Fabula
S3E16 · The U.S. Poet Laureate

Toby Brokers Empathetic Deal with Traumatized Tabitha

Toby joins the despondent Tabitha at the fountain steps, where she unburdens her trauma from witnessing a landmine kill a boy in Banja Luka, triggering her mid-lecture breakdown reciting 'Howl.' Self-doubting her artistic role amid geopolitical complexities, she proposes performing 64 couplets on the American experience at dinner in exchange for a private audience with President Bartlet to share her story. Toby swiftly agrees, crossing her name off his protest list, defusing the crisis with unexpected compassion that reveals his depth beyond political calculation.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

5

Toby approaches Tabitha at the fountain, their silent exchange heavy with unspoken tension.

apprehension to vulnerability ['Square outside lecture hall with loud …

Tabitha recounts the traumatic Banja Luka incident where a boy died from a landmine while fishing.

composure to raw grief ['Memory of Banja Luka']

Tabitha reveals her poetic breakdown during 'Howl' recitation, exposing artistic crisis.

defensiveness to humility ['Georgetown lecture memory']

Tabitha negotiates terms: private Bartlet meeting about Banja Luka in exchange for performing 64 couplets at dinner.

desperation to cautious hope

Toby crosses Tabitha's name off his list with finality, their negotiation complete as he departs for the press conference.

tension to resolution

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Despondent vulnerability yielding to relieved hope

Tabitha sits facing away despondently on steps, sighs heavily, recounts Banja Luka landmine death and 'Howl' breakdown with raw vulnerability, voices self-doubt on art's truth-telling, proposes couplets performance for private presidential audience, chuckles as Toby crosses her off list.

Goals in this moment
  • Share Banja Luka trauma directly with President
  • Avoid public protest by trading poetry performance
Active beliefs
  • Artists captivate rather than dictate truth
  • Personal testimony trumps public confrontation
Character traits
traumatized self-doubting resilient artistically fervent
Follow Tabitha Fortis's journey

Empathetic resolve masking political urgency

Toby strides past the fountain to sit beside Tabitha on the steps, listens intently to her trauma recount and lecture breakdown, questions gently, agrees to presidential meeting, reveals and crosses her name off his protest notepad with pen, then departs for press conference.

Goals in this moment
  • Neutralize Tabitha's potential protest threat
  • Secure her cooperation via presidential access for White House benefit
Active beliefs
  • Personal vulnerability can forge political alliances
  • Human stories outweigh ideological standoffs in crisis resolution
Character traits
empathetic pragmatic decisive compassionate
Follow Toby Ziegler's journey

Not directly observed

President Bartlet is referenced as the key figure Tabitha seeks private audience with to share her story, pivotal to Toby's agreement but absent from the scene.

Character traits
supportive poised strategically vital
Follow Abigail Bartlet's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Toby's Protest List Pen

Toby pulls the pen from his coat pocket alongside the notepad, using it to decisively slash Tabitha's name from the protest list, symbolizing crisis resolution and her removal from agitator status, transforming a tool of surveillance into one of reconciliation.

Before: Pocketed in Toby's coat, unused
After: In Toby's possession, ink freshly applied to notepad
Before: Pocketed in Toby's coat, unused
After: In Toby's possession, ink freshly applied to notepad

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Sava River (Banja Luka)

Sava River near Banja Luka invoked in Tabitha's vivid recount of fishing trip turned tragedy, where boy's landmine death anchors her trauma, fueling lecture collapse and protest motivation, contrasting serene postwar recovery with explosive horror.

Atmosphere Evoked as muddy, treacherous currents hiding postwar perils
Function Backstory anchor for emotional catalyst
Symbolism Emblem of fragile peace shattered by lingering violence
Muddy currents and fishing lures Submerged landmine amid debris
Lecture Hall Steps

The weathered steps outside the lecture hall serve as intimate negotiation ground post-Tabitha's breakdown, with fountain's loud rush underscoring emotional rawness; Toby approaches from square, sits beside her, enabling vulnerable exchange amid night chill and security lamps.

Atmosphere Chill night air heavy with desolation, pierced by fountain's relentless murmur
Function Neutral site for crisis de-escalation and personal bargaining
Symbolism Threshold bridging artistic unraveling to political accord
Access Public square but isolated by night and post-event hush
Loud fountain sound dominating background Harsh security lamps casting stark shadows

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
NARRATIVELY_FOLLOWS medium

"Toby's dismissal is followed by his approach to Tabitha at the fountain, their silent exchange heavy with tension."

Toby Discovers Tabitha's Lecture Breakdown
S3E16 · The U.S. Poet Laureate
What this causes 2
Temporal weak

"Toby's departure is followed by C.J. and Charlie discussing the environmental impact of drilling in ANWR."

C.J. Schools Charlie on ANWR Drilling's Ecological Devastation
S3E16 · The U.S. Poet Laureate
Temporal weak

"Toby's departure is followed by C.J. and Charlie discussing the environmental impact of drilling in ANWR."

C.J.'s Perceptive Confrontation: Bartlet's Intentional Gaffe Exposed?
S3E16 · The U.S. Poet Laureate

Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"TABITHA: There was a man in Banja Luka that I met. He took his son and I... to go fishing in the Sava River. And the little boy, uh... hooked a piece of garbage... and when he tried to take it off the line, it blew him up. Right in front of his father, and, uh... right in front of me."
"TABITHA: I was thinking maybe, you know... I-I don't if you could do this, but... I was thinking if I could get a few minutes alone with the President, so that could tell him what I saw in Banja Luka? [beat] Then it wouldn't have to be a thing, you know, at the dinner... in there I could, uh... I have 64 couplets on the American experience that I think might be appropriate."
"TOBY: Yeah, we can do that."