Home > Authors Index > J. M. Synge > Deirdre of the Sorrows > This page
Deirdre of the Sorrows, a play by J. M. Synge |
||
Act 3 |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
|
________________________________________________
_ ACT III Tent below Emain Macha. Tent below Emain, with shabby skins and benches. There is an opening at each side and at back, the latter closed. Old Woman comes in with food and fruits and arranges them on table. Conchubor comes in on right.
Has no one come with news for me? OLD WOMAN. CONCHUBOR Go up then to Emain, you're not wanting here. (A noise heard left.) OLD WOMAN It's Lavarcham coming again. She's a great wonder for jogging back and forward through the world, and I made certain she'd be off to meet them; but she's coming alone, Conchubor, my dear child Deirdre isn't with her at all. CONCHUBOR. OLD WOMAN I'd be well pleased to set my eyes on Deirdre if she's coming this night, as we're told. CONCHUBOR It's not long till you'll see her. But I've matters with Lavarcham, and let you go now, I'm saying. [He shows her out right, as Lavarcham comes in on the left.] LAVARCHAM This is a queer place to find you, and it's a queer place to be lodging Naisi and his brothers, and Deirdre with them, and the lot of us tired out with the long way we have been walking. CONCHUBOR. LAVARCHAM. (She sits down wearily.) CONCHUBOR. LAVARCHAM He's stopped, surely, and that's a trick has me thinking you have it in mind to bring trouble this night on Emain and Ireland and the big world's east beyond them. (She goes to him.) And yet you'd do well to be going to your dun, and not putting shame on her meeting the High King, and she seamed and sweaty and in great disorder from the dust of many roads. (Laughing derisively.) CONCHUBOR It's little I care if she's white and worn, for it's I did rear her from a child. I should have a good right to meet and see her always. LAVARCHAM. (Coaxingly.) CONCHUBOR I'll not go, when it's long enough I am above in my dun stretching east and west without a comrade, and I more needy, maybe, than the thieves of Meath. . . . You think I'm old and wise, but I tell you the wise know the old must die, and they'll leave no chance for a thing slipping from them they've set their blood to win. LAVARCHAM If you're old and wise, it's I'm the same, Conchubor, and I'm telling you you'll not have her though you're ready to destroy mankind and skin the gods to win her. There's things a king can't have, Conchubor, and if you go rampaging this night you'll be apt to win nothing but death for many, and a sloppy face of trouble on your own self before the day will come. CONCHUBOR. (Goes right.) LAVARCHAM. CONCHUBOR Naisi killed him? LAVARCHAM. CONCHUBOR. LAVARCHAM Then the gods have pity on us all! [Men with weapons come in.] CONCHUBOR MEN. CONCHUBOR. SOLDIER. CONCHUBOR SOLDIER . (Pointing to Lavarcham.) CONCHUBOR It's for that you've been playing your tricks, but what you've won is a nearer death for Naisi. (To Soldiers.) LAVARCHAM. CONCHUBOR Take her to Emain; it's too many tricks she's tried this day already. (A Soldier goes to her.) LAVARCHAM. (She puts her cloak round her and catches Conchubor's arm.) (with a gesture) (Shaking herself loose. Conchubor makes a sign to Soldiers.) [She goes out.] CONCHUBOR I see two people in the trees; it should be Naisi and Deirdre. (To Soldier.) Let you tell them they'll lodge here tonight. [Conchubor goes out right. Naisi and Deirdre come in on left, very weary.] NAISI Is it this place he's made ready for myself and Deirdre? SOLDIER. [Goes out right.] NAISI It's a strange place he's put us camping and we come back as his friends. DEIRDRE. NAISI It's little we want with state or rich rooms or curtains, when we're used to the ferns only and cold streams and they making a stir. DEIRDRE We want what is our right in Emain (looking at hangings), NAISI There are few would worry over skins and moths on this first night that we've come back to Emain. DEIRDRE You should be well pleased it's for that I'd worry all times, when it's I have kept your tent these seven years as tidy as a bee-hive or a linnet's nest. If Conchubor'd a queen like me in Emain he'd not have stretched these rags to meet us. (She pulls hanging, and it opens.) NAISI And that'll be our home in Emain. . . . He's dug it wisely at the butt of a hill, with fallen trees to hide it. He'll want to have us killed and buried before Fergus comes. DEIRDRE. NAISI I will not leave my brothers. DEIRDRE It's of us two he's jealous. Come away to the places where we're used to have our company. . . . Wouldn't it be a good thing to lie hid in the high ferns together? (She pulls him left.) NAISI. DEIRDRE Come to this side. Listen, Naisi! NAISI. DEIRDRE And isn't it a hard thing that you and I are in this place by our opened grave; though none have lived had happiness like ours those days in Alban that went by so quick. NAISI. DEIRDRE. NAISI. DEIRDRE. NAISI You'd best keep him off, maybe, and then, when the time comes, make your way to some place west in Donegal, and it's there you'll get used to stretching out lonesome at the fall of night, and waking lonesome for the day. DEIRDRE. Let you not be saying things are worse than death. NAISI I've one word left. If a day comes in the west that the larks are cocking their crests on the edge of the clouds, and the cuckoos making a stir, and there's a man you'd fancy, let you not be thinking that day I'd be well pleased you'd go on keening always. DEIRDRE And if it was I that died, Naisi, would you take another woman to fill up my place? NAISI It's little I know, saving only that it's a hard and bitter thing leaving the earth, and a worse and harder thing leaving yourself alone and desolate to be making lamentation on its face always. DEIRDRE. NAISI. DEIRDRE. CONCHUBOR I'd bid you welcome, Naisi. NAISI (standing up.) You're welcome, Conchubor. I'm well pleased you've come. CONCHUBOR Let you not think bad of this place where I've put you till other rooms are readied. NAISI We know the room you've readied. We know what stirred you to send your seals and Fergus into Alban and stop him in the north, (opening curtain and pointing to the grave) CONCHUBOR. NAISI. DEIRDRE Hush, Naisi! Maybe Conchubor'll make peace. . . . Do not mind him, Conchubor; he has cause to rage. CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE. CONCHUBOR That's the first friendly word I've heard you speaking, Deirdre. A game the like of yours should be the proper thing for softening the heart and putting sweetness in the tongue; and yet this night when I hear you I've small blame left for Naisi that he stole you off from Ulster. DEIRDRE Now, Naisi, answer gently, and we'll be friends to-night. NAISI I have no call but to be friendly. I'll answer what you will. DEIRDRE Then you'll call Conchubor your friend and king, the man who reared me up upon Slieve Fuadh. [As Conchubor is going to clasp Naisi's hand cries are heard behind.] CONCHUBOR. AINNLE Naisi. . . . . Naisi. Come to us; we are betrayed and broken. NAISI. CONCHUBOR. [He goes out.] DEIRDRE There is no battle. . . . Do not leave me, Naisi. NAISI. DEIRDRE Do not leave me, Naisi. Let us creep up in the darkness behind the grave. If there's a battle, maybe the strange fighters will be destroyed, when Ainnle and Ardan are against them. [Cries heard.] NAISI I hear Ardan crying out. Do not hold me from my brothers. DEIRDRE. NAISI. DEIRDRE. NAISI. [He throws her aside almost roughly.] DEIRDRE Go to your brothers. For seven years you have been kindly, but the hardness of death has come between us. NAISI And you'll have me meet death with a hard word from your lips in my ear? DEIRDRE. AINNLE Naisi, Naisi, we are attacked and ruined! DEIRDRE. (She looks at him for an instant coldly.) Have you no shame loitering and talking, and a cruel death facing Ainnle and Ardan in the woods? NAISI They'll not get a death that's cruel, and they with men alone. It's women that have loved are cruel only; and if I went on living from this day I'd be putting a curse on the lot of them I'd meet walking in the east or west, putting a curse on the sun that gave them beauty, and on the madder and the stone-crop put red upon their cloaks. DEIRDRE I'm well pleased there's no one in this place to make a story that Naisi was a laughing-stock the night he died. NAISI. [He goes out.] CONCHUBOR That is Naisi. Strike him! (Tumult. Deirdre crouches down on Naisi's cloak. Conchubor comes in hurriedly.) [A keen of men's voices is heard behind.] DEIRDRE It is not I will be a queen. CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE. CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE It was my words without pity gave Naisi a death will have no match until the ends of life and time. (Breaking out into a keen.) CONCHUBOR It's I'll know the way to pity and care you, and I with a share of troubles has me thinking this night it would be a good bargain if it was I was in the grave, and Deirdre crying over me, and it was Naisi who was old and desolate. [Keen heard.] DEIRDRE It is I who am desolate; I, Deirdre, that will not live till I am old. CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE Was it that way with your sorrow, when I and Naisi went northward from Slieve Fuadh and let raise our sails for Alban? CONCHUBOR. (With extraordinary pleading.) SOLDIER Emain is in flames. Fergus has come back and is setting fire to the world. Come up, Conchubor, or your state will be destroyed! CONCHUBOR Are the Sons of Usna buried? SOLDIER. CONCHUBOR. (Soldier opens back of tent and shows grave.) SOLDIER . CONCHUBOR There are none to harm you. Stay here until I come again. [Goes out with Soldier. Deirdre looks round for a moment, then goes up slowly and looks into grave. She crouches down and begins swaying herself backwards and forwards, keening softly. At first her words are not heard, then they become clear.] DEIRDRE. [Lavarcham and Old Woman come in stealthily on right.] DEIRDRE It is I, Deirdre, will be crouching in a dark place; I, Deirdre, that was young with Naisi, and brought sorrow to his grave in Emain. OLD WOMAN. LAVARCHAM. [She goes to Deirdre.) DEIRDRE. LAVARCHAM Let you rise up, Deirdre, and come off while there are none to heed us, the way I'll find you shelter and some friend to guard you. DEIRDRE. LAVARCHAM If it is that way you'd be, come till I find you a sunny place where you'll be a great wonder they'll call the queen of sorrows; and you'll begin taking a pride to be sitting up pausing and dreaming when the summer comes. DEIRDRE. LAVARCHAM She doesn't heed us at all. We'll be hard set to rouse her. OLD WOMAN. LAVARCHAM There's a score of woman's years in store for you, and you'd best choose will you start living them beside the man you hate, or being your own mistress in the west or south? DEIRDRE. OLD WOMAN Look, Lavarcham! There's a light leaving the Red Branch. Conchubor and his lot will be coming quickly with a torch of bog-deal for her marriage, throwing a light on her three comrades. DEIRDRE Let us throw down clay on my three comrades. Let us cover up Naisi along with Ainnle and Ardan, they that were the pride of Emain. (Throwing in clay.) OLD WOMAN. LAVARCHAM DEIRDRE I will not leave Naisi, who has left the whole world scorched and desolate. I will not go away when there is no light in the heavens, and no flower in the earth under them, but is saying to me that it is Naisi who is gone for ever. CONCHUBOR She is here. Stay a little back. (Lavarcham and Old Woman go into the shadow on left as Conchubor comes in. With excitement, to Deirdre.) Come forward and leave Naisi the way I've left charred timber and a smell of burning in Emain Macha, and a heap of rubbish in the storehouse of many crowns. DEIRDRE What are crowns and Emain Macha, when the head that gave them glory is this place, Conchubor, and it stretched upon the gravel will be my bed to-night? CONCHUBOR. [Conchubor makes a movement towards her.] DEIRDRE Draw a little back from Naisi, who is young for ever. Draw a little back from the white bodies I am putting under a mound of clay and grasses that are withered -- a mound will have a nook for my own self when the end is come. CONCHUBOR Let you rise up and come along with me in place of growing crazy with your wailings here. DEIRDRE. CONCHUBOR. [He moves towards her.]
CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE. LAVARCHAM There are steps in the wood. I hear the call of Fergus and his men. CONCHUBOR Fergus cannot stop me. I am more powerful than he is, though I am defeated and old. FERGUS I have destroyed Emain, and now I'll guard you all times, Deirdre, though it was I, without knowledge, brought Naisi to his grave. CONCHUBOR. FERGUS I am come between you. CONCHUBOR When I've killed Naisi and his brothers, is there any man that I will spare? And is it you will stand against me, Fergus, when it's seven years you've seen me getting my death with rage in Emain? FERGUS. DEIRDRE Draw a little back with the squabbling of fools when I am broken up with misery. (She turns round.) (She looks round.) FERGUS Keep back, or you will have the shame of pushing a bolt on a queen who is out of her wits. CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE I have put away sorrow like a shoe that is worn out and muddy, for it is I have had a life that will be envied by great companies. It was not by a low birth I made kings uneasy, and they sitting in the halls of Emain. It was not a low thing to be chosen by Conchubor, who was wise, and Naisi had no match for bravery. It is not a small thing to be rid of grey hairs, and the loosening of the teeth. (With a sort of triumph.) CONCHUBOR. DEIRDRE I have a little key to unlock the prison of Naisi you'd shut upon his youth for ever. Keep back, Conchubor; for the High King who is your master has put his hands between us. (She half turns to the grave.) [She presses knife into her heart and sinks into the grave. Conchubor and Fergus go forward. The red glow fades, leaving stage very dark.] FERGUS. (He throws his sword into the grave.) [He goes out.] LAVARCHAM. CONCHUBOR Take me with you. I'm hard set to see the way before me. OLD WOMAN. [They go out.] LAVARCHAM Deirdre is dead, and Naisi is dead; and if the oaks and stars could die for sorrow, it's a dark sky and a hard and naked earth we'd have this night in Emain. CURTAIN.
APPENDIX
[THE END] _ |