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The Piper.
by Josephine Preston Peabody.
CHARACTERS
THE PIPER ) MICHAEL-THE-SWORD-EATER ) Strolling Players CHEAT-THE-DEVIL )
JACOBUS the Burgomeister ) KURT the Syndic ) PETER the Cobbler ) HANS the Butcher ) AXEL the Smith ) Men of Hamelin MARTIN the Watch ) PETER the Sacristan ) ANSELM, a young priest ) OLD CLAUS, a miser ) TOWN CRIER )
JAN ) HANSEL ) ILSE ) Children TRUDE ) RUDI )
VERONIKA, the wife of Kurt BARBARA, daughter of Jacobus WIFE of HANS the Butcher WIFE of AXEL the Smith WIFE of MARTIN the Watch OLD URSULA
Burghers, nuns, priests, and children
SCENE: HAMELIN ON THE WESER, 1284 A.D.
SCENES
ACT I. The market-place in Hamelin
ACT II. SCENE I. Inside the 'Hollow-Hill'
SCENE II. The Cross-ways
ACT III. The Cross-ways
ACT IV. The market-place in Hamelin
One week is supposed to elapse between Acts I and II.
Acts II and III occupy one day.
Act IV concerns the following morning.
The Piper
ACT I
SCENE: The market-place of Hamelin. Right, the Minster, with an open shrine (right centre) containing a large sculptured figure of the Christ. Right, farther front, the house of KURT; and other narrow house-fronts. Left, the Rathaus, and (down) the home of JACOBUS. Front, to left and right, are corner-houses with projecting stories and cas.e.m.e.nt windows. At the centre rear, a narrow street leads away between houses whose gables all but meet overhead.
It is late summer afternoon, with a holiday crowd. In the open cas.e.m.e.nts, front (right and left, opposite each other), sit OLD URSULA and OLD CLAUS, looking on at men and things.
--In the centre of the place now stands a rude wooden Ark with a tented top: and out of the openings (right and left) appear the artificial heads of animals, worn by the players inside.
One is a Bear (inhabited by MICHAEL-THE-SWORD-EATER); one is a large Reynard-the-Fox, later apparent as the PIPER. Close by is the medieval piece of stage-property known as 'h.e.l.l-Mouth,' i.e.
a red painted cave with a jaw-like opening into which a mountebank dressed in scarlet (CHEAT-THE-DEVIL) is poking 'Lost Souls' with a pitchfork.
BARBARA loiters by the tent. VERONIKA, the sad young wife of KURT, watches from the house steps, left, keeping her little lame boy, Jan, close beside her.
Shouts of delight greet the end of the show, a Noah's Ark miracle-play of the rudest; and the Children continue to scream with joy whenever an Animal looks out of the Ark.
Men and women pay scant attention either to JACOBUS, when he speaks (himself none too sober)--from his doorstep, prompted by the frowning KURT,--or yet to ANSELM, the priest, who stands forth with lifted hands, at the close of the miracle-play.
ANSELM And you, who heed the colors of this show, Look to your laughter!--It doth body forth A Judgment that may take you unaware,-- Sun-struck with mirth, like unto chattering leaves Some wind of wrath shall scourge to nothingness.
HANS, AXEL, AND OTHERS Hurrah, Hurrah!
JACOBUS And now, good townsmen all, Seeing we stand delivered and secure As once yon chosen creatures of the Ark, For a similitude,--our famine gone, Our plague of rats and mice,--
CROWD Hurrah--hurrah!
JACOBUS 'Tis meet we render thanks more soberly--
HANS the Butcher Soberly, soberly, ay!--
JACOBUS For our deliverance.
And now, ye wit, it will be full three days Since we beheld--our late departed pest.--
OLD URSULA [putting out an ear-trumpet]
What does he say?
REYNARD [from the Ark]
--Oh, how felicitous!
HANS' WIFE He's only saying there be no more rats.
JACOBUS [with oratorical endeavor]
Three days it is; and not one mouse,--one mouse, One mouse, I say!--No-o-o! Quiet. . . as a mouse.
[Resuming]
And now. . .
CROWD Long live Jacobus!--
JACOBUS You have seen Noah and the Ark, most aptly happening by With these same play-folk. You have marked the Judgment.
You all have seen the lost souls sent to--h.e.l.l-- And, nothing more to do.--
[KURT prompts him]
Yes, yes.--And now. . .