Three Wonder Plays - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
_(Goes.)_
_King_: Oh, my poor child! My poor little Nu! I thought it never would come to pa.s.s, I to be sending you to the slaughter. And I too bulky to go out and face him, having led an easy life!
_Princess_: Do not be fretting.
_King_: The world is gone to and fro! I'll never ask satisfaction again either in bed or board, but to be wasting away with watercresses and rising up of a morning before the sun rises in Babylon!
_(Weeps.)_ Oh, we might make out a way to baffle him yet! Is there no meal will serve him only flesh and blood? Try him with Grecian wine, and with what was left of the big dinner a while ago!
_Gateman: (Coming in.)_ There is some strange thing in the ocean from Aran out. At first it was but like a bird's shadow on the sea, and now you would nearly say it to be the big island would have left its moorings, and it steering its course towards Aughanis.h.!.+
_Dall Glic_: I'm in dread it should be the Dragon that has cleared the ocean at a leap!
_King: (Holding Princess.)_ I will not give you up! Let him devour myself along with you!
_Dull Glic: (To Princess.)_ It is best for me to put you in a hiding-hole under the ground, that has seven locked doors and seven locks on the farthest door. It might fail him to make you out.
_Nurse_: Oh, it would be hard for her to go where she cannot hear the voice of a friend or see the light of day!
_Princess_: Would you wish me to save myself and let all the district perish? You heard what Fintan said. It is not right for destruction to be put on a whole province, and the women and the children that I know.
_Queen_: There is maybe time yet for you to wed.
_Princess_: So long as I am living I have a choice.
I will not be saved in that way. It is alone I will be in my death.
_Ma.n.u.s: (Coming to King.)_ I am going out from you, King. I might not be coming in to you again. I would wish to set you free from the promise you made me a while ago, and the bond.
_King_: What does it signify now? What does anything signify, and the world turning here and there!
_Ma.n.u.s_: And another thing. I would wish to ask pardon of the King's daughter. I ought not to have laid any claim to her, being a stranger in this place and without treasure or attendance.
And yet ...and yet ..._(stoops and kisses hem of her dress)_, she was dear to me. It is a man who never may look on her again is saying that.
_(Turns to door.)_
_Taig_: He is going to run from the Dragon!
It is kind father for a scullion to be timid!
_Queen_: It is in his blood. He is maybe not to blame for what is according to his nature.
_Ma.n.u.s_: That is so. I am doing what is according to my nature.
_(Goes, Nurse goes after him.)_
_Queen: (To Dall Glic.)_ Go throw a dishcloth after him that the little lads may be mocking him along the road!
_Dall Glic_: I will not. I have meddled enough at your bidding. I am done with living under dread. Let you blind me entirely! I am free of you. It might be best for me the two eyes to be withered, and I seeing nothing but the ever-living laws!
_Prince of Marshes: (Coming to Princess.)_ It is my grief that with all the teachers I had there was not one to learn me the handling of weapons or of arms. But for all that I will not run away, but will strive to strike one blow in your defence against that wicked beast.
_Princess_: It is a good friend that would rid us of him. But it grieves me that you should go into such danger.
_Prince of Marshes: (To Dall Glic.)_ Give me some sword or casting spears.
_(Dall Glic gives him spears.)_
_Princess_: I am sorry I made fun of you a while ago. I think you are a good kind man.
_Prince of Marshes; (Kissing her hand.)_ Having that word of praise I will bring a good heart into the fight.
_(Goes.)_
_(Taig is slipping out after him.)_
_Queen_: See now the King of Sorcha slipping away into the fight. Stop here now! _(Pulls him back.)_ You have a life that is precious to many besides yourself. Do not go without being well armed--and with a troop of good fighting men at your back.
_Taig_: I am greatly obliged to you. I think I'll be best with myself.
_Queen_: You have no suit or armour upon you.
_Taig_: That is what I was thinking.
_Queen_: Here anyway is a sword.
_Taig: (Taking it.)_ That's a nice belt now.
Well worked, silver thread and gold.
_Queen_: The King's own guard will go out with you.
_Taig_: I wouldn't ask one of them! What would you think of me wanting help! A Dragon!
Little I'd think of him. I'll knock the life out of him. I'll give him cruelty!
_Queen_: You have great courage indeed!
_Taig_: I'll cut him crossways and lengthways the same as a yard of frieze! I'll make garters of his body! I'll smooth him with a smoothing iron!
Not a fear of me! I never lost a bet yet that I wasn't able to pay it!
_Gateman: (As he rushes in, Taig slips away.)_ The Dragon! The Dragon! I seen it coming and its mouth open and a fiery flame from it! And nine miles of the sea is dry with all it drank of it!
The whole country is gathering the same as of a fair day for to see him devour the Princess.
_(Princess trembles and sinks into a chair.
King, Queen and Dall Glic look from window. They turn to her as they speak.)_
_Queen_: There is a terrible splas.h.i.+ng in the sea!
It is like as if the Dragon's tail had beaten it into suds of soap!
_Dall Glic_: He is near as big as a whale!
_King_: He is, and bigger!