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The Well of the Saints, a play by J. M. Synge |
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Act 2 |
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_ ACT II [Village roadside, on left the door of a forge, with broken wheels, etc., lying about. A well near centre, with board above it, and room to pass behind it. Martin Doul is sitting near forge, cutting sticks.]
Let you make haste out there.... I'll be putting up new fires at the turn of day, and you haven't the half of them cut yet. MARTIN DOUL It's destroyed I'll be whacking your old thorns till the turn of day, and I with no food in my stomach would keep the life in a pig. (He turns towards the door.) TIMMY Do you want me to be driving you off again to be walking the roads? There you are now, and I giving you your food, and a corner to sleep, and money with it; and, to hear the talk of you, you'd think I was after beating you, or stealing your gold. MARTIN DOUL. TIMMY There's no fear of your having gold -- a lazy, basking fool the like of you. MARTIN DOUL. TIMMY Working hard? (He goes over to him.) MARTIN DOUL Would you have me getting my death sitting out in the black wintry air with no coat on me at all? TIMMY Strip it off now, or walk down upon the road. MARTIN DOUL Oh, God help me! (He begins taking off his coat.) (He tucks up his sleeves.) TIMMY Let you cut that now, and give me rest from your talk, for I'm not heeding you at all. MARTIN DOUL That's a hard, terrible stick, Timmy; and isn't it a poor thing to be cutting strong timber the like of that, when it's cold the bark is, and slippy with the frost of the air? TIMMY What way wouldn't it be cold, and it freezing since the moon was changed? [He goes into forge.] MARTIN DOUL What way, indeed, Timmy? For it's a raw, beastly day we do have each day, till I do be thinking it's well for the blind don't be seeing them gray clouds driving on the hill, and don't be looking on people with their noses red, the like of your nose, and their eyes weeping and watering, the like of your eyes, God help you, Timmy the smith. TIMMY Is it turning now you are against your sight? MARTIN DOUL It's a hard thing for a man to have his sight, and he living near to the like of you TIMMY You'd have a right to be minding, Martin Doul, for it's a power the Saint cured lose their sight after a while. Mary Doul's dimming again, I've heard them say; and I'm thinking the Lord, if he hears you making that talk, will have little pity left for you at all. MARTIN DOUL. TIMMY The day's not dark since the clouds broke in the east. MARTIN DOUL. (He looks up and sees Mary Doul.) [He begins to work busily with his back to her.] TIMMY Look on him now, Mary Doul. You'd be a great one for keeping him steady at his work, for he's after idling and blathering to this hour from the dawn of day. MARY DOUL Of what is it you're speaking, Timmy the smith? TIMMY Of himself, surely. Look on him there, and he with the shirt on him ripping from his back. You'd have a right to come round this night, I'm thinking, and put a stitch into his clothes, for it's long enough you are not speaking one to the other. MARY DOUL. [She goes out left, with her head in the air.] MARTIN DOUL Well, isn't it a queer thing she can't keep herself two days without looking on my face? TIMMY Looking on your face is it? And she after going by with her head turned the way you'd see a priest going where there'd be a drunken man in the side ditch talking with a girl. (Martin Doul gets up and goes to corner of forge, and looks out left.) MARTIN DOUL You know rightly, Timmy, it was myself drove her away. TIMMY. MARTIN DOUL I'm coming, surely. [He stops and looks out right, going a step or two towards centre.] TIMMY. MARTIN DOUL. TIMMY. [He throws down pot-hooks.] MARTIN DOUL Is it roasting me now you'd be? (Turns back and sees pot-hooks; he takes them up.) TIMMY I'm making a power of things you do have when you're settling with a wife, Martin Doul; for I heard tell last night the Saint'll be passing again in a short while, and I'd have him wed Molly with myself.... He'd do it, I've heard them say, for not a penny at all. MARTIN DOUL Molly'll be saying great praises now to the Almighty God and He giving her a fine, stout, hardy man the like of you. TIMMY And why wouldn't she, if she's a fine woman itself? MARTIN DOUL Why wouldn't she, indeed, Timmy?.... The Almighty God's made a fine match in the two of you, for if you went marrying a woman was the like of yourself you'd be having the fearfullest little children, I'm thinking, was ever seen in the world. TIMMY God forgive you! if you're an ugly man to be looking at, I'm thinking your tongue's worse than your view. MARTIN DOUL Isn't it destroyed with the cold I am, and if I'm ugly itself I never seen anyone the like of you for dreepiness this day, Timmy the smith, and I'm thinking now herself's coming above you'd have a right to step up into your old shanty, and give a rub to your face, and not be sitting there with your bleary eyes, and your big nose, the like of an old scarecrow stuck down upon the road. TIMMY She's no call to mind what way I look, and I after building a house with four rooms in it above on the hill. (He stands up.) (Going towards forge.) [He goes into forge. MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE God save you. MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE. MARTIN DOUL. (he makes a gesture over his shoulder) MOLLY BYRNE. [Bailing water into her can with a cup.] MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE. MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE. MARTIN DOUL Is there no living person can speak a score of words to me, or say "God speed you," itself, without putting me in mind of the old woman, or that day either at Grianan? MOLLY BYRNE I was thinking it should be a fine thing to put you in mind of the day you called the grand day of your life. MARTIN DOUL. (Plaintively again, throwing aside his work, and leaning towards her.) MOLLY BYRNE You've great romancing this day, Martin Doul. Was it up at the still you were at the fall of night? MARTIN DOUL It was not, Molly Byrne, but lying down in a little rickety shed.... Lying down across a sop of straw, and I thinking I was seeing you walk, and hearing the sound of your step on a dry road, and hearing you again, and you laughing and making great talk in a high room with dry timber lining the roof. For it's a fine sound your voice has that time, and it's better I am, I'm thinking, lying down, the way a blind man does be lying, than to be sitting here in the gray light taking hard words of Timmy the smith. MOLLY BYRNE It's queer talk you have if it's a little, old, shabby stump of a man you are itself. MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE. MARTIN DOUL It's not a lie you're telling, maybe, for it's long years I'm after losing from the world, feeling love and talking love, with the old woman, and I fooled the whole while with the lies of Timmy the smith. MOLLY BYRNE It's a fine way you're wanting to pay Timmy the smith.... And it's not his LIES you're making love to this day, Martin Doul. MARTIN DOUL. (He passes behind her and comes near her left.) (Bending towards her.) MOLLY BYRNE Well, isn't it a queer thing when your own wife's after leaving you because you're a pitiful show, you'd talk the like of that to me? MARTIN DOUL It's a queer thing, maybe, for all things is queer in the world. (In a low voice with peculiar emphasis.) MOLLY BYRNE Wouldn't any married man you'd have be doing the like of that? MARTIN DOUL I'm thinking by the mercy of God it's few sees anything but them is blind for a space (He bends over her.) MOLLY BYRNE Keep off from me, Martin Doul. MARTIN DOUL It's the truth I'm telling you. (He puts his hand on her shoulder and shakes her.) MOLLY BYRNE It's the like of that talk you'd hear from a man would be losing his mind. MARTIN DOUL It'd be little wonder if a man near the like of you would be losing his mind. Put down your can now, and come along with myself, for I'm seeing you this day, seeing you, maybe, the way no man has seen you in the world. (He takes her by the arm and tries to pull her away softly to the right.) MOLLY BYRNE Leave me go, Martin Doul! Leave me go, I'm saying! MARTIN DOUL. MOLLY BYRNE Timmy the smith. (Timmy comes out of forge, and Martin Doul lets her go. Molly Byrne, excited and breathless, pointing to Martin Doul.) TIMMY He's no sense, surely, and he'll be having himself driven off this day from where he's good sleeping, and feeding, and wages for his work. MOLLY BYRNE He's a bigger fool than that, Timmy. Look on him now, and tell me if that isn't a grand fellow to think he's only to open his mouth to have a fine woman, the like of me, running along by his heels. [Martin Doul recoils towards centre, with his hand to his eyes; Mary Doul is seen on left coming forward softly.] TIMMY Oh, the blind is wicked people, and it's no lie. But he'll walk off this day and not be troubling us more. [Turns back left and picks up Martin Doul's coat and stick; some things fall out of coat pocket, which he gathers up again.] MARTIN DOUL Let you not put shame on me, Molly, before herself and the smith. Let you not put shame on me and I after saying fine words to you, and dreaming... dreams... in the night. (He hesitates, and looks round the sky.) (He staggers towards Mary Doul, tripping slightly over tin can.) (He reaches Mary Doul, and seizes her left arm with both his hands -- with a frantic cry.) MARY DOUL I see you a sight too clearly, and let you keep off from me now. MOLLY BYRNE That's right, Mary. That's the way to treat the like of him is after standing there at my feet and asking me to go off with him, till I'd grow an old wretched road-woman the like of yourself. MARY DOUL When the skin shrinks on your chin, Molly Byrne, there won't be the like of you for a shrunk hag in the four quarters of Ireland.... It's a fine pair you'd be, surely! [Martin Doul is standing at back right centre, with his back to the audience.] TIMMY Is it no shame you have to let on she'd ever be the like of you? MARY DOUL. (Turning to go out on right.) [She goes out; Martin Doul has come forward again, mastering himself, but uncertain.] TIMMY. (He throws down Martin Doul's coat and stick.) MARTIN DOUL What call have you to talk the like of that with myself? TIMMY It's well you know what call I have. It's well you know a decent girl, I'm thinking to wed, has no right to have her heart scalded with hearing talk -- and queer, bad talk, I'm thinking -- from a raggy-looking fool the like of you. MARTIN DOUL It's making game of you she is, for what seeing girl would marry with yourself? Look on him, Molly, look on him, I'm saying, for I'm seeing him still, and let you raise your voice, for the time is come, and bid him go up into his forge, and be sitting there by himself, sneezing and sweating, and he beating pot-hooks till the judgment day. [He seizes her arm again.] MOLLY BYRNE. TIMMY Would you have me strike you, Martin Doul? Go along now after your wife, who's a fit match for you, and leave Molly with myself. MARTIN DOUL Won't you raise your voice, Molly, and lay hell's long curse on his tongue? MOLLY BYRNE I'll be telling him it's destroyed I am with the sight of you and the sound of your voice. Go off now after your wife, and if she beats you again, let you go after the tinker girls is above running the hills, or down among the sluts of the town, and you'll learn one day, maybe, the way a man should speak with a well-reared, civil girl the like of me. (She takes Timmy by the arm.) [She goes into the forge. Timmy stops in the doorway.] TIMMY. (He bares his arm.) [He goes into the forge and pulls the door after him.] MARTIN DOUL And that's the last thing I'm to set my sight on in the life of the world -- the villainy of a woman and the bloody strength of a man. Oh, God, pity a poor, blind fellow, the way I am this day with no strength in me to do hurt to them at all. (He begins groping about for a moment, then stops.) [He turns to grope out.]
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