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The Playboy of the Western World, a play by J. M. Synge |
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Act 1 |
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_ ACT I SCENE: [Country public-house or shebeen, very rough and untidy. There is a sort of counter on the right with shelves, holding many bottles and jugs, just seen above it. Empty barrels stand near the counter. At back, a little to left of counter, there is a door into the open air, then, more to the left, there is a settle with shelves above it, with more jugs, and a table beneath a window. At the left there is a large open fire-place, with turf fire, and a small door into inner room. Pegeen, a wild looking but fine girl, of about twenty, is writing at table. She is dressed in the usual peasant dress.] PEGEEN Six yards of stuff for to make a yellow gown. A pair of lace boots with lengthy heels on them and brassy eyes. A hat is suited for a wedding-day. A fine tooth comb. To be sent with three barrels of porter in Jimmy Farrell's creel cart on the evening of the coming Fair to Mister Michael James Flaherty. With the best compliments of this season. Margaret Flaherty. SHAWN KEOGH Where's himself? PEGEEN He's coming. (She directs the letter.) To Mister Sheamus Mulroy, Wine and Spirit Dealer, Castlebar. SHAWN I didn't see him on the road. PEGEEN. SHAWN I stood a while outside wondering would I have a right to pass on or to walk in and see you, Pegeen Mike (comes to fire), PEGEEN It's above at the cross-roads he is, meeting Philly Cullen; and a couple more are going along with him to Kate Cassidy's wake. SHAWN And he's going that length in the dark night? PEGEEN He is surely, and leaving me lonesome on the scruff of the hill. (She gets up and puts envelope on dresser, then winds clock.) SHAWN If it is, when we're wedded in a short while you'll have no call to complain, for I've little will to be walking off to wakes or weddings in the darkness of the night. PEGEEN You're making mighty certain, Shaneen, that I'll wed you now. SHAWN. PEGEEN It's a wonder, Shaneen, the Holy Father'd be taking notice of the likes of you; for if I was him I wouldn't bother with this place where you'll meet none but Red Linahan, has a squint in his eye, and Patcheen is lame in his heel, or the mad Mulrannies were driven from California and they lost in their wits. We're a queer lot these times to go troubling the Holy Father on his sacred seat. SHAWN If we are, we're as good this place as another, maybe, and as good these times as we were for ever. PEGEEN As good, is it? Where now will you meet the like of Daneen Sullivan knocked the eye from a peeler, or Marcus Quin, God rest him, got six months for maiming ewes, and he a great warrant to tell stories of holy Ireland till he'd have the old women shedding down tears about their feet. Where will you find the like of them, I'm saying? SHAWN If you don't it's a good job, maybe; for (with peculiar emphasis on the words) Father Reilly has small conceit to have that kind walking around and talking to the girls. PEGEEN Stop tormenting me with Father Reilly (imitating his voice) [Looking out of door.] SHAWN Would I fetch you the widow Quin, maybe? PEGEEN. SHAWN Then I'm thinking himself will stop along with you when he sees you taking on, for it'll be a long night-time with great darkness, and I'm after feeling a kind of fellow above in the furzy ditch, groaning wicked like a maddening dog, the way it's good cause you have, maybe, to be fearing now. PEGEEN What's that? Is it a man you seen? SHAWN PEGEEN And you never went near to see was he hurted or what ailed him at all? SHAWN. PEGEEN. SHAWN I wasn't thinking of that. For the love of God, Pegeen Mike, don't let on I was speaking of him. Don't tell your father and the men is coming above; for if they heard that story, they'd have great blabbing this night at the wake. PEGEEN. SHAWN. PEGEEN. [She goes behind counter. Michael James, fat jovial publican, comes in followed by Philly Cullen, who is thin and mistrusting, and Jimmy Farrell, who is fat and amorous, about forty-five.] MEN God bless you. The blessing of God on this place. PEGEEN. MICHAEL Sit down now, and take your rest. (Crosses to Shawn at the fire.) SHAWN. PEGEEN He's right too, and have you no shame, Michael James, to be quitting off for the whole night, and leaving myself lonesome in the shop? MICHAEL Isn't it the same whether I go for the whole night or a part only? and I'm thinking it's a queer daughter you are if you'd have me crossing backward through the Stooks of the Dead Women, with a drop taken. PEGEEN. JIMMY What is there to hurt you, and you a fine, hardy girl would knock the head of any two men in the place? PEGEEN Isn't there the harvest boys with their tongues red for drink, and the ten tinkers is camped in the east glen, and the thousand militia -- bad cess to them! -- walking idle through the land. There's lots surely to hurt me, and I won't stop alone in it, let himself do what he will. MICHAEL. [They all turn on Shawn.] SHAWN I would and welcome, Michael James, but I'm afeard of Father Reilly; and what at all would the Holy Father and the Cardinals of Rome be saying if they heard I did the like of that? MICHAEL God help you! Can't you sit in by the hearth with the light lit and herself beyond in the room? You'll do that surely, for I've heard tell there's a queer fellow above, going mad or getting his death, maybe, in the gripe of the ditch, so she'd be safer this night with a person here. SHAWN I'm afeard of Father Reilly, I'm saying. Let you not be tempting me, and we near married itself. PHILLY Lock him in the west room. He'll stay then and have no sin to be telling to the priest. MICHAEL Go up now. SHAWN Don't stop me, Michael James. Let me out of the door, I'm saying, for the love of the Almighty God. Let me out (trying to dodge past him). MICHAEL Stop your noising, and sit down by the hearth. [Gives him a push and goes to counter laughing.] SHAWN Oh, Father Reilly and the saints of God, where will I hide myself to-day? Oh, St. Joseph and St. Patrick and St. Brigid, and St. James, have mercy on me now! [Shawn turns round, sees door clear, and makes a rush for it.] MICHAEL You'd be going, is it? SHAWN Leave me go, Michael James, leave me go, you old Pagan, leave me go, or I'll get the curse of the priests on you, and of the scarlet-coated bishops of the courts of Rome. [With a sudden movement he pulls himself out of his coat, and disappears out of the door, leaving his coat in Michael's hands.] MICHAEL Well, there's the coat of a Christian man. Oh, there's sainted glory this day in the lonesome west; and by the will of God I've got you a decent man, Pegeen, you'll have no call to be spying after if you've a score of young girls, maybe, weeding in your fields. PEGEEN What right have you to be making game of a poor fellow for minding the priest, when it's your own the fault is, not paying a penny pot-boy to stand along with me and give me courage in the doing of my work? [She snaps the coat away from him, and goes behind counter with it.] MICHAEL Where would I get a pot-boy? Would you have me send the bell-man screaming in the streets of Castlebar? SHAWN Michael James! MICHAEL What ails you? SHAWN. (Looks over his shoulder.) (he runs into room), [For a perceptible moment they watch the door with curiosity. Some one coughs outside. Then Christy Mahon, a slight young man, comes in very tired and frightened and dirty.] CHRISTY God save all here! MEN. CHRISTY I'd trouble you for a glass of porter, woman of the house. [He puts down coin.] PEGEEN You're one of the tinkers, young fellow, is beyond camped in the glen? CHRISTY. MICHAEL Let you come up then to the fire. You're looking famished with the cold. CHRISTY. (He takes up his glass and goes a little way across to the left, then stops and looks about him.) MICHAEL. CHRISTY It's a safe house, so. [He goes over to the fire, sighing and moaning. Then he sits down, putting his glass beside him and begins gnawing a turnip, too miserable to feel the others staring at him with curiosity.] MICHAEL Is it yourself fearing the polis? You're wanting, maybe? CHRISTY. MICHAEL. CHRISTY I had it in my mind it was a different word and a bigger. PEGEEN. CHRISTY I'm slow at learning, a middling scholar only. MICHAEL. CHRISTY And I the son of a strong farmer (with a sudden qualm), MICHAEL If it's not stealing, it's maybe something big. CHRISTY Aye; it's maybe something big. JIMMY. CHRISTY Oh, the saints forbid, mister; I was all times a decent lad. PHILLY You're a silly man, Jimmy Farrell. He said his father was a farmer a while since, and there's himself now in a poor state. Maybe the land was grabbed from him, and he did what any decent man would do. MICHAEL Was it bailiffs? CHRISTY. MICHAEL. CHRISTY. MICHAEL. CHRISTY Ah, not at all, I'm saying. You'd see the like of them stories on any little paper of a Munster town. But I'm not calling to mind any person, gentle, simple, judge or jury, did the like of me. [They all draw nearer with delighted curiosity.] PHILLY. JIMMY. PHILLY. CHRISTY. JIMMY. CHRISTY I never married with one, let alone with a couple or three. PHILLY. CHRISTY. PEGEEN He's done nothing, so. (To Christy.) CHRISTY That's an unkindly thing to be saying to a poor orphaned traveller, has a prison behind him, and hanging before, and hell's gap gaping below. PEGEEN You're only saying it. You did nothing at all. A soft lad the like of you wouldn't slit the windpipe of a screeching sow. CHRISTY You're not speaking the truth. PEGEEN Not speaking the truth, is it? Would you have me knock the head of you with the butt of the broom? CHRISTY Don't strike me. I killed my poor father, Tuesday was a week, for doing the like of that. PEGEEN Is it killed your father? CHRISTY With the help of God I did surely, and that the Holy Immaculate Mother may intercede for his soul. PHILLY There's a daring fellow. JIMMY. MICHAEL That was a hanging crime, mister honey. You should have had good reason for doing the like of that. CHRISTY He was a dirty man, God forgive him, and he getting old and crusty, the way I couldn't put up with him at all. PEGEEN. CHRISTY I never used weapons. I've no license, and I'm a law-fearing man. MICHAEL. CHRISTY Do you take me for a slaughter-boy? PEGEEN. CHRISTY. MICHAEL And what way weren't you hanged, mister? Did you bury him then? CHRISTY Aye. I buried him then. Wasn't I digging spuds in the field? MICHAEL. CHRISTY Never a one of them, and I walking forward facing hog, dog, or divil on the highway of the road. PHILLY It's only with a common week-day kind of a murderer them lads would be trusting their carcase, and that man should be a great terror when his temper's roused. MICHAEL. (To Christy.) CHRISTY Oh, a distant place, master of the house, a windy corner of high, distant hills. PHILLY He's a close man, and he's right, surely. PEGEEN. PHILLY. JIMMY. PEGEEN. CHRISTY Well, glory be to God! MICHAEL Would you think well to stop here and be pot-boy, mister honey, if we gave you good wages, and didn't destroy you with the weight of work? SHAWN That'd be a queer kind to bring into a decent quiet household with the like of Pegeen Mike. PEGEEN Will you whisht? Who's speaking to you? SHAWN A bloody-handed murderer the like of... PEGEEN Whisht I am saying; we'll take no fooling from your like at all. (To Christy with a honeyed voice.) And you, young fellow, you'd have a right to stop, I'm thinking, for we'd do our all and utmost to content your needs. CHRISTY And I'd be safe in this place from the searching law? MICHAEL. PEGEEN Let you stop a short while anyhow. Aren't you destroyed walking with your feet in bleeding blisters, and your whole skin needing washing like a Wicklow sheep. CHRISTY It's a nice room, and if it's not humbugging me you are, I'm thinking that I'll surely stay. JIMMY Now, by the grace of God, herself will be safe this night, with a man killed his father holding danger from the door, and let you come on, Michael James, or they'll have the best stuff drunk at the wake. MICHAEL And begging your pardon, mister, what name will we call you, for we'd like to know? CHRISTY. MICHAEL. CHRISTY. MEN. SHAWN Are you wanting me to stop along with you and keep you from harm? PEGEEN Didn't you say you were fearing Father Reilly? SHAWN. PEGEEN. SHAWN. PEGEEN. SHAWN. PEGEEN. (She hustles him out and bolts the door.) (Bustles about, then takes off her apron and pins it up in the window as a blind. Christy watching her timidly. Then she comes to him and speaks with bland good-humour.) CHRISTY I'm tired, surely, walking wild eleven days, and waking fearful in the night. [He holds up one of his feet, feeling his blisters, and looking at them with compassion.] PEGEEN You should have had great people in your family, I'm thinking, with the little, small feet you have, and you with a kind of a quality name, the like of what you'd find on the great powers and potentates of France and Spain. CHRISTY We were great surely, with wide and windy acres of rich Munster land. PEGEEN. CHRISTY Is it me? PEGEEN. CHRISTY I did not then. Oh, they're bloody liars in the naked parish where I grew a man. PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN You've said the like of that, maybe, in every cot and cabin where you've met a young girl on your way. CHRISTY I've said it nowhere till this night, I'm telling you, for I've seen none the like of you the eleven long days I am walking the world, looking over a low ditch or a high ditch on my north or my south, into stony scattered fields, or scribes of bog, where you'd see young, limber girls, and fine prancing women making laughter with the men. PEGEEN. CHRISTY You've a power of rings, God bless you, and would there be any offence if I was asking are you single now? PEGEEN. CHRISTY We're alike, so. PEGEEN I never killed my father. I'd be afeard to do that, except I was the like of yourself with blind rages tearing me within, for I'm thinking you should have had great tussling when the end was come. CHRISTY We had not then. It was a hard woman was come over the hill, and if he was always a crusty kind when he'd a hard woman setting him on, not the divil himself or his four fathers could put up with him at all. PEGEEN And isn't it a great wonder that one wasn't fearing you? CHRISTY Up to the day I killed my father, there wasn't a person in Ireland knew the kind I was, and I there drinking, waking, eating, sleeping, a quiet, simple poor fellow with no man giving me heed. PEGEEN It was the girls were giving you heed maybe, and I'm thinking it's most conceit you'd have to be gaming with their like. CHRISTY Not the girls itself, and I won't tell you a lie. There wasn't anyone heeding me in that place saving only the dumb beasts of the field. [He sits down at fire.] PEGEEN And I thinking you should have been living the like of a king of Norway or the Eastern world. [She comes and sits beside him after placing bread and mug of milk on the table.] CHRISTY The like of a king, is it? And I after toiling, moiling, digging, dodging from the dawn till dusk with never a sight of joy or sport saving only when I'd be abroad in the dark night poaching rabbits on hills, for I was a devil to poach, God forgive me, (very naively) PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN Well, you should have been a queer lot. I never cursed my father the like of that, though I'm twenty and more years of age. CHRISTY. (with depression) PEGEEN Well, you'll have peace in this place, Christy Mahon, and none to trouble you, and it's near time a fine lad like you should have your good share of the earth. CHRISTY. [Someone knocks.] CHRISTY Oh, glory! it's late for knocking, and this last while I'm in terror of the peelers, and the walking dead. [Knocking again.] PEGEEN. VOICE Me. PEGEEN. VOICE. PEGEEN Go on now with your supper, and let on to be sleepy, for if she found you were such a warrant to talk, she'd be stringing gabble till the dawn of day. (He takes bread and sits shyly with his back to the door.) PEGEEN What ails you, or what is it you're wanting at this hour of the night? WIDOW QUIN I'm after meeting Shawn Keogh and Father Reilly below, who told me of your curiosity man, and they fearing by this time he was maybe roaring, romping on your hands with drink. PEGEEN Look now is he roaring, and he stretched away drowsy with his supper and his mug of milk. Walk down and tell that to Father Reilly and to Shaneen Keogh. WIDOW QUIN I'll not see them again, for I've their word to lead that lad forward for to lodge with me. PEGEEN This night, is it? WIDOW QUIN This night. "It isn't fitting," says the priesteen, "to have his likeness lodging with an orphaned girl." (To Christy.) CHRISTY God save you kindly. WIDOW QUIN Well, aren't you a little smiling fellow? It should have been great and bitter torments did rouse your spirits to a deed of blood. CHRISTY It should, maybe. WIDOW QUIN. PEGEEN There's talking when any'd see he's fit to be holding his head high with the wonders of the world. Walk on from this, for I'll not have him tormented and he destroyed travelling since Tuesday was a week. WIDOW QUIN CHRISTY Did you kill your father? PEGEEN She did not. She hit himself with a worn pick, and the rusted poison did corrode his blood the way he never overed it, and died after. That was a sneaky kind of murder did win small glory with the boys itself. [She crosses to Christy's left.] WIDOW QUIN If it didn't, maybe all knows a widow woman has buried her children and destroyed her man is a wiser comrade for a young lad than a girl, the like of you, who'd go helter-skeltering after any man would let you a wink upon the road. PEGEEN And you'll say that, Widow Quin, and you gasping with the rage you had racing the hill beyond to look on his face. WIDOW QUIN Me, is it? Well, Father Reilly has cuteness to divide you now. (She pulls Christy up.) PEGEEN He'll not stir. He's pot-boy in this place, and I'll not have him stolen off and kidnabbed while himself's abroad. WIDOW QUIN. PEGEEN. WIDOW QUIN. PEGEEN It's true the Lord God formed you to contrive indeed. Doesn't the world know you reared a black lamb at your own breast, so that the Lord Bishop of Connaught felt the elements of a Christian, and he eating it after in a kidney stew? Doesn't the world know you've been seen shaving the foxy skipper from France for a threepenny bit and a sop of grass tobacco would wring the liver from a mountain goat you'd meet leaping the hills? WIDOW QUIN Do you hear her now, young fellow? Do you hear the way she'll be rating at your own self when a week is by? PEGEEN Don't heed her. Tell her to go into her pigsty and not plague us here. WIDOW QUIN. PEGEEN Are you dumb, young fellow? CHRISTY God increase you; but I'm pot-boy in this place, and it's here I'd liefer stay. PEGEEN Now you have heard him, and go on from this. WIDOW QUIN It's lonesome this hour crossing the hill, and if he won't come along with me, I'd have a right maybe to stop this night with yourselves. Let me stretch out on the settle, Pegeen Mike; and himself can lie by the hearth. PEGEEN Faith, I won't. Quit off or I will send you now. WIDOW QUIN Well, it's a terror to be aged a score. (To Christy.) CHRISTY What's that she's after saying? PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN. CHRISTY. PEGEEN. CHRISTY May God and Mary and St. Patrick bless you and reward you, for your kindly talk. [She shuts the door behind her. He settles his bed slowly, feeling the quilt with immense satisfaction.] CURTAIN _ |