登陆注册
15466100000015

第15章 ACT III(2)

MAHON -- [turning on her with a roar of rage.] -- Didn't you hear me say he was the fool of men, the way from this out he'll know the orphan's lot with old and young making game of him and they swearing, raging, kicking at him like a mangy cur. [A great burst of cheering outside, someway off.]

MAHON -- [putting his hands to his ears.] -- What in the name of God do they want roaring below?

WIDOW QUIN -- [with the shade of a smile.] -- They're cheering a young lad, the champion Playboy of the Western World. [More cheering.]

MAHON -- [going to window.] It'd split my heart to hear them, and I with pulses in my brain-pan for a week gone by. Is it racing they are?

JIMMY -- [looking from door.] -- It is then. They are mounting him for the mule race will be run upon the sands. That's the playboy on the winkered mule.

MAHON [puzzled.] That lad, is it? If you said it was a fool he was, I'd have laid a mighty oath he was the likeness of my wandering son (uneasily, putting his hand to his head.) Faith, I'm thinking I'll go walking for to view the race.

WIDOW QUIN -- [stopping him, sharply.] -- You will not. You'd best take the road to Belmullet, and not be dilly-dallying in this place where there isn't a spot you could sleep.

PHILLY -- [coming forward.] -- Don't mind her. Mount there on the bench and you'll have a view of the whole. They're hurrying before the tide will rise, and it'd be near over if you went down the pathway through the crags below.

MAHON [mounts on bench, Widow Quin beside him.] -- That's a right view again the edge of the sea. They're coming now from the point. He's leading. Who is he at all?

WIDOW QUIN. He's the champion of the world, I tell you, and there isn't a hop'orth isn't falling lucky to his hands to-day.

PHILLY -- [looking out, interested in the race.] -- Look at that. They're pressing him now.

JIMMY. He'll win it yet.

PHILLY. Take your time, Jimmy Farrell. It's too soon to say.

WIDOW QUIN -- [shouting.] Watch him taking the gate. There's riding.

JIMMY -- [cheering.] More power to the young lad!

MAHON. He's passing the third.

JIMMY. He'll lick them yet!

WIDOW QUIN. He'd lick them if he was running races with a score itself.

MAHON. Look at the mule he has, kicking the stars.

WIDOW QUIN. There was a lep! (catching hold of Mahon in her excitement.) He's fallen! He's mounted again! Faith, he's passing them all!

JIMMY. Look at him skelping her!

PHILLY. And the mountain girls hooshing him on!

JIMMY. It's the last turn! The post's cleared for them now!

MAHON. Look at the narrow place. He'll be into the bogs! (With a yell.)

Good rider! He's through it again!

JIMMY. He neck and neck!

MAHON. Good boy to him! Flames, but he's in! [Great cheering, in which all join.]

MAHON [with hesitation.] What's that? They're raising him up. They're coming this way. (With a roar of rage and astonishment.) It's Christy! by the stars of God! I'd know his way of spitting and he astride the moon. [He jumps down and makes for the door, but Widow Quin catches him and pulls him back.]

WIDOW QUIN. Stay quiet, will you. That's not your son. (To Jimmy.) Stop him, or you'll get a month for the abetting of manslaughter and be fined as well.

JIMMY. I'll hold him.

MAHON [struggling.] Let me out! Let me out, the lot of you! till I have my vengeance on his head to-day.

WIDOW QUIN -- [shaking him, vehemently.] -- That's not your son. That's a man is going to make a marriage with the daughter of this house, a place with fine trade, with a license, and with poteen too.

MAHON -- [amazed.] That man marrying a decent and a moneyed girl! Is it mad yous are? Is it in a crazy-house for females that I'm landed now?

WIDOW QUIN. It's mad yourself is with the blow upon your head. That lad is the wonder of the Western World.

MAHON. I seen it's my son.

WIDOW QUIN. You seen that you're mad. (Cheering outside.) Do you hear them cheering him in the zig-zags of the road? Aren't you after saying that your son's a fool, and how would they be cheering a true idiot born?

MAHON -- [getting distressed.] -- It's maybe out of reason that that man's himself. (Cheering again.) There's none surely will go cheering him. Oh, I'm raving with a madness that would fright the world! (He sits down with his hand to his head.) There was one time I seen ten scarlet divils letting on they'd cork my spirit in a gallon can; and one time I seen rats as big as badgers sucking the life blood from the butt of my lug; but I never till this day confused that dribbling idiot with a likely man. I'm destroyed surely.

WIDOW QUIN. And who'd wonder when it's your brain-pan that is gaping now?

MAHON. Then the blight of the sacred drought upon myself and him, for I never went mad to this day, and I not three weeks with the Limerick girls drinking myself silly, and parlatic from the dusk to dawn. (To Widow Quin, suddenly.)

Is my visage astray?

WIDOW QUIN. It is then. You're a sniggering maniac, a child could see.

MAHON -- [getting up more cheerfully.] -- Then I'd best be going to the union beyond, and there'll be a welcome before me, I tell you (with great pride), and I a terrible and fearful case, the way that there I was one time, screeching in a straightened waistcoat, with seven doctors writing out my sayings in a printed book. Would you believe that?

WIDOW QUIN. If you're a wonder itself, you'd best be hasty, for them lads caught a maniac one time and pelted the poor creature till he ran out, raving and foaming, and was drowned in the sea.

MAHON -- [with philosophy.] -- It's true mankind is the divil when your head's astray. Let me out now and I'll slip down the boreen, and not see them so.

WIDOW QUIN -- [showing him out.] -- That's it. Run to the right, and not a one will see. [He runs off.]

PHILLY -- [wisely.] You're at some gaming, Widow Quin; but I'll walk after him and give him his dinner and a time to rest, and I'll see then if he's raving or as sane as you.

WIDOW QUIN -- [annoyed.] If you go near that lad, let you be wary of your head, I'm saying. Didn't you hear him telling he was crazed at times?

PHILLY. I heard him telling a power; and I'm thinking we'll have right sport, before night will fall. [He goes out.]

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 网游之神之手

    网游之神之手

    左手光明,右手黑暗。他,手握光与暗,善与恶的力量。他,被世人尊称为“神之手”!这就是天启的故事。
  • 互联网大神养成记

    互联网大神养成记

    你想知道,你玩游戏抽奖时,为何总会抽不到你想要的道具吗?你想知道,一个手机app是怎么做出来的吗?你想知道,互联网行业的人生活工作状态,是怎么样的吗?你想知道,互联网行业的人每天都过着怎样逗比的生活吗?你想知道,互联网创业是多么艰辛的一件事情吗?你想知道,怎么在互联网世界一夜暴富吗?这里还有职场疑惑、时间管理、家庭与工作、生活与工作的平衡之道、亲情友情爱情,最美丽的事情。来看《互联网大神养成记》吧,看一个化工专业出生的人,如何闯入互联网行业,成为互联网大神。
  • 网游之魔力心计

    网游之魔力心计

    谁把青春当做赌注用世界策划了一个局神秘的追杀、亲友的众叛顿时成为女王陛下熟悉的风骚操作,认众人迷惑背后的真相,让无数人心伤。ps【这是一个少女因为无聊进入游戏,从而引出一段风华绝色。此文绝不是魔力风华的第二部,请不要大意的乱想!】
  • 中国神话故事

    中国神话故事

    神话产生在原始氏族社会,是我们的祖先在同自然的斗争中创造出来的关于“神”的各种幻想性故事。神话中的角色,可以是神,也可以是具有神性的人或其他生物。在自然界,生存着人类和各种各类为数甚多的动物。然而人类的智慧和动物的本能有着根本的区别:人类并非像动物那样去消极地“适应”自然环境,而总是力图认识自然,解释自然,以便同自然做斗争,改善自己的生活环境。
  • 死神异录

    死神异录

    什么是神?神是人心敬畏。世间真的有鬼么?你心内惧鬼,鬼便来了。那什么是鬼?鬼由心生,鬼就是人心中一股念,一段因果,因贪念因果而生。因果了了,鬼便也就散了。因果若一直在,鬼便存在。
  • 夏目友人帐之三流捉妖师

    夏目友人帐之三流捉妖师

    我就是个不入流的捉妖师,喝口凉水都塞牙的那种。有一天早上,突然被一个美少年砸醒。他说自己是穿越而来,还完了友人帐上面的妖怪名单,就会回去他的世界。于是,我开启了另外一段旅程,结下了跟妖怪的不解之缘,还白白得了个男佣人,他吃我的住我的,当然要听我的,他能看到妖怪,我能抓妖怪,正好合作,钱归我,活归他。没想到他这么单纯,好骗,让干嘛就干嘛,纯纯的小白一只,我深深的怀疑他们世界里的人全都是小白,要不为毛他还能活着到现在?哎哎,说的就是你,怎么回事,不是还完就回去了吗?你这破本子怎么越来越厚?
  • 当血流尽的时候

    当血流尽的时候

    我们一起从神的战争,聊到英雄的故事!再从繁荣兴盛的璀璨世纪,看到文明融合的黄金纪元!时代的交替,历史的浮沉,总避免不了流血!当血流尽的时候,一切都将落幕!
  • 亡者归来

    亡者归来

    哈格雷夫家的儿子雅各布在8岁那年意外溺死。然而五十多年后的一天,他们亲手埋葬的儿子再一次站在了家门前,声音样貌一如五十年前那个生机勃勃的小男孩。世界各国的死者纷纷重现人间:惨遭谋杀的家庭、二战时期的纳粹士兵、声名远扬的法国艺术家……恐惧日益蔓延,世界一片混乱。面对和自己昔日亲人一模一样的归来者,有人选择了欣然接纳,有人则拒之门外。从坟墓里归来的亡者们,究竟是久别重逢的亲人,还是入侵人间的魔鬼?
  • 醉尘缘

    醉尘缘

    她为了他放弃了千年的修为,坠落凡尘。而他为了天下苍生,却对她痛下杀手。随后七星下界,四象轮回。文曲星君轮回成人经历三生爱恋,贞廉星君为爱出家为道,武曲星君为爱血洗皇城……爱恨情仇,江湖恩怨
  • 狂尸遍野

    狂尸遍野

    二零一二年,并没有电影中描述的那样,山崩地裂。但是,这个世界却开始慢慢的变了,活生生的人们变成了吃人的怪物,在这个丧尸横行的世界里,你需要的就是武器弹药。《狂尸遍野》生化危机中的求生手册。