Imaginations and Reveries - LightNovelsOnl.com
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After a pause NAISI enters with DEIRDRE. AINLE, ARDAN, ILANN, and BUINNE follow. During the dialogue which ensues, NAISI is inattentive, and is curiously examining the chess-board.]
DEIRDRE--We are entering a house of death! Who is it that weeps so? I, too, would weep, but the children of Usna are too proud to let tears be seen in the eyes of their women. (She sees LAVARCAM, who raises her head from the table.) O fostermother, for whom do you sorrow? Ah! it is for us. You still love me dear fostermother; but you, who are wise, could you not have warned the Lights of Valor? Was it kind to keep silence, and only meet us here with tears?
LAVARCAM--O Deirdre, my child! my darling! I have let love and longing blind my eyes. I left the mountain home of the G.o.ds for Emain Macha, and to plot for your return. I--I deceived the king. I told him your loveliness was pa.s.sed, and the time of the prophecy gone by. I thought when you came all would be well. I thought wildly, for love had made a blindness in my heart, and now the king has discovered the deceit; and, oh! he has gone away in wrath, and soon his terrible hand will fall!
DEIRDRE--It was not love made you all blind, but the high G.o.ds have deserted us, and the demons draw us into a trap. They have lured us from Alba, and they hover here above us in red clouds--cloud upon cloud--and await the sacrifice.
LAVARACAM--Oh, it is not yet too late! Where is Fergus? The king dare not war on Fergus. Fergus is our only hope.
DEIRDRE--Fergus has bartered his honor for a feast. He remained with Baruch that he might boast he never refused the wine cup. He feasts with Baruch, and the Lights of Valor who put their trust in him--must die.
BUINNE--Fergus never bartered his honor. I do protest, girl, against your speech. The name of Fergus alone would protect you throughout all Eri; how much more here, where he is champion in Ulla. Come, brother, we are none of us needed here. [BUINNE leaves the room.]
DEIRDRE--Father and son alike desert us! O fostermother, is this the end of all? Is there no way out? Is there no way out?
ILANN--I will not desert you, Deirdre, while I can still thrust a spear.
But you, fear overmuch without a cause.
LAVARACAM--Bar up the door and close the windows. I will send a swift messenger for Fergus. If you hold the dun until Fergus comes all will yet be well. [LAVARCAM hurries out.]
DEIRDRE---(going to NAISI)--Naisi, do you not hear? Let the door be barred! Ainle and Ardan, are you still all blind? Oh! must I close them with my own hand!
[DEIRDRE goes to the Window, and lays her hand on the bars NAISI follows her.]
NAISI--Deirdre, in your girlhood you have not known of the ways of the Red Branch. This thing you fear is unheard of in Ulla. The king may be wrathful; but the word, once pa.s.sed, is inviolable. If he whispered treachery to one of the Red Branch he would not be Ardrie tomorrow.
Nay, leave the window unbarred, or they will say the sons of Usna have returned timid as birds! Come, we are enough protection for thee. See, here is the chessboard of Concobar, with which he is wont to divine, playing a lonely game with fate. The pieces are set. We will finish the game, and so pa.s.s the time until the feast is ready. (He sits down) The golden pieces are yours and the silver mine.
AINLE--(looking at the board) You have given Deirdre the weaker side.
NAISI--Deirdre always plays with more cunning skill.
DEIRDRE--O fearless one, if he who set the game played with fate, the victory is already fixed, and no skill may avail.
NAISI--We will see if Concobar has favourable omens. It is geasa for him always to play with silver pieces. I will follow his game. It is your move. Dear one, will you not smile? Surely, against Concobar you will play well.
DEIRDRE--It is too late. See, everywhere my king is threatened!
ARDAN--Nay, your game is not lost. If you move your king back all will be well.
MESSENGER--(at the door) I bear a message from the Ardrie to the sons of Usna.
NAISI--Speak out thy message, man. Why does thy voice tremble? Who art thou? I do not know thee. Thou art not one of the Red Branch. Concobar is not wont to send messages to kings by such as thou.
MESSENGER--The Red Branch are far from Emain Macha--but it matters not.
The king has commanded me to speak thus to the sons of Usna. You have broken the law of Ulla when you stole away the daughter of Felim. You have broken the law of the Red Branch when you sent lying messages through Lavarcam plotting to return. The king commands that the daughter of Felim be given up, and--
AINLIE--Are we to listen to this?
ARDAN--My spear will fly of itself if he does not depart.
NAISI--Nay, brother, he is only a slave. (To the MESSENGER.) Return to Concobar, and tell him that tomorrow the Red Branch will choose another chief. There, why dost thou wait? Begone! (To DEIRDRE.) Oh, wise woman, truly did you see the rottenness in this king!
DEIRDRE--Why did you not take my counsel, Naisi? For now it is too late--too late.
NAISI--There is naught to fear. One of us could hold this dun against a thousand of Concobar's household slaves. When Fergus comes tomorrow there will be another king in Emain Macha.
ILANN--It is true, Deirdre. One of us is enough for Concobar's household slaves. I will keep watch at the door while you play at peace with Naisi.
[ILANN lifts the curtain of the door and goes outside. The Play at chess begins again. AINLE and ARDAN look on.]
AINLE--Naisi, you play wildly. See, your queen will be taken. [A disturbance without and the clash of arms.]
ILANN--(Without) Keep back! Do you dare?
NAISI--Ah! the slaves come on, driven by the false Ardrie! When the game is finished we will sweep them back and slay them in the Royal House before Concobar's eyes. Play! You forget to move, Deirdre. [The clash of arms is renewed.]
ILANN--(without) Oh! I am wounded. Ainle! Ardan! To the door!
[AINLE and ARDAN rush out. The clash of arms renewed.]
DEIRDRE--Naisi, I cannot. I cannot. The end of all has come. Oh, Naisi!
[She flings her arms across the table, scattering the pieces over the board.]
NAISI--If the end has come we should meet it with calm. It is not with sighing and tears the Clan Usna should depart. You have not played this game as it ought to be played.
DEIRDRE--Your pride is molded and set like a pillar of bronze. O warrior, I was no mate for you. I am only a woman, who has given her life into your hands, and you chide me for my love.
NAISI--(caressing her head with his hands) Poor timid dove, I had forgotten thy weakness. I did not mean to wound thee, my heart. Oh, many will shed hotter tears than these for thy sorrow! They will perish swiftly who made Naisi's queen to weep! [He s.n.a.t.c.hes up a spear and rushes out. There are cries, and then a silence.]
LAVARCAM--(entering hurriedly) Bear Deirdre swiftly away through the night. (She stops and looks around.) Where are the sons of Usna? Oh! I stepped over many dead bodies at the door. Surely the Lights of Valor were not so soon overcome! Oh, my darling! come away with me from this terrible house.
DEIRDRE--(Slowly) What did you say of the Lights of Valor?
That--they--were dead?
[NAISI, AINLE, and ARDAN re-enter. DEIRDRE clings to NAISI.]
NAISI--My gentle one, do not look so pale nor wound me with those terror-stricken eyes. Those base slaves are all fled. Truly Concobar is a mighty king without the Red Branch!
LAVARCAM--Oh, do not linger here. Bear Deirdre away while there is time.
You can escape through the city in the silence of the night. The king has called for his Druids; soon the magic of Cathvah will enfold you, and your strength will be all withered away.
NAISI--I will not leave Emain Macha until the head of this false king is apart from his shoulders. A spear can pa.s.s as swiftly through his Druid as through one of his slaves. Oh, Cathvah, the old mumbler of spells and of false prophecies, who caused Deirdre to be taken from her mother's breast! Truly, I owe a deep debt to Cathvah, and I Will repay it.
LAVARCAM--If you love Deirdre, do not let pride and wrath stay your flight. You have but an instant to fly. You can return with Fergus and a host of warriors in the dawn. You do not know the power of Cathvah.
Surely, if you do not depart, Deirdre will fall into the king's hands, and it were better she had died in her mother's womb.
DEIRDRE--Naisi, let us leave this house of death. [The sound of footsteps without]
LAVARCAM--It is too late!