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Ⓗ 2018 Siôn Eirian
Mae angen caniatâd cyn perfformio neu recordio unrhyw ran o’r ddrama.

Act 3

ACT THREE

The royal chamber in the tower.
Alis enters.

Alis
Sir, my Lord, my mistress is getting ready.
She'll be here with you shortly.

Llywelyn
I sent my son to escort her here.
Is he with her?

Alis
Yes, Sir. This is the first time my mistress
Has seen him since his wedding.

Llywelyn
A whole year, yes … Is she well?

Alis
As well as can be expected, after
A year's imprisonment.

Llywelyn
Confinement, not imprisonment. She had everything
She asked for, apart from her freedom. Two maids
Waiting on her every whim, a courtyard for fresh air …

Alis
Yes. Everything except her freedom.

Llywelyn
And by that, you're implying – what?
Tell me girl.

Alis
A command, Sir?

Llywelyn
A command, yes.

Alis
Your son, Prince Dafydd, got married.
His mother wasn't at the wedding.
She didn't lead the dancing afterwards. All that day
She was left on her own with her thoughts.

Llywelyn
My son married Gwilym Brewys's daughter,
As arranged. How could we have allowed
Your mistress to have danced
In the hall of Brewys's widow?

Alis
The wedding dance is only a ceremony.

Llywelyn
For a royal family life itself
Is often only a ceremony.

Alis
She's changed, my Lord.

Llywelyn
Everybody changes. Even our memories change.
Anger changes. Vengeance changes.
How has your mistress changed?
Tell me what your observed.

Alis
This whole year gone, she's not struck me once.

Llywelyn
Have you deserved to be struck?

Alis
(Laughs.)
I don't know Sir.
Striking servants is done from habit, not desserts.

Llywelyn
And she's let that habit slip?

Alis
My Lord, before her confinement
She was young at heart.

Llywelyn
That's not what was on your mind, girl.
Tell me what was.

Alis
I've said all I dare, Sir.

Llywelyn
The hanging of Gwilym Brewys devastated her.
Her love of life went with Gwilym into that noose.
That's what you're telling me.

Alis
That's my worry, Sir. And you did ask me.

Llywelyn
I have to ask someone. A year
Without a beating has made you impudent.

Alis
I'm not a serf or a peasant's daughter.
My father was a freeman.

Llywelyn
You're also married aren't you?

Alis
A widow these last three years my Lord.

Llywelyn
Forgive me. Yes. One of my retinue.
He was killed in battle at Castell Baldwyn.
A brave lad.

Alis
I'd only seen him once before being betrothed to him
And then, after two weeks' marriage, the war …
He went. I never saw him again. And now
It all seems like some young girl's daydream.

Llywelyn
But a daydream, not a nightmare?
He was killed as we tried to scale the castle walls.
I remember it. D'you remember bidding him goodbye?

Alis
In the small hours.
I heated him a cup of milk.
Fresh from the goat's teat.
He gave me a milky kiss, we were laughing …
He was still laughing as he joined the other soldiers.
They saddled, mounted, rode away waving.
We were just starting to get to know each other.

Llywelyn
Every husband and wife
Are just starting to get to know each other,
Whether it's two weeks or twenty years.
You're a brave one too.

Alis
Me, Sir?

Llywelyn
You got on with living your life.

Alis
Did I have a choice?

Llywelyn
There isn't one brave and thinking soul
Who hasn't at some point contemplated
Not carrying on with life.
To us all, life is a gruelling gift.

Alis
Even for a prince?

Llywelyn
A prince is a man isn't he?

Alis
Are you going to say that to the Princess, Sir?

Llywelyn
Doesn't she already know?

Alis
It would help her to hear you say it.
Making war, laying plans and all the state's affairs
Lie like some wide walled-off field
Around a prince. His greatness sets him apart;
But to us women – yes, even a woman who's queen –
The mother's instinct is the root of our love.
And our first born is the man who married us
When we're girl brides. When the child in that man is lost
The woman too loses part of her love.

Llywelyn
Showing a weak side is to show one's humanity –
Is that it?

Alis
Gwilym Brewys was a child, Sir. A young child.

Llywelyn
And it's little children who enter the kingdom of love?
I'll mull over your lessons Alis.

Alis
My Lord, I'm only a maid. You asked me to speak.
I learnt what I know in these royal halls of Gwynedd.
I treasure this place, and its lord and lady.
This lost twelvemonth, this empty husk of a year,
Has hurt us all.
The Pope's excommunication would be
Child's play compared to the inner grief
All of us have already felt.

Llywelyn
The Pope's excommunication will yet come,
If that's of any consequence now …

Alis
So the stories are true?

Llywelyn
What rumours have you heard around the court?

Alis
That you're going to war
Against the King of England.

Llywelyn
That issue is to be settled today,
By your mistress. The choice is hers.
A war, or the end of Gwynedd. That's why
I called her up from the confinement of her rooms.
The fate of Wales lies in her hands.

Alis
Sir – here she is.

Llywelyn
Stay nearby, in the maidservants' room. I may
Need to call you back in a while. I hope so.


Alis exits.
Siwan enters.

Siwan
You called for me, my Lord. Here I am.

Llywelyn
Siwan!

Siwan
My Lord?

Llywelyn
Siwan!
(A moment's silence.)
Siwan – it's me, Llywelyn … Siwan!

Siwan
Llywelyn?

Llywelyn
I need you Siwan … Me, Llywelyn.
(No reply.)
I need you Siwan.

Siwan
You need me?
How can that be?

Llywelyn
Why shouldn't that be?

Siwan
I've been a prisoner for months now my Lord.

Llywelyn
A year to this morning.
Oh yes – I've been counting the days too.

Siwan
Is today May Day eve? I've lost count.

Llywelyn
It is May Day eve.

Siwan
Do you have to be so unfeeling towards your prisoner?

Llywelyn
Unfeeling? What do you mean?
I don't understand.

Siwan
Today of all days – ordering me here
Straight from my prison. Why did you call me?

Llywelyn
To continue that talk between us. The talk
That started and ended a year ago.

Siwan
No, no, no. Not ever again.
I can't talk about Gwilym. Show some pity my Lord.
Let me get back to my cell.

Llywelyn
I need you, Siwan. I'm begging, not commanding
And I didn't choose this morning to wound you.
Last night a messenger came to me from South Wales.
That's why I've summoned you now. God rest Gwilym's soul.
Hubert de Burgh is the thorn in my flesh now.
Here – that night – you foresaw this.
You foretold it, like some Cassandra.
All your words have come to pass, and I
Must once more go to war against your brother.

Siwan
Once more to war? Is that the Council's advice?

Llywelyn
The Council hasn't yet been convened.
I'm seeking your advice first.
Then I'll consult my councillors.

Siwan
Why my advice?

Llywelyn
I've a right to your advice. Adultery
And confinement don't lessen my rights.

Siwan
Yes, you have a right. I gave you that right.
And I can't withdraw it now.
But why do you exercise your right today?

Llywelyn
The prerogative of Gwynedd's crown
Is what I'm exercising. And that crown
Is now what's at stake.

Siwan
And you're ordering me to co-operate?

Llywelyn
If that's how you wish to see it.

Siwan
Why d'you need to go to war again?
You're almost sixty. What d'you have to prove?

Llywelyn
I was informed last night
Of William Marshall's death.

Siwan
I've been a whole year without news,
My reactions are dulled to its significance.
But how does William Marshall's death
Take us to the brink of war?

Llywelyn
Last year Gwilym Brewys's lands
Were placed in Marshall's charge.

Siwan
And now?

Llywelyn
Those lands now pass on to Hubert de Burgh.

Siwan
Fortune comes to those who seek it.
You've done your share to help him prosper –
I seem to recall telling you so.

Llywelyn
And the Earl of Gloucester recently died.

Siwan
And his successor is his little son?

Llywelyn
Yes. The child's guardian
Also happens to be Hubert de Burgh.

Siwan
(Laughs.)
And the little Earl's lands
In Gloucester and Glamorgan?

Llywelyn
Hubert has charge of those too.

Siwan
Your friend Hubert grows ever more corpulent
Through feeding on good luck
Or a diet of very wily design.

Llywelyn
Everything you prophesied is coming true, Siwan.

Siwan
That won't undo a death or unknot a noose.
That night I was trying to save a life.
Your rage made you deaf to political wisdom.
God rest Gwilym's soul. Hubert is a viper.

Llywelyn
His lands are now stretched from Hereford to Cardigan,
Spanning all Dyfed, Gower, Brecon and Glamorgan.
Gwilym Brewys and Marshall and the Earl of Gloucester
Have all served to feed Hubert's voracious aspirations.

Siwan
And he's Chancellor to the English crown.
So England's court and France's are his allies.
Dare you go to war?

Llywelyn
(Laughs.)
It's madness I know. But how can I sit back
Without forcing fortune? There are still lands
To the South split among the grandsons of Lord Rhys
Which cling to their independence, and to my
Protection. I must show that I still have
The strength to deserve their allegiance.

Siwan
If you do nothing – will Hubert
Court those weaker lords?

Llywelyn
Yes. And then his lands.
Would be greater than Gwynedd.
He would be two thirds of Wales.
His jaws a pincer closing round my northern kingdom.

Siwan
We can't have two great Princes
Astride this nation's land.

Llywelyn
That's my quandary.
That's why I need to act soon.

Siwan
And where's my brother now?

Llywelyn
The King's in the English Court.
I must rally my lands to attack him
And use that call to arms to widen the war
Against Hubert and the Marcher lords
For they're all arrayed against me.
I'm now the common foe.

Siwan
All against you? Then you dare not go to war
On all fronts. We've always clung to a peace
Between ourselves and the English, and the Marches,
Whatever the bitter internal feuding within Wales.
That was to be the great security
That we would hand on to Dafydd our son.

Llywelyn
But never before have Glamorgan and the South
United under one Prince, threatening us.
War is now inevitable.

Siwan
War is inevitable. Yes. But when we
Go to war it should only be
When we know that we can win it.
Dafydd's inheritance is at stake.

Llywelyn
Everything you and I have striven for
Is at stake. My crown, our bloodline,
Wales's proud standing and secure future.

Siwan
A year ago today you should have
Given thought to these great matters.

Llywelyn
A year ago today I did consider these matters fully.

Siwan
Did you?

Llywelyn
Here – in this room – you prophesied
The consequences of executing Gwilym Brewys.
Then in the Council, at the Court, I repeated
Your warnings. I spared no details.
They were debated. Ednyfed Fychan agreed with you.
The Bishop of Bangor agreed. I too believed you.
I knew that the Kingdom of Gwynedd and my crown
Were being risked, when I hanged Gwilym Brewys.

Siwan
May I ask you then, why you did?

Llywelyn
It's right that I tell you why,
And I will tell you shortly. But first my Lady,
Matters of policy. Back to the old discipline.

Siwan
What of England and the Marcher lands?
Are there any weaknesses there now?

Llywelyn
There lies our hope. The earls and bishops
Who went on the crusades are returning.

Siwan
Including Hubert's fiercest enemy, the Bishop Peter?

Llywelyn
Yes. He'll be back in England
Before the summer's end.

Siwan
England's court and the Marches
Will be at each other's throats.
Can you delay war until then?

Llywelyn
No. I can not – not if I hope to keep
The southern lords' allegiance. If they see me
Stalling now, they'll scuttle like mice
To Hubert's house. I must attack before summer.

Siwan
Would early in June be soon enough?

Llywelyn
Perhaps. Why?

Siwan
Let loose the southern lords now – to take
The spoils from Gwilym Brewys's old kingdom
And promise to join them in the despoiling soon.
But in the meantime send word to England
Asking the King's help, keeping the peace, the pact,
Then the crusaders will return.
They'll take a hostile stance
Towards Hubert in Hereford, and challenge
His sudden influence in Gloucester.
Some of the Marcher lords
Are headstrong and haughty enough to engage
Hubert de Burgh in battle. His army will be
Dragged hither and hither on different fronts
Then you strike. His mighty Southern kingdom
Could be a great dream that never
Does become a reality.

Llywelyn
Your advice seems sound. And your advice
Is in the best traditions
Of Gwynedd's measured policy making.
Retaking those newly garnered lands
In Hubert's kingdom would buckle again
The belt of my grip on Wales.
I'll follow your advice, Siwan – on one condition.

Siwan
Does the condition have to do with me?

Llywelyn
I'll follow your advice
If you return today to my table and my bed.

Siwan
Does that imply forgiveness?

Llywelyn
Would you accept that?

Siwan
Forgiving is a form of overcoming.
I haven't forgiven you.

Llywelyn
For killing Gwilym Brewys?

Siwan
I knew that his life was destined to be short.
Killing him was a human response. I forgive that.
But because he loved me,
And because I gave myself to that love,
You gave him the death
Of a mountain brigand and a common thief.
You opened our castle to the grimacing
Cackling peasants of Arfon. You hanged him
To show your hatred, to spit venom on our love
Before the crowds of your subjects.

Llywelyn
He died with dignified disdain – it was
A death worthy of your love.

Siwan
Your councillors were ashamed.
Your courtiers went quiet,
Ashamed of your obsessive hate.

Llywelyn
Didn't it cross your mind Siwan
That I could love you as much as Gwilym Brewys did?

Siwan
You – you, love me? No …

Llywelyn
Is the chasm between us that great?

Siwan
My Lord – I was given to you, a bride,
At the age of ten. You were
Already a Prince, in your thirties.
Four years after that I came to your bed,
The first time quivering like a frightened leveret.
I was your wife and bed partner for twenty years.
I gave you an heir; I gave you daughters.
I took part in your Council's debates.
More than once I saved you
From the anger of my father, and then my brother.
I was a shield between you and England's throne.
I travelled to other courts as your representative.
I put my shoulder behind the building
Of your great kingdom. And then,
Once, before my bloom faded, came a lad
Who sang a song that lit a flame
In my tired heart.
You strung him up like some crow on a garden pole.

Llywelyn
That's true. I regret that to this day.
He had to die.
But I didn't have to hang him.

Siwan
Why then? Why? I can't live with you,
I can't lie in the royal bed again
Without being told why.

Llywelyn
You can't understand why. For you, I don't exist.

Siwan
You exist as a nightmare does. Since that day.

Llywelyn
I know. Your Gwilym was closer to me in one way
Than you were. He saw me as a person.
I had to gag his mouth, to stop him
Betraying my truth before you.

Siwan
Tell me what Gwilym saw then.
I shared that bed with you for twenty years.
I've a right to know.

Llywelyn
Telling you would be like baring my breast
To your venom's barbs.

Siwan
A year's imprisonment has blunted those barbs.

Llywelyn
Our marriage was a political union.
Between us – a divide of twenty five years.
That's the common practice. That's how
Political pacts are made. The fate
Of countries and crowns hang on such things.
But four years after that wedding, when you
Came to Arfon, a vision of virginal beauty,
My heart stopped, I was breathless, as if I'd seen the Grail.
There was a light where your feet had walked
And when I felt you trembling.
Pressed against me, girdled by my arms,
I said, I showed … nothing. I didn't want
To give you any cause for further fright.
I didn't even discomfort you with a kiss.
No cloying embraces. Nothing to make you
Recoil from me. I held back. I was courteous,
Even formal, in my advances. You relaxed.
Into the familiarity of these rooms, into my company
And I became part, a vital part perhaps
Of your days' routine.
I worshipped you from a discreet distance,
From afar and without voicing my thoughts.
And, wanting to involve myself with you more,
I began engaging you in the affairs of my state.
I saw your wisdom, your acumen, burgeoning.
You impressed me so. I remember that afternoon
You returned from England, from your father's court.
There was the threat of invasion then.
You were only fifteen, and Dafydd our son
Hardly two months old. You had saved
My kingdom, had staved off war.
That night it was you who embraced me.
I had no language to express my bliss,
I had to stop my own body from trembling …
After that night I became ruthless
Towards this kingdom's enemies. I resolved to build
A mighty inheritance for our son. If I could,
I wanted to give him the whole of Wales.
I persuaded the Pope and the English crown
To acknowledge me as the Prince of Wales.
I constructed a great kingdom,
As a shrine to you, a monument of my love for you.

Siwan
Llywelyn, I didn't know. I didn't know.

Llywelyn
What good would it have done you to know.
There was a mountain range of years
Between us. I understand that too,
I'm a statesman. I don't ask the impossible.
For me, your fidelity sufficed.

Siwan
In twenty years of living together
You never said that.

Llywelyn
In twenty years of living together
You never saw that.

Siwan
Because of that jealousy – you hanged him?

Llywelyn
Jealousy, yes, perhaps.
But you gave him the gallows.

Siwan
Me? … Me?

Llywelyn
You thought it wise, in your contempt for me,
To try to sway my mind with political persuasion.
You thought I'd trade my desecrated bed
For a castle gained, that I'd accept
That my wife had been soiled, just to keep a pact
And secure borders.
I answered contempt with contempt.
I hanged him to make your threats become real,
To show the wife who sullied me
That there was one thing for which
I'd throw away my crown and kingdom.

Siwan
Llywelyn – Llywelyn!
For that base urge to punish me
You've fallen headlong into a war … You're now almost sixty,
Surely you know by now that government
Isn't a matter of chancing and daring on a whim.

Llywelyn
Your contempt for me that night
Undid half a century's careful strategy.

Siwan
That was the opposite of my intention.

Llywelyn
The unintentional is the key to how history happens.
That night your clenched mind opened and handed me
A key to unlock mayhem.

Siwan
You credit me with too much significance Llywelyn.
We talked at cross purposes.
You looked for an excuse.
There were no keys passing from hand to hand.
Not one single person on this earth
Properly understands another.
A husband embraces a wife.
The wife responds with a kiss.
Two planets, tied into their separate orbits.
They'll never merge,
They'll never share a common sphere.

Llywelyn
That's what marriage is. Having the ties
Without the common knowing.
Drifting into it, uninformed, untutored –
A grown man and a child are in the same trap.
Each a victim of what's forced upon him, by chance.
Lost in intricate games
Where he had no say in drawing up the rules.

Siwan
But war? That's by design, not chance.

Llywelyn
And that depends on you.
Will you come back to my table and my bed?

Siwan
What does that have to do with war?

Llywelyn
The war's inevitable now.
You may still choose what you do with me.

Siwan
I'm a prisoner. Your sentence separated us.
Why not command me to come back to you.

Llywelyn
You must come back of your own accord.

Siwan
If I refuse?

Llywelyn
Then – I'll go to war. And lead the fighting myself.

Siwan
And not return? That threat's unworthy.

Llywelyn
You, a princess and a king's daughter,
You're well versed in threats and ultimata.
They're part of our lives daily.

Siwan
I can't come back to your bed
Without your forgiveness.

Llywelyn
You know that's been offered.

Siwan
On your conditions. I won't grovel for
Your forgiveness. I won't accept it either
From a self-obsessed hypocrite,
I've listened to what you've told me. You say
I've desecrated the royal bed.
I also sent my lover to the gallows.
I caused the South to fall to Hubert.
I jeopardised Dafydd's kingdom and inheritance,
I unstitched your sanity, wrecked your ordered world
But you? You – are a martyr to a bad marriage.
And now before you go to battle, you'll allow me
Back into your bed. The royal bed.
You'll devastate me with your gracious forgiving.
You with the setting sun on your armour and helmet
As you ride to your worthy death.
When your body's brought back from battle
Should I commission a portrait from the court painter as a tribute
To the Man Who Was God?


The two laugh.

Llywelyn
I'm not worthy of you Siwan.

Siwan
Every married woman is told that
At one time or other. That's when their husbands
Are at their most dangerous.

Llywelyn
Can you forgive me Siwan?

Siwan
Llywelyn the Great asking forgiveness from a harlot?

Llywelyn
That night, that twelvemonth back,
My love flamed into hate. Malice.
That night, I'll tell you, –

Siwan
No. Don't tell me the truth.
This isn't a confessional. I'm no priest.
I'm a defeated woman who wants to win one more skirmish.


The two laugh again.

Llywelyn
Will you forgive me Siwan?

Siwan
For what? Calling me a whore?
The name sat on me easily enough.

Llywelyn
The hanging. That fit of fury.
For relishing your anguish.

Siwan
The residue of all this is your pitiful state.
Gwilym was hanged. He leapt to his death
Shouting my name. Our love was unbowed
In those last glorious seconds of defiance.
I'll remember him like that. We were spared
Any long disillusion, the cooling of passion,
Boredom becalming the flesh, and lies
Cheapening our talking. But you –
If you do forgive me
You'll have to live with the ashes of your old self.
With the nightmare of that night
When all love died within me. Sleeping with me
In that royal bed will be like
Lying in a grave, still alive. Can you, Llywelyn,
Put up with that? Can you not hate me?

Llywelyn
Will you come back to me Siwan?

Siwan
Between us in that bed
Will be the stench of your trust's defiling.

Llywelyn
If you return, between us in that bed
Will be your lover's corpse swinging from a rope.

Siwan
What shall we do with them Llywelyn?

Llywelyn
Reach out our arms over them, and touch.
Take them to us, between us, in penance.
Purgatory's fires can mould a marriage's redemption.
I'm the fire that blistered you, almost killed you,
Tried to burn you to a cinder, you and the memory
Of that boy who leapt to his death
Still proclaiming his love for you.
We've scorched each other. But not quite destroyed.
Come back to me Siwan.

Siwan
The habits of a quarter of a century bid me back.

Llywelyn
Your son's whole future bids you back.

Siwan
The daft ploys of an old man bent on a new war
Bid me back.

Llywelyn
Despite my age I might win that war
And win you back.

Siwan
Llywelyn, I wish you success,
I wish you wellbeing …

Llywelyn
That's enough. You're as good as back already.

Siwan
Will you take me back like that,
With nothing but my goodwill?

Llywelyn
Goodwill is love. Siwan, my wife,
I'll come out of my chambers, ready for battle,
I'll be eager and lusty. I'll smile a goodbye
For you. I'll be fighting this war for you.

Siwan
One word Llywelyn.
I'll cheer your victory when it comes.
I can see Hubert de Burgh's downfall.
I can see the securing of Dafydd's great inheritance
But after that, my days won't be many.

Llywelyn
You'll live a long time after me.

Siwan
No. I won't. Life still surges strongly in you.
And your urge to succeed still drives you.
I've lost that. Grant me one wish.

Llywelyn
What's that?

Siwan
My last testament. From the window of my prison loft
Beyond the green where he was hanged,
Over the Menai's waters I could see Dindaethwy
And the rooks rising and settling in those woods
By Saint Catrin's resting place.
Seeing their freedom to glide and swoop, to nest
And mate and squabble, high above men's to-ing and fro-ing
Gladdened my heart, made me envious.
When I die, take my body over the Menai
Lay me to rest there and give the land
To the Franciscan brothers to build a church.

Llywelyn
The grey friars. Why Franciscans?

Siwan
I owe a debt to the saint of the rope.
He liked to chance his luck. To dice with death.

Llywelyn
Your wish conceals some coded meaning.
I thought you'd be buried with me in Aberconwy.

Siwan
You referred to the marriage vows.
They tie me to you until death. I abide by them.
But the grave severs all such ties. Frees us all.
I want my bones to crumble to dust
With no one else beside me.

Llywelyn
Alright, my heart. I'll do everything
In accordance with your wishes Siwan.
(He calls.)
Are you there Alis?


Alis enters.

Alis
My lord?

Llywelyn
Where's the royal crown of Princess of Gwynedd?


Alis opens the chest.

Alis
Here in ma dame's chest.

Llywelyn
Bring it to me.
This maid complains about you Siwan.

Alis
Ma dame, I do not. I never complain.

Llywelyn
You haven't struck her for a year, she says.
She seems to miss the sting of your palm.

Alis
Sir, my Lord, for shame on you.

Llywelyn
And so, I'll take it upon myself to discipline her.
If I return from the war victorious
I'll give you away as a wife to the bravest lad
In my retinue. And you'll thank me for that.
The crown. My Princess, I crown you anew
And give you half of Gwynedd's lands.
I give you my right hand. I kiss your hand.
We'll go to the great hall. We'll banquet.
This afternoon I'll summon the councillors to Court
And lay before them Gwynedd's new strategy for war.


END


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