A ant vieurreted one side, but all in flat colour,
lig a diafiered or gold background.
COUNtESS CAthem.
CAtopping) Surely tory too?
OONA. t last.
ALEEL. A man, they say,
Loved Maeve t,
And died of uries ago.
And nohe full,
Shere
Upon t level place, and for three days
Stretcs her long pale cheeks.
CAtruly.
ALEEL. No, but s her cheeks,
Lady, because s his name.
CAt trouble a must be
A rouble to forget his name??
If ster sense.
OONA. Your own house, lady.
ALEEL. Sry Knock?na?rea
In an old cairn of stones; while her poor women
Must lie and jog in they would sleep
Being er born??yet if sheir names
the moon
till they are giddy and would love as men do,
And be as patient and as pitiful.
But t op in their heads,
t.
Os whe moon is full.
CAt because t memories
they live so long?
ALEEL. s memory but the ash
t c o sink?
And ting fire.
OONA. there is your own house, lady.
CAts true,
And noticing.
ALEEL. A curse upon it for a meddlesome house!
but stayed away I would have known
Queen Maeve the moon is pinched;
And whe dancers
Set their brief love on men.
OONA. Rest on my arm.
ts for any Cian ear.
ALEEL. I am younger, soo heavy for you.
(aking e out of turned tourns back to him.)
t
t danced upon the world,
And ell secrets if I .
(Sings.) Lift up te knee;
ts hey sing,
those young dancers
t in a ring
Raved but now
Of ts t break
Long, long ago
For their sake.
OONA. Ne.
ALEEL. quot;But the dance changes.
Lift up the gown,
All t sorrow
Is trodden do;
OONA. ty rattle?pate! Lean on this arm,
t I can tell you is a cened arm,
And not like some, if o judge by speech.
But as you please. It is time I .
Maybe it is not on this arm you slumbered
hen you were as helpless as a worm.
ALEEL. Stay ill o your own house.
CAtting down) ed I will need no help.
ALEEL. I t to her from remembering
times for full ten minutes;
But noween.
OONA. talk on; matter w you say,
For you been cened?
ALEEL. Old woman, old woman,
You robbed es peace of mind,
And to a hundred years,
And was of beggars and give alms,
And climb Croagrick, you s be pardoned.
OONA. ized
Know w heaven pardons?
ALEEL. You are a sinful woman
OONA. I care no more ted.
(Enter CAteward.)
StEARD. I am not to blame, for I e,
ters to blame. the men climbed in
At t corner wree is.
CAt understand you, who has climbed?
StEARD. t to tell you.
I s??
tc
And mixed up truth and lies, your ladyship.
CAtune happened?
StEARD. Yes, indeed.
ter t let the branches lie
Against to blame for everything,
For t is into the garden.
CAt to une here.
has any one been killed?
StEARD. O killed.
tolen ?load of green cabbage.
CAt maybe tarving.
StEARD. t is certain.
to rob or starve, t hey had.
CAtheologian has laid down
t starving men may take ws necessary,
And yet be sinless.
OONA. Sinless and a thief
ttles on the wall.
CAt be a sin, whs unbroken
God cannot pardon. there is no soul
But its unlike all othe world,
Nor one but lifts a strangeness to Gods love
till ts groe, and therefore none
han irremediable
Alt in the world.
(Enter tEIG and ShEMUS.)
StEARD. are you running for? Pull off your cap,
Do you not see where?
S .
I am running to t news
t it for a thousand years.
StEARD. t your breath and speak.
ShEMUS. If youd my news
Youd run as fast and be as out of breath.
tEIG. Such news, we shall be carried on mens shoulders.
Sh him
And t no more about t were
A mouts grown
A marketable thing!
tEIG. And yet it seemed
As useless as the paring of ones nails.
S sets me laug,
Is t a rogue wraw,
If sell it, may set up his coach.
tEIG. (lauglemen who buy mens souls.
CAthLEEN. O God!
tEIG. And maybe t all.
StEARD. theyre drunk or mad.
tEIG. Look at they give. (Showing money.)
Sossing up money)
quot;Go cry it all about t; they said.
quot;Money for souls, good money for a soul.quot;
CAty times t your souls again. I will pay all.
S here are souls??
But keep t of its merriment.
I shall be drunk and merry.
tEIG. Come, lets away.
(he goes.)
CAt to come.
Shere is,
Id ratrust myself into the hands
t can pay money doo the hands
t she bag.
( R.)
(lilting) quot;t yellow money.
t;
CAto ALEEL) Go call thing
you like;
(ALEEL goes.)
And you too folloo his.
(OONA, w.)
Stes of my house.
how much have I?
StEARD. A hundred kegs of gold.
CAtles?
StEARD. As much more.
CAture?
StEARD. As much more.
CAts?
StEARD. As much more.
CAthis house alone, sell all I have,
Go barter w come again
ittle and h ships of meal.
StEARD. Gods blessing light upon your ladyship.
You will he land.
CAthLEEN. Make no delay.
(he goes L.)
(ALEEL and OONA return)
CAt come; speak quickly.
ALEEL. One drew his knife
And said t he man or woman
t stopped opped him
roke at me; but it is nothing.
CAtended. From this day for ever
Ill have no joy or sorrow of my own.
OONA. the eyes of birds of prey.
CAt
till I o such a refuge
t t,
May escape from beak and claw; all, all, shall come
till t and the roof fall on us.
From t I hing of my own.
(She goes.)
OONA (taking ALEEL by to
put o,
And you and I are of no more account
ter.
(t.)
END OF SCENE 2.