2 Best The Woman Monologues

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The People (The Woman)

Category: Play Role: The Woman From: The People

The Woman says

A plain, dark trees off at the edge, against the trees a little house and a big barn. A flat piece of land fenced in. Stubble, furrows. Horses waiting to get in at barn; cows standing around a pump. A tile yard, a water tank, one straight street of a little town. The country so still it seemed dead. The trees like–hopes that have been given up. The grave yards–on hills–they come so fast. I noticed them first because of my tombstone, but I got to thinking about the people–the people who spent their whole lives right near the places where they are now. There’s something in the thought of them–like the cows standing around the pump. So still, so patient, it–kind of hurts. And their pleasures: –a flat field fenced in. Your great words carried me to other great words. I thought of Lincoln, and what he said of a few of the dead. I said it over and over. I said things and didn’t know the meaning of them ’till after I had said them. I said–“The truth–the truth–the truth that opens from our lives as water opens from the rocks.” Then I knew what that truth was. “Let us here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain.” I mean–all of them. Let life become what it may become! –so beautiful that everything that is back of us is worth everything it cost.

The People (The Woman)

Category: Play Role: The Woman From: The People

The Woman says

At least he has a heart. It’s only that he feels he must be witty. But you–you’re not going to let us just go away again, are you? He gave up his oyster bed, and this boy didn’t even wait for the dance, and me–I gave up my tombstone. Yes–tombstone. It had always been a saying in our family– “He won’t even have a stone to mark his grave.” They said it so much and so solemnly that I thought it meant something. I sew–plain sewing, but I’ve often said to myself– “Well, at least I’ll have a stone to mark my grave.” And then, there was a man who had been making speeches to the miners–I live in a town in Idaho–and he had your magazine, and he left it in the store, and the storekeeper said to me, when I went there for thread– “Here, you like to read. Don’t you want this? I wish you would take it away, because if some folks in town see it, they’ll think I’m not all I should be.” He meant the cover. So I took it home, and when my work was done that night, I read your wonderful words. They’re like a spring–if you’ve lived in a dry country, you’ll know what I mean. And they made me know that my tombstone was as dead as–well,

(with a little laugh)

as dead as a tombstone. So I had to have something to take its place.