Complete Works of Robert Louis Stevenson (Illustrated) (538 page)

 

Goriot. Then help the soup.

 

Dumont. Give me leave: I must have all happy. Shall these poor gentlemen upon a day like this drink ordinary wine? Not so; I shall drink it. (
To Macaire, who is just about to fill his glass.
) Don’t touch it, sir! Aline, give me that gentleman’s bottle and take him mine: with old Dumont’s compliments.

 

Macaire. What?

 

Bertrand. Change the bottle?

 

Macaire. Bitten!

Bertrand. Sold again!

}

Aside.

Dumont. Yes, all shall be happy.

 

Goriot. I tell ‘ee, help the soup!

 

Dumont (
begins to help soup. Then, dropping ladle
). One word: a matter of detail; Charles is not my son. (
All exclaim.
) O no, he is not my son. Perhaps I should have mentioned it before.

 

Charles. I am not your son, sir?

 

Dumont. O no, far from it.

 

Goriot. Then who the devil’s son be he?

 

 

 

Dumont. O, I don’t know. It’s an odd tale, a romantic tale: it may amuse you. It was twenty years ago, when I kept the “Golden Head” at Lyons; Charles was left upon my doorstep in a covered basket, with sufficient money to support the child till he should come of age. There was no mark upon the linen, nor any clue but one: an unsigned letter from the father of the child, which he strictly charged me to preserve. It was to prove his identity; he, of course, would know the contents, and he only; so I keep it safe in the third compartment of my cash-box, with the ten thousand francs I’ve saved for his dowry. Here is the key; it’s a patent key. To-day the poor boy is twenty-one, to-morrow to be married. I did perhaps hope the father would appear; there was a Marquis coming; he wrote me for a room; I gave him the best, Number Thirteen, which you have all heard of; I did hope it might be he, for a Marquis, you know, is always genteel. But no, you see. As for me, I take all to witness I’m as innocent of him as the babe unborn.

 

Macaire. Ahem! I think you said the linen bore an M?

 

Dumont. Pardon me; the markings were cut off.

 

Macaire. True. The basket white, I think?

 

Dumont. Brown, brown.

 

Macaire. Ah! brown — a whitey-brown.

 

Goriot. I tell ‘ee what, Dumont, this is all very well; but in that case, I’ll be danged if he gets my daater. (
General consternation.
)

 

Dumont. O Goriot, let’s have happy faces!

 

Goriot. Happy faces be danged! I want to marry my daater; I want your son. But who be this? I don’t know, and you don’t know, and he don’t know. He may be anybody; by Jarge, he may be nobody! (
Exclamations.
)

 

Curate. The situation is crepuscular.

 

 

 

Ernestine. Father, and Mr. Dumont (and you, too, Charles), I wish to say one word. You gave us leave to fall in love; we fell in love; and as for me, my father, I will either marry Charles or die a maid.

 

Charles. And you, sir, would you rob me in one day of both a father and a wife?

 

Dumont (
weeping
). Happy faces, happy faces!

 

Goriot. I know nothing about robbery; but she cannot marry without my consent, and that she cannot get.

 

Dumont. O dear, O dear!

Aline. What, spoil the wedding?

Ernestine. O father!

Charles. Sir, sir, you would not —  —

}

Together.

Goriot (
exasperated
). I wun’t, and what’s more I shan’t.

 

Notary. I donno if I make myself clear.

 

Dumont. Goriot, do let’s have happy faces!

 

Goriot. Fudge! Fudge!! Fudge!!!

 

Curate. Possibly on application to this conscientious jurist, light may be obtained.

 

All. The Notary; yes, yes; the Notary!

 

Dumont. Now, how about this marriage?

 

Notary. Marriage is a contract, to which there are two constracting parties, John Doe and Richard Roe. I donno if I make myself clear?

 

Aline. Poor lamb!

 

Curate. Silence, my friend; you will expose yourself to misconstruction.

 

Macaire (
taking the stage
). As an entire stranger in this painful scene, will you permit a gentleman and a traveller to interject one word? There sits the young man, full, I am sure, of pleasing qualities; here the young maiden, by her own confession bashfully consenting to the match; there sits that dear old gentleman, a lover of bright faces like myself, his own now dimmed with sorrow; and here — (may I be allowed to add?) — here sits this noble Roman, a father like myself, and like myself the slave of duty. Last you  have me — Baron Henri-Frédéric de Latour de Main de la Tonnerre de Brest, the man of the world and the man of delicacy. I find you all — permit me the expression — gravelled. A marriage and an obstacle. Now, what is marriage? The union of two souls, and, what is possibly more romantic, the fusion of two dowries. What is an obstacle? the devil. And this obstacle? to me, as a man of family, the obstacle seems grave; but to me, as a man and a brother, what is it but a word? O my friend (
to Goriot
), you whom I single out as the victim of the same noble failings with myself of pride of birth, of pride of honesty — O my friend, reflect. Go now apart with your dishevelled daughter, your tearful son-in-law, and let their plaints constrain you. Believe me, when you come to die, you will recall with pride this amiable weakness.

 

Goriot. I shan’t, and what’s more I wun’t. (
Charles and Ernestine lead him up stage, protesting. All rise except Notary.
)

 

Dumont (
front R., shaking hands with Macaire
). Sir, you have a noble nature. (
Macaire picks his pocket.
) Dear, me, dear me, and you are rich.

 

Macaire. I own, sir, I deceived you: I feared some wounding offer, and my pride replied. But to be quite frank with you, you behold me here, the Baron Henri-Frédéric de Latour de Main de la Tonnerre de Brest, and between my simple manhood and the infinite, these rags are all.

 

Dumont. Dear me, and with this noble pride, my gratitude is useless. For I, too, have delicacy. I understand you could not stoop to take a gift.

 

Macaire. A gift? a small one? never!

 

Dumont. And I will never wound you by the offer.

 

Macaire. Bitten!

Bertrand. Sold again!

}

Aside.

Goriot (
taking the stage
). But, look ‘ee here, he can’t marry.

 

 

 

Macaire. Hey?

Dumont. Ah!

Aline. Heyday!

Curate. Wherefore?

Ernestine. O!

Charles. Ah!

}

Together.

Goriot. Not without his veyther’s consent! And he hasn’t got it; and what’s more, he can’t get it: and what’s more, he hasn’t got a veyther to get it from. It’s the law of France.

 

Aline. Then the law of France ought to be ashamed of itself.

 

Ernestine. O, couldn’t we ask the Notary again?

 

Curate. Indubitably you may ask him.

 

Macaire. Can’t they marry?

Dumont. Can’t he marry?

Aline. Can’t she marry?

Ernestine. Can’t we marry?

Charles. Can’t I marry?

Goriot. Bain’t I right?

}

Together.

Notary. Constracting parties.

 

Curate. Possibly to-morrow at an early hour he may be more perspicuous.

 

Goriot. Ay, before he’ve time to get at it.

 

Notary. Unoffending jurisconsult overtaken by sorrow. Possibly by applying justice of peace might afford relief.

 

Macaire. Bravo!

Dumont. Excellent!

Charles. Let’s go at once!

Aline. The very thing!

Ernestine. Yes, this minute!

}

Together.

Goriot. I’ll go. I don’t mind getting advice, but I wun’t take it.

 

Macaire. My friends, one word: I perceive by your downcast looks that you have not recognised the true nature of your responsibility as citizens of time.  What is care? impiety. Joy? the whole duty of man. Here is an opportunity of duty it were sinful to forego. With a word, I could lighten your hearts; but I prefer to quicken your heels, and send you forth on your ingenuous errand with happy faces and smiling thoughts, the physicians of your own recovery. Fiddlers, to your catgut! Up, Bertrand, and show them how one foots it in society; forward, girls, and choose me every one the lad she loves; Dumont, benign old man, lead forth our blushing Curate; and you, O bride, embrace the uniform of your beloved, and help us dance in your wedding-day. (
Dance, in the course of which Macaire picks Dumont’s pocket of his keys, selects the key of the cash-box, and returns the others to his pocket. In the end, all dance out; the wedding-party, headed by Fiddlers, L.C.; the Maids and Aline into the inn, R.U.E. Manet, Bertrand and Macaire.
)

 

 

 

 

SCENE VIII

 

Macaire, Bertrand, who instantly takes a bottle from the wedding-table, and sits with it, L.

 

Macaire. Bertrand, there’s a devil of a want of a father here.

 

Bertrand. Ay, if we only knew where to find him.

 

Macaire. Bertrand, look at me: I am Macaire; I am that father.

 

Bertrand. You, Macaire? — you a father?

 

Macaire. Not yet, but in five minutes. I am capable of anything. (
Producing key.
) What think you of this?

 

Bertrand. That? Is it a key?

 

Macaire. Ay, boy, and what besides? my diploma of respectability, my patent of fatherhood. I prigged it — in the ardour of the dance I prigged it; I change  it beyond recognition, thus (
twists the handle of the key
); and now...? Where is my long-lost child? produce my young policeman, show me my gallant boy.

 

Bertrand. I don’t understand.

 

Macaire. Dear innocence, how should you? Your brains are in your fists. Go and keep watch. (
He goes into the office and returns with the cash-box.
) Keep watch, I say.

 

Bertrand. Where?

 

Macaire. Everywhere. (
He opens box.
)

 

Bertrand. Gold.

 

Macaire. Hands off! Keep watch. (
Bertrand at back of stage.
) Beat slower, my paternal heart! The third compartment! let me see.

 

Bertrand. S’st! (
Macaire shuts box.
) No: false alarm.

 

Macaire. The third compartment. Ay, here t —  —

 

Bertrand. S’st! (
Same business.
) No: fire away.

 

Macaire. The third compartment: it must be this.

 

Bertrand. S’st. (
Macaire keeps box open, watching Bertrand.
) All serene: it’s the wind.

 

Macaire. Now, see here! (
He darts his knife into the stage.
) I will either be backed as a man should be, or from this minute out I’ll work alone. Do you understand? I said alone.

 

Bertrand. For the Lord’s sake, Macaire! —  —

 

Macaire. Ay, here it is. (
Reading letter.
) “Preserve this letter secretly; its terms are known only to you and me; hence when the time comes, I shall repeat them, and my son will recognise his father.” Signed: “Your Unknown Benefactor.” (
He hums it over twice and replaces it. Then, fingering the gold.
) Gold! The yellow enchantress, happiness ready-made and laughing in my face! Gold: what is gold? The world; the term of ills; the empery of all; the multitudinous babble of the ‘Change, the sailing from all ports of freighted argosies; music, wine, a palace;  the doors of the bright theatre, the key of consciences, and — love’s — love’s whistle! All this below my itching fingers; and to set this by, turn a deaf ear upon the siren present, and condescend once more, naked, into the ring with fortune — Macaire, how few would do it! But you, Macaire, you are compacted of more subtile clay. No cheap immediate pilfering: no retail trade of petty larceny; but swoop at the heart of the position, and clutch all!

 

Bertrand (
at his shoulder
). Halves!

 

Macaire. Halves? (
He locks the box.
) Bertrand, I am a father. (
Replaces box in office.
)

 

Bertrand (
looking after him
). Well, I — am — damned!

 

 

 

DROP

 

 

 

 

ACT II

 

When the curtain rises, the night has come. A hanging cluster of lighted lamps over each table, R. and L. Macaire, R., smoking a cigarette; Bertrand, L., with a churchwarden: each with bottle and glass

 

 

 

 

SCENE I

 

Macaire, Bertrand

 

Macaire. Bertrand, I am content: a child might play with me. Does your pipe draw well?

 

Bertrand. Like a factory chimney. This is my notion of life: liquor, a chair, a table to put my feet on, a fine clean pipe, and no police.

 

Other books

Illusions of Evil by Carolyn Keene
The Last Secret by Mary Mcgarry Morris
Undertow by Elizabeth O'Roark
The Secret Heiress by Susie Warren
Romancing Miss Right by Lizzie Shane
Long Way Home by Eva Dolan
Voodoo Ridge by David Freed
Seems Like Old Times by Joanne Pence


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024