Three Plays: The Fiddler's House, The Land, Thomas Muskerry - LightNovelsOnl.com
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MAIRE If I gave you my promise now, I'd have great delight in coming back to this place again.
BRIAN You won't deny me, my jewel of love?
MAIRE Oh, I'm very fond of Aughnalee. I feel that I was reared in the place. I'd like to live all my life in the place.
BRIAN And why would you go from it? MAIRE You might come with us to Ardagh, Brian.
BRIAN Your father might stay with us when he'd be in this country.
MAIRE That's true; I'm glad to think on that.
BRIAN Give me your promise, Maire.
MAIRE We'll talk on the road. There's the blackbird. I'll hear him every evening on the road, and I'll think I'm a day nearer home.
BRIAN Sure you'd leave them all to come with me.
MAIRE Ay, I think I would. _(She takes up a new kerchief, and puts it on her, standing before the mirror)_ Do you know where I saw you first, Brian?
BRIAN Where was it, Maire?
MAIRE In a field by the road. You were breaking a horse.
BRIAN I was always a good hand with a horse.
MAIRE The poor beast was covered with foam and sweat, and at last you made it still. I thought it was grand then.
_She sings_.
I know where I'm going, I know who's going with me, I know who I love, But the dear knows who I'll marry.
Are your brothers with you, Brian?
BRIAN Is it building with me?
MAIRE Building with you?
_She sings_.
Some say he's dark, I say he's bonny.
He's the flower of the flock, My charming, coaxing Johnny.
BRIAN _(with sombre pa.s.sion)_ No. My brothers are not with me. I quarrelled with them all and I am nearly heart broken for what I did.
MAIRE Ah, Brian MacConnell, I don't know what to say to you at all.
BRIAN You'll give me your promise, Maire?
MAIRE Promise. I've no promise to give to any man.
BRIAN Remember that these days past I had only yourself to think on.
MAIRE There was never a man but failed me some time. They all leave me to face the world alone.
BRIAN You said that I might go with you as far as Ardagh.
MAIRE No. You're not to come. Myself and my father go to Ardagh by ourselves.
BRIAN How was I to know that you would take that quarrel to heart?
MAIRE I thought you were strong, but I see now that you are only a man who forces himself to harsh behaviour. I have my own way to go; my father wants to go back to the roads, and it's right that I should be with him, to watch over him.
BRIAN What shelter will you have on the road?
MAIRE I'll have the quiet of evening, and my own thoughts, and I'll follow the music; I'll laugh and hold up my head again.
BRIAN Maire Hourican, would you leave me?
MAIRE What can I do for you, Brian MacConnell?
_Brian goes to settle, and puts his hands before his eyes. She goes to him_.
BRIAN You have thought for your father, and you have no thought for me.
MAIRE Indeed I have thought for you.
BRIAN O Maire, my jewel, do you care for me at all?
_She kisses him_.
BRIAN Maire!
_She rises_.
MAIRE I'm going to call my father.
BRIAN You go to him, and you go from me.
MAIRE You are both my care: my father and yourself.
BRIAN What will become of me when you go?
MAIRE Isn't it right, Brian, that I should be with my father on the roads? Even if I was in your house, I would be thinking that I should watch over him.
BRIAN Then it's good-bye you'd be saying?
MAIRE Good-bye, Brian MacConnell.
BRIAN _(at door)_ Good-bye, Maire Hourican; gold and jewels, s.h.i.+ps on the sea, may you have them all.