The Road to Damascus by August Strindberg
page 88 of 339 (25%)
page 88 of 339 (25%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
I've never seen a good action get its reward. Never! It's a
disgrace to Him who records all sins, however black or venial. No man could do it: men would forgive. The gods ... never! LADY. Don't say that. Say rather _you_ forgive. STRANGER. I'm not small-minded. But what have I forgive you? LADY. More than I can say. STRANGER. Say it. Perhaps then we'll be quits. LADY. He and I used to read the curse of Deutertonomy over you ... for you'd ruined his life. STRANGER. What curse is that? LADY. From the fifth book of Moses. The priests chant it in chorus when the fasts begin. STRANGER. I don't remember it. What does it matter--a curse more or less? LADY. In my family those whom we curse, are struck. STRANGER. I don't believe it. But I do believe that evil emanates from this house. May it recoil upon it! That is my prayer! Now, according to custom, it would be my duty to shoot myself; but I can't, so long as I have other duties. You see, I can't even die, and so I've lost my last treasure--what, with reason, I call my |
|