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    William Shakespeare's Star Wars Trilogy

    Page 4
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      yet no Sand People.

      Wait, wait, one doth appear unto me now—

      CHORUS

      With sudden viciousness the Tuskens come,

      They knock young Luke and cause the droid to fall.

      They seek to take a harshly pillag’d sum,

      Till frighten’d by a false krayt dragon call.

      Enter OBI-WAN KENOBI, who has made a krayt dragon call to frighten off the Tusken Raiders.

      OBI-WAN

      Now enter I the scene of this boy’s life:

      This boy whom I have watch’d for many years

      Hath grown into the man before me now.

      My hope I now entrust to him alone,

      That he might be our sure deliverance.

      And yet, this situation warrants care—

      I must approach with caution as we speak,

      And meet his questions as a trusted guide.

      My inner joy I must with patience hide,

      For certain ’tis it gives me great delight

      To see him now—his face, his golden hair!

      So long have I watch’d o’er him from afar,

      So many hours and days of my life spent

      In hopeful expectation of this one.

      In his beginning I shall find my end;

      This business shall reveal my final stage.

      Yet in my closing scenes perhaps I’ll write

      A worthy ending to my mortal days:

      ’Tis possible that in this gentle one

      The dream I’ve long awaited shall come true.

      So I’ll compose a final act that shall

      Accomplish two most worthy ends: to set

      The world aright and save this old man’s soul.

      [To R2-D2:] Well met, my little one.

      R2-D2

      [aside:] —Almost I could

      My metal tongue release and speak to him.

      This man doth show sure signs of wisdom and

      Experience. [To Obi-Wan:] Beep, beep, meep, beep, meep, squeak.

      OBI-WAN

      Come hither, tiny friend, be not afraid.

      R2-D2

      Beep, squeak, whee, hoo.

      OBI-WAN

      —Nay, prithee fret thou not.

      For he shall make a full recovery.

      [Luke wakes.

      Rest easy, lad, for thou hast had a fall—

      And more adventure hast thou seen today

      Than many in a lifetime do. I say,

      Thou catchest Fortune’s favor to survive

      A cruel attack from Sand People most vile.

      LUKE

      But, by this light! ’Tis Ben Kenobi here!

      It fills my heart with joy and soothes my pain

      To meet thee.

      OBI-WAN

      —Aye, ’tis well. But let’s go hence.

      The Jundland Wastes no place for trav’lers is.

      Now prithee, good young Luke, say wherefore art

      Thou here, and what strange errand bringeth thee

      Herein where I am wont to dwell?

      LUKE

      —This droid.

      Aye, truly, he hath brought me here.

      R2-D2

      —Beep, meep.

      LUKE

      It seemeth unto me that he doth search

      To find his former master, yet in all

      My days I ne’er have such devotion seen—

      As this one showeth—from a droid.

      R2-D2

      —Hoo.

      LUKE

      —Yet

      He claims that he belongeth to a man

      Nam’d Obi-Wan Kenobi, and I thought,

      Perchance, the man some relative of yours

      May be. Dost thou know any by such name?

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] O how the heart inside me breaks to hear

      That name I once was call’d so long ago—

      But happy Fate that ’tis Luke’s voice that calls!

      [To Luke:] Aye, Obi-Wan Kenobi, Obi-Wan

      Kenobi. [Aside:] O, the name is like a song—

      Yet whether glorious song of joy or else

      Some dirge of bitter pain I’m yet unsure.

      [To Luke:] It is a name I have not heard for lo

      These many, many years—a long, long time.

      LUKE

      My uncle knoweth Obi-Wan, I ken.

      He doth report to me the man is dead.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] O Owen, wretched knave! Such base deceit,

      And yet I know full well why thou so spok’st.

      Should I have acted diff’rent in thy place?

      [To Luke:] But nay, the man takes not his final sleep.

      At least—unto this moment now—not yet.

      LUKE

      Then know’st thou him?

      OBI-WAN

      —Aye, verily I do.

      I know the man as if he were myself,

      For truly, aye, he is. This Obi-Wan,

      Dear Luke, ’tis I.

      R2-D2

      [aside:] —By heaven’s light! [To Obi-Wan:] Beep, meep.

      OBI-WAN

      I have not heard this name, this Obi-Wan, Since ere e’en thou, thyself, wert born.

      LUKE

      —Aye, then,

      I see this little droid is bound to thee.

      OBI-WAN

      I have no memory of owning such

      A droid as this. ’Tis curious indeed.

      [Sound of Tusken Raiders aside.] Now mark thee these my words: we must repair

      Indoors to ’scape a second cudg’ling here.

      The Sand People do easily take flight,

      But soon they shall return with many more.

      R2-D2

      Beep, meep, beep, beep, meep, squeak!

      LUKE

      —C-3PO!

      [C-3PO wakes, broken in pieces.

      C-3PO

      Where am I? Have I ta’en an ill-tim’d step?

      In dreams have I seen visions of my death—

      Ten thousand soldiers pranc’d upon my grave,

      And I, alone to face the murd’rous mass,

      Could only weep at my untimely end.

      LUKE

      Peace, peace, good droid. Thou art alive, fear not.

      Canst thou now stand? We quickly must depart

      Before the Sand People attack us here

      And strive to make thy dream reality.

      C-3PO

      O whether dream or waking, I know not,

      But go thee hence, and save thyself, I pray.

      C-3PO by nightmare hath been slain!

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] This droid shall quickly stretch his welcome thin.

      LUKE

      I shall not leave thee, droid, thou speak’st sans sense.

      Come, come, I’ll bear thee up, so argue not.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] What noble care he takes to soothe this droid.

      [To Luke:] We must make haste or face them yet again,

      So hence let us away unto my den.

      [Exeunt.

      SCENE 2.

      Inside the Kenobi homestead.

      Enter OBI-WAN KENOBI, LUKE SKYWALKER, C-3PO, and R2-D2.

      LUKE

      Nay, thou art sure misled, O wise one, for

      My father hath not fought in any wars.

      Full many evenings as I lay abed

      Such tales I heard of him I never knew:

      A navigator on a freighter ship

      Which carried fragrant spices hence to yon

      My father was. He kneweth naught of wars.

      OBI-WAN

      So hath thine uncle told thee. Marry, he

      Did not agree with aught thy father told

      Of his philosophy and brave ideals.

      Thine uncle, tether’d to the land, did not

      Believe thy father should become involv’d

      In matters of the stars and Empires, nay.

      [Aside:] What shall I of the father tell the child?

      If gentle Luke knew all that’s known to me

      I�
    �ll warrant he’d not understand the rhyme

      And reason for my words. And yet, what is’t

      To lie? To tell the truth, all else be damn’d?

      Or else to tell, perhaps, a greater truth?

      Is it the truth to tell a boy each fact

      And thus deface his father’s memory?

      Or have I spoken better truth to Luke

      When I about his father speak with pride?

      Aye, ev’ry child deserves a champion.

      LUKE

      Hast thou done battle in the Clone Wars?

      OBI-WAN

      —Aye.

      And once was I a Jedi Knight, the same

      As thy dear father.

      LUKE

      —O, how tears well up

      Within me for the loss of that dear man

      Whom never I did know, nor do, nor will.

      OBI-WAN

      I tell thee truly, ’mongst the pilots he

      Was e’er the greatest in the galaxy.

      He also was a cunning warrior,

      And to the last was he a dear, dear friend.

      [Aside:] And now to play upon his natur’l sense

      Of self-importance, so to draw him near

      To thoughts of Jedi training for himself.

      [To Luke:] I hear thou art a pilot skill’d as well.

      This calleth to my mind a gift I have

      For thee. Thy father hath desir’d that thou

      Shouldst have this weapon when thou wert of age.

      Thine uncle, though, would none of it, so fear’d

      He that thou might adjoin with Obi-Wan

      Upon a fool’s crusade or devil’s task

      Just as thy father hath when he was young.

      C-3PO

      Dear Sir, if thou dost need me not, I shall

      Shut down upon the present moment, here.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] Why speak’st he here when ’tis my time to speak?

      These droids of protocol are e’er uncouth:

      Of etiquette they know but little, troth!

      LUKE

      Pray tell, what is’t?

      OBI-WAN

      —Thy father’s lightsaber.

      It is the weapon of a Jedi Knight:

      If thou in thine own hand could hold a sun,

      Then thou wouldst know the power of this tool.

      Not merely random, neither awkward like

      A blaster. Nay, the lightsaber maintains

      A noble elegance, a Jedi’s pride.

      ’Tis something for a civiliz’d new age.

      CHORUS

      Now holdeth Luke the weapon in his hand,

      And with a switch the flame explodes in blue.

      The noble light Luke’s rev’rence doth command:

      That instant was a Jedi born anew.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] Now doth the Force begin to work in him.

      [To Luke:] For many generations Jedi were

      The guarantors of justice, peace, and good

      Within the Old Republic. Ere the dark

      Times came and ere the Empire ’gan to reign.

      LUKE

      How hath my father died?

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] —O question apt!

      The story whole I’ll not reveal to him,

      Yet may he one day understand my drift:

      That from a certain point of view it may

      Be said my answer is the honest truth.

      [To Luke:] A Jedi nam’d Darth Vader—aye, a lad

      Whom I had taught until he evil turn’d—

      Did help the Empire hunt and then destroy

      The Jedi. [Aside:] Now, the hardest words of all

      I’ll utter here unto this innocent,

      With hope that one day he shall comprehend.

      [To Luke:] He hath thy Father murder’d and betray’d,

      And now are Jedi nearly all extinct.

      Young Vader was seduc’d and taken by

      The dark side of the Force.

      LUKE

      —The Force?

      OBI-WAN

      —The Force.

      The Force doth give a Jedi all his pow’r,

      And ’tis a field of energy that doth

      Surround and penetrate and bind all things

      Together, here within our galaxy.

      R2-D2

      [aside:] In hearing this wise man I have almost

      My errand quite forgot. Now to my work!

      [To Obi-Wan:] Beep, meep, meep, squeak, beep, whee, squeak, whistle, meep!

      OBI-WAN

      And now, my little friend, shall I attempt

      To find out whence thou came, and to discern

      The reason wherefore thou hast left thy home

      For lands unknown, a mission to pursue.

      LUKE

      He hath a message play’d—

      OBI-WAN

      —Thus have I found.

      Enter PRINCESS LEIA, in beam projected by R2-D2.

      LEIA

      Dear General Kenobi, many years

      Ago thou serv’d my noble father in

      The Clone Wars. Now, he beggeth thee to come

      Again and aid him in his struggle with

      The Empire. Sadly may I not be there

      With thee in person, my request to give.

      My ship of late hath fallen under siege

      And thus my mission—bringing thee unto

      My cherish’d planet Alderaan—hath fail’d.

      Yet have I deep within the mem’ry banks

      Of this brave R2 unit stor’d the plans

      Most vital for rebellion’s victory.

      My father can retrieve the plans therein,

      But I must ask of thee to take the droid

      And bring him unto Alderaan with care.

      The desp’rate hour is now upon us—please,

      I beg thee, Sir. O help me, Obi-Wan

      Kenobi, help. Thou art mine only hope.

      [Exit Princess Leia from beam.

      CHORUS

      The message ends, then doth a silence fall.

      While Obi-Wan his duty contemplates,

      Young Luke considers whether Fate doth call.

      Aye—in this moment, destiny awaits.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] The boy doth hear and hath the taste of fire

      New burning in his ears. Now shall I play

      The part of fuel and gently stoke that fire.

      [To Luke:] Thou must be taught the Force if thou wouldst come

      Away with me, and go to Alderaan.

      LUKE

      Nay, Alderaan? [Aside:] This man hath many charms,

      And now it seems to me that I have been

      These many hours under some great spell

      That he hath cast. [To Obi-Wan:] Nay, I must hence back home.

      ’Tis late, and Uncle Owen shall be vex’d,

      If I do not return to him ere long.

      OBI-WAN

      [aside:] And now it must be done or else ’tis lost!

      [To Luke:] I need all thy good help, Luke—so doth she.

      For such adventures I have grown too old.

      LUKE

      Nay, nay, I should not be involv’d, dear friend.

      Much work there is to be completed yet,

      And as the seers say true, a crop without

      Its harvester is like a dewback sans

      Its rider. Verily, I loathe the cruel

      And noisome Empire, aye, yet nothing ’gainst

      It have I pow’r to do at present. Fie!

      ’Tis all so far, far distant from this place.

      OBI-WAN

      Thus speaks thine uncle through thy lips, not thee.

      LUKE

      Mine uncle, O, mine uncle! How shall I

      To him explain this matter? Tell me, how?

      OBI-WAN

      Come now with me and learn the Force, dear Luke.

      LUKE

      [aside:] Now am I split in twain by Fate’s sharp turns.

      Two paths: the one toward adventure leads,


      The other taketh me back to my home.

      I have, for all my life, long’d to go hence

      And now this Obi-Wan hath reason giv’n

      Why I should leave my Tatooine and fly

      Unto the stars. Aye, he hath told me of

      The pow’rful Force. And yet, another force

      Doth pull me home: the force of duty and

      Responsibility. I would go hence,

      Would fly today and ne’er look back again,

      Except Beru and Owen are my true

      And loyal family. ’Tis settled, then,

      I stay on Tatooine until the time

      When I may leave with clear, unfetter’d soul.

      [To Obi-Wan:] I shall take thee as far as Anchorhead.

      From there may’st thou find transport to where’er

      Thou goest—aye, throughout the galaxy.

      OBI-WAN

      Thou must hold with thy conscience, it is true,

      Whate’er thou thinkest right, thus thou shouldst do.

      [Exeunt.

      SCENE 3.

      Inside the Death Star.

      Enter Imperial generals and Senators, including ADMIRAL MOTTI and COMMANDER TAGGE.

      TAGGE

      Until this battle station utterly

      Prepar’d and operational shall be,

      ’Tis plainly vulner’ble to an attack.

      The rebels have more resources and are

      More dangerous that thou wilt deign to see.

      MOTTI

      Perhaps of danger to thy star fleet, aye,

      But not unto this battle station strong.

      TAGGE

      Rebellion shall gain more support within

      Th’Imperial Senate—

      Enter GRAND MOFF TARKIN and DARTH VADER.

      TARKIN

      [aside:] —O, these men do talk

      And quibble like a brood of clucking hens!

      [To Tagge:] Th’Imperial Senate, which thou speak’st of here,

      No longer any threat to us doth hold.

      For truly have I just receivèd word

     


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