Home > Authors Index > Eugene O'Neill > Anna Christie > This page
Anna Christie, a play by Eugene O'Neill |
||
Act 3 |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
_ ACT III SCENE--The interior of the cabin on the barge, "Simeon Winthrop" (at dock in Boston)--a narrow, low-ceilinged compartment the walls of which are painted a light brown with white trimmings. In the rear on the left, a door leading to the sleeping quarters. In the far left corner, a large locker-closet, painted white, on the door of which a mirror hangs on a nail. In the rear wall, two small square windows and a door opening out on the deck toward the stern. In the right wall, two more windows looking out on the port deck. White curtains, clean and stiff, are at the windows. A table with two cane-bottomed chairs stands in the center of the cabin. A dilapidated, wicker rocker, painted brown, is also by the table. It is afternoon of a sunny day about a week later. From the harbor and docks outside, muffled by the closed door and windows, comes the sound of steamers' whistles and the puffing snort of the donkey engines of some ship unloading nearby. As the curtain rises, CHRIS and ANNA are discovered. ANNA is seated in the rocking-chair by the table, with a newspaper in her hands. She is not reading but staring straight in front of her. She looks unhappy, troubled, frowningly concentrated on her thoughts. CHRIS wanders about the room, casting quick, uneasy side glances at her face, then stopping to peer absentmindedly out of the window. His attitude betrays an overwhelming, gloomy anxiety which has him on tenter hooks. He pretends to be engaged in setting things ship-shape, but this occupation is confined to picking up some object, staring at it stupidly for a second, then aimlessly putting it down again. He clears his throat and starts to sing to himself in a low, doleful voice: "My Yosephine, come aboard de ship. Long time Ay wait for you." ANNA [Wearily.] CHRIS Ay'm glad vhen ve sail again, too. [Then, as she makes no comment, Ay don't see vhy you don't like Boston, dough. You have good time here, Ay tank. You go ashore all time, every day and night veek ve've been here. You go to movies, see show, gat all kinds fun --[His eyes hard with hatred.] ANNA Oh, for heaven's sake, are you off on that again? Where's the harm in his taking me around? D'you want me to sit all day and night in this cabin with you--and knit? Ain't I got a right to have as good a time as I can? CHRIS. ANNA. [Then struck by some thought--looks at him Say, look here, what d'you mean by what you yust said? CHRIS Nutting but what Ay say, Anna. ANNA. CHRIS No, Anna! No, Ay svear to God, Ay never tank dat! ANNA Well, don't you never think it neither if you [Angrily again.] CHRIS Ay wouldn't never dream --[Then, after a second's pause, reprovingly.] ANNA Excuse me. You ain't used to such language, I know. [Mockingly.] CHRIS No, it ain't me. It's dat damn sailor fallar learn you bad tangs. ANNA. CHRIS Dat vas million times vorse, Ay tal you! Dem fallars ANNA. CHRIS. [Menacingly.] ANNA What d'you mean? CHRIS Nutting. ANNA. CHRIS Vell, yust let him! Ay'm ole bird maybe, but Ay bet Ay show him trick or two. ANNA Aw come on, be good. What's eating you, anyway? CHRIS Yes, Ay do, Anna--only not fallar on sea. But Ay like for you marry steady fallar got good yob on land. You have little home in country all your own-- ANNA Oh, cut it out! [Scornfully.] [With rising irritation.] CHRIS Ay don't vant-- ANNA. CHRIS. ANNA. CHRIS Vhy? You like dat fallar--very much, Anna? ANNA. CHRIS Maybe you tank you love him, den? ANNA What of it if I do? CHRIS Maybe--you tank you--marry him? ANNA [CHRIS' face lights up with relief. [She breaks off suddenly.] CHRIS Py yiminy, you go crazy, Ay tank! ANNA Well, I been thinking I was myself the last few days. [She goes and takes a shawl from a hook Guess I'll take a walk down to the end of the dock for a minute and see what's doing. I love to watch the ships passing. Mat'll be along before long, I guess. Tell him where I am, will you? CHRIS All right, Ay tal him. [ANNA goes out the doorway on rear. CHRIS follows her out and stands on the deck outside for a moment looking after her. Then he comes back inside and shuts the door. He stands looking out of the window--mutters--"Dirty die davil, you." Then he goes to the table, sets the cloth straight mechanically, picks up the newspaper ANNA has let fall to the floor and sits down in the rocking-chair. He stares at the paper for a while, then puts it on table, holds his head in his hands and sighs drearily. The noise of a man's heavy footsteps comes from the deck outside and there is a loud knock on the door. CHRIS starts, makes a move as if to get up and go to the door, then thinks better of it and sits still. The knock is repeated--then as no answer comes, the door is flung open and MAT BURKE appears. CHRIS scowls at the intruder and his hand instinctively goes back to the sheath knife on his hip. BURKE is dressed up--wears a cheap blue suit, a striped cotton shirt with a black tie, and black shoes newly shined. His face is beaming with good humor.] BURKE Well, God bless who's here! [He bends down and squeezes his huge form through the narrow doorway.] CHRIS Pooty goot--if it ain't for some fallars. BURKE [He laughs.] [Then soberly.] [CHRIS sits dumb, scowling, his eyes Where's Anna, I'm after asking you? CHRIS She go down end of dock. BURKE. [He sits down opposite CHRIS at the table and leans over toward him.] And that word is soon said. I'm marrying your Anna CHRIS Ho-ho! Dat's easy for say! BURKE. [Scornfully.] CHRIS. BURKE God help you! CHRIS. BURKE Is it Anna you think will prevent me? CHRIS. BURKE. CHRIS. BURKE That's a lie in your throat, divil mend you! CHRIS. BURKE. [Earnestly.] CHRIS Vell--Ay don't vant for Anna gat married. Listen, you fallar. Ay'm a ole man. Ay don't see Anna for fifteen year. She vas all Ay gat in vorld. And now ven she come on first trip--you tank Ay vant her leave me 'lone again? BURKE Let you not be thinking I have no heart at all for the way you'd be feeling. CHRIS Den you do right tang, eh? You ship avay again, leave Anna alone. [Cajolingly.] BURKE God stiffen you! [Then controlling himself--calmly.] CHRIS. BURKE. CHRIS Ay taught it vas better Anna stay avay, grow up inland BURKE Is it blaming the sea for your troubles ye are again, God help you? CHRIS BURKE CHRIS Dat's yust it! Dat's yust what you are--no-good, sailor fallar! You tank Ay lat her life be made sorry by you like her mo'der's vas by me! No, Ay svear! She don't marry you if Ay gat kill you first! BURKE Ho-ho! Glory be to God, it's bold talk you have for a stumpy runt of a man! CHRIS Vell--you see! BURKE I'll see, surely! I'll see myself and Anna married this day, I'm telling you! [Then with contemptuous exasperation.] CHRIS [Darkly.] You see if Ay'm man--maybe quicker'n you tank. BURKE Yerra, don't be boasting. I'm thinking 'tis out of your wits you've got with fright of the sea. You'd be wishing Anna married to a farmer, she told me. That'd be a swate match, surely! Would you have a fine girl the like of Anna lying down at nights with a muddy scut stinking of pigs and dung? Or would you have her tied for life to the like of them skinny, shrivelled swabs does be working in cities? CHRIS. BURKE. [Pounding the table.] CHRIS You vas crazy fool, Ay tal you! BURKE. [Proudly.] CHRIS Yes, you vas hell of fallar, hear you tal it! BURKE You'll be calling me a liar once too often, me old bucko! Wasn't the whole story of it and my picture itself in the newspapers of Boston a week back? [Looking CHRIS up and down belittlingly.] CHRIS. [With a meaning glance at BURKE.] BURKE Is it casting insults at the men in the stokehole ye are, ye old ape? God stiffen you! Wan of them is worth any ten stock-fish-swilling Square-heads ever shipped on a windbag! CHRIS Irish svine, you! BURKE Don't ye like the Irish, ye old babboon? 'Tis that you're needing in your family, I'm telling you--an Irishman and a man of the stokehole--to put guts in it so that you'll not be having grandchildren would be fearful cowards and jackasses the like of yourself! CHRIS You look out! BURKE And it's that you'll be having, no matter what you'll do to prevent; for Anna and me'll be married this day, and no old fool the like of you will stop us when I've made up my mind. CHRIS You don't! [He throws himself at BURKE, knife in hand, knocking his chair over backwards. BURKE springs to his feet quickly in time to meet the attack. He laughs with the pure love of battle. The old Swede is like a child in his hands. BURKE does not strike or mistreat him in any way, but simply twists his right hand behind his back and forces the knife from his fingers. He throws the knife into a far corner of the room--tauntingly.] BURKE. [Holding the struggling CHRIS at arm's length I've half a mind to hit you a great clout will [He gives CHRIS a push with the flat of his hand which sends the old Swede staggering back against the cabin wall, where he remains standing, panting heavily, his eyes fixed on BURKE with hatred, as if he were only collecting his strength to rush at him again.] BURKE Now don't be coming at me again, I'm saying, or I'll flatten you on the floor with a blow, if 'tis Anna's father you are itself! I've no patience left for you. [Then with an amused laugh.] [A shadow crosses the cabin windows. Both men start. ANNA appears in the doorway.] ANNA Hello, Mat. Are you here already? I was down What's up? [Then noticing the overturned chair--in alarm.] [Turning on BURKE reproachfully.] You ain't been fighting with him, Mat--after you promised? BURKE I've not laid a hand on him, Anna. [He goes and picks up the chair, then turning on Let you not be worried at all. ANNA. [She turns on CHRIS.] CHRIS Ve vas talking about ships and fallars on sea. ANNA Oh--the old stuff, eh? BURKE He's not after telling you the whole of it. We was arguing about you mostly. ANNA About me? BURKE. [He sits down at the left of table.] ANNA Sure. Tell me what it's all about. CHRIS No! You don't do dat, you! You tal him you don't vant for hear him talk, Anna. ANNA CHRIS ANNA Yes, right here and now. [She turns to BURKE.] BURKE The whole of it's in a few words only. So's he'd make no [Passionately.] CHRIS Ho-ho! He tal same tang to gel every port he go! ANNA Shut up, can't you? [Then to BURKE feelingly.] BURKE God bless you! ANNA. BURKE --[Hesitatingly.] --[He looks at her pleadingly.] [Passionately.] [He grasps both her hands in his two.] ANNA So you told him that, Mat? No wonder he was mad. [Forcing out the words.] --[She laughs helplessly.] [Then with a sudden joyous defiance.] CHRIS Anna! [He sits crushed.] BURKE God be praised! ANNA And I ain't never loved a man in my life before, BURKE Sure I do be believing ivery word you iver said or iver will say. And 'tis you and me will be having a grand, beautiful life together to the end of our days! [He tries to kiss her. At first she turns away her head--then, overcome by a fierce impulse of passionate love, she takes his head in both her hands and holds his face close to hers, staring into his eyes. Then she kisses him full on the lips.] ANNA Good-bye. [She walks to the doorway in rear--stands with her back toward them, looking out. Her shoulders quiver once or twice as if she were fighting back her sobs.] BURKE Good-bye, is it? The divil you say! [To CHRIS, who has quickened to instant attention at his daughter's good-bye, and has looked back at her with a stirring of foolish hope in his eyes.] Now, me old bucko, what'll you be saying? You heard the words from her own lips. Confess I've bate you. Own up like a man when you're bate fair and square. And here's my hand to you --[Holds out his hand.] CHRIS BURKE [Growling.] CHRIS. [At the sound of her name ANNA has turned round to BURKE No, and I wasn't hearing her say the sun is shining either. CHRIS ANNA No, I didn't say it, Mat. CHRIS Dere! You hear! BURKE You're waiting till you do be asked, you mane? Well, I'm asking you now. And we'll be married this day, with the help of God! ANNA You heard what I said, Mat--after I kissed you? BURKE No--I disremember. ANNA [Her voice trembling.] BURKE What d'you mane? ANNA. CHRIS Ay know it! Ay know dat vas so! BURKE Anna! Is it making game of me you'd be? 'Tis a quare ANNA D'you think I'd kid you now? BURKE. ANNA No I'm not. BURKE But what's come over you so sudden? You was saying you loved me-- ANNA. BURKE Then why--what, in the divil's name--Oh, God help me, I can't make head or tail to it at all! ANNA. [Her voice catching.] BURKE. [Suddenly getting an idea and pointing at CHRIS exasperatedly.] Is it giving heed to the like of that old fool ye are, and CHRIS Yes, Anna believe me, not you! She know her old fa'der don't lie like you. ANNA You sit down, d'you hear? Where do you come in butting [Harshly.] CHRIS You ain't got nutting for hold against me, Anna. ANNA. Say, Mat, I'm s'prised at you. You didn't think anything he'd said-- BURKE Sure, what else would it be? ANNA. BURKE. I don't know how to take you, with your saying this one minute and that the next. ANNA. BURKE. ANNA [Distractedly.] BURKE [Then fearfully.] ANNA BURKE To the divil with all other reasons then. They don't matter with me at all. [He gets to his feet confidently, assuming a masterful tone.] [He takes her by the arms, grinning to soften his serious bullying.] We've had enough of talk! Let you be going into your room now and be dressing in your best and we'll be going ashore. CHRIS No, py God, she don't do that! [Takes hold of her arm.] ANNA Say, where do you get that stuff? BURKE Never mind, now! Let you go get dressed, I'm saying, CHRIS You stay right here, Anna, you hear! [ANNA stands looking from one to the other of them as if she thought they had both gone crazy. Then the expression of her face freezes into the hardened sneer of her experience.] BURKE She'll not! She'll do what I say! ANNA Your turn? Say, what am I, anyway? BURKE. CHRIS You don't do one tang he say, Anna! [ANNA laughs mockingly.] BURKE. CHRIS. BURKE. ANNA Orders is good! BURKE Hurry up now, and shake a leg. We've no time to be wasting. [Irritated as she doesn't move.] Do you hear what I'm telling you? CHRIS. ANNA. You can go to hell, both of you! [There is something in her tone that makes them forget their You're just like all the rest of them--you two! Gawd, you'd think I was a piece of furniture! I'll show you! Sit down now! [As they hesitate--furiously.] [To BURKE with a harsh laugh.] [Pointing to CHRIS.] [With hard mocking.] BURKE That's my word, and I'll stick to it! ANNA What a chance! You make me laugh, honest! Want to bet you will? Wait 'n see! [She stands at the table rear, looking from one to the other of the two men with her hard, mocking smile. Then she begins, fighting to control her emotion and speak calmly.] BURKE I wasn't meaning it that way at all and well you know it. [Pointing to CHRIS.] ANNA [Hysterically.] BURKE ANNA Decent? Who told you I was? [CHRIS is sitting with bowed shoulders, his head Don't go to sleep, Old Man! Listen here, I'm talking to you now! CHRIS Ay don't vant for hear it. You vas going out of head, Ay tank, Anna. ANNA Well, living with you is enough to drive anyone off their nut. Your bunk about the farm being so fine! Didn't I write you year after year how rotten it was and what a dirty slave them cousins made of me? What'd you care? Nothing! Not even enough to come out and see me! That crazy bull about wanting to keep me away from the sea don't go down with me! You yust didn't want to be bothered with me! You're like all the rest of 'em! CHRIS Anna! It ain't so-- ANNA But one thing I never wrote you. It was one of [Loudly.] --[Pointing to Burke] BURKE CHRIS Anna! ANNA That was why I run away from the farm. That was what made me get a yob as nurse girl in St. Paul. [With a hard, mocking laugh.] And you think that was a nice yob for a girl, too, don't you? [Sarcastically.] [As BURKE lets a groan of fury escape him--desperately.] [With a sudden weariness in her voice.] [She stops and looks at the two men. Both are motionless and silent. CHRIS seems in a stupor of despair, his house of cards fallen about him. BURKE's face is livid with the rage that is eating him up, but he is too stunned and bewildered yet to find a vent for it. The condemnation she feels in their silence goads ANNA into a harsh, strident defiance.] You don't say nothing--either of you--but I know what [To CHRIS furiously.] CHRIS Don't talk dat vay, Anna! Ay go crazy! Ay von't listen! [Puts his hands over his ears.] ANNA You will too listen! [She leans over and pulls his hands from his ears--with hysterical rage.] You--keeping me safe inland--I wasn't no nurse girl the last two years--I lied when I wrote you--I was in a house, that's what!--yes, that kind of a house--the kind sailors like you and Mat goes to in port--and your nice inland men, too--and all men, God damn 'em! I hate 'em! Hate 'em! [She breaks into hysterical sobbing, throwing herself into the chair and hiding her face in her hands on the table. The two men have sprung to their feet.] CHRIS Anna! Anna! It's lie! It's lie! [He stands wringing his hands together and begins to weep.] BURKE So that's what's in it! ANNA I s'pose you remember your promise, Mat? No other reason was to count with you so long as I wasn't married already. So I s'pose you want me to get dressed and go ashore, don't you? [She laughs.] BURKE God stiffen you! ANNA I s'pose if I tried to tell you I wasn't--that--no more you'd believe me, wouldn't you? Yes, you would! And if I told you that yust getting out in this barge, and being on the sea had changed me and made me feel different about things,'s if all I'd been through wasn't me and didn't count and was yust like it never happened--you'd laugh, wouldn't you? And you'd die laughing sure if I said that meeting you that funny way that night in the fog, and afterwards seeing that you was straight goods stuck on me, had got me to thinking for the first time, and I sized you up as a different kind of man--a sea man as different from the ones on land as water is from mud--and that was why I got stuck on you, too. I wanted to marry you and fool you, but I couldn't. Don't you see how I'd changed? I couldn't marry you with you believing a lie--and I was shamed to tell you the truth--till the both of you forced my hand, and I seen you was the same as all the rest. And now, give me a bawling out and beat it, like I can tell you're going to. [She stops, looking at BURKE. He is silent, Will you believe it if I tell you that loving you [Then as he doesn't reply--bitterly.] BURKE The rest, is it? God's curse on you! Clane, is it? [He picks up the chair on which he has been sitting and, swinging it high over his shoulder, springs toward her. CHRIS rushes forward with a cry of alarm, trying to ward off the blow from his daughter. ANNA looks up into BURKE'S eyes with the fearlessness of despair. BURKE checks himself, the chair held in the air.] CHRIS Stop, you crazy fool! You vant for murder her! ANNA Keep out of this, you! [To BURKE dully.] BURKE I can't do it, God help me, and your two eyes looking at me. [Furiously.] [His voice high pitched in a lamentation that is like a keen]. ANNA Don't, Mat! For Gawd's sake! [Then raging and pounding on the table with her hands.] BURKE I'll be going, surely! And I'll be drinking sloos of whiskey will wash that black kiss of yours off my lips; and I'll be getting dead rotten drunk so I'll not remember if 'twas iver born you was at all; and I'll be shipping away on some boat will take me to the other end of the world where I'll never see your face again! [He turns toward the door] CHRIS No, you don't go. Ay tank maybe it's better Anna marry you now. BURKE Lave go of me, ye old ape! Marry her, is it? I'd see her roasting in hell first! I'm shipping away out of this, I'm telling you! [Pointing to Anna--passionately] ANNA Mat! [But he turns without another word and strides out of the doorway. ANNA looks after him wildly, starts to run after him, then hides her face in her outstretched arms, sobbing. CHRIS stands in a stupor, staring at the floor.] CHRIS Ay tank Ay go ashore, too. ANNA Not after him! Let him go! Don't you dare-- CHRIS Ay go for gat drink. ANNA So I'm driving you to drink, too, eh? CHRIS Yes, Ay vant! You tank Ay like hear dem tangs. [Breaking down--weeping.] ANNA And I s'pose you want me to beat it, don't you? CHRIS. [Goes over and pats her on the shoulder, the Ain't your fault, Anna, Ay know dat. [She looks up at him, softened. He bursts into rage.] [He shakes his fist at the door.] [He shakes his fist again,] ANNA Oh, what's the use? Go on ashore and get drunk. CHRIS You vait here, Anna? ANNA Maybe--and maybe not. Maybe I'll get drunk, too. [CHRIS turns stupidly and goes out.
|