In the Shadow of the Glen
A Play in One Act
Persons in the Play
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Dan Burke, farmer and herd
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Nora Burke, his wife
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Micheal Dara, a young herd
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A Tramp
Scene: The last cottage at the head of a long glen in County Wicklow.
In the Shadow of the Glen
Cottage kitchen; turf fire on the right; a bed near it against the wall with a body lying on it covered with a sheet. A door is at the other end of the room, with a low table near it, and stools, or wooden chairs. There are a couple of glasses on the table, and a bottle of whisky, as if for a wake, with two cups, a teapot, and a homemade cake. There is another small door near the bed. Nora Burke is moving about the room, settling a few things, and lighting candles on the table, looking now and then at the bed with an uneasy look. Someone knocks softly at the door. She takes up a stocking with money from the table and puts it in her pocket. Then she opens the door.
Tramp | Outside. Good evening to you, lady of the house. |
Nora | Good evening, kindly stranger, itās a wild night, God help you, to be out in the rain falling. |
Tramp | It is, surely, and I walking to Brittas from the Aughrim fair. |
Nora | Is it walking on your feet, stranger? |
Tramp | On my two feet, lady of the house, and when I saw the light below I thought maybe if youād a sup of new milk and a quiet decent corner where a man could sleepā āā ā¦ He looks in past her and sees the dead man. The Lord have mercy on us all! |
Nora | It doesnāt matter anyway, stranger, come in out of the rain. |
Tramp | Coming in slowly and going towards the bed. Is it departed he is? |
Nora | It is, stranger. Heās after dying on me, God forgive him, and there I am now with a hundred sheep beyond on the hills, and no turf drawn for the winter. |
Tramp | Looking closely at the dead man. Itās a queer look is on him for a man thatās dead. |
Nora | Half-humorously. He was always queer, stranger, and I suppose them thatās queer and they living men will be queer bodies after. |
Tramp | Isnāt it a great wonder youāre letting him lie there, and he not tidied, or laid out itself? |
Nora | Coming to the bed. I was afeard, stranger, for he put a black curse on me this morning if Iād touch his body the time heād die sudden, or let anyone touch it except his sister only, and itās ten miles away she lives in the big glen over the hill. |
Tramp | Looking at her and nodding slowly. Itās a queer story he wouldnāt let his own wife touch him, and he dying quiet in his bed. |
Nora | He was an old man, and an odd man, stranger, and itās always up on the hills he was thinking thoughts in the dark mist. She pulls back a bit of the sheet. Lay your hand on him now, and tell me if itās cold he is surely. |
Tramp | Is it getting the curse on me youād be, woman of the house? I wouldnāt lay my hand on him for the Lough Nahanagan and it filled with gold. |
Nora | Looking uneasily at the body. Maybe cold would be no sign of death with the like of him, for he was always cold, every day since I knew himā āā ā¦ and every night, strangerā āā ā¦ she covers up his face and comes away from the bed; but Iām thinking itās dead he is surely, for heās complaining a while back of a pain in his heart, and this morning, the time he was going off to Brittas for three days or four, he was taken with a sharp turn. Then he went into his bed and he was saying it was destroyed he was, the time the shadow was going up through the glen, and when the sun set on the bog beyond he made a great lep, and let a great cry out of him, and stiffened himself out the like of a dead sheep. |
Tramp | Crosses himself. God rest his soul. |
Nora | Pouring him out a glass of whisky. Maybe that would do you better than the milk of the sweetest cow in County Wicklow. |
Tramp | The Almighty God reward you, and may it be to your good health. He drinks. |
Nora | Giving him a pipe and tobacco. Iāve no pipes saving his own, stranger, but theyāre sweet pipes to smoke. |
Tramp | Thank you kindly, lady of the house. |
Nora | Sit down now, stranger, and be taking your rest. |
Tramp | Filling a pipe and looking about the room. Iāve walked a great way through the world, lady of the house, and seen great wonders, but I never seen a wake till this day with fine spirits, and good tobacco, and the best of pipes, and no one to taste them but a woman only. |
Nora | Didnāt you hear me say it was only after dying on me he was when the sun went down, and how would I go out into the glen and tell the neighbours, and I a lone woman with no house near me? |
Tramp | Drinking. Thereās no offence, lady of the house? |
Nora | No offence in life, stranger. How would the like of you, passing in the dark night, know the lonesome way I was with no house near me at all? |
Tramp | Sitting down. I knew rightly. He lights his pipe so that there is a sharp light beneath his haggard face. And I was thinking, and I coming in through the door, that itās many a lone woman would be afeard of the like of me in the dark night, in a place wouldnāt be as lonesome as this place, where there arenāt two living souls would see the little light you have shining from the glass. |
Nora | Slowly. Iām thinking many would be afeard, but I never knew what way Iād be afeard of beggar or bishop or any man of you at all.ā āā ā¦ She looks towards the window and lowers her voice. Itās other things than the like of you, stranger, would make a person afeard. |
Tramp | Looking round with a half-shudder. It is surely, God help us all! |
Nora | Looking at him for a moment with curiosity. Youāre saying that, stranger, as if you were easy afeard. |
Tramp | Speaking mournfully. Is it myself, lady of the house, that does be walking round in the long nights, and crossing the hills when the fog is on them, the time a little stick would seem as big as your arm, and a rabbit as big as a bay horse, and a stack of turf as big as a towering church in the city of Dublin? If myself was easy afeard, Iām telling you, itās long ago Iād have been locked into the Richmond Asylum, or maybe have run up into the back hills with nothing on me but an old shirt, and been eaten by the crows the like of Patch Darcyā āthe Lord have mercy on himā āin the year thatās gone. |
Nora | With interest. You knew Darcy? |
Tramp | Wasnāt I the last one heard his living voice in the whole world? |
Nora | There were great stories of what was heard at that time, but would anyone believe the things they do be saying in the glen? |
Tramp | It was no lie, lady of the house.ā āā ā¦ I was passing below on a dark night the like of this night, and the sheep were lying under the ditch and every one of them coughing, and choking, like an old man, with the great rain and the fog. Then I heard a thing talkingā āqueer talk, you wouldnāt believe at all, and you out of your dreamsā āand āMerciful God,ā says I, āif I begin hearing the like of that voice out of the thick mist, Iām destroyed surely.ā Then I run and I run till I was below in Rathvanna. I got drunk that night, I got drunk in the morning, and drunk the day afterā āI was coming from the races beyondā āand the third day they found Darcy.ā āā ā¦ Then I knew it was himself I was after hearing, and I wasnāt afeard any more. |
Nora | Speaking sorrowfully and slowly. God spare Darcy, heād always look in here and he passing up or passing down, and itās very lonesome I was after him a long while she looks over at the bed and lowers her voice, speaking very clearly, and then I got happy againā āif itās ever happy we are, strangerā āfor I got used to being lonesome. |
A short pause; then she stands up. | |
Nora | Was there anyone on the last bit of the road, stranger, and you coming from Aughrim? |
Tramp | There was a young man with a drift of mountain ewes, and he running after them this way and that. |
Nora | With a half-smile. Far down, stranger? |
Tramp | A piece only. |
Nora fills the kettle and puts it on the fire. | |
Nora | Maybe, if youāre not easy afeard, youād stay here a short while alone with himself. |
Tramp | I would surely. A man thatās dead can do no hurt. |
Nora | Speaking with a sort of constraint. Iām going a little back to the west, stranger, for himself would go there one night and another and whistle at that place, and then the young man youāre after seeingā āa kind of a farmer has come up from the sea to live in a cottage beyondā āwould walk round to see if there was a thing weāld have to be done, and Iām wanting him this night, the way he can go down into the glen when the sun goes up and tell the people that himself is dead. |
Tramp | Looking at the body in the sheet. Itās myself will go for him, lady of the house, and let you not be destroying yourself with the great rain. |
Nora | You wouldnāt find your way, stranger, for thereās a small path only, and it running up between two sluigs where an ass and cart would be drowned. She puts a shawl over her head. Let you be making yourself easy, and saying a prayer for his soul, and itās not long Iāll be coming again. |
Tramp | Moving uneasily. Maybe if youād a piece of a grey thread and a sharp needleā āthereās great safety in a needle, lady of the houseā āIād be putting a little stitch here and there in my old coat, the time Iāll be praying for his soul, and it going up naked to the saints of God. |
Nora | Takes a needle and thread from the front of her dress and gives it to him. Thereās the needle, stranger, and Iām thinking you wonāt be lonesome, and you used to the back hills, for isnāt a dead man itself more company than to be sitting alone, and hearing the winds crying, and you not knowing on what thing your mind would stay? |
Tramp | Slowly. Itās true, surely, and the Lord have mercy on us all! |
Nora goes out. The Tramp begins stitching one of the tags in his coat, saying the āDe Profundisā under his breath. In an instant the sheet is drawn slowly down, and Dan Burke looks out. The Tramp moves uneasily, then looks up, and springs to his feet with a movement of terror. | |
Dan | With a hoarse voice. Donāt be afeard, stranger; a man thatās dead can do no hurt. |
Tramp | Trembling. I meant no harm, your honour; and wonāt you leave me easy to be saying a little prayer for your soul? |
A long whistle is heard outside. | |
Dan | Sitting up in his bed and speaking fiercely. Ah, the devil mend her.ā āā ā¦ Do you hear that, stranger? Did ever you hear another woman could whistle the like of that with two fingers in her mouth? He looks at the table hurriedly. Iām destroyed with the drouth, and let you bring me a drop quickly before herself will come back. |
Tramp | Doubtfully. Is it not dead you are? |
Dan | How would I be dead, and I as dry as a baked bone, stranger? |
Tramp | Pouring out the whisky. What will herself say if she smells the stuff on you, for Iām thinking itās not for nothing youāre letting on to be dead? |
Dan | It is not, stranger, but she wonāt be coming near me at all, and itās not long now Iāll be letting on, for Iāve a cramp in my back, and my hipās asleep on me, and thereās been the devilās own fly itching my nose. Itās near dead I was wanting to sneeze, and you blathering about the rain, and Darcy bitterlyā āthe devil choke himā āand the towering church. Crying out impatiently. Give me that whisky. Would you have herself come back before I taste a drop at all? |
Tramp gives him the glass. | |
Dan | After drinking. Go over now to that cupboard, and bring me a black stick youāll see in the west corner by the wall. |
Tramp | Taking a stick from the cupboard. Is it that, your honour? |
Dan | It is, stranger; itās a long time Iām keeping that stick, for Iāve a bad wife in the house. |
Tramp | With a queer look. Is it herself, master of the house, and she a grand woman to talk? |
Dan | Itās herself, surely, itās a bad wife she isā āa bad wife for an old man, and Iām getting old, God help me, though Iāve an arm to me still. He takes the stick in his hand. Let you wait now a short while, and itās a great sight youāll see in this room in two hours or three. He stops to listen. Is that somebody above? |
Tramp | Listening. Thereās a voice speaking on the path. |
Dan | Put that stick here in the bed and smooth the sheet the way it was lying. He covers himself up hastily. Be falling to sleep now and donāt let on you know anything, or Iāll be having your life. I wouldnāt have told you at all but itās destroyed with the drouth I was. |
Tramp | Covering his head. Have no fear, master of the house. What is it I know of the like of you that Iād be saying a word or putting out my hand to stay you at all? |
He goes back to the fire, sits down on a stool with his back to the bed and goes on stitching his coat. | |
Dan | Under the sheet, querulously. Stranger! |
Tramp | Quickly. Whisht! whisht! Be quiet, Iām telling you; theyāre coming now at the door. |
Nora comes in with Micheal Dara, a tall, innocent young man, behind her. | |
Nora | I wasnāt long at all, stranger, for I met himself on the path. |
Tramp | You were middling long, lady of the house. |
Nora | There was no sign from himself? |
Tramp | No sign at all, lady of the house. |
Nora | To Micheal. Go over now and pull down the sheet, and look on himself, Micheal Dara, and youāll see itās the truth Iām telling you. |
Micheal | I will not, Nora, I do be afeard of the dead. |
He sits down on a stool next the table facing the Tramp. Nora puts the kettle on a lower hook of the pot hooks, and piles turf under it. | |
Nora | Turning to Tramp. Will you drink a sup of tea with myself and the young man, stranger, or speaking more persuasively will you go into the little room and stretch yourself a short while on the bed, Iām thinking itās destroyed you are walking the length of that way in the great rain. |
Tramp | Is it to go away and leave you, and you having a wake, lady of the house? I will not, surely. He takes a drink from his glass which he has beside him. And itās none of your tea Iām asking either. |
He goes on stitching. Nora makes the tea. | |
Micheal | After looking at the Tramp rather scornfully for a moment. Thatās a poor coat you have, God help you, and Iām thinking itās a poor tailor you are with it. |
Tramp | If itās a poor tailor I am, Iām thinking itās a poor herd does be running back and forward after a little handful of ewes the way I seen yourself running this day, young fellow, and you coming from the fair. |
Nora comes back to the table. | |
Nora | To Micheal in a low voice. Let you not mind him at all, Micheal Dara, he has a drop taken and itās soon heāll be falling asleep. |
Micheal | Itās no lie heās telling, I was destroyed surely. They were that wilful they were running off into one manās bit of oats, and another manās bit of hay, and tumbling into the red bogs till itās more like a pack of old goats than sheep they were.ā āā ā¦ Mountain ewes is a queer breed, Nora Burke, and I not used to them at all. |
Nora | Settling the tea things. Thereās no one can drive a mountain ewe but the men do be reared in the Glenmalure, Iāve heard them say, and above by Rathvanna, and the Glen Imaalā āmen the like of Patch Darcy, God spare his soul, who would walk through five hundred sheep and miss one of them, and he not reckoning them at all. |
Micheal | Uneasily. Is it the man went queer in his head the year thatās gone? |
Nora | It is, surely. |
Tramp | Plaintively. That was a great man, young fellowā āa great man, Iām telling you. There was never a lamb from his own ewes he wouldnāt know before it was marked, and heād run from this to the city of Dublin and never catch for his breath. |
Nora | Turning round quickly. He was a great man surely, stranger, and isnāt it a grand thing when you hear a living man saying a good word of a dead man, and he mad dying? |
Tramp | Itās the truth Iām saying, God spare his soul. |
He puts the needle under the collar of his coat, and settles himself to sleep in the chimney corner. Nora sits down at the table; Nora and Micheaelās backs are turned to the bed. | |
Micheal | Looking at her with a queer look. I heard tell this day, Nora Burke, that it was on the path below Patch Darcy would be passing up and passing down, and I heard them say heād never past it night or morning without speaking with yourself. |
Nora | In a low voice. It was no lie you heard, Micheal Dara. |
Micheal | Iām thinking itās a power of men youāre after knowing if itās in a lonesome place you live itself. |
Nora | Giving him his tea. Itās in a lonesome place you do have to be talking with someone, and looking for someone, in the evening of the day, and if itās a power of men Iām after knowing they were fine men, for I was a hard child to please, and a hard girl to please she looks at him a little sternly, and itās a hard woman I am to please this day, Micheal Dara, and itās no lie Iām telling you. |
Micheal | Looking over to see that the Tramp is asleep, and then pointing to the dead man. Was it a hard woman to please you were when you took himself for your man? |
Nora | What way would I live, and I an old woman, if I didnāt marry a man with a bit of a farm, and cows on it, and sheep on the back hills? |
Micheal | Considering. Thatās true, Nora, and maybe itās no fool you were, for thereās good grazing on it, if it is a lonesome place, and Iām thinking itās a good sum heās left behind. |
Nora | Taking the stocking with the money from her pocket, and putting it on the table. I do be thinking in the long nights it was a big fool I was that time, Micheal Dara, for what good is a bit of a farm with cows on it, and sheep on the back hills, when you do be sitting looking out from a door the like of that door, and seeing nothing but the mists rolling down the bog, and the mists again and they rolling up the bog, and hearing nothing but the wind crying out in the bits of broken trees were left from the great storm, and the streams roaring with the rain. |
Micheal | Looking at her uneasily. What is it ails you, this night, Nora Burke? Iāve heard tell itās the like of that talk you do hear from men, and they after being a great while on the back hills. |
Nora | Putting out the money on the table. Itās a bad night, and a wild night, Micheal Dara, and isnāt it a great while I am at the foot of the back hills, sitting up here boiling food for himself, and food for the brood sow, and baking a cake when the night falls? She puts up the money listlessly in little piles on the table. Isnāt it a long while I am sitting here in the winter and the summer, and the fine spring, with the young growing behind me and the old passing, saying to myself one time, to look on Mary Brien, who wasnāt that height holding out her hand, and I a fine girl growing up, and there she is now with two children, and another coming on her in three months or four. |
She pauses. | |
Micheal | Moving over three of the piles. Thatās three pounds we have now, Nora Burke. |
Nora | Continuing in the same voice. And saying to myself another time, to look on Peggy Cavanagh, who had the lightest hand at milking a cow that wouldnāt be easy, or turning a cake, and there she is now walking round on the roads, or sitting in a dirty old house, with no teeth in her mouth, and no sense, and no more hair than youād see on a bit of a hill and they after burning the furze from it. |
Micheal | Thatās five pounds and ten notes, a good sum, surely!ā āā ā¦ Itās not that way youāll be talking when you marry a young man, Nora Burke, and they were saying in the fair my lambs were the best lambs, and I got a grand price, for Iām no fool now at making a bargain when my lambs are good. |
Nora | What was it you got? |
Micheal | Twenty pound for the lot, Nora Burke.ā āā ā¦ Weād do right to wait now till himself will be quiet awhile in the Seven Churches, and then youāll marry me in the chapel of Rathvanna, and Iāll bring the sheep up on the bit of a hill you have on the back mountain, and we wonāt have anything weād be afeard to let our minds on when the mist is down. |
Nora | Pouring him out some whisky. Why would I marry you, Mike Dara? Youāll be getting old and Iāll be getting old, and in a little while Iām telling you, youāll be sitting up in your bedā āthe way himself was sittingā āwith a shake in your face, and your teeth falling, and the white hair sticking out round you like an old bush where sheep do be leaping a gap. |
Dan Burke sits up noiselessly from under the sheet, with his hand to his face. His white hair is sticking out round his head. Nora goes on slowly without hearing him. | |
Itās a pitiful thing to be getting old, but itās a queer thing surely. Itās a queer thing to see an old man sitting up there in his bed with no teeth in him, and a rough word in his mouth, and his chin the way it would take the bark from the edge of an oak board youād have building a door.ā āā ā¦ God forgive me, Micheal Dara, weāll all be getting old, but itās a queer thing surely. | |
Micheal | Itās too lonesome you are from living a long time with an old man, Nora, and youāre talking again like a herd that would be coming down from the thick mist he puts his arm round her, but itās a fine life youāll have now with a young manā āa fine life, surely.ā āā ā¦ |
Dan sneezes violently. Micheal tries to get to the door, but before he can do so, Dan jumps out of the bed in queer white clothes, with his stick in his hand, and goes over and puts his back against it. | |
Micheal | Son of God deliver us! |
Crosses himself, and goes backward across the room. | |
Dan | Holding up his hand at him. Now youāll not marry her the time Iām rotting below in the Seven Churches, and youāll see the thing Iāll give you will follow you on the back mountains when the wind is high. |
Micheal | To Nora. Get me out of it, Nora, for the love of God. He always did what you bid him, and Iām thinking he would do it now. |
Nora | Looking at the Tramp. Is it dead he is or living? |
Dan | Turning towards her. Itās little you care if itās dead or living I am, but thereāll be an end now of your fine times, and all the talk you have of young men and old men, and of the mist coming up or going down. He opens the door. Youāll walk out now from that door, Nora Burke, and itās not tomorrow, or the next day, or any day of your life, that youāll put in your foot through it again. |
Tramp | Standing up. Itās a hard thing youāre saying for an old man, master of the house, and what would the like of her do if you put her out on the roads? |
Dan | Let her walk round the like of Peggy Cavanagh below, and be begging money at the crossroads, or selling songs to the men. To Nora. Walk out now, Nora Burke, and itās soon youāll be getting old with that life, Iām telling you; itās soon your teethāll be falling and your headāll be the like of a bush where sheep do be leaping a gap. |
He pauses: Nora looks round at Micheal. | |
Micheal | Timidly. Thereās a fine Union below in Rathdrum. |
Dan | The like of her would never go there.ā āā ā¦ Itās lonesome roads sheāll be going and hiding herself away till the end will come, and they find her stretched like a dead sheep with the frost on her, or the big spiders maybe, and they putting their webs on her, in the butt of a ditch. |
Nora | Angrily. What way will yourself be that day, Daniel Burke? What way will you be that day and you lying down a long while in your grave? For itās bad you are living, and itās bad youāll be when youāre dead. She looks at him a moment fiercely, then half turns away and speaks plaintively again. Yet, if it is itself, Daniel Burke, who can help it at all, and let you be getting up into your bed, and not be taking your death with the wind blowing on you, and the rain with it, and you half in your skin. |
Dan | Itās proud and happy youād be if I was getting my death the day I was shut of yourself. Pointing to the door. Let you walk out through that door, Iām telling you, and let you not be passing this way if itās hungry you are, or wanting a bed. |
Tramp | Pointing to Micheal. Maybe himself would take her. |
Nora | What would he do with me now? |
Tramp | Give you the half of a dry bed, and good food in your mouth. |
Dan | Is it a fool you think him, stranger, or is it a fool you were born yourself? Let her walk out of that door, and let you go along with her, strangerā āif itās raining itselfā āfor itās too much talk you have surely. |
Tramp | Going over to Nora. Weāll be going now, lady of the house; the rain is falling, but the air is kind and maybe itāll be a grand morning, by the grace of God. |
Nora | What good is a grand morning when Iām destroyed surely, and I going out to get my death walking the roads? |
Tramp | Youāll not be getting your death with myself, lady of the house, and I knowing all the ways a man can put food in his mouth.ā āā ā¦ Weāll be going now, Iām telling you, and the time youāll be feeling the cold, and the frost, and the great rain, and the sun again, and the south wind blowing in the glens, youāll not be sitting up on a wet ditch, the way youāre after sitting in this place, making yourself old with looking on each day, and it passing you by. Youāll be saying one time, āItās a grand evening, by the grace of God,ā and another time, āItās a wild night, God help us, but itāll pass surely.ā Youāll be sayingā āā ā¦ |
Dan | Goes over to them, crying out impatiently. Go out of that door, Iām telling you, and do your blathering below in the glen. |
Nora gathers a few things into her shawl. | |
Tramp | At the door. Come along with me now, lady of the house, and itās not my blather youāll be hearing only, but youāll be hearing the herons crying out over the black lakes, and youāll be hearing the grouse and the owls with them, and the larks and the big thrushes when the days are warm, and itās not from the like of them youāll be hearing a tale of getting old like Peggy Cavanagh, and losing the hair off you, and the light of your eyes, but itās fine songs youāll be hearing when the sun goes up, and thereāll be no old fellow wheezing, the like of a sick sheep, close to your ear. |
Nora | Iām thinking itās myself will be wheezing that time with lying down under the Heavens when the night is cold; but youāve a fine bit of talk, stranger, and itās with yourself Iāll go. She goes towards the door, then turns to Dan. You think itās a grand thing youāre after doing with your letting on to be dead, but what is it at all? What way would a woman live in a lonesome place the like of this place, and she not making a talk with the men passing? And what way will yourself live from this day, with none to care for you? What is it youāll have now but a black life, Daniel Burke; and itās not long, Iām telling you, till youāll be lying again under that sheet, and you dead surely. |
She goes out with the Tramp. Micheal is slinking after them, but Dan stops him. | |
Dan | Sit down now and take a little taste of the stuff, Micheal Dara. Thereās a great drouth on me, and the night is young. |
Micheal | Coming back to the table. And itās very dry I am, surely, with the fear of death you put on me, and I after driving mountain ewes since the turn of the day. |
Dan | Throwing away his stick. I was thinking to strike you, Micheal Dara, but youāre a quiet man, God help you, and I donāt mind you at all. He pours out two glasses of whisky, and gives one to Micheal. Your good health, Micheal Dara. |
Micheal | God reward you, Daniel Burke, and may you have a long life, and a quiet life, and good health with it. |
They drink. | |
Curtain. |