Here is the entry for the mini opera competition run by the ENO based on a story 'The Dream Sweeper' by Neil Gaiman.
Rags
Setting, a huge tip consisting of mountains of
rags. Ghost like people sort through the rags scavenging for those that can be
sold. A man, the rag man, swaggers towards them.
Rag Man:
Come on over ladies and gents,
let’s be having you, penny for old mares,
a quid for something new.
Found a sailor drowning in a whisky sea,
a man trying to open doors with a melting
key?
A check-out girl, glued to her swivel chair,
she spits teeth onto the belt
watched by a queue that doesn’t care?
How about a soldier watching his mates die,
he screams to warn them over and over
but they never hear his cry?
A timid teenage girl running
through her school, suddenly she’s naked,
I’d give a fiver for that but I won’t take any tat.
Top price paid for terror, misery and pain
mare stuff I can recycle again and again and
again
Scavengers: We can sell you all their nights,
but there are no dreams for us,
only theirs to sift and to sort;
bad to worse, worse to this ,
the last resort for us.
We are the dreamless,
the scavengers, the lost.
and no one gives a toss.
Rag man: Listen I’m no bleeding heart,
I’m only here to play a part,
my job is just to buy the mares.
Who cares about you...No one cares
Sweeper enters with his broom pushing a hand
cart piled high with rags. The scavengers all gather around his cart examining
its contents. He sits down, exhausted.
Sweeper: The nights these days seem
longer,
each pavement and every gutter
clogged
with all their dreams,
the clutter of designer histories,
words they mutter into pillows,
and into the ear of the dark
that listens at their window.
Each
dream roars in my head
and this old dragon breathes
a fire into the shadows,
into the fabric of the night
then it slashes, tears and rips
and I sweep it up, sweep it up
and bring it to the tip
Scavengers: We need new fears, new tears,
bring us something new.
These old sorrows, bad tomorrows,
are two a penny now.
Sweeper’s Lover: Leave him be, leave him be
can’t
you see he’s had enough
night
after night he sweeps alone
sweeps
the dark for us.
Let
him have some peace
all
their ragged dreams
have
worn him to the bone.
The Sweeper: Their dreams have worn me down.
I am the man they don’t quite see,
a roll-up glow in a back alley.
I am that maybe, an almost sound
they believe they don’t quite hear,
the constant foot- fall behind them
that suddenly disappears.
That old moon
is this white silk,
a soft noose around my neck,
those stars a million holes pecked
in black velvet by dark crows.
Scavengers: We need new fears, new tears,
bring us something new.
These old sorrows, bad tomorrows,
are two a penny now.
Sweeper’s Lover: Remember Sweeper what I find as well
those scraps of hope I
never sell;
odds and ends of wonder,
happiness,
bright threads of
memories.
We sort and sell the torn dreams
but there are always those I keep
that makes it worth the sweep.
Scavengers: A girl whose wedding
dress is slashed and cut.
An
opera singer whose mouth is sewn tight shut.
A mother who sees her dead son in the house.
A man being chased by a giant Minnie Mouse
Rag Man: A penny for that giant
Mouse,
tenner for the mother’s haunted house.
Sweeper’s Lover: Hold her rag to the moonlight,
see the tight warp and weft
the close weave of her longing
is all that she has left,
the silky slivers of her heart
that shimmer in the dark.
The Sweeper: I bring it all here, the scraps
of teeth bared, bolting mares,
the ragged dreams of life,
their Kevlar loves, their flimsy cares,
I bring them home to you.
A panic at losing
something,
the wanting that comes first,
all their best dreams and worst,
I bring them home to
you,
Sweeper’s Lover: I have made a quilt to keep you warm
out of dreams that may be torn
but are flecked with love and hope
stitches of better tomorrows.
stitches of better tomorrows.
I know the strands of cold
that wrap around your soul,
that wrap around your soul,
those frayed chill fingers
of lost dreams that linger
of lost dreams that linger
on your face and
in the air you breathe.
Rag Man: A hundred, no a thousand for that quilt.
It’s wasted on the sweeper;
he’s the one who built
he’s the one who built
this wasteland, rag, by
rag, by rag
Scavengers: He swept and swept,
and built this wasteland,
and built this wasteland,
rag, by rag, by rag
Sweeper: I swept and swept,
and built this wasteland,
and built this wasteland,
rag, by rag, by rag
Sweeper’s Lover: No, you swept for us, for me,
we forgot how to dream and
we forgot how to dream and
we built our own wasteland
here, rag, by rag, by rag
here, rag, by rag, by rag
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