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The Life of Man
(Leonid Andreyev)

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The Life of Man begins with an empty gray room, feebly lit. Someone-in-Gray, so named for his hooded, shapeless gray robe, moves away from the wall and begins to speak. His tone is indifferent, dispassionate. He warns the audience that has come to the theater to "laugh and be amused" that it will see the whole of Man’s life—from a dark beginning to a dark ending. He sketches the course of this life in the five scenes to come and the lights dim. The first scene, "The Birth of Man," opens in utter darkness. Gradually, a group of women emerges, sitting in a large, dimly-lit room. Though not midwives, they somehow obviously belong at the birth. In mocking, cynical tones they discuss the relative merits of boys versus girls, the husband’s comical fear and distraction, and the wife’s pain. They listen to her cries and muse on the ease with which animals deliver their young. As Man is finally born, Someone-in-Gray reappears and the candle in his hands lights. The room grows brighter and the Old Women scuttle away, to be replaced by the Relatives. Meanwhile, the Doctor and the Father trade remarks about the health of the child and the mother. The Relatives offer advice both moral and practical on what to name the boy and how to rear him. As the scene ends, the Relatives are discussing the merits of tobacco and the baby is crying. In scene 2, "Love and Poverty," the Man is already grown. The room is once again large, nearly empty except for a few pieces of rickety furniture, but it is warmly and brightly lit. Someone-in-Gray is present, but stands in the darkest corner. His candle burns strongly and steadily. The Neighbors, who adore the Man and his Wife for their beauty and kindness, enter. The Neighbors scatter flowers and fragrant grasses; they decorate the poor young couple’s room and leave them a fine cigar, a hair ribbon, a bottle of milk and some bread. They leave with hopes that Man will find work. Man’s Wife enters as soon as they leave. Her monologue explains their predicament: No one has yet recognized Man’s talent as an architect; no one buys his designs. She has been in the city center seeking either luck or work, but has come home empty-handed. She prays for mercy and for a chance for her stubborn, independent husband to prove himself. Someone-in-Gray steps out to announce to the audience that indeed Man has been discovered, and that on the next day wealthy patrons will seek him out. Man comes home disillusioned and hungry; he has walked the city in search of work, stopping at every grocery window and raging at the well-fed, well-housed people he meets. Man and Wife console each other with fancies of Italian villas and Norwegian castles; she crowns him with a wreath of oak leaves and declares him her knight; the scene ends with their discovery of the Neighbors’ gifts and their waltz to an imaginary orchestra. The third scene is no imaginary waltz, but a full-scale ball at the Man’s house. Some years have passed. The furnishings are sparse but rich and severe and somehow out of proportion. One group of Guests is dancing; another sits stiffly on gilt chairs along the walls. The latter group admires Man’s wealth and good fortune, the size of his mansion, and the beauty of his young son, punctuating their remarks with exclamations of "how fine," "how rich," "how brilliant." The Man and his Wife enter, followed by his friends—all handsome, graceful, and slightly disdainful. The Friends are followed by Man’s Enemies, who are as low and ugly as the Friends are noble and beautiful. This silent train slowly passes from one side of the stage to the other, accompanied by the Guests’ obtuse and fawning remarks. They admire the Man’s importance and fame, his Friends’ loyalty; they gossip about his Enemies’ cowardice. Once the procession passes, however, some of the Guests suspect they have been forgotten, and their talk takes a mean and spiteful turn. When they are invited to supper, though, they exit with all pomp, repeating their compliments of "how grand." The orchestra continues to play. The candle’s yellow flame sharply outlines Someone-in-Gray. Scene 4 is "Man’s Misfortune." The candle is little more than a stump, and it flickers as it burns. The set is Man’s study—large, gloomy, and dark. Man’s only remaining servant, an old woman, tells the audience of his decline into poverty and obscurity. Styles have changed; his designs are no longer popular. His house is full of rats. He has lost his furniture, his car, his carriages. Worst of all, his son—now a young man—is dying from a chance blow to the head. The old servant directs yet another Doctor into the son’s room and continues her soliloquy. Her constant refrain is "It’s all the same to me. I don’t care." The Doctor soon leaves, with cautious but reassuring words for the Man and his Wife. They are greatly aged. Man agonizes over the old broken-down toys in his study, and both pray: the Wife for compassion and mercy, the Man for justice. They reminisce and talk of his sketches and their old age. He falls asleep and she goes to tend their son, but soon returns with news of the boy’s death. For the first time in the play, Man addresses Someone-in-Gray directly: He curses the day of his birth and the whole of his life, and then defiantly curses Someone-in-Gray and whatever indifferent power he represents. This very curse is his legacy, his immortality. The two figures confront each other silently and tensely as the lights go down. "The Death of Man," the fifth scene, takes place in a tavern. Once again the room is large and barely lit, but now it is dirty and low-ceilinged. A shabbily dressed Man sits silently at a table in the center, surrounded by ragged, deformed Drunkards. Their voices are rough and coarse; their conversation is confused, alternately belligerent and tentative—they trade accounts of their hallucinations, fears, and complaints. One of their complaints is about the Man, who comes to sit and drink alone, taking no part in their feeble debauches. His Wife is dead, his mansion empty of everything save rats. The Drunkards taunt him with reminders of his fifteen rooms, his weak heart, his lost youth. Gradually other voices are heard, and the Old Women from the first scene reappear, replacing the Drunkards entirely. They mockingly recall Man’s life: One describes her visit to the empty house and abandoned nursery, while the others imitate the ball. They mimic the Guests’ exclamations and caper around the silent Man. As the Old Women begin to sing, the Musicians from the ball reappear, and the Old Women slide into a dance, leaning towards Man and whispering that he will soon die. The dance becomes jerky and abrupt, but both they and the Musicians freeze when the Man suddenly stands up, calls for his wife-shieldbearer, then collapses and dies with a curse on his lips. After a moment of profound silence and darkness, the Old Women announce Man’s death to the audience, then renew their dance. The music rises as the dance turns into a frenzy of screeching and whirling, which continues even as the stage goes entirely dark except for Man’s face. Soon that light, too, is extinguished. The noise continues, reaching a nearly unbearable pitch, then abruptly dies away.



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