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An Enemy of the People, a play by Henrik Ibsen |
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ACT V |
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_ ACT V
(SCENE.--DR. STOCKMANN'S study. Bookcases and cabinets DR. STOCKMANN (calling through the open sitting-room door). MRS. STOCKMANN (from the sitting-room). Oh, you will find a lot DR. STOCKMANN (adding the stone to a heap of others on the MRS. STOCKMANN (coming in). Yes, but he said he didn't know if he DR. STOCKMANN. You will see he won't dare to come. MRS. STOCKMANN. Well, that is just what Randine thought--that he DR. STOCKMANN. Let me see it. (Opens and reads it.) Ah!--of MRS. STOCKMANN. Who is it from? DR. STOCKMANN. From the landlord. Notice to quit. MRS. STOCKMANN. Is it possible? Such a nice man DR. STOCKMANN (looking at the letter). Does not dare do MRS. STOCKMANN. There, you see, Thomas! DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, yes, I see well enough; the whole lot of them MRS. STOCKMANN. But, Thomas, are you sure we are well advised to DR. STOCKMANN. Are you suggesting that I should stay here, where MRS. STOCKMANN. Oh, dear!--and they are the best pair you have DR. STOCKMANN. You should never wear your best trousers when you MRS. STOCKMANN. There is no doubt they have behaved very ill toward DR. STOCKMANN. If we went to another town, do you suppose we MRS. STOCKMANN. But think of the boys, Thomas! DR. STOCKMANN (standing still). What a strange woman you are, MRS. STOCKMANN. But, Thomas dear, the imprudent things you said DR. STOCKMANN. Well, isn't what I said perfectly true? Don't they MRS. STOCKMANN. Yes, yes, it's mad enough of them, certainly; PETRA. Yes. I have been given notice of dismissal. MRS. STOCKMANN. Dismissal? DR. STOCKMANN. You too? PETRA. Mrs. Busk gave me my notice; so I thought it was best to DR. STOCKMANN. You were perfectly right, too! MRS. STOCKMANN. Who would have thought Mrs. Busk was a woman like PETRA. Mrs. Busk isn't a bit like that, mother; I saw quite DR. STOCKMANN (laughing and rubbing his hands). She didn't dare MRS. STOCKMANN. Well, after the dreadful scenes last night-- PETRA. It was not only that. Just listen to this, father! DR. STOCKMANN. Well? PETRA. Mrs. Busk showed me no less than three letters she DR. STOCKMANN. Anonymous, I suppose? PETRA. Yes. DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, because they didn't dare to risk signing PETRA. And two of them were to the effect that a man, who has DR. STOCKMANN. You did not deny that, I hope? PETRA. No, you know I wouldn't. Mrs. Busk's own views are MRS. STOCKMANN. And someone who had been a guest of ours! That DR. STOCKMANN. We won't live in such a disgusting hole any MRS. STOCKMANN. Be quiet--I think I hear someone in the hall. PETRA (opening the door). Oh, it's you, Captain Horster! Do come HORSTER (coming in). Good morning. I thought I would just come in DR. STOCKMANN (shaking his hand). Thanks--that is really kind of MRS. STOCKMANN. And thank you, too, for helping us through the PETRA. How did you manage to get home again? HORSTER. Oh, somehow or other. I am fairly strong, and there is DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, isn't their swinish cowardice astonishing? HORSTER. Just as well for you this time, doctor! DR. STOCKMANN. True enough. But it makes one angry all the same; MRS. STOCKMANN. You will never be that, Thomas. DR. STOCKMANN. Don't swear to that, Katherine. To be called an PETRA. Bah!--you should only laugh at them, father, HORSTER. They will change their minds some day, Doctor. MRS. STOCKMANN. Yes, Thomas, as sure as you are standing here. DR. STOCKMANN. Perhaps, when it is too late. Much good may it do HORSTER. Hm!--that was just what I had come to speak about-- DR. STOCKMANN. Why, has anything gone wrong with the ship? HORSTER. No; but what has happened is that I am not to sail in PETRA. Do you mean that you have been dismissed from your HORSTER (smiling). Yes, that's just it. PETRA. You too. MRS. STOCKMANN. There, you see, Thomas! DR. STOCKMANN. And that for the truth's sake! Oh, if I had HORSTER. You mustn't take it to heart; I shall be sure to find a DR. STOCKMANN. And that is this man Vik--a wealthy man, HORSTER. He is quite an excellent fellow otherwise; he told me DR. STOCKMANN. But he didn't dare? No, of course not. HORSTER. It is not such an easy matter, he said, for a party man-- DR. STOCKMANN. The worthy man spoke the truth. A party is like a MRS. STOCKMANN. Come, come, Thomas dear! PETRA (to HORSTER). If only you had not come home with us, things HORSTER. I do not regret it. PETRA (holding out her hand to him). Thank you for that! HORSTER (to DR. STOCKMANN). And so what I came to say was that if DR. STOCKMANN. That's splendid!--if only we can get away at once. MRS. STOCKMANN. Hush!--wasn't that some one knocking? PETRA. That is uncle, surely. DR. STOCKMANN. Aha! (Calls out.) Come in! MRS. STOCKMANN. Dear Thomas, promise me definitely--. (PETER PETER STOCKMANN. Oh, you are engaged. In that case, I will-- DR. STOCKMANN. No, no, come in. PETER STOCKMANN. But I wanted to speak to you alone. MRS. STOCKMANN. We will go into the sitting-room in the HORSTER. And I will look in again later. DR. STOCKMANN. No, go in there with them, Captain Horster; I want HORSTER. Very well, I will wait, then. (He follows MRS. STOCKMANN DR. STOCKMANN. I daresay you find it rather draughty here today. PETER STOCKMANN. Thank you, if I may. (Does so.) I think I caught DR. STOCKMANN. Really? I found it warm enough. PETER STOCKMANN. I regret that it was not in my power to prevent DR. STOCKMANN. Have you anything in particular to say to me PETER STOCKMANN (taking a big letter from his pocket). I have DR. STOCKMANN. My dismissal? PETER STOCKMANN. Yes, dating from today. (Lays the letter on the DR. STOCKMANN (smiling). Dared not? I seem to have heard that PETER STOCKMANN. I must beg you to understand your position DR. STOCKMANN. Devil take the practice! But why are you so sure PETER STOCKMANN. The Householders' Association is circulating a DR. STOCKMANN. No, no; I don't doubt it. But what then? PETER STOCKMANN. If I might advise you, it would be best to leave DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, the propriety of leaving the place has PETER STOCKMANN. Good. And then, when you have had six months to DR. STOCKMANN. I might have my appointment restored to me, do you PETER STOCKMANN. Perhaps. It is not at all impossible. DR. STOCKMANN. But what about public opinion, then? Surely you PETER STOCKMANN. Public opinion is an extremely mutable thing. DR. STOCKMANN. Oh, that's what you are after, is it! I will just PETER STOCKMANN. Your position was quite different then. At that DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, and now I feel I have the whole town ON my PETER STOCKMANN. A man with a family has no right to behave as DR. STOCKMANN. I have no right! There is only one single thing in PETER STOCKMANN. No. DR. STOCKMANN. Of course you don't, but I will tell you. A free PETER STOCKMANN. This sort of thing sounds extremely plausible, DR. STOCKMANN. What do you mean? PETER STOCKMANN. You understand, very well what I mean. But, as DR. STOCKMANN. What in the world is all this about? PETER STOCKMANN. Do you really ask me to believe that you are DR. STOCKMANN. I know that the small amount he possesses is to go PETER STOCKMANN. In the first place, it is by no means a small DR. STOCKMANN. I had no notion of that! PETER STOCKMANN. Hm!--hadn't you really? Then I suppose you had DR. STOCKMANN. Never, on my honour! Quite the reverse; he has PETER STOCKMANN. I have it from an absolutely reliable source. DR. STOCKMANN. Then, thank God, Katherine is provided for--and PETER STOCKMANN (restraining him). Hush, don't say a word yet! MRS. STOCKMANN (opening the door). What is the matter? DR. STOCKMANN. Oh, nothing, nothing; you can go back. (She shuts PETER STOCKMANN. Yes, but that is just exactly what you are not. DR. STOCKMANN. But he won't do that, my dear Peter. The "Badger" PETER STOCKMANN (starts and looks intently at him). Ali, that DR. STOCKMANN. What things? PETER STOCKMANN. I see that the whole thing was a combined DR. STOCKMANN. What about them? PETER STOCKMANN. I see that they were nothing else than the DR. STOCKMANN (almost speechless). Peter--you are the most PETER STOCKMANN. All is over between us. Your dismissal is DR. STOCKMANN. For shame! For shame! (Calls out.) Katherine, you MRS. STOCKMANN. (in the sitting-room). Hush, Thomas, be quiet! PETRA (coming to the door). Father, grandfather is here, asking DR. STOCKMANN. Certainly he may. (Going to the door.) Come in, MORTEN KIIL. I won't sit. (Looks around.) You look very DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, don't we! MORTEN KIIL. Very comfortable--plenty of fresh air. I should DR. STOCKMANN. It is. MORTEN KIIL. So I should think. (Taps his chest.) Do you know DR. STOCKMANN. A good conscience, too, I hope. MORTEN KIIL. Bah!--No, it is something better than that. (He DR. STOCKMANN (looking at him in astonishment). Shares in the MORTEN KIIL. They were not difficult to get today. DR. STOCKMANN. And you have been buying--? MORTEN KIIL. As many as I could pay for. DR. STOCKMANN. But, my dear Mr. Kiil--consider the state of the MORTEN KIIL. If you behave like a reasonable man, you can soon DR. STOCKMANN. Well, you can see for yourself that I have done MORTEN KIIL. You said yesterday that the worst of this pollution DR. STOCKMANN. Unfortunately I am afraid you will have to. MORTEN KIIL. No, thank you. I am jealous of my name and DR. STOCKMANN. And how are you going to set about it? MORTEN KIIL. You shall cleanse me, Thomas. DR. STOCKMANN. I! MORTEN KIIL. Do you know what money I have bought these shares DR. STOCKMANN (flaring up). And you have gone and taken MORTEN KIIL. Yes, the whole of the money is invested in the Baths DR. STOCKMANN (walking up and down). Yes, but I am mad; I am mad! MORTEN KIIL. You cannot be so absurdly mad as all that, when it DR. STOCKMANN (standing still in front of him). Why couldn't you MORTEN KIIL. What is done cannot be undone. DR. STOCKMANN (walks about uneasily). If only I were not so MORTEN KIIL (weighing the pocket-book in his hand). If you stick DR. STOCKMANN. But, hang it all! It might be possible for science MORTEN KIIL. To kill these animals, do you mean? DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, or to make them innocuous. MORTEN KIIL. Couldn't you try some rat's-bane? DR. STOCKMANN. Don't talk nonsense! They all say it is only MORTEN KIIL. And broken all your windows to pieces! DR. STOCKMANN. And then there is my duty to my family. I must MORTEN KIIL. That is right; be guided by a reasonable woman's DR. STOCKMANN (advancing towards him). To think you could do such MORTEN KIIL. Then I had better go. But I must have an answer from DR. STOCKMANN. And what does Katherine get? MORTEN KIIL. Not a halfpenny. (The door leading to the hall DR. STOCKMANN (staring at them). What the devil!--have YOU HOVSTAD. Certainly. ASLAKSEN. We have something to say to you, you see. MORTEN KIIL (in a whisper). Yes or no--before two o'clock. ASLAKSEN (glancing at HOVSTAD). Aha! (MORTEN KIIL goes out.) DR. STOCKMANN. Well, what do you want with me? Be brief. HOVSTAD. I can quite understand that you are annoyed with us for DR. STOCKMANN. Attitude, do you call it? Yes, it was a charming HOVSTAD. Call it what you like, we could not do otherwise. DR. STOCKMANN. You DARED not do otherwise--isn't that it? HOVSTAD. Well, if you like to put it that way. ASLAKSEN. But why did you not let us have word of it beforehand? DR. STOCKMANN. A hint? Of what? ASLAKSEN. Of what was behind it all. DR. STOCKMANN. I don't understand you in the least-- ASLAKSEN (with a confidential nod). Oh yes, you do, Dr. HOVSTAD. It is no good making a mystery of it any longer. DR. STOCKMANN (looking first at one of them and then at the ASLAKSEN. May I ask if your father-in-law is not going round the DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, he has been buying Baths shares today; but-- ASLAKSEN. It would have been more prudent to get someone else to HOVSTAD. And you should not have let your name appear in the DR. STOCKMANN (looks in front of him; then a light seems to dawn ASLAKSEN (with a smile). Evidently they are. But it is better to HOVSTAD. And it is much better to have several persons in a thing DR. STOCKMANN (composedly). Come to the point, gentlemen. What do ASLAKSEN. Perhaps Mr. Hovstad had better-- HOVSTAD. No, you tell him, Aslaksen. ASLAKSEN. Well, the fact is that, now we know the bearings of the DR. STOCKMANN. Do you dare do that now? What about public HOVSTAD. We will try to weather it. ASLAKSEN. And you must be ready to go off quickly on a new tack, DR. STOCKMANN. Do you mean, as soon as my father-in-law and I HOVSTAD. Your reasons for wishing to get the control of the Baths DR. STOCKMANN. Of course; it was for scientific reasons that I HOVSTAD. I think so--if you have the "People's Messenger" behind ASLAKSEN. The Press is a power in a free community. Doctor. DR. STOCKMANN. Quite so. And so is public opinion. And you, Mr. ASLAKSEN. Yes, and for the Temperance Society. You may rely on DR. STOCKMANN. But, gentlemen--I really am ashamed to ask the HOVSTAD. We should prefer to help you without any return DR. STOCKMANN. Quite so; that would be a great trial to such a HOVSTAD. What's that? ASLAKSEN. Surely you never mean-- DR. STOCKMANN (standing still.) And suppose I don't give you a HOVSTAD. And you please to remember that this affair of the DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, and you are just the man to do it. If I don't HOVSTAD. It is a natural law; every animal must fight for its own ASLAKSEN. And get its food where it can, you know. DR. STOCKMANN (walking about the room). Then you go and look for HOVSTAD. You are surely not going to use violence! ASLAKSEN. Take care what you are doing with that umbrella. DR. STOCKMANN. Out of the window with you, Mr. Hovstad! HOVSTAD (edging to the door). Are you quite mad! DR. STOCKMANN. Out of the window, Mr. Aslaksen! Jump, I tell you! ASLAKSEN (running round the writing-table). Moderation, Doctor--I (MRS. STOCKMANN, PETRA and HORSTER come in from the sitting- MRS. STOCKMANN. Good gracious, Thomas! What is happening? DR. STOCKMANN (brandishing the umbrella). Jump out, I tell you! HOVSTAD. An assault on an unoffending man! I call you to witness, ASLAKSEN (irresolutely). If only I knew the way about here--. MRS. STOCKMANN (holding her husband back). Control yourself, DR. STOCKMANN (throwing down the umbrella). Upon my soul, they MRS. STOCKMANN. What did they want you to do? DR. STOCKMANN. I will tell you later on; I have something else to MRS. STOCKMANN. Three big Noes; what does that mean. DR. STOCKMANN. I will tell you that too, later on. (Holds out the DR. STOCKMANN. Well, I think I have had a visit from every one of MRS. STOCKMANN. Yes, but we are going away, you know, Thomas. (PETRA comes back.) DR. STOCKMANN. Well? PETRA. She has gone with it. DR. STOCKMANN. Good.--Going away, did you say? No, I'll be hanged PETRA. Stay here? MRS. STOCKMANN. Here, in the town? DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, here. This is the field of battle--this is HORSTER. That you shall have in my house. DR. STOCKMANN. Can I? HORSTER. Yes, quite well. I have plenty of room, and I am almost MRS. STOCKMANN. How good of you, Captain Horster! PETRA. Thank you! DR. STOCKMANN (grasping his hand). Thank you, thank you! That is MRS. STOCKMANN (with a sigh). Oh yes, I expected that. DR. STOCKMANN. And they want to take my practice away from me MRS. STOCKMANN. But, dear Thomas, I should have thought events DR. STOCKMANN. You are really ridiculous, Katherine. Do you want HORSTER. Very likely; I don't know much about such things myself. DR. STOCKMANN. Well, look here--I will explain! It is the party MRS. STOCKMANN. Yes, if only we could live on sunshine and spring DR. STOCKMANN. Oh, you will have to pinch and save a bit--then we PETRA. Don't think about that, father; you have plenty of time (EJLIF and MORTEN come in from the sitting-room.) MRS. STOCKMANN. Have you got a holiday? MORTEN. No; but we were fighting with the other boys between EJLIF. That isn't true; it was the other boys were fighting with MORTEN. Well, and then Mr. Rorlund said we had better stay at DR. STOCKMANN (snapping his fingers and getting up from the The Boys. No more school! MRS. STOCKMANN. But, Thomas-- DR. STOCKMANN. Never, I say. I will educate you myself; that is MORTEN. Hooray! DR. STOCKMANN. --but I will make liberal-minded and high-minded PETRA, Yes, father, you may be sure I will. DR. STOCKMANN. And my school shall be in the room where they MRS. STOCKMANN. You will certainly never get them in this town. DR. STOCKMANN. We shall. (To the boys.) Don't you know any street MORTEN. Yes, father, I know lots! DR. STOCKMANN. That's capital! Bring me some specimens of them. I MORTEN. And what are we going to do, when you have made liberal- DR. STOCKMANN. Then you shall drive all the wolves out of the (EJLIF looks rather doubtful about it; MORTEN jumps about crying MRS. STOCKMANN. Let us hope it won't be the wolves that will DR. STOCKMANN. Are you out of your mind, Katherine? Drive me out! MRS. STOCKMANN. The strongest--now? DR. STOCKMANN. Yes, and I will go so far as to say that now I am MORTEN. I say! DR. STOCKMANN (lowering his voice). Hush! You mustn't say MRS. STOCKMANN. Another one? DR. STOCKMANN. Yes. (Gathers them round him, and says MRS. STOCKMANN (smiling and shaking her head). Oh, Thomas, PETRA (encouragingly, as she grasps her father's hands). Father! Content of ACT V _ |