PEER GYNT
A monologue from the
play by Henrik
Ibsen
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NOTE: This monologue is reprinted
from The Collected Works of Henrik Ibsen, vol. iv: Peer Gynt.
Trans. William and Charles Archer. New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1911. |
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- PRIEST: [Speaking beside a grave.]
- Now, when the soul has gone to meet its doom,
- And here the dust lies, like an empty pod,--
- Now, my dear friends, we'll speak a word or two
- About this dead man's pilgrimage on earth.
- He was not wealthy, neither was he wise,
- His voice was weak, his bearing was unmanly,
- He spoke his mind abashed and faltering,
- He scarce was master at his own fireside;
- He sidled into church, as though appealing
- For leave, like other men, to take his place.
- It was from Gudbrandsdale, you know, he came.
- When here he settled he was but a lad;--
- And you remember how, to the very last,
- He kept his right hand hidden in his pocket.
- That right hand in the pocket was the feature
- That chiefly stamped his image on the mind,--
- And therewithal his writhing, his abashed
- Shrinking from notice wheresoe'er he went.
- But, though he still pursued a path aloof,
- And ever seemed a stranger in our midst,
- You all know what he strove so hard to hide,--
- The hand he muffled had four fingers only.--
- I well remember, many years ago,
- One morning; there were sessions held at Lundë.
- 'Twas war-time, and the talk in every mouth
- Turned on the country's sufferings and its fate.
- I stood there watching. At the table sat
- The Captain, 'twixt the Bailiff and the sergeants;
- Lad after lad was measured up and down,
- Passed, and enrolled, and taken for a soldier.
- The room was full, and from the green outside,
- Where thronged the young folks, loud the laughter rang.
- A name was called, and forth another stepped,
- One pale as snow upon the glacier's edge.
- They bade the youth advance; he reached the table;
- We saw his right hand swaddled in a clout;--
- He gasped, he swallowed, battling after words,--
- But, though the Captain urged him, found no voice.
- Ah yes, at last! Then with his cheek aflame,
- His tongue now failing him, now stammering fast
- He mumbled something of a scythe that slipped
- By chance, and shore his finger to the skin.
- Straightway a silence fell upon the room.
- Men bandied meaning glances; they made mouths;
- They stoned the boy with looks of silent scorn.
- He felt the hail-storm, but he saw it not.
- Then up the Captain stood, the grey old man;
- He spat, and pointed forth, and thundered "Go!"
- And the lad went. On both sides men fell back,
- Till through their midst he had to run the gauntlet.
- He reached the door; from there he took to flight;--
- Up, up he went,--through wood and over hillside,
- Up through the stone-screes, rough, precipitous.
- He had his home up there among the mountains.--
- It was some six months later he came here,
- With mother, and betrothed, and little child.
- He leased some ground upon the high hill-side,
- There where the waste lands trend away towards Lomb.
- He married the first moment that he could;
- He built a house; he broke the stubborn soil;
- He throve, as many a cultivated patch
- Bore witness, bravely clad in waving gold.
- At church he kept his right hand in his pocket,--
- But sure I am at home his fingers nine
- Toiled every whit as hard as others' ten.--
- One spring the torrent washed it all away.
- Their lives were spared. Ruined and stripped of all,
- He set to work to make another clearing;
- And, ere the autumn, smoke again arose
- From a new, better-sheltered, mountain farmhouse.
- Sheltered? From torrent--not from avalanche;
- Two years, and all beneath the snow lay buried.
- But still the avalanche could not daunt his spirit.
- He dug, and raked, and carted--cleared the ground--
- And the next winter, ere the snow-blasts came,
- A third time was his little homestead reared.
- Three sons he had, three bright and stirring boys;
- They must to school, and school was far away;--
- And they must clamber, where the hill-track failed,
- By narrow ledges past the headlong scree.
- What did he do? The eldest had to manage
- As best he might, and, where the path was worst,
- His father bound a rope round him to stay him;--
- The others on his back and arms he bore.
- Thus he toiled, year by year, till they were men.
- Now might he well have looked for some return.
- In the New World, three prosperous gentlemen
- Their school-going and their father have forgotten.
- He was short-sighted. Out beyond the circle
- Of those most near to him he nothing saw.
- To him seemed meaningless as cymbals' tinkling
- Those words that to the heart should ring like steel.
- His race, his fatherland, all things high and shining,
- Stood ever, to his vision, veiled in mist.
- But he was humble, humble, was this man;
- And since that sessions-day his doom oppressed him,
- As surely as his cheeks were flushed with shame,
- And his four fingers hidden in his pocket--
- Offender 'gainst his country's laws? Ay, true!
- But there is one thing that the law outshineth
- Sure as the snow-white tent of Glittertind
- Has clouds, like higher rows of peaks, above it.
- No patriot was he. Both for church and state
- A fruitless tree. But there, on the upland ridge,
- In the small circle where he saw his calling,
- There he was great, because he was himself.
- His inborn note rang true unto the end.
- His days were as a lute with muted strings.
- And therefore, peace be with thee, silent warrior,
- That fought the peasant's little fight, and fell!
- It is not ours to search the heart and reins;--
- That is no task for dust, but for its ruler;--
- Yet dare I freely, firmly, speak my hope:
- He scarce stands crippled now before his God!
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MONOLOGUES BY HENRIK IBSEN |
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