登陆注册
26618300000014

第14章

(SCENE.--The editorial office of the "People's Messenger." The entrance door is on the left-hand side of the back wall; on the right-hand side is another door with glass panels through which the printing room can be seen. Another door in the right-hand wall. In the middle of the room is a large table covered with papers, newspapers and books. In the foreground on the left a window, before which stands a desk and a high stool. There are a couple of easy chairs by the table, and other chairs standing along the wall. The room is dingy and uncomfortable; the furniture is old, the chairs stained and torn. In the printing room the compositors are seen at work, and a printer is working a handpress. HOVSTAD is sitting at the desk, writing. BILLINGcomes in from the right with DR. STOCKMANN'S manuscript in his hand.)Billing. Well, I must say!

Hovstad (still writing). Have you read it through?

Billing (laying the MS. on the desk). Yes, indeed I have.

Hovstad. Don't you think the Doctor hits them pretty hard?

Billing. Hard? Bless my soul, he's crushing! Every word falls like--how shall I put it?--like the blow of a sledgehammer.

Hovstad. Yes, but they are not the people to throw up the sponge at the first blow.

Billing. That is true; and for that reason we must strike blow upon blow until the whole of this aristocracy tumbles to pieces.

As I sat in there reading this, I almost seemed to see a revolution in being.

Hovstad (turning round). Hush!--Speak so that Aslaksen cannot hear you.

Billing (lowering his voice). Aslaksen is a chicken-hearted chap, a coward; there is nothing of the man in him. But this time you will insist on your own way, won't you? You will put the Doctor's article in?

Hovstad. Yes, and if the Mayor doesn't like it--Billing. That will be the devil of a nuisance.

Hovstad. Well, fortunately we can turn the situation to good account, whatever happens. If the Mayor will not fall in with the Doctor's project, he will have all the small tradesmen down on him--the whole of the Householders' Association and the rest of them. And if he does fall in with it, he will fall out with the whole crowd of large shareholders in the Baths, who up to now have been his most valuable supporters--Billing. Yes, because they will certainly have to fork out a pretty penny--Hovstad. Yes, you may be sure they will. And in this way the ring will be broken up, you see, and then in every issue of the paper we will enlighten the public on the Mayor's incapability on one point and another, and make it clear that all the positions of trust in the town, the whole control of municipal affairs, ought to be put in the hands of the Liberals.

Billing. That is perfectly true! I see it coming--I see it coming; we are on the threshold of a revolution!

(A knock is heard at the door.)

Hovstad. Hush! (Calls out.) Come in! (DR. STOCKMANN comes in by the street door. HOVSTAD goes to meet him.) Ah, it is you, Doctor! Well?

Dr. Stockmann. You may set to work and print it, Mr. Hovstad!

Hovstad. Has it come to that, then?

Billing. Hurrah!

Dr. Stockmann. Yes, print away. Undoubtedly it has come to that.

Now they must take what they get. There is going to be a fight in the town, Mr. Billing!

Billing. War to the knife, I hope! We will get our knives to their throats, Doctor!

Dr. Stockmann. This article is only a beginning. I have already got four or five more sketched out in my head. Where is Aslaksen?

Billing (calls into the printing-room). Aslaksen, just come here for a minute!

Hovstad. Four or five more articles, did you say? On the same subject?

Dr. Stockmann. No--far from it, my dear fellow. No, they are about quite another matter. But they all spring from the question of the water supply and the drainage. One thing leads to another, you know. It is like beginning to pull down an old house, exactly.

Billing. Upon my soul, it's true; you find you are not done till you have pulled all the old rubbish down.

Aslaksen (coming in). Pulled down? You are not thinking of pulling down the Baths surely, Doctor?

Hovstad. Far from it, don't be afraid.

Dr. Stockmann. No, we meant something quite different. Well, what do you think of my article, Mr. Hovstad?

Hovstad. I think it is simply a masterpiece.

Dr. Stockmann. Do you really think so? Well, I am very pleased, very pleased.

Hovstad. It is so clear and intelligible. One need have no special knowledge to understand the bearing of it. You will have every enlightened man on your side.

Aslaksen. And every prudent man too, I hope?

Billing. The prudent and the imprudent--almost the whole town.

Aslaksen. In that case we may venture to print it.

Dr. Stockmann. I should think so!

Hovstad. We will put it in tomorrow morning.

Dr. Stockmann. Of course--you must not lose a single day. What Iwanted to ask you, Mr. Aslaksen, was if you would supervise the printing of it yourself.

Aslaksen. With pleasure.

Dr. Stockmann. Take care of it as if it were a treasure! No misprints--every word is important. I will look in again a little later; perhaps you will be able to let me see a proof. I can't tell you how eager I am to see it in print, and see it burst upon the public--Billing. Burst upon them--yes, like a flash of lightning!

Dr. Stockmann. --and to have it submitted to the judgment of my intelligent fellow townsmen. You cannot imagine what I have gone through today. I have been threatened first with one thing and then with another; they have tried to rob me of my most elementary rights as a man--Billing. What! Your rights as a man!

Dr. Stockmann. --they have tried to degrade me, to make a coward of me, to force me to put personal interests before my most sacred convictions.

Billing. That is too much--I'm damned if it isn't.

Hovstad. Oh, you mustn't be surprised at anything from that quarter.

Dr. Stockmann. Well, they will get the worst of it with me; they may assure themselves of that. I shall consider the "People's Messenger" my sheet-anchor now, and every single day I will bombard them with one article after another, like bombshells--Aslaksen. Yes, butBilling. Hurrah!--it is war, it is war!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 修真高手在花都

    修真高手在花都

    天才绝艳的修真高手陈如峰穿越到现代都市,成为面临高考的高中生,在众人震惊的目光中,陈如峰纵横都市,彪悍的人生从此开始,各种美女扑面而来,挡都挡不住……
  • 新梦幻少年

    新梦幻少年

    什么是真实的,什么是梦幻而己.没人知道.人生充满无奈,也有不少奇迹.人类生命的意义是什么.不懂.人生,只不过是一个过程,仅此而己.
  • 开往你心底的列车

    开往你心底的列车

    真是应验了匆匆那年,那年匆匆,在列车上我还没来得及认识你,你就匆匆而去了。很高兴在学校再次见到你,贺云翔!
  • 英雄联盟之德玛西亚之力

    英雄联盟之德玛西亚之力

    盖伦本是德诺山脉普通猎户人家的儿子,直到德玛西亚四大家族之一的奎家姐妹奎瑾和奎因的到来,发现了盖伦和妹妹拉克丝独特的体质,从而改变了自己的命运,也担负起了保卫德玛西亚的使命。在这里,你将看到的是最全的英雄联盟人物和他们的背景资料。短发尽量将所有的英雄全部巧妙的融合到我们的故事中来,并且高度的还原拳头给定的英雄背景资料,给热爱游戏的你别样的享受。。
  • 超能探案

    超能探案

    “维护正义找出真相吗?为什么不直接说拯救宇宙呢?小鬼就是天真。。。”他手臂一伸直接接住了要扑桌的她。“小心点。。。你这么扑上去。。。”“我没事,不会磕到的”她红着脸松了一口气“我是说,你这么扑上去,文案桌上刚刚拼好的线索都要乱了”他彻底无视了她的自作多情。
  • 如果只缘遇见

    如果只缘遇见

    如果不曾遇见结局是不是会不一样——苏逸文
  • 一种人类

    一种人类

    世界在地球,食物链最顶端的是人类,人类洋洋得意,自私自利,肆意掠夺其他的生命,而我,一个软弱的普通高二学生,到了另一个世界,那个世界人类是食物链最低端的生物,我们自认为凌驾在万物之上,所以,理所当然的残害其他的生命。到底是什么决定强者生存?人类在一边吃着盘中考得香喷喷的肉一边唏嘘慢慢灭绝的物种,手里沾满血腥的抱起无家可归的小动物,如果有一天我们人类像动物一样被屠杀,苟延残喘的四处逃命时,人性是什么?兽性是什么?这不都是我们人类自己定义的么
  • 火影之绝对力量

    火影之绝对力量

    在被哥哥大筒木舍人击败并夺取力量之后,大筒木樱空流落原界之中。当他成长为一个能够独当一面的强者时,大筒木舍人企图前来毁灭人界。面对哥哥的绝对力量,他该作何选择?是对抗?还是臣服?新书《大王万岁》已上传,又名《火影之绝对力量2》
  • 惊穹录

    惊穹录

    他是三百年前,天界浩劫的叛乱之首,她是为开辟人界立下功劳的第一女。轮回在同一世,一个暴戾,一个倔强,偏偏,她无可自拔的爱上了他。他的恶灵,一次次让她陷入水深火热之中。自身被关押,家族遭血洗,亲人的背叛……走投无路之际,她瞥得前世,得知他不爱她,她却因他而死。心如死灰,她毅然选择离开。他遭三界追杀,当她准备牺牲一切去救他时,他忽然带着千军万马现身天界,笑意从容的叫她:“小懒儿,我来接你回家……“
  • 熊猫的葬礼

    熊猫的葬礼

    莫离被咬后变成了熊猫大魔王。争取写一个让人开心的故事。