The End of the World

ACT I

SCENE .— A public-house kitchen. Huff the Farmer and Sollers the Wainwright talking; another man, a stranger, sitting silent .

HUFF . Ay, you may think we're well off—
SOLLERS . Now for croaks.
 Old toad! who's trodden on you now?—Go on;
 But if you can, croak us a new tune.
HUFF . Ay,
 You think you're well off—and don't grab my words
 Before they're spoken—but some folks, I've heard,
 Pity us living quiet in the valley.
SOLLERS . Well, I suppose 'tis their affair.
HUFF . Is it?
 But what I mean to say,—if they think small
 Of us that live in the valley, mayn't it show
 That we aren't all so happy as we think?
MERRICK . Quick, cider! I believe I've swallowed a coal.
SOLLERS . Good evening. True, the heat's a wonder to-night.
HUFF . Haven't you brought your flute? We've all got room
 For music in our minds to-night, I'll swear.
 Working all the day in the sun do seem to push
 The thought out of your brain.
SOLLERS . O, 'tis the sun
 Has trodden on you? That's what makes you croak?
 Ay, whistle him somewhat: put a tune in his brain;
 He'll else croak us out of pleasure with drinking.
MERRICK . 'Tis quenching, I believe.—A tune? Too hot.
 You want a fiddler.
HUFF . Nay, I want your flute.
 I like a piping sound, not scraping o' guts.
MERRICK . This is no weather for a man to play
 Flutes or music at all that asks him spend
 His breath and spittle: you want both yourself
 These oven days. Wait till a fiddler comes.
HUFF . Who ever comes down here?
SOLLERS . There's someone come.
MERRICK . Good evening, mister. Are you a man for tunes?
STRANGER . And if I was I'ld give you none to-night.
MERRICK . Well, no offence: there's no offence, I hope,
 In taking a dummy for a tuneful man.
 Is it for can't or won't you are?
STRANGER . You wouldn't, if you carried in your mind
 What I've been carrying all day.
SOLLERS . What's that?
STRANGER . You wait; you'll know about it soon; O yes,
 Soon enough it will find you out and rouse you.
HUFF . Now ain't that just the way we go down here?
 Here in the valley we're like dogs in a yard,
 Chained to our kennels and wall'd in all round,
 And not a sound of the world jumps over our hills.
 And when there comes a passenger among us,
 One who has heard what's stirring out beyond,
 'Tis a grutchy mumchance fellow in the dismals!
STRANGER . News, is it, you want? I could give you news!
 I wonder, did you ever hate to feel
 The earth so fine and splendid?
HUFF . Oh, you're one
 Has stood in the brunt of the world's wickedness,
 Like me? But listen, and I'll give you a tale
 Of wicked things done in this little valley,
 Done against me, will surely make you think
 The Devil here fetcht up his masterpiece.
SOLLERS . Ah, but it's hot enough without you talking
 Your old hell fire about that pair of sinners.
 Leave them alone and drink.
HUFF . I'll smell them grilling
 One of these days.
MERRICK . But there'll be nought to drink
 When that begins! Best keep your skin full now.
STRANGER . What do I care for wickedness? Let those
 Who've played with dirt, and thought the game was bold,
 Make much of it while they can: there's a big thing
 Coming down to us, ay, well on its road,
 Will make their ploys seem mighty piddling sport.
HUFF . This is a fool; or else it's what I think,—
 The world now breeds such crowd that they've no room
 For well-grown sins: they hatch 'em small as flies.
 But you stay here, out of the world awhile,
 Here where a man's mind, and a woman's mind,
 Can fling out large in wickedness: you'll see
 Something monstrous here, something dreadful.
STRANGER . I've seen enough of that. Though it was only
 Fancying made me see it, it was enough:
 I've seen the folk of the world yelling aghast,
 Scurrying to hide themselves. I want nought else
 Monstrous and dreadful.—
MERRICK . What had roused 'em so?
 Some house afire?
HUFF . A huzzy flogged to death
 For her hard-faced adultery?
STRANGER [ too intent to hear them ]. Oh to think of it!
 Talk, do, chatter some nonsense, else I'll think:
 And then I'm feeling like a grub that crawls
 All abroad in a dusty road; and high
 Above me, and shaking the ground beneath me, come
 Wheels of a thundering wain, right where I'm plodding.
SOLLERS . Queer thinking, that.
STRANGER . And here's a queerer thing.
 I have a sort of lust in me, pushing me still
 Into that terrible way of thinking, like
 Black men in India lie them down and long
 To feel their holy wagon crack their spines.
MERRICK . Do you mean beetles? I've driven over scores,
 They sprawling on their backs, or standing mazed.
 I never knew they liked it.
SOLLERS . He means frogs.
 I know what's in his mind. When I was young
 My mother would catch us frogs and set them down,
 Lapt in a screw of paper, in the ruts,
 And carts going by would quash 'em; and I'ld laugh,
 And yet be thinking, ‘Suppose it was myself
 Twisted stiff in huge paper, and wheels
 Big as the wall of a barn treading me flat!’
HUFF . I know what's in his mind: just madness it is.
 He's lookt too hard at his fellows in the world;
 Sight of their monstrous hearts, like devils in cages,
 Has jolted all the gearing of his wits.
 It needs a tough brain, ay, a brain like mine,
 To pore on ugly sin and not go mad.
STRANGER . Madness! You're not far out.—I came up here
 To be alone and quiet in my thoughts,
 Alone in my own dreadful mind. The path,
 Of red sand trodden hard, went up between
 High hedges overgrown of hawthorn blowing
 White as clouds; ay, it seemed burrowed through
 A white sweet-smelling cloud,—I walking there
 Small as a hare that runs its tunnelled drove
 Thro' the close heather. And beside my feet
 Blue greygles drifted gleaming over the grass;
 And up I climbed to sunlight green in birches,
 And the path turned to daisies among grass
 With bonfires of the broom beside, like flame
 Of burning straw: and I lookt into your valley.
 I could scarce look.
 Anger was smarting in my eyes like grit.
 O the fine earth and fine all for nothing!
 Mazed I walkt, seeing and smelling and hearing:
 The meadow lands all shining fearfully gold,—
 Cruel as fire the sight of them toucht my mind;
 Breathing was all a honey taste of clover
 And bean flowers: I would have rather had it
 Carrion, or the stink of smouldering brimstone.
 And larks aloft, the happy piping fools,
 And squealing swifts that slid on hissing wings,
 And yellowhammers playing spry in hedges:
 I never noted them before; but now—
 Yes, I was mad, and crying mad, to see
 The earth so fine, fine all for nothing!
SOLLERS [ spits ]. Pst! yellowhammers! He talks gentry talk.
 That's worse than being mad.
STRANGER . I tell you, you'll be feeling them to-morn
 And hating them to be so wonderful.
MERRICK . Let's have some sense. Where do you live?
STRANGER . Nowhere.
 I'm always travelling.
HUFF . Why, what's your trade?
STRANGER . A dowser.
HUFF . You're the man for me!
STRANGER . Not I.
HUFF . Ho, this is better than a fiddler now!
 One of those fellows who have nerves so clever
 That they can feel the waters of underground
 Tingling in their fingers?
 You find me a spring in my high grazing-field,
 I'll give you what I save in trundling water.
STRANGER . I find you water now!—No, but I'll find you
 Fire and fear and unbelievable death.
VINE . Are ye all served? Ay, seems so; what's your score?
MERRICK . Two ciders.
HUFF . Three.
SOLLERS . And two for me.
VINE [ to Dowser ]. And you?
DOWSER . Naught. I was waiting on you.
VINE . Will you drink?
DOWSER . Ay! Drink! what else is left for a man to do
 Who knows what I know?
VINE . Good. What is't you know?
 You tell it out and set my trade a-buzzing.
SOLLERS . He's queer. Give him his mug and ease his tongue.
VINE . I had to swill the pigs: else I'd been here;
 But we've the old fashion in this house; you draw,
 I keep the score. Well, what's the worry on you?
SOLLERS . O he's in love.
DOWSER . You fleering grinning louts,
 I'll give it you now; now have it in your faces!
SOLLERS . Crimini, he's going to fight!
DOWSER . You try and fight with the thing that 's on my side!
MERRICK . A ranter!
HUFF . A boozy one then.
DOWSER . Open you door;
 'Tis dark enough by now. Open it, you.
VINE . Hold on. Have you got something fierce outside?
MERRICK . A Russian bear?
SOLLERS . Dowsers can play strange games.
HUFF . No tricks!
DOWSER . This is a trick to rouse the world.
 Look out! Between the elms! There's my fierce thing.
MERRICK . He means the star with the tail like a feather of fire.
SOLLERS . Comet, it's called.
HUFF . Do you mean the comet, mister?
DOWSER . What do you think of it?
HUFF . Pretty enough.
 But I saw a man loose off a rocket once;
 It made more stir and flare of itself; though yon
 Does better at steady burning.
DOWSER . Stir and flare!
 You'll soon forget your rocket.
MERRICK . Tell you what
 I thought last night, now, going home. Says I,
 'Tis just the look of a tadpole: if I saw
 A tadpole silver as a dace, that swam
 Upside-down towards me through black water,
 I'ld see the plain spit of that star and his tail.
SOLLERS . And how does your thought go?
DOWSER . It's what I know!—
 A tadpole and a rocket!—My dear God,
 And I can still laugh out!—What do you think
 Your tadpole's made of? What lets your rocket fling
 Those streaming sparks across the half of night,
 Splashing the burning spray of its haste among
 The quiet business of the other stars?
 Ay, that's a fiery jet it leaves behind
 In such enormous drift! What sort of fire
 Is spouted so, spouted and never quenching?—
 There is no name for that star's fire: it is
 The fire that was before the world was made,
 The fire that all the things we live among
 Remember being; and whitest fire we know
 Is its poor copy in their dreaming trance!
HUFF . That would be hell fire.
DOWSER . Ay, if you like, hell fire,
 Hell fire flying through the night! 'Twould be
 A thing to blink about, a blast of it
 Swept in your face, eh? and a thing to set
 The whole stuff of the earth smoking rarely?
 Which of you said ‘the heat's a wonder to-night’?
 You have not done with marvelling. There'll come
 A night when all your clothes are a pickle of sweat,
 And, for all that, the sweat on your salty skin
 Shall dry and crack in the breathing of a wind
 That's like a draught come through an open'd furnace.
 The leafage of the trees shall brown and faint,
 All sappy growth turning to brittle rubbish
 As the near heat of the star strokes the green earth;
 And time shall brush the fields as visibly
 As a rough hand brushes against the nap
 Of gleaming cloth—killing the season's colour,
 Each hour charged with the wasting of a year;
 And sailors panting on their warping decks
 Will watch the sea steam like broth about them.
 You'll know what I know then!—That towering star
 Hangs like a fiery buzzard in the night
 Intent over our earth—Ay, now his journey
 Points, straight as a plummet's drop, down to us!
HUFF . Why, that's the end of the world!
DOWSER . You've said it now.
SOLLERS . What, soon? In a day or two?
MERRICK . You can't mean that!
VINE . End of the world! Well now, I never thought
 To hear the news of that. If you've the truth
 In what you say, likely this is an evening
 That we'll be talking over often and often.
 ‘How was it, Sollers?’ I'll say; ‘or you, Merrick,
 Do you mind clearly how he lookt?’—And then—
 ‘“End of the world,” he said, and drank—like that,
 Solemn!’—And right he was: he had it all
 As sure as I have when my sow's to farrow.
DOWSER . Are you making a joke of me? Keep your mind
 For tippling while you can.
VINE . Was that a joke?
 I'm always bad at seeing 'em, even my own.
DOWSER . A fool's! 'Twill cheer you when the earth blows up
 Like as it were all gunpowder.
VINE . You mean
 The star will butt his burning head against us?
 'Twill knock the world to flinders, I suppose?
DOWSER . Ay, or with that wild, monstrous tail of his
 Smash down upon the air, and make it bounce
 Like water under the flukes of a harpooned whale,
 And thrash it to a poisonous fire; and we
 And all the life of the world drowned in blazing!
VINE . 'Twill be a handsome sight. If my old wife
 Were with me now! This would have suited her.
 ‘I do like things to happen!’ she would say;
 Never shindy enough for her; and now
 She's gone, and can't be seeing this!
DOWSER . You poor fool.
 How will it be a sight to you, when your eyes
 Are scorcht to little cinders in your head?
VINE . Whether or no, there must be folks outside
 Willing to know of this. I'll scatter your news.
SOLLERS . No, no; it wouldn't do for me at all;
 Nor for you neither, Merrick? End of the world?
 Bogy! A parson's tale or a bairn's!
MERRICK . That's it.
 Your trade's a gift, easy as playing tunes.
 But Sollers here and I, we've had to drill
 Sinew and muscle into their hard lesson,
 Until they work in timber and glowing iron
 As kindly as I pick up my pint: your work
 Grows in your nature, like plain speech in a child,
 But we have learnt to think in a foreign tongue;
 And something must come out of all our skill!
 We shan't go sliding down as glib as you
 Into notions of the End of the World.
SOLLERS . Give me a tree, you may say, and give me steel,
 And I'll put forth my shapely mind; I'll make,
 Out of my head like telling a well-known tale,
 A wain that goes as comely on the roads
 As a ship sailing, the lines of it true as gospel.
 Have I learnt that all for nothing?—O no!
 End of the World? It wouldn't do at all.
 No more making of wains, after I've spent
 My time in getting the right skill in my hands?
DOWSER . Ay, you begin to feel it now, I think;
 But you complain like boys for a game spoilt:
 Shaping your carts, forging your iron! But Life,
 Life, the mother who lets her children play
 So seriously busy, trade and craft,—
 Life with her skill of a million years' perfection
 To make her heart's delighted glorying
 Of sunlight, and of clouds about the moon,
 Spring lighting her daffodils, and corn
 Ripening gold to ruddy, and giant seas,
 And mountains sitting in their purple clothes—
 O life I am thinking of, life the wonder,
 All blotcht out by a brutal thrust of fire
 Like a midge that a clumsy thumb squashes and smears.
HUFF . Let me but see the show beginning, though!
 You'ld mind me then! O I would like you all
 To watch how I should figure, when the star
 Brandishes over the whole air its flame
 Of thundering fire; and naught but yellow rubbish
 Parcht on the perishing ground, and there are tongues
 Chapt with thirst, glad to lap stinking ponds,
 And pale glaring faces spying about
 On the earth withering, terror the only speech!
 Look for me then, and see me stand alone
 Easy and pleasant in the midst of it all.
 Did you not make your merry scoff of me?
 Was it your talk, that when yon shameless pair
 Threw their wantoning in my face like dirt,
 I had no heart against them but to grumble?
 You would be saying that, I know! But now,
 Now I believe it 's time for you to see
 My patient heart at last taking its wages.
SOLLERS . Pull up, man! Screw the brake on your running tongue,
 Else it will rattle you down the tumbling way
 This fellow's gone.
MERRICK . And one man 's enough
 With brain quagged axle-deep in crazy mire.
 We won't have you beside him in his puddles,
 And calling out with him on the End of the World
 To heave you out with a vengeance.
HUFF . What you want!
 Have I not borne enough to make me know
 I must be righted sometime?—And what else
 Would break the hardy sin in them, which lets
 Their souls parade so daring and so tall
 Under God's hate and mine? What else could pay
 For all my wrong but a blow of blazing anger
 Striking down to shiver the earth, and change
 Their strutting wickedness to horror and crying?
MERRICK . Be quiet, Huff! If you mean to believe
 This dowser's stuff, and join him in his bedlam,
 By God, you'll have to reckon with my fist.
SHALE . Where's the joker? You, is it? Here's hot news
 You've brought us; all the valley's hissing aloud,
 And makes as much of you falling into it
 As a pail of water would of a glowing coal.
SOLLERS . Don't you start burbling too, Shale.
SHALE . That's the word!
 Burbling, simmering, ay and bumpy-boiling:
 All the women are mobbed together close
 Under the witan-trees, and their full minds
 Boil like so many pans slung on a fire.
 Why, starlings trooping in a copse in fall
 Could make no scandal like it.
MERRICK . What is it, man?
SHALE . End of the World! The flying star! End of the World!
SOLLERS . They don't believe it though?
SHALE . What? the whole place
 Has gone just randy over it!
MERRICK . Hold your noise!
SOLLERS . I shall be daft if this goes on.
SHALE . Ay, so?
 The End of the World's been here? You look as though
 You'd startled lately. And there's the virtuous man!
 How would End of the World suit our good Huff,
 Our old crab-verjuice Huff?
HUFF [ seizing the Dowser and bringing him up in front of Shale ].
Look at him there!
 This is the man I told you of when you
 Were talking small of sin. You made it out,
 Did you, a fool's mere nasty game, like dogs
 That snuggle in muck, and grin and roll themselves
 With snorting pleasure? Ah, but you are wrong.
 'Tis something that goes thrusting dreadfully
 Its wilful bravery of evil against
 The worth and right of goodness in the world:
 Ay, do you see how his face still brags at me?
 And long it has been, the time he's had to walk
 Lording about me with his wickedness.
 Do you know what he dared? I had a wife,
 A flighty pretty linnet-headed girl,
 But mine: he practised on her with his eyes;
 He knew of luring glances, and she went
 After his calling lust: and all since then
 They've lived together, fleering in my face,
 Pleased in sight of the windows of my house
 With doing wrong, and making my disgrace.
 O but wait here with me; wait till your news
 Is not to be mistaken, for the way
 The earth buckles and singes like hot boards:
 You'll surely see how dreadful sin can be
 Then, when you mark these two running about,
 With raging fear for what they did against me
 Buzzing close to their souls, stinging their hearts,
 And they like scampering beasts when clegs are fierce,
 Or flinging themselves low as the ground to writhe,
 Their arms hugging their desperate heads. And then
 You'll see what 'tis to be an upright man,
 Who keeps a patient anger for his wrongs
 Thinking of judgement coming—you will see that
 When you mark how my looks hunt these wretches,
 And smile upon their groans and posturing anguish.
 O watch how calm I'll be, when the blazing air
 Judges their wickedness; you watch me then
 Looking delighted, like a nobleman
 Who sees his horse winning an easy race.
MERRICK . You fool, Huff, you believe it now!
HUFF . You fool,
 Merrick, how should I not believe a thing
 That calls aloud on my mind and spirit, and they
 Answer to it like starving conquering soldiers
 Told to break out and loot?
SHALE . You vile old wasp!
SOLLERS . We've talked enough: let's all go home and sleep;
 There might be a fiend in the air about us, one
 Who pours his will into our minds to see
 How we can frighten one another.
HUFF . A fiend?
 Shale will soon have the flapping wings of a fiend,
 And flaming wings, beating about his head.
 There'll be no air for Shale, very soon now,
 But the breathing of a fiend: the star's coming!
 The star that breathes a horrible fury of fire
 Like glaring fog into the empty night;
 And in the gust of its wrath the world will soon
 Shrivel and spin like paper in a furnace.
 I knew they both would have to pay me at last
 With sight of their damned souls for all my wrong!
SHALE . Somebody stop his gab.
MERRICK [ seizing the Dowser and shaking him ]. Is it the truth?
 Is it the truth we're in the way of the star?
SOLLERS . O let us go home; let us go home and sleep!
1. Look out for the star!
2. 'Tis moving, moving.
3. Grows as you stare at it.
4. Bigger than ever.
1. Down it comes with a diving pounce,
 As though it had lookt for us and at last found us.
2. O so near and coming so quick!
3. And how the burning hairs of its tail
 Do seem surely to quiver for speed.
4. We saw its great tail twitch behind it,
 'Tis come so near, so gleaming near.
1. The tail is wagging!
2. Come out and see!
3. The star is wagging its tail and eyeing us—
4. Like a cat huncht to leap on a bird.
MERRICK . Out of my way and let me see for myself.
HUFF . Ay, now begins the just man's reward;
 And hatred of the evil thing
 Now is to be satisfied.
 Wrong ventured out against me and braved:
 And I'll be glad to see all breathing pleasure
 Burn as foolishly to naught
 As a moth in candle flame,
 If I but have my will to watch over those
 Who injured me bawling hoarse heartless fear.
SHALE . As for you, let you and the women make
 Your howling scare of this; I'll stand and laugh.
 But if it truly were the End of the World,
 I'ld be the man to face it out, not you:
 I who have let life go delighted through me,
 Not you, who've sulkt away your chance of life
 In mumping about being paid for goodness.
HUFF [ after him ]. You wait, you wait!
DOWSER [ alone ]. Naught but a plague of flies!
 I cannot do with noises, and light fools
 Terrified round me; I must go out and think
 Where there is quiet and no one near. O, think!
 Life that has done such wonders with its thinking,
 And never daunted in imagining;
 That has put on the sun and the shining night,
 The flowering of the earth and tides of the sea,
 And irresistible rage of fate itself,
 All these as garments for its spirit's journey—
 O now this life, in the brute chance of things,
 Murder'd, uselessly murder'd! And naught else
 For ever but senseless rounds of hurrying motion
 That cannot glory in itself. O no!
 I will not think of that; I'll blind my brain
 With fancying the splendours of destruction;
 When like a burr in the star's fiery mane
 The crackling earth is caught and rusht along,
 The forests on the mountains blazing so,
 That from the rocks of ore beneath them come
 White-hot rivers of smelted metal pouring
 Across the plains to roar into the sea. …

ACT II As before, a little while after. The room is empty when the curtain goes up. Sollers runs in and paces about, but stops short when he catches sight of a pot dog on the mantelpiece .

SOLLERS . The pace it is coming down!—What to do now?—
 My brain has stopt: it's like a clock that's fallen
 Out of a window and broke all its cogs.—
 Where's that old cider, Vine would have us pay
 Twopence a glass for? Let's try how it smells:
 Old Foxwhelp, and a humming stingo it is!
 Hullo, you! What are you grinning at?—
 I know!
 There'll be no score against me for this drink!
 O that score! I've drunk it down for a week
 With every gulp of cider, and every gulp
 Was half the beauty it should have been, the score
 So scratcht my swallowing throat, like a wasp in the drink!
 And I need never have heeded it!—
 Old grinning dog! You've seen me happy here;
 And now, all's done! But do you know this too,
 That I can break you now, and never called
 To pay for you?
I shall be savage soon!
 We're leaving all this!—O, and it was so pleasant
 Here, in here, of an evening.—Smash!
 It's all no good! Let's make a wreck of it all!
 Damn me! Now I'm forgetting to drink, and soon
 'Twill be too late. Where's there a mug not shivered?
MERRICK . You at the barrels too? Out of the road!
SOLLERS . Go and kick out of doors, you black donkey.
MERRICK . Let me come at the vessel, will you?
SOLLERS . Keep off;
 I'm the first here. Lap what you've spilt of mine.
MERRICK . You with your chiselling and screw-driving,
 Your wooden work, you bidding me, the man
 Who hammers a meaning into red-hot iron?
VINE . O this is a cruel affair!
SOLLERS . Here's Vine crying!
VINE . I've seen the moon.
MERRICK . The moon? 'Tisn't the moon
 That 's tumbling on us, but yon raging star.
 What notion now is clotted in your head?
VINE . I've seen the moon; it has nigh broke my heart.
SOLLERS . Not the moon too jumping out of her ways?
VINE . No, no;—but going quietly and shining,
 Pushing away a flimsy gentle cloud
 That would drift smoky round her, fending it off
 With steady rounds of blue and yellow light.
 It was not much to see. She was no more
 Than a curved bit of silver rind. But I
 Never before so noted her—
SOLLERS . What he said,
 The dowser!
MERRICK . Ay, about his yellowhammers.
SOLLERS . And there 's a kind of stifle in the air
 Already!
MERRICK . It seems to me, my breathing goes
 All hot down my windpipe, hot as cider
 Mulled and steaming travels down my swallow.
SOLLERS . And a queer racing through my ears of blood.
MERRICK . I wonder, is the star come closer still?
SOLLERS . O, close, I know, and viciously heading down.
VINE . She was so silver! and the sun had left
 A kind of tawny red, a dust of fine
 Thin light upon the blue where she was lying,—
 Just a curled paring of the moon, amid
 The faint grey cloud that set the gleaming wheel
 Around the tilted slip of shining silver.
 O it did seem to me so safe and homely,
 The moon quietly going about the earth;
 It's a rare place we have to live in, here;
 And life is such a comfortable thing——
 And what's the sense of it all? Naught but to make
 Cruel as may be the slaughtering of it.
SOLLERS . It beats my mind!
MERRICK . 'Twas bound to come sometime,
 Bound to come, I suppose. 'Tis a poor thing
 For us, to fall plumb in the chance of it;
 But, now or another time, 'twas bound to be.—
 I have been thinking back. When I was a lad
 I was delighted with my life: there seemed
 Naught but things to enjoy. Say we were bathing:
 There'ld be the cool smell of the water, and cool
 The splashing under the trees: but I did loathe
 The sinking mud slithering round my feet,
 And I did love to loathe it so! And then
 We'ld troop to kill a wasp's nest; and for sure
 I would be stung; and if I liked the dusk
 And singing and the game of it all, I loved
 The smart of the stings, and fleeing the buzzing furies.
 And sometimes I'ld be looking at myself
 Making so much of everything; there'ld seem
 A part of me speaking about myself:
 ‘You know, this is much more than being happy.
 'Tis hunger of some power in you, that lives
 On your heart's welcome for all sorts of luck,
 But always looks beyond you for its meaning.’
 And that 's the way the world 's kept going on,
 I believe now. Misery and delight
 Have both had liking welcome from it, both
 Have made the world keen to be glad and sorry.
 For why? It felt the living power thrive
 The more it made everything, good and bad,
 Its own belonging, forged to its own affair,—
 The living power that would do wonders some day.
 I don't know if you take me?
SOLLERS . I do, fine;
 I've felt the very thought go through my mind
 When I was at my wains; though 'twas a thing
 Of such a flight I could not read its colour.—
 Why was I like a man sworn to a thing,
 Working to have my wains in every curve,
 Ay, every tenon, right as they should be?
 Not for myself, not even for those wains:
 But to keep in me living at its best
 The skill that must go forward and shape the world,
 Helping it on towards its masterpiece.
MERRICK . And never was there aught to come of it!
 The world was always looking to use its life
 In some great handsome way at last. And now—
 We are just fooled. There never was any good
 In the world going on or being at all.
 The fine things life has plotted to do are worth
 A rotten toadstool kickt to flying bits.
 End of the World? Ay, and the end of a joke.
VINE . Well, Huff's the man for this turn.
MERRICK . Ay, the good man!
 He could but grunt when times were pleasant; now
 There 's misery enough to make him trumpet.
 And yet, by God, he shan't come blowing his horn
 Over my misery!
 We are just fooled, did I say?—We fooled ourselves,
 Looking for worth in what was still to come;
 And now there 's a stop to our innings. Well, that 's fair:
 I've been a living man, and might have been
 Nothing at all! I've had the world about me,
 And felt it as my own concern. What else
 Should I be crying for? I've had my turn.
 The world may be for the sake of naught at last,
 But it has been for my sake: I've had that.
SOLLERS . I can't stay here. I must be where my sight
 May silence with its business all my thinking—
 Though it will be the star plunged down so close
 It puffs its flaming vengeance in my face.
VINE . I wish there were someone who had done me wrong,
 Like Huff with his wife and Shale; I wish there were
 Somebody I would like to see go crazed
 With staring fright. I'ld have my pleasure then
 Of living on into the End of the World.
 But there is no one at all for me, no one
 Now my poor wife is gone.
MERRICK . Why, what did she
 To harm you?
VINE . Didn't she marry me?—It's true
 She made it come all right. She died at last.
 Besides, it would be wasting wishes on her,
 To be in hopes of her weeping at this.
 She'ld have her hands on her hips and her tongue jumping
 As nimble as a stoat, delighting round
 The way the world 's to be terrible and tormented.—
 Ay, but I'll have a thing to tell her now
 When she begins to ask the news! I'll say
 ‘You've misst such a show as never was nor will be,
 A roaring great affair of death and ruin;
 And I was there—the world smasht to sparkles!’
 O, I can see her vext at that!
VINE . We've all been envying you, Huff. You're well off,
 You with your goodness and your enemies
 Showing you how to relish it with their terror.
 When do you mean the gibing is to start?
HUFF . There 's time enough.
VINE . O, do they still hold out?
 If they should be for spiting you to the last!
 You'ld best keep on at them: think out a list
 Of frantic things for them to do, when air
 Is scorching smother and the sin they did
 Frightens their hearts. You'll shout them into fear,
 I undertake, if you find breath enough.
HUFF . You have the breath. What 's all your pester for?
 You leave me be.
VINE . Why, you're to do for me
 What I can't do myself.—And yet it's hard
 To make out where Shale hurt you. What 's the sum
 Of all he did to you? Got you quit of marriage
 Without the upset of a funeral.
HUFF . Why need you blurt your rambling mind at me?
 Let me bide quiet in my thought awhile,
 And it's a little while we have for thought.
MERRICK . I know your thought. Paddling round and around,
 Like a squirrel working in a spinning cage
 With his neck stretcht to have his chin poke up,
 And silly feet busy and always going;
 Paddling round the story of your good life,
 Your small good life, and how the decent men
 Have jeered at your wry antic.
HUFF . My good life!
 And what good has my goodness been to me?
 You show me that! Somebody show me that!
 A caterpillar munching a cabbage-heart,
 Always drudging further and further from
 The sounds and lights of the world, never abroad
 Nor flying free in warmth and air sweet-smelling:
 A crawling caterpillar, eating his life
 In a deaf dark—that's my gain of goodness!
 And it 's too late to hatch out now!—
 I can but fancy what I might have been;
 I scarce know how to sin!—But I believe
 A long while back I did come near to it.
MERRICK . Well done!—O but I should have guesst all this!
HUFF . I was in Droitwich; and the sight of the place
 Is where they cook the brine: a long dark shed,
 Hot as an oven, full of a grey steam
 And ruddy light that leaks out of the furnace;
 And stirring the troughs, ladling the brine that boils
 As thick as treacle, a double standing row,
 Women—boldly talking in wicked jokes
 All day long. I went to see 'em. It was
 A wonderful rousing sight. Not one of them
 Was really wearing clothes: half of a sack
 Pinned in an apron was enough for most,
 And here and there might be a petticoat;
 But nothing in the way of bodices.—
 O, they knew words to shame a carter's face!
MERRICK . This is the thought you would be quiet in!
HUFF . Where else can I be quiet? Now there 's an end
 Of daring, 'tis the one place my life has made
 Where I may try to dare in thought. I mind,
 When I stood in the midst of those bare women,
 All at once, outburst with a rising buzz,
 A mob of flying thoughts was wild in me:
 Things I might do swarmed in my brain pell-mell,
 Like a heap of flies kickt into humming cloud.
 I beat them down; and now I cannot tell
 For certain what they were. I can call up
 Naught venturesome and darting like their style;
 Very tame braveries now!—O Shale 's the man
 To smile upon the End of the World; 'tis Shale
 Has lived the bold stiff fashion, and filled himself
 With thinking pride in what a man may do.—
 I wish I had seen those women more than once!
VINE . Well, here 's an upside down! This is old Huff!
 What have you been in your heart all these years?
 The man you were or the new man you are?
HUFF . Just a dead flesh!
MERRICK . Nay, Huff the good man at least
 Was something alive, though snarling like trapt vermin.
 But this? What 's this for the figure of a man?
 'Tis a boy's smutty picture on a wall.
HUFF . I was alive, was I? Like a blind bird
 That flies and cannot see the flight it takes,
 Feeling it with mere rowing of its wings.
 But Shale—he 's had a stirring sense of what he is.
VINE . What do they holla for there?
SOLLERS . The earth.
MERRICK . The earth?
SOLLERS . The earth 's afire.
HUFF . The earth blazing already?
 O, not so soon as this?
VINE . What sort of a fire?
SOLLERS . The earth has caught the heat of the star, you fool,
MERRICK . I know: there 's come some dazzle in your eyes
 From facing to the star; a lamp would do it.
HUFF . It will be that. Your sight, being so strained,
 Is flashing of itself.
SOLLERS . Say what you like.
 There 's a red flare out of the land beyond
 Looking over the hills into our valley.
 The thing 's begun, 'tis certain. Go and see.
VINE . I won't see that. I will stay here.
SOLLERS . Ay, creep
 Into your oven. You'll be cooler there.—
 O my God, we'll all be coals in an hour!
HUFF . And I have nought to stand in my heart upright,
 And vow it made my living time worth more
 Than if my time had been death in a grave!
THE CROWD .
1. The river 's the place!
2. The only safe place now!
3. Best all charge down to the river!
4. For there 's a blaze,
 A travelling blaze comes racing along the earth.
SOLLERS . 'Tis true. The air's red-hot above the hills.
THE CROWD .
1. Ay, but the burning now crests the hill-tops
 In quiver of yellow flame.
2. And a great smoke
 Waving and tumbling upward.
3. The river now!
4. The only place we have, not to be roasted!
MERRICK . And what will make us water-rats or otters,
 To keep our breath still living through a dive
 That lasts until the earth 's burnt out? Or how
 Would that trick serve, when we stand up to gasp,
 And find the star waiting for our plunged heads
 To knock them into pummy?
VINE . Scarce more dazed
 I'ld be with that than now. I shall be bound,
 When I'm to give my wife the tale of it all,
 To be devising: more of this to-do
 My mind won't carry.
HUFF . O ashamed I am,
 Ashamed!—It needn't have been downright feats,
 Such as the braving men, the like of Shale,
 Do easily, and smile, keeping them up.
 If I could look back to one manful hour
 Of romping in the face of all my goodness!—
SHALE . Huff! Where 's Huff?—Huff, you must take her back!
 You'll take her back? She 's yours: I give her up.
MERRICK . Belike here 's something bold again.
MRS. HUFF . Once more,
 Listen.
SHALE . I will not listen. There 's no time
 For aught but giving you back where you belong;
 And that 's with you, Huff. Take her.
HUFF . Here is depth
 I cannot see to. Is it your last fling?—
 The dolt I am in these things!—What's this way
 You've found of living wickedly to the end?
SHALE . Scorn as you please, but take her back, man, take her.
HUFF . But she 's my wife! Take her back now? What for?
MRS. HUFF . What for? Have you not known of thieves that throw
 Their robbery down, soon as they hear a step
 Sounding behind them on the road, and run
 A long way off, and pull an honest face?
 Ay, see Shale's eyes practising baby-looks!
 He never stole, not he!
SHALE . Don't hear her talk.
MRS. HUFF . But he was a talker once! Love was the thing;
 And love, he swore, would make the wrong go right,
 And Huff was a kind of devil—and that 's true——
HUFF . What? I've been devilish and never knew?
MRS. HUFF . The devil in the world that hates all love.
 But Shale said, he'd the love in him would hold
 If the world's frame and the fate of men were crackt.
SHALE . What I said!
 Whoever thought the world was going to crack?
MRS. HUFF . And now he hears someone move behind him—
 They'll say, perhaps, ‘You stole this!’—Down it goes,
 Thrown to the dirty road—thrown to Huff!
SHALE . Yes, to the owner.
MRS. HUFF . It was not such brave thieving.
 You did not take me from my owner, Shale:
 There 's an old robber will do that some day,
 Not you.
VINE . Were you thinking of me then, missis?
MRS. HUFF . You found me lost in the dirt: I was with Huff.
 You lifted me from there; and there again,
 Like a frightened urchin, you're for throwing me.
SHALE . Let it be that! I'm firm
 Not to have you about me, when the thing,
 Whatever it is, that 's standing now behind
 The burning of the world, comes out on us.
HUFF . The way men cheat! This windle-stalk was he
 Would hold a show of spirit for the world
 To study while it ruined!—Make what you please
 Of your short wrangle here, but leave me out.
 I have my thoughts—O far enough from this.
SHALE . You shall not put me off. I tell you, Huff,
 You are to take her back now.
HUFF . Take her back!
 And what has she to do with what I want?
SHALE . Isn't she yours? I must be quit of her;
 I'll not be in the risk of keeping her.
 She 's yours!
HUFF . And what 's the good of her now to me?
 What 's the good of a woman whom I've married?
WARP . Shale and Huff at their old pother again!
MERRICK . The Molecatcher!
SOLLERS . Warp, have you travelled far?
 Is it through frenzy and ghastly crowds you've come?
VINE . Have you got dreadful things to tell us, Warp?
WARP . Why, no.
 But seemingly you'ld have had news for me,
 If I'd come later. Is Huff to murder Shale,
 Or Shale for murdering Huff? One way or t'other,
 'Tis time 'twas settled surely.—Mrs. Huff,
 They're neither of them worth you: here 's your health.
HUFF . Where have you been? Are you not new from folk
 That throng together in a pelting horror?
WARP . Do you think the whole land hearkens to the flurry
 Of an old dog biting at a young dog's throat?
MERRICK . No, no! Not their shrill yapping; you've not heard
 The world 's near to be blasted?
WARP . No mutter of it.
 I am from walking the whole ground I trap,
 And there 's no likeness of it, but the moles
 I've turned up dead and dried out of three counties.
SOLLERS . Why, but the fire that 's eating the whole earth,
 The breath of it is scarlet in the sky!
 You must have seen that?
WARP . But what 's taken you?
 You are like boys that go to hunt for ghosts,
 And turn the scuttle of rats to a roused demon
 Crawling to shut the door of the barn they search.
 Fire? Yes, fire is playing a pretty game
 Yonder, and has its golden fun to itself,
 Seemingly.
SOLLERS . You don't know what 'tis that burns?
WARP . Call me a mole and not a molecatcher
 If I do not. It is a rick that burns;
 And a strange thing I'll count it if the rick
 Be not old Huff's.
SOLLERS . That flare a fired stack?
HUFF . Only one of my ricks alight? O Glory!
 There may be chance for me yet.
MERRICK . Best take the train
 To Droitwich, Huff.
VINE . It would be like a stack,
 But for the star.
SOLLERS . Yes, as you're so clever,
 You can talk down maybe yon brandishing star!
WARP . O, 'tis the star has flickt your brains? Indeed,
 The tail swings long enough to-night for that.
 Well, look your best at it; 'tis off again
 To go its rounds, they tell me, from now on;
 And the next time it swaggers in our sky,
 The moles a long while will have tired themselves
 Of having their easy joke with me.
MERRICK . You mean
 The flight of the star is from us?
SOLLERS . But the world,
 The whole world reckons on it battering us!
WARP . Who told you that?
SOLLERS . A dowser.
MERRICK . Where's he gone?
WARP . A dowser! say a tramping conjurer.
 You'll believe aught, if you believe a dowser.
SOLLERS . I had it in me to be doubting him.
MERRICK . The noise you made was like that! But I knew
 You'ld laugh at me, so sure you were the world
 Would shiver like a bursting grindlestone:
 Else I'ld have said out loud, 'twas a fool's whimsy.
VINE . Where are you now? What am I now to think?
 Your minds run round in puzzles, like chased hares.
 I cannot sight them.
MERRICK . Think of going to bed.
SOLLERS . And dreaming prices for your pigs.
MERRICK . O Warp,
 You should have seen Vine crying! The moon, he said,
 The silver moon! Just like an onion 'twas
 To stir the water in his eyes.
SOLLERS . He's left
 A puddle of his tears where he was droopt
 Over the table.
VINE . There's to be no ruin?—
 But what's the word of a molecatcher, to crow
 So ringing over a dowser's word?
WARP . I'll tell you.
 These dowsers live on lies: my trade's the truth.
 I can read moles, and the way they've dug their journeys,
 Where you'ld not see a wrinkle.
VINE . And he knows
 The buried water.
WARP . There's always buried water,
 If you prod deep enough. A dowser finds
 Because the whole earth's floating, like a raft.
 What does he know? A twitching in his thews;
 A dog asleep knows that much. What I know
 I've learnt, and if I'd learnt it wrong, I'ld starve.
 And if I'm right about the grubbing moles,
 Won't I be right for news of walking men?
MERRICK . Of course you're right. Let's put the whole thing by,
 And have a pleasant drink.
SHALE . You must be tired
 With all this story. Shall we be off for home?
HUFF . You brass! You don't go now with her! She's mine:
 You gave her up.
SHALE . And you made nothing of her.
[ To Mrs. Huff ]. Come on.
MRS. HUFF . Warp, will you do a thing for me?
WARP . A hundred things.
MRS. HUFF . Then slap me these cur-dogs.
WARP . I will. Where will I slap them, and which first?
MRS. HUFF . Maybe 'twill do if you but laugh at them.
WARP . I'll try for that; but they are not good jokes;
 Though there's a kind of monkey-look about them.
MRS. HUFF . They thinking I'ld be near one or the other
 After this night! Will I be made no more
 Than clay that children puddle to their minds,
 Moulding it what they fancy?—Shale was brave:
 He made a bogy and defied it, till
 He frightened of his work and ran away.
 But Huff!—Huff was for modelling wickedly.
HUFF . Who told you that?
MRS. HUFF . I need no one's telling.
 I was your wife once. Don't I know your goodness?
 A stupid heart gone sour with jealousy,
 To feel its blood too dull and thick for sinning.—
 Yes, Huff would figure a wicked thought, but had
 No notion how, and flung the clay aside.—
 O they were gaudy colours both! But now
 Fear has bleacht their swagger and left them blank,
 Fear of a loon that cried, End of the World!
HUFF . Shale, do you know what we're to do?
SHALE . I'ld like
 To have the handling of that dowser-man.
HUFF . Just that, my lad, just that!
WARP . And your fired rick?
HUFF . Let it be blazes! Quick, Shale, after him!
 I'll tramp the night out, but I'll take the rogue.
SHALE . You wait, and see us haul him by the ears,
 And swim the blatherer in Huff's farmyard pond.
HUFF . The devil's own star is that!
SHALE . And floats as calm
 As a pike basking.
HUFF . There shouldn't be such stars!
SHALE . Neither such dowsers, and we'll learn him that.
SOLLERS . Why, the star's dwindling now, surely!
MERRICK . O, small
 And dull now to the glowing size it was.
VINE . But is it certain there'll be nothing smasht?
 Not even a house knockt roaring down in crumbles?
 —And I did think, I'ld open my wife's mouth
 With envy of the dreadful things I'd seen!
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