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Six Plays Page 5


  PEER

  Heisan! Hop!

  Now we’ll play at Peer and reindeer;—

  [Curvetting.]

  I’m the reindeer, you are Peer!

  ÅSE

  Oh, I’m going clean distraught!

  PEER

  See now—we have reached the shallows;—

  [Wades ashore.]

  Come, a kiss now, for the reindeer;

  Just to thank him for the ride——

  ÅSE [Boxing his ears.]

  This is how I thank him!

  PEER

  Ow!

  That’s a miserable fare!

  ÅSE

  Put me down!

  PEER

  First to the wedding.

  Be my spokesman. You’re so clever;

  Talk to him, the old curmudgeon;

  Say Mads Moen’s good for nothing——

  ÅSE

  Put me down!

  PEER

  And tell him then

  What a rare lad is Peer Gynt.

  ÅSE

  Truly, you may swear to that!

  Fine’s the character I’ll give you.

  Through and through I’ll show you up;

  All about your devil’s pranks

  I will tell them straight and plain——

  PEER

  Will you?

  ÅSE [Kicking with rage.]

  I won’t stay my tongue

  Till the old man sets his dog

  At you, as you were a tramp!

  PEER

  H’m; then I must go alone.

  ÅSE

  Ay, but I’ll come after you!

  PEER

  Mother dear, you haven’t strength——

  ÅSE

  Strength? When I’m in such a rage,

  I could crush the rocks to powder!

  Hu! I’d make a meal of flints!

  Put me down!

  PEER

  You’ll promise then——

  ÅSE

  Nothing! I’ll to Hegstad with you!

  They shall know you, what you are!

  PEER

  Then you’ll even have to stay here.

  ÅSE

  Never! To the feast I’m coming!

  PEER

  That you shan’t.

  ÅSE

  What will you do?

  PEER

  Perch you on the mill-house roof.

  [He puts her up on the roof. ÅSE screams.]

  ÅSE

  Lift me down!

  PEER

  Yes, if you’ll listen——

  ÅSE

  Rubbish!

  PEER

  Dearest mother, pray——

  ÅSE [Throwing a sod of grass at him.]

  Lift me down this moment, Peer!

  PEER

  If I dared, be sure I would.

  [Coming nearer.]

  Now remember, sit quite still.

  Do not sprawl and kick about;

  Do not tug and tear the shingles,—

  Else ’twill be the worse for you;

  You might topple down.

  ÅSE

  You beast.

  PEER

  Do not kick!

  ÅSE

  I’d have you blown,

  Like a changeling, into space!5

  PEER

  Mother, fie!

  ÅSE

  Bah!

  PEER

  Rather give your

  Blessing on my undertaking.

  Will you? Eh?

  ÅSE

  I’ll thrash you soundly,

  Hulking fellow though you be!

  PEER

  Well, good-bye then, mother dear!

  Patience; I’ll be back ere long.

  [Is going, but turns, holds up his finger warningly, and says:]

  Careful now, don’t kick and sprawl!

  [Goes.]

  ÅSE

  Peer! God help me, now he’s off;

  Reindeer-rider! Liar! Hei!

  Will you listen!—No, he’s striding

  O’er the meadow——!

  [Shrieks.]

  Help. I’m dizzy!

  TWO OLD WOMEN, with sacks on their backs, come down the path to the mill.

  FIRST WOMAN

  Christ, who’s screaming?

  ÅSE

  It is I!

  SECOND WOMAN

  Åse! Well, you are exalted!

  ÅSE

  This won’t be the end of it;—

  Soon, God help me, I’ll be heaven-high.

  FIRST WOMAN

  Bless your passing!

  ÅSE

  Fetch a ladder;

  I must be down! That devil Peer——

  SECOND WOMAN

  Peer! Your son?

  ÅSE

  Now you can say

  You have seen how he behaves.

  FIRST WOMAN

  We’ll bear witness.

  ÅSE

  Only help me;

  Straight to Hegstad will I hasten——

  SECOND WOMAN

  Is he there?

  FIRST WOMAN

  You’ll be revenged, then;

  Aslak Smith will be there too.

  ÅSE [Wringing her hands.]

  Oh, God help me with my boy;

  They will kill him ere they’re done!

  FIRST WOMAN

  Oh, that lot has oft been talked of;

  Comfort you: what must be must be!

  SECOND WOMAN

  She is utterly demented.

  [Calls up the hill.]

  Eivind, Anders! Hei! Come here!

  A MAN’S VOICE

  What’s amiss?

  SECOND WOMAN

  Peer Gynt has perched his

  Mother on the mill-house roof!

  SCENE SECOND

  A hillock, covered with bushes and heather.The high-road runs behind it; a fence between.

  PEER GYNT comes along a footpath, goes quickly up to the fence, stops, and looks out over the distant prospect.

  PEER

  Yonder lies Hegstad. Soon I’ll have reached it.

  [Puts one leg over the fence; then hesitates.]

  Wonder if Ingrid’s alone in the house now?

  [Shades his eyes with his hand, and looks out.]

  No; to the farm guests are swarming like midges.—

  H’m, to turn back now perhaps would be wisest.

  [Draws back his leg.]

  Still they must titter behind your back,

  And whisper so that it burns right through you.

  [Moves a few steps away from the fence, and begins absently plucking leaves.]

  Ah, if I’d only a good strong dram now.

  Or if I could pass to and fro unseen.—

  Or were I unknown.—Something proper and strong

  Were the best thing of all, for the laughter don’t bite then.

  [Looks around suddenly as though afraid; then hides among the bushes.

  Some WEDDING-GUESTS6 pass by, going downwards towards the farm.]

  A MAN [In conversation as they pass.]

  His father was drunken, his mother is weak.

  A WOMAN.

  Ay, then it’s no wonder the lad’s good for nought.

  [They pass on. Presently PEER GYNT comes forward, his face flushed

  with shame. He peers after them.]

  PEER [Softly.]

  Was it me they were talking of?

  [With a forced shrug.]

  Oh, let them chatter?

  After all, they can’t sneer the life out of my body.

  [Casts himself down upon the heathery slope; lies for some time flat on his

  back with his hands under his head, gazing up into the sky.]

  What a strange sort of cloud! It is just like a horse.

  There’s a man on it too—and a saddle—and bridle.—

  And after it comes an old crone on a broomstick.

  [Laughs quietly to himself.]

  It is mother. She’s scolding and screaming: You beast!

  Hei you, Peer Gynt——

  [His eyes gradually close.]

  Ay, now she is frightened.—

  Peer Gynt he rides first, and there follow him many.—

  His steed it is gold-shod and crested with silver.

  Himself he has gauntlets and sabre and scabbard.

  His cloak it is long, and its lining is silken.

  Full brave is the company riding behind him.

  None of them, though, sits his charger so stoutly.

  None of them glitters like him in the sunshine.—

  Down by the fence stand the people in clusters,

  Lifting their hats, and agape gazing upwards.

  Women are curtseying. All the world knows him,

  Kaiser Peer Gynt, and his thousands of henchmen.

  Sixpenny pieces and glittering shillings

  Over the roadway he scatters like pebbles.

  Rich as a lord grows each man in the parish.

  High o’er the ocean Peer Gynt goes a-riding.

  Engelland’s Prince on the seashore awaits him;

  There too await him all Engelland’s maidens.

  Engelland’s nobles and Engelland’s Kaiser,

  See him come riding and rise from their banquet.

  Raising his crown, hear the Kaiser address him——

  ASLAK THE SMITH [To some other young men, passing along the road.]

  Just look at Peer Gynt there, the drunken swine——!

  PEER [Starting half up.]

  What, Kaiser——!

  THE SMITH [Leaning against the fence and grinning.]

  Up with you, Peer, my lad!

  PEER

  What the devil? The smith! What do you want here?

  THE SMITH [To the others.]

  He hasn’t got over the Lundëspree yet.

  PEER [Jumping up.]

  You’d better be off!

  THE SMITH

  I am going, yes.

  But tell us, where have you dropped from, man?

  You’ve been gone six weeks. Were you troll-taken, eh?

  PEER

  I have been doing strange deeds, Aslak Smith!

  THE SMITH [Winking to the others.]

  Let us hear them, Peer!

  PEER

  They are nought to you.

  THE SMITH [After a pause.]

  You’re going to Hegstad?

  PEER

  No.

  THE SMITH

  Time was

  They said that the girl there was fond of you.

  PEER

  You grimy crow——!

  THE SMITH [Falling back a little.]

  Keep your temper, Peer.

  Though Ingrid has jilted you, others are left;—

  Think—son of Jon Gynt! Come on to the feast;

  You’ll find there both lambkins and well-seasoned widows——

  PEER

  To hell——

  THE SMITH

  You will surely find one that will have you.—

  Good evening! I’ll give your respects to the bride.—

  [They go off, laughing and whispering.]

  PEER [Looks after them a while, then makes a defiant motion and turns half round.]

  For my part, may Ingrid of Hegstad go marry

  Whoever she pleases. It’s all one to me.

  [Looks down at his clothes.]

  My breeches are torn. I am ragged and grim.—

  If only I had something new to put on now.

  [Stamps on the ground.]

  If only I could, with a butcher-grip,

  Tear out the scorn from their very vitals!

  [Looks round suddenly.]

  What was that? Who was it that tittered behind there?

  H’m, I certainly thought——No no, it was no one.—

  I’ll go home to mother.

  [Begins to go upwards, but stops again and listens towards Hegstad.]

  They’re playing a dance!

  [Gazes and listens; moves downwards step by step, his eyes glisten; he rubs

  his hands down his thighs.]

  How the lasses do swarm! Six or eight to a man!

  Oh, galloping death,—I must join in the frolic!—

  But how about mother, perched up on the mill-house——

  [His eyes are drawn downwards again; he leaps and laughs.]

  Hei, how the Halling7 flies over the green!

  Ay, Guttorm, he can make his fiddle speak out!

  It gurgles and booms like a foss8 o’er a scaur.

  And then all that glittering bevy of girls!—

  Yes, galloping death, I must join in the frolic!

  [Leaps over the fence and goes down the road.]

  SCENE THIRD

  The farm-place at Hegstad. In the background, the dwelling-house. A THRONG OF GUESTS. A lively dance in progress on the green. THE FIDDLER sits on a table. THE KITCHEN-MASTER9 is standing in the doorway. COOKMAIDS are going to and fro between the different buildings. Groups of ELDERLY PEOPLE sit here and there, talking.

  A WOMAN [Joins a group that is seated on some logs of wood.]

  The bride? Oh yes, she is crying a bit;

  But that, you know, isn’t worth heeding.

  THE KITCHEN-MASTER [In another group.]

  Now then, good folk, you must empty the barrel.

  A MAN

  Thanks to you, friend; but you fill up too quick.

  A LAD [To the FIDDLER, as he flies past, holding a GIRL by the hand.]

  To it now, Guttorm, and don’t spare the fiddle-strings!

  THE GIRL

  Scrape till it echoes out over the meadows!

  OTHER GIRLS [Standing in a ring round a lad who is dancing.]

  That’s a rare fling!

  A GIRL

  He has legs that can lift him!

  THE LAD [Dancing.]

  The roof here is high,10 and the walls wide asunder.

  THE BRIDEGROOM [Comes whimpering up to his FATHER, who is standing talking with some other men, and twitches his jacket.]

  Father, she will not; she is so proud!

  HIS FATHER

  What won’t she do?

  THE BRIDEGROOM

  She has locked herself in.

  HIS FATHER

  Well, you must manage to find the key.

  THE BRIDEGROOM

  I don’t know how.

  HIS FATHER

  You’re a nincompoop!

  [Turns away to the others.The BRIDEGROOM drifts across the yard.]

  A LAD

  [Comes from behind the house.]

  Wait a bit, girls! Things’ll soon be lively!

  Here comes Peer Gynt.

  THE SMITH [Who has just come up.]

  Who invited him?

  THE KITCHEN-MASTER

  No one.

  [Goes towards the house.]

  THE SMITH [To the girls.]

  If he should speak to you, never take notice!

  A GIRL [To the others.]

  No, we’ll pretend that we don’t even see him.

  PEER GYNT [Comes in heated and full of animation, stops right in front of the group, and claps his hands.]

  Which is the liveliest girl of the lot of you?

  A GIRL [As he approaches her.]

  I am not.

  ANOTHER [Similarly.]

  I am not.

  A THIRD

  No; nor I either.

  PEER [To a fourth.]

  You come along, then, for want of a better.

  THE GIRL

  Haven’t got time.

  PEER [To a fifth.]

  Well then, you!

  THE GIRL [Going.]

  I’m for home.

  PEER

  To-night? are you utterly out of your senses?11

  THE SMITH [After a moment, in a low voice.]

  See, Peer, she’s taken a greybeard for partner.

  PEER [Turns sharply to an elderly man.]

  Where are the unbespoke girls?

  THE MAN

  Find them out.

  [Goes away from him.]

  PEER GYNT has suddenly become subdued. He glances shyly and furtively at the group.All look at him, but no one speaks. He approaches other groups.Wherever he goes there is silence; when he moves away they look after him and smile.

  PEER [To himself.]

  Mocking looks; needle-keen whispers12 and smiles.

  They grate like a sawblade under the file!

  [He slinks along close to the fence. SOLVEIG, leading little HELGA by

  the hand, comes into the yard, along with her PARENTS.]

  A MAN [To another, close to PEER GYNT.]

  Look, here are the new folk.

  THE OTHER

  The ones from the west?

  THE FIRST MAN

  Ay, the people from Hedal.

  THE OTHER

  Ah yes, so they are.

  PEER [Places himself in the path of the new-comers, points to SOLVEIG, and asks the FATHER:]

  May I dance with your daughter?

  THE FATHER [Quietly.]

  You may so; but first

  We must go to the farm-house and greet the good people.

  [They go in.]

  THE KITCHEN-MASTER [To PEER GYNT, offering him drink.]

  Since you are here, you’d best take a pull at the liquor.