FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60  
61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   >>  
orbingly, as you confess you do now. Do you fully realise what your confession does? It strikes off the shackles from me, from us--sets us free. [With a gesture of freedom.] Oh, my dear Agnes, free! AGNES. [Staring at him.] Free? LUCAS. Free from the burden of that crazy plan of ours of trumpeting our relations to the world. Forgive me--crazy is the only word for it. Thank heaven, we've at last admitted to each other that we're ordinary man and woman! Of course, I was ill--off my head. I didn't know what I was entering upon. And you, dear--living a pleasureless life, letting your thoughts dwell constantly on old troubles; that is how cranks are made. Now that I'm strong again, body and mind, I can protect you, keep you right. Ha, ha! What were we to pose as? Examples of independent thought and action! [Laughing.] Oh my darling, well be independent in thought and action still; but we won't make examples of ourselves--eh? AGNES. [Who has been watching him with wide-open eyes.] Do you mean that all idea of our writing together, working together, defending our position, and the position of such as ourselves, before the world, is to be abandoned? LUCAS. Why, of course. AGNES. I--I didn't mean quite that. LUCAS. Oh, come, come! We'll furl what my uncle calls the banner of Free Union finally. [Going to her and kissing her hair lightly.] For the future, mere man and woman. [Pacing the room excitedly.] The future! I've settled everything already. The work shall fall wholly on my shoulders. My poor girl, you shall enjoy a little rest and pleasure. AGNES. [In a low voice.] Rest and pleasure-- LUCAS. We'll remain abroad. One can live unobserved abroad, without actually hiding. [She rises slowly.] We'll find an ideal retreat. No more English tourists prying around us! And there, in some beautiful spot, alone except for your company, I'll work! [As he paces the room, she walks slowly to and fro, listening, staring before her.] I'll work. My new career! I'll write under a nom de plume. My books, Agnes, shall never ride to popularity on the back of a scandal. Our life! The mornings I must spend by myself, of course, shut up in my room. In the afternoon we will walk together. After dinner you shall hear what I've written in the morning; and then a few turns round our pretty garden, a glance at the stars with my arms round your waist--[she stops abruptly, a look of horror on her face]--while you whisper to me words of t
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60  
61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   >>  



Top keywords:

pleasure

 
abroad
 
slowly
 

independent

 

future

 

position

 

thought

 

action

 
English
 

tourists


retreat

 

company

 

beautiful

 

prying

 

realise

 

shoulders

 

confession

 

wholly

 

unobserved

 

hiding


remain
 

orbingly

 
pretty
 

morning

 

written

 

dinner

 

garden

 

glance

 

horror

 

whisper


abruptly

 

afternoon

 

career

 
listening
 

staring

 

mornings

 

popularity

 
scandal
 

confess

 

strikes


strong

 

troubles

 

cranks

 

trumpeting

 

protect

 

Examples

 

relations

 

heaven

 

ordinary

 

admitted