Plays by August Strindberg: Creditors. Pariah. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about Plays by August Strindberg.

Plays by August Strindberg: Creditors. Pariah. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 99 pages of information about Plays by August Strindberg.

Adolph.  You hate me then?

Tekla.  No, I don’t.  And I don’t think I shall either.  But that’s probably because you are nothing to me but a child.

Adolph.  At this moment, yes.  But do you remember how it was while the storm swept over us?  Then you lay there like an infant in arms and just cried.  Then you had to sit on my lap, and I had to kiss your eyes to sleep.  Then I had to be your nurse; had to see that you fixed your hair before going out; had to send your shoes to the cobbler, and see that there was food in the house.  I had to sit by your side, holding your hand for hours at a time:  you were afraid, afraid of the whole world, because you didn’t have a single friend, and because you were crushed by the hostility of public opinion.  I had to talk courage into you until my mouth was dry and my head ached.  I had to make myself believe that I was strong.  I had to force myself into believing in the future.  And so I brought you back to life, when you seemed already dead.  Then you admired me.  Then I was the man—­not that kind of athlete you had just left, but the man of will-power, the mesmerist who instilled new nervous energy into your flabby muscles and charged your empty brain with a new store of electricity.  And then I gave you back your reputation.  I brought you new friends, furnished you with a little court of people who, for the sake of friendship to me, let themselves be lured into admiring you.  I set you to rule me and my house.  Then I painted my best pictures, glimmering with reds and blues on backgrounds of gold, and there was not an exhibition then where I didn’t hold a place of honour.  Sometimes you were St. Cecilia, and sometimes Mary Stuart—­or little Karin, whom King Eric loved.  And I turned public attention in your direction.  I compelled the clamorous herd to see yon with my own infatuated vision.  I plagued them with your personality, forced you literally down their throats, until that sympathy which makes everything possible became yours at last—­and you could stand on your own feet.  When you reached that far, then my strength was used up, and I collapsed from the overstrain—­in lifting you up, I had pushed myself down.  I was taken ill, and my illness seemed an annoyance to you at the moment when all life had just begun to smile at you--and sometimes it seemed to me as if, in your heart, there was a secret desire to get rid of your creditor and the witness of your rise.  Your love began to change into that of a grown-up sister, and for lack of better I accustomed myself to the new part of little brother.  Your tenderness for me remained, and even increased, but it was mingled with a suggestion of pity that had in it a good deal of contempt.  And this changed into open scorn as my talent withered and your own sun rose higher.  But in some mysterious way the fountainhead of your inspiration seemed to dry up when I could no longer replenish it—­or rather when you wanted to show its independence of

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Plays by August Strindberg: Creditors. Pariah. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.