The Game (Play Script)
The Game (Play Script)
LIFE: (Counting abstractly) Fifty thousand, fifty-one, sixty-five, ninety-- (She goes on through the next
speech.)
DEATH: Come come, Life, forget your losses. It's no fun playing with a dull partner. I had hoped for a
good game tonight, although there is little in it for me--just a couple of suicides.
LIFE: (With a gesture of anxiety) My dear Death, I wish you would grant me a favor.
DEATH: (Grumbling) A favor. A favor. Now isn't that just like a woman? I never saw one yet who was
willing to abide by the results of a fair game.
LIFE: (Earnestly) But I want these two, whether I win or lose. I really must have them. They are
geniuses--and you know how badly I am in need of geniuses right now. Ungrateful spoiled children!
They always want to commit suicide over their first disappointments.
DEATH: (Impatiently) How many times must I tell you that the game must be played! It's the law--
you know it as well as I do.
LIFE: (Shrugging) O, the law! Laws are always in your favor, Death!
DEATH: There you are. I always said the universe would be in a wild state of disorder if the women
had any say! No, you must play the game.
LIFE: (Indignantly) Whoever said anything about not playing? All I want is your consent to let them
meet here before the game begins.
DEATH: I'll bet this isn't so innocent as it sounds. Who are they? I haven't paid much attention to the
case.
LIFE: (Quickly) I'll give you Kaiser Wilhelm, The Czar of Russia, George of England and old Francis
Joseph--that's two to one!
DEATH: Now that's dishonest. You're always trying to unload a lot of monarchs on me when you
know I don't want them. Why, when you play for them you almost go to sleep and I always win. No
bargaining in kings, my dear.
DEATH: (With scorn) Soldiers! What do you care about soldiers? Look at your figures again. You've
been losing millions of soldiers in Europe for the past two years--and you're much more excited
about these two rattle-pated young idiots. Your idea of a fair trade is to get something for nothing.
You love too much. With such covetness how can you ever know the thrill of chance?
LIFE: (Turning) Youth! (To Death) You've tricked me. You were only playing for time.
DEATH: Come, sister. Be game. All's fair in everything but the dice. And just think. If you win this cast
the other is half won. They'll meet then ...
YOUTH: (Seeint the two and starting. To Life.) Who are you?
YOUTH: (Taken aback) Death! How different from my dream of you. I thought you were sombre,
austere; and instead, you're--if I may say so--just a trifle commonplace.
DEATH: I'm not as young as I once was. One's figure, you know--
DEATH: Look at her. A pleasing exterior, eh? And yet you wouldn't be seeking me if you didn't know
better. Alas, my boy, beauty is not even skin deep.
YOUTH: That is true. (Going to Death) Ah, Death, I have been seeking you for weeks.
YOUTH: (Excitedly, with gestures) I tried poison, but just as I was about to swallow it they snatched it
from me ... I tried to shoot myself. They cheated me; the pistol wouldn't go off.
YOUTH: (Hotly) As if you didn't know. Did you not give me the power to string beautiful words into
songs--did you not give me Love to sing to and take Love away? I cannot sing any more! And yet you
ask me why I want to die! I am not a slave! Slaves live just to eat and be clothed--you have plenty of
them!
YOUTH: If I cannot have love to warm me, I cannot create beauty. And if I cannot create beauty, I will
not live!
LIFE: Are you sure it was Love? I think it was only Desire I gave you; you did not seem ready for Love.
YOUTH: (Passionately) Falsehoods. Evasions. What is Love, then? You gave me a girl who sold
flowers on the street. She had hair like gold and a body all curves and rose-white like marble. I sang
my songs for her, and the whole world listened. Then an ugly beast came and offered her gold ... and
she laughed at me--and went away.
DEATH: (Laughing indulgently) That is Love, my boy. You are lucky to find it out so young.
DEATH: (Gallantly) I am a sport and a gentleman and I must admit that Life is as truthful as I am.
LIFE: Listen, Youth, and answer me. Did your sweetheart understand your songs?
YOUTH: Why should she? Women do not have to understand. They must be fragrant and beautiful--
like flowers.
LIFE: I will show you one who understands your songs. She is coming here.
DEATH: (Harshly) To leap into the sea, like you!
DEATH: (Scornfully) And you have been seeking me for weeks! Are you to be fooled again by this
tricky charlatan? You who have had enough of Life? There is no place for cowards among the lofty
dead!
[He stretches out his arms and turns towards the cliff.]
DEATH: (Jovially) So now it is you who are asking me to play! Come, Life do me a favor. Give me this
one and the girl shall be yours!
[Death laughs. They go to center stage and throw the dice. Death frowns and grumbles.]
YOUTH: (Dropping his arms and turning slowly. Sadly.) Then I am to live--in spite of myself. Death, I
have lost you. Life, I hate you. Without Love you are crueller than Death.
LIFE: Soon the Girl will be here. Then you will think me beautiful.
DEATH: That's the comedy of it. You probably will, you know.
YOUTH: (With a gesture of revulsion) Promises. Promises. Love comes but one--
[He breaks off and stares as the Girl rushes in. She almost runs into Life, then suddenly recoils.]
LIFE: I am Life.
GIRL: O, Life dear, I must leave you! I cannot bear you any longer. You are so white and so cold!
LIFE: What have you to complain of? Have I not given you Fame, and Worship and Wealth?
DEATH: (With a smile) What--you without Love? How about those who stand at the stage door every
evening--and send you flowers and jewels? One of them shot himself because you stamped on his
flowers. Believe me, my dear, that is all the Love there is--
DEATH: Bah! Desire when they seek you--Love when you seek them.
GIRL: No, No. Love understands. They didn't. They wanted to buy me in order to destroy me. That is
why I stamped on their flowers.
YOUTH: I am Youth.
GIRL: (Drawing back) Youth, the Poet? You? O I know all your songs by heart. I have kissed every line.
Always, when I dance, I try to dance them. (Looking around fearfully) But why are you here?
GIRL: (Alarmed. Clutching him by the arm.) Oh, no. You must not. What would the poor world do
without your beautiful songs?
GIRL: (Drawing back coldly) His sweetheart! So he loves someone! I don't believe you. How could any
woman he loved ... when he sings so sweetly--
GIRL: Nothing! (Going to Youth) O then she was not worth your love. She was like the men who wait
for me at the stage-door; she wanted to destroy you.
DEATH: Such is Life, my dear young lady, Love is the destroyer always.
YOUTH: (Bitterly) You are right. It is all a myth--Life, Love, Happiness. I must idealize someone,
something--and then the bubble bursts and I am alone. No. If she could not understand, no one
could understand.
GIRL: (Eagerly) O how wrong you are! I understand. Don't you believe me? I have danced all you
have sung. Do you remember "The Bird Calls?"
YOUTH: How beautiful! You do understand--you do! Wings flash and soar when you dance! You skim
the sea gloriously, lifting your quivering feathery breast against the sunny wind. Dance again for me.
Dance my "Cloud Flight!"
GIRL: The loveliest of all! (Remembering sadly) But I can never dance for you anymore. I came here
to die!
DEATH: And you'd forgotten it already! O you're all alike, you suicides. Life's shallowest little deceit
fools you again--though you have seen through her and know her for what she is.
YOUTH: (Swiftly) Yes, and Youth has found Love--real Love at last. Love that burns like fire and
flowers like the trees. You shall not die. (To Death) And I will fight you for her! Love is stronger than
Death!
DEATH: Than Life, you mean. Think of the great lovers of the world--Paola and Francesca, Romeo
and Juliet, Tristan and Isolde. I, I claimed them all. Who are you to set yourself up against such
august prcedents? (To the Girl) You think he loves you. It is not you he loves, but your dancing of his
songs. He is a Poet--therefore he loves only himself. And his sweetheart, for lack of whom he was
going to die. See! He has already forgotten her! (Slowly) As you will one day be forgotten.
LIFE: (To Girl) Why ask too much of me? I can only give happiness for a moment--but it is real
happiness--Love, Creation, Unity with the tremendous rhythm of the universe. I can't promise it will
endure. I won't say you will not some day be forgotten. What if it is himself he loves in you? That,
too, is Love.
GIRL: (Spurning him) Peace? Do you think I want peace--I, a dancer, a child of the whirling winds? Do
you think I would be blind to the sunlight, deaf to Youth's music--to my sweet applause, dumb to
laughter? All this joy that is in me--scattered in darkness? Dust in my hair--in my eyes--on my
dancing feet? (Hesitating) And yet--and yet Life is so cruel!
DEATH: Ah! But in willing to die she laid her life on the knees of the Fates. So we must play for her. It
is the law.
DEATH: Have me! Ho, Ho. Nay, Life. I am cleverer than you. On this game hangs the doom of both!
LIFE: (Astonished) Of both? (Furiously) You lie, Death! I have already won Youth, he cannot die.
DEATH: (Laughing) Ho. Ho. Youth cannot die, you say. True. But the Girl dies if I win; isn't that so?
(Life nods.) Well, and if she dies, what then? He loves her, yet he cannot follow. Nay, he shall live--
forever mute, forever regretting his lost love, until you yourself will beg me to take him!
DEATH: (Blackly, hurling the dice to the ground) Yes, curse the luck! But some day we'll play for
those two again--and then it will be my turn.
YOUTH: Yes. But we will have lived. Until then, Death, you are Powerless. I fear you not, and I will
guard her from you.
DEATH: Well, it was a good game after all. You see, that's the difference between you and me; you
play to win, and I play for the fun of the thing. (He laughs.) But tell me, Life; why is it you make such
a fuss over dreamers and care so little for soldiers?
LIFE: O, soldiers don't matter one way or the other to me; but some day the dreamers will chain you
to the earth, and I will have the game all my way.
LIFE: Kings are my enemies. Do you remember how careless I was during the French Revolution? I've
always had it on my conscience, and I think I'd feel better if I told you; whenever I threw a good
combination, I--juggled the dice!
DEATH: (Nodding) I'm not surprised. Heavens, aren't women unscrupulous! And yet they call me
unfair ... Well, I suppose I've got to keep an eye on you.
LIFE: I warn you I will stop at nothing. By the way, what's the game tomorrow night?
DEATH: A Plague. And in that game, I regret to say you haven't a chance in the world.
DEATH: Science, Bah! A fool's toy! I sweep them all together in my net--the men of learning and the
ones they try to cure.
LIFE: But remember that the sun, the blessed healing sun still rises every morning.
[He goes.]
LIFE: (Beginning to count her losses again) Two hundred thousand, seventy-five, three hundred and
ten. (Looking up.) I must never let him know how much I mind losing soldiers. They are the flower of
youth--there are dreamers among them...
CURTAIN