SCENE: Three richly bedecked pavilions, the central one in the foreground, the others set further back. Draperies and silk hangings. The curtain of the central pavilion is drawn aside to reveal the decorated interior. Within, and near the entrance, are seated GAWAINE and ETARRE. To the left, through the branching trees and above their summits, the walls of the Castle of ETARRE are dimly visible. Toward the right, a gentle slope descends to a thicket which shuts off the view. The last colours of sunset are in the sky. ETARRE Now sinks the day beneath the western rim. Night's hooded shepherd gathers-in the light And drives the crimson and the purple hues From highest heav'n unto their twilight fold; There shall they sleep till morn upwakes anew And sends them forth on eastern pasturage. O golden cloud, farewell; and yonder, too, Which like a billowed sea upon the West Heaves ruddy flame. Farewell, sweet colours all; That night makes shut the heavy doors of sleep And seals the portals with a silver star. GAWAINE Dim silence flings its misty veil abroad. Hark! how the birds are stilled, and one by one Drop off to slumber. ETARRE Soon the hornèd bat, Shy lover of the twilight, soft of flight, With ribbèd wings in noiseless here-and-there Will weave the darkness; and the searching owl Will be a shadow-phantom clothed with sight. GAWAINE Gone is the day, and now another sun, Another taper in th' eternal halls, Is quenched for ever. ETARRE So the breath of night Moves down the long expanse of kindled flames And one by one makes dark the future days, Until the last weak taper is blown out And night unending rules the sunless world. GAWAINE Let not the sadness of departed day Weigh present joy with far fore-boded grief. Night robs us not of vision, though her hands Pluck down the light from heav'n and bind our eyes. Night clothes herself in beauty like a queen And robes her naked body with soft folds Whose half-concealment makes more rapturous The deep allurement of her charms. The day Is but a meadow garlanded with flowers; The darkness is a forest, deep and far, Where wonders move in every rustling leaf, And every footfall of the wind foretells Some mystic presence. In the noonday sun We see too well, and thence see not at all; But in the night our very spirit wakes, And with more gleaming power than day-lit eyes Reads deep the world's enchanted rune. 'Tis Night Who unto our most sacred thought and word In birth brings for the beauty of the soul. ETARRE With quiet hands she lights her waiting stars And sends them forth to wander in the skies. O Night, sweet mother of eternal calm, I owe thee penance. Thy bright brother, Day, Has lured me with his colours. GAWAINE See, the East Is spreading silver cloth of woven light. ETARRE The little people of the hills and meads Now hold their gathering at full of moon, With grave debate enacting law and will Whereby to rule. In angry conclave set, Till beast and bird are stricken by their wrath And cry full penitence. GAWAINE This is a tale; Yet in this land are wonders strange enow Which I myself have witnessed. ETARRE There be three Who hold this land in power, and with strange sk** Ordain the deeds of men. They oft appear To travellers intent on distant ways And by gift of favour bind their will. These three have you encountered? GAWAINE Even they. What shall their craft portend? ETARRE Nor good nor ill. My knights in journey unto other courts, My men from field returning at the dusk Have met these three and for some trifling grace, A draught of water or a sprig of thorn, Been bound to choice, but having mid the three To one a**ented are unharmed released. [The moon rises.] GAWAINE Whence are they, and with what malign intent Draw toll from men? ETARRE This no man knows or deems. They are of mist and water, and their ways Are as the air phantastic or the clouds Which change their shape to every wilful mood. But this adventure comes from many lips And I would hear some deed of sword and spear Wrough by your hand alone, and from your lips Alone recounted. Were you not of they Who sought the Grail through lands beyond the sea And wrought adventure such as none had dreamed? GAWAINE A future quest, forever unfulfilled; A lure across the rainbow to the sun! 'Tis present always and yet never here. May I not be of them who make this life A great To-be, a vision and a dream. Has earth no riches, that we ride aquest To find the silver path beyond the moon? Are there no flowers save those which other walls Enclose for ever from us, and no streams Save those beyond the trackless rocks, no sun In our own heav'n and no portentous start Save those which others see? O wretched souls That spurn the wine of life, and drain the cup Into the basin which is never filled, Where all the lees of mad desire run down, -- The Unattainable, the great In Vain! It is enough for me that here to-night I feel the soft sweet air and view the stars And hear your voice beside me. 'Tis enough That love is beautiful, that life is great, That old age is not come, nor winter bleak. ETARRE The year looks backward with half-wistful face This autumn night; the air is soft with spring And lulls the sense to a sweet repose. So is it on the first warm eve of May When earth, expectant of an unseen grace, Awaits it knows not what, all awed and still, And thinks to hear across the sleeping hills The footsteps of divinity returned. GAWAINE And not in vain; for God, each Spring, descends In guise unseen to shape the world anew To plant desire in every fleshly form And resurrect the world from winter sleep. Meseems, to-night He is returned to earth And with soft wand of vernal sorcery Brought back the Spring, and in our sleeping souls Awakened voices singing through the dark Like birds beneath the stars, to fill the night With rapt enchantment. ETARRE Mystical delight! Awake, awake, O sleeping birds of song! AWake within my heart, O silent birds, And fill the night with music till the stars Tremble in adoration! Have I lived and breathed These many years, these sombre silent years, Or was I numbered with the dreamless dead, Encharnelled in a palace, deep entombed In empty vault of daily thought and deed? Like them that walk within a sleep wide-eyed And deem themselves awake, so have I lived, -- Nay, so been dead, and deemd myself alive. GAWAINE Do you not feel a pulse of eager blood Through every vein, striving with beat and throb To rouse the broken armies of the spring, And hear the stamping of the hoofs, the cries Of mounted knights to battle riding down? They are reclaiming to their empery The autumn year, and winter's pagan horde Falls back before them. ETARRE Not in earth and air Alone they conquer, but in human mind They set their banners and in human heart Stir high their beacons. GAWAINE Yea, in thine and mine, Held captive to them here beneath the stars. ETARRE The flames leap heavenward with growing beam Of kindled pa**ion. O mad heart, wild heart, Why do you beat so fast, why leap and strive Like a wild thing netted, caught within a snare That leaves it free to struggle? O sweet heart, Be still, be still! GAWAINE O sweeter lips, speak on; Or better, speak no more; but unto mine Make harmony of silence and desire. [They kiss.] [From the pavilions in the background is heard a voice singing.] SONG When bleak December bares the hills And snowflakes curl in air, When hoary January chills Young hearts with old despair, When February plucks the day And plumes the stormy night, When March winds prowl in quest of prey And battle with the light, By river marge and reedless lake Love makes her weary moan, "O April sun, awake, awake!" She sings alone, alone. O hearts of men, make penance due When April draws anear, For life is false, but love is true, And Spring is here, is here! GAWAINE O singing voice, the year is old and grey, Unto the tomb totters her shaking step. September has from April stolen dress And you by quick illusion are deceived. ETARRE One day, one night, one shift of moon and sun, Each year are stolen from the hoard of Spring And unto Autumn given. On that eve All flowers, unknown to sleep-enchanted eyes, Break into blossom from a withered stem, The trees are clothed in leaf, the faded stars Put on new splendour, and the drowsy earth With glow-worm hangs each branch and dewy bower. It is the year's farewell festivity Ere love be quenched and winter cold return, Ere bird fly southward under warmer skies And fourfoot beast to sunless lair retire. GAWAINE But we unharmed through rainy nights and chill Shall hear the storm about the towered walls, And in security close-wrapped shall laugh When winter's frosty fingers pierce and pry At every stone and corner, and the wind Cries like a beast unsheltered through the night. Yea, thou and I, caught in each other's arms, Shall dream of stormy battle overhead When winter with the giants of the north Sweeps down across the hills and smites the plain With desolation, when above the dead The whirling snow in burial descends, When waters are bound captive in strong chains, When wells are sealed, and rivers turned to stone. And I will tell thee many a tale and strange Of dark enchantment wrought in waking dreams, Of magic lawns, and flowers that backward draw, Of shields that burn in flame, and helms that raise Quick serpents clutching the unwarded blow. So shall we hold the icy fiend at scorn And waken endless summer in our breast, With love to sing to us, and love to clothe Our souls with gladness and our hearts with peace. ETARRE How many times I love thee, whom three days Have scarcely crowned, whom speech and look and thought Have scarce revealed! And yet a thousand suns Could with no lordlier radiance bind thy brows Nor with more light illumine. GAWAINE Thou are dear As pearl deep-hidden in the lightless sea Which careless net a-search for other prey By chance drags upward to th' astounded light. One glance alone, one beam of shafted day, The wretched fisher clutches priceless wealth And needs no knowledge wrought of week and year To teach his fortune. So art thou to me, Revealed and perfect in an instant sight. ETARRE Hold me yet closer, let the living world Sink from me like wild stars that seek the night And downward vanish in the vast obscure. Quench yonder gleams that hold the dark in power, And ban yon moving shield of argent beam; Veil moon and stars, and draw me to thy own. GAWAINE O best endeared and sweet belovèd form, Thou art the earth's most precious heritage. A thousand years, she fashioned in the dark With labour and sad toil, and brought thee forth To be her fairest marvel all unstained. Thou art of summer nutured, light-enwrought, Cradled in southern flame. ETARRE The silent years In their dim fastness of forgotten days With virgin toil unrecompensed and lone Have fashioned me and brought me to thy lips. GAWAINE And now like shrouded mantles of the dawn Soft falling from the shoulders of the sun, They do reveal thee, girt and crowned with love, Thine inmost self, for utmost worship meet. ETARRE They have deserted me, like startled birds Rising from nook and deep recess of rock And wheeling, wheeling higher overhead, Till with a sudden impulse they depart And leave the watcher on the silent shore Alone and marvelling. So have they fled, My years of childhood and of maiden thought, My lonely years of growing womanhood, And I am left alone with love and thee, While at my feet the waters smite the shore, Wave after wave, in-coming from the deep. GAWAINE Of that great time-swept ocean have no fear. The future is a snare to lead the eye Toward far horizons clouding the unknown. It is the present which our feet must tread And there our vision is the most unsheathed And we with least illusion can behold. Think not of years, but grasp the present day, And adamantine make the fleeting phase, Arrested and in memory's stone held fast, Carved with rich wonder, traced with strange design. ETARRE Ah would that Time thus stayed his course, or clipped The present hour and left it shorn of wings To be our prisoner! For evermore Should I so cling to thee, my lips upheld For thy sweet ardour and enkindled mouth, For ever so be clasped within thine arms, And dure eternity in thine embrace. GAWAINE All things save this can might of love fulfil. Love can of dew makes pearls and emeralds And build a palace of a ruined moat, From deepest forest charm the wingèd bird To minstrelsy and hymeneal song, And from the mountains draw the sullen wild To serve in quick attendance at the feast. With power of shadowed dreams and quickening thought Love is endowed: she chains eternal things To be her servant, binds th' unwilling moon, And draws the silver-threaded stars which weave The tapestries of heav'n. The golden sun, Which like a shuttle moves across the sky With strands alternate of the day and night, Becomes her slave and lives but for her word. For they that love are rulers of the earth
And in their hands the future ages lie. [A nightingale sings close at hand.] ETARRE Did I not say this night was caught from Spring? Hark April's nightingale who turns the dark To music, and with radiant voice proclaims That summer is not fled, nor autumn here. To bed! to bed! sweet bird; with weary eyes You'll see the dawn if he o'ertake you singing. GAWAINE And unto us that selfsame counsel turns And bids us sleep. Good night, sweet love, good night. ETARRE Kiss me once more, till love be bared indeed And I in sweet communion with thy thoughts Be drawn into thy life and be a dream Within thy mind, a pulse within thy heart. -- Kiss me once more, till life forsake his toil Of mystic alchemy and hidden consonance Of soul with body, till he break his gla** Wherein he visions that processional Of generation unto generation matched, That sequence of mankind and beast and bird Which marks his handicraft: kiss me once more, Until he merge my soul in d**hless bond To thine, and in eternal union join Our mind and thought and will. -- Kiss me once more, Till heav'n and earth be reft of all their veils And robbed of their mysterious dark conceit, Till I behold the circles of the sun And see the pulsing of the day and night, Hear time upon his anvil forge the stars, And be at one with universal might. -- Kiss me once more, and shatter earth and sky Hurl all to dissolution, and with stroke Of vast desire still that gigantic heart Whose beating is the living, moving world. Leave me alone with thee, set round with night, In universal dark of boundless space, Alone, alone. -- Kiss me, and so good night! [She rises and comes forward to the entrance of the pavilion, where she stands gazing out.] How silent treads the night, how soft and still, With finger at her lips to hush each sound, That none of those who bide beneath her care Shall with uneasy dreams be stirred, and wake. Sleep soft, ye woods and meadow-lands, Ye silent leaves and sleeping flowers. Pale primroses, and daisies, ye sweet eyes With which the earth looks out on heaven, Be still; all, all, be still. Farewell, ye stars which overhead Drift by with distant song. Moon wide-eyed, watch well; Watch well until the dawn. [She lets fall the curtain across the entrance of the pavilion, thus shrouding GAWAINE and her- self from sight. The moon has now risen high above the trees and bathes the stage in silver light. A soft wind stirs the leaves. Their rustling is taken up and transformed to music, -- at first scarcely audible, but gradually growing in intensity,-- representing the sounds of a late summer night.] [The music stills. PELLEAS and FERGUS emerge from the thicket on the right.] PELLEAS Stay still: no further move. Our question here Shall find its answer. FERGUS Know you what this means? PELLEAS Rejoicing and festivity. FERGUS The rite Of burial. PELLEAS What mean you? FERGUS That the dead From battle ride not home. You are betrayed. This is rejoicing for your d**h, festivity To honour him who slew you. For she holds That Gawaine with true victor's right and might Carries your shield and helm. You are betrayed. PELLEAS Though mine own eyes beheld, I scarce should hold That such a knight to such a vow were false. 'Tis Gawaine, born of Caerleon's royal blood, Whom you, low-born, attaint. With deadly vow He swore him faithful, and in utmost pledge Bound life and body to fulfil my love. These were his words upon my sword-hilt sworn: "If I be found unfaithful, changeful, false, May my bare throat feel this unsheathèd blade, May I be cast for ever from the light!" FERGUS The vow is forfeit. Go! reclaim the oath. They have no fear of you and set no guard. Etarre believes you dead, and Gawaine laughs. She shall remember that the dead arise To wreak their vengeance. In these tents are hid Sure proofs and testimony. PELLEAS There remain, Within yon thicket hidden, till I come. [FERGUS draws back out of sight. PELLEAS advances up the slope toward the central pavilion.] PELLEAS Is this the timid prey which ran to earth Close harried, and like mole which dreads the light Drew shut her portals? This is she who feared My least approach, who with armed battlement Greeted my coming and with moat unbridged Bade welcome. These soft silks and drooping fanes Point mockery, as though they scorned to hide That which they cannot guard. [He has approached the curtain of the pavilion.] So comes the thief At dead of night on foul endeavour bent, So peers to left and right with fearing eye, And so on tip-toe to his booty draws. O watching powers of darkness and deceit, Grant that I be the very thief and true, And not myself the stolen-from, the robbed, The injured one down-tracking to his lair The plucking knave and claiming back his own! [He raises the curtain and peers in. After a moment he suddenly starts back.] O sight too horrible for mortal eyes, Burning the eye-ball with a blackened scar Of infamy and loathing! Oh, be blind, Twice injured eyes. Look not again on light. Clothe yourselves round with darkness, and forget This fatal gift of seeing! O accursed, O nest of shame breeding repugnant brood Of broken oaths and false virginity! Now is the scroll of knighthood ended; fame Forsakes her ancient stronghold of renown. The days of chivalry are past, and knights With plea insidious of inviolate oath Work treason and adultery. This was Etarre, The maiden ivory in her chastity, With eyes downcast for fear of shame; and now Her lips are drawn apart with hungry sin And like a serpent feast on evil fruit. O night, how canst thou sleep so still? Up! Wake! With hundred voices clamour at this deed, And loose the hell-hounds of your winds and storms To sweep into destruction's cloven pit This treachery and crime! O bitterness of man, To see his life down-trodden and the dust Of wild despair heap charnel mounds and whirl In mockery, while Heaven lifts no hand, The oceans are unmoved, the river-floods Within their channels tarry, wind and fire Their ancient office elsewhere do perform, And moon and star smile in serenity! Forsaken, thrice forsaken, with his grief Man wrings no pity. The great world is stone; God holds himself aloof, cold, pa**ionless, Wrapt in designs of far eternities. Spurning the race which shudders at his feet, He fashions future kingdoms. Weak, alone, From d**h unsheltered, bearing wounds and ill In life upgathered, man cries out in vain For judge of evil, champion 'gainst the wrong. But I, though I be so forsaken, scorned of God, Unheard of earth and Heaven, yet shall I Fulfil my vengeance, with unaided hand, And right the wrong and champion the true! False Nature, cry farewell to children twain Whom hast thou nurtured into infamy; Thou canst not save them! here, against thy will, I slay them, and in mockery of thee. [Lifting the curtain of the pavilion with one hand, and with the other holding his drawn sword, he enters and disappears from view. He re-emerges.] And is it manhood so to halt and fail, To hide the sword of vengeance in the sheath Of pity? Thought and deed wage mutual war, And deed is conquered; the weak thought prevails. So let them sleep; I cannot slay them now. -- [He turns to go, but halts suddenly.] What, let that injury to all my hopes So slumber on, so let that shameless word Sleep unavenged? -- Ah me, how still they lay! Gawaine at peace, half god-like in his dreams, And she like carven statue motionless, Her lips half-smiling, her dark-lidded eyes Soft closed, and one white hand against her breast As though her lover still within her clasp Lay sleeping. -- O deep misery accursed To find Etarre at last, and find her so! Am I by craft of wizardry encharmed That all my thoughts are shades and fleshless dreams? With maiden weakness here I stand and weep As though I had no strength of hand, no sword To bring me vengeance, and no warrior's will To punish proved deceit and oath forsworn. Unto my mercy's prayer I cast Etarre For pittance, but my anger's deadly curse Shall Gawaine take, and with the stroke of d**h Drive out his soul from earthly dwelling place And ban for ever from the living world. [He re-enters the pavilion. After a little, he re-emerges.] Sleep on, sleep on, I cannot slay you here. On field of battle, waking and full-armed, I'll slay you; but not here, not now, asleep, Unarmed, defenceless. Though you traitor be, Of knighthood's stroke unworthy, yet am I A knight, and with that sacred oath am bound To slay no sleeping man nor foe unarmed, To battle with the sword and not, as they Who slay their sheep for feasting, to approach With sharpened knife the victim's helpless throat. Not so in cowardice was knighthood framed, Not so adorned for valour. Nay, sleep on. You've wronged me more than thousand d**hs could pay; To take a single life so wretchedly Were but a mockery of payment. Nay, sleep on, And if your dreams affright you, be at ease; For that grim shadow, standing at your bed And with malign intent upon your life Down-gazing, is departed and returns No more to vex you. Ay, sleep on, sleep on. [He proceeds down the slope. At the foot of the slope he is met by FERGUS.] FERGUS And was it other than I said? PELLEAS Full well Your heart's malignity foretold me truth. FERGUS Gawaine is false? PELLEAS The night with darkling robe No falser thing conceals. FERGUS Where are they hid? PELLEAS Yonder pavilion holds the twain as one. FERGUS Then have you slain them, meted that reward Alone sufficient and well-earned? PELLEAS They live. FERGUS You had not power, not opportunity To fall upon them; they were held in guard Or otherway from you removed? PELLEAS Unwatched Their couch, unarmed they sleep and lone. FERGUS And are not dead! Are you of honour reft, Of resolution shorn, of anger void! Unmoved you know yourself betrayed and spurned, Laughed at and mocked, your prize of ten long years Snatched from you in a day, and all your life O'ercast with sorrow. Have you not a sword? Do swords not slay? Alas, suspicion grows; This is not Pelleas who held the field Of armoured knights at nought! This is a shade, And Pelleas by years of pining love Is grown too frail for manhood, and too weak For anger. Quick, take sword, and slay; Set seal of blood on this foul testament. Match deed to deed. Send me with hungry knife And I will slay, and take the fault, the shame, If you have found a fault in such a right, A shame in such a work of injured honour. PELLEAS I cannot slay a sleeping knight, nor turn The pointed sword against a woman's breast. Let us depart this most unhallowed spot Lest quick contagion which is here abroad Should with its ill infect us. FERGUS Unavenged You would depart, and leave no trace behind, No proof of anger, no memorial To that dishonourable union set, As though you were the spirit of the wind Across the moors, trailing nor track nor sign To mark your presence? Shall they wake at dawn And fill another day with wretched love, And deem themselves secure and laugh at thought Of Pelleas? PELLEAS Well said, a sign, a sign That I am not a shadow, but a man, A fleshly thing with mortal strength of arm, A threat of punishment, a deadly fear Unsilenced in their hearts. FERGUS Ay, still their hearts. This is the sign I meant, the sign of d**h, That all men may take knowledge to themselves And learn what thing it is thus to forswear All honour, and in treason to be false To Pelleas. These two together slain Shall be a history to all mankind, A legend and a saying. PELLEAS Here remain Yet once again until the deed be done. I shall exact his oath. [He ascends toward the pavilion.] FERGUS Praise be to Heaven! The ancient valour is returned, to swell High flood of vengeance and exact the oath. How ran the words wherewith he pledged his life? "May my bare throat feel this unsheathèd blade, May I be cast for ever from the light!" Then is he slain. [PELLEAS enters the pavilion.] And yet his temper burns Like sudden sun upon an April day, Hot for the moment but too soon o'ercast. Let me go up and strengthen his resolve Lest at the last he weaken. [He moves toward the pavilion. PELLEAS comes out.] Ah, returned, So soon returned. He had not time to fail. PELLEAS It is fulfilled. Across his naked throat My sword has gone. FERGUS And he is slain in truth! PELLEAS Slain? Nay, not slain, but sleeping as before. So let them sleep until the morning comes To waken them and they behold my sword Across their breasts, close drawn beneath their throats, A sign, in symbol of a broken oath. Comes, let us go; the night draws on apace. FERGUS O idle hope to dream that he was dead, By vengeance over taken! No! return; Not so that oath was sworn, not such th' intent; With d**h he bargained. Let him d**h receive. PELLEAS What I have done is with full purpose wrought. Come, let us go; the night draws on apace. [They disappear into the thicket. A cloud crosses the moon, and a sudden gust of wind shakes the trees.] CURTAIN