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    Peer Gynt and Brand

    Page 8
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      AGNES:      I tremble

      when you say that.

      BRAND:       Be strong.

      [Looking along the road]

                  At last!

      A MESSENGER [coming through the garden gate]:

      She’ll not live long …

      BRAND: What message do you bring?

      MESSENGER: A right old jumble.

      She sat up and screeched,

      ‘I want the priest fetched;

      my son, mind! Tell him, “half”.’

      BRAND [shrinking back]:

      Half? No!

      MESSENGER: Half, I swear,

      as true as I stand here.

      BRAND: You misheard. She said, ‘all’.

      MESSENGER: Look, man, I’m not deaf.

      I know what I heard.

      ‘Half’ is what she said.

      BRAND: You’d swear that, at the Day

      of Judgement?

      He clutches the MESSENGER’s arm.

      MESSENGER:   On my soul.

      BRAND [firmly]:

      Then take her my reply:

      ‘No bread, no wine,

      no comfort, none.’

      MESSENGER [looking uncertainly at him]:

      Perhaps your hearing’s bad.

      She’s dying, your own mother …

      BRAND: I don’t make different laws,

      one for my own kin, the other

      for strangers. My mother knows

      that ‘all or nothing’

      is absolute. One piece

      struck from the Golden Calf

      is an idol, no less

      than the beast itself.

      MESSENGER: Well, if she’s still breathing

      by the time I get back,

      I’ll tell her, ‘Your son

      sends his best wishes –

      fifty lashes!’

      I shan’t relish the work,

      I tell you plain.

      How can you treat her so?

      God Himself is less hard.

      That’s a comfort anyhow!

      Exit.

      BRAND: This stinking comfort blown

      from their own carrion;

      the stench of deathly fear

      tainting the world’s air!

      Even their so-called faith

      they keep to bargain with,

      to bribe their senile judge,

      a sop to soothe his rage.

      Out in the road, the MESSENGER has met a SECOND MESSENGER; both return.

      BRAND: Another message?

      FIRST MESSENGER:    Yes.

      BRAND: What does she say?

      SECOND MESSENGER:    She says,

      ‘Nine-tenths.’

      BRAND:    She’s not said ‘all’?

      SECOND MESSENGER: She’s not.

      BRAND:         Go back, then; tell

      her, ‘No wine, no bread,

      no comfort.’

      SECOND MESSENGER: Hasn’t she paid

      enough? More than enough?

      FIRST MESSENGER: That woman gave you life.

      BRAND [clenching his hands]:

      What would you have me do?

      Deal kindly with what’s mine

      and deal harshly with you?

      SECOND MESSENGER: Her need, her dread, are terrible

      to see. Give her some sign.

      BRAND [to the FIRST MESSENGER]:

      No sacraments can be brought

      to an unclean table:

      tell her what I have said.

      The MESSENGERS leave.

      AGNES [clinging to him]:

      Brand, sometimes you seem

      like some grim scourge of God,

      like God’s own sword of flame.

      I flinch from the sight.

      BRAND [sorrowfully]:

      But, Agnes, the world’s sword

      has already drawn blood

      from me; many times it has cut

      me to the heart.

      AGNES: Your own demands go deep;

      they’re not easy to bear.

      How many measure up

      to such morality?

      Pitifully few, I fear.

      BRAND: This entire age is devoid

      of grace or merit;

      it’s ruled by creeping pride,

      dull frivolity,

      meanness of spirit.

      Say to the ‘man-of-the-hour’,

      whether of peace or war,

      ‘Enough; be satisfied

      with the true victory,

      with the triumph of good;

      let your own name go down

      to dust; let silence reign.’

      Would he agree?

      Or tell some eager poet

      with his sweet cage-birds of song,

      tell him to live unsung.

      He’d fly at your throat.

      Rich men who set such store

      by largesse to the poor

      bargain on gratitude

      posthumously accrued.

      But selfless charity,

      now there’s a rarity!

      The mighty and the meek,

      the strong man and the sick,

      are all alike in this

      loathing of sacrifice,

      this craving to possess,

      this thraldom to the world.

      In dread of the abyss

      they struggle to keep hold,

      clinging to root and branch

      until the avalanche.

      AGNES: Yet still you thunder ‘all

      or nothing’ as they fall.

      BRAND: Lose all if you would gain

      all. Out of the depths men

      scale even the precipice

      of their own fall from grace.

      [Silent for a moment]

      Everything that I speak

      is spoken in agony.

      I’m like a castaway

      crying in vain among

      the spars of a great wreck.

      I could bite out my tongue

      that must rage and chastise

      and with its prophecies

      strike terror where I crave

      the touch of human love.

      Watch over our child,

      Agnes. In a radiant dream

      his spirit lies so calm,

      like water that is stilled,

      like a mountain tarn

      silent under the sun.

      Sometimes his mother’s face

      hovers over that hushed place,

      is received, is given back,

      as beautifully as a bird

      hovers, and hovering, is mirror’d

      in the depths of the lake.

      AGNES [pale]:

      No matter where you aim

      your thoughts, they fly to him.

      BRAND: O Agnes, guard him well,

      in quietness.

      AGNES:    I will.

      Only … a few more

      words …

      BRAND:   Words to inspire!

      AGNES: All the strength you can give.

      BRAND [embracing her]:

      The innocent shall live.

      AGNES [looking up radiantly]:

      The innocent! You see, even

      God dare not destroy

      such a gift from Heaven!

      She goes into the house.

      BRAND [gazing silently; then]:

      Does she think God has qualms? –

      the God who chose Abraham’s

      beloved child, the boy

      Isaac, as the altar stone

      of his father’s faith!7

      [Shakes off his thoughts.]

      No! I’ve made my sacrifice.

      The great cause is forgone,

      and I’ve stifled the voice

      that could rouse the whole earth

      to His redeeming wrath:

      ‘You sleepers, wake!’ I’ve come

      down from that high dream.

      [Looks down the road.]

      This torment of delay!

      Why no repentance, why?


      Why is she not prepared,

      even in this last pain,

      to be rid of her sin,

      to tear its claggy root

      out of her heart?

      The MAYOR appears on the road, walking in the direction of the pastor’s house.

      BRAND: A message! Yes, the word

      at last! Ugh, no. The mayor,

      look at him, tasting the air,

      strutting and jolly,

      his hands in his pockets,

      his arms like brackets

      around his belly.

      MAYOR [through the garden gate]:

      Good day, reverend!

      How are you, friend?

      I fear I’ve come

      at a difficult time.

      Your mother, I believe,

      not much longer to live?

      Very distressing!

      Death comes to us all.

      As I was passing

      I thought, ‘Why not call?

      Very much better

      to tackle the matter

      head-on.’ It’s well known

      you’re at daggers drawn.

      BRAND: At daggers drawn?

      MAYOR:       That’s what they say.

      Her treasure’s under lock and key.

      BRAND: The reckoning’s overdue;

      that at least is true.

      MAYOR: As soon as the old girl

      (God rest her soul)

      lies in Mother Earth,

      just think what you’ll be worth!

      From now on, pastor,

      the world’s your oyster.

      Believe me, I know.

      BRAND: That means ‘Be off with you!’

      MAYOR: Best thing for all concerned.

      I’m sure you understand.

      We’re happy as we are,

      we liege-folk of the shore.

      Your spiritual fire,

      utterly wasted here!

      BRAND: A man’s own native soil

      sustains him; he best thrives

      where he first plants his foot.

      If he’s cast out, his soul

      withers; nothing he strives

      for blossoms or bears fruit.

      MAYOR: A man must do what’s best

      in the national interest.

      BRAND: How can you ever truly

      know what our nation needs,

      if you bury your heads

      deep in this darkling valley?

      Go, purify your sight

      in the clear air of the height!

      MAYOR: That sounds like city talk,

      pastor. We’re humble folk.

      BRAND: These boundaries you draw

      between ‘high’ and ‘low’!

      This never-ending wail,

      ‘We are small, we are small, we are small!’

      MAYOR: For everything there is a time

      and a due season, says the psalm.

      This lowly parish, sir, has cast

      its mite into the treasure-chest

      of weighty cause and doughty deed,

      a tribute to our Viking blood!

      Those sagas, those heroic lays

      of good King Bele’s8 golden days

      and those great brothers, Ulf and Thor,9

      and many a hundred heroes more!

      Some say it’s not polite to boast,

      some say, ‘Forget what’s dead and past’;

      but I, for one, am very proud

      of what our great forefathers did.

      Few have done better, I’ll be bound,

      to aid the progress of mankind!

      BRAND: But you even betray

      your own battle-cry,

      your ‘patriots’ pledge’,

      your ‘noblesse oblige’!

      What do you care

      for that ‘goodly fere’,

      King Bele’s men?

      You’ve ploughed them in!

      MAYOR: But you’re wrong, you’re wrong!

      Why don’t you come along

      to our next ‘wassail’

      in the parish hall?

      The schoolmaster, magistrate,

      myself, all the elite

      of the neighbourhood,

      pounding the festal board

      and drinking hot toddy!

      King Bele lives, laddy!

      At such times I feel stirred

      by the power of the word,

      by heroic verse.

      I’m partial to a bit

      of rhyming; and that goes,

      I’d say, for most of us

      round here. Enough’s enough,

      though. Art isn’t life,

      as I hope you’ll agree. But,

      say, between seven and ten

      of an evening, when work’s

      over and folk can relax,

      we dally with the muse,

      and pipe a lyric strain,

      we play at hunt-the-rhyme,

      and bathe in the sublime.

      Now, just between ourselves,

      pastor, there’s something odd

      in your whole attitude.

      You don’t do things by halves.

      We do. You want to fight,

      turn every wrong to right

      at one fell swoop, it seems.

      These, I think, are your aims?

      Correct me, if they’re not.

      BRAND: Something of the sort.

      MAYOR: Keep your lofty ideals

      for your intellectuals

      in the big city.

      We’re tillers of the soil,

      we’re toilers of the sea.

      BRAND: Then justify that toil!

      Into the ocean cast

      each vainglorious boast;

      and deep in the earth hide

      every platitude.

      MAYOR: Surely great nations thrive

      on memories!

      BRAND:    If you have

      nothing but memories

      you keep vigil in vain

      at an empty cairn.

      MAYOR: It’s plain you’re much too good

      for this neighbourhood.

      Look, leave it to me –

      I’ll soon restore morale

      among our ‘sons of toil’.

      That I can guarantee.

      It’s not too much to claim

      that my mayoral term

      has won deserved applause

      for grit and enterprise.

      The birth-rate has increased

      thanks to my zeal and zest.

      What wonders men perform,

      under their own steam!

      A new road or a bridge,

      real marvels of the age!

      BRAND: Between the life of earth

      and the living faith

      you’ve built nothing at all.

      MAYOR: My road up to the fell!

      BRAND: Between vision and deed

      I see no new road;

      but I have seen God’s hand

      writing His words of flame:

      ‘The place where you are come

      is your abiding place.’

      Here I take my stand.

      MAYOR: Well, stay if you must.

      But stick to your last;

      castigate crime and vice,

      God knows, there’s need enough,

      wickedness is rife.

      But we don’t want fuss.

      And please remember this:

      six whole days a week

      are devoted to work.

      One day for sober thought

      is more than adequate.

      And don’t expect the Lord

      God to walk on the fjord,

      either!

      BRAND: To make use

      of such practical advice

      I would have to change

      souls, or my soul’s range

      of vision. Souls are called

      by God, not by the world.

      And I shall set free

      by my soul’s victory

      the people whom you led,

      lulled and betrayed,

     
    starved, and constrained

      in your poverty of mind.

      MAYOR: So we’re to fight it out?

      You’ll be the first to fall.

      Mark my words, you will!

      BRAND: Victorious in defeat.

      You’ll never understand …

      MAYOR: And can you wonder? Friend,

      don’t turn your back on life!

      Don’t hazard every good

      that this world has bestowed

      with such generous hands –

      your mother’s gold, her bonds,

      your child and your good wife.

      BRAND: And if I must renounce

      such an inheritance?

      And if I must, what then?

      MAYOR: It doesn’t make sense!

      You haven’t a chance!

      Think on, think on!

      BRAND: Here’s where I stake my claim;

      here, in my own home;

      and if I shrink from the call

      I lose my own soul.

      MAYOR: But a man on his own

      can’t hope to win.

      BRAND: The best are on my side.

      MAYOR [smiling]:

      I’ve thousands on parade!

      Exit.

      BRAND [gazing after him]:

      There goes a stalwart democrat,

      filled with the democratic urge,

      the civic sentiments at heart;

      but what a scourge!

      No avalanche or hurricane

      has done the damage he has done

      with a good conscience all these years.

      How many smiles he’s turned to tears!

      What gifts, what ardours, have recoiled

      to darkness, all their music stilled.

      What impulses of joy or wrath

      he cheerfully deprives of breath.

      How many hearts has he destroyed,

      without the slightest trace of blood!

      [The DOCTOR appears at the garden gate. BRAND suddenly notices him and cries out in anguish.]

      Doctor! Is there some word?

      DOCTOR: We must leave her to God …

      I’m sorry, my boy …

      BRAND: But surely, before she died,

      surely she must have said …

      DOCTOR: ‘I repent, I repent!’

      Is that what you want?

      She gave nothing away.

      BRAND [gazing in silence before he speaks]:

      Then she’s lost for ever?

      DOCTOR: God may be less severe.

      She whispered, at the end,

      ‘He is kinder than Brand.’

      BRAND [sinking down, as if in pain, on the bench]:

      In the final agony

      of guilt, on the brink of death

      itself, the same old lie.

      He hides his face in his hands.

      DOCTOR [coming nearer, looking at him and shaking his head]:

      You live by the old law,

      do you not? Here and now,

      ‘An eye for an eye, a tooth

      for a tooth’.10 But I believe

      that each generation

      has its own life to live

      in its own fashion.

      Ours has the wit to laugh

      at every ‘old wife’

      with her rag-bag of ghouls,

      changelings, damned souls,

      and dead bodies that rise.

      Our first commandment is:

      ‘Be humane, be humane!’

     


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