Comedies by Holberg : Jeppe of the Hill, The Political Tinker, Erasmus Montanus - LightNovelsOnl.com
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SCENE 4
Enter Herman and Antonius.
HERMAN. Many thanks, Monsieur Antonius, for your kind offer. You are a fine worthy fellow. I feel sure that you could take good care of my daughter. But I should very much like to have a son-in-law who had studied his politics.
ANTONIUS. But, my dear Monsieur Herman von Bremen, no one can support a wife and family on that!
HERMAN. You think not? Do you suppose I intend to die a tinker? Yon shall see, before half a year is over. I hope, when I have read through The European Herald, that I shall be urged to take a place in the council. I have already got The Political Dessert at my fingers' ends, but that is not enough. Confound the author! He might have spun it out a little. You know the book, of course?
ANTONIUS. No, not I.
HERMAN. Then I will lend you my copy. It is as good as it is brief.
I have learned all my statecraft from that book, together with the Herculus and the Herculiscus.
ANTONIUS. That last one--isn't that just a romance?
HERMAN. Indeed it is, and I wish the world were full of such romances. I was at a certain place yesterday, and a man of the foremost rank whispered in my ear: "Any one who has read that book with understanding may fill the most important posts, ay, rule a whole nation."
ANTONIUS. Very good, master, but when I take to reading, I neglect my trade.
HERMAN. I tell you, monsieur, that I do not expect to confine myself to tinkering forever. I should have abandoned it long since, for hundreds of fine men here in town have said to me, "Herman von Bremen, you ought to be something else." It was only the other day that one of the burgomasters let fall these words in the council: "Herman von Bremen could surely be something more than a tinker.
That man has stuff in him that many of us in the council itself might be glad to own." From which you may conclude that I shall not die a tinker. And therefore I wish to have a son-in-law who will apply himself to affairs of state, for I hope that in time both he and I shall become members of the council. And now, if you will start in with The Political Dessert, I shall examine you every Sat.u.r.day evening and see what progress you make.
ANTONIUS. No, indeed, I will not. I am too old to go to school all over again.
HERMAN. Then you are not the sort to be my son-in-law. Adieu! [Exit.
SCENE 5
Enter Geske.
GESKE. It is awful about my husband; he is never at home attending to business. I would give a good deal to find out where he keeps himself. But look, here is Monsieur Antonius! Are you all alone?
Won't you come in?
ANTONIUS. No, thank you, mother, I am not worthy of that.
GESKE. What nonsense is this?
ANTONIUS. Your husband has his head full of political whims, and has a burgomasters.h.i.+p on his brain. He turns up his nose at working-people like me and my kind. He imagines that he is cleverer than the notary public himself.
GESKE. The fool! The idiot! Will you heed him? I believe he's more likely to become a vagrant and have to beg his bread, than to become a burgomaster. Dear Antonius! you mustn't pay attention to him, and you mustn't lose the affection you have for my daughter.
ANTONIUS. Von Bremen swears she shall take no one who is not a politician.
GESKE. I'll wring her neck before I see her married to a politician.
In the old days they used to call a rogue a politician.
ANTONIUS. Nor do I wish to become one. I want to earn my living honestly as a wheelwright. That trade gave my honored father his daily bread, and I hope it will feed me, too. But here comes a boy who seems to be looking for you.
Enter boy.
GESKE. What do you want, my boy?
BOY. I want to talk to Master Herman.
GESKE. He's not at home. Won't you tell me?
BOY. I was to find out for my mistress, if the dish was done that she ordered three weeks ago. We have sent after it twenty times, but they always put us off with talk.
GESKE. Ask your mistress, my son, please not to be angry. It will surely be done to-morrow. [Exit Boy.
[Enter another Boy.]
SECOND BOY. I am to find out once and for all if the soup-plates will ever be finished. They could have been made and worn out since we ordered them. Mistress swore you shouldn't do any work for us again in a hurry.
GESKE. Listen, my dear child, when you order anything again, order it from me. At times my husband has bats in his belfry, and it does no good to talk to him. Believe me, on my word, it will be done by Sat.u.r.day. Good-bye. (Exit Boy.) You see, my dear Antonius, how it goes in our house. We lose one job after another from my husband's neglect.
ANTONIUS. Is he never at home?
GESKE. Seldom; and when he is, he builds castles in the air so that he has no thought for work. I ask nothing of him except that he keep an eye on the workmen, for if he does anything himself, the apprentices have to do it over again. Here is Henrich: he will tell you what I say is true.
SCENE 6
(Enter Henrich.)
HENRICH. There's a man out here, mistress, who wants to be paid for the eight barrels of coal we got yesterday.
GESKE. Where can I get the money from? He will have to wait till my husband comes home. Can't you tell me where my husband is all day long?
HENRICH. If you will keep quiet about it, I can tell you right enough.
GESKE. I swear, Henrich, that I won't give you away.
HENRICH. There's a college that meets every day--Collegium Politic.u.m, they call it--where a dozen or more people come together and chatter about affairs of state.
GESKE. Where does the meeting take place?
HENRICH. You mustn't call it a meeting, it is a Collegium.
GESKE. Where does the Collegium meet, then?
HENRICH. It meets in turn, now at one member's house, now at another's. To-day--don't tell on me--it will meet here.