Modern Icelandic Plays - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel Modern Icelandic Plays Part 13 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
_Halla (smiling)._
I feel only the sun s.h.i.+ning on my brow. [_Exit._
_Arngrim._
She deserves to be happy. (_Brings out the roll of paper._) Should you like to see what I am doing to make the days slip by?
_Gudfinna (goes to him)._
Yes, let me look at it.
_Arngrim (opens the roll, which is seen to contain drawings in bright colors)._
These are birds from the garden of Eden-- too bad I never heard them sing!-- and here is a blue flower so sensitive that it closes at the slightest touch, and here is a small plant from Gethsemane with red berries lying like drops of blood on the ground.
_Enter the Boy, running._
_The Boy._
Kari is coming!
_Gudfinna._
We know that.
_The Boy._
I must be off again to help drive the sheep into the fold. (_Leaps with joy._) What fun to be here! It's most as good as Christmas! [_Exit._
_Arngrim._
He skips about like a merry little lamb.
_Gudfinna (calling after him)._
Take care the rams don't b.u.t.t you!
_Enter Halla._
_Halla._
Now the sheep will soon be at the fold. (_Brushes her hair back from her forehead._) Aren't you clever enough to know a cure for freckles? I am so tired of my freckles.
_Arngrim (smiling)._
Perhaps you have a new looking-gla.s.s.
_Halla (smiling)._
Perhaps I have.
_Enter Jon and two other peasants, followed directly by two peasant women, Jon's Wife, and her friend with two little daughters, eight and nine years old._
_Jon (slightly intoxicated)._
Now a bite of shark's meat would taste first-rate. You didn't happen to be so thoughtful as to bring some, did you?
_Halla (laughing)._
That is just what I did. (_Looks in the saddle-bags._)
_Jon._
Didn't I tell you so! (_Takes a brandy-flask out of his pocket._) Do you mind if I bring out my bottle?
_Halla._
Please yourself.
_Jon_ (_sits down. The others follow suit, until only the children remain standing_). If I didn't have so fine a wife, I should have asked you to marry me long ago. (_Takes a pull at the flask and hands it to the one sitting next to him._) Let the bottle go the rounds!
_Halla_ (_to Jon's Wife_). Your husband is happy to-day.
_Jon's Wife._ Yes, he loves everybody to-day.
_First Peasant (hands the flask to Jon)._
Thanks!
_Jon._
Don't think I am forgetting you, Arngrim. (_Hands him the flask._)
_Arngrim._
The blood grows colder as one gets old, and then the warmth of the bottle feels good.
_Halla_ (_hands Jon a piece of shark's meat_). Help yourself.
_Jon._
Bless you! My mouth waters. (_Takes a knife from his pocket and cuts off a slice._) It is white as milk and sweet-smelling. I say, shark's meat and brandy are the best things the Lord ever made-- next to women!
(_Hands the fish to one of the peasants._)
_Halla_ (_finds a piece of sugar-candy and divides it between the children_). Have the little girls been to the folds before?
_Peasant Woman._