(Scene. The same room in
the late evening. The lamp, with a shade on it,
is burning on the table. Rebecca is standing
by the table, packing some small articles in a travelling-bag.
Her cloak, hat, and the white crochetted shawl are
hanging on the back of the couch. Mrs. Helseth
comes in from the right.)
Mrs. Helseth (speaking in low tones
and with a reserved manner). Yes, all your things
have been taken down, miss. They are in the kitchen
passage.
Rebecca. Thank you. You have ordered the
carriage?
Mrs. Helseth. Yes, miss.
The coachman wants to know what time he shall bring
it round.
Rebecca. I think at about eleven o’clock.
The boat goes at midnight.
Mrs. Helseth (with a little hesitation). But
what about Mr. Rosmer?
Suppose he is not back by that time?
Rebecca. I shall start, all the
same. If I should not see him, you can tell him
I will write to him a long letter, say that.
Mrs. Helseth. Yes, I dare say
it will be all right to write. But, poor dear,
I really think that you ought to try and have a talk
with him once more.
Rebecca. Perhaps I ought Or perhaps
not, after all.
Mrs. Helseth. Dear, dear!
I never thought I should, live to see such a thing
as this!
Rebecca. What did you think, then, Mrs. Helseth?
Mrs. Helseth. To tell the truth,
miss, I thought Mr. Rosmer was an honester man than
that.
Rebecca. Honester?
Mrs. Helseth. Yes, miss, that is the truth.
Rebecca. But, my dear Mrs. Helseth, what do you
mean by that?
Mrs. Helseth. I mean what is
true and right, miss. He should not get out of
it in this way that he shouldn’t.
Rebecca (looking at her). Now
look here, Mrs. Helseth. Tell me, honestly and
frankly, why you think I am going away.
Mrs. Helseth. Good Lord, miss because
it is necessary, I suppose. Well, well! Still,
I certainly do not think Mr. Rosmer has behaved well.
There was some excuse in Mortensgaard’s case,
because the woman’s husband was still alive;
so that it was impossible for them to marry, however
much they wished it. But Mr. Rosmer, he could ahem!
Rebecca (with a faint smile).
Is it possible that you could think such things about
me and Mr. Rosmer?
Mrs. Helseth. Not for a moment until
to-day, I mean.
Rebecca. But why to-day?
Mrs. Helseth. Well, after all
the horrible things they tell me one may see in the
papers about Mr. Rosmer
Rebecca. Ah!
Mrs. Helseth. What I mean is
this if a man can go over to Mortensgaard’s
religion, you may believe him capable of anything.
And that’s the truth.
Rebecca. Yes, very likely.
But about me? What have you got to say about
me?
Mrs. Helseth. Well, I am sure,
miss I do not think you are so greatly
to be blamed. It is not always so easy for a lone
woman to resist, I dare say. We are all human
after all, Miss West.
Rebecca. That is very true, Mrs.
Helseth. We are all human, after all. What
are you listening to?
Mrs. Helseth (in a low voice).
Good Lord! I believe that is him coming
now.
Rebecca (with a start). In spite
of everything, then ! (Speaks with determination.)
Very well. So be it. (Rosmer comes in from
the hall. He sees the luggage, and turns to Rebecca.)
Rosmer. What does this mean?
Rebecca. I am going away.
Rosmer. At once?
Rebecca. Yes. (To Mrs. Helseth.) Eleven
o’clock, then.
Mrs. Helseth. Very well, miss. (Goes out to the
right.)
Rosmer (after a short pause). Where are you going,
Rebecca?
Rebecca. I am taking the boat for the north.
Rosmer. North? What are you going there
for?
Rebecca. It is where I came from.
Rosmer. But you have no more ties there now.
Rebecca. I have none here, either.
Rosmer. What do you propose to do?
Rebecca. I do not know. I only want to make
an end of it.
Rosmer. Make an end of what?
Rebecca. Rosmersholm has broken me.
Rosmer (more attentively). What is that?
Rebecca. Broken me utterly.
I had a will of my own, and some courage, when I came
here. Now I am crushed under the law of strangers.
I do not think I shall have the courage to begin anything
else in the world after this.
Rosmer. Why not? What do you mean by being
crushed under a law ?
Rebecca. Dear friend, do not
let us talk about that now Tell me what
passed between you and Mr. Kroll.
Rosmer. We have made our peace.
Rebecca. Quite so. So it came to that.
Rosmer. He got together all our
old circle of friends at his house. They convinced
me that the work of ennobling men’s souls was
not in my line at all. Besides, it is such a
hopeless task, any way. I shall let it alone.
Rebecca. Well, perhaps it is better so.
Rosmer. Do you say that now? Is that
what your opinion is now?
Rebecca. I have come to that opinion in
the last day or two.
Rosmer. You are lying, Rebecca.
Rebecca. Lying ?
Rosmer. Yes, lying. You
have never believed in me. You have never believed
me to be the man to lead the cause to victory.
Rebecca. I have believed that we two together
would be equal to it.
Rosmer. That is not true.
You have believed that you could accomplish something
big in life yourself that you could use
me to further your plans that I might be
useful to you in the pursuit of your object.
That is what you have believed.
Rebecca. Listen to me, John
Rosmer (sitting down wearily on the
couch). Oh, let me be! I see the whole thing
clearly now. I have been like a glove in your
hands.
Rebecca. Listen to me, John.
Let us talk this thing over. It will be for the
last time. (Sits down in a chair by the couch.) I had
intended to write to you about it all when
I had gone back north. But it is much better
that you should hear it at once.
Rosmer. Have you something more to tell, then?
Rebecca. The most important part of it all.
Rosmer. What do you mean?
Rebecca. Something that you have
never suspected. Something that puts all the
rest in its true light.
Rosmer (shaking his head). I do not understand,
at all.
Rebecca. It is quite true that
at one time I did play my cards so as to secure admission
to Rosmersholm. My idea was that I should succeed
in doing well for myself here either in
one way or in another, you understand.
Rosmer. Well, you succeeded in carrying your
scheme through, too.
Rebecca. I believe I could have
carried anything through at that time.
For then I still had the courage of a free will.
I had no one else to consider, nothing to turn me
from my path. But then began what has broken
down my will and filled the whole of my life with dread
and wretchedness.
Rosmer. What began? Speak so
that I can understand you.
Rebecca. There came over me a wild,
uncontrollable passion Oh, John !
Rosmer. Passion? You ! For what?
Rebecca. For you.
Rosmer (getting up). What does this mean!
Rebecca (preventing him). Sit
still, dear. I will tell you more about it.
Rosmer. And you mean to say that you
have loved me in that way!
Rebecca. I thought I might call
it loving you then. I thought it was
love. But it was not. It was what I have
said a wild, uncontrollable passion.
Rosmer (speaking with difficulty).
Rebecca is it really you you who
are sitting here telling me this?
Rebecca. Yes, indeed it is, John.
Rosmer. Then it was as the outcome
of this and under the influence of this that
you “acted,” as you called it.
Rebecca. It swept over me like
a storm over the sea like one of the storms
we have in winter in the north. They catch you
up and rush you along with them, you know, until their
fury is expended. There is no withstanding them.
Rosmer. So it swept poor unhappy
Beata into the mill-race.
Rebecca. Yes it was
like a fight for life between Beata and me at that
time.
Rosmer. You proved the strongest
of us all at Rosmersholm stronger than
both Beata and me put together.
Rebecca. I knew you well enough
to know that I could not get at you in any way until
you were set free both in actual circumstances
and in your soul.
Rosmer. But I do not understand
you, Rebecca. You you yourself and
your whole conduct are an insoluble riddle
to me. I am free now both in my soul
and my circumstances. You are absolutely in touch
with the goal you set before yourself from the beginning.
And nevertheless
Rebecca. I have never stood farther
from my goal than I do now.
Rosmer. And nevertheless, I say,
when yesterday I asked you urged you to
become my wife, you cried out that it never could be.
Rebecca. I cried out in despair, John.
Rosmer. Why?
Rebecca. Because Rosmersholm
has unnerved me. All the courage has been sapped
out of my will here crushed out! The
time has gone for me to dare risk anything whatever.
I have lost all power of action, John.
Rosmer. Tell me how that has come about.
Rebecca. It has come about through my living
with you.
Rosmer. But how? How?
Rebecca. When I was alone with
you here and you had really found yourself
Rosmer. Yes, yes?
Rebecca. For you never really found yourself
as long as Beata was
Alive
Rosmer. Alas, you are right in that.
Rebecca. When it came about that
I was living together with you here, in peace and
solitude when you exchanged all your thoughts
with me unreservedly your every mood, however
tender or intimate then the great change
happened in me. Little by little, you understand.
Almost imperceptibly but overwhelmingly
in the end, till it reached the uttermost depths of
my soul.
Rosmer. What does this mean, Rebecca?
Rebecca. All the other feeling all
that horrible passion that had drowned my better self left
me entirely. All the violent emotions that had
been roused in me were quelled and silenced. A
peace stole over my soul a quiet like that
of one of our mountain peaks up under the midnight
sun.
Rosmer. Tell me more of it all that
you can.
Rebecca. There is not much more
to tell. Only that this was how love grew up
in my heart a great, self-denying love content
with such a union of hearts as there has been between
us two.
Rosmer. Oh, if only I had had the slightest suspicion
of all this!
Rebecca. It is best as it is.
Yesterday, when you asked me if I would be your wife,
I gave a cry of joy
Rosmer. Yes, it was that, Rebecca,
was it not! I thought that was what it meant.
Rebecca. For a moment, yes-I
forgot myself for a moment. It was my dauntless
will of the old days that was struggling to be free
again. But now it has no more strength it
has lost it for ever.
Rosmer. How do you explain what has taken place
in you?
Rebecca. It is the Rosmer attitude
towards life-or your attitude towards life, at any
rate that has infected my will.
Rosmer. Infected?
Rebecca. Yes, and made it sickly bound
it captive under laws that formerly had no meaning
for me. You my life together with you have
ennobled my soul
Rosmer. Ah, if I dared believe that to be true!
Rebecca. You may believe it confidently.
The Rosmer attitude towards life ennobles. But-(shakes
her head)-but-but
Rosmer. But? Well?
Rebecca. But it kills joy, you know.
Rosmer. Do you say that, Rebecca?
Rebecca. For me, at all events.
Rosmer. Yes, but are you so sure of that?
If I asked you again now ?
Implored you ?
Rebecca. Oh, my dear never
go back to that again! It is impossible.
Yes, impossible because I must tell you
this, John. I have a past behind me.
Rosmer. Something more than you have told me?
Rebecca. Yes, something more and something different.
Rosmer (with a faint smile).
It is very strange, Rebecca, but do you
know the idea of such a thing has occurred
to me more than once.
Rebecca. It has? And yet notwithstanding
that, you ?
Rosmer. I never believed in it.
I only played with the idea-nothing more.
Rebecca. If you wish, I will tell you all about
it at once.
Rosmer (stopping her). No, no! I do not
want to hear a word about it.
Whatever it is, it shall be forgotten, as far as I
am concerned.
Rebecca. But I cannot forget it.
Rosmer. Oh, Rebecca !
Rebecca. Yes, dear that
is just the dreadful part of it-that now, when all
the happiness of life is freely and fully offered to
me, all I can feel is that I am barred out from it
by my past.
Rosmer. Your past is dead, Rebecca.
It has no longer any hold on you has nothing
to do with you as you are now.
Rebecca. Ah, my dear, those are
mere words, you know. What about innocence, then?
Where am I to get that from?
Rosmer (gloomily). Ah, yes innocence.
Rebecca. Yes, innocence which
is at the root of all joy and happiness. That
was the teaching, you know, that you wanted to see
realised by all the men you were going to raise up
to nobility and happiness.
Rosmer. Ah, do not remind me
of that. It was nothing but a half-dreamt dream,
Rebecca a rash suggestion that I have no
longer any faith in. Human nature cannot be ennobled
by outside influences, believe me.
Rebecca (gently). Not by a tranquil love, do
you think?
Rosmer (thoughtfully). Yes, that
would be a splendid thing almost the most
glorious thing in life, I think if it were so. (Moves
restlessly.) But how am I ever to clear up the question? how
am I to get to the bottom of it?
Rebecca. Do you not believe in me, John?
Rosmer. Ah, Rebecca, how can
I believe you entirely you whose life here
has been nothing but continual concealment and secrecy! And
now you have this new tale to tell. If it is
cloaking some design of yours, tell me so openly.
Perhaps there is something or other that you hope
to gain by that means? I will gladly do anything
that I can for you.
Rebecca (wringing her hands).
Oh, this killing doubt! John, John !
Rosmer. Yes, I know, dear it
is horrible but I cannot help it. I
shall never be able to free myself from it never
be able to feel certain that your love for me is genuine
and pure.
Rebecca. But is there nothing
in your own heart that bears witness to the transformation
that has taken place in me and taken place
through your influence, and yours alone!
Rosmer. Ah, my dear, I do not
believe any longer in my power to transform people.
I have no belief in myself left at all. I do not
believe either in myself or in you.
Rebecca (looking darkly at him).
How are you going to live out your life, then?
Rosmer. That is just what I do
not know and cannot imagine. I do not
believe I can live it out. And, moreover, I do
not know anything in the world that would be worth
living for.
Rebecca. Life carries a perpetual
rebirth with it. Let us hold fast to it, dear.
We shall be finished with it quite soon enough.
Rosmer (getting up restlessly).
Then give me my faith back again! my faith
in you, Rebecca my faith in your love!
Give me a proof of it! I must have some proof!
Rebecca. Proof? How can I give you a proof !
Rosmer. You must! (Crosses the
room.) I cannot bear this desolate, horrible loneliness this-this .
(A knock is heard at the hall door.)
Rebecca (getting up from her chair). Did you
hear that?
(The door opens, and Ulrik Brendel
comes in. Except that he wears a white shirt,
a black coat and, a good pair of high boots, he is
dressed as in the first act. He looks troubled.)
Rosmer. Ah, it is you, Mr. Brendel!
Brendel. John, my boy, I have come to say good-bye
to you!
Rosmer. Where are you going, so late as this?
Brendel. Downhill.
Rosmer. How ?
Brendel. I am on my way home,
my beloved pupil. I am homesick for the great
Nothingness.
Rosmer. Something has happened to you, Mr. Brendel!
What is it?
Brendel. Ah, you notice the transformation,
then? Well, it is evident enough. The last
time I entered your doors I stood before you a man
of substance, slapping a well-filled pocket.
Rosmer. Really? I don’t quite understand
Brendel. And now, as you see
me to-night, I am a deposed monarch standing over
the ashes of my burnt-out palace.
Rosmer. If there is any way I can help you
Brendel. You have preserved your
childlike heart, John can you let me have
a loan?
Rosmer. Yes, most willingly!
Brendel. Can you spare me an ideal or two?
Rosmer. What do you say?
Brendel. One or two cast-off
ideals? You will be doing a good deed. I
am cleaned out, my dear boy, absolutely and entirely.
Rebecca. Did you not succeed in giving your lecture?
Brendel. No, fair lady.
What do you think? just as I was standing
ready to pour out the contents of my horn in plenty,
I made the painful discovery that I was bankrupt.
Rebecca. But what of all your unwritten works,
then?
Brendel. For five and twenty
years I have been like a miser sitting on his locked
money-chest. And then to-day, when I opened it
to take out my treasure there was nothing
there! The mills of time had ground it into dust.
There was not a blessed thing left of the whole lot.
Rosmer. But are you certain of that?
Brendel. There is no room for
doubt, my dear boy. The President has convinced
me of that.
Rosmer. The President?
Brendel. Oh, well His Excellency,
then. Ganz nach Belieben.
Rosmer. But whom do you mean?
Brendel. Peter Mortensgaard, of course.
Rosmer. What!
Brendel (mysteriously). Hush,
hush, hush! Peter Mortensgaard is Lord and Chieftain
of the Future. I have never stood in a more august
presence. Peter Mortensgaard has the power of
omnipotence in him. He can do whatever he wants.
Rosmer. Oh, come don’t you believe
that!
Brendel. It is true, my boy because
Peter Mortensgaard never wants to do more than he
can. Peter Mortensgaard is capable of living his
life without ideals. And that, believe me, is
precisely the great secret of success in life.
It sums up all the wisdom of the world. Basta!
Rosmer (in a low voice). Now
I see that you are going away from here poorer than
you came.
Brendel. Bien! Then take
an example from your old tutor. Erase from your
mind everything that he imprinted there. Do not
build your castle upon the shifting sand. And
look well ahead, and be sure of your ground, before
you build upon the charming creature who is sweetening
your life here.
Rebecca. Do you mean me?
Brendel. Yes, most attractive mermaid!
Rebecca. Why am I not fit to build upon?
Brendel (taking a step nearer to her).
I understood that my former pupil had a cause which
it was his life’s work to lead to victory.
Rebecca. And if he has ?
Brendel. He is certain of victory but,
be it distinctly understood, on one unalterable condition.
Rebecca. What is that?
Brendel (taking her gently by the
wrist). That the woman who loves him shall gladly
go out into the kitchen and chop off her dainty, pink
and white little finger here, just at the
middle joint. Furthermore, that the aforesaid
loving woman shall also gladly clip
off her incomparably moulded left ear. (Lets her go,
and turns to Rosmer.) Good-bye, John the Victorious!
Rosmer. Must you go now in this dark
night?
Brendel. The dark night is best. Peace be
with you! (He goes out.
Silence in the room for a short time.)
Rebecca (breathing heavily).
How close and sultry it is in here! (Goes to the window,
opens it and stands by it.)
Rosmer (sitting down on a chair by
the stove). There is nothing else for it after
all, Rebecca I can see that. You must
go away.
Rebecca. Yes, I do not see that I have any choice.
Rosmer. Let us make use of our
last hour together. Come over here and sit beside
me.
Rebecca (goes and sits down on the
couch). What do you want, John?
Rosmer. In the first place I
want to tell you that you need have no anxiety about
your future.
Rebecca (with a smile). Hm! My future!
Rosmer. I have foreseen all contingencies long
ago. Whatever may happen, you are provided for.
Rebecca. Have you even done that for me, dear?
Rosmer. You might have known that I should.
Rebecca. It is many a long day
since I thought about anything of the kind.
Rosmer. Yes, of course.
Naturally, you thought things could never be otherwise
between us than as they were.
Rebecca. Yes, that was what I thought.
Rosmer. So did I. But if anything were to happen
to me now
Rebecca. Oh, John, you will live longer than
I shall.
Rosmer. I can dispose of my miserable existence
as I please, you know.
Rebecca. What do you mean? You surely are
never thinking of !
Rosmer. Do you think it would
be so surprising? After the pitiful, lamentable
defeat I have suffered? I, who was to have made
it my life’s work to lead my cause to victory !
And here I am, a deserter before the fight has even
really begun!
Rebecca. Take up the fight again,
John! Only try and you will see that
you will conquer. You will ennoble hundreds thousands of
souls. Only try!
Rosmer. I, Rebecca, who no longer
believe even in my having a mission in life?
Rebecca. But your mission has
stood the test. You have at all events ennobled
one of your fellow-creatures for the rest of her life I
mean myself.
Rosmer. Yes if I dared believe you
about that.
Rebecca (wringing her hands). But, John, do you
know of
nothing nothing that would make
you believe that?
Rosmer (starts, as if with fear).
Don’t venture on that subject! No further,
Rebecca! Not a single word more!
Rebecca. Indeed, that is just
the subject we must venture upon. Do you know
of anything that would stifle your doubts? For
I know of nothing in the world.
Rosmer. It is best for you not to know.
Best for us both.
Rebecca. No, no, no I
have no patience with that sort of thing! If you
know of anything that would acquit me in your eyes,
I claim it as my right that you should name it.
Rosmer (as if impelled against his
will). Well, let us see. You say that you
have great love in your heart; that your soul has been
ennobled through me. Is that so? Have you
counted the cost? Shall we try and balance our
accounts? Tell me.
Rebecca. I am quite ready.
Rosmer. Then when shall it be?
Rebecca. Whenever you like. The sooner the
better.
Rosmer. Then let me see, Rebecca,
whether you for my sake-this very night .
(Breaks off.) Oh, no, no!
Rebecca. Yes, John! Yes, yes! Say it,
and you shall see.
Rosmer. Have you the courage are
you willing gladly, as Ulrik Brendel said for
my sake, to-night gladly to go
the same way that Beata went!
Rebecca (gets up slowly from the couch, and says almost
inaudibly):
John !
Rosmer. Yes, dear that
is the question I shall never be able to rid my thoughts
of, when you have gone away. Every hour of the
day I shall come back to it. Ah, I seem to see
you bodily before me standing out on the
foot-bridge-right out in the middle. Now you lean
out over the railing! You grow dizzy as you feel
drawn down towards the mill-race! No you
recoil. You dare not do what she dared.
Rebecca. But if I had the courage? and
willingly and gladly? What then?
Rosmer. Then I would believe
in you. Then I should get back my faith in my
mission in life my faith in my power to
ennoble my fellow men my faith in mankind’s
power to be ennobled.
Rebecca (takes up her shawl slowly,
throws it over her head, and says, controlling herself):
You shall have your faith back.
Rosmer. Have you the courage
and the strength of will for that, Rebecca?
Rebecca. Of that you must judge
in the morning or later when
they take up my body.
Rosmer (burying his head in his hands).
There is a horrible temptation in this !
Rebecca. Because I should not
like to be left lying there any longer
than need be. You must take care that they find
me.
Rosmer (springing up). But all
this is madness, you know. Go away, or stay!
I will believe you on your bare word this time too.
Rebecca. Those are mere words,
John. No more cowardice or evasion! How
can you believe me on my bare word after today?
Rosmer. But I do not want to see your defeat,
Rebecca.
Rebecca. There will be no defeat.
Rosmer. There will. You will never have
the heart to go Beata’s way.
Rebecca. Do you believe that?
Rosmer. Never. You are not
like Beata. You are not under the influence of
a distorted view of life.
Rebecca. But I am under the influence
of the Rosmersholm view of Life now.
Whatever my offences are it is right that
I should expiate them.
Rosmer (looking at her fixedly). Have you come
to that decision?
Rebecca. Yes.
Rosmer. Very well. Then
I too am under the influence of our unfettered view
of life, Rebecca. There is no one that can judge
us. And therefore we must be our own judges.
Rebecca (misunderstanding his meaning).
That too. That too. My leaving you will
save the best that is in you.
Rosmer. Ah, there is nothing left to save in
me.
Rebecca. There is. But I after
this I should only be like some sea-sprite hanging
on to the barque you are striving to sail forward
in, and, hampering its progress. I must go overboard.
Do you think I could go through the world bearing
the burden of a spoiled life brooding for
ever over the happiness which I have forfeited by my
past? I must throw up the game, John.
Rosmer. If you go then I go with you.
Rebecca (looks at him with an almost
imperceptible smile, and says more gently): Yes,
come with me, dear and be witness
Rosmer. I go with you, I said.
Rebecca. As far as the bridge yes.
You never dare go out on to it, you know.
Rosmer. Have you noticed that?
Rebecca (in sad and broken tones).
Yes. That was what made my love hopeless.
Rosmer. Rebecca now
I lay my hand on your head. (Does as he says.) And
I take you for my true and lawful wife.
Rebecca (taking both his hands in
hers, and bowing her head on to his breast).
Thank you, John. (Lets him go.) And now I am going gladly.
Rosmer. Man and wife should go together.
Rebecca. Only as far as the bridge, John.
Rosmer. And out on to it, too. As far as
you go so far I go with you.
I dare do it now.
Rebecca. Are you absolutely certain that way
is the best for you?
Rosmer. I know it is the only way.
Rebecca. But suppose you are
only deceiving yourself? Suppose it were only
a delusion one of these White Horses of
Rosmersholm?
Rosmer. It may be so. We can never escape
from them we of my race.
Rebecca. Then stay, John!
Rosmer. The man shall cleave to his wife, as
the wife to her husband.
Rebecca. Yes, but first tell
me this is it you that go with me, or I
that go with you?
Rosmer. We shall never get to the bottom of that.
Rebecca. Yet I should dearly like to know.
Rosmer. We two go with each other, Rebecca.
I with you, and you with me.
Rebecca. I almost believe that is true.
Rosmer. For now we two are one.
Rebecca. Yes. We are one
now. Come! We can go gladly now. (They go
out, hand in hand, through the hall, and are seen
to turn to the left. The door stands open after
them. The room is empty for a little while.
Then Mrs. Helseth opens the door on the
right.)
Mrs. Helseth. The carriage, miss,
is . (Looks round the room.) Not here?
Out together at this time of night? Well, well I
must say ! Hm! (Goes out into
the hall, looks round and comes in again.) Not sitting
on the bench ah, well! (Goes to the window
and looks out.) Good heavens! What is that white
thing ! As I am a living soul, they are
both out on the foot-bridge! God forgive the sinful
creatures if they are not in each other’s
arms! (Gives a wild scream.) Ah! they are
over both of them! Over into the mill-race!
Help! help! (Her knees tremble, she holds on shakily
to the back of a chair and can scarcely get her words
out.) No. No help here. The dead woman has
taken them.