Kitobni o'qish: «Plays: Lady Frederick, The Explorer, A Man of Honour»
LADY FREDERICK
CHARACTERS
Lady Frederick Berolles
Sir Gerald O'Mara
Mr. Paradine Fouldes
Marchioness of Mereston
Marquess of Mereston
Admiral Carlisle
Rose
Lady Frederick's Dressmaker
Lady Frederick's Footman
Lady Frederick's Maid
Thompson
A Waiter at the Hotel Splendide
Time: The Present Day
Acts I and II —Drawing-room at the Hotel Splendide, Monte Carlo.
Act III —Lady Frederick's Dressing-Room.
The Performing Rights of this play are fully protected, and permission to perform it, whether by Amateurs or Professionals, must be obtained in advance from the author's Sole Agent, R. Golding Bright, 20 Green Street, Leicester Square, London, W.C., from whom all particulars can be obtained
THE FIRST ACT
Scene: Drawing-room of the Hotel Splendide at Monte Carlo. A large, handsomely furnished room, with doors right and left, and French windows at the back leading to a terrace. Through these is seen the starry southern night. On one side is a piano, on the other a table with papers neatly laid out on it. There is a lighted stove.
Lady Mereston, in evening dress, rather magnificently attired, is reading the papers. She is a handsome woman of forty. She puts down the paper impatiently and rings the bell. A servant answers. He has a French accent.
Lady Mereston
Did Mr. Paradine Fouldes come this evening?
Servant
Yes, miladi.
Lady Mereston
Is he in the hotel now?
Servant
Yes, miladi.
Lady Mereston
Will you send some one up to his room to say I'm waiting to see him?
Servant
Pardon, miladi, but the gentleman say 'e was on no account to be disturbed.
Lady Mereston
Nonsense. Mr. Fouldes is my brother. You must go to him immediately.
Servant
Mr. Fouldes his valet is in the 'all. Will your ladyship speak with him?
Lady Mereston
Mr. Fouldes is more difficult to see than a cabinet minister. Send his servant to me.
Servant
Very good, miladi.
[Exit Servant, and presently Thompson, Mr. Fouldes' man, comes in.
Thompson
Your ladyship wished to see me.
Lady Mereston
Good evening, Thompson. I hope you had a comfortable journey.
Thompson
Yes, my lady. Mr. Fouldes always has a comfortable journey.
Lady Mereston
Was the sea calm when you crossed?
Thompson
Yes, my lady. Mr. Fouldes would look upon it as a great liberty if the sea was not calm.
Lady Mereston
Will you tell Mr. Fouldes that I should like to see him at once?
Thompson
[Looking at his watch.] Excuse me, my lady, but Mr. Fouldes said no one was to disturb him till ten o'clock. It's more than my place is worth to go to him at five minutes to.
Lady Mereston
But what on earth's he doing?
Thompson
I don't know at all, my lady.
Lady Mereston
How long have you been with Mr. Fouldes?
Thompson
Twenty-five years, my lady.
Lady Mereston
I should have thought you knew how he spent every minute of his day.
[Paradine comes in. He is a very well-dressed man of forty-odd. Self-possessed, worldly, urbane. He is never at a loss or put out of countenance. He overhears Lady Mereston's last words.
Fouldes
When I engaged Thompson I told him the first thing he must learn was the very difficult feat of keeping his eyes open and shut at one and the same time.
Lady Mereston
My dear Paradine, I've been waiting to see you for the last two hours. How tiresome you are.
Fouldes
You may give me a kiss, Maud, but don't be rough.
Lady Mereston
[Kissing his cheek.] You ridiculous creature. You really might have come to see me at once.
Fouldes
My dear, you cannot grudge me a little repose after a long and tedious journey. I had to repair the ravages to my person caused by twenty-seven hours in the train.
Lady Mereston
Don't be so absurd. I'm sure your person is never ravished.
Fouldes
Ravaged, my dear, ravaged. I should look upon it as an affectation at my age if I were not a little upset by the journey from London to Monte Carlo.
Lady Mereston
I'll be bound you ate a very hearty dinner.
Fouldes
Thompson, did I eat any dinner at all?
Thompson
[Stolidly.] Soup, sir.
Fouldes
I remember looking at it.
Thompson
Fish, sir.
Fouldes
I trifled with a fried sole.
Thompson
Bouchées à la Reine, sir.
Fouldes
They have left absolutely no impression upon me.
Thompson
Tournedos à la Splendide.
Fouldes
They were distinctly tough, Thompson. You must lodge a complaint in the proper quarter.
Thompson
Roast pheasant, sir.
Fouldes
Yes, yes, now you mention it, I do remember the pheasant.
Thompson
Chocolate ice, sir.
Fouldes
It was too cold, Thompson. It was distinctly too cold.
Lady Mereston
My dear Paradine, I think you dined uncommonly well.
Fouldes
I have reached an age when love, ambition and wealth pale into insignificance beside a really well-grilled steak. That'll do, Thompson.
Thompson
Very well, sir.
[He goes out.
Lady Mereston
It's too bad of you, Paradine, to devour a substantial meal when I'm eating out my very heart with anxiety.
Fouldes
It seems to agree with you very well. I've not seen you look better for years.
Lady Mereston
For heaven's sake be serious and listen to me.
Fouldes
I started immediately I got your telegram. Pray tell me what I can do for you?
Lady Mereston
My dear Paradine, Charlie's head over ears in love.
Fouldes
It's not altogether an unexpected condition for a young man of twenty-two. If the lady's respectable, marry him and resign yourself to being a dowager. If she's not, give her five hundred pounds and pack her off to Paris or London or wherever else she habitually practises her arts and graces.
Lady Mereston
I wish I could. But who d'you think it is?
Fouldes
My dear, there's nothing I detest more than riddles. I can imagine quite a number of fair ladies who would look without disdain upon a young marquess with fifty thousand a year.
Lady Mereston
Lady Frederick Berolles.
Fouldes
By Jupiter!
Lady Mereston
She's fifteen years older than he is.
Fouldes
Then she's not old enough to be his mother, which is a distinct advantage.
Lady Mereston
She dyes her hair.
Fouldes
She dyes it uncommonly well.
Lady Mereston
She paints.
Fouldes
Much better than a Royal Academician.
Lady Mereston
And poor Charlie's simply infatuated. He rides with her all the morning, motors with her all the afternoon, and gambles with her half the night. I never see him.
Fouldes
But why should you think Lady Frederick cares two straws for him?
Lady Mereston
Don't be ridiculous, Paradine. Every one knows she hasn't a penny, and she's crippled with debts.
Fouldes
One has to keep up appearances in this world. Life nowadays for the woman of fashion is a dilemma of which one horn is the Bankruptcy Court and the other – dear Sir Francis Jeune.
Lady Mereston
I wish I knew how she manages to dress so beautifully. It's one of the injustices of fate that clothes only hang on a woman really well when she's lost every shred of reputation.
Fouldes
My dear, you must console yourself with the thought that she'll probably frizzle for it hereafter.
Lady Mereston
I hope I'm not wicked, Paradine, but to wear draperies and wings in the next world offers me no compensation for looking dowdy in a Paquin gown in this.
Fouldes
I surmised she was on the verge of bankruptcy when I heard she'd bought a new motor. And you seriously think Charlie wants to marry her?
Lady Mereston
I'm sure of it.
Fouldes
And what d'you want me to do?
Lady Mereston
Good heavens, I want you to prevent it. After all he has a magnificent position; he's got every chance of making a career for himself. There's no reason why he shouldn't be Prime Minister – it's not fair to the boy to let him marry a woman like that.
Fouldes
Of course you know Lady Frederick?
Lady Mereston
My dear Paradine, we're the greatest friends. You don't suppose I'm going to give her the advantage of quarrelling with me. I think I shall ask her to luncheon to meet you.
Fouldes
Women have such an advantage over men in affairs of this sort. They're troubled by no scruples, and, like George Washington, never hesitate to lie.
Lady Mereston
I look upon her as an abandoned creature, and I tell you frankly I shall stop at nothing to save my son from her clutches.
Fouldes
Only a thoroughly good woman could so calmly announce her intention of using the crookedest ways to gain her ends.
Lady Mereston
[Looking at him.] There must be some incident in her career which she wouldn't like raked up. If we could only get hold of that…
Fouldes
[Blandly.] How d'you imagine I can help you?
Lady Mereston
A reformed burglar is always the best detective.
Fouldes
My dear, I wish you could be frank without being sententious.
Lady Mereston
You've run through two fortunes, and if we all got our deserts you would be starving now instead of being richer than ever.
Fouldes
My second cousins have a knack of dying at the psychological moment.
Lady Mereston
You've been a horrid, dissipated wretch all your life, and heaven knows the disreputable people who've been your bosom friends.
Fouldes
With my knowledge of the world and your entire lack of scruple we should certainly be a match for one defenceless woman.
Lady Mereston
[Looking at him sharply.] Common report says that at one time you were very much in love with her.
Fouldes
Common report is an ass whose long ears only catch its own braying.
Lady Mereston
I was wondering how far things went. If you could tell Charlie of the relations between you…
Fouldes
My good Maud, there were no relations – unfortunately.
Lady Mereston
Poor George was very uneasy about you at the time.
Fouldes
Your deceased husband, being a strictly religious man, made a point of believing the worst about his neighbours.
Lady Mereston
Don't, Paradine; I know you didn't like one another, but remember that I loved him with all my heart. I shall never get over his death.
Fouldes
My dear girl, you know I didn't mean to wound you.
Lady Mereston
After all, it was largely your fault. He was deeply religious, and as the president of the Broad Church Union he couldn't countenance your mode of life.
Fouldes
[With great unction.] Thank God in my day I've been a miserable sinner!
Lady Mereston
[Laughing.] You're quite incurable, Paradine. But you will help me now. Since his father's death, the boy and I have lived a very retired life, and now we're quite helpless. It would break my heart if Charlie married that woman.
Fouldes
I'll do my best. I think I can promise you that nothing will come of it.
[The door is flung open, and Lady Frederick enters, followed by Mereston, a young boyish man of twenty-two; by her brother, Sir Gerald O'Mara, a handsome fellow of six-and-twenty; by Captain Montgomerie, Admiral Carlisle, and Rose, his daughter. Lady Frederick is a handsome Irish woman of thirty to thirty-five, beautifully dressed. She is very vivacious, and light-hearted. She has all the Irish recklessness and unconcern for the morrow. Whenever she wants to get round anybody she falls into an Irish brogue, and then, as she knows very well, she is quite irresistible. Captain Montgomerie is a polished, well-groomed man of thirty-five, with suave manners. The Admiral is bluff and downright. Rose is a pretty ingénue of nineteen.
Lady Mereston
Here they are.
Lady Frederick
[Enthusiastically going to him with open arms.] Paradine! Paradine! Paradine!
Mererston
Oh, my prophetic soul, mine uncle!
Fouldes
[Shaking hands with Lady Frederick.] I heard you were at the Casino.
Lady Frederick
Charlie lost all his money, so I brought him away.
Lady Mereston
I wish you wouldn't gamble, Charlie dear.
Mererston
My dear mother, I've only lost ten thousand francs.
Lady Frederick
[To Paradine Fouldes.] I see you're in your usual robust health.
Fouldes
You needn't throw it in my face. I shall probably be very unwell to-morrow.
Lady Frederick
D'you know Admiral Carlisle? This is my brother Gerald.
Fouldes
[Shaking hands.] How d'you do?
Lady Frederick
[Introducing.] Captain Montgomerie.
Captain Montgomerie
I think we've met before.
Fouldes
I'm very pleased to hear it. How d'you do. [To Mererston.] Are you having a good time in Monte Carlo, Charles?
Mererston
A 1, thanks.
Fouldes
And what do you do with yourself?
Mererston
Oh, hang about generally, you know – and there's always the tables.
Fouldes
That's right, my boy; I'm glad to see that you prepare yourself properly for your duties as a hereditary legislator.
Mererston
[Laughing.] Oh, shut it, Uncle Paradine.
Fouldes
I rejoice also to find that you have already a certain command of the vernacular.
Mererston
Well, if you can browbeat a London cabby and hold your own in repartee with a barmaid, it oughtn't to be difficult to get on all right in the House of Lords.
Fouldes
But let me give you a solemn warning. You have a magnificent chance, dear boy, with all the advantages of wealth and station. I beseech you not to throw it away by any exhibition of talent. The field is clear and the British people are waiting for a leader. But remember that the British people like their leaders dull. Capacity they mistrust, versatility they cannot bear, and wit they utterly abhor. Look at the fate of poor Lord Parnaby. His urbanity gained him the premiership, but his brilliancy overthrew him. How could the fortunes of the nation be safe with a man whose speeches were pointed and sparkling, whose mind was so quick, so agile, that it reminded you of a fencer's play? Every one is agreed that Lord Parnaby is flippant and unsubstantial; we doubt his principles and we have grave fears about his morality. Take warning, my dear boy, take warning. Let the sprightly epigram never lighten the long periods of your speech nor the Attic salt flavour the roast beef of your conversation. Be careful that your metaphors show no imagination and conceal your brains as you would a discreditable secret. Above all, if you have a sense of humour, crush it. Crush it.
Mereston
My dear uncle, you move me very much. I will be as stupid as an owl.
Fouldes
There's a good, brave boy.
Mereston
I will be heavy and tedious.
Fouldes
I see already the riband of the Garter adorning your shirt-front. Remember, there's no damned merit about that.
Mereston
None shall listen to my speeches without falling into a profound sleep.
Fouldes
[Seizing his hand.] The premiership itself is within your grasp.
Lady Mereston
Dear Paradine, let us take a stroll on the terrace before we go to bed.
Fouldes
And you shall softly whisper all the latest scandal in my ear.
[He puts on her cloak and they go out.
Lady Frederick
May I speak to you, Admiral?
Admiral
Certainly, certainly. What can I do for you?
[While Lady Frederick and the Admiral talk, the others go slowly out. Through the conversation she uses her Irish brogue.
Lady Frederick
Are you in a good temper?
Admiral
Fairly, fairly.
Lady Frederick
I'm glad of that because I want to make you a proposal of marriage.
Admiral
My dear Lady Frederick, you take me entirely by surprise.
Lady Frederick
[Laughing.] Not on my own behalf, you know.
Admiral
Oh, I see.
Lady Frederick
The fact is, my brother Gerald has asked your daughter to marry him, and she has accepted.
Admiral
Rose is a minx, Lady Frederick, and she's much too young to marry.
Lady Frederick
Now don't fly into a passion. We're going to talk it over quite calmly.
Admiral
I tell you I won't hear of it. The boy's penniless.
Lady Frederick
That's why it's so lucky you're rich.
Admiral
Eh?
Lady Frederick
You've been talking of buying a place in Ireland. You couldn't want anything nicer than Gerald's – gravel soil, you know. And you simply dote on Elizabethan architecture.
Admiral
I can't bear it.
Lady Frederick
How fortunate, then, that the house was burnt down in the eighteenth century and rebuilt in the best Georgian style.
Admiral
Ugh.
Lady Frederick
And you'd love to have little grandsons to dandle on your knee.
Admiral
How do I know they wouldn't be girls?
Lady Frederick
Oh, it's most unusual in our family.
Admiral
I tell you I won't hear of it.
Lady Frederick
You know, it's not bad to have the oldest baronetcy in the country but one.
Admiral
I suppose I shall have to pack Rose off to England.
Lady Frederick
And break her heart?
Admiral
Women's hearts are like old china, none the worse for a break or two.
Lady Frederick
Did you ever know my husband, Admiral?
Admiral
Yes.
Lady Frederick
I was married to him at seventeen because my mother thought it a good match, and I was desperately in love with another man. Before we'd been married a fortnight he came home blind drunk, and I had never seen a drunken man before. Then I found out he was a confirmed tippler. I was so ashamed. If you only knew what my life was for the ten years I lived with him. I've done a lot of foolish things in my time, but, my God, I have suffered.
Admiral
Yes, I know, I know.
Lady Frederick
And believe me, when two young things love one another it's better to let them marry. Love is so very rare in this world. One really ought to make the most of it when it's there.
Admiral
I'm very sorry, but I've made up my mind.
Lady Frederick
Ah, but won't you alter it – like Nelson. Don't be hard on Rose. She's really in love with Gerald. Do give them a chance. Won't you? Ah, do – there's a dear.
Admiral
I don't want to hurt your feelings, but Sir Gerald is about the most ineligible young man that I've ever come across.
Lady Frederick
[Triumphantly.] There, I knew we should agree. That's precisely what I told him this morning.
Admiral
I understand his place is heavily mortgaged.
Lady Frederick
No one will lend a penny more on it. If they would Gerald would borrow it at once.
Admiral
He's got nothing but his pay to live upon.
Lady Frederick
And his tastes are very extravagant.
Admiral
He's a gambler.
Lady Frederick
Yes, but then he's so good looking.
Admiral
Eh?
Lady Frederick
I'm glad that we agree so entirely about him. Now there's nothing left but to call the young things in, join their hands and give them our united blessing.
Admiral
Before I consent to this marriage, madam, I'll see your brother —
Lady Frederick
Damned?
Admiral
Yes, madam, damned.
Lady Frederick
Now listen to me quietly, will you?
Admiral
I should warn you, Lady Frederick, that when I once make up my mind about a thing, I never change it.
Lady Frederick
Now that is what I really admire. I like a man of character. You know, I've always been impressed by your strength and determination.
Admiral
I don't know about that. But when I say a thing, I do it.
Lady Frederick
Yes, I know. And in five minutes you're going to say that Gerald may marry your pretty Rose.
Admiral
No, no, no.
Lady Frederick
Now look here, don't be obstinate, I don't like you when you're obstinate.
Admiral
I'm not obstinate. I'm firm.
Lady Frederick
After all, Gerald has lots of good qualities. He's simply devoted to your daughter. He's been a little wild, but you know you wouldn't give much for a young man who hadn't.
Admiral
[Gruffly.] I don't want a milksop for a son-in-law.
Lady Frederick
As soon as he's married, he'll settle into a model country squire.
Admiral
Well, he's a gambler, and I can't get over that.
Lady Frederick
Shall he promise you never to play cards again? Now, don't be horrid. You don't want to make me utterly wretched, do you?
Admiral
[Unwillingly.] Well, I'll tell you what I'll do – they shall marry if he doesn't gamble for a year.
Lady Frederick
Oh, you duck. [She impulsively throws her arms round his neck and kisses him. He is a good deal taken aback.] I beg your pardon, I couldn't help it.
Admiral
I don't altogether object, you know.
Lady Frederick
Upon my word, in some ways you're rather fascinating.
Admiral
D'you think so, really?
Lady Frederick
I do indeed.
Admiral
I rather wish that proposal of marriage had been on your own behalf.
Lady Frederick
Ah, with me, dear Admiral, experience triumphs over hope. I must tell the children. [Calling.] Gerald, come here. Rose.
[Gerald and Rose come in.
Lady Frederick
I always knew your father was a perfect darling, Rose.
Rose
Oh, papa, you are a brick.
Admiral
I thoroughly disapprove of the marriage, my dear, but – it's not easy to say no to Lady Frederick.
Gerald
It's awfully good of you, Admiral, and I'll do my best to make Rose a ripping husband.
Admiral
Not so fast, young man, not so fast. There's a condition.
Rose
Oh, father!
Lady Frederick
Gerald is to behave himself for a year, and then you may marry.
Rose
But won't Gerald grow very dull if he behaves himself?
Lady Frederick
I have no doubt of it. But dullness is the first requisite of a good husband.
Admiral
Now you must pack off to bed, my dear. I'm going to smoke my pipe before turning in.
Rose
[Kissing Lady Frederick.] Good-night, dearest. I'll never forget your kindness.
Lady Frederick
You'd better not thank me till you've been married a few years.
Rose
[Holding out her hand to GERALD.] Good-night.
Gerald
[Taking it and looking at her.] Good-night.
Admiral
[Gruffly.] You may as well do it in front of my face as behind my back.
Rose
[Lifting up her lips.] Good-night.
[He kisses her, and the Admiral and Rose go out.
Lady Frederick
Oh lord, I wish I were eighteen.
[She sinks into a chair, and an expression of utter weariness comes over her face.
Gerald
I say, what's up?
Lady Frederick
[Starting.] I thought you'd gone. Nothing.
Gerald
Come, out with it.
Lady Frederick
Oh, my poor boy, if you only knew. I'm so worried that I don't know what on earth to do.
Gerald
Money?
Lady Frederick
Last year I made a solemn determination to be economical. And it's ruined me.
Gerald
My dear, how could it?
Lady Frederick
I can't make it out. It seems very unfair. The more I tried not to be extravagant, the more I spent.
Gerald
Can't you borrow?
Lady Frederick
[Laughing.] I have borrowed. That's just it.
Gerald
Well, borrow again.
Lady Frederick
I've tried to. But no one's such a fool as to lend me a penny.
Gerald
Did you say I'd sign anything they liked?
Lady Frederick
I was so desperate I said we'd both sign anything. It was Dick Cohen.
Gerald
Oh lord, what did he say?
Lady Frederick
[Imitating a Jewish accent.] What's the good of wathting a nithe clean sheet of paper, my dear lady?
Gerald
[Shouting with laughter.] By George, don't I know it.
Lady Frederick
For heaven's sake don't let's talk of my affairs. They're in such a state that if I think of them at all I shall have a violent fit of hysterics.
Gerald
But look here, what d'you really mean?
Lady Frederick
Well, if you want it – I owe my dressmaker seven hundred pounds, and last year I signed two horrid bills, one for fifteen hundred and the other for two thousand. They fall due the day after to-morrow, and if I can't raise the money I shall have to go through the Bankruptcy Court.
Gerald
By George, that's serious.
Lady Frederick
It's so serious that I can't help thinking something will happen. Whenever I've got in a really tight fix something has turned up and put me on my legs again. Last time, Aunt Elizabeth had an apoplectic fit. But of course it wasn't really very profitable because mourning is so desperately expensive.
Gerald
Why don't you marry?
Lady Frederick
Oh, my dear Gerald, you know I'm always unlucky at games of chance.
Gerald
Charlie Mereston's awfully gone on you.
Lady Frederick
That must be obvious to the meanest intelligence.
Gerald
Well, why don't you have him?
Lady Frederick
Good heavens, I'm old enough to be his mother.
Gerald
Nonsense. You're only ten years older than he is, and nowadays no nice young man marries a woman younger than himself.
Lady Frederick
He's such a good fellow. I couldn't do him a nasty turn like that.
Gerald
How about Montgomerie? He simply stinks of money, and he's not a bad sort.
Lady Frederick
[Surprised.] My dear boy, I hardly know him.
Gerald
Well, I'm afraid it means marriage or bankruptcy.
Lady Frederick
Here's Charlie. Take him away, there's a dear. I want to talk to Paradine.
Enter Paradine Fouldes with Mereston.
Fouldes
What, still here, Lady Frederick?
Lady Frederick
As large as life.
Fouldes
We've been taking a turn on the terrace.
Lady Frederick
[To Mereston.] And has your astute uncle been pumping you, Charlie?
Fouldes
Eh, what?
Mereston
I don't think he got much out of me.
Fouldes
[Good-naturedly.] All I wanted, dear boy. There's no one so transparent as the person who thinks he's devilish deep. By the way, what's the time?
Gerald
About eleven, isn't it?
Fouldes
Ah! How old are you, Charlie?
Mereston
Twenty-two.
Fouldes
Then it's high time you went to bed.
Lady Frederick
Charlie's not going to bed till I tell him. Are you?
Mereston
Of course not.
Fouldes
Has it escaped your acute intelligence, my friend, that I want to talk to Lady Frederick?
Mereston
Not at all. But I have no reason to believe that Lady Frederick wants to talk to you.
Gerald
Let's go and have a game of pills, Charlie.
Mereston
D'you want to be left alone with the old villain?
Fouldes
You show no respect for my dyed hairs, young man.
Lady Frederick
I've not seen him for years, you know.
Mereston
Oh, all right. I say, you're coming for a ride to-morrow, aren't you?
Lady Frederick
Certainly. But it must be in the afternoon.
Fouldes
I'm sorry, but Charles has arranged to motor me over to Nice in the afternoon.
Mereston
[To Lady Frederick.] That'll suit me A 1. I had an engagement, but it was quite unimportant.
Lady Frederick
Then that's settled. Good-night.
Mereston
Good-night.
[He goes out with Gerald. Lady Frederick turns and good-humouredly scrutinises Paradise Fouldes.
Lady Frederick
Well?
Fouldes
Well?
Lady Frederick
You wear excellently, Paradine.
Fouldes
Thanks.
Lady Frederick
How do you manage it?
Fouldes
By getting up late and never going to bed early, by eating whatever I like and drinking whenever I'm thirsty, by smoking strong cigars, taking no exercise, and refusing under any circumstances to be bored.
Lady Frederick
I'm sorry you had to leave town in such a hurry. Were you amusing yourself?
Fouldes
I come to the Riviera every year.
Lady Frederick
I daresay, but not so early.
Fouldes
I've never surrendered so far to middle age as to make habits.
Lady Frederick
My dear Paradine, the day before yesterday, Lady Mereston, quite distracted, went to the post office and sent you the following wire: "Come at once, your help urgently needed. Charlie in toils designing female, Maud." Am I right?
Fouldes
I never admit even to myself that a well-dressed woman is mistaken.
Lady Frederick
So you started post-haste, bent upon protecting your nephew, and were infinitely surprised to learn that the designing female was no other than your humble servant.
Fouldes
You'd be irresistible, Lady Frederick, if you didn't know you were so clever.
Lady Frederick
And now what are you going to do?
Fouldes
My dear lady, I'm not a police officer, but a very harmless, inoffensive old bachelor.
Lady Frederick
With more wiles than the mother of many daughters and the subtlety of a company promoter.
Fouldes
Maud seems to think that as I've racketted about a little in my time, I'm just the sort of man to deal with you. Set a thief to catch a thief, don't you know? She's rather fond of proverbs.
Lady Frederick
She should have thought rather of: When Greek meets Greek, then comes the tug of war. I hear Lady Mereston has been saying the most agreeable things about me.
Fouldes
Ah, that's women's fault; they always show their hand. You're the only woman I ever knew who didn't.
Lady Frederick
[With a brogue.] You should have avoided the Blarney Stone when you went to Ireland.
Fouldes
Look here, d'you want to marry Charlie?
Lady Frederick
Why should I?
Fouldes
Because he's got fifty thousand a year, and you're head over ears in debt. You've got to raise something like four thousand pounds at once, or you go under. You've got yourself a good deal talked about during the last ten years, but people have stood you because you had plenty of money. If you go broke they'll drop you like a hot potato. And I daresay it wouldn't be inconvenient to change Lady Frederick Berolles into Lady Mereston. My sister has always led me to believe that it is rather attractive to be a Marchioness.
Lady Frederick
Unlike a duchess, its cheap without being gaudy.
Fouldes
You asked me why you might want to marry a boy from ten to fifteen years younger than yourself, and I've told you.
Lady Frederick
And now perhaps you'll tell me why you're going to interfere in my private concerns?
Fouldes
Well, you see his mother happens to be my sister, and I'm rather fond of her. It's true her husband was the most sanctimonious prig I've ever met in my life.
Lady Frederick
I remember him well. He was president of the Broad Church Union and wore side-whiskers.
Fouldes
But she stuck to me through thick and thin. I've been in some pretty tight places in my day, and she's always given me a leg up when I wanted it. I've got an idea it would just about break her heart if Charlie married you.
Lady Frederick
Thanks.
Fouldes
You know, I don't want to be offensive, but I think it would be a pity myself. And besides, unless I'm much mistaken, I've got a little score of my own that I want to pay off.
Lady Frederick
Have you?
Fouldes
You've got a good enough memory not to have forgotten that you made a blithering fool of me once. I swore I'd get even with you, and by George, I mean to do it.
Lady Frederick
[Laughing.] And how do you propose to stop me if I make up my mind that I'm going to accept Charlie?
Fouldes
Well, he's not proposed yet, has he?
Lady Frederick
Not yet, but I've had to use every trick and device I can think of to prevent him.
Fouldes
Look here, I'm going to play this game with my cards on the table.
Lady Frederick
Then I shall be on my guard. You're never so dangerous as when you pretend to be frank.
Fouldes
I'm sorry you should think so badly of me.
Lady Frederick
I don't. Only it was a stroke of genius when Nature put the soul of a Jesuit priest into the body of a Yorkshire squire.
Fouldes
I wonder what you're paying me compliments for. You must be rather afraid of me.
[They look at one another for a moment.
Lady Frederick
Well, let's look at these cards.
Fouldes
First of all, there's this money you've got to raise.
Lady Frederick
Well?
Fouldes
This is my sister's suggestion.
Lady Frederick
That means you don't much like it.
Fouldes
If you'll refuse the boy and clear out – we'll give you forty thousand pounds.
Lady Frederick
I suppose you'd be rather surprised if I boxed your ears.
Fouldes
Now, look here, between you and me high falutin's rather absurd, don't you think so? You're in desperate want of money, and I don't suppose it would amuse you much to have a young hobbledehoy hanging about your skirts for the rest of your life.