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    Peer Gynt and Brand

    Page 7
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      like flocks of wild swans overhead

      that swooped and bore me up, their wings

      the murmur of the multitudes.

      What vistas of imaginings

      I saw outspread; and what clear roads

      and distances to lead me on,

      God’s warrior of world renown!

      What hymns and incense and what gold

      banners brilliantly unfurled,

      my triumph splendid and austere!

      In spirit I was taken up

      to a high place, was tempted there

      with visions of exalted hope

      that faded even as they shone

      and turned to darkness and to stone.

      Now, shadowed by these walls

      of rock, where the light fades

      hours before night falls,

      and the fjord waters hem

      me in, once more I stand

      in the place I must call home.

      There will be no more rides

      on cloud-pawing Pegasus.

      Unsaddled is that wing’d horse.

      And no trumpets sound.

      But let us not … let us not

      falter, nor stoop to regret

      triumphs that might have been.

      I have received the sign.

      I see, now, the true goal

      to strive for: humble toil

      ennobled by belief,

      the sacrificial life.

      AGNES: But what of that false god

      who was to be destroyed,

      you said? Will he not fall,

      then? Ever?

      BRAND:    Fall he shall!

      But not in the wild gaze

      of crowds, not to their vast applause.

      I was wrong, I was wrong.

      In vain we stir the soil

      round the roots of the soul

      unless that soul is strong.

      It is not raucous fame

      that redeems the time.

      It is the will alone

      that can purge and refine,

      that alone has the power

      to make or mar

      what we do, whether the work

      be famed or not.

      [He turns towards the village, where the evening shadows are beginning to gather.]

            You who walk

      with slow and sullen step

      in the narrow and steep

      places of this land,

      I shall teach you to praise,

      with heart and mind and hand

      in true communion

      one with another; to rouse

      from mortal sleep the young lion

      of the immortal will.

      Let us do all things well,

      let the pickaxe, the spade,

      shine like the battle blade.

      Then shall the hand of God

      inscribe His holy word

      upon the human heart

      as though on Sinai slate.

      Let nobleness appear,

      let those who faint and fear

      find strength. Righteousness shall destroy

      falsehood utterly.

      He begins to leave. EINAR meets him.

      EINAR: You there! Yes, you, sir! Give me back

      that which you took!

      BRAND: That which …? Ah! Speak to her.

      Speak, but will she hear?

      EINAR: Agnes, I beg you, stay;

      stay on the sunlit heights,

      not where dark sorrow waits.

      AGNES: I have no choice to make.

      I have one road to take.

      This is the only way.

      EINAR: How can you? How can you leave

      your mother, your sisters?

      AGNES:         Give

      them my love, I shall send

      a letter when I have found

      words to express

      what my soul clearly sees.

      EINAR: Out there, where the great waters gleam,

      The white-sailed vessels scud and skim,

      Dipping their prows in pearly foam,

      Bright emanations of a dream,

      Seeking the fabled shore, the calm

      Landfall and their longed-for home.

      AGNES: Sail with them, then, go east or

      west; but think of me as dead.

      EINAR: Come, come with me; my sister

      if not my bride!

      AGNES: Einar, Einar, I have told

      you. There is an ocean

      of silence. It lies between

      us, wider than the world.

      EINAR: Go home, then. Go, be safe!

      AGNES [softly]:

      I am drawn by this man towards a new life.

      BRAND: Young woman, beware.

      And when you choose, be sure.

      For, choosing, you are chosen.

      In the shadow of these frozen

      peaks, I shall remain

      a forgotten man.

      And life with me will seem

      an endless winter gloom.

      AGNES: Starshine pierces the cloud.

      I am not afraid.

      BRAND: All or nothing. That

      is my demand. The task

      is very great. And the risk,

      also, is very great.

      There’ll be no mercy shown.

      There’s no provision made

      for weakness or dread.

      Falter, and you go down

      into the depths of the sea.

      Mere lifelong sacrifice

      itself may not suffice.

      Would you die willingly?

      EINAR: This is no seaside game.

      It is a dark and cruel

      commandment that can kill.

      BRAND [to AGNES]:

      You stand where the roads cross.

      Once and for all, then! Choose!

      Exit.

      EINAR: Choose between storm and calm.

      Choose between ‘go’ and ‘stay’.

      Choose between joy and grief.

      Choose between night and day.

      Choose between death and life.

      AGNES: Beyond darkness and death

      light dawns upon the earth.

      She follows BRAND. EINAR looks for some time, as if lost, in the direction in which she has gone; then he bows his head and goes out towards the fjord again.

      Act Three

      Three years later. A small garden at the pastor’s house. A high mountain face above it, a stone wall around it. The fjord, narrow and shut in, in the background. The door of the house leads into the garden. Afternoon. BRAND stands on the steps outside the house. AGNES sits on the step below him.

      AGNES: My dear, why do you gaze

      endlessly over the fjord,

      and with such anxious eyes,

      unwilling to rest?

      BRAND: These three years past

      I’ve waited for some word

      from my mother. Now I hear

      she lies at death’s door;

      yet I’ve received no sign

      that she’s dead to her sin.

      Therefore I wait.

      AGNES [softly and lovingly]:

      Why do you hesitate

      to go now? Go to her,

      go to her!

      BRAND [shaking his head]:

          Let her repent,

      then; let her sacrifice

      everything that she has.

      No solace, no sacrament,

      until that’s done.

      AGNES:     But your

      own mother, Brand …

      BRAND:       Own? Own?

      Would you have me bow down

      to every household god

      of clay and blood?

      AGNES: So harsh …

      BRAND:      To you?

      AGNES:         Ah, no.

      BRAND:           I saw

      what must be; foresaw and foretold

      struggle and bitter cold.

      AGNES [smiling]:

      O my deare
    st, Brand’s law

      sometimes is fallible,

      it seems. Look, I can smile.

      BRAND: Life withers; and your cheeks

      grow pale now; mind and soul

      burn in the icy chill.

      The glacier looms; the black rocks

      threaten our house.

      AGNES: Look how they shelter us.

      Even under the glacier’s rim

      we’re safe; and when, in spring, the stream

      leaps from the cliff, we live

      quiet, unharmed,

      behind the waterfall

      in our ferny cave.

      BRAND: In a deep cave, unwarmed

      by any shred of sun.

      AGNES:       Isn’t the sun-

      light lovely to look at when

      it shines on the high fell!

      BRAND: Shines, Agnes? When? For a few weeks

      perhaps, a brief glimmer

      at midsummer.

      AGNES [looking firmly at him and getting up]:

      There’s something here that makes

      even you afraid.

      BRAND: Surely it is your heart

      that’s thrilled by some secret

      dread, some abyss of dread.

      It’s as though you stand

      staring into that abyss.

      AGNES: Sometimes, I confess,

      sometimes, yes, I’ve trembled …

      BRAND: Trembled?

      AGNES:      For our child,

      for Alf.

      BRAND: For Alf!

      AGNES:    Ah, you see, Brand,

      you tremble too!

      BRAND:      Agnes, at times

      I fear for our little son.

      But he’ll get well;

      God is just; not cruel …

      not cruel … Where is Alf now?

      AGNES: Asleep.

      BRAND [looking in through the door]:

           So he is! No dreams

      of sickness or pain

      haunt his pillow

      with their gaunt phantom shapes.

      AGNES: But he’s so pale.

      BRAND:        It will pass,

      it will pass.

      AGNES:    How sweetly he sleeps.

      BRAND [closing the door]:

      Sleep and grow strong. God bless

      you, my own child! God bless you both

      for the gifts that you bring with

      such an instinct of grace. Labour

      and grief, now, are easy to bear.

      Day after day I am filled

      with new strength as the child

      plays, as I watch him at play.

      God summoned me to stay.

      I made the sacrifice.

      It seemed a martyrdom

      that I embraced. How altered

      now: here, in the wilderness,

      manna for one who starved.

      AGNES: For one who toiled, and served,

      and never faltered.

      I know what tears you’ve shed

      in secret, tears of blood.

      You have earned your fame.

      BRAND: Love touched me; now each thing

      I do is blest. Spring awakening

      in heart and in mind,

      that is what I have found

      with you, and with none other.

      Neither father nor mother

      had kindled the least spark

      of love. I do believe all

      the tenderness of my soul

      that was clamped into the dark

      is here released to shine

      on what is truly mine.

      AGNES: And upon all who come

      to your hearth and home:

      the poor and the downtrodden,

      the fatherless child, bidden

      to enter, each one a guest

      at your heart’s truth’s feast.

      BRAND: What I am, what I do, I owe

      to Alf and to you: two

      souls who crossed the gulf

      into my inmost self.

      I was too long alone.

      Spirit had become stone.

      AGNES: Where you caress, you strike.

      Those whom you bless, you break.

      BRAND: Not you, Agnes?

      AGNES:       No, Brand.

      But that which you demand,

      ‘all or nothing’, has driven

      souls out of Heaven.

      BRAND: That which the world calls ‘love’

      I do not wish to have.

      God’s love is hard to bear,

      I know that. Those who fear

      have cause enough to dread

      the summons. When Christ prayed,

      ‘Lord, take away this cup,’

      shivering in his sweat,

      what answer did he get?

      None, Christ had to drain

      the terror and the pain

      and taste the dregs.

      AGNES:       What hope

      is there for us poor souls

      weighed on such judgement scales?

      BRAND: Who’s doomed by God’s just law?

      Oh do not seek to know!

      Enough that you understand

      ‘Be faithful and endure’

      written by His own hand

      in letters of fire.

      To those who, striving, fall,

      God will be merciful.

      Those who refuse to strive

      He will not forgive.

      Agnes, in my book

      the first commandment says,

      ‘You shall not compromise’.

      Half-done, ill-done work

      thwarting the soul’s power,

      dooms the ill-doer.

      Yes, Agnes, it is so.

      AGNES [throwing her arms around his neck]:

      Where you go, I shall go.

      BRAND: Where love goes, no road

      is too steep or hard.

      The DOCTOR has come down the road and stops outside the garden wall.

      DOCTOR: And what are you doing?

      Ah, billing and cooing

      among these sylvan groves,

      pretty turtle-doves!

      AGNES [running to open the garden gate]:

      Doctor, come in! Do, please!

      DOCTOR: Now you know very well

      that I won’t. I’m so cross.

      Really, why must you stay

      in this place? Call it ‘home’?

      It’s a troll-cave of gloom,

      all glacier, no sky.

      Brr … it shrivels your soul!

      BRAND: Not my soul.

      DOCTOR:      Tch, man!

      You know what I mean.

      With you, ‘a promise made

      is a promise kept’ indeed.

      AGNES: Where love is, there’s no need of sun

      to bring the whole of summer in.

      DOCTOR: H’m. I’ve a call to make.

      BRAND: My mother?

      DOCTOR:      Very sick.

      A few more hours, and then …

      But you know that of course.

      You’ll have been to her house.

      Just back, are you?

      BRAND:      I’ve not been.

      DOCTOR: Well, now I’ve heard it all!

      I’ve trudged mile after mile

      across whinstone and bog,

      tight-fisted old hag

      though she is, just for her!

      BRAND: God bless you for that –

      all your skill and care.

      DOCTOR: God bless my soft heart.

      Perhaps you’d rather

      that we went there together …

      BRAND: Doctor, unless I hear

      that she’s ready to pay

      the full penalty,

      not one inch will I stir.

      DOCTOR [to AGNES]:

      His heart’s as hard as rock.

      You poor defenceless lamb,

      I’m sorry for your sake.

      AGNES: Don’t be. What’s more, he’d give

    &n
    bsp; all his heart’s blood to save

      that woman’s soul.

      BRAND:      I am her son.

      Am I not pledged to atone,

      to honour every claim?

      I tell you, every debt

      shall be wiped out!

      DOCTOR: By one who’s a pauper

      himself? Most improper.

      BRAND: I have made my choice

      freely. Let that suffice.

      DOCTOR [looking hard at him]:

      Pastor, your ledger’s full

      of ‘God’s law’ and ‘man’s will’.

      But the column marked ‘love’,

      that’s still blank, I believe.

      Exit.

      BRAND [gazing after him for a while]:

      Nothing is so much soiled

      by the commerce of the world

      as the word ‘love’: this veil

      hiding the deformed soul.

      Man’s pathway’s dark and steep:

      here’s ‘love’ to guide his step.

      He wallows in his sin:

      ‘love’ hauls him out again.

      He cringes from the fight:

      with ‘love’ there’s no defeat.

      AGNES: I know such things are false.

      Love is something else.

      BRAND: Agnes, if souls are athirst

      for truth and righteousness,

      let us assuage that longing first;

      then speak of love.

      Merely to perish on the cross,

      or to writhe in the flame,

      daily to be buried alive,

      this is not martyrdom.

      But to make a burned offering

      out of the suffering,

      to ordain the anguish

      of our spirit and our flesh,

      that is salvation, there we seize

      hold of martyrdom’s prize!

      AGNES [clinging tightly to him]:

      Brand, when I weaken,

      when I flinch from the task,

      speak then as you have spoken

      now. That much I do ask.

      BRAND: Man’s will must blaze the way

      for God’s victory,

      so that love can alight,

      the white dove with the olive-leaf

      of mercy and new life.

      But – until then – hate!

      [In terror]

      Hatred, the one redeeming word!

      Hatred, the angel of the Lord!

      He hurries into the house.

      AGNES [looking in through the open door]:

      Now he’s with Alf, kneeling by his bed.

      I think he’s crying; he rocks

      to and fro, to and fro. He seeks

      comfort; that great-hearted man

      seeks comfort from a child

      innocent of the world.

      But he’s … is the child ill? What is it?

      [Cries out in fear.]

      Brand, what is it? What have you seen

      that makes you so afraid?

      BRAND comes out on to the steps.

      BRAND: Was that …? I heard the gate,

      I thought. No messenger?

      AGNES: None.

      BRAND [looking back into the house]:

           His pulse is much too fast

      and his skin’s like fire.

      Agnes, be strong.

     


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