And all day I went on--and all the next night. And at last I thought I should never see the face of man again.
RITA. Not come home to us? Oh, then, I am sure your thoughts were with us here.
ALLMERS. No--they were not.
RITA. Not?
ALLMERS. No. It was so strange. Both you and Eyolf seemed to have drifted far, far away from me--and Asta, too.
RITA. Then what did you think of?
ALLMERS. I did not think. I dragged myself along among the precipices--and revelled in the peace and luxury of death.
RITA. [Springing up.] Oh, don"t speak in that way of that horror!
ALLMERS. I did not feel it so. I had no fear. Here went death and I, it seemed to me, like two good fellow-travellers. It all seemed so natural--so simple, I thought. In my family, we don"t live to be old--
RITA. Oh, don"t say such things, Alfred! You see you came safely out of it, after all.
ALLMERS. Yes; all of a sudden, I found myself where I wanted to be--on the other side of the lake.
RITA. It must have been a night of terror for you, Alfred. But now that it is over, you will not admit it to yourself.
ALLMERS. That night sealed my resolution. And it was then that I turned about and came straight homewards. To Eyolf.
RITA. [Softly.] Too late.
ALLMERS. Yes. And then when--my fellow-traveller came and took him--then I felt the horror of it; of it all; of all that, in spite of everything, we dare not tear ourselves away from. So earthbound are we, both of us, Rita.
RITA. [With a gleam of joy.] Yes, you are, too, are you not! [Coming close to him.] Oh, let us live our life together as long as we can!
ALLMERS. [Shrugging his shoulders.] Live our life, yes! And have nothing to fill life with. An empty void on all sides--wherever I look.
RITA. [In fear.] Oh, sooner or later you will go away from me, Alfred! I feel it! I can see it in your face! You will go away from me.
ALLMERS. With my fellow-traveller, do you mean?
RITA. No, I mean worse than that. Of your own free will--you will leave me--for you think it"s only here, with me, that you have nothing to live for. Is not that what is in your thoughts?
ALLMERS. [Looking steadfastly at her.] What if it were--?
[A disturbance, and the noise of angry, quarrelling voices is heard from down below, in the distance. ALLMERS goes to the railing.]
RITA. What is that? [With an outburst.] Oh, you"ll see, they have found him!
ALLMERS. He will never be found.
RITA. But what is it then?
ALLMERS. [Coming forward.] Only fighting--as usual.
RITA. Down on the beach?
ALLMERS. Yes. The whole village down there ought to be swept away. Now the men have come home--drunk, as they always are. They are beating the children--do you hear the boys crying! The women are shrieking for help for them--
RITA. Should we not get some one to go down and help them?
ALLMERS. [Harshly and angrily.] Help them, who did not help Eyolf! Let them go--as they let Eyolf go.
RITA. Oh, you must not talk like that, Alfred! Nor think like that!
ALLMERS. I cannot think otherwise. All the old hovels ought to be torn down.
RITA. And then what is to become of all the poor people?
ALLMERS. They must go somewhere else.
RITA. And the children, too?
ALLMERS. Does it make much difference where they go to the dogs?
RITA. [Quietly and reproachfully.] You are forcing yourself into this harshness, Alfred.
ALLMERS. [Vehemently.] I have a right to be harsh now! It is my duty.
RITA. Your duty?
ALLMERS. My duty to Eyolf. He must not lie unavenged. Once for all, Rita--it is as I tell you! Think it over! Have the whole place down there razed to the ground--when I am gone.
RITA. [Looks intently at him.] When you are gone?
ALLMERS. Yes. For that will at least give you something to fill your life with--and something you must have.
RITA. [Firmly and decidedly.] There you are right---I must. But can you guess what I will set about--when you are gone?
ALLMERS. Well, what?
RITA. [Slowly and with resolution.] As soon as you are gone from me, I will go down to the beach, and bring all the poor neglected children home with me. All the mischievous boys--
ALLMERS. What will you do with them here?
RITA. I will take them to my heart.
ALLMERS. You!
RITA. Yes, I will. From the day you leave me, they shall all be here, all of them, as if they were mine.
ALLMERS. [Shocked.] In our little Eyolf"s place!