Knee
Play Five - Einstein on the Beach
Lovers
on a Park Bench
The day with its cares and perplexities is ended
and the night is now upon us. The night should be a time of peace
and tranquility, a time to relax and be calm. We have need of
a soothing story to banish the disturbing thoughts of the day,
to set at rest our troubled minds, and put at ease our ruffled
spirits.
And what sort of story shall we hear? Ah, it
will be a familiar story, a story that is so very, very old,
and yet it is so new. It is the old, old story of love.
Two lovers sat on a park bench, with their bodies
touching each other, holding hands in the moonlight.
There was silence between them. So profound was
their love for each other, they needed no words to express it.
And so they sat in silence, on a park bench, with their bodies
touching, holding hands in the moonlight.
Finally she spoke. "Do you love me, John?"
she asked. "You know I love you, darling," he
replied. "I love you more than tongue can tell. You are
the light of my life, my sun, moon and stars. You are my everything.
Without you I have no reason for being."
Again there was silence as the two lovers sat
on a park bench, their bodies touching, holding hands in the
moonlight. Once more she spoke. "How much do you love
me, John?" she asked. He answered: "How much
do I love you? Count the stars in the sky. Measure the waters
of the oceans with a teaspoon. Number the grains of sand on the
sea shore. Impossible, you say?"
"Yes
and it is just as impossible for me to say how much I love you.
My love for you is higher than the heavens, deeper than Hades,
and broader than the earth. It has no limits, no bounds. Everything
must have an ending except my love for you."
There was more of silence as the two lovers sat
on a park bench with their bodies touching, holding hands in
the moonlight.
Once more her voice was heard. "Kiss
me, John," she implored. And leaning over, he pressed
his lips warmly to hers in fervent osculation. ...
Copyright 1976 by Samuel M. Johnson
Taken from a web page on Philip Glass and Robert
Wilson's Einstein on the Beach
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