Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 4).djvu/159

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  Mother! Have you gone out of your wits——?

[Goes to the head of the bed.

 You mustn't lie there and stare so——! Speak, mother; it's I, your boy!

[Feels her forehead and hands cautiously; then throws the string on the chair, and says softly:

 Ay, ay!—You can rest yourself, Granë; For e'en now the journey's done.

 [Closes her eyes, and bends over her.

 For all of your days I thank you, For beatings and lullabys! But see, you must thank me back, now—

 [Presses his cheek against her mouth.

   There; that was the driver's fare.[1] The Cottar's Wife.

[Entering.]

 What? Peer! Ah, then we are over The worse of the sorrow and need! Dear Lord, but she's sleeping soundly— Or can she be——? Peer. Hush; she is dead.

[Kari weeps besides the body; Peer Gynt walks up and down the room for some time; at last he stops beside the bed.


Peer.

See mother buried with honour.
  I must try to fare forth from here.

Kari.

Are you faring afar?

  1. Tak for skyds, literally "thanks for the drive."