Summary: The day after Brady and Drummond's dramatic
showdown in the courtroom, the town is waiting for word of the verdict. In the
virtually empty courthouse, Hornbeck cracks jokes about how he will miss the
circus of the trial. Cates, for his part, is visibly nervous. He fears the jury
will send him to jail. Drummond admits that, while he does not know what
verdict the jury will deliver, he feels he has a "smell" of the way they're
thinking. When Cates tells Drummond that this case has been a "long shot,"
Drummond tells him the story of his first "long shot," a rocking horse named
Golden Dancer that Drummond wanted when he was seven years old. One birthday,
he received Golden Dancer as a gift. The first time he rode the horse, he broke
it. Golden Dancer was "[a]ll shine, and no substance!"
A radio broadcaster enters the courthouse, preparing to
broadcast the verdict live across the nation. Brady notes the presence of the radio
microphone with pleasure, expecting that he will be able to deliver a grand
sermon to the country. The jury files into the courtroom and delivers its
verdict to the Judge, who announces it: "The jury's decision is unanimous.
Bertram Cates is found guilty as charged!" Before the Judge passes sentence,
Drummond reminds him that Cates is entitled to make a statement. Cates declares
he feels he has been convicted of breaking an unjust law. This plainspoken
defense, which even elicits a small "crack of applause," seems to deflate Brady
in his victory. It also, quite possibly, motivates the Judge to assess a minor
fine of one hundred dollars as Cates' punishment. As the stage directions put
it: "The mighty Evolution Law explodes with the pale puff of a wet firecracker."
Brady vehemently objects to the paltry nature of the fee,
arguing that the court must "make an example" of this "sinner," but Drummond
objects, stating that he and his client will appeal the fine and have no
intention of paying it. In a half-hearted answer to Brady's concerns, the Judge
sets a bond of five hundred dollars, and then-at Drummond's prompting-adjourns
the court. Defiantly, Brady begins to read a prepared statement to the court
and the listening nation, but spectators gradually leave, to buy Eskimo Pies
and generally return to the business of their lives; after a little time, the
radio man removes the microphone, while Brady is in mid-speech. Falling silent,
Brady suffers an attack of some kind. As he is carried from the courtroom, he
can be heard reciting the inaugural address he has several times been denied
the chance to deliver. Hornbeck reacts to this turn of events with no concern
for Brady as a person: he opines, "Show me a shouter, / And I'll show you an
also-ran. A might-have-been, / An almost-was."
Cates, confused, asks Drummond if he won or lost. Drummond
assures him that, despite the fines levied against him, he has won in the eyes
of millions of people: "They'll read in their papers tonight that you smashed a
bad law. You made it a joke!... [And] you've helped the next fella. Tomorrow
it'll be something else-and another fella will have to stand up. And you've
helped give him the guts to do it!" Hornbeck pays Cates' bail, on behalf of his
newspaper in Baltimore, and is reunited and reconciled with Rachel, who
expresses her newfound resolution to think through the issues raised in the
trial for her.
The Judge delivers the news that Brady has died. Hornbeck
cynically refers to Brady as "A Barnum-bunkum Bible-beating bastard!" This
comment proves too much for Drummond, who wheels on Hornbeck with anger: "You
have no right to spit on his religion than you have a right to spit on my
religion! Or my lack of it!" He believes Brady possessed "much greatness."
Still, he acknowledges Brady's fatal flaw by quoting Proverbs 11:29 as Brady's
obituary: "He that troubleth his own house shall inherit the wind: and the fool
shall be servant to the wise in heart." As he leaves the courthouse, Drummond,
in a symbolic bit of stage business, "weighs" Darwin's book and the Bible in
his hands; then he "slaps the two books together and jams them in his brief
case, side by side." The curtain falls.
Analysis: Lawrence and Lee's stage directions again convey
much of the real truth of this scene: when Cates speaks out against the state's
law, Brady is rendered a much less imposing force-"He's won the case. The prize
is his, but he can't reach the candy." Or, a few moments earlier, these stage
directions: "It is a spiteful, bitter victory for him, not a conquest with a
cavalcade of angels." These stage directions, and the ensuing action, in which
Brady cannot command a hearing, illustrates how, even though he has won the
"famous Hillsboro Monkey Trial case," he has lost the allegiance of the age.
The winds of public opinion have started and will continue to shift against him
and the unthinking, literal-minded approach to faith that he advocates.
The story Drummond tells about Golden Dancer is not
necessarily meant to imply that the spiritual truths of that faith are a
lie-although some critics of the play may take that meaning away from it-but
rather that the self-assured, smug, sanctified piety of people like Brady
and-perhaps even to a greater degree-the general population of places like
Hillsboro is "all shine, and no substance." The story captures Drummond's sense
of purpose: to expose falsehood and seek out truth, no matter where that search
leads. On the other hand, audiences may well ask if, for all their apparent
condemnation of Hornbeck through Drummond's voice, Lawrence and Lee are not
just as guilty of treating Brady dismissively.
In the final analysis, however, it is perhaps not the
playwrights' task to go beyond what they have done: they have, through
Drummond, exposed the dangers of uncritical acceptance of another's thoughts
and beliefs. Such blind loyalty to what has gone before prevents individuals,
and the human race as a whole, from seeing what lies ahead. Drummond would no
doubt agree with the famous, "90-second commencement speech" delivered on
several occasions by Theodor Geisel, better known as "Dr. Seuss":
My
uncle ordered popovers
from the restaurant's bill of fare.
And, when they were served,
he regarded them
with a penetrating stare.
Then he spoke great Words of Wisdom
as he sat there on that chair:
"To eat these things,"
said my uncle,
"you must exercise great care.
You may swallow down what's solid.
BUT.
you must spit out the air!"
And.
as you partake of the world's bill of fare,
that's darned good advice to follow.
Do a lot of spitting out the hot air.
And be careful what you swallow.
SOURCES CITED:
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English
Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2004, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin
Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/
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