登陆注册
20413700000017

第17章 ACT III(2)

An oldish peasant farmer,small,leathery,peat faced,with a deep voice and a surliness that is meant to be aggressive,and is in effect pathetic--the voice of a man of hard life and many sorrows--comes in at the gate.He is old enough to have perhaps worn a long tailed frieze coat and knee breeches in his time;but now he is dressed respectably in a black frock coat,tall hat,and pollard colored trousers;and his face is as clean as washing can make it,though that is not saying much,as the habit is recently acquired and not yet congenial.

THE NEW-COMER [at the gate].God save all here![He comes a little way into the garden].

LARRY [patronizingly,speaking across the garden to him].Is that yourself,Mat Haffigan?Do you remember me?

MATTHEW [intentionally rude and blunt].No.Who are you?

NORA.Oh,I'm sure you remember him,Mr Haffigan.

MATTHEW [grudgingly admitting it].I suppose he'll be young Larry Doyle that was.

LARRY.Yes.

MATTHEW [to Larry].I hear you done well in America.

LARRY.Fairly well.

MATTHEW.I suppose you saw me brother Andy out dhere.

LARRY.No.It's such a big place that looking for a man there is like looking for a needle in a bundle of hay.They tell me he's a great man out there.

MATTHEW.So he is,God be praised.Where's your father?

AUNT JUDY.He's inside,in the office,Mr Haffigan,with Barney Doarn n Father Dempsey.

Matthew,without wasting further words on the company,goes curtly into the house.

LARRY [staring after him].Is anything wrong with old Mat?

NORA.No.He's the same as ever.Why?

LARRY.He's not the same to me.He used to be very civil to Master Larry:a deal too civil,I used to think.Now he's as surly and stand-off as a bear.

AUNT JUDY.Oh sure he's bought his farm in the Land Purchase.

He's independent now.

NORA.It's made a great change,Larry.You'd harly know the old tenants now.You'd think it was a liberty to speak t'dhem--some o dhem.[She goes to the table,and helps to take off the cloth,which she and Aunt Judy fold up between them].

AUNT JUDY.I wonder what he wants to see Corny for.He hasn't been here since he paid the last of his old rent;and then he as good as threw it in Corny's face,I thought.

LARRY.No wonder!Of course they all hated us like the devil.

Ugh![Moodily]I've seen them in that office,telling my father what a fine boy I was,and plastering him with compliments,with your honor here and your honor there,when all the time their fingers were itching to beat his throat.

AUNT JUDY.Deedn why should they want to hurt poor Corny?It was he that got Mat the lease of his farm,and stood up for him as an industrious decent man.

BROADBENT.Was he industrious?That's remarkable,you know,in an Irishman.

LARRY.Industrious!That man's industry used to make me sick,even as a boy.I tell you,an Irish peasant's industry is not human:it's worse than the industry of a coral insect.An Englishman has some sense about working:he never does more than he can help--and hard enough to get him to do that without scamping it;but an Irishman will work as if he'd die the moment he stopped.That man Matthew Haffigan and his brother Andy made a farm out of a patch of stones on the hillside--cleared it and dug it with their own naked hands and bought their first spade out of their first crop of potatoes.Talk of making two blades of wheat grow where one grew before!those two men made a whole field of wheat grow where not even a furze bush had ever got its head up between the stones.

BROADBENT.That was magnificent,you know.Only a great race is capable of producing such men.

LARRY.Such fools,you mean!What good was it to them?The moment they'd done it,the landlord put a rent of 5pounds a year on them,and turned them out because they couldn't pay it.

AUNT JUDY.Why couldn't they pay as well as Billy Byrne that took it after them?

LARRY [angrily].You know very well that Billy Byrne never paid it.He only offered it to get possession.He never paid it.

AUNT JUDY.That was because Andy Haffigan hurt him with a brick so that he was never the same again.Andy had to run away to America for it.

BROADBENT [glowing with indignation].Who can blame him,Miss Doyle?Who can blame him?

LARRY [impatiently].Oh,rubbish!What's the good of the man that's starved out of a farm murdering the man that's starved into it?Would you have done such a thing?

BROADBENT.Yes.I--I--I--I--[stammering with fury]I should have shot the confounded landlord,and wrung the neck of the damned agent,and blown the farm up with dynamite,and Dublin Castle along with it.

LARRY.Oh yes:you'd have done great things;and a fat lot of good you'd have got out of it,too!That's an Englishman all over!make bad laws and give away all the land,and then,when your economic incompetence produces its natural and inevitable results,get virtuously indignant and kill the people that carry out your laws.

AUNT JUDY.Sure never mind him,Mr Broadbent.It doesn't matter,anyhow,because there's harly any landlords left;and ther'll soon be none at all.

LARRY.On the contrary,ther'll soon be nothing else;and the Lord help Ireland then!

AUNT JUDY.Ah,you're never satisfied,Larry.[To Nora]Come on,alanna,an make the paste for the pie.We can leave them to their talk.They don't want us [she takes up the tray and goes into the house].

BROADBENT [rising and gallantly protesting]Oh,Miss Doyle!

Really,really--

Nora,following Aunt Judy with the rolled-up cloth in her hands,looks at him and strikes him dumb.He watches her until she disappears;then comes to Larry and addresses him with sudden intensity.

BROADBENT.Larry.

LARRY.What is it?

BROADBENT.I got drunk last night,and proposed to Miss Reilly.

LARRY.You HWAT?[He screams with laughter in the falsetto Irish register unused for that purpose in England].

BROADBENT.What are you laughing at?

LARRY [stopping dead].I don't know.That's the sort of thing an Irishman laughs at.Has she accepted you?

BROADBENT.I shall never forget that with the chivalry of her nation,though I was utterly at her mercy,she refused me.

同类推荐
  • 唐尊前集

    唐尊前集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 归莲梦

    归莲梦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说佛母般若波罗蜜多大明观想仪轨

    佛说佛母般若波罗蜜多大明观想仪轨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 补续芝园集

    补续芝园集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • WEALTH OF NATIONS

    WEALTH OF NATIONS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 倾世王妃:涅槃重生六小姐

    倾世王妃:涅槃重生六小姐

    裴谣儿,普通职业高中女学生。因一场游戏事变竟穿越到架空王朝。昔日的废材丑女早已死去,既然老天又给了他一次重生的机会又何必窝囊一生呢!丑女,又有谁知道那面具下的绝世容颜;废材,本小姐只是不想你们在我的光芒下失了颜色。世人皆知她是废材丑女,唯有他横插一脚。倾世容颜被揭开,万丈光芒逐渐显露。她是颗流落凡世的珍珠擦去身上的灰尘不依旧是万丈光芒及其于一身。在这乱世之中即将上演一场男追女隔层沙的好戏了。
  • 真身穿越之仙铃夭夭

    真身穿越之仙铃夭夭

    纳尼?!穿越这么神奇的事情为什么要发生在我身上!本小姐有爹有娘有兄长,才不是内些爹不疼娘不爱的老中二!赶紧给我穿回去!
  • 案件与刑律历史纵横谈

    案件与刑律历史纵横谈

    本书在参考了大量权威性历史著作的基础上,将中国悠久历史沉淀下来的丰富的图文资料融为一体,直观的介绍历史发展进程,全书以丰富的珍贵图片,配以深沉的文字叙述,全方位介绍了中华文明的历史,内容涵盖政治、军事、经济、文化、外交、科技、法律、宗教、艺术等领域,具有很强的系统性、知识性和可读性,不仅是广大读者学习中国历史知识的最佳读物,也是各级图书馆珍藏的最佳版本。
  • 老公,看你的

    老公,看你的

    杜晓轩、沈嘉铭是曾经的大学校友,在一次偶然中相遇,两人很快便坠入爱河,谈婚论嫁。但现实的问题接踵而至,为了在房产证上加上杜晓轩的名字,两个家庭陷入了旷日持久战,正当两家“打”得鸡犬不宁时,沈嘉铭却因为家事扰了心情,导致严重的医疗事故。沈母不忍心儿子的事业受挫,终于做出让步,同意在房产证上加上沈嘉铭的名字。婚礼如期举行,婚礼当天,沈母要求杜晓轩给沈嘉铭他大姑跪下,感谢他大姑全额赞助他们买房和装修。杜晓轩真的会下跪吗?婚礼能够顺利进行吗?桃花运真的能带来好运吗?在所有婆媳关系中,儿子真的就是那块肉夹馍,前面贴着娘的热脸,后面贴着媳妇的冷屁股吗?婆媳关系不好,多半是儿子软弱没用吗?
  • 混世小白龙

    混世小白龙

    他。落魄之人。并无缚鸡之力。更无搬山之功。但。这个世界,将是他的一场游戏。
  • 怎么办好农民专业合作社

    怎么办好农民专业合作社

    《怎么办农民专业合作社》以其成员为主要服务对象,提供农业生产资料的购买,农产品的销售、加工、运输、贮藏以及与农业生产经营有关的技术、信息等服务。
  • 希腊神话故事·上

    希腊神话故事·上

    希腊文化源于古老的爱琴文明,他们是西洋文明的始祖,具有卓越的天性和不凡的想像力。在那原始时代,他们对自然现象,对人的生死,都感到神秘和难解,于是他们不断地幻想、不断地沉思。在他们的想像中,宇宙万物都拥有生命。然而在多利亚人入侵爱琴文明后,因为所生活的希腊半岛人口过剩,他们不得不向外寻拓生活空间。这时候他们崇拜英雄豪杰,因而产生了许多人神交织的民族英雄故事。这些众人所创造的人、神、物的故事,经由时间的淬炼,就被史家统称为“希腊神话”,公元前十一二世纪到七、八世纪间则被称为“神话时代”。神话故事最初都是口耳相传,直至公元前七世纪才由大诗人荷马统整记录于“史诗”中。
  • 白色狮子王

    白色狮子王

    《白色狮子王》由林华玉所著,《白色狮子王》收录了作者近期创作的寓言作品,其中多数为情节性强、富有哲思的动物寓言。作者通过寓言这一个老而又经久不衰的文学体裁,运用比喻和讽刺等写作手法阐述哲理和智慧,让读者采撷知识之果的同时,也深刻体会寓言之篇幅短小、意境深远作用。
  • 斋戒箓

    斋戒箓

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 极品修真狂少

    极品修真狂少

    秦天一觉醒来,发现自己穿越到了陌生的地球上,成了被豪门抛弃的弃子,被未婚女友踹下悬崖的苦逼。遭人嘲讽,受人愚弄。不过,这都是小儿科。我,秦天来了,俯视天下,掌控乾坤!世界,因我而改变!