party, Colonial patriot, Betsy Loring, tries to convince Billy Dawes, a Rebel spy, actor and friend, that she is up to the task.)

 

Firmly planted

Under my feet

Is a land that cries for freedom.

Firmly planted

In my heart

Are a people who long to live

As an eagle flies

Through boundless skies,

Rising, rising.

 

I am determined to stand

Tall and strong and free.

This is my country, my land,

A part of me.

 

Firmly planted

In my fist

Is the seed of my own freedom.

Firmly planted

In my heart

Is the power to let it grow

Like the winter grain

That fills the plain,

Rising, rising.

 

I am determined to stand

Tall and strong and free.

This is my country, my land,

A part of me.

 

I am determined to stand

Tall and strong and free.

This is my country, my land

And my destiny.

 

NOT ENGLISH

HOWE & BETSY     

           

(In Howe’s quarters, the angered General Howe gives full vent to his frustration with the       guerilla tactics of the rebels, and, after Howe leaves, Betsy expresses her resentment toward King George.)

 

HOWE

I’d hoped for conciliation,

Or war that’s played by rules.

An independent nation…of foolsl!

I’d hoped for negotiation

To end this wretched war.

An independent nation…what for?

 

Shooting at night,

Only in stealth,

Stabbing your back

While toasting your health,

How do you fight a phantom, a coward?

 

Lying in wait,

Hiding in trees,

Running behind you

Killing with ease,

Only the devil’s made them empowered.

 

What kind of war is this?

What kind of man

Would shoot so blindly, hit or miss?

Not English.

 

What kind of war is this?

What sort of cur

Would enter such a dark abyss?

Not English.

 

Planning attacks,

Just by surprise.

Hitting our backs,

A scheme I despise,

Only in ambush, men unprotected.

 

Blind to their debt,

Blind to their past,

Traitorous sons,

The die has been cast,

Time that this conflict truly is ended.

 

What kind of war is waged

Far from the field,

By heathens who are so enraged?

Not English.

 

What kind of men are these?

I’ll make them yield,

And they will learn they must  appease

The English.

 

(Howe leaves for battle, as Betsy looks for information in his desk.)

 

            BETSY

            What kind of war is this?

            Go ask your king.

            Caused by his avarice,

            It’s English.

 

            What kind of men are these?

            Righteous and brave

            Whom you will never see appease

            The English.

 

ONWARD                 

ENSEMBLE              

(The road to Trenton, the Dawes Home   The dramatic climax of the story is captured in this quintet.  When Betsy unknowingly passes on false intelligence to Billy,, General Howe, in an attempt to save his reputation and Betsy’s life, rides off to stop the Patriots from ambush.  Waiting at home, the women face their own night of desperation.  The piece interweaves several previous songs from the score in a thunderous ride toward destiny.)

 

BILLY AND THE PATRIOTS

Into the pines,

Skirting the highway,

Threading the forest as silent as air,

Searching for signs,

Leaving the byways,

Looking for troops and avoiding the snare,

 

Onward,

Pushing the horses,

Ever alert while avoiding the foe,

Onward,

Seeking the forces,

Tired and dirty yet

Onward I go.

 

BRITISH SOLDIERS

Pistols are drawn,

Waiting the hour,

Coiled up and ready to strike like a snake.

Waiting ‘til dawn,

Set to devour

Any prey making a fatal mistake,

 

PATRIOTS

Onward,

Hushing the horses,

Ever alert while pursuing the foe,

Onward,

Seeking the forces,

Tired and dirty yet

Onward we go.

 

HOWE

Searching the brush,

Fighting the current,

Gripping the saddle and whipping the reins,

Feeling the rush;

Fear no deterrent!

Hearing the blood churning hard through my veins,

 

How like a lamb I was led to the slaughter.

How like a fool I was eager to trust.

What can she say now her lies have caught her?

I shouldn’t stop them, but still I must.

And all these months have, indeed, been a nightmare.

And all these months have, indeed, been a curse.

I have been blind when the truth was right there.

She is a traitor, but I am worse.

Onward!

 

BETSY

Every tomorrow I pray for a way to be near him,

Pray he’ll forgive me,

Never let me go.

I didn’t know I’d be forced to choose.

Now that I love him I know I’ll lose

Either way…

 

HOWE

I am betrayed!

 

REBECCA                                                      BILLY

It’s knowing that your lover has

A role he must perform,                                  Onward!

Sewing woolen trousers and a

Cloak to keep him war                         Charging onward!

Praying G-d will save him as he

Rides to meet the storm.

 

BETSY                                                                        HOWE

Every tomorrow.                                              Traitor!

 

                                                                        BRITISH SOLDIERS

Will there be tomorrow?                                  Hush the horses!

 

BILLY AND THE PATRIOTS

But steady, onward

There in the distance,

Dust on the hillside, the pounding of hooves.

Onward,

There in the distance

Closer and closer, how quickly he moves.

 

HOWE

Whether to hale them…

How shall we meet?

Will the night end in

Luck or defeat?

 

BRITISH SOLDIERS                                                PATRIOTS

What is that pounding?                                    Whether to challenge?

I hear them at last.                               Whether to aim at the red

                                                            Of his suit.

And on we go.                                     And on we go.

 

BETSY                                                                        REBECCA

Every tomorrow.                                              By the window, waiting there patiently.

                                                            Waiting, always waiting.

 

ALL

Onward,

Facing the morning,

Racing toward destiny sharp and alive.

Onward,

Waiting for sunrise,

Who will be slaughtered and who will survive?

PATRIOTS                 BRITISH                                HOWE                       

Not so fast.  Onward…            What was that?  Onward…      Careful now.  Onward…

 

REBECCA                              BETSY

Hurry back.  Onward…           Tomorrow.  Onward…

 

ALL

Onward, onward, onward, onward, onward.

 

HOWE

“It’s a trap!”

 

(A shot is heard, followed quickly by two more shots.)

 

RETURN