Название: The Complete Plays of J. M. Barrie - 30 Titles in One Edition
Автор: Джеймс Барри
Издательство: Bookwire
Жанр: Языкознание
isbn: 9788027224012
isbn:
JENNY. Oh, ma’am! (Shrinks.)
MRS. OMMANEY (puzzled). Who are YOU?
JENNY (CALLING). Miss Margaret.
(Enter MARGARET. She sees mrs ommaney’s condition and shrinks.)
Oh, Miss Margaret, she IS — the same as that other time.
MRS OMMANEY (TO MARGARET). Miss Margaret! Is that your name?
MARGARET. Poor woman!
MRS OMMANEY (SWEETLY). Poor woman? I remember.
(LOOKS SOFTLY AT MARGARET.) It was my wedding day and you were there; I was so happy, but you, poor woman.
MARGARET. Jenny, she is confusing me with herself.
JENNY (TO mrs ommaney). Come and lie down.
MRS OMMANEY. I was in my wedding gown but you —
(PROUDLY) He preferred me, you know.
(MARGARET sits tearfully.)
Don’t cry, pretty dear. (GOING PITYINGLY TO HER) Shall I let you see my love’s portrait? It is on this locket — (ON HER NECK) — I can’t open it.
JENNY. Come and see baby.
MRS OMANNEY (VACANTLY). Baby? (LOOKING AT BEDROOM)
So that’s your baby! And you look such a good one!
(GIGGLING) Miss Margaret! (BECOMING SWEET AGAIN AS SHE SEES MARGARET IS DISTRESSED) I won’t tell. But you mustn’t call yourself Miss Margaret. Call yourself Mrs. Margaret — then no one will know. (NODS AS IF THIS WERE A CLEVER IDEA.)
(A knock at door.)
MARGARET (starting). Paul!
MRS OMMANEY. We are to be married and I am not dressed yet.
(Exit into bedroom hurriedly with JENNY, MARGARET meets PAUL as he enters.)
PAUL (in high spirits). Margaret, it is all arranged.
MARGARET (clinging to him). I thought you were never coming.
PAUL. Lady Janet detained me. She stayed last night at Old Keep but is on her way home now.
MARGARET. You have seen auntie?
PAUL. I left her in the postoffice but I had to tell her you were visiting your old nurse. (DOLEFULLY) And, of course, she said she must see you.
MARGARET. But, Paul, this is not nurse’s house. Mrs. Ommaney is here —
PAUL. What! (He is like one turned to stone!)
MARGARET. And, poor lady, she —
JENNY (calling excitedly). Miss Margaret!
MARGARET. Oh!
(Enter mrs ommaney; she has flung a gay shawl over her shoulders and enters simpering over her appearance. She takes Paul’s presence as a matter of course, jenny stands at bedroom door.)
MRS OMMANEY. Naughty man, where are the flowers?
(Displaying herself in shawl) How do you like it? It is my wedding gown. Is the cab at the door? (Trips to window.)
PAUL. My God!
MARGARET. It is heartrending.
PAUL. What does it mean?
MARGARET. She has been like this, it seems, more than once before. She has been ill, Paul, and that and the great sorrow that has come into her life have affected her brain at times.
JENNY. Oh, sir, she was quite sensible just a minute since.
PAUL. But I can’t —
MARGARET. Humour her, Paul — I will explain afterwards.
JENNY. Come and rest, ma’am — come. (TRYING TO TAKE MRS. OMMANEY TO SOFA.)
MRS. OMMANEY. Rest — when I am going to be married?
MARGARET (GOING TO HER). You ARE married now. The cab has brought you back.
MRS. OMMANEY (to PAUL). Am I?
(MARGARET signs to him to agree.)
PAUL. Yes.
MRS. ommaney (gleefully as a child). I am married! (With grand dignity to jenny) DO YOU KNOW WHO I am? I am Mrs. Margaret.
(JENNY TRIES TO TAKE HER TO SOFA.)
MARGARET (TO PAUL). Don’t you see, Paul, she has confused me with herself.
MRS. OMMANEY (holding out her arms to PAUL). You — I want you.
MARGARET (TO PAUL). Yes, humour her. She thinks you are her husband.
PAUL. You will lie down, won’t you?
(paul HELPS MRS. ommaney TO SOFA, WHERE SHE SITS. EXIT jenny INTO BEDROOM.)
MRS OMMANEY (WITH CHILDISH WONDER). Those skinny arms, are they mine? How tiny the wrist has grown, how thin the fingers. (TO PAUL, PLAINTIVELY) You will never weary of me again? When I bore you, you won’t say it, will you? You will say instead, ‘Poor little thin fingers, poor little pretty ways, all gone, all gone!’ MARGARET (PUTTING HAND ON Paul’s SHOULDER). Paul, I begin to think he is not dead. I believe he deserted her!
PAUL. No — not that!
MRS. OMMANEY (striking MARGARET’S arm off PAUL). Hands off!
MARGARET. Did he desert you?
MRS OMMANEY (LOOKING UP). Where is it — the letter? I left it on the mantelpiece — long, long ago.
PAUL (EAGERLY). Yes, tell her what was in the letter!
MRS OMMANEY (CONFIDENTIALLY). I said in it that I was leaving him because I had ceased to care for him. (GIGGLES.)
MARGARET. You left him!
(mrs ommaney NODS AS IF SHE HAD DONE A CLEVER THING.)
PAUL (EAGERLY). You see, Margaret, he was not so bad as you thought.
MARGARET. But why did you leave СКАЧАТЬ