The Project Gutenberg EBook of Three Wonder Plays, by Lady I. A. Gregory This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Three Wonder Plays Author: Lady I. A. Gregory Release Date: January 4, 2005 [EBook #14588] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE WONDER PLAYS *** Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Scott G. Sims and the PG Online Distributed Proofreading TeamBy LADY GREGORY
Drama
SEVEN SHORT PLAYS.
    FOLK-HISTORY PLAYS. 2 VOLS.
    NEW COMEDIES.
    THE GOLDEN APPLE.
    THE DRAGON.
    OUR IRISH THEATRE. A CHAPTER OF
    AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
    THE KILTARTAN MOLIERE.
    THE IMAGE AND OTHER PLAYS.
    THREE WONDER PLAYS.
Irish Folk-Lore and Legend
VISIONS AND BELIEFS. 2 VOLS.
    CUCHULAIN OF MURITHEMNE.
    GODS AND FIGHTING MEN.
    SAINTS AND WONDERS.
    POETS AND DREAMERS.
    THE KILTARTAN POETRY BOOK.
    THE KILTARTAN HISTORY BOOK.
G.P. Putnam's Sons London & New York
Note
These plays have been copyrighted in the United States and Great Britain.
All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign languages.
All acting rights, both professional and amateur, are reserved in the United States, Great Britain, and all countries of the Copyright Union, by the author. Performances are forbidden and right of presentation is reserved.
Application for the right of performing these plays or reading them in public should be made to Samuel French, 26, Southampton Street, Strand, London, W.C.2.
ACT I
PERSONS
The King
The Queen.
The Princess Nuala.
The Dall Glic (THE BLIND WISE MAN).
The Nurse.
The Prince of the Marshes.
Manus, King of Sorcha.
Fintan, The Astrologer.
Taig.
Sibby (TAIG'S MOTHER).
Gatekeeper.
Two Aunts of the Prince of the Marshes.
Foreign Men Bringing in Food.
The Dragon.
Scene: A room in the King's house at Burren.
    Large window at back with deep window seat.
    Doors right and left. A small table and some
    chairs.
Dall Glic: (Coming in with tray, which he puts
    on table. Goes back to door.) You can come in,
    King. There is no one here.
King: (Coming in.) That's very good. I was
    in dread the Queen might be in it.
Dall Glic: It is a good thought I had bringing
    it in here, and she gone to give learning to the
    Princess. She is not likely to come this side. It
    would be a great pity to annoy her.
King: (Hastily swallowing a mouthful.) Look
    out now the door and keep a good watch. The
    time she will draw upon me is when I am eating
    my little bite.
Dall Glic: I'll do that. What I wouldn't
    see with my one eye, there's no other would see
    with three.
King: A month to-day since I wed with her, and
    well pleased I am to be back in my own place. I
    give you word my teeth are rusting with the want
    of meat. On the journey I got no fair play. She
    wouldn't be willing to see me nourish myself,
    unless maybe with the marrow bone of a wren.
Dall Glic: Sure she lays down she is but thinking
    of the good of your health.
King: Maybe so. She is apt to be paying too
    much attention to what will be for mine and for
    the world's good. I kept my health fair enough,
    and the first wife not begrudging me my enough.
    I don't know what in the world led me not to stop
    as I was.
Dall Glic: It is what you were saying, it was
    for the good of the Princess Nuala, and of yourself.
King: That is what herself laid down. It
    would be a great ease to my mind, she was saying,
    to have in the house with the young girl, a far-off
    cousin of the King of Alban, and that had been
    conversation woman in his Court.
Dall Glic: So it might be too. She is a great
    manager of people.
King: She is that ...I think I hear her
    coming.... Throw a cloth over the plates.
Queen: (Coming in.) I was in search of you.
King: I thought you were in Nuala's sunny
    parlour, learning her to play music and to go through
    books.
Queen: That is what I thought to do. But I
    hadn't hardly started to teach her the principles
    of conversation and the branches of relationships
    and kindred of the big people of the earth, when
    she plucked off the coverings I had put over the
    cages, and set open their doors, till the fiery birds
    of Sabes and the canaries of the eastern world
    were screeching around my head, giving out every
    class of cry and call.
King: So they would too.
Queen: The royal eagles stirred up till I must
    quit the place with their squawking, and the
    enchanted swans raising up their heads and pecking
    at the beadwork on my gown.
King: Ah, she has a wish for the birds of the
    air,
    that are by nature light and airy the same as herself.
Queen: It is time for her to turn her mind
    to good sense. What's that? (Whipping cloth
    from tray.) Is it that you are eating again, and
    it is but one half-hour since your breakfast?
King: Ah, that wasn't a breakfast you'd call
    a breakfast.
Queen: Very healthy food, oaten meal flummery
    with whey, and a griddle-cake; dandelion tea
    and sorrel from the field.
King: My old fathers ate their enough of wild
    herbs and the like in the early time of the world.
    I'm thinking that it is in my nature to require a
    good share of nourishment as if to make up for the
    hardships they went through.
Queen: What now have you within that pastry
    wall?
King: It is but a little leveret pie.
Queen: (Poking with fork.) Leveret! What's
    this in it? The thickness of a blanket of beef;
    calves' sweetbreads; cocks' combs; balls mixed
    with livers and with spice. You to so much as
    taste of it, you'll be crippled and crappled with
    the gout, and roaring out in your pain.
King: I tell you my generations have enough
    done of fasting and for making little of the juicy
    meats of the world.
Queen: And the waste of it! Goose eggs and
    jellies.... That much would furnish out a dinner
    for the whole of the King of Alban's Court.
    King: Ah, I wouldn't wish to be using anything
    at all, only for to gather strength for to steer
    the business of the whole of the kingdom!
Queen: Have you enough ate now, my dear?
    Are you satisfied?
King: I am not. I would wish for a little taste
    of that saffron cake having in it raisins of the sun.
Queen: Saffron! Are you raving? You to
    have within you any of the four-and-twenty sicknesses
    of the race, it would throw it out in red
    blisters on your skin.
King: Let me just taste one little slab of that
    venison ham.
Queen: (Poking with a fork.) It would take
    seven chewings! Sudden death it would be!
    Leave it alone now and rise up. To keep in health
    every man should quit the table before he is satisfied
    —there are some would walk to the door and back
    with every bite.
King: Is it that I am to eat my meal standing,
    the same as a crane in a shallow, or moving from
    tuft to thistle like you'd see a jennet on the high
    road?
Queen: Well, at the least, let you drink down
    a share of this tansy juice. I was telling you it
    would be answerable to your health.
King: You are doing entirely too much for me.
Queen: Sure I am here to be comfortable to
    you. This house before I came into it was but
    a ship without a rudder! Here now, take the
    spoon in your hand.
Dall Glic: Leave it there, Queen, and I'll
    engage he'll swallow it down bye-and-bye.
Queen: Is it that you are meddling, Dall
    Glic?
    It is time some person took you in hand. I wonder
    now could that dark eye of yours be cured?
Dall Glic: It is given in that it can not, by
    doctors and by druids.
Queen: That is a pity now, it gives you a sort
    of a one-sided look. It might not be so hard a
    thing to put out the sight of the other.
Dall Glic: I'd sooner leave them the way they
    are.
Queen: I'll put a knot on my handkerchief till
    such time as I can give my mind to it.... Now,
    my dear (to King), make no more delay. It is
    right to drink it down after your meal. The
    stomach to be bare empty, the medicine might
    prey upon the body till it would be wore away
    and consumed.
King: Time enough. Let it settle now for
    a minute.
Queen: Here, now, I'll hold your nose the way
    you will not get the taste of it.
(She holds spoon to his mouth. A ball flies
    in at window; he starts and medicine
    is spilled.)
Princess: (Coming in with Nurse.) Is it true
    what they are telling me?
Queen: Do you see that you near hit the King
    with your ball, and, what is worse again, you have
    his medicine spilled from the spoon.
Princess: (Patting him.) Poor old King.
Queen: Have you your lessons learned?
Princess: (Throwing books in the air.) Neither
    line nor letter of them! Poem book! Brehon
    Laws! I have done with books! I am seventeen
    years old to-day!
Queen: There is no one would think it and
    you so flighty as you are.
Princess: (To King.) Is it true that the cook
    is gone away?
King: (Aghast.) What's that you're saying?
Queen: Don't be annoying the King's mind
    with such things. He should be hidden from every
    trouble and care.
Princess: Was it you sent him away?
Queen: Not at all. If he went it was through
    foolishness and pride.
Princess: It is said in the house that you
    annoyed
    him.
Queen: I never annoyed any person in my life,
    unless it might be for their own good. But it
    fails some to recognise their best friend. Just
    teaching him I was to pickle onion thinnings as it
    was done at the King of Alban's Court.
Princess: Didn't he know that before?
Queen: Whether or no, he gave me very little
    thanks, but turned around and asked his wages.
    Hurrying him and harrying him he said I was,
    and away with him, himself and his four-and-twenty
    apprentices.
King: That is bad news, and pitiful news.
Queen: Do not be troubling yourself at all. It
    will be easy find another.
King: It might not be easy to find so good a
    one. A great pity! A dinner or a supper not
    to be rightly dressed is apt to give no pleasure in
    the eating or in the bye-and-bye.
Queen: I have taken it in hand. I have a good
    headpiece. I put out a call with running lads
    and with the army captains through the whole
    of the five provinces; and along with that, I have
    it put up on tablets at the post office.
Princess: I am sorry the old one to be gone.
    To remember him is nearly the farthest spot in
    my memory.
Queen: (Sharply.) If you want the house to
    be under your hand only, it is best for you to settle
    into one of your own.
Princess: Give me the little rush cabin by the
    stream and I'll be content.
Queen: If you mind yourself and profit by
    my instruction it is maybe not a cabin you will
    be moving to but a palace.
Princess: I'm tired of palaces. There are too
    many people in them.
Queen: That is talking folly. When you settle
    yourself it must be in the station where you were
    born.
Princess: I have no mind to settle myself yet
    awhile.
Nurse: Ah, you will not be saying that the
    time Mr. Right will come down the chimney,
    and will give you the marks and tokens of a king.
Queen: There might have some come looking
    for her before this, if it was not for you petting
    and pampering her the way you do, and encouraging
    her flightiness and follies. It is likely she will get
    no offers till such time as I will have taught her
    the manners and the right customs of courts.
Nurse: Sure I am acquainted with courts myself.
    Wasn't it I fostered comely Manus that is presently
    King of Sorcha, since his father went out of the
    world? And as to lovers coming to look for her!
    They do be coming up to this as plenty as the eye
    could hold them, and she refusing them, and they
    laying the blame upon the King!
King: That is so, they laying the blame upon
    myself. There was the uncle of the King of
    Leinster; he never sent me another car-load of
    asparagus from the time you banished him away.
Princess: He was a widower man.
King: As to the heir of Orkney, since the time
    you sent him to the right about, I never got so
    much as a conger eel from his hand.
Princess: As dull as a fish he was. He had a
    fish's eyes.
King: That wasn't so with the champion of
    the merings of Ulster.
Princess: A freckled man. He had hair the
    colour of a fox.
King: I wish he didn't stop sending me his
    tribute of heather beer.
Queen: It is a poor daughter that will not
    wish to be helpful to her father.
Princess: If I am to wed for the furnishing
    of my father's table, it's as good for you to wrap
    me in a speckled fawnskin and roast me!
(Runs out, tossing her ball.)
Queen: She is no way fit for marriage unless
    with a herd to the birds of the air, till she has a
    couple of years schooling.
King: It would be hard to put her back to
    that.
Queen: I must take it in hand. She is getting
    entirely too much of her own way.
Nurse: Leave her alone, and in the end it will
    be a good way.
Queen: To keep rules and hours she must learn,
    and to give in to order and good sense. (To King.)
    There is a pigeon messenger I brought from Alban
    I am about to let loose on this day with news of
    myself and of yourself. I will send with it a message
    to a friend I have, bidding her to make ready for
    Nuala a place in her garden of learning and her
    school.
King: That is going too fast. There is no
    hurry.
Queen: She is seventeen years. There is no
    day to be lost. I will go write the letter.
Nurse: Oh, you wouldn't send away the poor
    child!
Dall Glic: It would be a great hardship to
    send her so far. Our poor little Princess Nu!
Queen: (Sharply.) What are saying? (Dall
    Glic is silent.)
King: I would not wish her to be sent out
    of this.
Queen: There is no other way to set her mind
    to sense and learning. It will be for her own
    good.
Nurse: Where's the use troubling her with
    lessons and with books that maybe she will never
    be in need of at all. Speak up for her, King.
King: Let her stop for this year as she is.
Queen: You are all too soft and too easy. She
    will turn on you and will blame you for it, and
    another year or two years slipped by.
Nurse: That she may!
Dall Glic: Who knows what might take place
    within the twelvemonth that is coming?
King: Ah, don't be talking about it. Maybe
    it never might come to pass.
Dall Glic: It will come to pass, if there is
    truth
    in the clouds of sky.
King: It will not be for a year, anyway. There'll
    be many an ebbing and flowing of the tide within
    a year.
Queen: What at all are you talking about?
King: Ah, where's the use of talking too
    much.
Queen: Making riddles you are, and striving
    to keep the meaning from your comrade, that is
    myself.
King: It's best not be thinking about the thing
    you would not wish, and maybe it might never
    come around at all. To strive to forget a threat
    yourself, it might maybe be forgotten by the
    universe.
Queen: Is it true something was threatened?
King: How would I know is anything true,
    and the world so full of lies as it is?
Nurse: That is so. He might have been wrong
    in his foretelling. What is he in the finish but an
    old prophecy?
Dall Glic: Is it of Fintan you are saying that?
Queen: And who, will you tell me, is Fintan?
Dall Glic: Anyone that never heard tell of
    Fintan never heard anything at all.
Queen: His name was not up on the tablets
    of big men at the King of Alban's Court, or of
    Britain.
Nurse: Ah, sure in those countries they are
    without religion or belief.
Queen: Is it that there was a prophecy?
King: Don't mind it. What are prophecies?
    Don't we hear them every day of the week? And
    if one comes true there may be seven blind and
    come to nothing.
Queen: (To Dall Glic.) I must get to the root
    of this, and the handle. Who, now, is Fintan?
Dall Glic: He is an astrologer, and understanding
    the nature of the stars.
Nurse: He wore out in his lifetime three eagles
    and three palm trees and three earthen dykes.
    It is down in a cleft of the rocks beyond he has
    his dwelling presently, the way he can be watching
    the stars through the daytime.
Dall Glic: He prophesied in a prophecy, and
    it is written in clean letters in the King's yew-tree
    box.
King: It is best to keep it out of sight. It
    being to be, it will be; and, if not, where's the
    use troubling our mind?
Queen: Sound it out to me.
Dall Glic: (Looking from window and drawing
    curtain.) There is no story in the world is worse
    to me or more pitiful; I wouldn't wish any person
    to hear.
Nurse: Oh, take care it would come to the
    ears of my darling Nu!
Dall Glic: It is said by himself and the heavens
    that in a year from this day the King's daughter will
    be brought away and devoured by a scaly Green
    Dragon that will come from the North of the
    World.
Queen: A Dragon! I thought you were talking
    of some danger. I wouldn't give in to dragons.
    I never saw one. I'm not in dread of beasts unless
    it might be a mouse in the night-time!
King: Put it out of mind. It is likely anyway
    that the world will soon be ended the way
    it is.
Queen: I will send and search out this astrologer
    and will question him.
Dall Glic: You have not far to search. He
    is outside at the kitchen door at this minute, and
    as if questioning after something, and it a half-score
    and seven years since I knew him to come
    out of his cave.
King: Do not! He might waken up the Dragon
    and put him in mind of the girl, for to make his
    own foretelling come true.
Nurse: Ah, such a thing cannot be! The
    poor innocent child! (Weeps.)
Queen: Where's the use of crying and roaring?
    The thing must be stopped and put an end to.
    I don't say I give in to your story, but that would
    be an unnatural death. I would be scandalised
    being stepmother to a girl that would be swallowed
    by a sea-serpent!
Nurse: Ochone! Don't be talking of it at
    all!
Queen: At the King of Alban's Court, one
    of the royal family to die over, it will be naturally
    on a pillow, and the dead-bells ringing, and a
    burying with white candles, and crape on the
    knocker of the door, and a flagstone put over the
    grave. What way could we put a stone or so
    much as a rose-bush over Nuala and she in the
    inside of a water-worm might be ploughing its way
    down to the north of the world?
Nurse: Och! that is what is killing me entirely!
    O save her, save her.
King: I tell you, it being to be, it will be.
Queen: You may be right, so, when you would
    not go to the expense of paying her charges at the
    Royal school. But wait, now, there is a plan
    coming into my mind.
Nurse: There must surely be some way!
Queen: It is likely a king's daughter the beast—
    if there is a beast—will come questioning after, and
    not after a king's wife.
Dall Glic: That is according to custom.
Queen: That's what I am saying. What we
    have to do is to join Nuala with a man of a husband,
    and she will be safe from the danger ahead of her.
    In all the inventions made by poets, for to put
    terror on children or to knock laughter out of fools,
    did any of you ever hear of a Dragon swallowing
    the wedding ring?
All: We never did.
Queen: It's easy enough so. There must be
    no delay till Nuala will be married and wed with
    someone that will bring her away out of this, and
    let the Dragon go hungry home!
Nurse: That she may! Isn't it a pity now
    she being so hard to please!
Queen: Young people are apt to be selfish and
    to have no thought but for themselves. She must
    not be hard to please when it will be to save and
    to serve her family and to keep up respect for
    their name. Here she is coming.
Nurse: Ah, you would not tell her! You
    would not put the dear child under the shadow
    of such a terror and such a threat!
King: She must not be told. I never could
    bear up against it.
(Nuala comes in.)
Queen: Look now at your father the way he is.
Princess: (Touching his hand.) What is fretting
    you?
Queen: His heart as weighty as that the chair
    near broke under him.
Princess: I never saw you this way before.
Queen: And all on the head of yourself!
Princess: I am sorry, and very sorry, for that.
Queen: He is loth to say it to you, but he is
    tired and wore out waiting for you to settle with
    some match. See what a troubled look he has on
    his face.
Princess: (To King.) Is it that you want me
    to leave you? (He gives a sob.) (To Dall Glic.)
    Is it the Queen urged him to this?
Dall Glic: If she did, it was surely for your good.
Nurse: Oh, my child and my darling, let you
    strive to take a liking to some good man that will
    come!
Princess: Are you going against me with the rest?
Nurse: You know well I would never do that!
Princess: Do you, father, urge me to go?
King: They are in too big a hurry why
    wouldn't they wait a while, for a quarter, or
    three-quarters
    of a year.
Princess: Is that all the delay I am given, and
    the term is set for me, like a servant that would be
    banished from the house?
King: That's not it. That's not right. I
    would never give in to let you go ...if it
    wasn't ...
Princess: I know. (Stands up.) For my own
    good!
(Trumpet outside.)
Gatekeeper: (Coming in.) There is company
    at the door.
Queen: Who is it?
Gatekeeper: Servants, and a company of women,
    and one that would seem to be a Prince, and young.
Princess: Then he is come asking me in marriage.
Dall Glic: Who is he at all?
Gatekeeper: They were saying he is the son
    of the King of the Marshes.
King: Go bring him in.
(Gatekeeper goes.)
Dall Glic: That's right! He has great riches
    and treasure. There are some say he is the first
    match in Ireland.
Nurse: He is not. If his father has a copper
    crown, and our own King a silver one, it is the
    King of Sorcha has a crown of gold! The young
    King of Sorcha that is the first match.
Dall Glic: If he is, this one is apt to be the
    second first.
Queen: Do you hear, Nuala, what luck is flowing
    to you?
Dall Glic: Do not now be turning your back
    on him as you did to so many.
Princess: No; whoever he is, it is likely I will
    not turn away from this one.
Queen: Go now and ready yourself to meet him.
Princess: Am I not nice enough the way I am?
Queen: You are not. The King of Alban's
    daughter has hair as smooth as if a cow had licked it.
(Princess goes.)
Gatekeeper: Here is the Prince of the Marshes!
(Enter Prince, very young and timid, an old lady
    on each side slightly in advance of him.)
King: A great welcome before you....
    And who may these be?
Prince: Seven aunts I have....
First Aunt: (Interrupting.) If he has, there
    are but two of us have come along with him.
Second Aunt: For to care him and be company
    for him on his journey, it being the first time he
    ever quitted home.
Queen: This is a great honour. Will you take
    a chair?
First Aunt: Leave that for the Prince of the
    Marshes. It is away from the draught of the
    window.
Second Aunt: We ourselves are in charge of
    his health. I have here his eel-skin boots for the
    days that will be wet under foot.
First Aunt: And I have here my little bag of
    cures, with a cure in it that would rise the body
    out of the grave as whole and as sound as the time
    you were born.
(Lays it down.)
King: (To Prince.) It is many a day your
    father and myself were together in our early time.
    What way is he? He was farther out in age than
    myself.
Prince: He is ...
First Aunt: (Interrupting.) He is only middling
    these last years. The doctors have taken him in
    hand.
King: He was more for fowling, and I was
    more for horses—before I increased so much in
    girth. Is it for horses you are, Prince?
Prince: I didn't go up on one up to this.
First Aunt: Kings and princes are getting scarce.
    They are the most class is wearing away, and it is
    right for them keep in mind their safety.
Second Aunt: The Prince has no need to go
    upon a horse, where he has always a coach at his
    command.
King: It is fowling that suits you so?
Prince: I would be well pleased ...
First Aunt: There is great danger going out
    fowling with a gun that might turn on you after
    and take your life.
Second Aunt: Why would the Prince go into
    danger, having servants that will go following
    after birds?
Queen: He is likely waiting till his enemies will
    make an attack upon the country to defend it.
First Aunt: There is a good dyke around about
    the marshes, and a sort of quaking bog. It is not
    likely war will come till such time as it will be made
    by the birds of the air.
King: Well, we must strive to knock out some
    sport or some pleasure.
Prince: It was not on pleasure I was sent.
First Aunt: That's so, but on business.
Second Aunt: Very weighty business.
King: Let the lad tell it out himself.
Prince: I hope there is no harm in me coming
    hither. I would be loth to push on you ...
First Aunt: We thought it was right, as he
    was come to sensible years ...
King: Stop a minute, ma'am, give him his
    time.
Prince: My father ... and his counsellors ...
    and my seven aunts ...that said it would be
    right for me to join with a wife.
Queen: They showed good sense in that.
Prince: (Rapidly.) They bade me come and
    take a look at your young lady of a Princess to see
    would she be likely to be pleasing to them.
First Aunt: That's it, and that is what brought
    ourselves along with him—to see would we be
    satisfied.
King: I don't know. The girl is young—
    she's young.
First Aunt: It is what we were saying, that
    might be no drawback. It might be easier train
    her in our own ways, and to do everything that
    is right.
King: Sure we are all wishful to do the thing
    that is right, but it's sometimes hard to know.
Second Aunt: Not in our place. What the
    King of the Marshes would not know, his counsellors
    and ourselves would know.
Queen: It will be very answerable to the Princess
    to be under such good guidance.
First Aunt: For low people and for middling
    people it is well enough to follow their own opinion
    and their will. But for the Prince's wife to have
    any choice or any will of her own, the people would
    not believe her to be a real princess.
(Princess comes to door, listening unseen.)
King: Ah, you must not be too strict with a
    girl that has life in her.
Prince: My seven aunts that were saying they
    have a great distrust of any person that is lively.
First Aunt: We would rather than the greatest
    beauty in the world get him a wife who would be
    content to stop in her home.
(Princess comes in very stately and with a
    fine dress. She curtseys. Aunts curtsey
    and sit down again. Prince bows uneasily
    and sidles away.)
First Aunt: Will you sit, now, between the
    two of us?
Princess: It is more fitting for a young girl
    to stay in her standing in the presence of a king's
    kindred and his son, since he is come so far to look
    for me.
Second Aunt: That is a very nice thought.
Princess: My far-off grandmother, the old
    people were telling me, never sat at the table
    to put a bit in her mouth till such time as her
    lord had risen up satisfied. She was that obedient
    to him that if he had bidden her, she would have
    laid down her hand upon red coals.
(Prince looks bored and fidgets.)
First Aunt: Very good indeed.
Princess: That was a habit with my grandmother.
    I would wish to follow in her ways.
King: This is some new talk.
Queen: Stop; she is speaking fair and good.
Princess: A little verse, made by some good
    wife, I used to be learning. "I always should:
    Be very good: At home should mind: My husband
    kind: Abroad obey: What people say."
First Aunt: (Getting up.) To travel the world,
    I never thought to find such good sense before me.
    Do you hear that, Prince?
Prince: Sure I often heard yourselves shaping
    that sort.
Second Aunt: I'll engage the royal family will
    make no objection to this young lady taking charge
    of your house.
Princess: I can do that! (Counts on fingers.)
    To send linen to the washing-tub on Monday, and
    dry it on Tuesday, and to mangle it Wednesday,
    and starch it Thursday, and iron it Friday, and
    fold it in the press against Sunday!
Second Aunt: Indeed there is little to learn
    you! And on Sundays, now, you will go driving
    in a painted coach, and your dress sewed with gold
    and with pearls, and the poor of the world envying
    you on the road.
Queen: (Claps hands.) There is no one but
    must envy her, and all that is before her for her
    lifetime!
First Aunt: Here is the golden arm-ring the
    Prince brought for to slip over your hand.
Second Aunt: It was put on all our generations of
    queens at the time of the making of their match.
Princess: (Drawing back her hand.) Mine is
    not made yet.
First Aunt: Didn't you hear me saying, and
    the Prince saying, there is nothing could be laid
    down against it.
Princess: There is one thing against it.
Queen: Oh, there can be nothing worth while!
Princess: A thing you would think a great
    drawback and all your kindred would think it.
Queen: (Rapidly.) There is nothing, but maybe
    that she is not so tall as you might think, through
    the length of the heels of her shoes.
Second Aunt: We would put up with that much.
Princess: (Rapidly.) It is that there was a
    spell put upon me—by a water-witch that was of
    my kindred. At some hours of the day I am as
    you see me, but at other hours I am changed into
    a sea-filly from the Country-under-Wave. And
    when I smell salt on the west wind I must race and
    race and race. And when I hear the call of the
    gulls or the sea-eagles over my head, I must leap
    up to meet them till I can hardly tell what is my
    right element, is it the high air or is it the loosened
    spring-tide!
Queen: Stop your nonsense talk. She is gone
    wild and raving with the great luck that is come
    to her!
(Prince has stood up, and is watching her
    eagerly.)
Princess: I feel a wind at this very time that
    is blowing from the wilderness of the sea, and
    I am changing with it.... There. (Pulls down
    her hair.) Let my mane go free! I will race
    you, Prince, I will race you! The wind of March
    will not overtake me, Prince, and I running on the
    top of the white waves!
(Runs out; Prince entranced, rushes to door.)
Aunts: (Catching hold of him.) Are you going
    mad wild like herself?
Prince: Oh, I will go after her!
First Aunt: (Clutching him) Do not! She
    will drag you to destruction.
Prince: (Struggling to door.) What matter! Let
    me go or she will escape me! (Shaking himself
    free.) I will never stop till I come to her.
(He rushes out, Second Aunt still holding on
    to him.)
First Aunt: What at all has come upon him?
    I never knew him this way before!
(She trots after him.)
Princess: (Comes leaping in by window.) They
    are gone running the road to Muckanish! But
    they won't find me!
Queen: You have a right to be ashamed of
    yourself and your play-game. It's easy for you
    to go joking, having neither cark nor care: that
    is no way to treat the second best match in Ireland!
King: You were saying you had your mind
    made up to take him.
Princess: It failed me to do it! Himself and
    his counsellors and his seven aunts!
Queen: He will give out that you are crazed
    and mad.
Princess: He will be thankful to his life's end
    to have got free of me!
King: I don't know. It seemed to me he
    was better pleased with you in the finish than
    in the commencement. But I'm in dread his
    father may not be well pleased.
Princess: (Patting him.) Which now of the
    two of you is the most to be pitied? He to
    have such a timid son or you to have such an unruly
    daughter?
Queen: It is likely he will make an attack on
    you. There was a war made by the King of Britain
    on the head of a terrier pup that was sent to him
    and that made away on the road following hares.
    It's best for you to make ready to put yourself at
    the head of your troop.
King: It's long since I went into my battle
    dress. I'm in dread it would not close upon my
    chest.
Queen: Ah, it might, so soon as you would
    go through a few hardships in the fight.
King: If the rest of Adam's race was of my
    opinion there'd be no fighting in the world at
    all.
Queen: It is this child's stubbornness is leading
    you into it. Go out, Nuala, after the Prince. Tell
    him you are sorry you made a fool of him.
Princess: He was that before—thinking to
    put me sitting and sewing in a cushioned chair,
    listening to stories of kings making a slaughter
    of one another.
Queen: Tell him you have changed your mind,
    that you were but funning; that you will wed
    with him yet.
Princess: I would sooner wed with the King
    of Poison! I to have to go to his kingdom, I'd
    sooner go earning my wages footing turf, with a
    skirt of heavy flannel and a dress of the grey frieze!
    Himself and his bogs and his frogs!
Queen: I tell you it is time for you to take a
    husband.
Princess: You said that before! And I was
    giving in a while ago, and I felt the blood of my
    heart to be rising against it! And I will not give
    in to you again! It is my own business and I will
    take my own way.
Queen: (To King.) This is all one with the
    raving of a hag against heaven!
King: What the Queen is saying is right. Try
    now and come around to it.
Princess: She has set you against me with her
    talk!
Queen: (To King.) It is best for you to lay
    orders on her.
Princess: The King is not under your
    orders!
Queen: You are striving to make him give in
    to your own!
King: I will take orders from no one at all!
Queen: Bid her go bring back the Prince.
Princess: I say that I will not!
Queen: She is standing up against you! Will
    you give in to that?
King: I am bothered with the whole of you!
    I will give in to nothing at all!
Queen: Make her do your bidding so.
King: Can't you do as you are told?
Princess: This concerns myself.
King: It does, and the whole of us.
Princess: Do you think you can force me to
    wed?
King: I do think it, and I will do it.
Princess: It will fail you!
King: It will not! I was too easy with you
    up to this.
Princess: Will you turn me out of the house?
King: I will give you my word, it is little but
    I will!
Princess: Then I have no home and no father!
    It is to my mother you must give an account.
    You know well it is with the first wife you will go
    at the Judgment!
Queen: Is it that you would make threats to
    the King? And put insults upon myself? Now
    she is daring and defying you! Let you put an end
    to it!
King: I will do that! (Stands up.) I swear
    by the oath my people swear by, the seven things
    common to us all; by sun and moon; sea and dew;
    wind and water; the hours of the day and night,
    I will give you in marriage and in wedlock to the
    first man that will come into the house!
Princess: (Shrinking as from a blow.) It is the
    Queen has done this.
Queen: I will give you out the reason, and
    see will you put blame on me or praise!
Nurse: Oh, let you stop and not draw it down
    upon her!
Queen: It is right for me to tell it; it is true
    telling! You not to be married and wed by this
    day twelvemonth, there will be a terrible thing
    happen you ...
Nurse: Be quiet! Don't you see Fintan himself
    looking in the window!
King: Fintan! What is it bring you here
    on this day?
Fintan: (A very old man in strange clothes at
    window.) What brings me is to put my curse
    upon the whole tribe of kitchen boys that are gone
    and vanished out of this, without bringing me my
    request, that was a bit of rendered lard that would
    limber the swivel of my spy-glass, that is clogged
    with the dripping of the cave.
Nurse: And you have no bad news?
Queen: Nothing to say on the head of the
    Princess, this being, as it is, her birthday?
Fintan: What birthday? This is not a birthday
    that signifies. It is the next will be the birthday
    concerned with the great story that is foretold.
Queen: It is right for her to know it.
King: It is not! It is not!
Princess: Whatever the story is, let me know
    it, and not be treated as a child that is without
    courage or sense.
Fintan: It's long till I'll come out from my
    cleft again, and getting no peace or quiet on the
    ridge of the earth. It is laid down by the stars
    that cannot lie, that on this day twelvemonth, you
    yourself will be ate and devoured by a scaly Green
    Dragon from the North!
END OF ACT I.
Scene: The Same. Princess and Nurse.
Nurse: Cheer up now, my honey bird, and
    don't be fretting.
Princess: It is not easy to quit fretting, and
    the terrible story you are after telling me of all
    that is before and all that is behind me.
Nurse: They had no right at all to go make
    you aware of it. The Queen has too much talk.
    An unlucky stepmother she is to you!
Princess: It is well for me she is here. It is
    well I am told the truth, where the whole of you
    were treating me like a child without sense, so
    giddy I was and contrary, and petted and humoured
    by the whole of you. What memory would there
    be left of me and my little life gone by, but of a
    headstrong, unruly child with no thought but
    for myself.
Nurse: No, but the best in the world, you
    are; there is no one seeing you pass by but would
    love you.
Princess: That is not so. I was wild and taking
    my own way, mocking and humbugging.
Nurse: I never will give in that there is no
    way to save you from that Dragon that is foretold
    to be your destruction. I would give the
    four divisions of the world, and Ireland along
    with them, if I could see you pelting your ball
    in at the window the same as an hour ago!
Princess: Maybe you will, so long as it will hurt
    nobody.
Nurse: Ah, sure it's no wonder there to be the
    tracks of tears upon your face, and that great terror
    before you.
Princess: I will wipe them away! I will not
    give in to danger or to dragons! No one will
    see a dark face on me. I am a king's daughter
    of Ireland, I did not come out of a herd's hut like
    Deirdre that went sighing and lamenting till she
    was put to death, the world being sick and tired
    of her complaints, and her finger at her eye dripping
    tears!
Nurse: That's right, now. You had always
    great courage.
Princess: There is like a change within me.
    You never will hear a cross word from me again.
    I would wish to be pleasant and peaceable until
    such time ...
(Puts handkerchief to eyes and goes.)
Dall Glic: (Coming in.) The King is greatly
    put out with all he went through, and the way
    the passion rose in him a while ago.
Nurse: That he may be twenty times worse
    before he is better! Showing such fury towards
    the innocent child the way he did!
Dall Glic: The Queen has brought him to the
    grass plot for to give him his exercise, walking his
    seven steps east and west.
Nurse: Hasn't she great power over him to
    make him to that much?
Dall Glic: I tell you I am in dread of her
    myself.
    Some plan she has for making my two eyes equal.
    I vexed her someway, and she got queer and humpy,
    and put a lip on herself, and said she would take
    me in hand. I declare I never will have a minute's
    ease thinking of it.
Nurse: The King should have done his seven
    steps, for I hear her coming.
(Dall Glic goes to recess of window.)
Queen: (Coming in.) Did you, Nurse, ever at
    any time turn and dress a dinner?
Nurse: (Very stiff.) Indeed I never did. Any
    house I ever was in there was a good kitchen and
    well attended, the Lord be praised!
Queen: Ah, but just to be kind and to oblige
    the King.
Nurse: Troth, the same King will wait long
    till he'll see any dish I will ready for him! I am
    not one that was reared between the flags and the
    oven in the corner of the one room! To be a nurse
    to King's children is my trade, and not to go stirring
    mashes, for hens or for humans!
Queen: I heard a crafty woman lay down one
    time there was no way to hold a man, only by food
    and flattery.
Nurse: Sure any mother of children walking the
    road could tell you that much.
Queen: I went maybe too far urging him not
    to lessen so much food the way he did. I only
    thought to befriend him. But now he is someway
    upset and nothing will rightly smooth him but to
    be thinking upon his next meal; and what it will
    be I don't know, unless the berries of the bush.
Dall Glic: (Leaning out of the window.) Here!
    Hi! Come this way!
Queen: Who are you calling to?
Dall Glic: It is someone with the appearance
    of a cook.
Queen: Are you saying it is a cook? That
    now will put the King in great humour!
(Manus appears at the window.)
Nurse: (Looking at him.) I wouldn't hardly
    think he'd suit. He has a sort of innocent look.
    I wouldn't say him to be a country lad. I don't
    know is he fitted to go readying meals for a royal
    family, and the King so wrathful if they do not
    please him as he is. And as to the Princess Nu!
    There to be the size of a hayseed of fat overhead
    on her broth, she'd fall in a dead faint.
Manus: I'll go on so.
Queen: No, no. Bring him in till I'll take a
    look at him!
Manus: (Coming inside.) I am a lad in search
    of a master.
Manus: (Inside.) I am a lad in search of a
    master.
Queen: And I myself that am wanting a cook.
Manus: I got word of that and I going the road.
Queen: You would seem to be but a young lad.
Manus: I am not very far in age to-day. But
    I'll be a day older to-morrow.
Queen: In what country were you born and
    reared?
Manus: I came from over, and I am coming
    hither.
Queen: What wages now would you be asking?
Manus: Nothing at all unless what you think
    I will have earned at the time I will be leaving
    your service.
Queen: That is very right and fair. I hope
    you will not be asking too much help. The last
    cook had a whole fleet of scullions that were no
    use but to chatter and consume.
Manus: I am asking no help at all but the
    help of the ten I bring with me.
(Holds up fingers.)
Queen: That will be a great saving in the house!
    Can I depend upon you now not to be turning
    to your own use the King's ale and his wine?
Manus: If you take me to be a thief I will go
    upon my road. It was no easier for me to come
    than to go out again.
Queen: (Holding him.) No, now, don't be so
    proud and thinking so much of yourself. If I
    give you trial here I would wish you to be ready
    to turn your hand to this and that, and not be
    saying it is or is not your business.
Manus: My business is to do as the King wishes.
Queen: That's right. That is the way the
    servants were in the palace of the King of Alban.
Manus: That's the way I was myself in the
    King's house of Sorcha.
Queen: Are you saying it is from that place you
    are come? Sure that should be a great household!
    The King of Sorcha, they were telling me, has
    seven castles on land and seven on the sea, and
    provision for a year and a day in every one of them.
Manus: That might be. I never was in more
    than one of them at the one time.
Queen: Anyone that has been in that place would
    surely be fitting here. Keep him, Nurse! Don't let
    him make away from us till I will go call the King!
(Goes out.)
Nurse: Sure it was I myself that fostered the
    young King of Sorcha and reared him in my lap!
    What way is he at all? My lovely child! Give
    me news of him!
Manus: I will do that....
Nurse: To hear of him would delight me!
Manus: It is I that can tell you....
Nurse: It is himself should be a grand king!
Manus: Listen till you hear!...
Nurse: His father was good and his mother was
    good, and it's likely, himself will be the best of all!
Manus: Be quiet now and hearken!...
Nurse: I remember well the first day I saw him
    in the cradle, two and a score of years back! Oh,
    it is glad, and very glad, I'll be to get word of him!
Manus: He is come to sensible years....
Nurse: A golden cradle it was and it standing
    on four golden balls the very round of the sun!
Manus: He is out of his cradle now. (Shakes
    her shoulder.) Let you hearken! He is in need
    of your help.
Nurse: He'll get it, he'll get it. I doted down
    on that child! The best to laugh and to roar!
Manus: (Putting hand on her mouth.) Will
    you be silent, you hag of a nurse? Can't you see
    that I myself am Manus, the new King of Sorcha?
Nurse: (Starting back.) Do you say that?
    And how's every bit of you? Sure I'd know you
    in any place. Stand back till I'll get the full of
    my eyes of you! Like the father you are, and you
    need never be sorry to be that! Well, I said to
    myself and you looking in at the window, I would
    not believe but there's some drop of king's blood
    in that lad!
Manus: That was not what you said to me!
Nurse: And wasn't the journey long on you
    from Sorcha, that is at the rising of the sun? Is
    it your foot-soldiers and your bullies you brought
    with you, or did you come with your hound and
    your deer-hound and with your horn?
Manus: There was no one knew of my journey.
    I came bare alone. I threw a shell in the sea and
    made a boat of it, and took the track of the wild
    duck across the mountains of the waves.
Nurse: And where in the world wide did you
    get that dress of a cook?
Manus: It was at a tailor's place near Oughtmana.
    There was no one in the house but the mother. I
    left my own clothes in her charge and my purse
    of gold; I brought nothing but my own blue
    sword. (Throws open blouse and shows it.) She gave
    me this suit, where a cook from this house had
    thrown it down in payment for a drink of milk.
    I have no mind any person should know I am a king.
    I am letting on to be a cook.
Nurse: I would sooner you to come as a champion
    seeking battle, or a horseman that had gone astray,
    or so far as a poet making praises or curses according
    to his treatment on the road. It would be a bad
    day I would see your father's son taken for a kitchen
    boy.
Manus: I was through the world last night in
    a dream. It was dreamed to me that the King's
    daughter in this house is in a great danger.
Nurse: So she is, at the end of a twelvemonth.
Manus: My warning was for this day. Seeing
    her under trouble in my dream, my heart was hot
    to come to her help. I am here to save her, to
    meet every troublesome thing that will come at
    her.
Nurse: Oh, my heavy blessing on you doing
    that!
Manus: I was not willing to come as a king,
    that she would feel tied and bound to live for if
    I live, or to die with if I should die. I am come
    as a poor unknown man, that may slip away after
    the fight, to my own kingdom or across the borders
    of the world, and no thanks given him and no more
    about him, but a memory of the shadow of a cook!
Nurse: I would not think that to be right,
    and you the last of your race. It is best for you
    to tell the King.
Manus: I lay my orders on you to tell no one
    at all.
Nurse: Give me leave but to whisper it to
    the
    Princess Nu. It's ye would be the finest two the
    world ever saw. You will not find her equal in all
    Ireland!
Manus: I lay it as crosses and as spells on you
    to say no word to her or to any other that will
    make known my race or my name. Give me now
    your oath.
Nurse: (Kneeling.) I do, I do. But they will
    know you by your high looks.
Manus: Did you yourself know me a while ago?
Nurse: (Getting up.) Oh, they're coming! Oh,
    my poor child, what way will you that never handled
    a spit be able to make out a dinner for the
    King?
Manus: This silver whistle, that was her pipe
    of music, was given to me by a queen among the
    Sidhe that is my godmother. At the sound of it
    that will come through the air any earthly thing
    I wish for, at my command.
Nurse: Let it be a dinner so.
Manus: So it will come, on a green tablecloth
    carried by four swans as white as snow. The
    freshest of every meat, the oldest of every drink,
    nuts from the trees in Adam's Paradise!
(King, Queen, Princess, Dall Glic come in.
    Princess sits on window sill.)
Queen: (To King.) Here now, my dear. Wasn't
    I telling you I would take all trouble from your
    mind, and that I would not be without finding a
    cook for you?
King: He came in a good hour. The want of a
    right dinner has downed kingdoms before this.
Queen: Travelling he is in search of service
    from the kings of the earth. His wages are in no
    way out of measure.
King: Is he a good hand at his trade?
Queen: Honest he is, I believe, and ready to
    give a hand here and there.
King: What way does he handle flesh, I'd wish
    to know? And all that comes up from the tide?
    Bream, now; that is a fish is very pleasant to me—
    stewed or fried with butter till the bones of it melt
    in your mouth. There is nothing in sea or strand
    but is the better of a quality cook—only oysters,
    that are best left alone, being as they are all gravy
    and fat.
Queen: I didn't question him yet about cookery.
King: It's seldom I met a woman with right
    respect for food, but for show and silly dishes and
    trash that would leave you in the finish as dwindled
    as a badger on St. Bridget's day.
Queen: If this youth of a young man was able to
    give satisfaction at the King of Sorcha's Court,
    I am sure that he will make a dinner to please
    yourself.
Manus: I will do more than that. I will dress
    a dinner that will please myself.
Princess: (Clapping hands.) Very well said!
King: Sound out now some good dishes such
    as you used to be giving in Sorcha, and the Queen
    will put them down in a line of writing, that I can
    be thinking about them till such time as you will
    have them readied.
Queen: There are sheeps' trotters below; you
    might know some tasty way to dress them.
Manus: I do surely. I'll put the trotters within
    a fowl, and the fowl within a goose, and the goose in
    a suckling pig, and the suckling pig in a fat lamb,
    and the lamb in a calf, and the calf in a Maderalla ...
King: What now is a Maderalla?
Manus: He is a beast that saves the cook trouble,
    swallowing all those meats one after another—in
    Sorcha.
King: That should be a very pretty dish. Let
    you go make a start with it the way we will not be
    famished before nightfall. Bring him, Dall Glic,
    to the larder.
Dall Glic: I'm in dread it's as good for him to
    stop where he is.
King: What are you saying?
Dall Glic: Those lads of apprentices that left
    nothing in it only bare hooks.
Nurse: It is the Queen would give no leave
    for more provision to come in, saying there was
    no one to prepare it.
Manus: If that is so, I will be forced to lay
    my orders on the Hawk of the Grey Rock and the
    Brown Otter of the Stream to bring in meat at
    my bidding.
King: Hurry on so.
Queen: I myself will go and give you instructions
    what way to use the kitchen.
Manus: Not at all! What I do I'd as lief do
    in your own royal parlour! (Blows whistle; two
    dark-skinned
    men come in with vessels.) Give me here
    those pots and pans!
Queen: What now is about to take place?
Dall Glic: I not to be blind, I would say those
    to be very foreign-looking men.
King: It would seem as if the world was grown
    to be very queer.
Queen: So it is, and the mastery being given
    to a cook.
Manus: So it should be too! It is the King
    of Shades and Shadows would have rule over the
    world if it wasn't for the cooks!
King: There's some sense in that now.
(Strange men are moving and arranging baskets
    and vessels.)
Manus: There was respect for cooks in the
    early days of the world. What way did the Sons
    of Tuireann get their death but going questing
    after a cooking spit at the bidding of Lugh of the
    Long Hand! And if a spit was worthy of the death
    of heroes, what should the man be worth that is
    skilled in turning it? What is the difference
    between man and beast? Beast and bird devour
    what they find and have no power to change it.
    But we are Druids of those mysteries, having
    magic and virtue to turn hard grain to tender cakes,
    and the very skin of a grunting pig to crackling
    causing quarrels among champions, and it singing
    upon the coals. A cook! If I am I am not without
    good generations before me! Who was the first
    old father of us, roasting and reddening the fruits
    of the earth from hard to soft, from bitter to kind,
    till they are fit for a lady's platter? What is it
    leaves us in the hard cold of Christmas but the
    robbery from earth of warmth for the kitchen
    fire of (takes off cap) the first and foremost of
    all
    master cooks—the Sun!
Princess: You are surely not ashamed of your
    trade!
Manus: To work now, to work. I'll engage to
    turn out a dinner fit for Pharaoh of Egypt or
    Pharamond King of the Franks! Here, Queen, is
    a silver-breast phoenix—draw out the feathers—
    they are pure silver—fair and clean. (Queen plucks
    eagerly.) King, take your golden sceptre and stir
    this pot.
(Gives him one.)
King: (Interested.) What now is in it?
Manus: A broth that will rise over the side
    and be consumed and split if you stop stirring
    it for one minute only! (King stirs furiously.)
    Princess (She is looking on and he goes over to
    her),
    there are honey cakes to roll out, but I will not
    ask you to do it in dread that you might spoil the
    whiteness ...
Princess: I have no mind to do it.
Manus: Of the flour!
Princess: Give them here.
(Rolls them out indignantly.)
Manus: That is right. Take care, King, would
    the froth swell over the brim.
Princess: It seems to me you are doing but
    little yourself.
Manus: I will turn now and ... boil these
    eggs.
(Takes some on a plate; they roll off.)
Princess: You have broken them.
Manus: (Disconcerted.) It was to show you a
    good trick, how to make them sit up on the narrow
    end.
Princess: That is an old trick in the world.
Manus: Every trick is an old one, but with
    a change of players, a change of dress, it comes
    out as new as before. Princess (speaks low), I
    have a message to give you and a pardon to ask.
Princess: Give me out the message.
Manus: Take courage and keep courage through
    this day. Do not let your heart fail. There is
    help beside you.
Princess: It has been a troublesome day indeed.
    But there is a worse one and a great danger before
    me in the far away.
Manus: That danger will come to-day, the
    message said in the dream. Princess, I have a
    pardon to ask you. I have been playing vanities.
    I think I have wronged you doing this. It was
    surely through no want of respect.
Gatekeeper: (Coming in.) There is word come
    from Ballyvelehan there is a coach and horses
    facing for this place over from Oughtmana.
Queen: Who would that be?
Gatekeeper: Up on the hill a woman was, brought
    word it must be some high gentleman. She could
    see all colours in the coach, and flowers on the
    horse's heads.
Goes out.)
Dall Glic: That is good hearing. I was in
    dread some man we would have no welcome for
    would be the first to come in this day.
Queen: Not a fear of it. I had orders given
    to the Gateman who he would and would not
    keep out. I did that the very minute after the
    King making his proclamation and his law.
King: Pup, pup. You need not be drawing
    that down.
Queen: It is well you have myself to care you
    and to turn all to good. I gave orders to the
    Gateman, I say, no one to be let in to the door
    unless carriage company, no other ones, even if they
    should wipe their feet upon the mat. I notched
    that in his mind, telling him the King was after
    promising the Princess Nu in marriage to the first
    man that would come into the house.
Manus: The King gave out that word?
Queen: I am after saying that he did.
Dall Glic: Come along, lad. Don't be putting
    ears on yourself.
Manus: I ask the King did he give out that
    promise as the Queen says?
King: I have but a poor memory.
Nurse: The King did say it within the hour,
    and swore to it by the oath of his people, taking
    contracts of the sun and moon of the air!
Dall Glic: What is it to you if he did? Come
    on, now.
Manus: No. This is a matter that concerns
    myself.
Queen: How do you make that out?
Manus: You, that called me in, know well that
    I was the first to come into the house.
Queen: Ha, ha! You have the impudence! It
    is a man the King said. He was not talking about
    cooks.
Manus: (To the King.) I am before you as a
    serving lad, and you are a King in Ireland. Because
    you are a King and I your hired servant you will not
    refuse me justice. You gave your word.
King: If I did it was in haste and in vexation,
    and striving to save her from destruction.
Manus: I call you to keep to your word and
    to give your daughter to no other one.
Queen: Speak out now, Dall Glic, and give
    your opinion and your advice.
Dall Glic: I would say that this lad going away
    would be no great loss.
Manus: I did not ask such a thing, but as it
    has come to me I will hold to my right.
Queen: It would be right to throw him to the
    hounds in the kennel!
Manus: (To King.) I leave it to the judgment
    of your blind wise man.
Queen: (To Dall Glic.) Take care would you
    offend myself or the King!
Manus: I put it on you to split justice as it
    is measured outside the world.
Dall Glic: It is hard for me to speak. He
    has laid it hard on me. My good eye may go
    asleep, but my blind eye never sleeps. In the
    place where it is waking, an honourable man, king
    or beggar, is held to his word.
King: Is it that I must give my daughter to
    a lad that owns neither clod nor furrow? Whose
    estate is but a shovel for the ashes and a tongs for
    the red coals.
Queen: It is likely he is urged by the sting of
    greed—it is but riches he is looking for.
King: I will not begrudge him his own asking
    of silver and of gold!
Manus: Throw it out to the beggars on the
    road! I would not take a copper half-penny!
    I'll take nothing but what has come to me from
    your own word!
(King bows his head.)
Princess: (Coming forward.) Then this battle
    is not between you and an old king that is feeble,
    but between yourself and myself.
Manus: I am sorry, Princess, if it must be a
    battle.
Princess: You can never bring me away against
    my will.
Manus: I said no word of doing that.
Princess: You think, so, I will go with you of
    myself? The day I will do that will be the day
    you empty the ocean!
Manus: I will not wait longer than to-day.
Princess: Many a man waited seven years for
    a king's daughter!
Manus: And another seven—and seven
    generations
    of hags. But that is not my nature.
    I will not kneel to any woman, high or low, or
    crave kindness that she cannot give.
Princess: Then I can go free!
Manus: For this day I take you in my charge.
    I cross and claim you to myself, unless a better
    man will come.
Princess: I would think it easier to find a
    better
    man than one that would be worse to me!
Manus: If one should come that you think
    to be a better man, I will give you your own way.
Princess: It is you being in the world at all
    that is my grief.
Manus: Time makes all things clear. You
    did not go far out in the world yet, my poor little
    Princess.
Princess: I would be well pleased to drive
    you out through the same world!
Manus: With or without your goodwill, I
    will not go out of this place till I have carried out
    the business I came to do.
Dall Glic: Is it the falling of hailstones I hear
    or the rumbling of thunder, or is it the trots of
    horses upon the road?
Queen: (Looking out.) It is the big man that
    is coming—Prince or Lord or whoever he may be.
    (To Dall Glic.) Go now to the door to welcome
    him. This is some man worth while. (To Manus.)
    Let you get out of this.
Manus: No, whoever he is I'll stop and face
    him. Let him know we are players in the one game!
King: And what sort of a fool will you make
    of me, to have given in to take the like of you for
    a son-in-law? They will be putting ridicule on me
    in the songs.
Queen: If he must stop here we might put
    some face on him.... If I had but a decent
    suit.... Give me your cloak, Dall Glic. (He
    gives it.) Here now ... (To Manus.) Put this
    around you.... (Manus takes it awkwardly.) It
    will cover up your kitchen suit.
Manus: Is it this way?
Queen: You have no right handling of it—
    stupid clown! This way!
Manus: (Flinging it off.) No, I'll change no
    more suits! It is time for me to stop fooling and
    give you what you did not ask yet, my name. I
    will tell out all the truth.
Gatekeeper: (At door.) The King of Sorcha!
    (Taig comes in.)
King and Queen: The King of Sorcha! (They
    rush forward to greet him.)
Nurse: (To Manus.) Did ever anyone hear
    the like!
Manus: It seems as if there will be a judgment
    between the man and the clothes!
Queen: (To Taig.) There is someone here that
    you know, King. This young man is giving out
    that he was your cook.
Taig: He was not. I never laid an eye on him
    till this minute.
Queen: I was sure he was nothing but a liar
    when he said he would tell the truth! Now, King,
    will you turn him out the door?
King: And what about the great dinner he has
    me promised?
Manus: Be easy King. Whether or no you
    keep your word to me I'll hold to mine! (Blows
    whistle.) In with the dishes! Take your places!
    Let the music play out!
(Music plays, the strange men wheel in tables
    and dishes.)
CURTAIN
Scene: Same. Table cleared of all but vessels of
    fruit, cocoa-nuts, etc. Queen and Taig sitting
    in front, Nurse and Dall Glic standing in background.
Queen: Now, King, the dinner being at an end,
    and the music, we have time and quiet to be
    talking.
Taig: It is with the King's daughter I am come
    to talk.
Queen: Go, Dall Glic, call the Princess. She
    will be here on the minute, but it is best for you
    to tell me out if it is to ask her in marriage you
    are come.
Taig: It is so, where I was after being told
    she would be given as a wife to the first man that
    would come into the house.
Queen: And who in the world wide gave that
    out?
Taig: It was the Gateman said it to a hawker
    bringing lobsters from the strand, and that got no
    leave to cross the threshold by reason of the oath
    given out by the King. The half of the kingdom
    she will get, they were telling me, and the king
    living, and the whole of it after he will be dead.
Nurse: There did another come in before you.
    Let me tell you that much!
Taig: There did not. The lobster man that
    set a watch upon the door.
Queen: A great honour you did us coming
    asking for her, and you being King of Sorcha!
Taig: Look at my ring and my crown. They
    will bear witness that I am. And my kind coat of
    cotton and my golden shirt! And under that
    again there's a stiff pocket. (Slaps it.) Is there
    e'er a looking-glass in any place? (Gets up.)
Dall Glic: There is the shining silver basin of
    the swans in the garden without.
Taig: That will do. I would wish to look
    tasty when I come looking for a lady of a wife.
    (He and Dall Glic go outside window but in sight.)
(Princess comes in very proud and sad.)
Queen: You should be proud this day, Nuala,
    and so grand a man coming asking you in marriage
    as the King of Sorcha.
Nurse: Grand, indeed! As grand as hands and
    pins can make him.
Princess: Are you not satisfied to have urged
    me to one man and promised me to another since
    sunrise?
Queen: What way could I know there was
    this match on the way, and a better match beyond
    measure? This is no black stranger going the
    road, but a man having a copper crown over his
    gateway and a silver crown over his palace door!
    I tell you he has means to hang a pearl of gold
    upon every rib of your hair! There is no one
    ahead of him in all Ireland, with his chain and his
    ring and his suit of the dearest silk!
Princess: If it was a suit I was to wed with he
    might do well enough.
Queen: Equal in blood to ourselves! Brought
    up to good behaviour and courage and mannerly ways.
Princess: In my opinion he is not.
Queen: You are talking foolishness. A King
    of Sorcha must be mannerly, seeing it is he himself
    sets the tune for manners.
Princess: He gave out a laugh when old Michelin
    slipped on the threshold. He kicked at the dog
    under the table that came looking for bones.
Queen: I tell you what might be ugly behaviour
    in a common man is suitable and right in a king.
    But you are so hard to please and so pettish, I am
    seven times tired of yourself and your ways.
Princess: If no one could force me to give in
    to the man that made a claim to me to-day, according
    to my father's bond, that bond is there yet to
    protect me from any other one.
Queen: Leave me alone! Myself and the
    Dall Glic will take means to rid you of that lad
    from the oven. I'll send in now to you the King
    of Sorcha. Let you show civility to him, and the
    wedding day will be to-morrow.
Princess: I will not see him, I will have nothing
    to do with him; I tell you if he had the rents of
    the whole world I would not go with him by day
    or by night, on foot or on horseback, in light or in
    darkness, in company or alone!
(Queen has gone while she cries this out.)
Nurse: The luck of the seven Saturdays on
    himself and on the Queen!
Princess: Oh, Muime, do not let him come
    near me! Have you no way to help me?
Nurse: It's myself that could help you if I
    was not under bonds not to speak!
Princess: What is it you know? Why won't
    you say one word?
Nurse: He put me under spells.... There
    now, my tongue turned with the word to be dumb.
Taig: (At the window.) Not a fear of me,
    Queen. It won't be long till I bring the Princess
    around.
Princess: I will not stay! Keep him here till
    I will hide myself out of sight! (Goes.)
Taig: (Coming in.) They told me the Princess
    was in it.
Nurse: She has good sense, she is in some other
    place.
Taig: (Sitting down.) Go call her to me.
Nurse: Who is it I will call her for?
Taig: For myself. You know who I am.
Nurse: My grief that I do not!
Taig: I am the King of Sorcha.
Nurse: If you say that lie again there will
    blisters
    rise up on your face.
Taig: Take care what you are saying, you
    hag!
Nurse: I know well what I am saying. I have
    good judgment between the noble and the mean
    blood of the world.
Taig: The Kings of Sorcha have high, noble
    blood.
Nurse: If they have, there is not so much of
    it in you as would redden a rib of scutch-grass.
Taig: You are crazed with folly and age.
Nurse: No, but I have my wits good enough.
    You ought to be as slippery as a living eel, I'll
    get satisfaction on you yet! I'll show out who
    you are!
Taig: Who am I so?
Nurse: That is what I have to get knowledge
    of, if I must ask it at the mouth of cold hell!
Taig: Do your best! I dare you!
Nurse: I will save my darling from you as sure
    as there's rocks on the strand! A girl that refused
    sons of the kings of the world!
Taig: And I will drag your darling from you
    as sure as there's foxes in Oughtmana!
Nurse: Oughtmana ...Is that now your living
    place?
Taig: It is not.... I told you I came from
    the far-off kingdom of Sorcha. Look at my cloak
    that has on it the sign of the risen sun!
Nurse: Cloaks and suits and fringes. You have
    a great deal of talk of them.... Have you e'er a
    needle around you, or a shears?
Taig: (His hand goes to breast of coat, but he
    withdraws it quickly.) Here ...no ...What
    are you talking about? I know nothing at all of
    such things.
Nurse: In my opinion you do. Hearken now.
    I know where is the real King of Sorcha!
Taig: Bring him before me now till I'll down
    him!
Nurse: Say that the time you will come face
    to face with him! Well, I'm under bonds to tell
    out nothing about him, but I have liberty to make
    known all I will find out about yourself.
Taig: Hurry on so. Little I care when once
    I'm wed with the King's daughter!
Nurse: That will never be!
Taig: The Queen is befriending me and in
    dread of losing me. I will threaten her if there
    is any delay I'll go look for another girl of a
    wife.
Nurse: I will make no delay. I'll have my
    story and my testimony before the white dawn
    of the morrow.
Taig: Do so and welcome! Before the yellow
    light of this evening I'll be the King's son-in-law!
    Bring your news, then, and little thanks you'll
    get for it! The King and Queen must keep up
    my name then for their own credit's sake. (Makes
    a face at her as King comes in with Dall Glic, and
    servants with cushions. Nurse goes out, shaking her
    fist.) (Rises.) I was just asking to see you, King,
    to say there is a hurry on me....
King: (Sitting down on window seat while Servant
    arranges cushions about him.) Keep your business
    a while. It's a poor thing to be going through
    business the very minute the dinner is ended.
Taig: I wouldn't but that it is pressing.
King: Go now to the Queen, in her parlour,
    and be chatting and whistling to the birds. I give
    you my word since I rose up from the table I am
    going here and there, up and down, craving and
    striving to find a place where I'll get leave to lay
    my head on the cushions for one little minute.
(Taig goes reluctantly.)
Dall Glic: (Taking cushions from servants.) Let
    you go now and leave the King to his rest.
(They go out.)
King: I don't know in the world why anyone
    would consent to be a king, and never to be left
    to himself, but to be worried and wearied and
    interfered with from dark to daybreak and from
    morning to the fall of night.
Dall Glic: I will be going out now. I have
    but one word only to say....
King: Let it be a short word! I would be
    better pleased to hear the sound of breezes in
    the sycamores, and the humming of bees in the
    hive and the crooning and sleepy sounds of the
    sea!
Dall Glic: There is one thing only could cause
    me to annoy you.
King: It should be a queer big thing that
    wouldn't wait till I have my rest taken.
Dall Glic: So it is a big matter, and a weighty
    one.
King: Not to be left in quiet and all I am after
    using! Food that was easy to eat! Drink that
    was easy to drink! That's the dinner that was
    a dinner. That cook now is a wonder!
Dall Glic: That is now the very one I am wishful
    to speak about.
King: I give you my word, I'd sooner have
    one goose dressed by him than seven dressed by
    any other one!
Dall Glic: The Queen that was urging me for
    to put my mind to make out some way to get quit
    of him.
King: Isn't it a hard thing the very minute
    I find a lad can dress a dinner to my liking, I must
    be made an attack on to get quit of him?
Dall Glic: It is on the head of the Princess Nu.
King: Tell me this, Dall Glic. Supposing, now,
    he was ...in spite of me ...to wed with her
    ...against my will ...and it might be unknownst
    to me.
Dall Glic: Such a thing must not happen.
King: To be sure, it must not happen. Why
    would it happen? But supposing—I only said
    supposing it did. Would you say would that
    lad grow too high in himself to go into the kitchen
    ...it might be only an odd time ...to oblige
    me ...and dress a dinner the same as he did
    to-day?
Dall Glic: I am sure and certain that he would
    not. It is the way, it is, with the common sort,
    the lower orders. He'd be wishful to sit on a chair
    at his ease and to leave his hand idle till he'd grow
    to be bulky and wishful for sleep.
King: That is a pity, a great pity, and a great
    loss to the world. A big misfortune he to have
    got it in his head to take a liking to the girl. I
    tell you he was a great lad behind the saucepans!
Dall Glic: Since he did get it in his head, it is
    what we have to do now, to make an end of
    him.
King: To gaol him now, and settle up ovens
    and spits and all sorts in the cell, wouldn't he,
    to shorten the day, be apt to start cooking?
Dall Glic: In my belief he will do nothing at
    all, but to hold you to the promise you made,
    and to force you to send away the King of Sorcha.
King: To have the misfortune of a cook for
    a son-in-law, and without the good luck of profiting
    by what he can do in his trade! That is a hard thing
    for a father to put up with, let alone a king!
Dall Glic: If you will but listen to the advice
    I have to give....
King: I know it without you telling me. You
    are asking me to make away with the lad! And
    who knows but the girl might turn on me after,
    women are so queer, and say I had a right to have
    asked leave from herself?
Dall Glic: There will no one suspect you of
    doing it, and you to take my plan. Bid them
    heat the big oven outside on the lawn that is for
    roasting a bullock in its full bulk.
King: Don't be talking of roasted meat! I
    think I can eat no more for a twelvemonth!
Dall Glic: There will be nothing roasted that
    any person will have occasion to eat. When the
    oven door will be open, give orders to your bullies
    and your foot-soldiers to give a tip to him that
    will push him in. When evening comes, news will
    go out that he left the meat to burn and made off
    on his rambles, and no more about him.
King: What way can I send orders when I'm
    near crazed in my wits with the want of rest. A
    little minute of sleep might soothe and settle my
    brain.
(Lies down.)
Dall Glic: The least little word to give leave
    ...or a sign ...such as to nod the head.
King: I give you my word, my head is tired
    nodding! Be off now and close the door after
    you and give out that anyone that comes to this
    side of the house at all in the next half-hour, his
    neck will be on the block before morning!
Dall Glic: (Hurriedly.) I'm going! I'm
    going.
(Goes.)
King: (Locking door and drawing window curtains.)
    That you may never come back till I ask you!
    (Lies down and settles himself on pillows.) I'll be
    lying here in my lone listening to the pigeons
    seeking their meal. "Coo-coo," they're saying,
    "Coo-coo."
(Closes eyes.)
Nurse: (At door.) Who is it locked the door?
    (Shakes it.) Who is it is in it? What is going on
    within? Is it that some bad work is after being
    done in this place? Hi! Hi! Hi!
King: (Sitting up.) Get away out of that,
    you torment of a nurse! Be off before I'll have
    the life of you!
Nurse: The Lord be praised, it is the King's
    own voice! There's time yet!
King: There's time, is there? There's time
    for everyone to give out their chat and their gab,
    and to do their business and take their ease and have
    a comfortable life, only the King! The beasts
    of the field have leave to lay themselves down in the
    meadow and to stretch their limbs on the green
    grass in the heat of the day, without being pestered
    and plagued and tormented and called to and
    wakened and worried, till a man is no less than
    wore out!
Nurse: Up or down, I'll say what I have to
    say, if it cost me my life. It is that I have to tell
    you of a plot that is made and a plan!
King: I won't listen! I heard enough of
    plots and plans within the last three minutes!
Nurse: You didn't hear this one. No one knows
    of it only myself.
King: I was told it by the Dall Glic.
Nurse: You were not! I am only after making
    it out on the moment!
King: A plot against the lad of the saucepans?
Nurse: That's it! That's it! Open now the door!
King: (Putting a cushion over each ear and
    settling himself to sleep.) Tell away and welcome!
(Shuts eyes.)
Nurse: That's right! You're listening. Give
    heed now. That schemer came a while ago letting
    on to be the King of Sorcha is no such thing! What
    do you say?...Maybe you knew it before?
    I wonder the Dall Glic not to have seen that for
    himself with his one eye.... Maybe you don't
    believe it? Well, I'll tell it out and prove it.
    I have got sure word by running messenger that
    came cross-cutting over the ridge of the hill....
    That carrion that came in a coach, pressing to bring
    away the Princess before nightfall, giving himself
    out to be some great one, is no other than Taig the
    Tailor, that should be called Taig the Twister,
    down from his mother's house from Oughtmana,
    that stole grand clothes which were left in the
    mother's charge, he being out at the time cutting
    cloth and shaping lies, and has himself dressed out
    in them the way you'd take him to be King! (King
    has slumbered peacefully all through.) Now, what
    do you say? Now, will you open the door?
Queen: (Outside.) What call have you to
    shouting and disturbing the King?
Nurse: I have good right and good reason to
    disturb him!
Queen: Go away and let me open the door.
Nurse: I will go and welcome now; I have
    told out my whole story to the King.
Queen: (Shaking door.) Open the door, my
    dear! It is I myself that is here! (King looks
    up, listens, shakes his head and sinks back.) Are
    you there at all, or what is it ails you?
Nurse: He is there, and is after conversing
    with myself.
Queen: (Shaking again.) Let me in, my dear
    King! Open! Open! Open! unless that the
    falling sickness is come upon you, or that you are
    maybe lying dead upon the floor!
Nurse: Not a dead in the world.
Queen: Go, Nurse, I tell you, bring the smith
    from the anvil till he will break asunder the lock
    of the door!
(King annoyed, waddles to door and opens it
    suddenly. Queen stumbles in.)
King: What at all has taken place that you
    come bawling and calling and disturbing my rest?
Queen: Oh! Are you sound and well? I was
    in dread there did something come upon you,
    when you gave no answer at all.
King: Am I bound to answer every call and
    clamour the same as a hall-porter at the door?
Queen: It is business that cannot wait. Here
    now is a request I have written to the bully of
    the King of Alban, bidding him to strike the head
    off whatever man will put the letter in his hand.
    Write your name and sign to it, in three royal words.
King: I wouldn't sign a letter out of my right
    hour if it was to make the rivers run gold. There
    is nothing comes of signing letters but more trouble
    in the end.
Queen: Give me, so, to bind it a drop of your
    own blood as a token and a seal. You will not
    refuse, and I telling you the messenger will go
    with it, and that will lose his head through it, is no
    less than that troublesome cook!
King: (With a roar.) Anyone to say that word
    again I will not leave a head on any neck in the
    kingdom! I declare on my oath it would be
    best for me to take the world for my pillow and
    put that lad upon the throne!
(Queen goes back frightened to door.)
Gateman: (Coming in.) There is a man coming
    in that will take no denial. It is Fintan the
    Astrologer.
(Fintan enters with Dall Glic, Nurse, Princess,
    Taig, Manus and Prince of the Marshes
    crowding after him.)
King: Another disturbance! The whole world
    would seem to be on the move!
Queen: Fintan! What brings him here again?
Fintan: A great deceit? A terrible deception!
King: What at all is it?
Fintan: Long and all as I'm in the world, such
    a thing never happened in my lifetime!
Queen: What is it has happened?
Fintan: It is not any fault of myself or any
    miscounting of my own! I am certain sure of
    that much. Is it that the stars of heaven are
    gone astray, they that are all one with a clock—
    unless it might be on a stormy night when they
    are wild-looking around the moon.
King: Go on with your story and stop your
    raving.
Fintan: The first time ever I came to this place
    I made a prophecy.
Dall Glic: You did, about the child was in the
    cradle.
Fintan: And that was but new in the world.
    It is what I said, that she was born under a certain
    star, and that in a score of years all but two,
    whatever acting was going on in that star at the
    time she was born, she would get her crosses in the
    same way.
Dall Glic: The cross you foretold to her was
    to be ate by a Dragon. You laid down it would
    come upon a twelvemonth from this very day.
Fintan: That's it. That was according to
    my reckoning. There was no mistake in that.
    And I thought better of the Seven Stars than
    they to make a fool of me, after all the respect
    I had showed them, giving my life to watching
    themselves and the plans they have laid down
    for men and for mortals.
King: It seems as if I myself was the best
    prophet
    and that there is no Dragon at all.
Fintan: What a bad opinion you have of me
    that I would be so far out as that! It would be
    a deception and a disappointment out of measure,
    there to come no Dragon, and I after foretelling
    and prophesying him.
King: Troth, it would be no disappointment
    at all to ourselves.
Fintan: It would be better, I tell you, a score
    of king's daughters to be ate and devoured, than
    the high stars in their courses to be proved wrong.
    But it must be right, it surely must be right. I
    gave the prophecy according to her birth hour,
    that was one hour before the falling back of the sun.
Dall Glic: It was not, but an hour before the
    rising of the sun.
Fintan: Not at all! It was the Nurse herself
    told me it was at evening she was born.
Queen: There is the Nurse now. Let you ask
    her account.
Fintan: (To Nurse.) It was yourself laid down
    it was evening!
Nurse: Sure I wasn't in the place at all till
    Samhuin time, when she was near three months
    in the world.
Fintan: Then it was some other hag the very
    spit of you! I wish she didn't tell a lie.
Nurse: Sure that one was banished out of this
    on the head of telling lies. An hour ere sunrise,
    and before the crowing of the cocks. The Dall
    Glic will tell you that much.
Dall Glic: That is so. I have it marked upon
    the genealogies in the chest.
Fintan: That is great news! It was a heavy
    wrong was done me! It had me greatly upset.
    Twelve hours out in laying down the birth-time!
    That clears the character of myself and
    of the carwheel of the stars. I knew I could
    make no mistake in my office and in my
    billet!
King: Will you stop praising yourself and give
    out some sense?
Fintan: Knowledge is surely the greatest thing
    in the world! And truth! Twelve hours with
    the planets is equal to twelve months on earth.
    I am well satisfied now.
Queen: So the Dragon is not coming, and the
    girl is in no danger at all?
Fintan: Not coming! Heaven help your poor
    head! Didn't I get word within the last half-hour
    he is after leaving his den in the Kingdoms of the
    Cold, and is at this minute ploughing his way to
    Ireland, the same as I foretold him, but that I
    made a miscount of a year?
Nurse: (Putting her arm round Princess.) Och!
    do not listen or give heed to him at all!
Queen: When is he coming so?
Fintan: Amn't I tired telling you this day
    in the place of this day twelvemonth. But as to
    the minute, there's too much lies in this place
    for me to be rightly sure.
King: The curse of the seven elements upon
    him!
Fintan: Little he'll care for your cursing. The
    whole world wouldn't stop him coming to your
    own grand gate.
Princess: (Coming forward.) Then I am to die
    to-night?
Fintan: You are, without he will be turned
    back by someone having a stronger star than your
    own, and I know of no star is better, unless it might
    be the sun.
Queen: If you had minded me, and given in
    to ring the wedding bells, you would be safe out
    of this before now.
Fintan: That Dragon not to find her before
    him, he will ravage and destroy the whole district
    with the poisonous spittle of his jaw, till the want
    will be so great the father will disown his son and
    will not let him in the door. Well, good-bye to ye!
    Ye'll maybe believe me to have foreknowledge
    another time, and I proved to be right. I have
    knocked great comfort out of that!
(Goes.)
King: Oh, my poor child! My poor little
    Nu! I thought it never would come to pass, I
    to be sending you to the slaughter. And I too
    bulky to go out and face him, having led an easy life!
Princess: Do not be fretting.
King: The world is gone to and fro! I'll
    never ask satisfaction again either in bed or board,
    but to be wasting away with watercresses and rising
    up of a morning before the sun rises in Babylon!
    (Weeps.) Oh, we might make out a way to baffle
    him yet! Is there no meal will serve him only
    flesh and blood? Try him with Grecian wine,
    and with what was left of the big dinner a while ago!
Gateman: (Coming in.) There is some strange
    thing in the ocean from Aran out. At first it was
    but like a bird's shadow on the sea, and now you
    would nearly say it to be the big island would have
    left its moorings, and it steering its course towards
    Aughanish!
Dall Glic: I'm in dread it should be the Dragon
    that has cleared the ocean at a leap!
King: (Holding Princess.) I will not give you
    up! Let him devour myself along with you!
Dull Glic: (To Princess.) It is best for me
    to put you in a hiding-hole under the ground,
    that has seven locked doors and seven locks on
    the farthest door. It might fail him to make
    you out.
Nurse: Oh, it would be hard for her to go
    where she cannot hear the voice of a friend or
    see the light of day!
Princess: Would you wish me to save myself
    and let all the district perish? You heard what
    Fintan said. It is not right for destruction to be
    put on a whole province, and the women and the
    children that I know.
Queen: There is maybe time yet for you to
    wed.
Princess: So long as I am living I have a choice.
    I will not be saved in that way. It is alone I will
    be in my death.
Manus: (Coming to King.) I am going out
    from you, King. I might not be coming in to
    you again. I would wish to set you free from
    the promise you made me a while ago, and the bond.
King: What does it signify now? What does
    anything signify, and the world turning here and
    there!
Manus: And another thing. I would wish to
    ask pardon of the King's daughter. I ought not
    to have laid any claim to her, being a stranger in
    this place and without treasure or attendance.
    And yet ...and yet ...(stoops and kisses hem
    of her dress), she was dear to me. It is a man who
    never may look on her again is saying that.
(Turns to door.)
Taig: He is going to run from the Dragon!
    It is kind father for a scullion to be timid!
Queen: It is in his blood. He is maybe not
    to blame for what is according to his nature.
Manus: That is so. I am doing what is according
    to my nature.
(Goes, Nurse goes after him.)
Queen: (To Dall Glic.) Go throw a dishcloth
    after him that the little lads may be mocking him
    along the road!
Dall Glic: I will not. I have meddled enough
    at your bidding. I am done with living under
    dread. Let you blind me entirely! I am free
    of you. It might be best for me the two eyes to
    be withered, and I seeing nothing but the ever-living
    laws!
Prince of Marshes: (Coming to Princess.) It is
    my grief that with all the teachers I had there was
    not one to learn me the handling of weapons or
    of arms. But for all that I will not run away,
    but will strive to strike one blow in your defence
    against that wicked beast.
Princess: It is a good friend that would rid
    us of him. But it grieves me that you should
    go into such danger.
Prince of Marshes: (To Dall Glic.) Give me
    some sword or casting spears.
(Dall Glic gives him spears.)
Princess: I am sorry I made fun of you a while
    ago. I think you are a good kind man.
Prince of Marshes; (Kissing her hand.) Having
    that word of praise I will bring a good heart into
    the fight.
(Goes.)
(Taig is slipping out after him.)
Queen: See now the King of Sorcha slipping
    away into the fight. Stop here now! (Pulls him
    back.) You have a life that is precious to many
    besides yourself. Do not go without being well
    armed—and with a troop of good fighting men
    at your back.
Taig: I am greatly obliged to you. I think
    I'll be best with myself.
Queen: You have no suit or armour upon you.
Taig: That is what I was thinking.
Queen: Here anyway is a sword.
Taig: (Taking it.) That's a nice belt now.
    Well worked, silver thread and gold.
Queen: The King's own guard will go out with
    you.
Taig: I wouldn't ask one of them! What
    would you think of me wanting help! A Dragon!
    Little I'd think of him. I'll knock the life out of
    him. I'll give him cruelty!
Queen: You have great courage indeed!
Taig: I'll cut him crossways and lengthways
    the same as a yard of frieze! I'll make garters of
    his body! I'll smooth him with a smoothing iron!
    Not a fear of me! I never lost a bet yet that I
    wasn't able to pay it!
Gateman: (As he rushes in, Taig slips away.)
    The Dragon! The Dragon! I seen it coming and
    its mouth open and a fiery flame from it! And
    nine miles of the sea is dry with all it drank of it!
    The whole country is gathering the same as of a
    fair day for to see him devour the Princess.
(Princess trembles and sinks into a chair.
    King, Queen and Dall Glic look from
    window. They turn to her as they
    speak.)
Queen: There is a terrible splashing in the sea!
    It is like as if the Dragon's tail had beaten it into
    suds of soap!
Dall Glic: He is near as big as a whale!
King: He is, and bigger!
Queen: I see him! I see him! He would seem
    to have seven heads!
Dall Glic: I see but one.
Queen: You would see more if you had your
    two eyes! He has six heads at the least!
King: He has but one. He is twisting and
    turning it around.
Dall Glic: He is coming up towards the flaggy
    shore!
King: I hear him! He is snoring like a flock
    of pigs!
Queen: He is rearing his head in the air! He
    has teeth as long as a tongs!
Doll Glic: No, but his tail he is rearing up!
    It would take a ladder forty feet long to get to
    the tip of it!
Queen: There is the King of Sorcha going out
    the gate for to make an end of him.
Dall Glic: So he is, too. That is great bravery.
King: He is going to one side. He is come
    to a stop.
Dall Glic: It seems to me he is ready to fall in
    his standing. He is gone into a little thicket of
    furze. He is not coming out, but is lying crouched
    up in it the same as a hare in a tuft. I can see his
    shoulders narrowed up.
Queen: He maybe got a weakness.
King: He did, maybe, of courage. Shaking
    and shivering, he is like a hen in thunder. In my
    opinion, he is hiding from the fight.
Queen: There is the Prince of the Marshes
    going out now, and his coach after him! And
    his two aunts sitting in it and screeching to him
    not to run into danger!
King: He will not do much. He has not pith
    or power to handle arms. That sort brings a bad
    name on kings.
Dall Glic: He is gone away from the coach.
    He is facing to the flaggy shore!
Queen: Oh, the Dragon has put up his head
    and is spitting at him!
King: He has cast a spear into its jaw! Good man!
(Princess goes over to window.)
Dall Glic: He is casting another! His hand
    shook ...it did not go straight. He is gone
    on again! He has cast another spear! It should
    hit the beast ...it let a roar!
Princess: Good little Prince! What way is
    the battle now?
Dall Glic: It will kill him with its fiery
    breath!
    He is running now ...he is stumbling ...the
    Dragon is after him! He is up again! The two
    Aunts have pushed him into the coach and have
    closed the iron door.
King: It will fail the beast to swallow him coach
    and all. It is gone back to refresh itself in the sea.
    You can hear it puffing and plunging!
Queen: There is nothing to stop it now. (To
    Princess.) If you have e'er a prayer, now is the
    time to say it.
Dall Glic: Stop a minute ...there is another
    champion going out.
King: A man wearing a saffron suit ...who
    is he at all? He has the look of one used to giving
    orders.
Princess: (Looking out.) Oh! he is but going
    to his death. It would be better for me to throw
    myself into the tide and make an end of it.
(Is rushing to door.)
King: (Holding her.) He is drawing his sword.
    Himself and the Dragon are thrusting at one
    another on the flags!
Princess: Oh, close the curtains! Shut out the
    sound of the battle.
(Dall Glic closes curtains.)
King: Strike up now a tune of music that will
    deafen the sound!
(Orchestra plays. Princess is kneeling by
    King. Music changes from discord to
    victory. Two Aunts and Gateman rush
    in. Noise of cheering heard without as
    the Gateman silences music.)
Gateman: Great news and wonderful news and
    a great story!
First Aunt: The fight is ended!
Second Aunt: The Dragon is brought to his
    last goal!
Gateman: That young fighting man that has
    him flogged! Made at him like a wave breaking
    on the strand! They crashed at one another like
    two days of judgment! Like the battle of the
    cold with the heat!
First Aunt: You'd say he was going through
    dragons all his life!
Second Aunt: It can hardly put a stir out of
    itself!
Gateman: That champion has it baffled and
    mastered! It is after being chased over seven
    acres of ground!
First Aunt: Drove it to its knees on the flaggy
    shore and made an end of it!
King: God bless that man to-day and to-morrow!
Second Aunt: He has put it in a way it will eat
    no more kings' daughters!
Princess: And the stranger that mastered
    it—
    is he safe?
First Aunt: What signifies if he is or is not, so
    long as we have our own young prince to bring
    home!
Gatekeeper: He is not safe. No sooner had he
    the beast killed and conquered than he fell dead,
    and the life went out of him.
Princess: Oh, that is not right! He to be dead
    and I living after him!
King: He was surely noble and high-blooded.
    There are some that will be sorry for his death.
Princess: And who should be more sorry than
    I myself am sorry? Who should keen him unless
    myself? There is a man that gave his life for me,
    and he young and all his days before him and shut
    his eyes on the white world for my sake!
Queen: Indeed he was a man you might have
    been content to wed with, hard and all as you are
    to please.
Princess: I never will wed with any man so
    long as my life will last, that was bought for me
    with a life was more worthy by far than my own!
    He is gone out of my reach; let him wait for me
    to give him my thanks on the other side. Bring
    me now his sword and his shield till I will put
    them before me and cry my eyes down with grief!
Gateman: Here is his cap for you, anyway, and
    his cleaver and his bunch of skivers. For the
    champion you are crying was no other than that
    lad of a cook!
Queen: That is not true! It is not possible!
Gateman: Sure I seen him myself going out the
    gate a while ago. He put off his cook's apparel
    and threw it along with these behind the turfstack. I
    gathered them up presently and I coming in the door.
King: The world is gone beyond me entirely!
    But what I was saying all through, there was
    something beyond the common in that boy!
Queen: (To Princess, who is clinging to chair.)
    Let you be comforted now, knowing he cannot
    come back to lay claim to you in marriage, as it
    is likely he would, and he living.
Princess: It is he saved me after my
    unkindness!...
    Oh, I am ashamed ...ashamed!
Queen: It is a queer thing a king's daughter
    to be crying after a man used to twisting the spit
    in place of weapons, and over skivers in the place
    of a sword!
Princess: (Gropes and totters.) What has
    happened?
    There is something gone astray! I have
    no respect for myself.... I cannot live! I am
    ashamed. Where is Nurse? Muime! Come to
    me, Muime!...My grief! The man that died
    for me, whether he is of the noble or the simple
    of the world, it is to him I have given the love of
    my soul!
(Dall Glic supports her and lays her on
    window seat.)
Nurse: (Rushing in.) What is it, honey?
    What at all are they after doing to you?
Queen: Throw over her a skillet of water. She
    is gone into a faint.
Dall Glic: (Who is bending over her.) She is
    in no faint. She is gone out.
Nurse: Oh, my child and my darling! What
    call had I to leave you among them at all?
King: Raise her up. It is impossible she can
    be gone.
Dall Glic: Gone out and spent, as sudden as
    a candle in a blast of wind.
King: Who would think grief would do away
    with her so sudden, there to be seven of the like
    of him dead?
Nurse: (Rises.) What did you do to her at all,
    at all? Or was it through the fright and terror
    of the beast?
Queen: She died of the heartbreak, being told
    that the strange champion that had put down the
    Dragon was killed dead.
Nurse: Killed, is it? Who now put that lie
    out of his mouth? (Shouts in her ear.) What
    would ail him to be dead? It is myself can tell
    you the true story. No man in Ireland ever was
    half as good as him! It was himself mastered the
    beast and dragged the heart out of him and forced
    down a squirrel's heart in its place, and slapped a
    bridle on him. And he himself did but stagger
    and go to his knees in the heat and drunkenness
    of the battle, and rose up after as good as ever he
    was! It is out putting ointments on him that I
    was up to this, and healing up his cuts and wounds!
    Oh, what ails you, honey, that you will not waken?
Queen: She thought it to be a champion and a
    high up man that had died for her sake. It is
    what broke her down in the latter end, hearing
    him to be no big man at all, but a clown!
Nurse: Oh, my darling! And I not here to
    tell you! You are a motherless child, and the
    curse of your mother will be on me! It was no
    clown fought for you, but a king, having generations
    of kings behind him, the young King of Sorcha,
    Manus, son of Solas son of Lugh.
King: I would believe that now sooner than
    many a thing I would hear.
Nurse: (Keening.) Oh, my child, and my
    share! I thought it was you would be closing my
    eyes, and now I am closing your own! You to
    be brought away in your young youth! Your hand
    that was whiter than the snow of one night, and
    the colour of the foxglove on your cheek.
(A great shouting outside and burst of music.
    A march played. Manus comes in, followed
    by Fintan and Prince of the Marshes.
    Shouts and music continue. He leads the
    Dragon by a bridle. The others are in
    front of Princess, huddled from Dragon.
    Queen gets up on a chair.)
Manus: Where is the Princess Nu? I have
    brought this beast to bow itself at her feet.
(All are silent. Manus flings bridle to
    Fintan's hand. Dragon backs out. All
    go aside from Princess.)
Nurse: She is here dead before you.
Manus: That cannot be! She was well and
    living half an hour ago.
Nurse: (Rises.) Oh, if she could but waken
    and hear your voice! She died with the fret of
    losing you, that is heaven's truth! It is tormented
    she was with these giving out you were done away
    with, and mocking at your weapons that they laid
    down to be the cleaver and the spit, till the heart
    broke in her like a nut.
Manus: (Kneeling beside her.) Then it is myself
    have brought the death darkness upon you at the
    very time I thought to have saved you!
Nurse: There is no blame upon you, but some
    that had too much talk!
(Goes on keening.)
Manus: What call had I to come humbugging
    and letting on as I did, teasing and tormenting
    her, and not coming as a King should that is come
    to ask for a Queen! Oh, come back for one minute
    only till I will ask your pardon!
Dall Glic: She cannot come to you or answer
    you at all for ever.
Manus: Then I myself will go follow you and
    will ask for your forgiveness wherever you are gone,
    on the Plain of Wonder or in the Many-Coloured
    Land! That is all I can do ...to go after you
    and tell you it was no want of respect that brought
    me in that dress, but hurry and folly and taking
    my own way. For it is what I have to say to you,
    that I gave you my heart's love, what I never gave
    to any other, since first I saw you before me in
    my sleep! Here, now, is a short road to reach you!
(Takes sword.)
Prince of Marshes: (Catching his hand.) Go
    easy now, go easy.
Manus: Take off your hand! I say I will die
    with her!
Prince of Marshes: That will not raise her up
    again. But I, now, if I have no skill in killing
    beasts or men, have maybe the means of bringing
    her back to life.
Nurse: Oh, my blessing on you! What is it
    you have at all?
Prince of Marshes: (Taking bag from his Aunt.)
    These three leaves from the Tree of Power that
    grows by the Well of Healing. Here they are
    now for you, tied with a thread of the wool of
    the sheep of the Land of Promise. There is power
    in them to bring one person only back to life.
First Aunt: Give them back to me! You
    have your own life to think of as well as any other
    one!
Second Aunt: Do not spend and squander that
    cure on any person but yourself!
Prince of Marshes: (Giving the leaves.) And if
    I have given her my love that it is likely I will
    give to no other woman for ever, indeed and
    indeed, I would not ask her or wish her to wed
    with a very frightened man, and that is what I
    was a while ago. But you yourself have earned her,
    being brave.
Manus: (Taking leaves.) I never will forget it
    to you. You will be a brave man yet.
Prince of Marshes: Give me in place of it your
    sword; for I am going my lone through the world
    for a twelvemonth and a day, till I will learn to
    fight with my own hand.
(Manus gives him sword. He throws off cloak
    and outer coat and fastens it on.)
Nurse: Stand back, now. Let the whole of ye
    stand back. (She lays a leaf on the Princess's mouth
    and one on each of her hands.) I call on you by
    the power of the Seven Belts of the Heavens, of
    the Twelve Winds of the World, of the Three
    Waters of the Sea!
(Princess stirs slightly.)
King: That is a wonder of wonders! She is stirring!
Manus: Oh, my share of the world! Are you
    come back to me?
Princess: It was a hard fight he wrestled with.
    ...I thought I heard his voice.... Is he come
    from danger?
Nurse: He did. Here he is. He that saved
    you and that killed the Dragon, and that let on
    to be a serving boy, and he no less than one of
    the world's kings!
Manus: Here I am, my dear, beside you, to be
    your comrade and your company for ever.
Princess: You!...Yes, it is yourself. Forgive
    me. I am sorry that I spoke unkindly to you
    a while ago; I am ashamed that it failed me to
    know you to be a king.
(She stands up, helped by Nurse.)
Manus: It was my own fault and my folly.
    What way could you know it? There is nothing
    to forgive.
Princess: But ...if I did not recognise you
    as a king ...anyway ...the time you dropped
    the eggs ...I was nearly certain that you were
    no cook!
(They embrace.)
Queen: There now I have everything brought
    about very well in the finish!
(A scream at door. Taig rushes in, followed
    by Sibby, in country dress. He kneels at
    the Queen's feet, holding on to her skirt.)
Sibby: Bad luck and bad cess to you! Torment
    and vexation on you! (Seizes him by back of neck
    and shakes him.) You dirty little scum and leavings!
    You puny shrimp you! You miserable ninth part
    of a man!
Queen: Is it King or the Dragon Killer he is
    letting on to be yet, or do you know what he is
    at all?
Sibby: It's myself knows that, and does know
    it! He being Taig the tailor, my own son and
    my misfortune, that stole away from me a while
    ago, bringing with him the grand clothes of that
    young champion (points to Manus) and his gold!
    To borrow a team of horses from the plough he
    did, and to bring away the magistrate's coach! But
    I followed him! I came tracking him on the road!
    Put off now those shoes that are too narrow for
    you, you red thief, you! For, believe me, you'll
    go facing home on shank's mare!
Taig: (Whimpering.) It's a very unkind thing
    you to go screeching that out before the King,
    that will maybe strike my head off!
Sibby: Did ever you know of anyone making a
    quarrel in a whisper? To wed with the King's
    daughter, you would? To go vanquish the water-worm,
    you would? I'll engage you ran before you
    went anear him!
Taig: If I didn't I'd be tore with his claws
    and scorched with his fiery breath. It is likely
    I'd be going home dead!
Sibby: Strip off now that cloak and that
    body-coat
    and come along with me, or I'll make split
    marrow of you! What call have you to a suit
    that is worth more than the whole of the County
    Mayo? You're tricky and too much tricks in you,
    and you were born for tricks! It would be right
    you to be turned into the shape of a limping
    foxy cat!
Taig: (Weeping as he takes off clothes.) Sure
    I thought it no harm to try to go better
    myself.
Prince of Marshes: (Giving his cloak and coat.)
    Here, I bestow these to you. If you were a while
    ago a tailor among kings, from this out you will
    be a king among tailors.
Sibby: (Curtseying.) Well, then, my thousand
    blessings on you! He'll be as proud as the world
    of that. Now, Taig, you'll be as dressed up as the
best of them! Come on now to Oughtmana, as
    it is long till you'll quit it.
(They go towards door.)
Dragon: (Putting his head in at window.) Manus,
    King of Sorcha, I am starved with the want of food.
    Give me a bit to eat.
Fintan: He is not put down! He will devour
    the whole of us! I'd sooner face a bullet and
    ten guns!
Dragon: It is not mannerly to eat without
    being invited. Is it any harm to ask where will
    I find a meal will suit me?
Princess: Oh, does he ask to make a meal of
    me, after all?
Dragon: I am hungry and dancing with the
    hunger! It was you, Manus, stopped me from the
    one meal. Let you set before me another.
King: There is reason in that. Drive up now
    for him a bullock from the meadow.
Dragon: Manus, it is not bullocks I am craving,
    since the time you changed the heart within me
    for the heart of a little squirrel of the wood.
Manus: (Taking a cocoa-nut from table.) Here
    is a nut from the island of Lanka, that is called
    Adam's Paradise. Milk there is in it, and a kernel
    as white as snow.
(He throws it out. Dragon is heard crunching.)
Dragon: (Putting head in again.) More! Give
    me more of them! Give them out to me by the
    dozen and by the score!
Manus: You must go seek them in the east of
    the world, where you can gather them in bushels
    on the strand.
Dragon: So I will go there! I'll make no delay!
    I give you my word, I'd sooner one of them than
    to be cracking the skulls of kings' daughters, and
    the blood running down my jaws. Blood! Ugh!
    It would disgust me! I'm in dread it would cause
    vomiting. That and to have the plaits of hair
    tickling and tormenting my gullet!
Princess: (Claps hands.) That is good
    hearing,
    and a great change of heart.
Dragon: But if it's a tame dragon I am from this
    out, I'm thinking it's best for me to make away
    before you know it, or it's likely you'll be yoking
    me to harrow the clods, or to be dragging the
    water-car from the spring well. So good-bye the
    whole of ye, and get to your supper. Much good
    may it do you! I give you my word there is
    nothing in the universe I despise, only the flesh-eaters
    of Adam's race!
CURTAIN.
I wrote The Dragon in 1917, that now seems so many long years away, and I have been trying to remember how I came to write it. I think perhaps through some unseen inevitable kick of the swing towards gay-coloured comedy from the shadow of tragedy. It was begun seriously enough, for I see among my scraps of manuscripts that the earliest outline of it is entitled "The Awakening of a Soul," the soul of the little Princess who had not gone "far out in the world." And that idea was never quite lost, for even when it had all turned to comedy I see as an alternative name "A Change of Heart." For even the Dragon's heart is changed by force, as happens in the old folk tales and the heart of some innocent creature put in its place by the conqueror's hand; all change more or less except the Queen. She is yet satisfied that she has moved all things well, and so she must remain till some new breaking up or re-birth.
As to the framework, that was once to have been the often-told story of a King's daughter given to whatever man can "knock three laughs out of her." As well as I remember the first was to have been when the eggs were broken, and another when she laughed with the joy of happy love. But the third was the stumbling-block. It was necessary the ears of the Abbey audience should be tickled at the same time as those of the Princess, and old-time jests like those of Sir Dinadin of the Round Table seem but dull to ears of to-day. So I called to my help the Dragon that has given his opportunity to so many a hero from Perseus in the Greek Stories to Shawneen in those of Kiltartan. And he did not sulk or fail me, for after one of the first performances the producer wrote: "I wish you had seen the play last night when a big Northern in the front of the stalls was overcome with helpless laughter, first by Sibby and then by the Dragon. He sat there long after the curtain fell, unable to move and wiping the tears from his eyes; the audiences stopped going out and stood and laughed at him." And even a Dragon may think it a feather in his cap to have made Ulster laugh.
A.G.
Coole, February, 1920.
ORIGINAL CAST
"The Dragon " was first produced at the Abbey Theatre, Dublin, on 21st April, 1919, with the following cast:
The King BARRY FITZGERALD
The Queen MARY SHERIDAN
The Princess Nuala EITHNE MAGEE
The Dall Glic (The Blind Wise Man) PETER NOLAN
The Nurse MAUREEN DELANY
The Prince of the Marshes J. HUGH NAGLE
Manus—King of Sorcha ARTHUR SHIELDS
Fintan—The Astrologer F.J. MACCORMICK
Taig FLORENCE MARKS
The Dragon SEAGHAN BARLOW
The Porter STEPHEN CASEY
The Gatekeeper HUBERT M'GUIRE
Two Aunts of the Prince of the Marshes {ESME WARDPERSONS
The Mother.ACT I
Scene: A Room in an old half-ruined castle.
Mother: Look out the door, Celia, and see is
    your uncle coming.
Celia: (Who is lying on the ground, a bunch of
    ribbons in her hand, and playing with a pigeon, looks
    towards door without getting up.) I see no sign of
    him.
Mother: What time were you telling me it was
    a while ago?
Celia: It is not five minutes hardly since I was
    telling you it was ten o'clock by the sun.
Mother: So you did, if I could but have kept
    it in mind. What at all ails him that he does not
    come in to the breakfast?
Celia: He went out last night and the full moon
    shining. It is likely he passed the whole night
    abroad, drowsing or rummaging, whatever he does
    be looking for in the rath.
Mother: I'm in dread he'll go crazy with digging
    in it.
Celia: He was crazy with crossness before that.
Mother: If he is it's on account of his learning.
    Them that have too much of it are seven times
    crosser than them that never saw a book.
Celia: It is better to be tied to any thorny bush
    than to be with a cross man. He to know the
    seventy-two languages he couldn't be more crabbed
    than what he is.
Mother: It is natural to people do be so clever
    to be fiery a little, and not have a long patience.
Celia: It's a pity he wouldn't stop in that
    school he had down in the North, and not to come
    back here in the latter end of life.
Mother: Ah, he was maybe tired with enlightening
    his scholars and he took a notion to acquaint
    ourselves with knowledge and learning. I was
    trying to reckon a while ago the number of the
    years he was away, according to the buttons of my
    gown (fingers bodice), but they went astray on me
    at the gathers of the neck.
Celia: If the hour would come he'd go out of
    this, I'd sing, I'd play on all the melodeons that
    ever was known! (Sings.) (Air, "Shule
    Aroon.")
Mother: Did you make ready now what will
    please him for his breakfast?
Celia: (Laughing.) I'm doing every whole
    thing, but you know well to please him is not
    possible.
Mother: It is going astray on me what sort of
    egg best suits him, a pullet's egg or the egg of a
    duck.
Celia: I'd go search out if it would satisfy him
    the egg of an eagle having eyes as big as the moon,
    and feathers of pure gold.
Mother: Look out again would you see him.
Celia: (Sitting up reluctantly.) I wonder
    will
    the rosy ribbon or the pale put the best appearance
    on my party dress to-night? (Looks out.) He is
    coming down the path from the rath, and he having
    his little old book in his hand, that he gives out
    fell down before him from the skies.
Mother: So there is a little book, whatever
    language he does be wording out of it.
Celia: If you listen you'll hear it now, or hear
    his own talk, for he's mouthing and muttering as
    he travels the path.
Conan: (Comes in: the book in his hand open,
    he is not looking at it.) "Life is the flame of the
    heart ...that heat is of the nature of the stars." ...It
    is Aristotle had knowledge to turn that
    flame here and there.... What way now did he
    do that?
Mother: Ah, I'm well pleased to see you coming
    in, Conan. I was getting uneasy thinking you
    were gone astray on us.
Conan: (Dropping his book and picking it up
    again.) I never knew the like of you, Maryanne,
    under the canopy of heaven. To be questioning
    me with your talk, and I striving to keep my mind
    upon all the wisdom of the ancient world. (Sits
    down beside fire.)
Mother: So you would be too. It is well able
    you are to do that.
Conan: (To Celia.) Have you e'er a meal to
    leave down to me?
Celia: It will be ready within three minutes of
    time.
Conan: Wasting the morning on me! What
    good are you if you cannot so much as boil the
    breakfast? Hurry on now.
Celia: Ah, hurry didn't save the hare. (Sings
    ironically as she prepares breakfast.) (Air, "Mo
    Bhuachailin Buidhe.")
Conan: Give me up the tea-pot.
Celia: Best leave it on the coals awhile.
Conan: Give me up those eggs so. (Seizes them.)
Celia: You can take the tea-pot too if you are
    calling for it. (Goes on singing mischievously as
    she turns a cake.)
Conan: (Breaking eggs.) They're raw and
    running!
Celia: There's no one can say which is best,
    hurry or delay.
Conan: You had them boiled in cold water!
Celia: That's where you're wrong.
Conan: The young people that's in the world
    now, if you had book truth they wouldn't believe
    it. (Flings eggs into the fire and pours out tea.)
Mother: I hope now that is pleasing to you?
Conan: (Threatening Celia with spoon.) My
    seven curses on yourself and your fair-haired tea.
    (Puts back tea-pot.)
Celia: (Laughing.) It was hurry left it so
    weak
    on you!
Mother: Ah, don't be putting reproaches on
    him. Crossness is a thing born with us. It do run
    in the blood. Strive now to let him have a quiet life.
Conan: I am not asking a quiet life! But to
    come live with your own family you might as well
    take your coffin on your back!
Celia: (Sings.)
"We'll look on the stars and we'll list to the riverConan: That girl is a disgrace sitting on the
    floor the way she is! If I had her for a while I'd
    put betterment on her. No one that was under
    me ever grew slack!
Celia: You would never be satisfied and
    you
    to see me working from dark to dark as hard as a
    pismire in the tufts.
Mother: Leave her now, she's a quiet little girl
    and comely.
Conan: Comely! I'd sooner her to be like the
    ugliest sod of turf that is pockmarked in the bog,
    and a handy housekeeper, and her pigeon doing
    something for the world if it was but scaring its
    comrades on a stick in a barley garden!
Celia: Ah, do you hear him! (Stroking
    pigeon.)
    (Sings.)
Mother: I wonder you to be going into the rath
    the way you do, Conan. It is a very haunted place.
Conan: Don't be bothering me. I have my
    reason for that.
Mother: I often heard there is many a one lost
    his wits in it.
Conan: It's likely they hadn't much to lose.
    Without the education anyone is no good.
Mother: Ah, indeed you were always a tip-top
    scholar. I didn't ever know how good you were
    till I had my memory lost.
Conan: Indeed, it is a strange thing any wits
    at all to be found in this family.
Mother: Ah, sure we are as is allotted to us at
    the time God made the world.
Conan: Now I to make the world—
Mother: You are not saying you would make a
    better hand of it?
Conan: I am certain sure I could.
Mother: Ah, don't be talking that way!
Conan: I'd make changes you'd wonder at.
Celia: It's likely you'd make the world in one
    day in place of six.
Mother: It's best make changes little by little
    the same as you'd put clothes upon a growing
    child, and to knock every day out of what God
    will give you, and to live as long as we can, and
    die when we can't help it.
Conan: And the first thing I'd do would be to
    give you back your memory and your sense. (Sings.)
    (Air, "The Bells of Shandon.")
Mother: It is like a dream to me I heard that
    name. Aristotle of the books.
Conan: (Eagerly.) What did you hear about him?
Mother: I don't know was it about him or was
    it some other one. My memory to be as good as
    it is bad I might maybe bring it to mind.
Conan: Hurry on now and remember!
Mother: Ah, it's hard remember anything and
    the weather so uncertain as what it is.
Conan: Is it of late you heard it?
Mother: It was maybe ere yesterday or some
    day of the sort; I don't know. Since the age
    tampered with me the thing I'd hear to-day I
    wouldn't think of to-morrow.
Conan: Try now and tell me was it that
    Aristotle, the time he walked Ireland, had come to
    this place.
Mother: It might be that, unless it might be
    some other thing.
Conan: And that he left some great treasure
    hid—it might be in the rath without.
Mother: And what good would it do you a pot of
    gold to be hid in the rath where you would never
    come near to it, it being guarded by enchanted
    cats and they having fiery eyes?
Conan: Did I say anything about a pot of
    gold? This was better again than gold. This
    was an enchantment would raise you up if you
    were gasping from death. Give attention now ...
    Aristotle.
Mother: It's Harry he used to be called.
Conan: Listen now. (Sings.) (Air, "Bells of
    Shandon.")
"Once Aristotle hid in a bottle
    Or some other vessel of security
    A spell had power bring sweet from sour
    Or bring blossoms blooming on the blasted tree."
Mother: (Repeating last line.) "Or bring
    blossoms
    blooming on the blasted tree."
Conan: Is that now what you heard ...that
    Aristotle has hid some secret spell?
Mother: I won't say what I don't know. My
    memory is too weak for me to be telling lies.
Conan: You could strengthen it if you took it
    in hand, putting a knot in the corner of your shawl
    to keep such and such a thing in mind.
Mother: If I did I should put another knot in
    the other corner to remember what was the first
    one for.
Conan: You'd remember it well enough if it
    was a pound of tea!
Mother: Ah, maybe it's best be as I am and not
    to be running carrying lies here and there, putting
    trouble on people's mind.
Conan: Isn't it terrible to be seeing all this
    folly around me and not to have a way to
    better it!
Mother: Ah, dear, it's best leave the time under
    the mercy of the Man that is over us all.
Conan: (Jumping up furious.) Where's the
    use of old people being in the world at all if they
    cannot keep a memory of things gone by! (Sings.)
    (Air, "O the time I've lost in wooing.")
Mother: What is it ails you?
Conan: That secret to be in the world, and I
    all to have laid my hand on it, and it to have gone
    astray on me!
Mother: So it would go too.
Conan: A secret that could change the world!
    I'd make it as good a world to live in as it was in
    the time of the Greeks. I don't see much goodness
    in the trace of the people in it now. To
    change everything to its contrary the way the
    book said it would! There would be great satisfaction
    doing that. Was there ever in the world
    a family was so little use to a man? (Sings in
    dejection.) (Air, "My Molly O.")
Celia: I wonder you wouldn't ask Timothy
    that is older again than what my mother is.
Conan: Timothy! He has the hearing lost.
Celia: Well there is no harm to try him.
Conan: (Going to door.) Timothy!... There,
    he's as deaf as a beetle.
Mother: It might be best for him. The thing
    the ear will not hear will not put trouble on the
    heart.
Celia: (Who has gone out comes pushing him
    in.)
    Here he is now for you.
Conan: Did ever you hear of Aristotle?
Timothy: Aye?
Conan: Aristotle!
Timothy: Ere a bottle? I might ...
Conan: Aristotle.... That had some power?
Timothy: I never seen no flower.
Conan: Something he hid near this place.
Timothy: I never went near no race.
Conan: Has the whole world its mind made up
    to annoy me!
Celia: Raise your voice into his ear.
Conan: (Chanting.)
"Aristotle in the hourTimothy: Would it now?
Conan: You said you had heard of a bottle.
Timothy: A charmed bottle. It is Biddy Early
    put a cure in it and bestowed it in her will to her son.
Conan: Aristotle that left one in the same way.
Timothy: It is what I am thinking that my old
    generations used to be talking about a bellows.
Conan: A bellows! There's no sense in that!
Timothy: Have it your own way so, and give
    me leave to go feeding the little chickens and the
    hens, for if I cannot hear what they say and they
    cannot understand what I say, they put no reproach
    on me after, no more than I would put
    it on themselves. (Goes.)
Celia: Let you be satisfied now and not torment
    yourself, for if you got the world wide you
    couldn't discover it. You might as well think to
    throw your hat to hit the stars.
Conan: You have me tormented among the
    whole of ye. To be without ye would be no harm
    at all. (Sits down and weeps.) Of all the families
    anyone would wish to live away from I am full
    sure my family is the worst.
Mother: Ah, dear, you're worn out and contrary
    with the want of sleep. Come now into the
    room and stretch yourself on the bed. To go
    sleeping out in the grass has no right rest in it at
    all! (Takes his arm.)
Conan: Where's the use of lying on my bed
    where it is convenient to the yard, that I'd be
    afflicted by the turkeys yelping and the pullets
    praising themselves after laying an egg! and the
    cackling and hissing of the geese.
Mother: Lie down so on the settle, and I'll let
    no one disturb you. You're destroyed, avic, with
    the want of sleep.
Conan: There'll be no peace in this kitchen no
    more than on the common highway with the
    people running in and out.
Mother: I'll go sit in the little gap without,
    and
    the whole place will be as quiet as St. Colman's
    wilderness of stones.
Conan: The boards are too hard.
Mother: I'll put a pillow in under you.
Conan: Now it's too narrow. Leave me now
    it'll be best.
Mother: Sleep and good dreams to you. (Goes
    singing sleepy song.)
Conan: The most troublesome family ever I
    knew in all my born days! Why is that people
    cannot have behaviour now the same as in ancient
    Greece. (Sits up.) I'll not give them the
    satisfaction
    of going asleep. I'll drink a sup of the
    tea that is black with standing and with strength.
    (Drinks and lies down.) I'll engage that'll keep
    me waking. (Music heard.) Is it to annoy me
    they are playing tunes of music? I'll let on to be
    asleep! (Shuts eyes.)
(Two large Cats with fiery eyes look over top
    of settle.)
(They disappear saying together:)
Men and mortals what are yeConan: (Looking out timidly.) Are they
    gone?
    Here, Puss, puss! Come hither now poor Puss!
    They're not in it.... Here now! here's milk
    for ye. And a drop of cream.... (Gets up,
    peeps under settle and around.) They are gone!
    And that they may never come back! I wouldn't
    wish to be brought riding a thorny bush in the night
    time into the cold that is behind the sun! What
    now did they say? Or is it dreaming I was? Oh,
    it was not! They spoke clear and plain. The
    hidden spell that I was seeking, they said it to be
    in the hiding hole under the hearth. (Pokes,
    sneezes.) Bad cess to Celia leaving that much
    ashes to be choking me. Well, the luck has come
    to me at last!
(Sings as he searches.)
"Proudly the note of the trumpet is sounding,(Pokes at hearthstone.) Sure enough, it's
    loose! It's moving! Wait till I'll get
    a wedge under it!
(Takes fork from table.) It's coming!
(Door suddenly opens and he drops fork and
    springs back.)
Mother: (Coming in with Rock and
    Flannery.)
    Here now, come in the two of ye. Here now, Conan,
    is two of the neighbours, James Rock of Lis Crohan
    and Fardy Flannery the rambling herd, that are
    come to get a light for the pipe and they walking
    the road from the Fair.
Conan: That's the way you make a fool of me
    promising me peace and quiet for to sleep!
Mother: Ah, so I believe I did. But it slipped
    away from me, and I listening to the blackbird on
    the bush.
Conan: (To Rock.) I wonder, James Rock,
    that you wouldn't have on you so much as a halfpenny
    box of matches!
Rock: (Trying to get to hearth.) So I have
    matches. But why would I spend one when I can
    get for nothing a light from a sod?
Flannery: Sure, I could give you a match I
    have this long time, waiting till I'll get as much
    tobacco as will fill a pipe.
Mother: It's the poor man does be generous.
    It's gone from my mind, Fardy, what was it
    brought you to be a servant of poverty?
Flannery: Since the day I lost on the road my
    forty pound that I had to stock my little farm of
    land, all has wore away from me and left me bare
    owning nothing unless daylight and the run of
    water. It was that put me on the Shaughrann.
(Sings "The Bard of Armagh.")
"Oh, list to the lay of a poor Irish harper,Rock: Bad management! Look what I brought
    from the Fair through minding my own property
    —£20 for a milch cow, and thirty for a score of
    lambs!
Mother: £20 for a cow! Isn't that terrible
    money!
Conan: Let you whist now! You are putting
    a headache on me with all your little newses and
    country chat!
(Mother goes, the others are following.)
Rock: (Turning from door.) It might be
    better
    for yourself, Conan Creevey, if you had minded
    business would bring profit to your hand in place
    of your foreign learning, that never put a penny
    piece in anyone's pocket that ever I heard. No
    earthly profit unless to addle the brain and leave
    the pocket empty.
Conan: You think yourself a great sort! Let
    me tell you that my learning has power to do more
    than that!
Rock: It's an empty mouth that has big talk.
Conan: What would you say hearing I had
    power put in my hand that could change the entire
    world? And that's what you never will have power
    to do.
Rock: What power is that?
Conan:Rock: Foolishness! I never would believe in
    poetry or in dreams or images, but in ready money
    down. (Jingles bag.)
Conan: I tell you you'll see me getting the
    victory over all Ireland!
Rock: You have but a cracked headpiece thinking
    that will come to you.
Conan: I tell you it will! No end at all in the
    world to what I am about to bring in!
Rock: It's easy praise yourself!
Conan: And so I am praising myself, and so will
    you all be praising me when you will see all that
    I will do!
Rock: It is what I think you got demented in
    the head and in the mind.
Conan: It is soon the wheel will be turned and
    the whole of the nation will be changed for the
    best. (Sings.)
Flannery: That's a great thought, if it is but a
    vanity or a dream.
Rock: (Sneeringly.) Well now and what
    would
    you do?
Flannery: I would wish a great lake of milk,
    the same as blessed St. Bridget, to be sharing with
    the family of Heaven. I would wish vessels full
    of alms that would save every sorrowful man. Do
    that now, Conan, and you'll have the world of
    prayers down on you!
Rock: It's what I'd do, to turn the whole of
    Galway Bay to dry land, and I to have it for myself,
    the red land, the green land, the fallow and the
    lea! The want of land is a great stoppage to a man
    having means to lay out in stock.
(Sings.) (Air, "I wish I had the shepherd's lamb.")
"I wish I had both mill and kiln,Flannery: Ah, the land, the land, the rotten
    land, and what will you have in the end but the
    breadth of your back of it? Let you now soften
    the heart in that one (points to Rock) till he would
    restore to me the thing he is aware of.
Conan: It was not for that the spell was
    promised, to be changing a few neighbours or a
    thing of the kind, or to be doing wonders in this
    broken little place. A town of dead factions! To
    change any of the dwellers in this place would be
    to make it better, for it would be impossible to
    make it worse. The time you wouldn't be meddling
    with them you wouldn't know them to be
    bad, but the time you'd have to do business with
    them that's the time you'd know it!
Rock: I suppose it is what you are asking to
    do, to make yourself rich?
Conan: I do not! I would be loth take any
    profit, and Aristotle after laying down that to
    pleasure or to profit every wealthy man is a slave!
Flannery: What would you do, so?
Conan: I will change all into the similitude of
    ancient Greece! There is no man at all can understand
    argument but it is from Greece he is. I know
    well what I'm doing. I'm not like a potato having
    eyes this way and that. People were harmless
    long ago and why wouldn't they be made harmless
    again? Aristotle said, "Fair play is more
    beautiful than the morning and the evening star!"
"Be friendly with one another," he said, "and
    let the lawyers starve!" I'll turn the captains of
    soldiers to be as peaceable as children picking
    strawberries in the grass. I've a mind to change
    the tongue of the people to the language of the
    Greeks, that no farmer will be grumbling over a
    halfpenny Independent, but be following the plough
    in full content, giving out Homer and the praises
    of the ancient world!
Flannery: If you make the farmers content you
    will make the world content.
Rock: You will, when you'll bring the sun from
    Greece to ripen our little lock of oats!
Conan: So I will drag Ireland from its moorings
    till I'll bring it to the middling sea that has no ebb
    or flood!
Rock: You will do well to put a change on the
    college that harboured you, and that left you so
    much of folly.
Conan: I'll do that! I'll be in College Green
    before the dawn is white—no but before the night
    is grey! It is to Dublin I will bring my spell, for
    I ever and always heard it said what Dublin will
    do to-day Ireland will do to-morrow! (Sings.)
Rock: And maybe you'll tell us now by what
    means you will do all this?
Conan: Go out of the house and I will tell you
    in the by and bye.
Rock: That is what I was thinking. You are
    talking nothing but lies.
Conan: I tell you that power is not far from
    where you stand! But I will let no one see it only
    myself.
Flannery: There might be some truth in it.
    There are some say enchantments never went out
    of Ireland.
Conan: It is a spell, I say, that will change
    anything to its contrary. To turn it upon a snail,
    there is hardly a greyhound but it would overtake;
    but a hare it would turn to be the slowest thing in
    the universe; too slow to go to a funeral.
Rock: I'll believe it when I'll see it.
Conan: You could see it if I let you look in
    this hiding-hole.
Rock: Good-morrow to you!
Conan: Then you will see it, for I'll raise up
    the stone. (Kneels.)
Rock: It to be anything it is likely a pot of
    sovereigns.
Flannery: It might be the harp of Angus.
Rock: I see no trace of it.
Conan: There is something hard! It should
    likely be a silver trumpet or a hunting-horn of gold!
Rock: Give me a hold of it.
Conan: Leave go! (Lifts out bellows.)
Rock: Ha! Ha! Ha! after all your chat, nothing
    but a little old bellows!...
Conan: There is seven rings on it.... They
    should signify the seven blasts....
Rock: If there was seventy times seven what
    use would it be but to redden the coals?
Conan: Every one of these blasts has power to
    make some change.
Rock: Make one so, and I'll plough the world
    for you.
Conan: Is it that I would spend one of my
    seven blasts convincing the like of ye?
Rock: It is likely the case there is no power in
    it at all.
Conan: I'm very sure there is surely. The world
    will be a new world before to-morrow's Angelus bell.
Flannery: I never could believe in a bellows.
Rock: Here now is a fair offer. I'll loan you
    this bag of notes to pay your charges to Dublin if
    you will change that little pigeon in the crib into a
    crow.
Conan: I will do no such folly.
Rock: You wouldn't because you'd be afeared
    to try.
Conan: Hold it up to me. I'll show you am
    I afeared!
Rock: There it is now. (Holds up cage.)
Conan: Have a care! (Blows.)
Rock: (Dropping it with a shriek.) It has
    me
    bit with its hard beak, it is turned to be an old
    black crow.
Flannery: As black as the bottom of the pot.
Crow: Caw! Caw! Caw!
(Cats reappear and look over back of settle.)
(Music from behind.) ("O'Donnall Abu.")
CURTAIN
ACT II
Conan alone holding up bellows, singing:
Conan:Celia: (Comes in having listened amused at
    door; claps hands.) Very good! It is you yourself
    should be going to the dance house to-night in
    place of myself. It is long since I heard you rise
    so happy a tune!
Conan: (Putting bellows behind him.) What
    brings you here? Is there no work for you out in
    the garden—the cabbages to be cutting for the
    cow....
Celia: I wouldn't wish to roughen my hands
    before evening. Music there will be for the dancing!
(She lilts Miss McLeod's Reel.)
Conan: Let you go ready yourself for it so.
Celia: Is it at this time of the day? You
    should be forgetting the hours of the clock the
    same as the poor mother.
Conan: It is a strange thing since I came to
    this house I never can get one minute's ease and
    quiet to myself.
Celia: It was hearing you singing brought me in.
Conan: I'd sooner have you without! Be
    going now.
Celia: I will and welcome. It is to bring out
    my little pigeon I will, where there is a few grains
    of barley fell from a car going the road.
Conan: Hurry on so!
Celia: (Taking up cage.) He is not in his crib.
    (Looking here and there.) Where now can he
    have gone?
Conan: He should have gone out the door.
Celia: He did not. He could not have come
    out unknown to me. Coo, coo,—coo—coo.
Conan: Never mind him now. You are putting
    my mind astray with your Coo, coo—
Celia: He might be in under the settle.
    (Stoops.) Where are you, my little bird. (Sings.)
    (Air, "Shule Aroon.")
Conan: (Putting her away.) What way would
    he be in it? Let you put a stop to that humming.
    (Seizes her.) Come here to the light ...is it
    you sewed this button on my coat?
Celia: It was not. It is likely it was some
    tailor down in the North.
Conan: It is getting loose on the sleeve.
Celia: Ah, it will last a good while yet. Coo, coo!
Conan: (Getting before her.) It would be no
    great load on you to get a needle and put a stitch
    would tighten it.
Celia: I'll do it in the by and bye. There, I
    twisted the thread around it. That'll hold good
    enough for a while.
Conan: "Anything worth doing at all is worth
    doing well."
Celia: Aren't you getting very dainty in your
    dress?
Conan: Any man would like to have a decent
    appearance on his suit.
Celia: Isn't it the same to-day as it was
    yesterday?
Conan: Have you ne'er a needle?
Celia: I don't know where is it gone.
Conan: You haven't a stim of sense. Can't
    you keep in mind "Everything in its right place."
Celia: Sure, there's no hurry—the day is long.
Conan: Anything has to be done, the quickest
    to do it is the best.
Celia: I'm not working by the hour or the day.
Conan: Look now at Penelope of the Greeks,
    and all her riches, and her man not at hand to urge
    her, how well she sat at the loom from morn till
    night till she'd have the makings of a suit of frieze.
Celia: Ah, that was in the ancient days, when
    you wouldn't buy it made and ready in the shops.
Conan: Will you so much as go to find a towel
    would take the dust off of the panes of glass?
Celia: I wonder at you craving to disturb the
    spider and it after making its web.
Conan: Well, go sit idle outside. I wouldn't
    wish to be looking at you! Aristotle that said a
    lazy body is all one with a lazy mind. You'll be
    begging your bread through the world's streets
    before your poll will be grey.
(Sings.)
"You'll dye your petticoat, you'll dye it red,Celia: (Sings.)
"Come here my little birdeen! Coo!"Conan: (Putting his hand on her mouth.) Be
    going out now in place of calling that bird that is
    as lazy and as useless as yourself.
Celia: My little dove! Where are you at all!
Conan: A cat to have ate it would be no great
    loss!
Celia: Did you yourself do away with him?
Conan: I did not.
Celia: (Wildly breaking free throws herself
    down.)
    There is no place for him to be only in under
    the settle!
Conan: (Dragging at her.) It is not there.
Celia: (Who has put in her hand.) O what
    is
    that? It has hurt me!
Conan: A nail sticking up out of the floor.
Celia: (Jumping up with a cry.) It's a
    crow!
    A great big wicked black crow!
Conan: If it is let you leave it there.
Celia: (Weeping.) I'm certain sure it has
    my
    pigeon killed and ate!
Conan: To be so doleful after a pigeon! You
    haven't a stim of sense!
Celia: It was you gave it leave to do that!
Conan: Stop your whimpering and blubbering!
    What way can I settle the world and I being
    harassed and hampered with such a contrary class!
    I give you my word I have a mind to change
    myself into a ravenous beast will kill and devour ye
    all! That much would be no sin when it would be
    according to my nature. (Sings or chants.)
Celia: (Sitting down miserable.) You are a very
    wicked man!
Conan: Get up out of that or I'll make you!
Celia: I will not! I'm certain you did this
    cruel thing!
Conan: (Taking up bellows.) I'd hardly begrudge
    one of my six blasts to be quit of your slowness
    and your sluggish ways! Rise up now before
    I'll make you that you'll want shoes that will never
    wear out, you being ever on the trot and on the
    run from morning to the fall of night! Start up
    now! I'm on the bounds of doing it!
Celia: What are you raving about?
Conan: To get quit of you I cannot, but to
    change your nature I might! I give you warning
    ...one, two, three!
(Blows.) (Sings: "With a chirrup.") (Air,
    "Garryowen.")
Celia: (Staring and standing up.) What is
    that? Is it the wind or is it a wisp of flame that
    is going athrough my bones!
(Rock and Flannery come in.)
(Celia rushes out.)
Rock: (Out of breath.) We went looking for
    a
    car to bring you to the train!
Flannery: There was not one to be found.
Rock: But those that are too costly!
Flannery: Till we went to the Doctor of the
    Union.
Rock: For to ask a lift for you on the ambulance....
Flannery: But when he heard what we had to
    tell—
Rock: He said he would bring you and glad
    to do it on his own car, and no need to hansel
    him.
Flannery: And welcome, if it was as far as the
    grave!
Rock: All he is sorry for he hasn't a horse that
    would rise you up through the sky—
Conan: Let him give me the lift so—it will
    be
    a help to me. It wasn't only with his own hand
    Alexander won the world!
Flannery: Unless you might give him, he was
    saying, a blast of the bellows, that would change
    his dispensary into a racing stable, and all that
    come to be cured into jockeys and into grooms!
Conan: What chatterers ye are! I gave ye no
    leave to speak of that.
Rock: Ah, it costs nothing to be giving out
    newses.
Flannery: The world and all will be coming to
    the door to throw up their hats for you, and you
    making your start, cars and ass cars, jennets and
    traps. (Sings.)
Conan: It's my death I'll come to in Dublin.
    That news to get there ahead of me I'll be pressed
    in the throng as thin as a griddle.
Flannery: So you might be, too. All I have
    that might protect you I offer free, and that's this
    good umbrella that was given to me in a rainstorm
    by a priest. (Holds it out.)
Rock: And what do you say to me giving you
    the loan of your charges for the road?
Conan: Come in here, Maryanne! and give a
    glass to these honest men till they'll wish me good
    luck upon my journey, as it's much I'll need it,
    with the weight of all I have to do.
Mother: (Coming in.) So I will, so I will and
    welcome ...but that I disremember where did
    I put the key of the chest.
Conan: I'll engage you do! There it is before
    you in the lock since ere yesterday. (Mother puts
    bottle and glasses on table.)
Flannery: (Lifting glass.) That you may bring
    great good to Ireland and to the world!
Rock: Here's your good health!
Conan: I'm obliged to you!
Rock and Flannery: (Sing.) (Air, "The Cruiskeen
    lán.")
(They nod as they finish and take out their
    pipes and sit down. A banging is heard.)
Conan: What disturbance is that?
(Celia comes in, her hair screwed up tight,
    skirt tucked up, is carrying a pail,
    brush, cloth, etc., lets them drop and
    proceeds to fasten up skirt.)
Mother: Ah, Celia, what is on you? I never
    saw you that way before.
Conan: Ha! Very good! I think that you will
    say there is a great change come upon her, and a
    right change.
Celia: Look now at the floor the way it is.
Mother: I see no other way but the way it is
    always.
Celia: There's a bit of soot after falling down
    the chimney. (Picks up tongs.)
Mother: Ah, leave it now, dear, a while.
Celia: Anything has to be done, the quickest
    way to do it is the best. (Having taken up soot,
    flings down tongs.)
Conan: Listen to that! Now am I able to
    work wonders?
Rock: It is that you have spent on her a blast?
Conan: If I did it was well spent.
Flannery: I'm in dread you have been robbing
    the poor.
Rock: It is myself you have robbed doing that.
    You have no call to be using those blasts for your
    own profit!
Conan: I have every right to bring order in
    my own dwelling before I can do any other thing!
Celia: All the dust of the world's roads is
    gathered in this kitchen. The whole place ate
    with filth and dirt.
(Begins to sweep.)
Conan: Ah, you needn't hardly go as far as that.
Celia: Anything that is worth doing is worth
    doing well. (To Rock.) Look now at the marks
    of your boots upon the ground. Get up out of
    that till I'll bustle it with the broom!
Rock: (Getting up.) There is a change indeed
    and a queer change. Where she used to be singing
    she is screeching the same as a slate where you'd
    be casting sums!
Celia: (To Flannery.) What's that I see in
    under your chair? Rise up. (He gets up.) It's
    a pin! (Sticks it in her dress.) Everything in its
    right place! (Goes on flicking at the furniture.)
Mother: Leave now knocking the furniture to
    flitters.
Celia: I will not, till I'll free it from the
    dust
    and dander of the year.
Mother: That'll do now. I see no dust.
Celia: You'll see it presently. (Sweeps up a cloud.)
Mother: Let you speak to her, Conan.
Conan: Leave now buzzing and banging about
    the room the same as a fly without a head!
Celia: Never put off till to-morrow what you
    can do to-day.
Conan: I tell you I have things to settle and
    to say before the car will come that is to bring me
    on my road to Dublin.
Celia: (Stopping short.) Is it that you are going
    to Dublin?
Conan: I am, and within the hour.
Celia: Pull off those boots from your feet!
Conan: I will not! Let you leave my boots
    alone!
Celia: You are not going out of the house with
    that slovenly appearance on you! To have it said
    out in Dublin that you are a class of man never has
    clean boots but of a Sunday!
Conan: They'll do well enough without you
    meddling!
Celia: Clean them yourself so! (Gives him a
    rag and blacking and goes on dusting.)
(Sings.) (Air, "City of Sligo.")
"We may tramp the earthConan: What ailed me that I didn't leave her
    as she was before.
Celia: (Stopping work.) What way are they now?
Conan: (Having cleaned his boots, putting them
    on hurriedly.) They're very good. (Wipes his brow,
    drawing hand across leaving mark of blacking.)
Celia: The time I told you to put black on
    your shoes I didn't bid you rub it upon your brow!
Conan: I didn't put it in any wrong place.
Celia: I ask the whole of you, is it black his
    face
    is or white?
All: It is black indeed.
Celia: Would you put a reproach on the whole
    of the barony, going up among big citizens with a
    face on you the like of that?
Conan: I'll do well enough. There will be
    the black of the smoke from the engine on it any
    way, and I after journeying in the train.
Celia: You will not go be a disgrace to me.
Conan: If it is black it is yourself forced me to it.
Celia: If I did I'll make up for it, putting a
    clean face upon you now. (Dips towel in pail and
    sings "With a fillip"—air, "Garryowen"—as she
    washes him.)
Conan: Let me go, will you! Let you stop!
    The soap that is going into my eye!
Celia: My grief you are! Let you be willing
    to suffer, so long as you will be tasty and decent
    and be a credit to ourselves.
Conan: The suds are in my mouth!
Celia: One minute now and you'll be as clean
    as a bishop!
Conan: Let me go, can't you!
Celia: Only one thing wanting now.
Conan: I'm good enough, I tell you!
Celia: To cut the wisp from the back of your
    poll.
Conan: You will not cut it!
Celia: And you'll go into the grandeurs of
    Dublin and you being as neat as an egg.
Conan: (With a roar.) Leave meddling with
    my hair. I that can change the world with one
    turn of my hand!
Celia: Wait till I'll find the scissors! That's
    not the way to be going showing off in the town,
    if you were all the saints and Druids of the universe!
Conan: (Breaking free and rushing out.) My
    seven thousand curses on the minute when I didn't
    leave you as you were. (Goes.)
Celia: (Looking at Mother.) There's meal on
    your dress from the cake you're after putting in
    the oven—where now did that bellows fall from?
    (Taking up bellows.) It comes as handy as a
    gimlet. There (blows the meal off), that now will
    make a big difference in you.
Rock: (Seizing bellows.) Leave now that down
    out of your hand. Let you go looking for a
    scissors!
(Celia goes off singing "The Beautiful City
    of Sligo.")
Mother: (Sitting down.) I'm thinking it's seven
    years to-day, James Rock, since you took a lend
    of my clock.
Rock: You're raving! What call would I have
    to ask a lend of your clock?
Mother: The way you would rise in time for
    the fair of Feakle in the morning.
Rock: Did I now?
Mother: You did, and that's my truth. I was
    standing here, and you were standing there, and
    Celia that was but ten years was sucking the sugar
    off a spoon I was after putting in a bag that had
    come from the shop, for to put a grain into my
    tea.
Rock: (Sneering.) Well now, didn't your memory
    get very sharp!
Mother: You thought I had it forgot, but I
    remember it as clear as pictures. The time it stood
    at was seven minutes after four o'clock, and I
    never saw it from that day till now. This very
    day of the month it was, the year of the black
    sheep having twins.
Rock: It was but an old clock anyway.
Mother: If it was it is seven years older since
    I laid an eye on it. And it's kind father for you
    robbing me, where it's often you robbed your own
    mother, and you stealing away to go cardplaying
    the half crowns she had hid in the churn.
Rock: Didn't you get very wicked and hurtful,
    you that was a nice class of a woman without no
    harm!
Flannery: Ah, Ma'am, you that was easy-minded,
    it is not kind for you to be a scold.
Mother: And another thing, it was the same
    day where Michael Flannery (turns to him) came in
    an' told me of you being grown so covetous you
    had made away with your dog, by reason you
    begrudged it its diet.
Rock: (To Flannery.) You had a great deal to
    say about me!
Mother: And more than that again, he said
    you had it buried secretly, and had it personated,
    creeping around the haggard in the half dark
    and you barking, the way the neighbours would
    think it to be living yet and as wicked as it was
    before.
Rock: (To Flannery.) I'll bring you into the
    Courts for telling lies!
Mother: (Coming near Rock and speaking into
    his ear.) And there's another thing I know, and
    that I made a promise to her that was your wife
    not to tell, but death has that promise broke.
Rock: Stop, can't you!
Mother: I know by sure witness that it was
    you found the forty pound he (points to Flannery,
    who nods) lost on the road, and kept it for your
    own profit. Bring me now, I dare you, into the
    Courts!
Rock: (Fearfully.) That one would remember
    the world! It is as if she went to the grinding
    young!
(Conan's voice heard. Singing: "Let me be
    merry" in a melancholy voice.)
Mother: It is Conan will near lose his wits
    with joy when he knows what is come back to me!
Conan: (Peeping in.) Is Celia gone?
Flannery: She is, Conan.
Conan: It's a queer thing with women. If
    you'll turn them from one road it's likely they'll
    go into another that is worse again.
Rock: That is so indeed. There is Celia's
    mother that is running telling lies, and leaving a
    heavy word upon a neighbour.
Mother: I'll give my promise not to tell it out
    in Court if he will give to poor Michael Flannery
    what is due to him, and that is the whole of what
    he has in his bag!
Conan: (Laughing scornfully.) Sure she has
    no
    memory at all. It fails her to remember that two
    and two makes four.
Mother: You think that? Well, listen now to
    me. Two and two is it? No, nine times two that
    is eighteen and nine times three twenty-seven,
    nine times four thirty-six, nine times five forty-fi
    ve, nine times six fifty-four, nine times seven
    sixty-three, nine times eight seventy-two, nine
    times nine eighty-one.... Yes, and eleven times,
    and any times that you will put before me!
Conan: That's enough, that's enough!
Mother: Ha, ha! You giving out that I can
    keep no knowledge in mind and no learning, when
    I should sit on the chapel roof to have enough of
    slates for all I can cast up of sums! Multiplication,
    Addition, subtraction, and the rule of three!
Conan: Whist your tongue!
Mother: Is it the verses of Raftery's talk into
    the Bush you would wish me to give out, or the
    three hundred and sixty-nine verses of the Contention
    of the Bards—(Repeats verse of "The Talk
    with the Bush" in Irish.)
Or I'll English it if that will please you:
"A hundred years and a thousand before the time of the ArkConan: (Putting hands to ears and walking
    away.) I am thinking your mind got unsettled
    with the weight of years.
Mother: (Following him.) No, but your own
    that got scattered from the time you ran barefoot
    carrying worms in a tin can for that Professor of a
    Collegian that went fishing in the stream, and that
    you followed after till you got to think yourself a
    lamp of light for the universe!
Conan: Will you stop deafening the whole world
    with your babble!
Mother: There was always a bad drop in you
    that attached to you out of the grandfather. What
    did your languages do for you but to sharpen
    your tongue, till the scrape of it would take the
    skin off, the same as a cat! My blessing on you,
    Conan, but my curse upon your mouth!
Conan: Oh, will you stop your chat!
Mother: Every word you speak having in it
    the sting of a bee that was made out of the curses
    of a saint!
Conan: Stop your gibberish!
Mother: Are you satisfied now?
Conan: I'm not satisfied!
Mother: And never will be, for you were ever
    and always a fault-finder and full of crossness
    from the day that you were small suited.
Conan: You remember that, too?
Mother: I do well!
Conan: Where is the bellows? Was it you
    (to Flannery) that blew a blast on her?
Flannery: It was not.
Conan: Or you?
Rock: It's long sorry I'd be to do such a thing!
Conan: It is certain someone did it on her.
    Where now is it?
Mother: (Seizing him.) And I remember the
    day you threw out your mug of milk into the street,
    by reason, says you, you didn't like the colour of
    the cow that gave it!
Conan: Will you stop ripping up little
    annoyances,
    till I'll find the bellows!
Rock: It's what I'm thinking, her memory will
    soon be back at the far side of Solomon's
    Temple.
Mother: (Repeats in Irish.) Agus is iomdha
    sgéal a bhféadain traácht air!
Conan: (Shouting.) Is it that you'll drive the
    seven senses out of me!
Mother: Is it that you begrudge me my
    recollection?
    Ha! I have it in spite of you. (Sings.)
Celia: (Bursting in.) Where is Conan?
Conan: What do you want of me?
Celia: I have got the hair brush.
Conan: Let you not come near me!
Celia: And the comb!
Conan: Get away from me!
Celia: And the scissors.
Conan: Will you drive me out of the house or
    will I drive you out of it!
Celia: Ah, be easy!
Conan: I will not be easy!
Celia: (Pushing him back in a chair.) It will
    delight the world to see the way I'll send you out!
Conan: Is the universe gone distracted mad!
Celia: Be quiet now!
Conan: Leave your hold of me!
Celia: One stir, and the scissors will run into
    you!
(Sings "With a snippet, a snippet, a snippet.")
CURTAIN
ACT III
The two Cats are looking over the settle.
Music behind scene: "O Johnny, I hardly knew
    you!"
1st Cat: We did well leaving the bellows for
    that foolish Human to see what he can do. There
    is great sport before us and behind.
2nd Cat: The best I ever saw since the Jesters
    went out from Tara.
1st Cat: They to be giving themselves high
    notions and to be looking down on Cats!
2nd Cat: Ha, Ha, Ha, the folly and the craziness
    of men! To see him changing them from one
    thing to the next, as if they wouldn't be a two-legged
    laughing stock whatever way they would
    change.
1st Cat: There's apt to be more changes yet
    till they will hardly know one another, or every
    other one, to be himself! (Sings.)
(Timothy and Mother come in from opposite
    doors. Cats disappear—music still heard
    faintly.)
Mother: (Looking at little bellows in her hand.)
    Do you know That what it is, Timothy?
Timothy: Is it now a hand-bellows? It's long
    since I seen the like of that.
Mother: It is, but what bellows?
Timothy: Not a bellows? I'd nearly say it to be one.
Mother: There has strange things come to pass.
Timothy: That's what we've all been praying
    for this long time!
Mother: Ah, can't you give attention and strive
    to listen to me. It is all coming back to my mind.
    All the things I am remembering have my mind
    tattered and tossed.
Timothy: (Who has been trying to hear the music,
    sings a verse.)
(Music ceases.)
Mother: Will you give attention, I say! It
    will be worth while for you to go chat with me now
    I can be telling you all that happened in my years
    gone by. What was it Conan was questioning me
    about a while ago? What was it now....
Timothy: That now is a very nice sort of a
    little prayer.
Mother: (Calling out.) That's it! Aristotle's
    Bellows! I know now what has happened. This
    that is in my hand has in it the power to make
    changes. Changes! Didn't great changes come in
    the house to-day! (Shouts.) Did you see any great
    change in Celia?
Timothy: Why wouldn't I, and she at this
    minute fighting and barging at some poor travelling
    man, saying he laid a finger mark of bacon-grease upon
    the lintel of the door. Driving him off with a
    broken-toothed
    rake she is, she that was so gentle that she
    wouldn't hardly pluck the feathers of a dead duck!
Mother: It was surely a blast of this worked
    that change in her, as the blast she blew upon me
    worked a change in myself. O! all the thoughts
    and memories that are thronging in my mind and
    in my head! Rushing up within me the same as
    chaff from the flail! Songs and stories and the
    newses I heard through the whole course of my
    lifetime! And I having no person to tell them out
    to! Do you hear me what I'm saying, Timothy?
    (Shouts in his ear.) What is come back to me is
    what I lost so long ago, my MEMORY.
Timothy: So it is a very good song.
(Sings.)
"By Memory inspired, and love of glory fired,Mother: Thoughts crowding on one another,
    mixing themselves up with one another for the
    want of sifting and settling! They'll have me
    distracted and I not able to speak them out to
    some person! Conan as surly as a bramble bush,
    and Celia wrapped up in her bucket and her broom!
    And yourself not able to hear one word I say. (Sobs,
    and bellows falls from her hands.)
Timothy: I'll lay it down now out of your way,
    ma'am, the way you can cry your fill whatever
    ails you.
Mother: (Snatching it back.) Stop! I'll not
    part with it! I know now what I can do! Now!
    (Points it at him.) I'll make a companion to be
    listening to me through the long winter nights and
    the long summer days, and the world to be without
    any end at all, no more than the round of the
    full moon! You that have no hearing, this will
    bring back your hearing, the way you'll be a
    listener and a benefit to myself for ever. I
    wouldn't feel the weeks long that time!
(Blows. Timothy turns away and gropes
    toward wall.)
(She sings: Air, "Eileen Aroon.")
"What if the days go wrong,(Rock at door: sneezes. Mother drops bellows
    and goes. Timothy gives a cry,
    claps hands to ears and rushes out as if
    terrified.)
Rock: (Coming in seizes bellows.) Well now,
    didn't this turn to be very lucky and very good!
    The very thing I came looking for to be left there
    under my hands! (Puts it hurriedly under coat.)
Flannery: (Coming in.) What are you doing
    here, James Rock?
Rock: What are you doing yourself?
Flannery: What is that in under your coat?
Rock: What's that to you?
Flannery: I'll know that when I see it.
Rock: What call have you to be questioning me?
Flannery: Open now your coat!
Rock: Stand out of my way!
Flannery: (Suddenly tearing open coat and seizing
    bellows.) Did you think it was unknownst to me
    you stole the bellows?
Rock: Ah, what steal?
Flannery: Put it back in the place it was!
Rock: I will within three minutes.
Flannery: You'll put it back here and now.
Rock: (Coaxingly.) Look at here now, Michael
    Flannery, we'll make a league between us. Did
    you ever see such folly as we're after seeing to-day?
    Sitting there for an hour and a half till that one
    settled the world upside down!
Flannery: If I did see folly, what I see now is
    treachery.
Rock: Didn't you take notice of the way that
    foolish old man is wasting and losing what was
    given him for to benefit mankind? A blast he has
    lost turning a pigeon to a crow, as if there wasn't
    enough in it before of that tribe picking the spuds
    out of the ridges. And another blast he has lost
    turning poor Celia, that was harmless, to be a holy
    terror of cleanness and a scold.
Flannery: Indeed, he'd as well have left her
    as she was. There was something very pleasing
    in her little sleepy ways.
(Sings.)
"But sad it is to see you soRock: Bringing back to the memory of his
    mother every old grief and rancour. She that has
    a right to be making her peace with the grave!
Flannery: Indeed it seems he doesn't mind
    what he'll get so long as it's something that he
    wants.
Rock: Three blasts gone! And the world didn't
    begin to be cured.
Flannery: Sure enough he gave the bellows no
    fair play.
Rock: He has us made a fool of. He using it
    the way he did, he has us robbed.
Flannery: There's power in the four blasts
    left would bring peace and piety and prosperity
    and plenty to every one of the four provinces of
    Ireland.
Rock: That's it. There's no doubt but I'll
    make a better use of it than him, because I am a
    better man than himself.
Flannery: I don't know. You might not get
    so much respect in Dublin.
Rock: Dublin, where are you! What would
    I'd do going to Dublin? Did you never hear said
    the skin to be nearer than the shirt?
Flannery: What do you mean saying that?
Rock: The first one I have to do good to is
    myself.
Flannery: Is it that you would grab the benefit
    of the bellows?
Rock: In troth I will. I've got a hold of it, and
    by cripes I'll knock a good turn out of it.
Flannery: To rob the country and the poor for
    your own profit? You are a class of man that is
    gathering all for himself.
Rock: It is not worth while we to fall out of
    friendship. I will use but the one blast.
Flannery: You have no right or call to meddle
    with it.
Rock: The first thing I will meddle with is my
    own rick of turf. And I'll give you leave to go do
    the same with your own umbrella, or whatever
    property you may own.
Flannery: Sooner than be covetous like yourself
    I'd live and die in a ditch, and be buried
    from the Poorhouse!
Rock: Turf being black and light in the hand,
    and gold being shiny and weighty, there will be
    no delay in turning every sod into a solid brick of
    gold. I give you leave to do the same thing, and
    we'll be two rich men inside a half an hour!
Flannery: You are no less than a thief!
    (Snatches
    at bellows.)
Rock: Thief yourself. Leave your hand off it!
Flannery: Give it up here for the man that
    owns it!
Rock: You may set your coffin making for I'll
    beat you to the ground.
Flannery: (As he clutches.) Ah, you have given
    it a shove. It has blown a blast on yourself!
Rock: Yourself that blew it on me! Bad cess
    to you! But I'll do the same bad turn upon you!
    (Blows.)
Flannery: There is some footstep without.
    Heave it in under the ashes.
Rock: Whist your tongue! (Flings bellows
    behind hearth.)
(Conan comes in.)
Conan: With all the chattering of women I
    have the train near lost. The car is coming for
    me and I'll make no delay now but to set out.
(Sings.)
"Oh the French are on the sea,Here now is my little pack. You were saying,
    Thomas Flannery, you would be lending me the
    loan of your umbrella.
Flannery: Ah, what umbrella? There's no fear
    of rain.
Conan: (Taking it.) You to have proffered it
    I would not refuse it.
Flannery: (Seizing it.) I don't know. I have
    to mind my own property. It might not serve
    it to be loaning it to this one and that. It might
    leave the ribs of it bare.
Conan: That's the way with the whole of ye. I
    to give you my heart's blood you'd turn me upside
    down for a pint of porter!
Flannery: I see no sense or charity in lending to
    another anything that might be of profit to myself.
Conan: Let you keep it so! That your ribs may
    be as bare as its own ribs that are bursting out
    through the cloth!
Rock: Do not give heed to him, Conan. There
    is in this bag (takes it out) what will bring you
    every
    whole thing you might be wanting in the town.
    (Takes out notes and gold and gives them.)
Conan: It is only a small share I'll ask the lend of.
Rock: The lend of! No, but a free gift!
Conan: Well now, aren't you turned to be very
    kind? (Takes notes.)
Rock: Put that back in the bag. Here it is, the
    whole of it. Five and fifty pounds. Take it and
    welcome! It is yourself will make a good use of
    it laying it out upon the needy and the poor.
    Changing all for their benefit and their good! Oh,
    since St. Bridget spread her cloak upon the Curragh
    this is the most day and the happiest day ever
    came to Ireland.
Conan: (Giving bag to Flannery.) Take it you,
    as is your due by what the mother said a while ago
    about the robbery he did on you in the time past.
Flannery: Give it here to me. I'll engage I'll
    keep a good grip on it from this out. It's long
    before any other one will get a one look at it!
Conan: There would seem to be a great change
    —and a sudden change come upon the two of ye.
    ...(With a roar.) Where now is the bellows?
Flannery: (Sulkily.) What way would I know?
Conan: (Shaking him.) I know well what
    happened! It is ye have stolen two of my blasts!
    Putting changes on yourselves ye would—much
    good may it do ye—. Thieving with your covetousness
    the last two nearly I had left!
Rock: (Sulkily.) Leave your hand off me! I
    never stole no blast!
Conan: There's a bad class going through the
    world. The most people you will give to will be
    the first to cry you down. This was a wrong out
    of measure! Thieves ye are and pickpockets!
    Ye that were not worth changing from one to
    another, no more than you'd change a pinch of
    dust off the road into a puff of ashes. Stealing
    away my lovely blasts, bad luck to ye, the same as
    Prometheus stole the makings of a fire from the
    ancient gods!
Flannery: That is enough of keening and
    lamenting after a few blasts of barren wind—I'll
    be going where I have my own business to attend.
Conan: Where, so, is the bellows?
Flannery: How would I know?
Conan: The two of ye won't quit this till I'll
    find it! There is another two blasts in it that
    will bring sense and knowledge into Ireland yet!
Rock: Indeed they might bring comfort yet
    to many a sore heart!
Conan: (Searching.) Where now is it? I
    couldn't find it if the earth rose up and swallowed
    it. Where now did I lay it down?
Rock: There's too much changes in this place
    for me to know where anything is gone.
Conan: (At door.) Where are you, Maryanne!
    Celia! Timothy! Let ye come hither and search
    out my little bellows!
(Timothy comes in, followed by Mother.)
Conan: Hearken now, Timothy!
Timothy: (Stopping his ears.) Speak easy, speak easy!
Conan: Take down now your fingers from your
    ears the way you will hear my voice!
Timothy: Have a care now with your screeching
    would you split the drum of my ear?
Conan: Is it that you have got your hearing?
Timothy: My hearing is it? As good as that I
    can hear a lie, and it forming in the mind.
Conan: Is that the truth you're saying?
Timothy: Hear, is it! I can hear every whisper
    in this parish and the seven parishes are nearest.
    And the little midges roaring in the air.—Let ye
    whist now with your sneezing in the draught!
Conan: This is surely the work of the bellows.
    Another blast gone!
Rock: So it would be too. Mostly the whole
    of them gone and spent. It's hard know in the
    morning what way will it be with you at night.
    (Sings.)
     "I saw from the beach when the morning was
    shining
    A bark o'er the waters move gloriously on—
    came when the sun o'er the beach was declining,
    The bark was still there, but the waters were gone."
Timothy: It is yourself brought the misfortune
    on me, calling your Druid spells into the house.
Conan: It is not upon you I ever turned it.
Timothy: You have a great wrong done to me!
Mother: It is glad you should be and happy.
Timothy: Happy, is it? Give me a hareskin cap
 
    for to put over my ears, having wool in it very thick!
    (Sings.)
     "Silent, O Moyle, be the roar of thy water,
    Break not ye breezes your chain of repose,
    While murmuring mournfully Lir's lonely daughter
    Tells to the night-star her tale of woes.
    
    "When shall the swan, her death-note singing,
    Sleep with wings in darkness furl'd?
    When will heaven its sweet bells ringing
    Call my spirit from this stormy world?"
Mother: Come with me now and I'll be chatting
    to you.
Timothy: Why would I be listening to your
    blather when I have the voices of the four winds to
    be listening to? The night wind, the east wind,
    the black wind and the wind from the south!
Conan: Such a thing I never saw before in all
    my natural life.
Timothy: To be hearing, without understanding
    it, the language of the tribes of the birds! (Puts
    hands over ears again.) There's too many sounds
    in the world! The sounds of the earth are terrible!
    The roots squeezing and jostling one another
    through the clefts, and the crashing of the acorn
    from the oak. The cry of the little birdeen in
    under the silence of the hawk!
Conan: (To Mother.) As it you let it loose
    upon him, let you bring him away to some hole or
    cave of the earth.
Timothy: It is my desire to go cast myself in
    the ocean where there'll be but one sound of its
    waves, the fishes in its meadows being dumb!
    (Goes to corner and hides his head in a sack.)
Mother: Even so there might likely be a mermaid
    playing reels on her silver comb, and yourself
    craving after the world you left.
    (Sings: Air, "Spailpin
    Fanach.")
     "You think to go from every woe to peace in the
    wide ocean,
    But you will find your foolish mind repent its
    foolish notion.
    When dog-fish dash and mermaids splash their
    finny tails to find you,
    I'll make a bet that you'll regret the world you
    left behind you!"
Celia: (Clattering in with broom, etc.)
    What
    are ye doing, coming in this room again after I
    having it settled so nice? I'll allow no one in the
    place again, only carriage company that will have
    no speck of dust upon the sole of their shoe!
Mother: Oh, Celia, there has strange things
    happened!
Celia: What I see strange is that some person
    has meddled with that hill of ashes on the hearth
    and set it flying athrough the air. Is it hens ye
    are wishful to be, that would be searching and
    scratching in the dust for grains? And this thrown
    down in the midst! (Holds up bellows.)
Conan: Give me my bellows!
Mother: No, but give it to me!
Rock and Flannery: Give it to myself!
Timothy: (Looking up, with hands on ears.)
 
    My curse upon it and its work. Little I care if it
    goes up with the clouds.
Celia: What in the world wide makes the whole
    of ye so eager to get hold of such a thing?
Celia: What are you fretting about blasts and
    about roses?
Rock: It has a charm on it—
Flannery: To change the world—
Mother: That chedang myself—
Conan: For the worse—
Mother: And Timothy—
Conan: For the worse—
Rock: Myself and Flannery—
Conan: For the worse, for the worse—
Mother: Conan that changed yourself with it—
Conan: For the very worst!
Celia: (To Conan.) Is it riddles, or is it
    that
    you put a spell and a change upon me?
Conan: If I did, it was for your own good!
Celia: Do you call it for my good to set me
    running till I have my toes going through my shoes?
    (Holds them out.)
Conan: I didn't think to go that length.
Celia: To roughen my hands with soap and
    scalding water till they're near as knotted and as
    ugly as your own!
Conan: Ah, leave me alone! I tell you it is not
    by my own fault. My plan and my purpose that
    went astray and that broke down.
Celia: I will not leave you till you'll change me
    back to what I was. What way can these hands go
    to the dance house to-night? Change me back, I say!
Rock: And me—
Timothy: And myself, that I'll have quiet in my
    head again.
Conan: I cannot undo what has been done.
    There is no back way.
Timothy: Is there no way at all to come out of
    it safe and sane?
Conan: (Shakes head.) Let ye make the best of it.
Flannery: (Sings.) (Air, "I saw from the Beach.")
"Ne'er tell me of glories serenely adorningMother: (Who has bellows in her hand.) Stop!
    Stop—my mind is travelling backward ...so far
    I can hardly reach to it ...but I'll come to it
    ...the way I'll be changed to what I was before,
    and the town and the country wishing me well, I
    having got my enough of unfriendly looks and hard
    words!
Timothy: Hurry on, Ma'am, and remember, and
    take the spell off the whole of us.
Mother: I am going back, back, to the longest
    thing that is in my mind and my memory!...
    I myself a child in my mother's arms the very day
    I was christened....
Conan: Ah, stop your raving!
Mother: Songs and storytelling, and my old
    generations laying down news of this spell that is
    now come to pass....
Rock: Did they tell what way to undo the
    charm?
Mother: You have but to turn the bellows the
    same as the smith would turn the anvil, or St.
    Patrick turned the stone for fine weather ...
    and to blow a blast ...and a twist will come
    inside in it and the charm will fall off with that
    blast, and undo the work that has been done!
Timothy: Ha! (Takes hands from ears and puts
    one behind his ear.)
Rock: Ha! Where now is my bag? (Turns
    out his pockets, unhappy to find them empty.)
Flannery: Ha! (Smiles and holds out umbrella
    to Conan, who takes it.)
Mother: (To Celia.) Let you blow a blast on me.
    (Celia does so.) Now it's much if I can remember
    to blow a blast backward upon yourself!
Celia: Stop a minute! Leave what is in me of
    life and of courage till I will blow the last blast is
    in the bellows upon Conan.
Conan: Stop that! Do you think to change
    and to crow over me. You will not or I'll lay my
    curse upon you, unless you would change me into
    an eagle would be turning his back upon the whole
    of ye, and facing to his perch upon the right hand
    of the master of the gods!
Celia: Is it to waste the last blast you would?
    Not at all. As we burned the candle we'll burn the
    inch! I'll not make two halves of it, I'll give it to
    you entirely!
Celia: (Having got him to a corner.) Let you
    take things quiet and easy from this out, and be as
    content as you have been contrary from the very
    day and hour of your birth!
    (She blows upon him and he
    sits down smiling.
    Mother blows on Celia, and
    she sits down
    in first
    attitude.)
Celia: (Taking up pigeon.) Oh, there you
    are
    come back my little dove and my darling!
    (Sings: "Shule
    Aroon.")
     "Come sit and settle on my knee
    And I'll tell you and you'll tell me
    A tale of what will never be,
    Go-dé-tóu-Mavourneen slan!"
Conan: (Lighting pipe.) So the dove is
    there,
    too. Aristotle said there is nothing at the end but
    what there used to be at the beginning. Well now,
    what a pleasant day we had together, and what
    good neighbours we all are, and what a comfortable
    family entirely.
Rock: You would seem to have done with your
    complaints about the universe, and your great plan
    to change it overthrown.
Conan: Not a complaint! What call have I to
    go complaining? The world is a very good world,
    the best nearly I ever knew.
    (Sings.)
     "O, a little cock sparrow he sat on a tree,
    O, a little cock sparrow he sat on a tree,
    O, a little cock sparrow he sat on a tree,
    And he was as happy as happy could be,
    With a chirrup, a chirrup, a chirrup!
    
    "A chirrup, a chirrup, a chirrup!
    A chirrup, a chirrup, a chirrup!
    A chirrup, a chirrup, a chirrup!
    A chirrup, a chirrup, a——!"
CURTAIN
I had begun to put down some notes for this play when in the autumn of 1919 I was suddenly obliged (through the illness and death of the writer who had undertaken it) to take in hand the writing of the "Life and Achievement" of my nephew Hugh Lane, and this filled my mind and kept me hard at work for a year.
When the proofs were out of my hands I turned with but a vague recollection to these notes, and was surprised to find them fuller than they had appeared in my memory, so that the idea was rekindled and the writing was soon begun. And I found a certain rest and ease of mind in having turned from a long struggle (in which, alas, I had been too often worsted) for exactitude in dates and names and in the setting down of facts, to the escape into a world of fantasy where I could create my own. And so before the winter was over the play was put in rehearsal at the Abbey Theatre, and its first performance was on St. Patrick's Day, 1921.
I have been looking at its first scenario, made according to my habit in rough pen and ink sketches, coloured with a pencil blue and red, and the changes from that early idea do not seem to have been very great, except that in the scene where Conan now hears the secret of the hiding-place of the Spell from the talk of the cats, the Bellows had been at that time left beside him by a dwarf from the rath, in his sleep. The cats work better, and I owe their success to the genius of our Stage Carpenter, Mr. Sean Barlow, whose head of the Dragon from my play of that name had been such a masterpiece that I longed to see these other enchanted heads from his hand.
The name of the play in that first scenario was "The Fault-Finder," but my cranky Conan broke from that narrowness. If the play has a moral it is given in the words of the Mother, "It's best make changes little by little, the same as you'd put clothes upon a growing child." The restlessness of the time may have found its way into Conan's mind, or as some critic wrote, "He thinks of the Bellows as Mr. Wilson thought of the League of Nations," and so his disappointment comes. As A.E. writes in "The National Being," "I am sympathetic with idealists in a hurry, but I do not think the world can be changed suddenly by some heavenly alchemy, as St. Paul was smitten by a light from the overworld. Though the heart in us cries out continually, 'Oh, hurry, hurry to the Golden Age,' though we think of revolutions, we know that the patient marshalling of human forces is wisdom.... Not by revolutions can humanity be perfected. I might quote from an old oracle, 'The gods are never so turned away from man as when he ascends to them by disorderly methods.' Our spirits may live in the Golden Age but our bodily life moves on slow feet, and needs the lantern on the path and the staff struck carefully into the darkness before us to see that the path beyond is not a morass, and the light not a will o' the wisp." (But this may not refer to our own Revolution, seeing that has been making a step now and again towards what many judged to be a will o' the wisp through over seven hundred years.)
As to the machinery of the play, the spell was first to have been worked by a harp hung up by some wandering magician, and that was to work its change according to the wind, as it blew from north or south, east or west. But that would have been troublesome in practice, and the Bellows having once entered my mind, brought there I think by some scribbling of the pencil that showed Conan protecting himself with an umbrella, seemed to have every necessary quality, economy, efficiency, convenience.
As to Aristotle, his name is a part of our folklore. The old wife of one of our labourers told me one day, as a bee buzzed through the open door: "Aristotle of the Books was very wise but the bees got the better of him in the end. He wanted to know how did they pack the comb, and he wasted the best part of a fortnight watching them, and he could not see them doing it. Then he made a hive with a glass cover on it and put it over them, and he thought to watch them. But when he went to put his eye to the glass, they had it all covered with wax so that it was as black as the pot, and he was as blind as before. He said he was never rightly killed till then. The bees had him beat that time surely." And Douglas Hyde brought home one day a story from Kilmacduagh bog, in which Aristotle took the place of Solomon, the Wise Man in our tales as well as in those of the East. And he said that as the story grew and the teller became more familiar, the name of Aristotle was shortened to that of Harry.
As to the songs they are all sung to the old Irish airs I give at the end.
A. GREGORY.
August 18, 1921.
A PLAY IN THREE ACTS
FOR RICHARD
January, 1919
A.G.
PERSONS
The Five Princes.
The Five Wrenboys.
The Guardian of the Princes and Governor of the Island.
The Servant.
The Two Dowager Messengers.
The Ogre.
The Jester.
Two Soldiers.
The Scene is laid in The Island of Hy Brasil, that appears every seven years.
Time: Out of mind.
Scene: A winter garden, with pots of flowering
    trees or fruit-trees. There are books about and
    some benches with cushions on them and many
    cushions on the ground. The young PRINCES are
    sitting or lying at their ease. One is playing
    "Home, Sweet Home" on a harp. The
    SERVANT—an old man—is standing in the
    background.
1st Prince: Here, Gillie, will you please take
    off
    my shoe and see what there is in it that is pressing
    on my heel.
Servant: (Taking it off and examining it.)
    I
    see nothing.
1st Prince: Oh, yes, there is something; I have
    felt it all the morning. I have been thinking this
    long time of taking the shoe off, but I waited for
    you.
Servant: All I can find is a grain of poppy seed.
1st Prince: That is it of course—it was
    enough
    to hurt my skin.
2nd Prince: Gillie, there is a mayfly tickling
    my cheek. Will you please brush it away.
Servant: I will and welcome. (Fans it off.)
3rd Prince: Just give me, please, that book
    that is near my elbow. I cannot reach to it without
    taking my hand off my cheek.
Servant: I wouldn't wish you to do that.
    (Gives him book.)
4th Prince: Gillie, I think, I am nearly sure,
    there is a feather in this cushion that has the quill
    in it yet. I feel something hard.
Servant: Give it to me till I will open it and
    make a search.
4th Prince: No, wait a while till I am not lying
    on it. I will put up with the discomfort till then.
5th Prince: Would it give you too much trouble,
    Gillie, when you waken me in the morning, to
    come and call me three times, so that I can have
    the joy of dropping off again?
Servant: Why wouldn't I? And there is a
    thing I would wish to know. There will be a
    supper laid out here this evening for the Dowager
    Messengers that are coming to the Island, and I
    would wish to provide for yourselves whatever
    food would be pleasing to you.
1st Prince: It is too warm for eating. All I
    will ask is a few grapes from Spain.
2nd Prince: A mouthful of jelly in a silver
    spoon ...or in the shape of a little castle with
    towers. When will the Lady Messengers be here?
Servant: Not before the fall of day.
2nd Prince: The time passes so quietly and
    peaceably it does not feel like a year and a day since
    they came here before.
Servant: No wonder the time to pass easy and
    quiet where you are, with comfort all around you,
    and nothing to mark its course, and every season
    feeling the same as another, within the glass walls
    and the crystal roof of this place. And the old
    Queen, your godmother, sending her own Chamberlain
    to take charge of you, and to be your Guardian,
    and Governor of the Island. Sure, the wind
    itself must slacken coming to this sheltered place.
3rd Prince: That is a great thing. I would
    not wish the rough wind to be blowing upon me.
4th Prince: Or the dust to be rising and coming
    in among us to spoil our suits.
5th Prince: Or to be walking out on the hard
    roads, or climbing over stone walls, or tearing
    ourselves in hedges.
1st Prince: That is the reason we were sent
    here by the Queen, our Godmother, in place of
    being sent to any school. To be kept safe and
    secure.
2nd Prince: Not to be running here and there
    like our own poor five first cousins, that used to
    be slipping out and rambling in their young youth,
    till they were swallowed up by the sea.
3rd Prince: It was maybe by some big fish of
    the sea.
2nd Prince: It might be they were brought
    away by sea-robbers coming in a ship.
3rd Prince: Foolish they were and very foolish
    not to stay in peace and comfort in the house where
    they were safe.
Servant: There is no fear of ye stirring
    from
    where you are, having every whole thing ye can
    wish.
4th Prince: Here is the Guardian coming!
(They all rise.)
Guardian: (A very old man, much encumbered
    with wraps, coming slowly in.) Are you all here,
    all the five of you?
All: We are here!
Guardian: (Standing, leaning on a stick, to
    address them.) It's a pity that these being holidays,
    your teachers and tutors are far away.
Gone off afloat in a cedar boat to a College of
    Learning out in Cathay.
1st Prince: It's a pity indeed they're not here
    to-day.
Guardian: For it's likely you looked in your
    almanacs, or judged by the shape of the lessening
    moon, That your Godmother's Dowager Messengers are
    due to arrive this afternoon.
2nd Prince: We did and we think they'll be
    here very soon.
Guardian: But I know they'll be glad that each
    royal lad, put under my rule in place of a school,
    Can fashion his life without trouble or strife, and
    be shielded from care in a nice easy chair.
3rd Prince: As we always are and we always
    were.
Guardian: It is part of my knowledge that lads
    in a college, and made play one and all with a bat
    and a ball,
    Come often to harm with a knock on the arm,
    and their hands get as hard as the hands of a clown.
4th Prince: But ours are as soft as thistledown.
Guardian: And I've seen young princes not
    far from your age, go chasing beasts on a winter day,
    And carted home with a broken bone, and a
    yard of a doctor's bill to pay;
    Or going to sail in the teeth of a gale, when the
    waves were rising mountains high,
    Or fall from a height that was near out of sight,
    robbing rooks from their nest in a poplar tree.
5th Prince: (To another.) But that never
    happened to you or me.
Guardian: Or travelling far to a distant war,
    with battles and banners rilling their mind,
    And creeping back like a crumpled sack, content
    if they'd left no limbs behind.
1st Prince: But we'll have nothing to do with
    that, but stop at home with an easy mind.
Guardian: (Sitting down.) That's right. And
    now I would wish you to say over some of your
    tasks, to make ready for the Dowager Messengers,
    that they may bring back a good report to the
    Queen, your Godmother.
1st Prince: We'll do that. We would wish to be
    a credit to you, sir, and to our teachers.
Guardian: Say out now some little piece of
    Latin; that one that is my favourite.
Guardian: Say out the translation.
2nd Prince: Beneath a chilly blast the rose,
    loses its sweet, and scentless blows;
If you would have earth keep its charm, stop
    in the sunshine and keep warm.
Guardian: Very good. Now your history book;
    you were learning of late some genealogies of kings,
    might suit your Godmother.
Guardian: That will do. You have that very
    well in your memory. Now let me hear the
    grammar lesson.
Guardian: Very good, go on.
4th Prince:Guardian: It will be very useful to you to have
    that so well grafted in your mind.... What
    noise is that outside?
Servant: It is some strolling people.
1st Prince: Oh, Guardian, let them come in.
    We will do our work all the better if we have some
    amusement now.
Guardian: Maybe so. I am well pleased when
    amusements come to our door, that you can see
    without going outside the walls.
(A Jester enters in very ragged green clothes
    and broken shoes.)
But this is a very ragged looking man. Do you
    know anything about him, Gillie?
Servant: I seen him one time before.... At
    the time of the earthquake out in Foreign. A mad
    jester he was. A tramp class of a man. (To Jester.)
    Where is it you stop?
Jester: Where do I stop? Where would I be
    but everywhere, like the bad weather. I stop in
    no place, but going through the whole roads of
    the world.
Guardian: What brought you in here?
Jester: Hearing questions going on, and answers.
    I am well able to give help in that. It's
    not long since I was giving instruction to the sons
    of the King of Babylon. Here now is a question.
    How many ladders would it take to reach to the
    moon?
1st Prince: It should be a great many.
2nd Prince: I give it up.
Jester: One ...if it is long enough! Which
    is it easier to spell, ducks or geese?
3rd Prince: Ducks I suppose because it's shorter.
Jester: Not at all but geese. Do you know
    why? Because it is spelled with ees. Tell me
    now, can you spell pup backwards?
4th Prince: P-u-p....
Jester: Not at all.
4th Prince: But it is.
Jester: No, that is pup straight forwards....
    Can you run back and forwards at the same time?
4th Prince: Answer it yourself so.
Jester: You would be as wise as myself then.
    But I'll show you some tricks. Look at these
    three straws on my hand. Will I be able to blow
    two of them away, and the other to stay in its place?
5th Prince: They would all blow away.
Jester: Look now. Puff! (He has put his
    finger on the middle one.) Now is it possible?
5th Prince: It is easy when you know the way.
Jester: That is so with all knowledge. Can you
    wag one ear and keep the other quiet?
1st Prince: Nobody can do that.
Jester: (Wagging one ear with his finger.) There,
    now you see I have done it! There's more learning
    than is taught in books. Wait now and I'll give
    you out a song I'll engage you never heard. (Sings
    or repeats.)
Guardian: That's enough now. I have no
    fancy for that class of song. What other amusements
    are there?
Servant: There are the Wrenboys are come here
    at the end of their twelve days' funning.
Jester: That's it! The Wrenboys; a rambling
    troop; rambling the world like myself. I will make
    place for them. The old must give way to the
    young.
(He goes and sits down in a corner, munching
    a crust and dozing.)
Servant: Come in here let ye, and show what
    ye can do!
(Wrenboys come in playing a fife. They are
    wearing little masks and are dressed in
    ragged tunics; they carry drum and, fife,
    and stand in a line.)
All Five Wrenboys: (Together.)
The wren, the wren, the King of all birds,(Princes laugh and clap hands.)
1st Prince: That is very good.
2nd Prince: We must give them some money to
    bury the wren!
Guardian: Come on then and I will give you
    some. They will be glad of it. Play now the
    harp as you go.
(Princes go off playing, "Home, Sweet Home."
    The Wrenboys sit down.)
1st Wrenboy: It is likely we'll get good treatment.
Jester: (Coming forward.) Ye should be tired.
2nd Wrenboy: We should be, but that we have
    our feet well soled,—with the dust of the road!
3rd Wrenboy: If walking could tire us we might
    be tired. But we're as well pleased to be moving,
    where we have no house or home that you'll call a
    house or a home.
Jester: That's not so with those young princes.
    Wouldn't you be well pleased if ye could change
    places with them? (He goes back to his corner.)
4th Wrenboy: They are lovely kind young
    princes. I was near in dread they might set the
    dogs at us.
5th Wrenboy: They would do that if they
    knew the Ogre had sent us to spy out the place
    for him.
1st Wrenboy: It failed us to see what he wanted
    us to see. It is likely he will beat us, when we go
    back, with his cat-o'-nine-tails.
2nd Wrenboy: Wouldn't it be good if we could
    do as that Jester was saying and change places with
    those sons of kings! They that can lie in the
    sunshine on soft pillows.
3rd Wrenboy: They that can use food when they
    ask it, and not have to wait till they can find it,
    or steal it, or get it what way they can.
3rd Wrenboy: And not to be waiting till you'll
    hear a rabbit squealing, with the teeth of a weasel
    in his neck.
4th Wrenboy: And the weasel when you take
    it to be spitting poison at you, the same as a serpent.
5th Wrenboy: It would be a nice thing to be
    eating sweet red apples in place of the green crabs.
1st Wrenboy: Or to be maybe sucking marrow-bones.
2nd Wrenboy: It is likely they are as airy and
    as careless as the blackbird singing on the bush.
3rd Wrenboy: It's likely they go following after
    foxes on horses, having huntsmen and beagles at
    their feet.
4th Wrenboy: Or go out sporting and fowling
    with their greyhound and with their gun.
5th Wrenboy: Or matching fighting cocks.
1st Wrenboy: It's likely they lead a gentleman's
    life, card-playing and eating and drinking, and
    racing with jockeys in speckled clothes.
2nd Wrenboy: Their brooches were shining like
    green fire, the same as a marten cat's eyes. They
    have everything finer than another.
3rd Wrenboy: Their faces as clean as a linen
    sheet. Their hair as if combed with a silver comb.
4th Wrenboy: There is no one to so much as
    put a clean shirt on ourselves.
5th Wrenboy: (Rubbing his hand.) I never
    felt uneasy at the dirt that is grinted into me till
    I saw them so nice.
1st Wrenboy: That music they were playing
    put me in mind of some far thing. It is dreamed
    to me, and it is never leaving my mind, that there
    is something I remember in the long ago ...
    music in a house that was as bright as the moon,
    or as the brightest night of stars.
5th Wrenboy: Whisht! They are coming!
(The Princes come back.)
1st Prince: Here are coppers for you.
2nd Prince: And white money.
3rd Prince: And here is a piece of gold.
3rd Wrenboy: We are thankful to you! We'll
    bury the Wren in grand style now!
4th Prince: Have you far to go?
1st Wrenboy: Not very far if it was a straight
    road. But it is through the forest we go, beyond
    the lake.
2nd Wrenboy: We will hardly be there before
    the moon rises.
1st Prince: Are you afraid in the night time?
2nd Wrenboy: I am not. But I've seen a great
    deal of strange things at that time.
2nd Prince: What sort of things?
2nd Wrenboy: Fairies you'd see.
3rd Prince: Are there such things?
2nd Wrenboy: One night I was attending a
    pot-still,
    roasting oats for to make still-whiskey, and I
    seen hares coming out of the wood, by fours and by
    sixes, and they as thin as thin....
3rd Wrenboy: Hares are the biggest fairies of all.
4th Wrenboy: And down by the sea I met a
    weasel bringing up a fish in his mouth from the
    tide. And I often seen seals there, seals that are
    enchanted and look like humans, and will hold up
    a hand the same as a Christian.
5th Wrenboy: I that saw a hedgehog running
    up the side of a mountain as swift as a racehorse.
1st Wrenboy: It's the moonlight is the only time!
1st Prince: I never saw the moon but through
    a window.
1st Wrenboy: That's the time to go ramble.
    (He chants.)
    You'll see the crane in the water standing,
    And never landing a fish, for fright,
    For he can but shiver seeing in the river
    His shadow shaking in the bright moonlight.
2nd Wrenboy: Or you may listen to the plover's
    whistle,
    When high above him the wild geese screech;
    Or the mallard flying, as the night is dying,
    His neck out-stretched towards the salt sea beach.
3rd Wrenboy: When dawn discloses the oak and shows
    us
    The wide sky whitening through the scanty ash,
    High in the beeches the furry creatures,
    Squirrel and marten lightly pass.
4th Wrenboy:
    The badger scurries to find his burrow
    The rabbit hurries to hide underground.
5th Wrenboy:
    The pigeon rouses the thrush that drowses,
    The woods awaken and the world goes round!
1st Wrenboy: Come now, it's time to be taking
    the road. Thank you, noble Gentlemen! That
    you may be doing the same thing this day fifty years!
    (They go off playing fife and beating drum.)
1st Prince: I would nearly wish to be in their
    place to go through the world at large.
2nd Prince: They can go visit strange cities,
    sailing in white-sailed ships.
3rd Prince: They have no lessons to learn.
4th Prince: No hours to keep. No clocks to
    strike.
5th Prince: No Lady Messengers coming to
    show off to.
1st Prince: They should be as merry as midges.
2nd Prince: As free as the March wind.
3rd Prince: I don't know how we stopped so
    long shut up in this place.
4th Prince: I would be nearly ready to change
    places with them if such a thing were possible.
Jester: (Who has had his back to them comes
    forward; the Princes stand on his right in a half
    circle.) And why wouldn't you change?
5th Prince: It is a thing not possible.
Jester: I never could know the meaning of that
    word "impossible." Where there's a will there's
    a way.
1st Prince: It seems to me like the sound of a
    bell ringing a long way off, that I had leave at one
    time to go here and there.
Jester: If you are in earnest wanting to come to
    that freedom again you will get it.
2nd Prince: No, we would be followed and
    brought back through kindness.
Jester: If you have the strong wish to make
    the change you can make it.
1st Prince: I think I was never so much in
    earnest in all my life.
(The Jester takes his pipe and plays a note
    on it. The Wrenboys come back beating
    their drum. They stand in a half circle
    on Jester's left.)
Wrenboys: (Together.) We will change! We will!
Jester: (To Princes.)2nd Prince: They will know us, they will know us!
Jester: Change your clothes, change your clothes!
3rd Prince: They will know us every place.
Jester: Put their masks upon your face.
(Wrenboys give them the masks.)(Throws a handful of dust over all the boys.)
Dust of Mullein, work your spell;5th Prince: (To a Wrenboy.)
Give me here your coat now fast(They all rapidly change coats and caps.)
Jester: That will do, that is enough.
1st Wrenboy: But my hands are very rough.
Jester:Guardian: (Off stage.) Gillie, do as you are
    told, shut the door, it's getting cold.
1st Prince: Oh, I'm in dread! What will be
    said!
2nd Prince: I'd sooner stay in my old way!
Jester:1st Wrenboy: I'll be ashamed if I am blamed.
2nd Wrenboy: I have no grace or lovely face!
Jester: (To Princes.) Too late, too late! Go
    out the gate!
(The Princes have taken up fife and drum.
    They march out playing.)
CURTAIN
SCENE I
(A front scene. A poor hut or tent, the
    Princes are coming in slowly, some limping.
    They are in Wrenboys' clothes and the
    masks are in their hands.)
1st Prince: This should be the hut where the
    Wrenboys told us to come.
2nd Prince: It is a poor looking place.
3d Prince: It is good to have any place to sit
    down in for a while. My back is aching.
4th Prince: My feet are all scratched and torn.
    There are blisters rising.
5th Prince: I thought we would never come to
    the end of the road. The stones by the lake were
    so hard and so sharp.
1st Prince: It was a root of a tree I fell over
    that made these bruises on my knees. I was
    watching a hawk that was still and quiet up in the
    air, and when it made a swoop all of a sudden
    I stumbled and fell.
2nd Prince: It was in slipping where the rocks
    are high I gave this twist to my arm. I can hardly
    move it.
3rd Prince: But wasn't the sight of the sunset
    splendid over the lake? And the hills so blue!
4th Prince: I like the tall trees best. I tried
    to climb up one of them, but it was so smooth I
    did but slip and fall.
1st Prince: I would wish to walk as far as the
    hills, and to have a view of the ocean that is beyond.
5th Prince: I am hungry. I wonder where we
    will get our supper.
4th Prince: Not in this place, anyway, it must
    be making ready in some big guesthouse.
3rd, Prince: What will they give us, I wonder?
2nd Prince: I wish we had in our hand what
    they have ready for us at home.
1st Prince: What use would it be to us? Do
    you remember what we asked to be given, some
    jellies and a few grapes? It is not that much
    would satisfy me now.
2nd Prince: Indeed it would not. I never felt
    so sharp a hunger in my longest memory.
3rd Prince: It is roasted meat I would wish for.
4th Prince: There were pigeons in the tall
    trees. They will maybe give us a pigeon pie.
5th Prince: I would be content with a plate of
    minced turkey with poached eggs.
1st Prince: I would sooner have a roasted
    chicken, with bread sauce.
2nd Prince: Be quiet.... I think I hear someone
    coming! (Looks out.)
3rd Prince: (Looking out.) I see him. He is not
    a right man ...he is very strange looking....
4th Prince: (Looking out.) Oh! It is an Ogre!
    A Grugach!
(All shrink back and hurriedly put on masks.)
Ogre: (Coming in: he wears a frightful mask, has
    red hair and a cloak of rough skins and carries a
    whip with many lashes.) What makes ye late to-night,
    ye young schemers? What was it delayed
    ye? Lagging along the road.
1st Prince: We came as fast as we could. It
    was getting dusk in the wood.
Ogre: Dusk, good morrow to you! I'll dusk
    ye! I had a mind to go after ye and to change
    myself into the form of a wolf, and catch a hold of
    ye with my long sharp teeth!
2nd Prince: We did not know there was any
    great hurry.
Ogre: There is always hurry when you are on
    my messages. What did I bring you away from
    your own house for and put ye on the shaughraun
    for and keep ye wandering, if it was not to be
    serviceable and helpful to myself. Show me now
    what ye have in your pocket or your bag.
3rd Prince: This is all we got in the bag.
    (Holds
    it out.) It is but very little.
Ogre: (Turning it out and counting it.)
    Coppers!
    Silver! What is this? A piece of gold! Is that
    what ye call little? What notions ye have! Take
    care did ye keep any of it back! If ye did I'll
    skin ye with the lash of my cat-o'-nine-tails.
    (Shakes it.)
4th Prince: That is all we got. It should maybe
    pay for our supper in some place.
Ogre: What supper? To go buy supper with
    my money! It will go to add to my store of
    treasure in the cave that is under ground.
5th Prince: We are hungry, very hungry. When
    will the supper be ready?
Ogre: It will be ready whenever ye will ready
    it for yourselves. Ye should know that by this time.
1st Prince: We would make it ready if we were
    acquainted with the way.
Ogre: It is gone cracked ye are? What is it
    ye are thinking to get for your supper? What
    ailed ye that ye didn't climb a tree and suck a few
    pigeon's eggs?
2nd Prince: We were thinking of a pigeon pie.
Ogre: A what!!!
2nd Prince: A pigeon pie.
Ogre: Hurry on then making your pigeon pie!
    There are pigeons enough there in the corner, that
    a hawk that is my carrier brought me in a while
    ago. And there's a pike that was in the lake these
    hundred years, an otter is after leaving at my door.
3rd Prince: (Taking a pigeon.) I don't
    think
    this is a right pigeon.
4th Prince: Pigeons in a pie are not the pigeons
    that have feathers.
5th Prince: (To Ogre.) Please, sir, where
    can
    we find pigeons without feathers, that are trussed
    on a silver skewer?
Ogre: Aye? What's that?
1st Prince: Never mind. You'll anger him.
    Maybe we can pull the feathers off these. I have
    read of plucking a pigeon in our books. (They
    begin to pluck.)
2nd Prince: It is very hard work.
3rd Prince: I never knew feathers could stick
    in so hard.
4th Prince: The more we pull out the more
    there would seem to be left.
5th Prince: It will be a feather pie we will be
    getting in the end.
1st Prince: (Throwing it down.) It is no
    use.
    We might work at it to-day and to-morrow and be
    no nearer to a finish.
2nd Prince: The pike might be better.
3rd Prince: It has no feathers anyway.
4th Prince: (Touching it.) It is raw and bleeding!
5th Prince: We might roast it.
1st Prince: The fire is black out.
2nd Prince: I wonder what way can we kindle it?
3rd Prince: Better ask him. (Points to Ogre.)
2nd Prince: Please, sir, what way can we kindle
    the fire?
Ogre: What!
4th Prince: We would wish to light the fire.
Ogre: Well, do so.
5th Prince: If we had a box of matches....
Ogre: Matches! What are you talking about?
    Matches won't be invented for the next seven
    hundred years.
1st Prince: What can we do then, we are starving
    with hunger.
Ogre: Let ye blow a breath upon a coal under
    the ashes, and bring in small sticks from the wood.
2nd Prince: (Blowing.) The ashes are choking me.
Ogre: Very good. Then you'll put no delay
    on me, waiting till you'll cook your supper.
3rd Prince: Where can we get it then?
Ogre: You'll go without it, as you were too
    helpless to catch it, or to dress it, there's no one
    will force you to eat it.
4th Prince: If there is nothing for us to eat we
    had best pass the time in sleep.
5th Prince: I am all covered with ashes and
    dirt. (To Ogre.) Please, where can I find a towel
    and a piece of soap?
Ogre: Soap! Is it bewitched ye are or demented
    in the head? Did ever anyone hear of
    soap unless of a Saturday night? Letting on to be
    as dainty and as useless as those young princes
    beyond, that are kept closed up in a tower of glass.
    Come on now. If there is no food that suits you,
    leave it. It is time for us to get to work.
1st Prince: But it is bed-time.
Ogre: Your bed-time is the time when I have
    no more use for you. Don't you know I have
    made a plan? What was it I sent you for, spying
    out that place of the young princes? Wasn't it
    to see where is it that treasure is kept, the
    golden-handled
    sword of Justice that is used by the
    Guardian when he turns Judge.
2nd Prince: That is kept in the Courthouse.
Ogre: That's right ...in what part of it?
3rd Prince: What do you want it for?
Ogre: I have it in my mind this long time to
    get and to keep it in my cave under ground, along
    with the rest of my treasures that are in charge of
    my two enchanted cats. I have had near enough
    of grubbing for gold with a pick in the clefts and
    crannies of the earth. It is time for me to find
    some rest, and get into my hand what is ready
    worked and smelted and purified. We are going
    to that Courthouse to-night. If we cannot get in
    at the door, I will put ye in at the window and ye
    can open the door to myself. I will find out
    where the sword is, and away with us, and it in
    my hand.
4th Prince: But that would be stealing.
Ogre: What else would it be?
4th Prince: But that is wrong. It is against the law.
Ogre: The law! That is the Judge's trade.
    Breaking it is mine.
5th Prince: Ask him for it and maybe he will
    give it to you, he is so kind.
Ogre: I'll take no charity! What I get I'll
    earn by taking it. I would feel no pleasure it being
    given to me, any more than a huntsman would
    take pleasure being made a present of a dead fox,
    in place of getting a run across country after it.
    Come on now! We'll have the moon wasted.
    We'll hardly get there before the dawn of day.
1st Prince: Whatever time you get there the
    Guardian will be awake. There is a cock of Denmark
    perched on the curtain rod of his bed,
    specially to waken him if there is any stir.
Ogre: There is, is there? What a fool you
    think me to be. Do you see that pot?
2nd Prince: We do see it.
Ogre: Look what there is in it.
3rd Prince: Nothing but a few bare bones.
Ogre: Well, that is all that is left of the
    Judge's
    cock of Denmark, that was brought to me awhile
    ago by a fox that is my messenger, and that I have
    boiled and ate and devoured.
All the Princes: O! O! O!
Ogre: (Cracking his whip.) He was boiled
    in
    the little pot. Come on now and lead the way, or
    I give you my word it is in the big pot your own
    bones will be making broth for my breakfast in the
    morning! (Cracks whip.) Now, right about face!
    Quick march!
CURTAIN
(The Winter Garden, evening. The Servant
    settling benches and a table.)
Guardian: (Coming in.) Are the Dowager
    Messengers come? They are late.
Servant: They are come. They are at the
    looking-glasses settling themselves.
Guardian: As soon as they are ready you will
    call in the Princes for their examination before
    them, and their tasks.
Servant: I will.
Guardian: The Messengers will have a good
    report to bring back of them. They have come
    to be good scholars, in poetry, in music, in languages,
    in history, in numbers and all sorts. The
    old Queen-Godmother will be well satisfied with
    their report.
Servant: She might and she might not.
Guardian: They would be hard to please if they
    are not well pleased with the lads, as to learning
    and as to manners and behaviour.
Servant: Maybe so. Maybe so. There are
    strange things in the world.
Guardian: You're in bad humour, my poor
    Gillie. Have you been quarrelling with the cook,
    or did you get up on the wrong side of your
    bed?
Servant: There is times when it is hard not to
    be in a bad humour.
Guardian: What are you grumbling and hinting at?
Servant: There's times when it's hard to believe
    that witchcraft is gone out of the world.
Guardian: That is a thing that has been done
    away with in this Island through my government,
    and through enlightenment and through learning.
Servant: Maybe so. Maybe so.
Guardian: I suppose a three-legged chicken has
    come out of the shell, or a magpie has come before
    you in your path? Or maybe some token in the
    stars?
Servant: It would take more than that to put
    me astray.
Guardian: Whatever it is you had best tell it out.
Servant: To see lads of princes, sons of kings,
    and the makings of kings, that were mannerly and
    well behaved and as civil as a child a few hours
    ago, to be sitting in a corner at one time as if in
    dread of the light, and tricking and fooling and
    grabbing at other times.
Guardian: Oh, is that all! The poor lads.
    They're out of their habits because of their Godmother's
    Messengers coming. They are making
    merry and funning, thinking there might be
    messages for them or presents.
Servant: Funning is natural. But blowing their
    nose with their fingers is not natural.
Guardian: High spirits. Just to torment you
    in their joy.
Servant: To get a bit of chalk, and to make
    marks in the Hall of dancing, and to go playing
    hop-scotch.
Guardian: High spirits, high spirits! I never
    saw boys better behaved or more gentle or with
    more sweetness of speech. I am thinking there is
    not one among them but will earn the name of
    Honey-mouth.
Servant: Have it your own way. But is it a
    natural thing, I am asking, for the finger nails to
    make great growth in one day?
Guardian: Stop, stop, be quiet. Here now are
    the Dowager Messengers. (Two old ladies in
    travelling costume appear; bowing low to them.)
 
    You are welcome for the sake of her that sent you,
    and for your own sakes.
1st Dowager Messenger: We are come from the
    Court of the Godmother Queen, for news of the
    Princes now in your charge;
She hopes they have manners, are minded well,
    and never let run at large;
For she never has yet got over the fret, of their
    five little cousins were swept away.
Guardian: Let your mind be at ease, for you'll
    be well pleased with the youngsters you're going
    to see to-day.
They're learning the laws to speak and to pause—
    may be orators then, or Parliament men.
2nd Dowager Messenger: Are they shielded from
    harm?
Guardian:
In my sheltering arm;
Do their work and their play in a mannerly waytheir feet.
2nd Dowager Messenger: And next to good
    manners and next to good looks ...
Guardian:
    I know what you'll say ...she asks news of the cooks;
    I'm with her in putting them equal to books;
    There's some rule by coaxing and some rule by beating,
    But my principle is, tempt them on with good eating.
    When everything's said, isn't Sparta as dead
    As many a place never heard of black bread?
    And as to a lad who a tartlet refuses,—
    If Cato stewed parsnips he hated the Muses!
1st Dowager Messenger: And at meals are they
    taught to behave as they ought?
Guardian:
    You'll be well satisfied and the Queen will have pride,
    You will see every Prince use a fork with his mince,
    And eating his peas like Alcibiades,
    Who would sooner go mute than play on the flute
    Lest it made him grimace and contorted his face.
1st Dowager Messenger: Oh, all that you say
    delights us to-day!
We'll have good news to bring of these sons of
    a king.
Servant: Here they are now coming.
(Wrenboys in Princes' clothes come in awkwardly.)
Guardian:
    Now put out a chair.
    Where these ladies may hear.
    Come over, my boys ...(Now what is that noise?)
    Come here, take your places, and show us your
    faces,
    And say out your task as these ladies will ask.
    I would wish them to know how you say Parlez-vous,
    And I'd like you to speak in original Greek
    And make numeration, and add up valuation;
    But to lead you with ease and on by degrees
    In case you are shy in the visitors' eye
    I will let you recite, as you easily might,
    The kings of that Island that no longer are silent
    But ask recognition and to take a position—
    (Though if stories are true they ran about blue,
    While we in Hy-Brasil wore our silks to a frazzle—)
    So the rhymes you may say that I heard you to-day;
    And the opening will fall on the youngest of all.
Servant: Let you stand up now and do as you
    are bid. (Touches 5th Wrenboy.)
Guardian: Go on, my child, say out your lesson.
    William the First as the Conqueror known....
    (Boy puts finger in mouth and hangs his head.)
    Ah, he is shy. Don't be affrighted, go on now;
    don't you remember it?
5th Wrenboy: I do not.
Guardian: Try it again now. You said it off
    quite well this morning.
5th Wrenboy: It fails me.
Guardian: Now I will give you a start: "William
    the First as the Conqueror known,
    At the Battle of Hastings ascended the throne
    ..." Say that now.
5th Wrenboy: (Nudging 4th.) Let you word it.
4th Wrenboy: (To Guardian.) Let you word it
    again, sir.
Guardian: "William the First as the Conqueror
    known."
4th Wrenboy: William the First as the congereel
    known....
Guardian: What is that? You would not do
    it to vex me! Gillie is maybe right. There is
    something strange.... (To another.) You may
    try now. Go on to the next verse. "William
    called Rufus from having red hair." ...(He does
    not answer.) Say it anyone who knows....
3rd Wrenboy: (Putting up his hand.) I know
    a man that has red hair!
All the Wrenboys: (Cheerfully) So do I! So
    do I!
2nd Wrenboy: He lives in the wood beyond!
    He is no way good! He is an Ogre, a Grugach....
1st Wrenboy: He can turn himself into the shape
    of a beast, or he can change his face at any time;
    sometimes he'll be that wicked you would think
    he was a wolf; he would skin you with his
    cat-o'-nine-tails!
Guardian: What gibberish are you talking?
2nd Wrenboy: He goes working underground to
    get gold!
3rd Wrenboy: It is minded by enchanted cats!
4th Wrenboy: They would tear in bits anyone
    that would find it!
Guardian: Now take care, lads, this is carrying
    a joke too far. I was wrong to begin with that
    silly history. Tell me out now the parts of speech.
5th Wrenboy: An owl's the name of anything....
Guardian: A noun.
5th Wrenboy: An owl.
Guardian: Don't pretend you don't know it.
5th Wrenboy: I do know it. I know an owl
    that sits in the cleft of the hollow sycamore and
    eats its fill of mice, till it can hardly put a stir
    out of itself.
Guardian: I do wish you would stop talking
    nonsense.
1st Wrenboy: It is not, but sense. It devoured
    ere yesterday a whole fleet of young rats.
2nd Wrenboy: It's as wise as King Solomon.
Guardian: Gillie was right. There is surely
    something gone wrong in their heads.
2nd Wrenboy: Go out yourself and you'll see are
    we wrong in the head! Inside in the old sycamore
    he is sitting through the daylight.
1st Dowager Messenger: There is something gone
    wrong in somebody's head.
2nd Dowager Messenger: (Tapping her
    forehead.)
    The poor Guardian; he is too long past his youth.
    It is well we came to look how things were going
    before it is too late.
1st Dowager Messenger: Ask them to say something
    they do know.
Guardian: Here, you're good at arithmetic, say
    now your numbers.
1st Wrenboy: Twelve coppers make a shilling.
    I never handled more than that.
Guardian: (Angrily.) Well, do as the lady
    said,
    tell us something you do know.
2nd Wrenboy: (Standing up, excited.) I
    know
    the way to make bird-lime, steeping willow rods in
    the stream....
3rd Wrenboy: I know how to use my fists; I
    knocked a tinker bigger than myself.
4th Wrenboy: I am the best at wrestling. I
    knocked himself. (Pointing at 3rd.)
5th Wrenboy: I that can skin a fawn after
    catching him running!
2nd Dowager Messenger. Where now did you get
    that learning?
5th Wrenboy: Here and there, rambling the
    woods, sleeping out at night. I would never
    starve in any place where grass grows!
1st Dowager Messenger: This is worse than
    neglect. The poor old Guardian the Queen put
    her trust in must be in his dotage.
Guardian: (Hastily.) Here, there is at least
    one
    thing you will not fail in. Take the harp (hands
    it to the 1st Wrenboy) and draw out of it sweet
    sounds, (To Dowager Messengers.) He can play
    a tune so sweet it has been known to send all the
    hearers into a sound sleep. Here now, touch the
    strings with all your skill.
(1st Wrenboy bangs harp, making a crash.)
2nd Dowager Messenger: (With hands to
    ears.)
    Mercy! Our poor ears!
1st Dowager Messenger: That is the poorest
    music we have ever heard.
2nd Dowager Messenger: That sound would send
    no one into their sleep. It would be more likely
    to send them into Bedlam.
1st Dowager Messenger: Whatever they knew
    last year, they have forgotten it all now.
Guardian: (Weeping into his handkerchief.)
    I
    don't know what has come upon them! At noon
    they were the most charming lads in the whole
    world. Their memory seems to have left
    them!
2nd Dowager Messenger: It is as if another
    memory had come to them. They did not learn
    those wild tricks shut up in the garden.
Servant: (To Boys.) Can't ye behave nice and
    not ugly? (To Guardian.) You would not believe
    me a while ago. I said and I say still there is
    enchantment on them, and spells.
Guardian: Oh, I would be sorry to think such
    a thing. But they never went on this way in their
    greenest youth.
2nd Dowager Messenger: If there is a spell upon
    them what way can it be taken off?
Servant: It is what I always heard, that to make
    a rod of iron red in the fire, and to burn the enchantment
    out of them is the only way.
Guardian: Oh, boys, do you hear that! You
    would not like to be burned with a red hot rod!
    Say out now what at all is the matter with you?
    What is it you feel within you that is putting you
    from your gentle ways?
1st Wrenboy: The thing that I feel in me is
    hunger. The thing I would wish to feel inside me
    is a good fistful of food.
1st Dowager Messenger: They have been starved
    and stinted! It would kill their Godmother on
    the moment if she was aware of that!
Guardian: It is a part of their playgame. They
    have everything they ask.
2nd Wrenboy: I did not eat a farthing's worth
    since yesterday.
3rd Wrenboy: My teeth are rusty with the want
    of food!
4th Wrenboy: I want some dinner!
5th Wrenboy: We want something to eat!
Guardian: Give them whatever you have ready
    for them, Gillie.
Servant: (Giving the plates.) Here is the supper
    ye gave orders for this morning.
1st Wrenboy: What is it at all?
Servant: It is your choice thing. Jellies and
    grapes from Spain.
2nd Wrenboy: (Pushing away grapes) Berries!
    I thought to get better than berries from the bush.
3rd Wrenboy: There's not much satisfaction in
    berries!
4th Wrenboy: If it was a pig's foot now; or as
    much as a potato with a bit of dripping.
5th Wrenboy: (Looking at jelly.) What now is
    this? It has like the appearance of frog spawn.
1st Wrenboy; Or the leavings of a fallen star.
5th Wrenboy: Shivering it is and shaking. It's
    not natural! (Drops his plate.)
4th Wrenboy: There is nothing here to satisfy
    our need.
2nd. Dowager Messenger: I am nearly sorry for
    them, poor youngsters. When they were but little
    toddlers they never behaved like that at home.
3rd Wrenboy: It's the starvingest place ever I
    was in!
1st Dowager Messenger: There must be something
    in what they say. They would not ask for
    food if they were not in need of it. And the
    Guardian making so much talk about his table and
    his cooks. We cannot go home and report that
    they have no learning and no food.
2nd Dowager Messenger: As to learning I don't
    mind. But as to food, I would not wish to leave
    them without it for the night. They might be as
    small as cats in the morning.
Guardian: They are dreaming when they say
    they are in want of food.
1st Dowager Messenger: It is a dream that will
    waken up their Godmother.
Servant: Look, ma'am, at the table behind you,
    and you will see is this a scarce house! That is
    what is set out for yourselves, ma'am, lobsters
    from Aughanish! A fat turkey from the barley
    gardens! A spiced and larded sucking pig! Cakes
    and sweets and all sorts! It is not the want of
    provision was ever brought against us up to this!
2nd Dowager Messenger: If all this is for us, we
    would sooner give it up to those poor children.
(To Wrenboys.) Here, my dears, we will not eat
    while you are in want of food. We will give it all
    to you.
1st Wrenboy: Is it that we can have what is on
    that table?
2nd Dowager Messenger: You may, and welcome.
1st Wrenboy: (With a shout.) Do you hear
    that news! Come on now. Take your chance!
    I'll have the first start! Skib scab! Hip, hip,
    hooray!
(They rush at table and upset it, flinging
    themselves on the food)
CURTAIN
The Hall of Justice. It is nearly dawn. The last
    of the Princes is getting in through the window.
    They are wearing their masks.
Ogre: (Outside door to left.) Open now the door
    for myself.
1st Prince: No, we will get rid of him now. Let
    the Grugach stay outside.
2nd Prince: That will be best. He cannot
    break the bars of this door, or get round over the
    high wall to the door on the other side.
3rd Prince: I am sore with the blows he put on
    us, driving us before him through the wood.
4th Prince: Let us call to the Guardian, and let
    him deal with him. He can bring his foot soldiers
    and his guns.
5th Prince: A villain that Ogre is and a thief,
    wanting to steal away the golden-handled sword.
    But we would not tell him where it was, and he
    never will find it under the step of the Judge's
    chair. (Lifts top of step, takes out sword and puts it
    back again.)
Ogre: (Outside.) Are ye going to open the door?
1st Prince: It is a great thing to have that
    strong door between us.
2nd Prince: Take care would he break it in.
3rd Prince: No fear. It would make too much
    noise. It would bring every person in the house
    running.
4th Prince: Let us go quick and call the
    Guardian.
5th Prince: What will he say seeing us in
    these
    clothes? He will be vexed with us.
1st Prince: It was folly of us running away.
    But he will forgive us, knowing it will teach us
    better sense.
2nd Prince: Come to him then, I don't mind
    what he will do to us so long as we are safe from
    the terrible Grugach of an Ogre. (All go to right
    door, it opens and Ogre bursts in.)
Ogre: Ye thought to deceive me, did ye? Ye
    thought to bar me out and to keep me out? And
    I after minding you and caring you these seven
    years!
3rd Prince: What way did you get in?
Ogre: It's easy for me to get in any place. If
    I had a mind I could turn into a house fly and come
    through the lockhole of the door. It's much if I
    don't change the whole lot of ye into small birds,
    and myself to a hawk going through you! Or, into
    frightened mice, and I myself into a starving cat!
    It's much if I don't skin you with this whip, and
    grind your bones as fine as rape seed!
4th Prince: I will call for help! (Tries to shout.)
Ogre: (Putting hand over his mouth and lifting
    whip.) Shout now and welcome, and it is bare
    bones will be left of you! If it wasn't that I need
    you to search out the golden-handled sword for me
    I'd throttle the whole of ye as easy as I'd squeeze
    an egg! Come on now! Show me where the
    treasure is hid.
5th Prince: How would we know?
Ogre: Didn't I send ye spying it out, and if it
    fails ye to make it out, I'll boil and bake you!
1st Prince: (Looking about and pointing to end
    of room.) It might be there.
Ogre: What way would it be on the bare floor?
    Search it out.
2nd Prince: (Looking under a bench.) It might
    be here.
Ogre: It is not there.
3rd Prince: (Looking up chimney?) This would
    be a good hiding-place.
Ogre: (Looks up.) There is nothing in it, only
    an old nest of a jackdaw,—a bundle of bare twigs.
    Trying to deceive me you are and to lead me astray.
4th Prince: It might be on the shelf.
Ogre: Stop your chat unless you have something
    worth saying.
5th Prince: (Sitting down on step under which
    sword is hidden.) Are you certain there is any
    treasure at all?
Ogre: You are humbugging and making a fool
    of me! (Lashes whip and seizes him.) Get up
    now out of that! (Drags him up and taps board.)
    There is a hollow sort of a sound.... That is
    a sort of place where a treasure might be hid.
    (Drags up board.) I see something shining. (Pulls
    out sword.) Oh, it is a lovely sword! And the
    handle of pure gold. The best I ever seen!
1st Prince: (To the others.) I'll make a run now
    and call out and awaken all in the house! (Is going
    towards door.)
Ogre: (Seizing him.) You'd make your escape
    would you?
1st Prince: (Calling out.) Ring the big bell,
    ring the bell! I forgot it till now.
(They pull a bell-rope and bell is beard clanging.)
Ogre: (Rushing at them as they ring it.) I'll
    stop
    that!
(Voices are heard, at door to right. Ogre rushes to other door.)
2nd Prince: I'll get the sword from him.
    (Snatches
    it away as Ogre is rushing at him. Servant and
    Guardian come in.)
Guardian: What is going on! (Blows a
    whistle.)
    Here, soldiers of the guard!
(Feet are heard marching and bugle blowing at
    left door. Ogre rapidly slips off his mask,
    and appears as a harmless old man.)
Guardian: Thieves! Robbers! Burglars!
    Here, soldiers, surround the place; who are these
    ruffians? Murder! Robbery! Fire!
(Two soldiers come in.)
Servant: They are the very same youngsters
    were at our door this morning, doing their play;
    those Wrenboys!
Guardian: They are thieves. There is one of
    them bringing away my gold-handled sword. (He
    and Servant seize sword.)
Ogre: (Coming forward and bowing low.) It
    is time for you to come, your honour my lordship!
    I am proud to see you coming! It was I myself
    that rang the bell and that called and awakened
    you, where I would not like to see the place robbed
    and left bare by these scum of the world!
All the Princes: Oh! Oh! Oh!
Guardian: What have you to do with it?
    Where do you come from?
Ogre: An honest poor man I am....
Servant: You have a queer wild sort of a
    dress.
Ogre: Making a living I do be, dressing up as a
    hobgoblin and a bogey man to get an odd copper
    from a mother here and there, would be wishful to
    frighten a stubborn child from bawling or from
    tricks. Passing the door I was, and hearing a noise
    I looked in, and these young villains were after
    rising a board and taking out that sword you seen
    in their hands. It is then that I made a clamour
    with the bell.
(Princes laugh.)
Guardian: Who are they at all?
Ogre: It is I myself say it; they are the terror
    of the whole district.
1st Prince: You may save your breath and stop
    that talk. This gentleman knows us well. He
    knows us and will recognise us.
Guardian: I do recognise you. I saw you but
    yesterday.
2nd Prince: There now, what do you say?
Guardian: You are those vagabond Wrenboys
    that came tricking and begging to my gate.
Princes: Oh! Oh! Oh!
Ogre: That's it! Spying round they were!
    Thinking to do a robbery! Robbery they're after
    doing!
3rd Prince: We were doing no such thing!
Guardian: You were! I stopped you making
    off with my sword of Justice.
Ogre: If it wasn't for me hindering them they
    would have it swept.
Guardian: That was very honest of you.
4th Prince: (Rushing at Ogre.) It is you
    that
    are a rogue and a thief!
Other Princes: Throw him down while we have
    the chance. (They surround him.)
Guardian: Silence! Don't make that disturbance!
    I felt a suspicion yesterday the first
    time I saw your faces there was villainy hidden
    beneath the dust that was on your cheeks.
4th Prince: Listen to us, listen!
Guardian: And whatever I thought then, you
    are seventeen times more wicked looking now!
    And the very scum of the roads!
5th Prince: Oh, have you forgotten your
    nurslings!
Guardian: It is well you reminded me of them.
    (To Servant.) Go now and bring the young Princes
    here till they will see justice done! They are
    maybe gone a bit wild and foolish since yesterday,
    put out by those Dowager Messengers. But whatever
    they were at their worst, they are King George
    compared with these!
1st Prince: You must listen!
Guardian: Must! What is that language!
    That is a word was never said to me since I was
    made the Queen's Chamberlain. Here! Put a
    gag upon their mouths! (Soldiers do so, tying a
    handkerchief on mouth of each.) Tie their hands
    behind them with ropes. (This is done.)
    Rapscallions!
    Do they think to terrify and command me!
    I that am not only Governor of the Island but am
    Supreme Judge whenever I come into this Court.
Ogre: That is very good and very right! Keep
    the gag in their mouth! You wouldn't like to be
    listening to the things they were saying a while
    ago! They were giving out great impudence and
    very disrespectful talk!
Guardian: Give me here my Judge's wig and
    my gown! (Puts them on.) Where now are the
    young Princes?
Servant: They are coming now.
Guardian: It will be a great help in their
    education
    seeing justice done by me, as straight as was
    ever done by Aristides. Give me here that book of
    punishments and rewards. I'll see what is bad
    enough for these lads! (He consults book.)
Servant: Here now are the Princes.
(Wrenboys come in wearing Princes' clothes)
1st Wrenboy: (To another) Do you see who it
    is that is in it?
2nd Wrenboy: It is the young Princes in our
    clothes!
3rd Wrenboy: What in the world wide brought
    them here? Believe me it was through some
    villainy of the Grugach.
4th Wrenboy: What at all has happened?
5th Wrenboy: Go ask them what it was brought
    them, or what they came doing.
1st Wrenboy: (To Princes) What is it brought
    you here so soon?
(Princes shake their heads)
2nd Wrenboy: (Coming back) There is a gag
    on their mouths!
3rd Wrenboy: (Going and looking) Their hands
    are tied with a rope.
4th Wrenboy: They had not the wit to stand
    against the Grugach; it is not long till they were
    brought to trouble.
5th Wrenboy: It was seventeen times worse
    for them to be under him than for ourselves that
    was used to him, and to his cruelty and his ways.
1st Wrenboy: It was bad enough for ourselves.
    We were not built for roguery.
(The Dowager Messengers rushing in.)
Dowager Messengers: (Together.) What is going
    on? What has happened?
Guardian: What you see before you has happened.
    Those young thieves came to try and to
    rob the house. They were found by myself in the
    very act of bringing away my golden-handled
    sword! They were stopped by this honest man.
    (Points to Ogre.)
1st Dowager Messenger: There would seem to be
    a great deal of wickedness around this place!
Guardian: I'll put a stop to it! I'll use my
    rights as Judge! To have that sort of villainy
    running through the Island, it would come through
    walls of glass or of marble, and lead away the best.
2nd Dowager Messenger: There must be something
    gone wrong in the stars, our own young
    princes having gone wild out of measure, and these
    young vagabonds doing no less than house-breaking!
    It is hard to live!
Ogre: Indeed, ma'am, it would be a great blessing
    to the world if all the boys in it could be born
    grown up.
Guardian: (Sighing.) I, myself, am beginning
    to have that same opinion.
1st Dowager Messenger: And so am I myself.
    Young men have strength and beauty, and old
    men have knowledge and wisdom, but as to boys!
    After what we saw a while ago in the supper
    room!
Servant: The Court is about to sit! Take your
    places!
(Wrenboys make for the dock and Princes the
    jury-box.)
Guardian: What do you mean, prisoners, going
    up there, that is the place for honourable men!
    For a jury! It is here in the criminals' dock your
    place is.
Servant: (To Wrenboys.) Oh, that is the wrong
    place you're in. That is for the wicked and the
    poor that are brought to be tried and condemned.
1st Wrenboy: It is a place the like of that I was
    put one time I was charged before a magistrate
    for snaring rabbits.
Servant: Silence in the Court. The Judge is
    about to speak.
Guardian: (Reading out of book.)
    It's laid down in a clause of the Cretian laws,
    That were put through a filter by Solon,
    That for theft the first time, though a capital crime
    A criminal may keep his poll on.
    Though (consults another book) some jurists believe
    That a wretch who can thieve,
    Has earned a full stop, not a colon.
Ogre: That was said by a better than Solon.
Guardian:
And the book says in sum, to cut off the left thumb,
    May be penalty enough for a warning;
    Though (looks at another book) the Commentors say
    That one let off that way
    Will be thieving again before morning.
Ogre: So he will, and the jury suborning.
Guardian:
    For the second offence, as the crime's more immense,
    Take the thumb off the right hand instead;
    And the third time he'll steal, without any appeal,
    The hangman's to whip off his head.
Ogre: Very right to do so, for a thief as we
    know,
    Isn't likely to steal when he's dead.
2nd Dowager Messenger:
    You won't order the worst, as this crime is the first,
    It's a pity if they have to swing.
Guardian:
In the Commentors' sense, a primal offence
    Is as much an impossible thing
    As a stream without source, a blow struck without
    force,
    Or leaves without roots in the spring.
Ogre: Or a catapult wanting a sling.
Guardian:
    But although this case is proved on its face
    To be what is called a priori
    I cannot refuse to consider the views
    Of the amiable lady before me. (Bows to 2nd
    Dowager Messenger.)
    In compliance to her I am ready to err
    On the side that she leans to, of mercy,
    For she has a kind tongue, and the prisoners are
    young;
    But that they may not live to curse me,
    I give out my decree, the left thumb shall be
    Kept in Court till the next time they'll come.
    And now if you please let whoever agrees
    With my pledge turn down his own thumb.
1st Dowager Messenger: It is very just and right.
    (Turns down hers.)
Ogre: You're letting them off too easy. They're
    a bad example to the world. But to take the
    thumb off them is better than nothing! (Turns
    down both his thumbs.)
Guardian: (To Wrenboys.) Well, my dear pupils,
    I don't see you turn down your thumbs.
1st Wrenboy: We cannot do it. (They cover
    their faces with their hands.)
Ogre: Get on so. I never saw the work I'd
    sooner do than checking youngsters!
Guardian: Where is the Executioner?
Servant: I sent seeking him a while ago, thinking
    he might be needed.
Guardian: Bring him in.
Servant: He is not in it. There was so little
    business for him this long time under your own
    peaceable rule, that he is after leaving us, and
    taking a job in a slaughter house out in foreign.
2nd Dowager Messenger: Maybe that is a token
    we should let them off.
Ogre: (Briskly.) I am willing to be useful; give
    me here a knife or a hatchet!
Servant: (To Ogre.) You need not be pushing
    yourself forward. (To Guardian.) There is a
    stranger of an Executioner chanced to be passing
    the road, just as I sent out, and he looking for
    work. He said he would do the job for a four-penny
    bit and his dinner, that he is sitting down
    to now.
Servant: (At door.) Here he is now.
(Jester comes in, disguised as Executioner, a
    long cloak with hood over his head.)
Guardian: Here is the sword (hands it to him
    and reads), "In case of the first act of theft the
    left thumb is to be struck off." There are the
    criminals before you. That is what you have to do.
Jester: (Taking the sword.) Stretch out your
    hands! There is hurry on me. I was sitting at
    the dinner I engaged for. I was called away from
    the first mouthful, and I would wish to go back
    to the second mouthful that is getting cold.
Guardian: (Relenting.) Maybe now the fright
    would be enough to keep them from crimes from
    this out. They are but young.
Jester: (To Princes.) Don't be keeping me
    waiting! Put out now your hands. (They shake
    their heads.)
Servant: They cannot do that, being bound.
Jester: If you will not stretch out your hands
    when I ask you, I will strike off your heads without
    asking! (Flourishes sword.)
Guardian: (Standing up.) I did not empower
    you to go so far as that! It is without my
    authority!
Jester: You have given over the power of the
    law to the power of the sword. It must take its way!
Guardian: I will not give in to that! I have
    all authority here!
Jester: If you grow wicked with the Judge's
    wig on your head, so do I with this sword in my
    hand! You called me in to do a certain business
    and I am going to do it! I am not going to get a
    bad name put on me for breach of contract! If
    a labourer is given piece work cutting thistles with
    a hook he is given leave to do it, or a rat catcher
    doing away with vermin in the same way! He
    is not bid after his trouble to let them go loose out
    of his bag! And why would an Executioner that
    is higher again in the profession be checked. Isn't
    my pride in my work the same as theirs? And
    along with that, let me tell you I belong to a
    Trades Union!
(Guardian moans and covers his face.)
(To the Princes.) Kneel down now! Where you
    kept me so long waiting and that the Judge attempted
    to interfere with me, I have my mind
    made up to make an end of you! (Holds up sword.)
1st Wrenboy: (Rushing forward and putting his
    arms about Prince.) You must not touch him!
    These lads never did any harm!
2nd Wrenboy: (Protecting a Prince.) It is we
    ourselves are to be punished if anyone must be
    punished.
3d Wrenboy: They are innocent whoever is to
    blame.
Jester: Take their place so! Someone must be
    put an end to.
(All the Wrenboys kneel.)
1st Wrenboy: Here we are so. We changed
    places with them for our own pleasure, thinking
    to lead a prince's life, and if there is anyone must
    suffer by reason of that change let it be ourselves.
Jester: I'll take off their gags so and let them free.
(He cuts cord of gags and hands, then throws
    some dust over all boys as before, saying):
(The Princes throw off their masks.)
1st Prince: It is all a mistake! Oh, Guardian,
    don't you know now that we are your murslings
    and your wards! Look at the royal mark upon
    our arm, that we brought with us into the world.
    (They turn up sleeves and show their arms.)
2nd Dowager Messenger: I am satisfied without
    looking at the royal sign. I have been looking at
    their finger nails. Those other nails (pointing to
    Wrenboys) have never been touched with a soapy
    brush.
2nd Prince: It is strange you did not recognise
    us. It was that Jester yesterday when we changed
    our coats that threw a dust of disguise between you
    and us.
1st Dowager Messenger: Was it that these lads
    robbed you of your clothes?
3d. Prince: Not at all.
4th Prince: We ourselves that were discontented
    and wishful to change places with them.
Guardian: A very foolish thing, and that I have
    never read of in any of my histories.
5th Prince: We were the first to wish the change.
    It is we should be blamed.
5th Wrenboy: No, but put the blame on us!
    The Wrenboys you seen yesterday.
Guardian: Ah, be quiet, how do I know who
    you are, or if ever I saw you before! My poor
    head is going round and round.
1st Wrenboy: Now do you know us! (All recite
    "The Wren, the Wren, the King of All Birds." Give
    first verse.)
Guardian: (Stopping his ears.) Oh, stop it!
    That makes my poor head worse again.
2nd Wrenboy: (Pulling up sleeve.) If you had
    chanced to see our right arm you would recognise
    us. We were not without bringing a mark into
    the world with us, if it is not royal itself.
(Wrenboys strip their arms.)
1st Dowager Messenger: What is he talking
    about? (Seizes arm and looks at it.)
2nd Dowager Messenger: It is the same mark as
    is on the princes, the sign and token of a King!
1st Dowager Messenger: It is certain these must
    be their five little royal cousins, that were stolen
    away from the coast.
1st Wrenboy: If we were brought away it was
    by that Grugach that has kept us in his service
    through the years.
2nd Dowager Messenger: It is no wonder they
    took to one another. It was easy to know by the
    way they behaved they had in them royal blood.
(The Boys turn to each other, the Ogre is
    slipping out.)
Jester: (Throwing off his cloak and showing his
    green ragged clothes.) Stop where you are!
Ogre: Do your best! You cannot hinder me!
    I have spells could change the whole of ye to a
    cairn of grey stones! (Makes signs with his hands.)
Jester: (In a terrible voice.) Are you thinking
    to try your spells against mine?
Ogre: (Trembling and falling on his knees.) Oh,
    spare me! Hold your hand! Do not use against
    me your spells of life and death! I know you
    now! I know you well through your ragged dress!
    What are my spells beside yours? You the great
    Master of all magic and all enchantments, Manannan,
    Son of the Sea!
Jester: Yes, I am Manannan, that men are apt
    to call a Jester and a Fool, and a Disturber, and a
    Mischief-maker, upsetting the order of the world
    and making confusion in its order and its ways.
    (Recites or sings.)
And now here is my word of command! Everyone
    into his right place!
Ogre: Spare me! Let me go this time!
Jester: Go out now! I will not bring a blemish
    on this sword by striking off your ugly head. But
    as you have been through seven years an enemy
    to these young boys, keeping them in ignorance
    and dirt, they that are sons of a king, I cross and
    command you to go groping through holes and dirt
    and darkness through three times seven years in
    the shape of a rat, with every boy, high or low,
    gentle or simple, your pursuer and your enemy.
    And along with that I would recommend you to
    keep out of the way of your own enchanted cats!
(Ogre gives a squeal and creeps away on all fours.)
Guardian: I think I will give up business and
    go back to my old trade of Chamberlain and of
    shutting out draughts from the Court. The
    weight of years is coming on me, and it is time for
    me to set my mind to some quiet path.
1st Dowager Messenger: Come home with us
    so, and help us to attend to our cats, that they will
    be able to destroy the rats of the world.
2nd Dowager Messenger: (To Princes.) It is best
    for you come to your Godmother's Court, as your
    Guardian is showing the way.
1st Prince: We may come and give news of our
    doings at the end of a year and a day.
But now we will go with our comrades to learn
    their work and their play.
2nd Prince: For lying on silken cushions, or
    stretched on a feathery bed.
We would long again for the path by the lake,
    and the wild swans overhead.
3d Prince: Till we'll harden our bodies with
    wrestling and get courage to stand in a fight.
4th Prince: And not to be blind in the woods
    or in dread of the darkness of night.
1st Wrenboy: And we who are ignorant blockheads,
    and never were reared to know
    The art of the languaged poets, it's along with
    you we will go.
5th Prince: Come show us the wisdom of woods,
    and the way to outrun the wild deer,
    Till we'll harden our minds with courage, and
    be masters of hardship and fear.
2nd Wrenboy: But you are candles of knowledge,
    and we'll give you no ease or peace,
    Till you'll learn us manners and music, and news
    of the Wars of Greece.
1st Prince: Come on, we will help one another,
    and going together we'll find,
    Joy with those great companions, Earth, Water,
    Fire, and Wind. (They join hands.)
Jester: It's likely you'll do great actions, for
    there is an ancient word,
    That comradeship is better than the parting of
    the sword,
    And that if ever two natures should join and
    grow into one,
    They will do more together than the world has
    ever done.
    So now I've ended my business, and I'll go, for
    my road is long,
    But be sure the Jester will find you out, if ever
    things go wrong!
(He goes off singing.)
And so I follow afterCURTAIN
I was asked one Christmas by a little schoolboy to write a play that could be acted at school; and in looking for a subject my memory went back to a story I had read in childhood called "The Discontented Children," where, though I forget its incidents, the gamekeeper's children changed places for a while with the children of the Squire, and I thought I might write something on these lines. But my mind soon went miching as our people (and Shakespeare) would say, and broke through the English hedges into the unbounded wonder-world. Yet it did not quite run out of reach of human types, for having found some almost illegible notes, I see that at the first appearance of Manannan I had put in brackets the initials "G.B.S." And looking now at the story of that Great Jester, in the history of the ancient gods, I see that for all his quips and mischief and "tricks and wonders," he came when he was needed to the help of Finn and the Fianna, and gave good teaching to the boy-hero, Cuchulain; and I read also that "all the food he would use would be a vessel of sour milk or a few crab-apples. And there never was any music sweeter than the music he used to be playing."
I have without leave borrowed a phrase from "The Candle of Vision," written by my liberal fellow-countryman, A.E., where he says, "I felt at times as one raised from the dead, made virginal and pure, who renews exquisite intimacies with the divine companions, with Earth, Water, Air, and Fire." And I think he will forgive me for quoting another passage now from the same book, for I think it must have been in my mind when I wrote of my Wrenboys: "The lands of Immortal Youth which flush with magic the dreams of childhood, for most sink soon below far horizons and do not again arise. For around childhood gather the wizards of the darkness and they baptize it and change its imagination of itself, as in the Arabian tales of enchantment men were changed by sorcerers who cried, 'Be thou beast or bird.' So ...is the imagination of life about itself changed and one will think he is a worm in the sight of Heaven, he who is but a god in exile.... What palaces they were born in, what dominions they are rightly heir to, are concealed from them as in the fairy tale the stolen prince lives obscurely among the swineherd. Yet at times men do not remember, in dreams or in the deeps of sleep, they still wear sceptre and diadem and partake of the banquet of the gods."
The Wrenboys still come to our door at Coole on St. Stephen's Day, as they used in my childhood to come to Roxborough, but it is in our bargain that the wren itself must be symbolic, unmolested, no longer killed in vengeance for that one in the olden times that awakened the sentinels of the enemy Danes by pecking at crumbs on a drum. And, indeed, these last two or three years the rhymes concerning that old history have been lessened, and their place taken by "The Soldiers Song."
I think the staging of the play is easy. The Ogre's hut may be but a shallow front scene, a curtain that can be drawn away. The masks are such as might be used by Wrenboys, little paper ones, such as one finds in a Christmas cracker, held on with a bit of elastic, and would help to get the change into the eyes of the audience, which Manannan's Mullein-dust may not have reached.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
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