Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 4).djvu/147

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The Woman.

Oh ay, 'tis the guiltless must smart, said the devil:
His mother boxed his ears when his father was drunk!


[She trudges off into the thicket with The Brat, who throws the flagon at Peer Gynt.


Peer.


[After a long silence.]


The Boyg said, "Go roundabout!"—so one must here.—
There fell my fine palace, with crash and clatter!
There's a wall around her whom I stood so near,
Of a sudden all's ugly—my joy has grown old.—
Roundabout, lad! There's no way to be found
Right through all this, from where you stand to her.
Right through? H'm, surely there should be one.
There's a text on repentance, unless I mistake.
But what? What is it? I haven't the book,
I've forgotten it mostly, and here there is none
That can guide me aright in the pathless wood.—
  Repentance? And maybe 'twould take whole years
Ere I fought my way through. 'Twere a meagre life, that.
To shatter what's radiant, and lovely, and pure,
And clinch it together in fragments and shards?
You can do it with a fiddle, but not with a bell.
Where you'd have the sward green, you must mind not to trample.
  'Twas nought but a lie though, that witch-snout business!
Now all that foulness is well out of sight.—
Ay, out of sight maybe, but not out of mind.
Thoughts will sneak stealthily in at my heel.