Plays of Gods and Men: With linked Table of Contents
By Lord Dunsany
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About this ebook
Lord Dunsany
Lord Dunsany (1878-1957) was a British writer. Born in London, Dunsany—whose name was Edward Plunkett—was raised in a prominent Anglo-Irish family alongside a younger brother. When his father died in 1899, he received the title of Lord Dunsany and moved to Dunsany Castle in 1901. He met Lady Beatrice Child Villiers two years later, and they married in 1904. They were central figures in the social spheres of Dublin and London, donating generously to the Abbey Theatre while forging friendships with W. B. Yeats, Lady Gregory, and George William Russell. In 1905, he published The Gods of Pegāna, a collection of fantasy stories, launching his career as a leading figure in the Irish Literary Revival. Subsequent collections, such as A Dreamer’s Tales (1910) and The Book of Wonder (1912), would influence generations of writers, including J. R. R. Tolkein, Ursula K. Le Guin, and H. P. Lovecraft. In addition to his pioneering work in the fantasy and science fiction genres, Dunsany was a successful dramatist and poet. His works have been staged and adapted for theatre, radio, television, and cinema, and he was unsuccessfully nominated for the 1950 Nobel Prize in Literature.
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Reviews for Plays of Gods and Men
16 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Jorkens stories and those from the books of wonder were the best. I was let down by the final section of stories about the gods.
Book preview
Plays of Gods and Men - Lord Dunsany
Preface
Lest any idle person might think that I have had time to write plays during the last few years I may mention that the first act of The Tents of the Arabs was written on September 3rd, and the second act on September 8th, 1910.
The first and second acts of The Laughter of the Gods were written on January 29th, and the third act on February 2nd and 3rd, 1911. A Night at an Inn was written on January 17th, 1912, and The Queen’s Enemies on April 19, 20, 21, 24, 28, 29, 1913.
Dunsany, Captain
Royal Inniskilling Fusileers.
The Laughter of the Gods
A Tragedy in Three Acts
Dramatis Personæ
King Karnos
Voice-of-the-Gods (a prophet)
Ichtharion
Ludibras
Harpagas
First Sentry
Second Sentry
One of the Camel Guard
An Executioner
The Queen
Tharmia (wife of Ichtharion)
Arolind (wife of Ludibras)
Carolyx (wife of Harpagas)
Attendants
Act I
Time: About the time of the decadence in Babylon. Scene: The jungle city of Thek in the reign of King Karnos.
Tharmia: You know that my lineage is almost divine.
Arolind: My father’s sword was so terrible that he had to hide it with a cloak.
Tharmia: He probably did that because there were no jewels in the scabbard.
Arolind: There were emeralds in it that outstared the sea.
*
Tharmia: Now I must leave you here and go down among the shops for I have not changed my hair since we came to Thek.
Ichtharion: Have you not brought that from Barbul-el-Sharnak?
Tharmia: It was not necessary. The King would not take his court where they could not obtain necessities.
Arolind: May I go with your Sincerity?
Tharmia: Indeed, Princely Lady, I shall be glad of your company.
Arolind: [To Ludibras] I wish to see the other palaces in Thek, [To Tharmia] then we can go on beyond the walls to see what princes live in the neighbourhood.
Tharmia: It will be delightful. [Exeunt Tharmia and Arolind]
Ichtharion: Well, we are here in Thek.
Ludibras: How lucky we are that the King has come to Thek. I feared he would never come.
Ichtharion: It is a most fair city.
Ludibras: When he tarried year after year in monstrous Barbul-el-Sharnak, I feared that I would see the sun rise never more in the windy glorious country. I feared we should live always in Barbul-el-Sharnak and be buried among houses.
Ichtharion: It is mountainous with houses: there are no flowers there. I wonder how the winds come into it.
Ludibras: Ah. Do you know that it is I that brought him here at last? I gave him orchids from a far country. At last he noticed them. Those are good flowers,
said he. They come from Thek,
I said. Thek is purple with them. It seems purple far out on the sand to the camel men.
Then…
Ichtharion: No, it was not you brought him. He saw a butterfly once in Barbul-el-Sharnak. There had not been one there for seven years. It was lucky for us that it lived; I used to send for hundreds, but they all died but that one when they came to Barbul-el-Sharnak. The King saw it.
Ludibras: It was since then that he noticed my purple orchids.
Ichtharion: Something changed in his mind when he saw the butterfly. He became quite different. He would not have noticed a flower but for that.
Ludibras: He came to Thek in order to see the orchids.
Ichtharion: Come, come. We are here. Nothing else matters.
Ludibras: Yes, we are here. How beautiful are the orchids.
Ichtharion: What a beautiful thing the air is in the morning. I stand up very early and breathe it from my casement; not in order to nourish my body, you understand, but because it is the wild, sweet air of Thek.
Ludibras: Yes, it is wonderful rising up in the morning. It seems all fresh from the fields.
Ichtharion: It took us two days to ride out of Bar-el-Sharnak. Do you remember how men stared at our camels? No one had gone away from the city for years.
Ludibras: I think it is not easy to leave a great city. It seems to grow thicker around you, and you forget the fields.
Ichtharion: [looking off]
The jungle is like a sea lying there below us. The orchids that blaze on it are like Tyrian ships, all rich with purple of that wonderful fish; they have even dyed their sails with it.
Ludibras: They are not like ships because they do not move. They are like… They are like no tangible thing in all the world. They are like faint, beautiful songs of an unseen singer; they are like temptations to some unknown sin. They make me think of the tigers that slip through the gloom below them. [Enter Harpagas and a Noble of the Court, with spears and leather belts.]
Ichtharion: Where are you going?
Harpagas: We are going hunting.
Ichtharion: Hunting! How beautiful!
Harpagas: A little street goes down from the palace door; the other end of it touches the very jungle.
Ludibras: O, heavenly city of Thek.
Ichtharion: Have you ever before gone hunting?
Harpagas: No; I have dreamed of it. In Barbul-el-Sharnak I nearly forgot my dream.
Ichtharion: Man was not made for cities. I did not know this once.
Ludibras: I will come with you.
Ichtharion: I will come with you, too. We will go down by the little street, and there will be the jungle. I will fetch a spear as we go.
Ludibras: What shall we hunt in the jungle?
Harpagas: They say there are kroot and abbax; and tigers, some say, have been heard of.
Noble: We must never go back to Barbul-el-Sharnak again.
Ichtharion: You may rely on us.
Ludibras: We shall keep the King in Thek. [Exeunt, leaving two sentries standing beside the throne.]
1st Sentry: They are all very glad to be in Thek. I, too, am glad.
2nd Sentry: It is a very little city. Two hundred of these cities would not build
Barbul-el-Sharnak.
1st Sentry: No. But it is a finer palace, and Barbul-el-Sharnak is the centre of the world; men have drawn together there.
2nd Sentry: I did not know there was a