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    A wood with perhaps distant view of turreted house at one side, but all in flat colour,

    without light and shade and against a diafiered old background.

    TESS CATHLEEN es in leaning UpOn ALEELs arm. OONA follows them.

    CATHLEEN. (Stopping) Surely this leafy er, where one smells The wild bees honey, has a story too?

    OONA. There is the house at last.

    ALEEL. A man, they say,

    Loved Maeve the Queen of all the invisible host,

    And died of his love nine ce<s></s>nturies ago.

    And now, when the moons riding at the full,

    She leaves her dancers lonely and lies there

    Upon that level place, and for three days

    Stretches and sighs as her long pale cheeks.

    CATHLEEN. So she loves truly.

    ALEEL. No, but wets her cheeks,

    Lady, because she has fot his name.

    CATHLEEN. Shed sleep that trouble away??though it must be

    A heavy trouble tet his name??

    If she had better sense.

    OONA. Your own house, lady.

    ALEEL. She sleeps high up on wintry Knoa?rea

    In an old  of stones; while her poor women

    Must lie and jog in the wave if they would sleep

    Being water bor if she cry their names

    They run up on the land and <s>..</s>dan the moon

    Till they are giddy and would love as men do,

    And be as patient and as pitiful.

    But there is nothing that will stop in their heads,

    Theyve suemories, though they weep for it.

    Oh, yes, they weep; thats when the moon is full.

    CATHLEEN. is it because they have short memories

    They live so long?

    ALEEL. Whats memory but the ash

    That chokes our fires that have begun to sink?

    And theyve a dizzy, everlasting fire.

    OONA. There is your own house, lady.

    CATHLEEN. Why, thats true,

    And wed have passed it without notig.

    ALEEL. A curse upon it for a meddlesome house!

    Had it but stayed away I would have known

    What Queehinks ohe moon is pinched;

    And whether now??as in the old days??the dancers

    Set their brief love on men.

    OONA. Rest on my arm.

    These are no thoughts for any Christian ear.

    ALEEL. I am younger, she would be too heavy for you.

    (He begins taking his lute out of the bag, CATHLEEN, Who has turowards OONA, turns ba.)

    This hollow box remembers every foot

    That danced upon the level grass of the world,

    And will tell secrets if I whisper to it.

    (Sings.) Lift up the white knee;

    Thats what they sing,

    Those young dancers

    That in a ring

    Raved but now

    Of the hearts that break

    Long, long ago

    For their sake.

    OONA. New friends are sweet.

    ALEEL. &quot;But the dance ges.

    Lift up the gown,

    All that sorrow

    Is trodden down.&quot;

    OONA. The empty rattle?pate! Lean on this arm,

    That I  tell you is a christened arm,

    And not like some, if we are to judge by speech.

    But as you please. It is time I was fot.

    Maybe it is not on this arm you slumbered

    When you were as helpless as a worm.

    ALEEL. Stay with me till we e to your own house.

    CATHLEEN (Sitting down) When I am rested I will need no help.

    ALEEL. I thought to have kept her from remembering

    The evil of the times for full ten minutes;

    But now when seve you e between.

    OONA. Talk on; what does it matter what you say,

    For you have not been christened?

    ALEEL. Old woman, old woman,

    You robbed her of three minutes peaind,

    And though you live unto a hundred years,

    And wash the feet of beggars and give alms,

    And climb Croaghpatrick, you shall not be pardoned.

    OONA. How does a man who never was baptized

    Know what Heaven pardons?

    ALEEL. You are a sinful woman

    OONA. I care no more than if a pig had grunted.

    (Enter CATHLEENs Steward.)

    STEWARD. I am not to blame, for I had locked the gate,

    The foresters to blame. The men climbed in

    At the east er where the elm?tree is.

    CATHLEEN. I do not uand you, who has climbed?

    STEWARD. Then God be thanked, I am the first to tell you.

    I was afraid some other of the servants??

    Though Ive been och??had been the first

    And mixed up truth and lies, your ladyship.

    CATHLEEN (rising) Has some misfortune happened?

    STEWARD. Yes, indeed.

    The forester that let the branches lie

    Against the walls to blame for everything,

    For that is how the rogues got into the garden.

    CATHLEEN. I thought to have escaped misfortune here.

    Has any one been killed?

    STEWARD. Oh, no, not killed.

    They have stolen half a cart?load of green cabbage.

    CATHLEEN. But maybe they were starving.

    STEWARD. That is certain.

    To rob or starve, that was the choice they had.

    CATHLEEN. A learheologian has laid down

    That starving men may take whats necessary,

    A be sinless.

    OONA. Sinless and a thief

    There should be broken bottles on the wall.

    CATHLEEN. And if it be a sin, while faiths unbroken

    God ot help but pardon. There is no soul

    But its unlike all others in the world,

    Nor o lifts a strao Gods love

    Till thats grown infinite, and therefore none

    Whose loss were less than irremediable

    Although it were the wickedest in the world.

    (EEIG and SHEMUS.)

    STEWARD. What are you running for? Pull off your cap,

    Do you not see whos there?

    SHEMUS. I ot wait.

    I am running to the world with the best news

    That has been brought it for a thousand years.

    STEWARD. The your breath and speak.

    SHEMUS. If youd my news

    Youd run as fast and be as out of breath.

    TEIG. Suews, we shall be carried on mens shoulders.

    SHEMUS. Theres something every man has carried with him

    And thought no more about than if it were

    A mouthful of the wind; and now its grown

    A marketable thing!

    TEIG. A seemed

    As useless as the paring of ones nails.

    SHEMUS. What sets me laughing when I think of it,

    Is that a rogue whos lain in lousy straw,

    If he but sell it<s></s>, may set up his coach.

    TEIG. (laughing) There are two gentlemen who buy mens souls.

    CATHLEEN. O God!

    TEIG. And maybe theres no soul at all.

    STEWARD. Theyre drunk or mad.

    TEIG. Look at the price they give. (Showing money.)

    SHEMUS. (tossing up money)

    &quot;Go cry it all about the world,&quot; they said.

    &quot;Money for souls, good money for a soul.&quot;

    CATHLEEN. Give twid thrid twenty times their money, A your souls again. I will pay all.

    SHEMUS. Not we! not we! For souls??if there are souls??

    But keep the flesh out of its merriment.

    I shall be drunk and merry.

    TEIG. e, lets away.

    (He goes.)

    CATHLEEN. But theres a world to e.

    SHEMUS. And if there is,

    Id rather trust myself into the hands

    That  pay money down than to the hands

    That have but shaken famine from the bag.

    (He goes Out R.)

    (lilting) &quot;Theres money for a soul, sweet yellow money.

    Theres money for mens souls, good money,<u></u> money.&quot;

    CATHLEEN. (to ALEEL) Go call them here again, bring them by force, Beseech them, bribe, do anything

    you like;

    (ALEEL goes.)

    And you too follow, add your prayers to his.

    (OONA, who has been praying, goes out.)

    Steward, you know the secrets of my house.

    How much have I?

    STEWARD. A hundred kegs of gold.

    CATHLEEN. How much have I in castles?

    STEWARD. As much more.

    CATHLEEN. How much have I in pasture?

    STEWARD. As much more.

    CATHLEEN. How much have I in forests?

    STEWARD. As much more.

    CATHLEEN. Keeping this house alone, sell all I have,

    Go barter where you please, but e again

    With herds of cattle and with ships of meal.

    STEWARD. Gods blessing light upon your ladyship.

    You will have saved the land.

    CATHLEEN. Make no delay.

    (He goes L.)

    (ALEEL and OOurn)

    CATHLEEN. They have not e; speak quickly.

    ALEEL. One drew his knife

    And said that he would kill the man or woman

    That stopped his way; and when I would have stopped him

    He made this stroke at me; but it is nothing.

    CATHLEEN. You shall be tended. From this day for ever

    Ill have no joy or sorrow of my own.

    OONA. Their eyes shone like the eyes of birds of prey.

    CATHLEEN. e, follow me, for the earth burns my feet

    Till I have ged my house to such a refuge

    That the old and ailing, and all weak of heart,

    May escape from beak and claw; all, all, shall e

    Till the walls burst and the roof fall on us.

    From this day out I have nothing of my own.

    (She goes.)

    OONA (taking ALEEL by the arm and as she speaks bandaging his wound) She has found something now to

    put her hand to,

    And you and I are of no more at

    Than flies upon a window?pane in the winter.

    (They go out.)

    END OF SE 2.

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