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    Peer Gynt and Brand

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      what will you say that is? A flake

      of snow, melting? No, no, it

      flows from your anguished heart.

      BRAND: Agnes, my own, my wife, let us both

      be steadfast, even unto death.

      Out there I was a chosen man

      indeed. I was God’s champion.

      While, in mid-fjord, the boat

      laboured, sea-drenched I fought.

      The tiller strained in my hand

      yet steadied as it strained.

      Eight souls froze at the oars

      like corpses on their biers.

      The mast groaned, cordage clashed, flung

      loose on the wind. Our seams were sprung.

      The canvas blew to shreds,

      whipped to leeward. The seabirds’

      cries were drowned. Through darkness I saw

      cliff-falls, cataracts of snow,

      crash down upon the rocks.

      And all this while, He who makes

      storm and calm held me to His will.

      Through sea-howl I heard Him call.

      AGNES: How easy it is to wage war

      on the elements, and to dare

      all. How hard it seems to wait

      as I must, so very quiet,

      while life ticks by; and be at home

      to all the visitings of time;

      and hear the ceaseless sparrow-

      flutterings of sorrow

      in the eaves of the heart’s house.

      I long to be of use

      in the great world. I dare not

      remember, cannot forget.

      Know me for what I am.

      BRAND: Agnes, for shame, for shame!

      How can you think to scorn

      your life’s work, its true crown:

      my helpmate and my wife?

      Listen, and I’ll reveal

      strange mercies wrought from grief.

      Sometimes, Agnes, my eyes fill

      with tears of gratitude.

      I think that I see God,

      so close. As never before

      I greet Him face to face,

      feel His fatherly care.

      Then I desire to cast

      myself on His breast,

      weeping in His embrace.

      AGNES: And may He always appear

      so to you, Brand. Fathers forgive.

      It is tyrants who rave.

      BRAND: O Agnes, you must ever fear

      to question Him. Never presume

      to turn your face away from Him.

      I am the servant of the Lord.

      I am the warrior with the sword

      of righteousness. Your gentle hands

      shall soothe and heal my wounds.

      Agnes, embrace your task!

      AGNES: Everything that you ask

      of me seems too heavy to bear.

      I’m so weary I can scarcely hear

      what you say. Thoughts ravel my mind

      without beginning or end.

      I gaze at my own life

      almost with disbelief.

      My dearest, let me grieve

      and I may learn to live

      and serve you, purged of sorrow

      at last … I don’t know.

      Brand, while you were away,

      I saw my little boy

      again, I saw him! He came

      smiling into my room.

      He looked, as once he did,

      bright-eyed and rosy-cheeked.

      He came towards my bed

      as though to be cradled and rocked

      in my arms. It made my blood run cold.

      BRAND: Agnes!

      AGNES:    I knew that he’d turned

      to ice, out there in the icy ground.

      BRAND: Believe me, Agnes, our child

      has been gathered to God,

      he is in Paradise.

      It is a corpse that lies

      out there under the snow.

      AGNES [shrinking away from him]:

      Why do you tear and prod

      at the wound, make the blood flow?

      The body and the soul

      go down into the soil

      together. Together they rise up

      out of our mortal sleep.

      I cannot discriminate

      like you; I cannot tell them apart.

      To me they are as one,

      soul, body … my son.

      BRAND: Many an old wound shall

      bleed to make you well.

      AGNES: Stay by me in my need,

      Brand; for I’ll not be led

      against my will. Please try

      to be gentle; speak gently.

      Your voice is like a storm

      when you drive a soul to choose

      its own poor martyrdom.

      Is there no gentler voice

      that says to pain, ‘Be still,’

      no song that greets the light,

      no gentleness at all?

      Your God, I see Him sit

      just like some grim seigneur

      in His stronghold. I fear

      to irritate His gaze

      with my weak woman’s cries.

      BRAND: It seems, then, you’d prefer

      the God you knew before.

      AGNES: Einar’s mild God? Never!

      Yet I feel as if I were drawn

      by a longing for clear, pure air

      where it’s drawing towards dawn.

      Your visions, your new realms,

      your calling, your iron will,

      everything looms, overwhelms,

      threatens me, like the cliff

      that would bury us if it fell

      or the fjord that cuts us off

      from the world. Brand! Brand! Such

      pain! And for what? Your little church

      that crouches under the rock

      like a mouse from a hawk?

      BRAND [struck]:

      Again, again, that thought,

      like a tremor of air. What

      makes you speak so? Why do you say

      the church is too small?

      AGNES [shaking her head sorrowfully]:

               How can I

      give reasons? How do I know?

      How do the winds blow,

      how does a scent travel

      on the air? Must I unravel

      everything that goes through my mind?

      It is enough that I understand.

      Call it instinct, if you will.

      Brand, your church is too small.

      BRAND: ‘The young shall see visions and the old

      dream dreams.’13 What mysteries unfold,

      my Agnes! Even she I met

      wandering on the mountain height

      in madness froze me with that call:

      ‘The church is hideous and small, small.’

      Whether she knew of what she spoke

      I cannot tell; but the womenfolk

      echo her, murmuring all the time,

      as though possessed of the same dream,

      visionary things, things yet unknown,

      strange intimations of new Zion.14

      Dear angel of my destiny,

      you bless and guide me on my way.

      The church is small, I see it now.

      It shall be built anew,

      and the Lord God shall enter in

      to His own temple once again.

      AGNES: From this time forward, let it seem

      as if a wide deserted sea

      lay blank between my grief and me.

      I shall decide upon a tomb

      and bury the dead hopes of life;

      and make each mirrored citadel

      vanish as in a fairy tale.

      I’ll be your consecrated wife.

      BRAND: Agnes, the road leads on.

      AGNES: You sound so cold and stern,

      even now.

      BRAND:   It is God

      who speaks, not I.

      AGNES:      You’ve said

      that He is merciful

      to those who
    faint and fall,

      if they’ll but persevere.

      She turns to leave.

      BRAND: Agnes, must you go?

      AGNES [smiling]:

      It’s Christmas Eve, my dear,

      and I have things to do.

      Last Christmas you chided me

      a little for my extravagance:

      a lit candle in every sconce,

      and shining glass and greenery,

      the room alive with laughter’s song

      and all the gifts that love could bring.

      The candles shall be lit again;

      we’ll deck the tree; do what we can

      to keep our Christmas, and rejoice

      inwardly in the silent house.

      If God should stare into this room

      tonight, Brand, I need feel no shame.

      I’ve watched and prayed, wiped every trace

      of grief, each tear smudge, from my face,

      you see; all gone now! I would meet

      Him with a truly chastened heart.

      BRAND pulls her towards him in an embrace; then abruptly lets her go.

      BRAND: Go, light the candles. There, hush!

      AGNES [smiling sorrowfully]:

      And let the church be built all new

      and bright by the spring thaw.

      Let us make that our Christmas wish!

      Exit.

      BRAND [gazing after her]:

      Help me, O help me, God,

      to spare her more agony.

      It’s like watching her die

      in martyrdom’s slow flame.

      What else must I perform

      that Your law may be satisfied,

      lex talionis,15 Your hawk

      that will swoop down and take

      the heart out of her?

      Let me be the martyr,

      not her. Dear God! Haven’t I faith

      and strength, and will, enough for both?

      Let her devoted love suffice.

      Remit, O Lord, remit the sacrifice.

      There is a knock at the door. The MAYOR enters.

      MAYOR: Well, here I am, d’you see,

      come to eat humble pie!

      Sir, I’m a beaten man,

      beaten and trampled on!

      BRAND: You, mayor?

      MAYOR:      I’m not joking.

      I tried to send you packing.

      I admit, I said at the time,

      I said, there isn’t room

      for both of us. I was right,

      no shadow of a doubt,

      no doubt at all. Yet here

      I am with my white flag.

      My friend, I come to beg.

      There’s a new spirit abroad

      in the region, praise God;

      suddenly it’s everywhere,

      but not mine: yours,

      pastor. The war’s

      over. Stop the fight.

      Now, let’s shake hands on that!

      BRAND: Between the two of us

      the strife can never cease;

      for spiritual war

      is endless, must be waged

      however bruised and scourged

      and desolate we are.

      MAYOR: Don’t try to win a fight

      if it pays you to lose:

      I call that compromise.

      BRAND: Though you deride God’s law,

      nothing can make black white!

      MAYOR: My dear man, you can holler,

      ‘White as the driven snow,’

      till you’re blue in the face.

      If our wise populace

      prefers snow to be black,

      then black it is. Hard luck!

      BRAND: And what’s your favourite colour?

      MAYOR: Mine’s a nice in-between

      delicate shade of grey.

      I’ve told you, I’m humane.

      I meet people halfway.

      I don’t gallop head-on

      against opinion.

      I let the crowd decide,

      run with the multitude.

      You’re the crowd’s candidate,

      it seems; so here’s my vote.

      I’ve had to shelve my plans

      for new ditches and drains,

      for new jetties and roads,

      and Lord knows what besides.

      Still, if that’s the game,

      I’ll play it. ‘Bide your time,’

      I tell myself, ‘and smile.

      Hang on to fortune’s wheel

      like the grim death. Your turn

      always comes round again.’

      BRAND: There speaks the ‘public spirit’

      in essence, mayor. It

      seems, then, that greed, if shrewd,

      can pass as zeal-for-good.

      MAYOR: That’s not how it is at all!

      I’ve lived a life of real

      self-sacrificing labour,

      a man who’s served his neighbour

      more than he’s served himself.

      I spit on this world’s pelf.

      But surely, surely, it’s fair,

      isn’t it, minister,

      that honesty and good sense

      should gain some recompense?

      When all’s been said you can’t

      let your own kith and kin

      go hungry. I’ve got daughters.

      I must think of their futures.

      You know what that can mean.

      Chewing on the ideal

      won’t get you a square meal

      and it won’t pay the rent.

      He who says otherwise

      doesn’t know what life is!

      BRAND: What will you do now?

      MAYOR:          Build.

      BRAND: Did you say build?

      MAYOR:        I did.

      I’ll serve the nation’s need

      as I served it of old.

      I’ll dazzle people’s eyes

      with some great enterprise.

      I’ll be cock of the roost,

      I’ll strut upon my post.

      By God, you’ll hear me crow

      pro bono publico!16

      My new election cry

      is ‘Banish poverty!’

      BRAND: And how will you do that?

      MAYOR: I’ve given it some thought.

      Well, come on, use your wits!

      What am I planning? It’s

      my ‘hygienic edifice’,

      and cheap at the price!

      A workhouse and a gaol

      under the same roof;

      perfectly clean and safe

      and economical.

      Then, having made a start,

      I’ll add an extra wing

      built to accommodate

      wassail, that sort of thing,

      banquets and lantern-slide

      lectures, what you will:

      the Patriots’ Pledge hall.

      BRAND: There may be some need

      for the things you name –

      but there is one thing more,

      with a far higher claim.

      MAYOR: A madhouse, to be sure!

      But who would foot the bill?

      BRAND: Well, if you need to house

      your madmen, why not use

      the Patriots’ Pledge hall?

      It would be suitable.

      MAYOR [delighted]:

      The Patriots’ Pledge hall

      a madhouse all the time –

      O pastor, what a scheme!

      How could it ever fail?

      We’ll soon have crime and sin

      and madness all crammed in;

      then we’ll cram in the poor

      and lock and bolt the door.

      BRAND: You’ve come begging, you said.

      MAYOR: I think that puts the case

      fairly enough. Indeed,

      cash for a worthy cause

      seems very hard to find.

      A well-placed word or two

      from ‘t’People’s’ Pastor Brand

      would turn the tide. You know

      I shan’t
    forget a friend.

      BRAND: I know I’m being bribed.

      MAYOR: Couldn’t it be described

      as the best way of healing

      old wounds, and that sad breach

      between us, from which each

      of us, I know, has suffered,

      since we’re both men of feeling.

      BRAND: Suffered, did you say?

      MAYOR: Of course, of course, the boy …

      I trust that you’ll accept

      condolences as offered.

      You seemed, though, so imbued

      with Christian fortitude

      I took it that the worst

      excess of grief had passed.

      I came because I’d hoped …

      BRAND: You’ve hoped and schemed in vain.

      I also plan to build.

      MAYOR: To steal my master plan –

      well, I must say, that’s bold!

      BRAND: You say so? Look out there –

      [Points out of the window.]

      no, there; what do you see?

      MAYOR: Not much, if you ask me!

      That old barn on the tilt?

      Look, I don’t understand …

      BRAND: The church. Mayor, I intend

      the church shall be rebuilt

      on a grander scale.

      MAYOR: I’m master builder here.

      Just leave things as they are,

      I’ll make it worth your while.

      Why pull the old place down?

      BRAND: I have said: it is small.

      MAYOR: Small? But I’ve never seen

      it more than half-full.

      BRAND: There’s no space, no air,

      for the spirit to soar!

      MAYOR [aside]:

      If he goes on like this,

      he’ll need the services

      of the madhouse himself.

      [Aloud]

      Pastor, take my advice,

      leave the church to the mice,

      I beg you, on behalf

      of the whole neighbourhood.

      I rise to the defence

      of our inheritance.

      An architectural gem

      destroyed for a mere whim?

      No, it can’t be allowed!

      BRAND: I’ll build God’s house with my

      own substance; dedicate

      every last farthing-bit

      out of my legacy.

      MAYOR: Well! I’m thunderstruck!

      I can’t believe our luck,

      I can’t, truly, I can’t!

      Riches without stint,

      a great gold, glittering stream –

      tell me it’s not a dream!

      BRAND: I made up my mind,

      long ago, to renounce

      that cursed inheritance.

      MAYOR: I’m with you heart and soul,

      I’m filled with purest zeal.

      How’s that for a surprise?

      Onward then! Hand in hand!

      Together, to the end.

      Here’s to our enterprise!

      I dare to think that fate

      has brought me here tonight.

      I even dare to think

      that you have me to thank

      and that your miracle

      is mine after all.

      BRAND: Destroy that ‘hallowed fane’

      out there? Why, it’s a shrine!

      MAYOR: H’m, that’s as may be.

     


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