Three Plays by Granville-Barker - BestLightNovel.com
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ANN. I suppose that a woman's profession is marriage.
GEORGE. My lord has departed.
ANN. There'll be others to come. I'm not afraid of being married.
SARAH. What did Papa want Mrs. Opie for?
ANN. There'll be a great many things I shall want to know about men now.
GEORGE. Wisdom cometh with sorrow . . . oh, my sister.
SARAH. I believe you two are both about as selfish as you can be.
GEORGE. I am an egotist . . . with attachments.
ANN. Make use of me.
GEORGE. Ann, you marry--when you marry--to please yourself.
ANN. There's much in life that I don't like, Sally.
SARAH. There's much more that you will.
GEORGE. I think we three have never talked together before.
ABUD, _who has been in sight on the terrace for a few moments, now comes down the steps_.
ABUD. May I make so bold, sir, as to ask how is Mrs. George Leete?
GEORGE. She was well when I last heard.
ABUD. Thank you, sir.
_And he returns to his work._
ANN. I wonder will it be a boy or a girl.
GEORGE. Poor weak woman.
SARAH. Be grateful to her.
ANN. A baby is a wonderful thing.
SARAH. Babyhood in the abstract . . . beautiful.
ANN. Even kittens . . .
_She stops, and then in rather childish embarra.s.sment, moves away from them._
SARAH. Don't shudder, George.
GEORGE. I have no wish to be a father. Why?
SARAH. It's a vulgar responsibility.
GEORGE. My wayside flower!
SARAH. Why pick it?
GEORGE. Sarah, I love my wife.
SARAH. That's easily said.
GEORGE. She should be here.
SARAH. George, you married to please yourself.
GEORGE. By custom her rank is my own.
SARAH. Does she still drop her aitches?
GEORGE. Dolly . . .
SARAH. Pretty name.
GEORGE. Dolly aspires to be one of us.
SARAH. Child-bearing makes these women blowzy.
GEORGE. Oh heaven!
ANN. [_Calling to_ ABUD _on the terrace_.] Finish to-day, Abud. If it rains . . .
_She stops, seeing_ MR. TETGEEN _standing at the top of the steps leading from the house. This is an intensely respectable, selfcontained-looking lawyer, but a man of the world too._
MR. TETGEEN. Lady Cottesham.
SARAH. Sir?
MR. TETGEEN. My name is Tetgeen.
SARAH. Mr. Tetgeen. How do you do?
MR. TETGEEN. The household appeared to be in some confusion and I took the liberty to be my own messenger. I am anxious to speak with you.
SARAH. Ann, dear, ask if Papa will see you now.
DIMMUCK _appears_.