Home > Authors Index > George Meredith > Sentimentalists: An Unfinished Comedy > This page
The Sentimentalists: An Unfinished Comedy, a play by George Meredith |
||
Scene 5 |
||
< Previous |
Table of content |
Next > |
________________________________________________
_ SCENE V ASTRAEA, LYRA
ASTRAEA. You speak of your husband strangely, Lyra. LYRA. My head is out of a sack. I managed my escape from him this morning by renouncing bath and breakfast; and what a relief, to be in the railway carriage alone! that is, when the engine snorted. And if I set eyes on him within a week, he will hear some truths. His idea of marriage is, the taking of the woman into custody. My hat is on, and on goes Pluriel's. My foot on the stairs; I hear his boot behind me. In my boudoir I am alone one minute, and then the door opens to the inevitable. I pay a visit, he is passing the house as I leave it. He will not even affect surprise. I belong to him, I am cat's mouse. And he will look doating on me in public. And when I speak to anybody, he is that fearful picture of all smirks. Fling off a kid glove after a round of calls; feel your hand--there you have me now that I am out of him for my half a day, if for as long. ASTRAEA. This is one of the world's happy marriages! LYRA. This is one of the world's choice dishes! And I have it planted under my nostrils eternally. Spare me the mention of Pluriel until he appears; that's too certain this very day. Oh! good husband! good kind of man! whatever you please; only some peace, I do pray, for the husband- haunted wife. I like him, I like him, of course, but I want to breathe. Why, an English boy perpetually bowled by a Christmas pudding would come to loathe the mess. ASTRAEA. His is surely the excess of a merit. LYRA. Excess is a poison. Excess of a merit is a capital offence in morality. It disgusts, us with virtue. And you are the cunningest of fencers, tongue, or foils. You lead me to talk of myself, and I hate the subject. By the way, you have practised with Mr. Arden. ASTRAEA. A tiresome instructor, who lets you pass his guard to compliment you on a hit. LYRA. He rather wins me. ASTRAEA. He does at first. LYRA. Begins Plurielizing, without the law to back him, does he? ASTRAEA. The fencing lessons are at an end. LYRA. The duetts with Mr. Swithin's violoncello continue? ASTRAEA. He broke through the melody. LYRA. There were readings in poetry with Mr. Osier, I recollect. ASTRAEA. His own compositions became obtrusive. LYRA. No fencing, no music, no poetry! no West Coast of Africa either, I suppose. ASTRAEA. Very well! I am on my defence. You at least shall not misunderstand me, Lyra. One intense regret I have; that I did not live in the time of the Amazons. They were free from this question of marriage; this babble of love. Why am I so persecuted? He will not take a refusal. There are sacred reasons. I am supported by every woman having the sense of her dignity. I am perverted, burlesqued by the fury of wrath I feel at their incessant pursuit. And I despise Mr. Osier and Mr. Swithin because they have an air of pious agreement with the Dame, and are conspirators behind their mask. LYRA. False, false men! ASTRAEA. They come to me. I am complimented on being the vulnerable spot. LYRA. The object desired is usually addressed by suitors, my poor Astraea! ASTRAEA. With the assumption, that as I am feminine I must necessarily be in the folds of the horrible constrictor they call Love, and that I leap to the thoughts of their debasing marriage. LYRA. One of them goes to Mr. Homeware. ASTRAEA. All are sent to him in turn. He can dispose of them. LYRA. Now that is really masterly fun, my dear; most creditable to you! Love, marriage, a troop of suitors, and uncle Homeware. No, it would not have occurred to me, and--I am considered to have some humour. Of course, he disposes of them. He seemed to have a fairly favourable opinion of Mr. Arden. ASTRAEA. I do not share it. He is the least respectful of the sentiments entertained by me. Pray, spare me the mention of him, as you say of your husband. He has that pitiful conceit in men, which sets them thinking that a woman must needs be susceptible to the declaration of the mere existence of their passion. He is past argument. Impossible for him to conceive a woman's having a mind above the conditions of her sex. A woman, according to him, can have no ideal of life, except as a ball to toss in the air and catch in a cup. Put him aside. . . . We creatures are doomed to marriage, and if we shun it, we are a kind of cripple. He is grossly earthy in his view of us. We are unable to move a step in thought or act unless we submit to have a husband. That is his reasoning. Nature! Nature! I have to hear of Nature! We must be above Nature, I tell him, or, we shall be very much below. He is ranked among our clever young men; and he can be amusing. So far he passes muster; and he has a pleasant voice. I dare say he is an uncle Homeware's good sort of boy. Girls like him. Why does he not fix his attention upon one of them; Why upon me? We waste our time in talking of him . . . . The secret of it is, that he has no reverence. The marriage he vaunts is a mere convenient arrangement for two to live together under command of nature. Reverence for the state of marriage is unknown to him. How explain my feeling? I am driven into silence. Cease to speak of him . . . . He is the dupe of his eloquence--his passion, he calls it. I have only to trust myself to him, and--I shall be one of the world's married women! Words are useless. How am I to make him see that it is I who respect the state of marriage by refusing; not he by perpetually soliciting. Once married, married for ever. Widow is but a term. When women hold their own against him, as I have done, they will be more esteemed. I have resisted and conquered. I am sorry I do not share in the opinion of your favourite. LYRA. Mine? ASTRAEA. You spoke warmly of him. LYRA. Warmly, was it? ASTRAEA. You are not blamed, my dear: he has a winning manner. LYRA. I take him to be a manly young fellow, smart enough; handsome too. ASTRAEA. Oh, he has good looks. LYRA. And a head, by repute. ASTRAEA. For the world's work, yes. LYRA. Not romantic. ASTRAEA. Romantic ideas are for dreamy simperers. LYRA. Amazons repudiate them. ASTRAEA. Laugh at me. Half my time I am laughing at myself. I should regain my pride if I could be resolved on a step. I am strong to resist; I have not strength to move. LYRA. I see the sphinx of Egypt! ASTRAEA. And all the while I am a manufactory of gunpowder in this quiet old-world Sabbath circle of dear good souls, with their stereotyped interjections, and orchestra of enthusiasms; their tapering delicacies: the rejoicing they have in their common agreement on all created things. To them it is restful. It spurs me to fly from rooms and chairs and beds and houses. I sleep hardly a couple of hours. Then into the early morning air, out with the birds; I know no other pleasure. LYRA. Hospital work for a variation: civil or military. The former involves the house-surgeon: the latter the grateful lieutenant. ASTRAEA. Not if a woman can resist . . . I go to it proof-armoured. LYRA. What does the Dame say? ASTRAEA. Sighs over me! Just a little maddening to hear. LYRA. When we feel we have the strength of giants, and are bidden to sit and smile! You should rap out some of our old sweet-innocent garden oaths with her--'Carnation! Dame!' That used to make her dance on her seat.--'But, dearest Dame, it is as natural an impulse for women to have that relief as for men; and natural will out, begonia! it will!' We ran through the book of Botany for devilish objurgations. I do believe our misconduct caused us to be handed to the good man at the altar as the right corrective. And you were the worst offender. ASTRAEA. Was I? I could be now, though I am so changed a creature. LYRA. You enjoy the studies with your Spiral, come! ASTRAEA. Professor Spiral is the one honest gentleman here. He does homage to my principles. I have never been troubled by him: no silly hints or side-looks--you know, the dog at the forbidden bone. LYRA. A grand orator. ASTRAEA. He is. You fix on the smallest of his gifts. He is intellectually and morally superior. LYRA. Praise of that kind makes me rather incline to prefer his inferiors. He fed gobble-gobble on your puffs of incense. I coughed and scraped the gravel; quite in vain; he tapped for more and more. ASTRAEA. Professor Spiral is a thinker; he is a sage. He gives women their due. LYRA. And he is a bachelor too--or consequently. ASTRAEA. If you like you may be as playful with me as the Lyra of our maiden days used to be. My dear, my dear, how glad I am to have you here! You remind me that I once had a heart. It will beat again with you beside me, and I shall look to you for protection. A novel request from me. From annoyance, I mean. It has entirely altered my character. Sometimes I am afraid to think of what I was, lest I should suddenly romp, and perform pirouettes and cry 'Carnation!' There is the bell. We must not be late when the professor condescends to sit for meals. LYRA. That rings healthily in the professor. ASTRAEA. Arm in arm, my Lyra. LYRA. No Pluriel yet! (They enter the house, and the time changes to evening of the same day. The scene is still the garden.) _ |