SCENE FOURTH.

Among the Rondë mountains. Sunset. Shining snow-peaks all around.

Peer Gynt enters, dizzy and bewildered.

Peer.

Tower over tower arises!

Hei, what a glittering gate!

Stand! Will you stand! It’s drifting

Further and further away!

High on the vane the wind-cock

Arches his wings for flight;—

Blue spread the rifts and bluer,

Locked is the fell and barred.—

What are those trunks and tree-roots,

That grow from the ridge’s clefts?

They are warriors heron-footed!

Now they, too, are fading away.

A shimmering like rainbow-streamers

Goes shooting through eyes and brain.

What is it, that far-off chiming?

What’s weighing my eyebrows down?

Hu, how my forehead’s throbbing—

A tightening red-hot ring——!

I cannot think who the devil

as bound it around my head!

[Sinks down.

Flight o’er the Edge of Gendin—

Stuff and accursed lies!

Up o’er the steepest hill-wall

With the bride,—and a whole day drunk;

Hunted by hawks and falcons,

Threatened by trolls and such,

Sporting with crazy wenches:—

and accursed stuff!

[Gazes long upwards.

Yonder sail two brown eagles.

Southward the wild geese fly.

And here I must splash and stumble

In quagmire and filth knee-deep!

[Springs up.

I’ll fly too! I will wash myself clean in

The bath of the keenest winds!

I’ll fly high! I will plunge myself fair in

The glorious christening-font!

I will soar far over the sæter;

I will ride myself pure of soul;

I will forth o’er the salt sea waters,

And high over Engelland’s prince!

Ay, gaze as ye may, young maidens;

My ride is for none of you;

You’re wasting your time in waiting—!

Yet maybe I’ll swoop down, too.—

What has come of the two brown eagles—?

They’ve vanished, the devil knows where!—

There’s the peak of a gable rising;

It’s soaring on every hand;

It’s growing from out the ruins;—

See, the gateway is standing wide!

Ha-ha, yonder house, I know it;

It’s grandfather’s new-built farm!

Gone are the clouts from the windows;

The crazy old fence is gone.

The lights gleam from every casement;

There’s a feast in the hall to-night.

There, that was the provost clinking

The back of his knife on his glass;—

There’s the captain flinging his bottle,

And shivering the mirror to bits.—

Let them waste; let it all be squandered!

Peace, mother; what need we care!

’Tis the rich Jon Gynt gives the banquet;

Hurrah for the race of Gynt!

What’s all this bustle and hubbub?

Why do they shout and bawl?

The captain is calling the son in;—

Oh, the provost would drink my health.

In then, Peer Gynt, to the judgment;

It rings forth in song and shout:

Peer Gynt, thou art come of great things,

And great things shall come of thee!

[Leaps forward, but runs his head against a rock, falls, and remains stretched on the ground.