as to the wrongs the poor dead mother had to submit to? Not a vestige. Her son annihilates them at one stroke.
Werle. Gregers—I believe there is no one in the world you detest as you do me.
Gregers. [Softly.] I have seen you at too close quarters.
Werle.
You have seen me with your mother's eyes. [Lowers his voice a little.] But you should remember that her eyes were—clouded now and then.
Gregers.
[Quivering.] I see what you are hinting at. But who was to blame for mother's unfortunate weakness? Why you, and all those
! The last of them was this woman that you palmed off upon Hialmar Ekdal, when you were Ugh!Werle.
[Shrugs his shoulders.] Word for word as if it were your mother speaking!
Gregers.
[Without heeding.] And there he is now, with his great, confiding, childlike mind, compassed about with all this treachery—living under the same roof with such a creature, and never dreaming that what he calls his home is built upon a lie! [Comes a step nearer.] When I look back upon your past, I seem to see a battle-field with shattered lives on every hand.