登陆注册
15463700000008

第8章 SECOND ACT(1)

SCENE

Garden at the Manor House. A flight of grey stone steps leads up to the house. The garden, an old-fashioned one, full of roses.

Time of year, July. Basket chairs, and a table covered with books, are set under a large yew-tree.

[MISS PRISM discovered seated at the table. CECILY is at the back watering flowers.]

MISS PRISM. [Calling.] Cecily, Cecily! Surely such a utilitarian occupation as the watering of flowers is rather Moulton's duty than yours? Especially at a moment when intellectual pleasures await you. Your German grammar is on the table. Pray open it at page fifteen. We will repeat yesterday's lesson.

CECILY. [Coming over very slowly.] But I don't like German. It isn't at all a becoming language. I know perfectly well that Ilook quite plain after my German lesson.

MISS PRISM. Child, you know how anxious your guardian is that you should improve yourself in every way. He laid particular stress on your German, as he was leaving for town yesterday. Indeed, he always lays stress on your German when he is leaving for town.

CECILY. Dear Uncle Jack is so very serious! Sometimes he is so serious that I think he cannot be quite well MISS PRISM. [Drawing herself up.] Your guardian enjoys the best of health, and his gravity of demeanour is especially to be commanded in one so comparatively young as he is. I know no one who has a higher sense of duty and responsibility.

CECILY. I suppose that is why he often looks a little bored when we three are together.

MISS PRISM. Cecily! I am surprised at you. Mr. Worthing has many troubles in his life. Idle merriment and triviality would be out of place in his conversation. You must remember his constant anxiety about that unfortunate young man his brother.

CECILY. I wish Uncle Jack would allow that unfortunate young man, his brother, to come down here sometimes. We might have a good influence over him, Miss Prism. I am sure you certainly would.

You know German, and geology, and things of that kind influence a man very much. [CECILY begins to write in her diary.]

MISS PRISM. [Shaking her head.] I do not think that even I could produce any effect on a character that according to his own brother's admission is irretrievably weak and vacillating. Indeed I am not sure that I would desire to reclaim him. I am not in favour of this modern mania for turning bad people into good people at a moment's notice. As a man sows so let him reap. You must put away your diary, Cecily. I really don't see why you should keep a diary at all.

CECILY. I keep a diary in order to enter the wonderful secrets of my life. If I didn't write them down, I should probably forget all about them.

MISS PRISM. Memory, my dear Cecily, is the diary that we all carry about with us.

CECILY. Yes, but it usually chronicles the things that have never happened, and couldn't possibly have happened. I believe that Memory is responsible for nearly all the three-volume novels that Mudie sends us.

MISS PRISM. Do not speak slightingly of the three-volume novel, Cecily. I wrote one myself in earlier days.

CECILY. Did you really, Miss Prism? How wonderfully clever you are! I hope it did not end happily? I don't like novels that end happily. They depress me so much.

MISS PRISM. The good ended happily, and the bad unhappily. That is what Fiction means.

CECILY. I suppose so. But it seems very unfair. And was your novel ever published?

MISS PRISM. Alas! no. The manuscript unfortunately was abandoned.

[CECILY starts.] I use the word in the sense of lost or mislaid.

To your work, child, these speculations are profitless.

CECILY. [Smiling.] But I see dear Dr. Chasuble coming up through the garden.

MISS PRISM. [Rising and advancing.] Dr. Chasuble! This is indeed a pleasure.

[Enter CANON CHASUBLE.]

CHASUBLE. And how are we this morning? Miss Prism, you are, Itrust, well?

CECILY. Miss Prism has just been complaining of a slight headache.

I think it would do her so much good to have a short stroll with you in the Park, Dr. Chasuble.

MISS PRISM. Cecily, I have not mentioned anything about a headache.

CECILY. No, dear Miss Prism, I know that, but I felt instinctively that you had a headache. Indeed I was thinking about that, and not about my German lesson, when the Rector came in.

CHASUBLE. I hope, Cecily, you are not inattentive.

CECILY. Oh, I am afraid I am.

CHASUBLE. That is strange. Were I fortunate enough to be Miss Prism's pupil, I would hang upon her lips. [MISS PRISM glares.] Ispoke metaphorically. - My metaphor was drawn from bees. Ahem!

Mr. Worthing, I suppose, has not returned from town yet?

MISS PRISM. We do not expect him till Monday afternoon.

CHASUBLE. Ah yes, he usually likes to spend his Sunday in London.

He is not one of those whose sole aim is enjoyment, as, by all accounts, that unfortunate young man his brother seems to be. But I must not disturb Egeria and her pupil any longer.

MISS PRISM. Egeria? My name is Laetitia, Doctor.

CHASUBLE. [Bowing.] A classical allusion merely, drawn from the Pagan authors. I shall see you both no doubt at Evensong?

MISS PRISM. I think, dear Doctor, I will have a stroll with you.

I find I have a headache after all, and a walk might do it good.

CHASUBLE. With pleasure, Miss Prism, with pleasure. We might go as far as the schools and back.

MISS PRISM. That would be delightful. Cecily, you will read your Political Economy in my absence. The chapter on the Fall of the Rupee you may omit. It is somewhat too sensational. Even these metallic problems have their melodramatic side.

[Goes down the garden with DR. CHASUBLE.]

CECILY. [Picks up books and throws them back on table.] Horrid Political Economy! Horrid Geography! Horrid, horrid German!

[Enter MERRIMAN with a card on a salver.]

MERRIMAN. Mr. Ernest Worthing has just driven over from the station. He has brought his luggage with him.

CECILY. [Takes the card and reads it.] 'Mr. Ernest Worthing, B.

4, The Albany, W.' Uncle Jack's brother! Did you tell him Mr.

Worthing was in town?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 汉皇斗帝

    汉皇斗帝

    古往今来,他,受尽世人耻笑;千秋百代,他,挨尽英雄嘲讽。他上承父业,却未能一统天下。下恤黎民,也未能得到好评。他就是扶不起的阿斗,蜀汉皇帝刘禅。郁郁而终的他得到上天的眷顾,重生了,来到了一个全新的世界。在这里没有相父诸葛亮的辅助,也没有姜维、蒋琬的扶持。他只能靠自己,达到他前生梦寐以求的目的。在这个以自身实力为生存的基本条件的世界,懦弱只会遭到灭顶之灾,所以,他必须变强。阿斗坚定的吼声传遍了这个世界的每个角落“寡人要在这个陌生的世界里,重新开创大汉国运,做一个前所未有的汉皇斗帝。”
  • 重生豪门系列女王之冠

    重生豪门系列女王之冠

    S市,是最繁华的城市。在S市,有大名鼎鼎的十大家族,他们的顺序是:风氏,赵氏,江氏,米氏,沐氏,周氏,司氏,宫氏,云氏,钟氏。她,本是S市十大家族里钟氏的唯一的继承人,是江氏的外孙女。可是身遭不幸,被奸-人陷害,含恨而死......她恨,以至于重生。重生后,她要掌握着自己的命运,发誓要把钟氏玩弄于股掌,要活出精彩......于是,她玩转娱乐圈,开进商业,走进文学然而,她遇到了他。他处处维护她,保护她,爱护她,两人爱意愈来愈浓......而他也变成为了她的白马王子,守护着她,为她保驾护航......且看落魄公主如何摇身一变成女王
  • 安居山林当猎户

    安居山林当猎户

    穿越什么的如今已经很正常了,潮流啊!只是若是你穿越过来一个月,爹死了,两个月,后娘把你嫁了,还是直接用一只野猪把你换给了山民,你该怎么办?逃?落后到了差不多原始社会的架空王朝,四面都是茂密山林,你能逃到哪里去?安分的活着吧!不要有太多的奢望,不要想那些飘渺的东西!当然若是能日久生情,有孩子绕膝,其实真的,日子还是很幸福的。【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 仅剩的希冀,宠物小精灵神奇宝贝

    仅剩的希冀,宠物小精灵神奇宝贝

    为了仅剩的那点希冀,不断的在苦海中挣扎。痛苦,却从未后悔过。
  • 斗破苍穹之萧宇

    斗破苍穹之萧宇

    本文是一个初二学生穿越到斗破世界,又因机缘得到系统传承成为斗帝,且看他成为守护他心中女神的神,本故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,是巧合。
  • 媚骨生香,王的二嫁妖妃

    媚骨生香,王的二嫁妖妃

    有一款香,可覆国家,倾天下,但炼制之时需取将军最爱之人的心头血。有一款香,点燃之后可以使灵魂出窍,穿越异世。“皇上将一个先帝的遗妃赐婚于你,这是在侮辱你,你没看出来吗?”“皇上这是用你在侮辱本将军,你没看出来吗?”一夕穿越,她明里是入宫三日便死了夫君的被贬至尼姑庵的晦气太妃,暗里是技艺倾天下的调香师;他却是战功赫赫,威名远播的镇国大将军。一场权利的谋杀,京师四大尼姑庵,两庵相继被灭,她楚楚可怜的紧紧拽住他的衣角:“将军一定要保护哀家。”“将军,世间除了我,没人能帮你夺得这天下……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 浪漫传说之赵公明的日常

    浪漫传说之赵公明的日常

    浪漫传说虽然已经完结,但我想还是有很多人期待接下来的故事吧
  • 武小宝传奇

    武小宝传奇

    放学回家的武小宝,意外的掉进了时空黑洞,来到了另一个世界,开始了他奇异的修行之旅……
  • 神级小村医

    神级小村医

    都说山里不如城里好,岂不知杨柳拂风轻轻摇。都说山里不知山外事,岂不知花娇人美更逍遥。这里有那被骗进来一心想出大山的城里妹,这里还有从城里进了山来的女老师。这里有门前妇人倚门望,这里还有隔壁嫂子探纱窗。周青作为周围村子里唯一的一个医生,凭着师傅传授的一手针灸术,纵横乡野林间,独揽绮丽妖艳……
  • 千古之不死邪帝

    千古之不死邪帝

    “离山之中,紫微星出。腥风血雨,江山易主!”一个新的帝皇,正在离山之中,悄然出世。