Music Composed by:
GRIEG, Edvard (1843-1907); Norweg.

Peer Gynt Suite No.1, Op.46
1.Morning Mood (50k)
Sequenced by: H.-J.Roeder

PEER GYNT
by Henrik Ibsen




ACT FIVE


SCENE SIX



[Night. A heath, with fir-trees. A forest fire has been raging; charred tree-trunks are seen stretching for miles. White mists here and there clinging to the earth.]

[PEER GYNT comes running over the heath.]

PEER Ashes, fog-scuds, dust wind-driven,- here's enough for building with! Stench and rottenness within it; all a whited sepulchre. Figments, dreams, and still-born knowledge lay the pyramid's foundation; o'er them shall the work mount upwards, with its step on step of falsehood. Earnest shunned, repentance dreaded, flaunt at the apex like a scutcheon, fill the trump of judgment with their: Petrus Gyntus Caesar fecit! [Listens.] What is this, like children's weeping? Weeping, but half-way to song.- Thread-balls at my feet are rolling!- [Kicking at them.] Off with you! You block my path!

THE THREAD-BALLS [on the ground]. We are thoughts; thou shouldst have thought us;- feet to run on thou shouldst have given us!

PEER [going round about]. I have given life to one;- 'twas a bungled, crook-legged thing!

THE THREAD-BALLS We should have soared up like clangorous voices,- and here we must trundle as grey-yarn thread-balls.

PEER [stumbling]. Thread-clue! You accursed scamp! Would you trip your father's heels? [Flees.]

WITHERED LEAVES [flying before the wind]. We are a watchword; thou shouldst have proclaimed us! See how thy dozing has wofully riddled us. The worm has gnawed us in every crevice; we have never twined us like wreaths round fruitage.

PEER Not in vain your birth, however;- lie but still and serve as manure.

A SIGHING IN THE AIR We are songs; thou shouldst have sung us!- a thousand times over hast thou cowed us and smothered us. Down in thy heart's pit we have lain and waited;- we were never called forth. In thy gorge be poison!

PEER Poison thee, thou foolish stave! Had I time for verse and stuff? [Attempts a short cut.]

DEWDROPS [dripping from the branches]. We are tears unshed for ever. Ice-spears, sharp-wounding, we could have melted. Now the barb rankles in the shaggy bosom;- the wound is closed over; our power is ended.

PEER Thanks;-I wept in Ronde-cloisters,- none the less they tied the tail on!

BROKEN STRAWS We are deeds; thou shouldst have achieved us! Doubt, the throttler, has crippled and riven us. On the Day of Judgment we'll come a-flock, and tell the story,- then woe to you!

PEER Rascal-tricks! How dare you debit what is negative against me? [Hastens away.]

ASE'S VOICE [far away]. Fie, what a post-boy! Hu, you've upset me! Snow's newly fallen here;- sadly it's smirched me.- You've driven me the wrong way. Peer, where's the castle? The Fiend has misled you with the switch from the cupboard!

PEER Better haste away, poor fellow! With the devil's sins upon you, soon you'll faint upon the hillside;- hard enough to bear one's own sins. [Runs off.]

End Scene Six




Act Five--Scene Seven