MISS JAY.There I entirely differ. In my view,A free accord of lovers, heart with heart,Who hold together, having leave to part,Gives the best warrant that their love is true.
ANNA [warmly].O no—Love's bound when it is fresh and youngIs of a stuff more precious and more strong.
LIND [thoughtfully].Possibly the ideal flower may blow,Even as that snowdrop,—hidden by the snow.
FALK [with a sudden outburst].You fallen Adam! There a heart was cleftWith longing for the Eden it has left!
LIND.What stuff!
MRS. HALM [offended, to FALK, rising].'Tis not a very friendly actTo stir a quarrel where we've made a peace.As for your friend's good fortune, be at ease—
SOME LADIES.Nay that's assured—
OTHERS.A very certain fact.
MRS. HALM.The cooking-class at school, I must confess,She did not take; but she shall learn it still.
MISS JAY.With her own hands she's trimming her own dress.
AN AUNT [patting ANNA's hand].And growing exquisitely sensible.
FALK [laughing aloud].O parody of sense, that rives and rendsIn mania dance upon the lips of friends!Was it good sense he wanted? Or a she-Professor of the lore of Cookery?A joyous son of springtime he came here,For the wild rosebud on the bush he burned.You reared the rosebud for him; he returned—And for his rose found what? The hip!
MISS JAY [offended].You jeer!
FALK.A useful household condiment, heaven knows!But yet the hip was not his bridal rose.
MRS. HALM.O, if it is a ball-room queen he wants,I'm very sorry; these are not their haunts.
FALK.O yes, I know the pretty coquetryThey carry on with "Domesticity."It is a suckling of the mighty LieThat, like hop-tendrils, spreads itself on high.I, madam, reverently bare my headTo the ball queen; a child of beauty she—And the ideal's golden woof is spreadIn ball-rooms, hardly in the nursery.
MRS. HALM [with suppressed bitterness].Your conduct, sir is easily explained;A plighted lover cannot be a friend;That is the kernel of the whole affair;I have a very large experience there.
FALK.No doubt,—with seven nieces, each a wife—
MRS. HALM.And each a happy wife—
FALK [with emphasis].Ah, do we know?
GULDSTAD.How!
MISS JAY.Mr. Falk!
LIND.Are you resolved to sowDissension?
FALK [vehemently].Yes, war, discord, turmoil, strife!
STIVER.What you, a lay, profane outsider here!
FALK.No matter, still the battle-flag I'll rear!Yes, it is war I mean with nail and toothAgainst the Lie with the tenacious root,The lie that you have fostered into fruit,For all its strutting in the guise of truth!
STIVER.Against these groundless charges I protest,Reserving right of action—
MISS JAY.Do be still!
FALK.So then it is Love's ever-running rillThat tells the widow what she once possess'd,—Out of her language blotted "moan" and "sigh"!So then it is Love's brimming tide that rollsAlong the placid veins of wedded souls,—That very Love that faced the iron sleet,Trampling inane Convention under feet,And scoffing at the impotent discreet!So then it is Love's beauty-kindled flameThat keeps the plighted from the taint of timeYear after year! Ah yes, the very sameThat made our young bureaucrat blaze in rhyme!So it is Love's young bliss that will not braveThe voyage over vaulted Ocean's wave,But asks a sacrifice when, like the sun,Its face should fill with glory, making one!Ah no, you vulgar prophets of the Lie,Give things the names we ought to know them by;Call widows' passion—wanting what they miss,And wedlock's habit—call it what it is!
STRAWMAN.Young man, this insolence has gone too far!In every word there's scoffing and defiance.[Goes close up to FALK.Now I'll gird up my aged loins to warFor hallowed custom against modern science!
FALK.I go to battle as it were a feast!
STRAWMAN.Good! For your bullets I will be a beacon:—[Nearer.A wedded pair is holy, like a priest—
STIVER [at FALK's other side].And a betrothed—
FALK.Half-holy, like the deacon.
STRAWMAN.Behold these children;—see,—this little throng!Io triumphemay for them be sung!How was it possible—how practicable—:The words of truth are strong, inexorable—;He has no hearing whom they cannot move.See,—every one of them's a child of Love—![Stops in confusion.That is—you understand—I would have said—!
MISS JAY [fanning herself with her handkerchief].This is a very mystical oration!
FALK.There you yourself provide the demonstration,—A good old Norse one, sound, true-born, home-bred.You draw distinction between wedded pledgesAnd those of Love: your Logic's without flaw.They are distinguished just as roast from raw,As hothouse bloom from wilding of the hedges!Love is with us a science and an art;It long ago since ceased to animate the heart.Love is with us a trade, a special lineOf business, with its union, code and sign;It is a guild of married folks and plighted,Past-masters with apprentices united;For they cohere compact as jelly-fishes,A singing-club their single want and wish is—
GULDSTAD.And a gazette!
FALK.A good suggestion, yes!We too must have our organ in the press,Like ladies, athletes, boys, and devotees.Don't ask the price at present, if you please.There I'll parade each amatory fetterThat John and Thomas to our town unites,There publish every pink and perfumed letterThat William to his tender Jane indites;There you shall read, among "Distressing Scenes"—Instead of murders and burnt crinolines,The broken matches that the week's afforded;There under "goods for sale" you'll find what firmsWill furnish cast-off rings on easy terms;There double, treble births will be recorded;No wedding, but our rallying rub-a-dubShall drum to the performance all the club;No suit rejected, but we'll set it down,In letters large, with other news of weightThus: "Amor-Moloch, we regret to state,Has claimed another victim in our town."You'll see, we'll catch subscribers: once in sightOf the propitious season when they bite,By way of throwing them the bait they'll brookI'll stick a nice young man upon my hook.Yes, you will see me battle for our cause,With tiger's, nay with editorial, clawsRending them—
GULDSTAD.And the paper's name will be—?
FALK.Amor's Norse Chronicle of Archery.
STIVER [going nearer].You're not in earnest, you will never stakeYour name and fame for such a fancy's sake!
FALK.I'm in grim earnest. We are often toldMen cannot live on love; I'll show that thisIs an untenable hypothesis;For Love will prove to be a mine of gold:Particularly if Miss Jay, perhaps,Will Mr. Strawman's "Life's Romance" unfold,As appetising feuilleton, in scraps.
STRAWMAN [in terror].Merciful heaven! My "life's romance!" What, what!When was my life romantic, if you please?
MISS JAY.I never said so.
STIVER.Witness disagrees.
STRAWMAN.That I have ever swerved a single jotFrom social prescript,—is a monstrous lie.
FALK.Good.[Clapping STIVER on the shoulder.Here's a friend who will not put me by.We'll start with Stiver's lyric ecstasies.
STIVER [after a glance of horror at STRAWMAN].Are you quite mad! Nay then I must be heard!You dare accuse me for a poet—
MISS JAY.How—!
FALK.Your office has averred it anyhow.
STIVER [in towering anger].Sir, by our office nothing is averred.
FALK.Well, leave me then, you also: I have by meOne comrade yet whose loyalty will last."A true heart's story" Lind will not deny me,Whose troth's too tender for the ocean blast,Who for his mistress makes surrender ofHis fellow-men—pure quintessence of Love!
MRS. HALM.My patience, Mr. Falk, is now worn out.The same abode no longer can receive us:—I beg of you this very day to leave us—
FALK [with a bow as MRS. HALM and the company withdraw].That this would come I never had a doubt!
STRAWMAN.Between us two there's a battle to the death;You've slandered me, my wife, my little flock,From Molly down to Millie, in one breath.Crow on, crow on—Emancipation's cock,—[Goes in followed by his wife and children.
FALK.And go you on observing Peter's faithTo Love your lord—who, thanks to your advice,Was thrice denied before the cock crew thrice!
MISS JAY [turning faint].Attend me, Stiver! help me get unlacedMy corset—this way, this way—do make haste!
STIVER [to FALK as he withdraws with MISS JAY on his arm].I here renounce your friendship.
LIND.I likewise.
FALK [seriously].You too, my Lind?
LIND.Farewell.
FALK.You were my nearest one—
LIND.No help, it is the pleasure of my dearest one.
[He goes in: SVANHILD has remained standing on theverandah steps.
FALK.So, now I've made a clearance, have free courseIn all directions!
SVANHILD.Falk, one word with you!
FALK [pointing politely to the house].That way, Miss Halm;—that way, with all the forceOf aunts and inmates, Mrs. Halm withdrew.
SVANHILD [nearer him].Let them withdraw; their ways and mine divide;I will not swell the number of their band.
FALK.You'll stay?
SVANHILD.If you make war on lies, I standA trusty armour-bearer by your side.
FALK.You, Svanhild, you who—
SVANHILD.I, who—yesterday—?Were you yourself, Falk, yesterday the same?You bade me be a sallow, for your play.
FALK.And a sweet sallow sang me into shame.No, you are right: I was a child to ask;But you have fired me to a nobler task.Right in the midst of men the Church is foundedWhere Truth's appealing clarion must be soundedWe are not called, like demigods, to gaze onThe battle from the far-off mountain's crest,But in our hearts to bear our fiery blazon,An Olaf's cross upon a mailed breast,—To look afar across the fields of flight,Tho' pent within the mazes of its might,—Beyond the mirk descry one glimmer stillOf glory—that's the Call we must fulfil.
SVANHILD.And you'll fulfil it when you break from men,Stand free, alone,—
FALK.Did I frequent them then?And there lies duty. No, that time's gone by,—My solitary compact with the sky.My four-wall-chamber poetry is done;My verse shall live in forest and in field,I'll fight under the splendour of the sun;—I or the Lie—one of us two must yield!
SVANHILD.Then forth with God from Verse to Derring-doe!I did you wrong: you have a feeling heart;Forgive me,—and as good friends let us part—
FALK.Nay, in my future there is room for two!We part not. Svanhild, if you dare decide,We'll battle on together side by side.
SVANHILD.We battle?
FALK.See, I have no friend, no mate,By all abandoned, I make war on all:At me they aim the piercing shafts of hate;Say, do you dare with me to stand or fall?Henceforth along the beaten walks I'll moveHeedful of each constraining etiquette;Spread, like the rest of men, my board, and setThe ring upon the finger of love![Takes a ring from his finger and holds it up.
SVANHILD [in breathless suspense].You mean that?
FALK.Yes, by us the world will see,Love has an everlasting energy,That suffers not its splendour to take hurtFrom the day's dust, the common highway's dirt.Last night I showed you the ideal aflame,Beaconing from a dizzy mountain's brow.You shuddered, for you were a woman,—nowI show you woman's veritable aim;—A soul like yours, what it has vowed, will keep.You see the abyss before you, Svanhild, leap!
SVANHILD [almost inaudibly].If we should fail—?
FALK [exulting].No, in your eyes I seeA gleam that surely prophesies our winning!
SVANHILD.Then take me as I am, take all of me!Now buds the young leaf; now my spring's beginning!
[She flings herself boldly into his arms as thecurtain falls.
Evening. Bright moonlight. Coloured lanterns are hung about the trees. In the background are covered tables with bottles, glasses, biscuits, etc. From the house, which is lighted up from top to bottom, subdued music and singing are heard during the following scene. SVANHILD stands on the verandah. FALK comes from the right with some books and a portfolio under his arm. The PORTER follows with a portmanteau and knapsack.
FALK.That's all, then?
PORTER.Yes, sir, all is in the pack,But just a satchel, and the paletot.
FALK.Good; when I go, I'll take them on my back.Now off. See, this is the portfolio.
PORTER.It's locked, I see.
FALK.Locked, Peter.
PORTER.Good, sir.
FALK.Pray,Make haste and burn it.
PORTER.Burn it?
FALK.Yes, to ash—[Smiling.With every draft upon poetic cash;As for the books, you're welcome to them.
PORTER.Nay,Such payment is above a poor man's earning.But, sir, I'm thinking, if you can bestowYour books, you must have done with all your learning?
FALK.Whatever can be learnt from books I know,And rather more.
PORTER.More? Nay, that's hard I doubt!
FALK.Well, now be off; the carriers wait without.Just help them load the barrow ere you go.[The PORTER goes out to the left.
FALK [approaching SVANHILD who comes to meet him].One moment's ours, my Svanhild, in the lightOf God and of the lustrous summer night.How the stars glitter thro' the leafage, see,Like bright fruit hanging on the great world-tree.Now slavery's last manacle I slip,Now for the last time feel the wealing whip;Like Israel at the Passover I stand,Loins girded for the desert, staff in hand.Dull generation, from whose sight is hidThe Promised Land beyond that desert flight,Thrall tricked with knighthood, never the more knight,Tomb thyself kinglike in the Pyramid,—I cross the barren desert to be free.My ship strides on despite an ebbing sea;But there the Legion Lie shall find its doom,And glut one deep, dark, hollow-vaulted tomb.[A short pause; he looks at her and takes her hand.You are so still!
SVANHILD.So happy! Suffer me,O suffer me in silence still to dream.Speak you for me; my budding thoughts, grown strong,One after one will burgeon into song,Like lilies in the bosom of the stream.
FALK.O say it once again, in truth's pure toneBeyond the fear of doubt, that thou art mine!O say it, Svanhild, say—
SVANHILD [throwing herself on his neck].Yes, I am thine!
FALK.Thou singing-bird God sent me for my own!
SVANHILD.Homeless within my mother's house I dwelt,Lonely in all I thought, in all I felt,A guest unbidden at the feast of mirth,—Accounted nothing—less than nothing—worth.Then you appeared! For the first time I heardMy own thought uttered in another's word;To my lame visions you gave wings and feet—You young unmasker of the Obsolete!Half with your caustic keenness you alarmed me,Half with your radiant eloquence you charmed me,As sea-girt forests summon with their spellThe sea their flinty beaches still repel.Now I have read the bottom of your soul,Now you have won me, undivided, whole;Dear forest, where my tossing billows beat,My tide's at flood and never will retreat!
FALK.And I thank God that in the bath of PainHe purged my love. What strong compulsion drewMe on I knew not, till I saw in youThe treasure I had blindly sought in vain.I praise Him, who our love has lifted thusTo noble rank by sorrow,—licensed usTo a triumphal progress, bade us sweepThro' fen and forest to our castle-keep,A noble pair, astride on Pegasus!
SVANHILD [pointing to the house].The whole house, see, is making feast to-night.There, in their honour, every room's alight,There cheerful talk and joyous song ring out;On the highroad no passer-by will doubtThat men are happy where they are so gay.[With compassion.Poor sister!—happy in the great world's way!
FALK."Poor" sister, say you?
SVANHILD.Has she not dividedWith kith and kin the treasure of her soul,Her capital to fifty hands confided,So that not one is debtor for the whole?From no one has she all things to receive,For no one has she utterly to live.O beside my wealth hers is little worth;I have but one possession upon earth.My heart was lordless when with trumpet blareAnd multitudinous song you came, its king,The banners of my thought your ensign bear,You fill my soul with glory, like the spring.Yes, I must needs thank God, when it is past,That I was lonely till I found out thee,—That I lay dead until the trumpet blastWaken'd me from the world's frivolity.
FALK.Yes we, who have no friends on earth, we twainOwn the true wealth, the golden fortune,—weWho stand without, beside the starlit sea,And watch the indoor revel thro' the pane.Let the lamp glitter and the song resound,Let the dance madly eddy round and round;—Look up, my Svanhild, into yon deep blue,—There glitter little lamps in thousands, too—
SVANHILD.And hark, beloved, thro' the limes there floatsThis balmy eve a chorus of sweet notes—
FALK.It is for us that fretted vault's aglow—
SVANHILD.It is for us the vale is loud below!
FALK.I feel myself like God's lost prodigal;I left Him for the world's delusive charms.With mild reproof He wooed me to His arms;And when I come, He lights the vaulted hall,Prepares a banquet for the son restored,And makes His noblest creature my reward.From this time forth I'll never leave that Light,—But stand its armed defender in the fight;Nothing shall part us, and our life shall proveA song of glory to triumphant love!
SVANHILD.And see how easy triumph is for two,When He's a man—
FALK.She, woman thro' and thro';—It is impossible for such to fall!
SVANHILD.Then up, and to the war with want and sorrow;This very hour I will declare it all![Pointing to FALK's ring on her finger.
FALK [hastily].No, Svanhild, not to-night, wait till to-morrow!To-night we gather our young love's red rose;'Twere sacrilege to smirch it with the proseOf common day.[The door into the garden-room opens.Your mother's coming! Hide!No eye this night shall see thee as my bride!
[They go out among the trees by the summer-house.MRS. HALM and GULDSTAD come out on the balcony.
MRS. HALM.He's really going?
GULDSTAD.Seems so, I admit.
STIVER [coming].He's going, madam!
MRS. HALM.We're aware of it!
STIVER.A most unfortunate punctilio.He'll keep his word; his stubbornness I know.In the Gazette he'll put us all by name;My love will figure under leaded headings,With jilts, and twins, and countermanded weddings.Listen; I tell you, if it weren't for shame,I would propose an armistice, a truce—
MRS. HALM.You think he would be willing?
STIVER.I deduceThe fact from certain signs, which indicateThat his tall talk about his Amor's NewsWas uttered in a far from sober state.One proof especially, if not transcendent,Yet tells most heavily against defendant:It has been clearly proved that after dinnerTo his and Lind's joint chamber he withdrew,And there displayed such singular demeanourAs leaves no question—
GULDSTAD.[Sees a glimpse of FALK and SVANHILD, who separate,Falk going to the background; SVANHILD remainsstanding hidden by the summer-house.Hold, we have the clue!Madam, one word!—Falk does not mean to go,Or if he does, he means it as a friend.
STIVER.How, you believe then—?
MRS. HALM.What do you intend?
GULDSTAD.With the least possible delay I'll showThat matters move precisely as you would.Merely a word in private—
MRS. HALM.Very good.
[They go together into the garden and are seen fromtime to time in lively conversation.
STIVER.[Descending into the garden discovers FALK, who isstanding by the water and gazing over it.These poets are mere men of vengeance, weState servants understand diplomacy.I need to labour for myself—[Seeing STRAWMAN, who enters from the garden-room.Well met!
STRAWMAN [on the verandah].He's really leaving! [Going down to STIVER.Ah, my dear sir, letMe beg you just a moment to go inAnd hold my wife—
STIVER.I—hold her, sir?
STRAWMAN.I meanIn talk. The little ones and we are soUnused to be divided, there is noEscaping—[His wife and children appear in the door.Ha! already on my trail.
MRS. STRAWMAN.Where are you, Strawman?
STRAWMAN [aside to STIVER].Do invent some tale,Something amusing—something to beguile!
STIVER [going on to the verandah].Pray, madam, have you read the official charge?A masterpiece of literary style.[Takes a book from his pocket.Which I shall now proceed to cite at large.
[Ushers her politely into the room, and followshimself. FALK comes forward; he and Strawmanmeet; they regard one another a moment insilence.
STRAWMAN.Well?
FALK.Well?
STRAWMAN.Falk?
FALK.Pastor?
STRAWMAN.Are you lessIntractable than when we parted?
FALK.Nay,I go my own inexorable way—
STRAWMAN.Even tho' you crush another's happiness?
FALK.I plant the flower of knowledge in its place.[Smiling.If, by the way, you have not ceased to thinkOf the Gazette—
STRAWMAN.Ah, that was all a joke?
FALK.Yes, pluck up courage, that will turn to smoke;I break the ice in action, not in ink.
STRAWMAN.But even though you spare me, sure enoughThere's one who won't so lightly let me off;He has the advantage, and he won't forego it,That lawyer's clerk—and 'tis to you I owe it;You raked the ashes of our faded flames,And you may take your oath he won't be stillIf once I mutter but a syllableAgainst the brazen bluster of his claims.These civil-service gentlemen, they say,Are very potent in the press to-day.A trumpery paragraph can lay me low,Once printed in that Samson-like GazetteThat with the jaw of asses fells its foe,And runs away with tackle and with net,Especially towards the quarter day—
FALK [aquiescing].Ah, were there scandal in the case, indeed—
STRAWMAN [despondently].No matter. Read its columns with good heed,You'll see me offered up to Vengeance.
FALK [whimsically].Nay,To retribution—well-earned punishment.Thro' all our life there runs a Nemesis,Which may delay, but never will relent,And grants to none exception or release.Who wrongs the Ideal? Straight there rushes inThe Press, its guardian with the Argus eye,And the offender suffers for his sin.
STRAWMAN.But in the name of heaven, what pledge have IGiven this "Ideal" that's ever on your tongue?I'm married, have a family, twelve youngAnd helpless innocents to clothe and keep;I have my daily calls on every side,Churches remote and gleve and pasture wide,Great herds of breeding cattle, ghostly sheep—All to be watched and cared for, clipt and fed,Grain to be winnowed, compost to be spread;—Wanted all day in shippon and in stall,What time haveIto serve the "Ideal" withal?
FALK.Then get you home with what dispatch you may,Creep snugly in before the winter-cold;Look, in young Norway dawns at last the day,Thousand brave hearts are in its ranks enroll'd,Its banners in the morning breezes play!
STRAWMAN.And if, young man, I were to take my wayWith bag and baggage home, with everythingThat made me yesterday a little king,Were mine the onlyvolet faceto-day?Think you I carry back the wealth I brought?[As FALK is about to answer.Nay, listen let me first explain my thought[Coming nearer.Time was when I was young, like you, and playedLike you, the unconquerable Titan's part;Year after year I toiled and moiled for bread,Which hardens a man's hand, but not his heart.For northern fells my lonely home surrounded,And by my parish bounds my world was bounded.My home—Ah, Falk, I wonder, do you knowWhat home is?
FALK [curtly].I have never known.
STRAWMAN.Just so.That is a home, where five may dwell with ease,Tho' two would be a crowd, if enemies.That is a home, where all your thoughts play freeAs boys and girls about their father's knee,Where speech no sooner touches heart, than tongueDarts back an answering harmony of song;Where you may grow from flax-haired snowy-polled,And not a soul take note that you grow old;Where memories grow fairer as they fade,Like far blue peaks beyond the forest glade.
FALK [with constrained sarcasm].Come, you grow warm—
STRAWMAN.Where you but jeered and flouted.So utterly unlike God made us two!I'm bare of that he lavished upon you.But I have won the game where you were routed.Seen from the clouds, full many a wayside grainOf truth seems empty chaff and husks. You'd soarTo heaven, I scarcely reach the stable door,One bird's an eagle born—
FALK.And one a hen.
STRAWMAN.Yes, laugh away, and say it be so, grantI am a hen. There clusters to my cluckA crowd of little chickens,—which you want!And I've the hen's high spirit and her pluck,And for my little ones forget myself.You think me dull, I know it. PossiblyYou pass a harsher judgment yet, decreeMe over covetous of worldly pelf.Good, on that head we will not disagree.[Seizes FALK's arm and continues in a lowtone but with gathering vehemence.You're right, I'm dull and dense and grasping, yes;But grasping for my God-given babes and wife,And dense from struggling blindly for bare life,And dull from sailing seas of loneliness.Just when the pinnance of my youthful dreamInto the everlasting deep went down,Another started from the ocean streamBorne with a fair wind onward to life's crown.For every dream that vanished in the wave,For every buoyant plume that broke asunder,God sent me in return a little wonder,And gratefully I took the good He gave.For them I strove, for them amassed, annexed,—For them, for them, explained the Holy text;On them you've poured the venom of your spite!You've proved, with all the cunning of the schools,My bliss was but the paradise of fools,That all I took for earnest was a jest;—Now I implore, give me my quiet breastAgain, the flawless peace of mind I had—
FALK.Prove, in a word, your title to be glad?
STRAWMAN.Yes, in my path you've cast the stone of doubt,And nobody but you can cast it out.Between my kin and me you've set a bar,—Remove the bar, the strangling noose undo—
FALK.You possibly believe I keep the glueOf lies for Happiness's in a broken jar?
STRAWMAN.I do believe, the faith your reasons toreTo shreds, your reasons may again restore;The limb that you have shatter'd, you can set;Reverse your judgment,—the whole truth unfold,Restate the case—I'll fly my banner yet—
FALK [haughtily].I stamp no copper Happiness as gold.
STRAWMAN [looking fixedly at him].Remember then that, lately, one whose scentFor truth is of the keenest told us this:[With uplifted finger."There runs through all our life a Nemesis,Which may delay, but never will relent."[He goes towards the house.
STIVER[Coming out with glasses on, and an open bookin his hand.Pastor, you must come flying like the blast!Your girls are sobbing—
THE CHILDREN [in the doorway].Pa!
STIVER.And Madam waiting![Strawman goes in.This lady has no talent for debating.[Puts the book and glasses in his pocket,and approaches FALK.Falk!
FALK.Yes!
STIVER.I hope you've changed your mind at last?
FALK.Why so?
STIVER.For obvious reasons. To betrayCommunications made in confidence,Is conduct utterly without defence.They must not pass the lips.
FALK.No, I've heard sayIt is at times a risky game to play.
STIVER.The very devil!
FALK.Only for the great.
STIVER [zealously].No, no, for all us servants of the state.Only imagine how my future chancesWould dwindle, if the governor once knewI keep Pegasus that neighs and prancesIn office hours—and such an office, too!From first to last, you know, in our profession,The winged horse is viewed with reprobation:But worst of all would be, if it got windThat I against our primal law had sinn'dBy bringing secret matters to the light—
FALK.That's penal, is it—such an oversight?
STIVER [mysteriously].It can a servant of the state compelTo beg for his dismissal out of hand.On us officials lies a strict command,Even by the hearth to be inscrutable.
FALK.O those despotical authorities,Muzzling the—clerk that treadeth out the grain!
STIVER [shrugging his shoulders].It is the law; to murmur is in vain.Moreover, at a moment such as this,When salary revision is in train,It is not well to advertise one's viewsOf office time's true function and right use.That's why I beg you to be silent; look,A word may forfeit my—
FALK.Portfolio?
STIVER.Officially it's called a transcript book;A protocol's the clasp upon the veil of snowThat shrouds the modest breast of the Bureau.What lies beneath you must not seek to know.
FALK.And yet I only spoke at your desire;You hinted at your literary crop.
STIVER.How should I guess he'd grovel in the mireSo deep, this parson perch'd on fortune's top,A man with snug appointments, children, wife,And money to defy the ills of life?If such a man prove such a Philistine,What shall of us poor copyists be said?Of me, who drive the quill and rule the line,A man engaged and shortly to be wed,With family in prospect—and so forth?[More vehemently.O, if I only had a well-lined berth,I'd bind the armour'd helmet on my head,And cry defiance to united earth!And were I only unengaged like you,Trust me, I'd break a road athwart the snowOf prose, and carry the Ideal through!
FALK.To work then, man!
STIVER.How?
FALK.You may still do so!Let the world's prudish owl unheeded flutter by;Freedom converts the grub into a butterfly!
STIVER.You mean, to break the engagement—?
FALK.That's my mind;—The fruit is gone, why keep the empty rind?
STIVER.Such a proposal's for a green young shoot,Not for a man of judgment and repute.I heed not what King Christian in his time(The Fifth) laid down about engagements broken-off;For that relationship is nowhere spoken ofIn any rubric of the code of crime.The act would not be criminal in name,It would in no way violate the laws—
FALK.Why there, you see then!
STIVER [firmly].Yes, but all the same,—I must reject all pleas in such a cause.Staunch comrades we have been in times of dearth;Of life's disport she asks but little share,And I'm a homely fellow, long awareGod made me for the ledger and the hearth.Let others emulate the eagle's flight,Life in the lowly plains may be as bright.What does his Excellency Goethe sayAbout the white and shining milky way?Man may not there the milk of fortune skim,Nor is the butter of it meant for him.
FALK.Why, even were fortune-churning our life's goal,The labour must be guided by the soul;—Be citizens of the time that is—but thenMake the time worthy of the citizen.In homely things lurks beauty, without doubt,But watchful eye and brain must draw it out.Not every man who loves the soil he turnsMay therefore claim to be another Burns.(5)
STIVER.Then let us each our proper path pursue,And part in peace; we shall not hamper you;We keep the road, you hover in the sky,There where we too once floated, she and I.But work, not song, provides our daily bread,And when a man's alive, his music's dead.A young man's life's a lawsuit, and the mostSuperfluous litigation in existence:Plead where and how you will, your suit is lost.
FALK [bold and confident, with a glance at thesummer-house].Nay, tho' I took it to the highest place,—Judgment, I know, would be reversed by grace!I know two hearts can live a life complete,With hope still ardent, and with faith still sweet;You preach the wretched gospel of the hour,That the Ideal is secondary!
STIVER.No!It's primary: appointed, like the flower,To generate the fruit, and then to go.
[Indoors, MISS JAY plays and sings: "In the Gloaming."STIVER stands listening in silent emotion.
With the same melody she calls me yetWhich thrilled me to the heart when first we met.[Lays his hand on FALK's arm and gazes intently at him.Oft as she wakens those pathetic notes,From the white keys reverberating floatsAn echo of the "yes" that made her mine.And when our passions shall one day decline,To live again as friendship, to the lastThat song shall link that present to this past.And what tho' at the desk my back grow round,And my day's work a battle for mere bread,Yet joy will lead me homeward, where the deadEnchantment will be born again in sound.If one poor bit of evening we can claim,I shall come off undamaged from the game!
[He goes into the house. FALK turns towards the summer-house. SVANHILD comes out, she is pale and agitated. They gaze at each other in silence a moment, and fling themselves impetuously into each other's arms.
FALK.O, Svanhild, let us battle side by side!Thou fresh glad blossom flowering by the tomb,—See what the life is that they call youth's bloom!There's coffin-stench wherever two go byAt the street corner, smiling outwardly,With falsehood's reeking sepulchre beneath,And in their blood the apathy of death.And this they think is living! Heaven and earth,Is such a load so many antics worth?For such an end to haul up babes in shoals,To pamper them with honesty and reason,To feed them fat with faith one sorry season,For service, after killing-day, as souls?
SVANHILD.Falk, let us travel!
FALK.Travel? Whither, then?Is not the whole world everywhere the same?And does not Truth's own mirror in its frameLie equally to all the sons of men?No, we will stay and watch the merry game,The conjurer's trick, the tragi-comedyOf liars that are dupes of their own lie;Stiver and Lind, the Parson and his dame,See them,—prize oxen harness'd to love's yoke,And yet at bottom very decent folk!Each wears for others and himself a mask,Yet one too innocent to take to task;Each one, a stranded sailor on a wreck,Counts himself happy as the gods in heaven;Each his own hand from Paradise has driven,Then, splash! into the sulphur to the neck!But none has any inkling where he lies,Each thinks himself a knight of Paradise,And each sits smiling between howl and howl;And if the Fiend come by with jeer and growl,With horns, and hoofs, and things yet more abhorred,—Then each man jogs the neighbour at his jowl:"Off with your hat, man! See, there goes the Lord!"
SVANHILD [after a brief thoughtful silence].How marvellous a love my steps has ledTo this sweet trysting place! My life that spedIn frolic and fantastic visions gay,Henceforth shall grow one ceaseless working day!O God! I wandered groping,—all was dim:Thou gavest me light—and I discovered him![Gazing at FALK in love and wonder.Whence is that strength of thine, thou mighty treeThat stand'st alone, and yet canst shelter me—?
FALK.God's truth, my Svanhild; that gives fortitude.
SVANHILD [with a shy glance towards the house].They came like tempters, evilly inclined,Each spokesman for his half of humankind,One asking: How can true love reach its goalWhen riches' leaden weight subdues the soul?The other asking: How can true love speedWhen life's a battle to the death with Need?O horrible!—to bid the world receiveThat teaching as the truth, and yet to live!
FALK.How if 'twere meant for us?
SVANHILD.For us?—What, then?Can outward fate control the wills of men?I have already said: if thou'lt stand fast,I'll dare and suffer by thee to the last.How light to listen to the gospel's voice,To leave one's home behind, to weep, rejoice,And take with God the husband of one's choice!
FALK [embracing her].Come then, and blow thy worst, thou winter weather!We stand unshaken, for we stand together!
[MRS. HALM and GULDSTAD come in from the right inthe background.
GULDSTAD [aside].Observe!
[FALK and SVANHILD remain standing by the summer-house.
MRS. HALM [surprised].Together!
GULDSTAD.Do you doubt it now?
MRS. HALM.This is most singular.
GULDSTAD.O, I've noted howHis work of late absorb'd his interest.
MRS. HALM [to herself].Who would have fancied Svanhild so sly?[Vivaciously to GULDSTAD.But no—I can't think.
GULDSTAD.Put it to the test.
MRS. HALM.Now, on the spot?
GULDSTAD.Yes, and decisively!
MRS. HALM [giving him her hand].God's blessing with you!
GULDSTAD [gravely].Thanks, it may bestead.[Comes to the front.
MRS. HALM [looking back as she goes towards the house].Whichever way it goes, my child is sped.[Goes in.
GULDSTAD [approaching FALK].It's late, I think?
FALK.Ten minutes and I go.
GULDSTAD.Sufficient for my purpose.
SVANHILD [going].Farewell.
GULDSTAD.No,Remain.
SVANHILD.Shall I?
GULDSTAD.Until you've answered me.It's time we squared accounts. It's time we threeTalked out for once together from the heart.
FALK [taken aback].We three?
GULDSTAD.Yes,—all disguises flung apart.
FALK [suppressing a smile].O, at your service.
GULDSTAD.Very good, then hear.We've been acquainted now for half a year;We've wrangled—
FALK.Yes.
GULDSTAD.We've been in constant feud;We've changed hard blows enough. You fought—alone—For a sublime ideal; I as oneAmong the money-grubbing multitude.And yet it seemed as if a chord unitedUs two, as if a thousand thoughts that layDeep in my own youth's memory benightedHad started at your bidding into day.Yes, I amaze you. But this hair grey-sprinkledOnce fluttered brown in spring-time, and this brow,Which daily occupation moistens nowWith sweat of labour, was not always wrinkled.Enough; I am a man of business, hence—
FALK [with gentle sarcasm].You are the type of practical good sense.
GULDSTAD.And you are hope's own singer young and fain.[Stepping between them.Just therefore, Falk and Svanhild, I am here.Now let us talk, then; for the hour is nearWhich brings good hap or sorrow in its train.
FALK [in suspense].Speak, then!
GULDSTAD [smiling].My ground is, as I said last night,A kind of poetry—
FALK.In practice.
GULDSTAD.Right!
FALK.And if one asked the source from which you drew—?
GULDSTAD[Glancing a moment at SVANHILD, and then turningagain to FALK.A common source discovered by us two.
SVANHILD.Now I must go.
GULDSTAD.No, wait till I conclude.I should not ask so much of others. You,Svanhild, I've learnt to fathom thro' and thro';You are too sensible to play the prude.I watched expand, unfold, your little life;A perfect woman I divined within you,But long I only saw a daughter in you;—Now I ask of you—will you be my wife?[SVANHILD draws back in embarrassment.
FALK [seizing his arm].Hold!
GULDSTAD.Patience; she must answer. Put your ownQuestion;—then her decision will be free.
FALK.I—do you say?
GULDSTAD [looking steadily at him].The happiness of threeLives is at stake to-day,—not mine alone.Don't fancy it concerns you less than me;For tho' base matter is my chosen sphere,Yet nature made me something of a seer.Yes, Falk, you love her. Gladly, I confess,I saw your young love bursting into flower.But this young passion, with its lawless power,May be the ruin of her happiness.
FALK [firing up].You have the face to say so?
GULDSTAD [quietly].Years give right.Say now you won her—
FALK [defiantly].And what then?
GULDSTAD [slowly and emphatically].Yes, sayShe ventured in one bottom to embarkHer all, her all upon one card to play,—And then life's tempest swept the ship away,And the flower faded as the day grew dark?
FALK [involuntarily].She must not!
GULDSTAD [looking at him with meaning].Hm. So I myself decidedWhen I was young, like you. In days of oldI was afire for one. Our paths divided.Last night we met again;—the fire was cold.
FALK.Last night?
GULDSTAD.Last night. You know the parson's dame—
FALK.What? It was she, then, who—
GULDSTAD.Who lit the flame.Long I remembered her with keen regret,And still in my remembrance she aroseAs the young lovely woman that she wasWhen in life's buoyant spring-time first we met.And that same foolish fire you now are fainTo light, that game of hazard you would dare.See, that is why I call to you—beware!The game is perilous! Pause, and think again!
FALK.No, to the whole tea-caucus I declaredMy fixed and unassailable belief—
GULDSTAD [completing his sentence].That heartfelt love can weather unimpairedCustom, and Poverty, and Age, and Grief.Well, say it be so; possibly you're right;But see the matter in another light.What love is, no man ever told us—whenceIt issues, that ecstatic confidenceThat one life may fulfil itself in two,—To this no mortal ever found the clue.But marriage is a practical concern,As also is betrothal, my good sir—And by experience easily we learnThat we are fitted just for her, or her.But love, you know, goes blindly to its fate,Chooses a woman, not a wife, for mate;And what if now this chosen woman wasNo wife for you—?
FALK [in suspense].Well?
GULDSTAD [shrugging his shoulders].Then you've lost your cause.To make happy bridegroom and a brideDemands not love alone, but much beside,Relations that do not wholly disagree.And marriage? Why, it is a very seaOf claims and calls, of taxing and exaction,Whose bearing upon love is very small.Here mild domestic virtues are demanded,A kitchen soul, inventive and neat handed,Making no claims, and executing all;—And much which in a lady's presence ICan hardly with decorum specify.
FALK.And therefore—?
GULDSTAD.Hear a golden counsel then.Use your experience; watch your fellow-men,How every loving couple struts and swaggersLike millionaires among a world of beggars.They scamper to the altar, lad and lass,They make a home and, drunk with exultation,Dwell for awhile within its walls of glass.Then comes the day of reckoning;—out, alas,They're bankrupt, and their house in liquidation!Bankrupt the bloom of youth on woman's brow,Bankrupt the flower of passion in her breast,Bankrupt the husband's battle-ardour now,Bankrupt each spark of passion he possessed.Bankrupt the whole estate, below, above,—And yet this broken pair were once confessedA first-class house in all the wares of love!
FALK [vehemently].That is a lie!
GULDSTAD [unmoved].Some hours ago 'twas trueHowever. I have only quoted you;—In these same words you challenged to the fieldThe "caucus" with love's name upon your shield.Then rang repudiation fast and thickFrom all directions, as from you at present;Incredible, I know; who finds it pleasantTo hear the name of death when he is sick?Look at the priest! A painter and composerOf taste and spirit when he wooed his bride;—What wonder if the man became a proserWhen she was snugly settled by his side?To be his lady-love she was most fit;To be his wife, tho'—not a bit of it.And then the clerk, who once wrote clever numbers?No sooner was the gallant plighted, fixed,Than all his rhymes ran counter and got mixed;And now his Muse continuously slumbers,Lullabied by the law's eternal hum.Thus you see— [Looks at SVANHILD.Are you cold?
SVANHILD [softly].No.
FALK [with forced humour].Since the sumWorks out a minus then in every caseAnd never shows a plus,—why should you beSo resolute your capital to placeIn such a questionable lottery?
GULDSTAD [looks at him, smiles, and shakes his head].My bold young Falk, reserve a while your mirth.—There are two ways of founding an estate.It may be built on credit—drafts long-datedOn pleasure in a never-ending bout,On perpetuity of youth unbated,And permanent postponement of the gout.It may be built on lips of rosy red,On sparkling eyes and locks of flowing gold,On trust these glories never will be shed,Nor the dread hour of periwigs be tolled.It may be built on thoughts that glow and quiver,—Flowers blowing in the sandy wilderness,—On hearts that, to the end of life, for everThrob with the passion of the primal "yes."To dealings such as this the world extendsOne epithet: 'tis known as "humbug," friends.
FALK.I see, you are a dangerous attorney,You—well-to-do, a millionaire may-be;While two broad backs could carry in one journeyAll that beneath the sun belongs to me.
GULDSTAD [sharply].What do you mean?
FALK.That is not hard to see.For the sound way of building, I suppose,Is just with cash—the wonder-working paintThat round the widow's batten'd forehead throwsThe aureole of a young adored saint.
GULDSTAD.O no, 'tis something better that I meant.'Tis the still flow of generous esteem,Which no less honours the recipientThan does young rapture's giddy-whirling dream.It is the feeling of the blessednessOf service, and home quiet, and tender ties,The joy of mutual self-sacrifice,Of keeping watch lest any stone distressHer footsteps wheresoe'er her pathway lies;It is the healing arm of a true friendThe manly muscle that no burdens bend,The constancy no length of years decays,The arm that stoutly lifts and firmly stays.This, Svanhild, is the contribution IBring to your fortune's fabric: now, reply.[SVANHILD makes an effort to speak; GULDSTAD liftshis hand to check her.Consider well before you give your voice!With clear deliberation make your choice.
FALK.And how have you discovered—
GULDSTAD.That I love her?That in your eyes 'twas easy to discover.Let her too know it. [Presses his hand.Now I will go in.Let the jest cease and earnest work begin;And if you undertake that till the endYou'll be to her no less a faithful friend,A staff to lean on, and a help in need,Than I can be— [Turning to SVANHILD.Cancel it from the tables of your thought.Then it is I who triumph in very deed;You're happy, and for nothing else I fought.[To FALK.And, apropos—just now you spoke of cash,Trust me, 'tis little more than tinsell'd trash.I have not ties, stand perfectly alone;To you I will make over all I own;My daughter she shall be, and you my son.You know I have a business by the border:There I'll retire, you set your home in order,And we'll foregather when a year is gone.Now, Falk, you know me; with the same precisionObserve yourself: the voyage down life's stream,Remember, is no pastime and no dream.Now, in the name of God—make your decision!
[Goes into the house. Pause. FALK andSVANHILD look shyly at each other.
FALK.You are so pale.
SVANHILD.And you so silent.
FALK.True.
SVANHILD.He smote us hardest.
FALK [to himself].Stole my armour, too.
SVANHILD.What blows he struck!
FALK.He knew to place them well.
SVANHILD.All seemed to go to pieces where they fell.[Coming nearer to him.How rich in one another's wealth beforeWe were, when all had left us in despite,And Thought rose upward like the echoing roarOf breakers in the silence of the night.With exultation then we faced the fray,And confidence that Love is lord of death;—He came with worldly cunning, stole our faith,Sowed doubt,—and all the glory pass'd away!
FALK [with wild vehemence].Tear, tear it from thy memory! All his talkWas true for others, but for us a lie!
SVANHILD [slowly shaking her head].The golden grain, hail-stricken on its stalk,Will never more wave wanton to the sky.
FALK [with an outburst of anguish].Yes, we two, Svanhild—!
SVANHILD.Hence with hopes that snare!If you sow falsehood, you must reap despair.For others true, you say? And do you doubtThat each of them, like us, is sure, alike,That he's the man the lightning will not strike,And no avenging thunder will find out,Whom the blue storm-cloud scudding up the skyOn wings of tempest, never can come nigh?
FALK.The others split their souls on scattered ends:Thy single love my being comprehends.They're hoarse with yelling in life's Babel din:I in this quiet shelter fold thee in.
SVANHILD.But if love, notwithstanding, should decay,—Love being Happiness's single stay—Could you avert, then, Happiness's fall?
FALK.No, my love's ruin were the wreck of all.
SVANHILD.And can you promise me before the LordThat it will last, not drooping like the flower,But smell as sweet as now till life's last hour?
FALK [after a short pause].It will last long.
SVANHILD."Long!" "Long!"—Poor starveling word!Can "long" give any comfort in Love's need?It is her death-doom, blight upon her seed."My faith is, Love will never pass away"—That song must cease, and in its stead be heard:"My faith is, that I loved you yesterday!"[As uplifted by inspiration.No, no, not thus our day of bliss shall wane,Flag drearily to west in clouds and rain;—But at high noontide, when it is most bright,Plunge sudden, like a meteor, into the night!
FALK.What would you, Svanhild?
SVANHILD.We are of the Spring;No autumn shall come after, when the birdOf music in thy breast shall not be heard,And long not thither where it first took wing.Nor ever Winter shall his snowy shroudLay on the clay-cold body of our bliss;—This Love of ours, ardent and glad and proud,Pure of disease's taint and age's cloud,Shall die the young and glorious thing it is!
FALK [in deep pain].And far from thee—what would be left of life?
SVANHILD.And near me what were left—if Love depart?