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usiness mid him! REMBRANDT TEMPENNY (_disconcerted_). I say I am a modest man, Mr. Schercl, but I feel safe in declaring that you will be satisfied with your bargain. HENRICH SCHERCL. "Bargain?" I do not tink dat ven I pay tree hundred bounds for a bicture it should be called a "pargain." Tree hundred bounds is very large brice; I shall have not made a pargain. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. Er--quite so. You misunderstand me. I should have said your "contract"--you will be satisfied with your contract. HENRICH SCHERCL. If you should have said "gontract," vy did you say "Pargain." Vell, vell, let us see the bicture. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. (_With a desperate attempt to throw enthusiasm in his voice_.) It is the best work I have done. I look to "Susannah" to advance my position enormously. People will talk about "Susannah." It is--er--full of rapture. HENRICH SCHERCL. "Rapture?" Vat is "Rapture?" REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. _You_ know what "rapture" is. It is the term best understood by the movement of to-day. It is our watchword, our ideal. "Rapture!" HENRICH SCHERCL. (_Puzzled, but not wishing to appear ignorant_.) Oh "Rapture," I did not understand you. Of course I know what rapture is. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. Of course you do. Well, "Susannah" brims over with it. HENRICH SCHERCL. Goot, goot. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. It is the very apotheosis of rapture. HENRICH SCHERCL. I gongratulate you. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. It exudes with rapture. HENRICH SCHERCL. Is dat so? REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. It is bathed in rapture. (_Aside_.) I can't go on much longer. HENRICH SCHERCL. Now show it to me. REMBRANDT TEMPENNY (_with feigned surprise_). Show it to you? I can't show it to you--it isn't here. HENRICH SCHERCL. Vat is dat you say? Not here? REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. Certainly not. I am working on it in a friend's studio, not my own. The light here is not nearly good enough for a work like that. HENRICH SCHERCL. You have always found it goot enough, I pelieve? REMBRANDT TEMPENNY (_with enthusiasm_). But not for "Susannah"--not nearly good enough for "Susannah," "Susannah" demands so much; she is exacting--she must be humoured. HENRICH SCHERCL. Vell, I am very disappointed; I came expressly to see how you had brogressed. Will you make me an abbointment? REMBRANDT TEMPENNY. Certainly I will. I will write you to-morrow. I am anxious to have your opinion. HENRIC
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