Plays: Comrades; Facing Death; Pariah; Easter - LightNovelsOnl.com
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ELIS. Let us hope so.
LINDKVIST. Good. Do you know that if justice, which you value so highly, had its course, your mother, who only knew of your father's criminal act, could have been imprisoned?
ELIS. No! No!
LINDKVIST. Yes! Yes! And it isn't too late even now.
ELIS [Rises]. My mother--
[Lindkvist takes out another paper, also blue, and places it on the table.]
LINDKVIST. See--now I put down another paper, and it's blue, too, but as yet--no seals.
ELIS. Oh, G.o.d,--my mother! "As ye sow, so shall ye reap."
LINDKVIST. Yes, my young lover of justice, "As ye sow, so shall ye reap." That's the way it goes. Now, if I should put this question to myself: "You, Joseph Lindkvist, born in poverty and brought up in denial and work, have you the right at your age to deprive yourself and children--mark you, _your children_--of the support, which you thro'
industry, economy and denial,--mark you, _denial_,--saved penny by penny? What will you do, Joseph Lindkvist, if you want justice? You plundered no one--but if you resent being plundered, then you cannot stay in this town, as no one would speak to the terrible creature who wants his own hard-earned money returned." So you see there exists a grace which is finer than justice, and that is mercy.
ELIS. You are right. Take everything. It belongs to you.
LINDKVIST. I have right on my side, but I dare not use it.
ELIS. I shall think of your children and not complain.
LINDKVIST. Good. Then I'll put the blue paper away again.--And now we'll go a step further.
ELIS. Pardon me, but do they intend to accuse my mother?
LINDKVIST. We will go a step further first--I take it that you don't know the Governor personally?
ELIS. No, and I don't want to know him.
[Lindkvist takes out paper again and shakes it warningly at Elis.]
LINDKVIST. Don't, don't say that. The Governor and your father were friends in their youth, and he wishes to see and know you. You see. "As ye sow," and so forth, in everything--everything. Won't you go to see him?
ELIS. No.
LINDKVIST. But the Governor
ELIS. Let us change the subject.
LINDKVIST. You must speak courteously to me, as I am defenseless. You have public opinion on your side, and I have only justice on mine. What have you got against the Governor? He doesn't like this and that, what some people would call pleasure.--But that belongs to his eccentricities, and we needn't exactly respect his eccentricities, but we can overlook them and hold to fundamental facts as human beings; and in the crises of human life we must swallow each other skin and hair, as the saying goes. But will you go to see the Governor?
ELIS. Never.
LINDKVIST. Are you that sort of creature?
ELIS. Yes.
LINDKVIST [Rises, walks about waving his blue paper.] That's too bad--too bad.--Well, then I must start from the other end.--A revengeful person has threatened to take legal steps against your mother.
ELIS. What do you say?
LINDKVIST. Go to see the Governor.
ELIS. No.
LINDKVIST [Taking Elis by the shoulders]. Then you are the most miserable being that I have ever met in all my experience.--And now I shall go and see your mother.
ELIS. No, no. Don't go to her.
LINDKVIST. Will you go to see the Governor then?
ELIS. Yes.
LINDKVIST. Tell me again and louder.
ELIS. Yes.
LINDKVIST [Giving Elis blue paper]. Then that matter is over with--and there is an end to that paper, and an end to your troubles on that score.
[Elis takes paper without looking at it.]
LINDKVIST. Then we have number two--that was number one. Let us sit down. [They sit as before.] You see--if we only meet each other half-way, it will be so much shorter.--Number two--that is my claim on your home.--No illusions--as I cannot and will not give away my family's common property, I must have what is owing me, to the last penny.
ELIS. I understand--
LINDKVIST. So. You understand that?
ELIS. I didn't mean to offend you.
LINDKVIST. No. I gather as much. [He lifts his gla.s.ses and looks at Elis.] The wolf, the angry wolf--eh? The rod--the rod--the giant of the mountains, who does not eat children--only scares them--eh? And I shall scare you--yes, out of your senses. Every piece of furniture must come out and I have the warrant in my pocket. And if there isn't enough--you'll go to jail, where neither sun nor stars s.h.i.+ne.--Yes, I can eat children and widows when I am irritated.--And as for public opinion? Bah! I'll let that go hang. I have only to move to another city. [Elis is silent.] You had a friend who is called Peter. He is a debater and was your student in oratory. But you wanted him to be a sort of prophet.--Well, he was faithless. He crowed twice, didn't he? [Elis is silent.]
LINDKVIST. Human nature is as uncertain as things and thought. Peter was faithless--I don't deny it, and I won't defend him--in that. But the heart of mankind is fathomless, and there is always some gold to be found. Peter was a faithless friend, but a friend nevertheless.
ELIS. A faithless--
LINDKVIST. Faithless--yes, but a friend, as I said. This faithless friend has unwittingly done you a great service.
ELIS [Sneeringly]. Even that.
LINDKVIST. [Moving nearer to Elis]. As ye sow, so shall ye reap!
ELIS. It's not true of evil.
LINDKVIST. It's true of everything in life. Do you believe me?
ELIS. I must, or else you will torture the life out of me.