<SPAN name="act4"></SPAN>
<h3> ACT IV </h3>
<p>SCENE—Same as Act Three, about nine o'clock of a foggy night two days
later. The whistles of steamers in the harbor can be heard. The cabin
is lighted by a small lamp on the table. A suitcase stands in the
middle of the floor. ANNA is sitting in the rocking-chair. She wears a
hat, is all dressed up as in Act One. Her face is pale, looks terribly
tired and worn, as if the two days just past had been ones of suffering
and sleepless nights. She stares before her despondently, her chin in
her hands. There is a timid knock on the door in rear. ANNA jumps to
her feet with a startled exclamation and looks toward the door with an
expression of mingled hope and fear.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Faintly.] Come in. [Then summoning her courage—more
resolutely.] Come in. [The door is opened and CHRIS appears in the
doorway. He is in a very bleary, bedraggled condition, suffering from
the after effects of his drunk. A tin pail full of foaming beer is in
his hand. He comes forward, his eyes avoiding ANNA'S. He mutters
stupidly.] It's foggy.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Looking him over with contempt.] So you come back at last, did
you? You're a fine looking sight! [Then jeeringly.] I thought you'd
beaten it for good on account of the disgrace I'd brought on you.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Wincing-faintly.] Don't say dat, Anna, please! [He sits in a
chair by the table, setting down the can of beer, holding his head in
his hands]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Looks at him with a certain sympathy.] What's the trouble?
Feeling sick?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Dully.] Inside my head feel sick.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Well, what d'you expect after being soused for two days?
[Resentfully.] It serves you right. A fine thing—you leaving me alone
on this barge all that time!</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Humbly.] Ay'm sorry, Anna.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Scornfully] Sorry!</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—But Ay'm not sick inside head vay you mean. Ay'm sick from tank
too much about you, about me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—And how about me? D'you suppose I ain't been thinking, too?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Ay'm sorry, Anna. [He sees her bag and gives a start] You pack
your bag, Anna? You vas going—?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Forcibly.] Yes, I was going right back to what you think.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Anna!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—I went ashore to get a train for New York. I'd been waiting and
waiting 'till I was sick of it. Then I changed my mind and decided not
to go to-day. But I'm going first thing to-morrow, so it'll all be the
same in the end.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Raising his head—pleadingly] No, you never do dat, Anna!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a sneer.] Why not, I'd like to know?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—You don't never gat to do—dat vay—no more, Ay tal you. Ay fix
dat up all right.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Suspiciously.] Fix what up?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Not seeming to have heard her question—sadly.] You vas
vaiting, you say? You vasn't vaiting for me, Ay bet.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Callously.] You'd win.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—For dat Irish fallar?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Defiantly.] Yes—if you want to know! [Then with a forlorn
laugh.] If he did come back it'd only because he wanted to beat me up
or kill me, I suppose. But even if he did, I'd rather have him come
than not show up at all. I wouldn't care what he did.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Ay guess it's true you vas in love with him all right.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—You guess!</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Turning to her earnestly.] And Ay'm sorry for you like hell he
don't come, Anna!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Softened.] Seems to me you've changed your tune a lot.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Ay've been tanking, and Ay guess it vas all my fault—all bad
tangs dat happen to you. [Pleadingly.] You try for not hate me, Anna.
Ay'm crazy ole fool, dat's all.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Who said I hated you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Ay'm sorry for everytang Ay do wrong for you, Anna. Ay vant for
you be happy all rest of your life for make up! It make you happy marry
dat Irish fallar, Ay vant it, too.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Dully.]—Well, there ain't no chance. But I'm glad you think
different about it, anyway.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Supplicatingly.] And you tank—maybe—you forgive me sometime?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a wan smile.] I'll forgive you right now.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Seizing her hand and kissing it—brokenly.] Anna lilla! Anna
lilla!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Touched but a bit embarrassed.] Don't bawl about it. There ain't
nothing to forgive, anyway. It ain't your fault, and it ain't mine, and
it ain't his neither. We're all poor nuts, and things happen, and we
yust get mixed in wrong, that's all.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Eagerly.] You say right tang, Anna, py golly! It ain't nobody's
fault! [Shaking his fist.] It's dat ole davil, sea!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With an exasperated laugh.] Gee, won't you ever can that stuff?
[CHRIS relapses into injured silence. After a pause ANNA continues
curiously.] You said a minute ago you'd fixed something up—about me.
What was it?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[After a hesitating pause.] Ay'm shipping avay on sea again,
Anna.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Astounded.] You're—what?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Ay sign on steamer sail to-morrow. Ay gat my ole yob—bo'sun.
[ANNA stares at him. As he goes on, a bitter smile comes over her
face.] Ay tank dat's best tang for you. Ay only bring you bad luck, Ay
tank. Ay make your mo'der's life sorry. Ay don't vant make yours dat
way, but Ay do yust same. Dat ole davil, sea, she make me Yonah man
ain't no good for nobody. And Ay tank now it ain't no use fight with
sea. No man dat live going to beat her, py yingo!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a laugh of helpless bitterness.] So that's how you've fixed
me, is it?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Yes, Ay tank if dat ole davil gat me back she leave you alone
den.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Bitterly.] But, for Gawd's sake, don't you see, you're doing the
same thing you've always done? Don't you see—? [But she sees the look
of obsessed stubbornness on her father's face and gives it up
helplessly.] But what's the use of talking. You ain't right, that's
what. I'll never blame you for nothing no more. But how you could
figure out that was fixing me—!</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Dat ain't all. Ay gat dem fallars in steam-ship office to pay
you all money coming to me every month vhile Ay'm avay.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a hard laugh.] Thanks. But I guess I won't be hard up for
no small change.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Hurt—humbly.] It ain't much, Ay know, but it's plenty for keep
you so you never gat go.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Shortly.] Shut up, will you? We'll talk about it later, see?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[After a pause—ingratiatingly.] You like Ay go ashore look for
dat Irish fallar, Anna?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Angrily.] Not much! Think I want to drag him back?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[After a pause—uncomfortably.] Py golly, dat booze don't go
veil. Give me fever, Ay tank, Ay feel hot like hell. [He takes off his
coat and lets it drop on the floor. There is a loud thud.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a start.] What you got in your pocket, for Pete's sake—a
ton of lead? [She reaches down, takes the coat and pulls out a
revolver—looks from it to him in amazement.] A gun? What were you
doing with this?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Sheepishly.] Ay forgat. Ain't nutting. Ain't loaded, anyvay.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Breaking it open to make sure—then closing it again—looking at
him suspiciously.] That ain't telling me why you got it?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Sheepishly.] Ay'm ole fool. Ay gat it vhen Ay go ashore first.
Ay tank den it's all fault of dat Irish fallar.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a shudder.] Say, you're crazier than I thought. I never
dreamt you'd go that far.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Quickly.] Ay don't. Ay gat better sense right avay. Ay don't
never buy bullets even. It ain't his fault, Ay know.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Still suspicious of him.] Well, I'll take care of this for a
while, loaded or not. [She puts it in the drawer of table and closes
the drawer.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Placatingly.] Throw it overboard if you vant. Ay don't care,
[Then after a pause.] Py golly, Ay tank Ay go lie down. Ay feel sick.
[ANNA takes a magazine from the table. CHRIS hesitates by her chair.]
Ve talk again before Ay go, yes?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Dully.] Where's this ship going to?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Cape Town. Dat's in South Africa. She's British steamer called
Londonderry. [He stands hesitatingly—finally blurts out.] Anna—you
forgive me sure?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Wearily.] Sure I do. You ain't to blame. You're yust—what you
are—like me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Pleadingly.] Den—you lat me kiss you again once?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Raising her face—forcing a wan smile.] Sure. No hard feelings.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Kisses her—brokenly.] Anna lilla! Ay—[He fights for words to
express himself, but finds none—miserably—with a sob.] Ay can't say
it. Good-night, Anna.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Good-night. [He picks up the can of beer and goes slowly into the
room on left, his shoulders bowed, his head sunk forward dejectedly. He
closes the door after him. ANNA turns over the pages of the magazine,
trying desperately to banish her thoughts by looking at the pictures.
This fails to distract her, and flinging the magazine back on the
table, she springs to her feet and walks about the cabin distractedly,
clenching and unclenching her hands. She speaks aloud to herself in a
tense, trembling voice.] Gawd, I can't stand this much longer! What am
I waiting for anyway?—like a damn fool! [She laughs helplessly, then
checks herself abruptly, as she hears the sound of heavy footsteps on
the deck outside. She appears to recognize these and her face lights up
with joy. She gasps:] Mat! [A strange terror seems suddenly to seize
her. She rushes to the table, takes the revolver out of drawer and
crouches down in the corner, left, behind the cupboard. A moment later
the door is flung open and MAT BURKE appears in the doorway. He is in
bad shape—his clothes torn and dirty, covered with sawdust as if he
had been grovelling or sleeping on barroom floors. There is a red
bruise on his forehead over one of his eyes, another over one
cheekbone, his knuckles are skinned and raw—plain evidence of the
fighting he has been through on his "bat." His eyes are bloodshot and
heavy-lidded, his face has a bloated look. But beyond these
appearances—the results of heavy drinking—there is an expression in
his eyes of wild mental turmoil, of impotent animal rage baffled by its
own abject misery.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Peers blinkingly about the cabin—hoarsely.] Let you not be
hiding from me, whoever's here—though 'tis well you know I'd have a
right to come back and murder you. [He stops to listen. Hearing no
sound, he closes the door behind him and comes forward to the table. He
throws himself into the rocking-chair—despondently.] There's no one
here, I'm thinking, and 'tis a great fool I am to be coming. [With a
sort of dumb, uncomprehending anguish.] Yerra, Mat Burke, 'tis a great
jackass you've become and what's got into you at all, at all? She's
gone out of this long ago, I'm telling you, and you'll never see her
face again. [ANNA stands up, hesitating, struggling between joy and
fear. BURKE'S eyes fall on ANNA'S bag. He leans over to examine it.]
What's this? [Joyfully.] It's hers. She's not gone! But where is she?
Ashore? [Darkly.] What would she be doing ashore on this rotten night?
[His face suddenly convulsed with grief and rage.] 'Tis that, is it?
Oh, God's curse on her! [Raging.] I'll wait 'till she comes and choke
her dirty life out. [ANNA starts, her face grows hard. She steps into
the room, the revolver in her right hand by her side.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[In a cold, hard tone.] What are you doing here?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Wheeling about with a terrified gasp] Glory be to God! [They
remain motionless and silent for a moment, holding each other's eyes.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[In the same hard voice] Well, can't you talk?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Trying to fall into an easy, careless tone] You've a year's
growth scared out of me, coming at me so sudden and me thinking I was
alone.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—You've got your nerve butting in here without knocking or
nothing. What d'you want?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Airily] Oh, nothing much. I was wanting to have a last word
with you, that's all. [He moves a step toward her.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Sharply—raising the revolver in her hand.] Careful now! Don't
try getting too close. I heard what you said you'd do to me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Noticing the revolver for the first time.] Is it murdering me
you'd be now, God forgive you? [Then with a contemptuous laugh.] Or is
it thinking I'd be frightened by that old tin whistle? [He walks
straight for her.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Wildly.] Look out, I tell you!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Who has come so close that the revolver is almost touching his
chest.] Let you shoot, then! [Then with sudden wild grief.] Let you
shoot, I'm saying, and be done with it! Let you end me with a shot and
I'll be thanking you, for it's a rotten dog's life I've lived the past
two days since I've known what you are, 'til I'm after wishing I was
never born at all!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Overcome—letting the revolver drop to the floor, as if her
fingers had no strength to hold it—hysterically.] What d'you want
coming here? Why don't you beat it? Go on! [She passes him and sinks
down in the rocking-chair.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Following her—mournfully.] 'Tis right you'd be asking why did
I come. [Then angrily.] 'Tis because 'tis a great weak fool of the
world I am, and me tormented with the wickedness you'd told of
yourself, and drinking oceans of booze that'd make me forget. Forget?
Divil a word I'd forget, and your face grinning always in front of my
eyes, awake or asleep, 'til I do be thinking a madhouse is the proper
place for me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Glancing at his hands and—face—scornfully] You look like you
ought to be put away some place. Wonder you wasn't pulled in. You been
scrapping, too, ain't you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—I have—with every scut would take off his coat to me!
[Fiercely.] And each time I'd be hitting one a clout in the mug, it
wasn't his face I'd be seeing at all, but yours, and me wanting to
drive you a blow would knock you out of this world where I wouldn't be
seeing or thinking more of you.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Her lips trembling pitifully] Thanks!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Walking up and down—distractedly.] That's right, make game of
me! Oh, I'm a great coward surely, to be coming back to speak with you
at all. You've a right to laugh at me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—I ain't laughing at you, Mat.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Unheeding.] You to be what you are, and me to be Mat Burke, and
me to be drove back to look at you again! 'Tis black shame is on me!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Resentfully.] Then get out. No one's holding you!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Bewilderedly] And me to listen to that talk from a woman like
you and be frightened to close her mouth with a slap! Oh, God help me,
I'm a yellow coward for all men to spit at! [Then furiously] But I'll
not be getting out of this 'till I've had me word. [Raising his fist
threateningly] And let you look out how you'd drive me! [Letting his
fist fall helplessly] Don't be angry now! I'm raving like a real
lunatic, I'm thinking, and the sorrow you put on me has my brains
drownded in grief. [Suddenly bending down to her and grasping her arm
intensely] Tell me it's a lie, I'm saying! That's what I'm after coming
to hear you say.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Dully] A lie? What?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[With passionate entreaty] All the badness you told me two days
back. Sure it must be a lie! You was only making game of me, wasn't
you? Tell me 'twas a lie, Anna, and I'll be saying prayers of thanks on
my two knees to the Almighty God!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Terribly shaken—faintly.] I can't. Mat. [As he turns
away—imploringly.] Oh, Mat, won't you see that no matter what I was I
ain't that any more? Why, listen! I packed up my bag this afternoon and
went ashore. I'd been waiting here all alone for two days, thinking
maybe you'd come back—thinking maybe you'd think over all I'd
said—and maybe—oh, I don't know what I was hoping! But I was afraid
to even go out of the cabin for a second, honest—afraid you might come
and not find me here. Then I gave up hope when you didn't show up and I
went to the railroad station. I was going to New York. I was going
back—</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Hoarsely.] God's curse on you!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Listen, Mat! You hadn't come, and I'd gave up hope. But—in the
station—I couldn't go. I'd bought my ticket and everything. [She takes
the ticket from her dress and tries to hold it before his eyes.] But I
got to thinking about you—and I couldn't take the train—I couldn't!
So I come back here—to wait some more. Oh, Mat, don't you see I've
changed? Can't you forgive what's dead and gone—and forget it?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Turning on her—overcome by rage again.] Forget, is it? I'll
not forget 'til my dying day, I'm telling you, and me tormented with
thoughts. [In a frenzy.] Oh, I'm wishing I had wan of them fornenst me
this minute and I'd beat him with my fists 'till he'd be a bloody
corpse! I'm wishing the whole lot of them will roast in hell 'til the
Judgment Day—and yourself along with them, for you're as bad as they
are.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Shuddering.] Mat! [Then after a pause—in a voice of dead, stony
calm.] Well, you've had your say. Now you better beat it.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Starts slowly for the door—hesitates—then after a pause.] And
what'll you be doing?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—What difference does it make to you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—I'm asking you!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[In the same tone.] My bag's packed and I got my ticket. I'll go
to New York to-morrow.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Helplessly.] You mean—you'll be doing the same again?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Stonily.] Yes.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[In anguish.] You'll not! Don't torment me with that talk! 'Tis
a she-divil you are sent to drive me mad entirely!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Her voice breaking.] Oh, for Gawd's sake, Mat, leave me alone!
Go away! Don't you see I'm licked? Why d'you want to keep on kicking me?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Indignantly.] And don't you deserve the worst I'd say, God
forgive you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—All right. Maybe I do. But don't rub it in. Why ain't you done
what you said you was going to? Why ain't you got that ship was going
to take you to the other side of the earth where you'd never see me
again?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—I have.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Startled.] What—then you're going—honest?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—I signed on to-day at noon, drunk as I was—and she's sailing
to-morrow.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—And where's she going to?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—Cape Town.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[The memory of having heard that name a little while before
coming to her—with a start, confusedly.] Cape Town? Where's that. Far
away?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—'Tis at the end of Africa. That's far for you.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Forcing a laugh.] You're keeping your word all right, ain't you?
[After a slight pause—curiously.] What's the boat's name?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—The Londonderry.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[It suddenly comes to her that this is the same ship her father
is sailing on.] The Londonderry! It's the same—Oh, this is too much!
[With wild, ironical laughter.] Ha-ha-ha!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—What's up with you now?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Ha-ha-ha! It's funny, funny! I'll die laughing!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Irritated.] Laughing at what?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—It's a secret. You'll know soon enough. It's funny. [Controlling
herself—after a pause—cynically.] What kind of a place is this Cape
Town? Plenty of dames there, I suppose?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—To hell with them! That I may never see another woman to my
dying hour!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—That's what you say now, but I'll bet by the time you get there
you'll have forgot all about me and start in talking the same old bull
you talked to me to the first one you meet.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Offended.] I'll not, then! God mend you, is it making me out to
be the like of yourself you are, and you taking up with this one and
that all the years of your life?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Angrily assertive.] Yes, that's yust what I do mean! You been
doing the same thing all your life, picking up a new girl in every
port. How're you any better than I was?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Thoroughly exasperated.] Is it no shame you have at all? I'm a
fool to be wasting talk on you and you hardened in badness. I'll go out
of this and lave you alone forever. [He starts for the door—then stops
to turn on her furiously] And I suppose 'tis the same lies you told
them all before that you told to me?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Indignantly.] That's a lie! I never did!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Miserably.] You'd be saying that, anyway.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Forcibly, with growing intensity.] Are you trying to accuse
me—of being in love—really in love—with them?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—I'm thinking you were, surely.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Furiously, as if this were the last insult—advancing on him
threateningly] You mutt, you! I've stood enough from you. Don't you
dare. [With scornful bitterness.] Love 'em! Oh, my Gawd! You damn
thick-head! Love 'em? [Savagely.] I hated 'em, I tell you! Hated 'em,
hated 'em, hated 'em! And may Gawd strike me dead this minute and my
mother, too, if she was alive, if I ain't telling you the honest truth!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Immensely pleased by her vehemence—a light beginning to break
over his face—but still uncertain, torn between doubt and the desire
to believe—helplessly.] If I could only be believing you now!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Distractedly.] Oh, what's the use? What's the use of me talking?
What's the use of anything? [Pleadingly.] Oh, Mat, you mustn't think
that for a second! You mustn't! Think all the other bad about me you
want to, and I won't kick, 'cause you've a right to. But don't think
that! [On the point of tears.] I couldn't bear it! It'd be yust too
much to know you was going away where I'd never see you again—thinking
that about me!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[After an inward struggle—tensely—forcing out the words with
difficulty.] If I was believing—that you'd never had love for any
other man in the world but me—I could be forgetting the rest, maybe.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a cry of joy.] Mat!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Slowly.] If 'tis truth you're after telling, I'd have a right,
maybe, to believe you'd changed—and that I'd changed you myself 'til
the thing you'd been all your life wouldn't be you any more at all.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Hanging on his words—breathlessly.] Oh, Mat! That's what I been
trying to tell you all along!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Simply.] For I've a power of strength in me to lead men the way
I want, and women, too, maybe, and I'm thinking I'd change you to a new
woman entirely, so I'd never know, or you either, what kind of woman
you'd been in the past at all.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—Yes, you could, Mat! I know you could!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—And I'm thinking 'twasn't your fault, maybe, but having that old
ape for a father that left you to grow up alone, made you what you was.
And if I could be believing 'tis only me you—</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Distractedly.] You got to believe it. Mat! What can I do? I'll
do anything, anything you want to prove I'm not lying!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Suddenly seems to have a solution. He feels in the pocket of
his coat and grasps something—solemnly.] Would you be willing to swear
an oath, now—a terrible, fearful oath would send your soul to the
divils in hell if you was lying?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Eagerly.] Sure, I'll swear, Mat—on anything!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Takes a small, cheap old crucifix from his pocket and holds it
up for her to see.] Will you swear on this?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Reaching out for it.] Yes. Sure I will. Give it to me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Holding it away.] 'Tis a cross was given me by my mother, God
rest her soul. [He makes the sign of the cross mechanically.] I was a
lad only, and she told me to keep it by me if I'd be waking or sleeping
and never lose it, and it'd bring me luck. She died soon after. But I'm
after keeping it with me from that day to this, and I'm telling you
there's great power in it, and 'tis great bad luck it's saved me from
and me roaming the seas, and I having it tied round my neck when my
last ship sunk, and it bringing me safe to land when the others went to
their death. [Very earnestly.] And I'm warning you now, if you'd swear
an oath on this, 'tis my old woman herself will be looking down from
Hivin above, and praying Almighty God and the Saints to put a great
curse on you if she'd hear you swearing a lie!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Awed by his manner—superstitiously] I wouldn't have the
nerve—honest—if it was a lie. But it's the truth and I ain't scared
to swear. Give it to me.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Handing it to her—almost frightenedly, as if he feared for her
safety.] Be careful what you'd swear, I'm saying.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Holding the cross gingerly.] Well—what do you want me to swear?
You say it.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—Swear I'm the only man in the world ivir you felt love for.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Looking into his eyes steadily] I swear it.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—And that you'll be forgetting from this day all the badness
you've done and never do the like of it again.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Forcibly.] I swear it! I swear it by God!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—And may the blackest curse of God strike you if you're lying.
Say it now!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—And may the blackest curse of God strike me if I'm lying!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[With a stupendous sigh.] Oh, glory be to God, I'm after
believing you now! [He takes the cross from her hand, his face beaming
with joy, and puts it back in his pocket. He puts his arm about her
waist and is about to kiss her when he stops, appalled by some terrible
doubt.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Alarmed.] What's the matter with you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[With sudden fierce questioning.] Is it Catholic ye are?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Confused.] No. Why?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Filled with a sort of bewildered foreboding.] Oh, God, help me!
[With a dark glance of suspicion at her.] There's some divil's trickery
in it, to be swearing an oath on a Catholic cross and you wan of the
others.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Distractedly.] Oh, Mat, don't you believe me?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Miserably.] If it isn't a Catholic you are—</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—I ain't nothing. What's the difference? Didn't you hear me swear?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Passionately.] Oh, I'd a right to stay away from you—but I
couldn't! I was loving you in spite of it all and wanting to be with
you, God forgive me, no matter what you are. I'd go mad if I'd not have
you! I'd be killing the world—[He seizes her in his arms and kisses
her fiercely.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[With a gasp of joy.] Mat!</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Suddenly holding her away from him and staring into her eyes as
if to probe into her soul—slowly.] If your oath is no proper oath at
all, I'll have to be taking your naked word for it and have you anyway,
I'm thinking—I'm needing you that bad!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Hurt—reproachfully.] Mat! I swore, didn't I?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Defiantly, as if challenging fate.] Oath or no oath, 'tis no
matter. We'll be wedded in the morning, with the help of God. [Still
more defiantly.] We'll be happy now, the two of us, in spite of the
divil! [He crushes her to him and kisses her again. The door on the
left is pushed open and CHRIS appears in the doorway. He stands
blinking at them. At first the old expression of hatred of BURKE comes
into his eyes instinctively. Then a look of resignation and relief
takes its place. His face lights up with a sudden happy thought. He
turns back into the bedroom—reappears immediately with the tin can of
beer in his hand grinning.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—Me have drink on this, py golly! [They break away from each
other with startled exclamations.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Explosively.] God stiffen it! [He takes a step toward CHRIS
threateningly.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Happily—to her father.] That's the way to talk! [With a laugh.]
And say, it's about time for you and Mat to kiss and make up. You're
going to be shipmates on the Londonderry, did you know it?</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Astounded.] Shipmates—Has himself—</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Equally astounded.] Ay vas bo'sun on her.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—The divil! [Then angrily.] You'd be going back to sea and
leaving her alone, would you?</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Quickly.] It's all right, Mat. That's where he belongs, and I
want him to go. You got to go, too; we'll need the money. [With a
laugh, as she gets the glasses.] And as for me being alone, that runs
in the family, and I'll get used to it. [Pouring out their glasses.]
I'll get a little house somewhere and I'll make a regular place for you
two to come back to,—wait and see. And now you drink up and be friends.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Happily—but still a bit resentful against the old man.] Sure!
[Clinking his glass against CHRIS'.] Here's luck to you! [He drinks.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Subdued—his face melancholy.] Skoal. [He drinks.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[To Anna, with a wink.] You'll not be lonesome long. I'll see to
that, with the help of God. 'Tis himself here will be having a
grandchild to ride on his foot, I'm telling you!</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Turning away in embarrassment.] Quit the kidding, now. [She
picks up her bag and goes into the room on left. As soon as she is gone
BURKE relapses into an attitude of gloomy thought. CHRIS stares at his
beer absent-mindedly. Finally BURKE turns on him.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—Is it any religion at all you have, you and your Anna?</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Surprised.] Vhy yes. Ve vas Lutheran in ole country.</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Horrified.] Luthers, is it? [Then with a grim resignation,
slowly, aloud to himself.] Well, damned then surely. Yerra, what's the
difference? 'Tis the will of God, anyway.</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Moodily preoccupied with his own thoughts—speaks with somber
premonition as ANNA re-enters from the left.] It's funny. It's queer,
yes—you and me shipping on same boat dat vay. It ain't right. Ay don't
know—it's dat funny vay ole davil sea do her vorst dirty tricks, yes.
It's so. [He gets up and goes back and, opening the door, stares out
into the darkness.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
BURKE—[Nodding his head in gloomy acquiescence—with a great sigh.]
I'm fearing maybe you have the right of it for once, divil take you.</p>
<p class="dialog">
ANNA—[Forcing a laugh.] Gee, Mat, you ain't agreeing with him, are
you? [She comes forward and puts her arm about his shoulder—with a
determined gaiety.] Aw say, what's the matter? Cut out the gloom. We're
all fixed now, ain't we, me and you? [Pours out more beer into his
glass and fills one for herself—slaps him on the back.] Come on!
Here's to the sea, no matter what! Be a game sport and drink to that!
Come on! [She gulps down her glass. Burke banishes his superstitious
premonitions with a defiant jerk of his head, grins up at her, and
drinks to her toast.]</p>
<p class="dialog">
CHRIS—[Looking out into the night—lost in his somber
preoccupation—shakes his head and mutters.] Fog, fog, fog, all bloody
time. You can't see vhere you vas going, no. Only dat ole davil,
sea—she knows! [The two stare at him. From the harbor comes the
muffled, mournful wail of steamers' whistles.]</p>
<p class="stage">
[The Curtain Falls]</p>
<br/><br/><br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />