Page:The collected works of Henrik Ibsen (Heinemann Volume 4).djvu/208

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Anitra.

Oh, thank you; I'll get on without the soul.
But you asked for a sorrow——

Peer.


[Rising.]

                                Ay, curse me, I did! A keen one, but short,—to last two or three days! Anitra. Anitra obeyeth the Prophet!—Farewell!

[Gives him a smart cut across the fingers, and dashes off, at a tearing gallop, back across the desert.


Peer.


[Stands for a long time thunderstruck.]

 Well now, may I be——!

SCENE NINTH. The same place, an hour later.

Peer Gynt is stripping off his Turkish costume, soberly and thoughtfully, bit by bit. Last of all, he takes his little travelling-cap out of his coat pocket, puts it on, and stands once more in European dress.


Peer.


[Throwing the turban far away from him.]


There lies the Turk, then, and here stand I!—
These heathenish doings are no sort of good.
It's lucky 'twas only a matter of clothes,
And not, as the saying goes, bred in the bone.—