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A Bit O’ Love
ACT I
John Galsworthy
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       It is Ascension Day in a village of the West. In the low panelled hall-sittingroom of the BURLACOMBE'S farmhouse on the village green, MICHAEL STRANGWAY, a clerical collar round his throat and a dark Norfolk jacket on his back, is playing the flute before a very large framed photograph of a woman, which is the only picture on the walls. His age is about thirty-five his figure thin and very upright and his clean-shorn face thin, upright, narrow, with long and rather pointed ears; his dark hair is brushed in a coxcomb off his forehead. A faint smile hovers about his lips that Nature has made rather full and he has made thin, as though keeping a hard secret; but his bright grey eyes, dark round the rim, look out and upwards almost as if he were being crucified. There is something about the whole of him that makes him seen not quite present. A gentle creature, burnt within.
       A low broad window above a window-seat forms the background to his figure; and through its lattice panes are seen the outer gate and yew-trees of a churchyard and the porch of a church, bathed in May sunlight. The front door at right angles to the window-seat, leads to the village green, and a door on the left into the house.
       It is the third movement of Veracini's violin sonata that STRANGWAY plays. His back is turned to the door into the house, and he does not hear when it is opened, and IVY BURLACOMBE, the farmer's daughter, a girl of fourteen, small and quiet as a mouse, comes in, a prayer-book in one hand, and in the other a gloss of water, with wild orchis and a bit of deep pink hawthorn. She sits down on the window-seat, and having opened her book, sniffs at the flowers. Coming to the end of the movement STRANGWAY stops, and looking up at the face on the wall, heaves a long sigh.
       

       IVY
       [From the seat] I picked these for yu, Mr. Strangway.
       STRANGWAY
       [Turning with a start] Ah! Ivy. Thank you. [He puts his flute down on a chair against the far wall] Where are the others?
       

       As he speaks, GLADYS FREMAN, a dark gipsyish girl, and CONNIE TRUSTAFORD, a fair, stolid, blue-eyed Saxon, both about sixteen, come in through the front door, behind which they have evidently been listening. They too have prayer-books in their hands. They sidle past Ivy, and also sit down under the window.
       

       GLADYS
       Mercy's comin', Mr. Strangway.
       STRANGWAY
       Good morning, Gladys; good morning, Connie.
       

       He turns to a book-case on a table against the far wall, and taking out a book, finds his place in it. While he stands thus with his back to the girls, MERCY JARLAND comes in from the green. She also is about sixteen, with fair hair and china-blue eyes. She glides in quickly, hiding something behind her, and sits down on the seat next the door. And at once there is a whispering.
       

       STRANGWAY
       [Turning to them] Good morning, Mercy.
       MERCY
       Good morning, Mr. Strangway.
       STRANGWAY
       Now, yesterday I was telling you what our Lord's coming meant to the world. I want you to understand that before He came there wasn't really love, as we know it. I don't mean to say that there weren't many good people; but there wasn't love for the sake of loving. D'you think you understand what I mean?
       

       MERCY fidgets. GLADYS'S eyes are following a fly.
       

       IVY
       Yes, Mr. Strangway.
       STRANGWAY
       It isn't enough to love people because they're good to you, or because in some way or other you're going to get something by it. We have to love because we love loving. That's the great thing- -without that we're nothing but Pagans.
       GLADYS
       Please, what is Pagans?
       STRANGWAY
       That's what the first Christians called the people who lived in the villages and were not yet Christians, Gladys.
       MERCY
       We live in a village, but we're Christians.
       STRANGWAY
       [With a smile] Yes, Mercy; and what is a Christian?
       

       MERCY kicks afoot, sideways against her neighbour, frowns over her china-blare eyes, is silent; then, as his question passes on, makes a quick little face, wriggles, and looks behind her.
       

       STRANGWAY
       Ivy?
       IVY
       'Tis a man--whu--whu----
       STRANGWAY
       Yes?--Connie?
       CONNIE
       [Who speaks rather thickly, as if she had a permanent slight cold] Please, Mr. Strangway, 'tis a man what goes to church.
       GLADYS
       He 'as to be baptised--and confirmed; and--and--buried.
       IVY
       'Tis a man whu--whu's gude and----
       GLADYS
       He don't drink, an' he don't beat his horses, an' he don't hit back.
       MERCY
       [Whispering] 'Tisn't your turn. [To STRANGWAY] 'Tis a man like us.
       IVY
       I know what MRS Strangway said it was, 'cause I asked her once, before she went away.
       STRANGWAY
       [Startled] Yes?
       IVY
       She said it was a man whu forgave everything.
       STRANGWAY
       Ah!
       

       The note of a cuckoo comes travelling. The girls are gazing at STRANGWAY, who seems to have gone of into a dream. They begin to fidget and whisper.
       

       CONNIE
       Please, Mr. Strangway, father says if yu hit a man and he don't hit yu back, he's no gude at all.
       MERCY
       When Tommy Morse wouldn't fight, us pinched him--he did squeal! [She giggles] Made me laugh!
       STRANGWAY
       Did I ever tell you about St. Francis of Assisi?
       IVY
       [Clasping her hands] No.
       STRANGWAY
       Well, he was the best Christian, I think, that ever lived--simply full of love and joy.
       IVY
       I expect he's dead.
       STRANGWAY
       About seven hundred years, Ivy.
       IVY
       [Softly] Oh!
       STRANGWAY
       Everything to him was brother or sister--the sun and the moon, and all that was poor and weak and sad, and animals and birds, so that they even used to follow him about.
       MERCY
       I know! He had crumbs in his pocket.
       STRANGWAY
       No; he had love in his eyes.
       IVY
       'Tis like about Orpheus, that yu told us.
       STRANGWAY
       Ah! But St. Francis was a Christian, and Orpheus was a Pagan.
       IVY
       Oh!
       STRANGWAY
       Orpheus drew everything after him with music; St. Francis by love.
       IVY
       Perhaps it was the same, really.
       STRANGWAY
       [looking at his flute] Perhaps it was, Ivy.
       GLADYS
       Did 'e 'ave a flute like yu?
       IVY
       The flowers smell sweeter when they 'ear music; they du.
       

       [She holds up the glass of flowers.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       [Touching one of the orchis] What's the name of this one?
       

       [The girls cluster; save MERCY, who is taking a stealthy interest in what she has behind her.]
       

       CONNIE
       We call it a cuckoo, Mr. Strangway.
       GLADYS
       'Tis awful common down by the streams. We've got one medder where 'tis so thick almost as the goldie cups.
       STRANGWAY
       Odd! I've never noticed it.
       IVY
       Please, Mr. Strangway, yu don't notice when yu're walkin'; yu go along like this.
       

       [She holds up her face as one looking at the sky.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       Bad as that, Ivy?
       IVY
       MRS Strangway often used to pick it last spring.
       STRANGWAY
       Did she? Did she?
       

       [He has gone off again into a kind of dream.]
       

       MERCY
       I like being confirmed.
       STRANGWAY
       Ah! Yes. Now----What's that behind you, Mercy?
       MERCY
       [Engagingly producing a cage a little bigger than a mouse-trap, containing a skylark] My skylark.
       STRANGWAY
       What!
       MERCY
       It can fly; but we're goin' to clip its wings. Bobbie caught it.
       STRANGWAY
       How long ago?
       MERCY
       [Conscious of impending disaster] Yesterday.
       STRANGWAY
       [White hot] Give me the cage!
       MERCY
       [Puckering] I want my skylark. [As he steps up to her and takes the cage--thoroughly alarmed] I gave Bobbie thrippence for it!
       STRANGWAY
       [Producing a sixpence] There!
       MERCY
       [Throwing it down-passionately] I want my skylark!
       STRANGWAY
       God made this poor bird for the sky and the grass. And you put it in that! Never cage any wild thing! Never!
       MERCY
       [Faint and sullen] I want my skylark.
       STRANGWAY
       [Taking the cage to the door] No! [He holds up the cage and opens it] Off you go, poor thing!
       

       [The bird flies out and away. The girls watch with round eyes the fling up of his arm, and the freed bird flying away.]
       

       IVY
       I'm glad!
       

       [MERCY kicks her viciously and sobs. STRANGWAY comes from the door, looks at MERCY sobbing, and suddenly clasps his head. The girls watch him with a queer mixture of wonder, alarm, and disapproval.]
       

       GLADYS
       [Whispering] Don't cry, Mercy. Bobbie'll soon catch yu another.
       

       [STRANGWAY has dropped his hands, and is looking again at MERCY. IVY sits with hands clasped, gazing at STRANGWAY. MERCY continues her artificial sobbing.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       [Quietly] The class is over for to-day.
       

       [He goes up to MERCY, and holds out his hand. She does not take it, and runs out knuckling her eyes. STRANGWAY turns on his heel and goes into the house.]
       

       CONNIE
       'Twasn't his bird.
       IVY
       Skylarks belong to the sky. Mr. Strangway said so.
       GLADYS
       Not when they'm caught, they don't.
       IVY
       They du.
       CONNIE
       'Twas her bird.
       IVY
       He gave her sixpence for it.
       GLADYS
       She didn't take it.
       CONNIE
       There it is on the ground.
       IVY
       She might have.
       GLADYS
       He'll p'raps take my squirrel, tu.
       IVY
       The bird sang--I 'eard it! Right up in the sky. It wouldn't have sanged if it weren't glad.
       GLADYS
       Well, Mercy cried.
       IVY
       I don't care.
       GLADYS
       'Tis a shame! And I know something. MRS Strangway's at Durford.
       CONNIE
       She's--never!
       GLADYS
       I saw her yesterday. An' if she's there she ought to be here. I told mother, an' she said: "Yu mind yer business." An' when she goes in to market to-morrow she'm goin' to see. An' if she's really there, mother says, 'tis a fine tu-du an' a praaper scandal. So I know a lot more'n yu du.
       

       [Ivy stares at her.]
       

       CONNIE
       MRS Strangway told mother she was goin' to France for the winter because her mother was ill.
       GLADYS
       'Tisn't, winter now--Ascension Day. I saw her cumin' out o' Dr. Desert's house. I know 'twas her because she had on a blue dress an' a proud luke. Mother says the doctor come over here tu often before MRS Strangway went away, just afore Christmas. They was old sweethearts before she married Mr. Strangway. [To Ivy] 'Twas yure mother told mother that.
       

       [Ivy gazes at them more and more wide-eyed.]
       

       CONNIE
       Father says if MRS Bradmere an' the old Rector knew about the doctor, they wouldn't 'ave Mr. Strangway 'ere for curate any longer; because mother says it takes more'n a year for a gude wife to leave her 'usband, an' 'e so fond of her. But 'tisn't no business of ours, father says.
       GLADYS
       Mother says so tu. She's praaper set against gossip. She'll know all about it to-morrow after market.
       IVY
       [Stamping her foot] I don't want to 'ear nothin' at all; I don't, an' I won't.
       

       [A rather shame faced silence falls on the girls.]
       

       GLADYS
       [In a quick whisper] 'Ere's MRS Burlacombe.
       

       [There enters fawn the house a stout motherly woman with a round grey eye and very red cheeks.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Ivy, take Mr. Strangway his ink, or we'll never 'eve no sermon to-night. He'm in his thinkin' box, but 'tis not a bit o' yuse 'im thinkin' without 'is ink. [She hands her daughter an inkpot and blotting-pad. Ivy Takes them and goes out] What ever's this? [She picks up the little bird-cage.]
       GLADYS
       'Tis Mercy Jarland's. Mr. Strangway let her skylark go.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Aw! Did 'e now? Serve 'er right, bringin' an 'eathen bird to confirmation class.
       CONNIE
       I'll take it to her.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       No. Yu leave it there, an' let Mr. Strangway du what 'e likes with it. Bringin' a bird like that! Well 'I never!
       

       [The girls, perceiving that they have lighted on stony soil, look at each other and slide towards the door.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Yes, yu just be off, an' think on what yu've been told in class, an' be'ave like Christians, that's gude maids. An' don't yu come no more in the 'avenin's dancin' them 'eathen dances in my barn, naighther, till after yu'm confirmed--'tisn't right. I've told Ivy I won't 'ave it.
       CONNIE
       Mr. Strangway don't mind--he likes us to; 'twas MRS Strangway began teachin' us. He's goin' to give a prize.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Yu just du what I tell yu an' never mind Mr. Strangway--he'm tu kind to everyone. D'yu think I don't know how gells oughter be'ave before confirmation? Yu be'ave like I did! Now, goo ahn! Shoo!
       

       [She hustles them out, rather as she might hustle her chickens, and begins tidying the room. There comes a wandering figure to the open window. It is that of a man of about thirty-five, of feeble gait, leaning the weight of all one side of him on a stick. His dark face, with black hair, one lock of which has gone white, was evidently once that of an ardent man. Now it is slack, weakly smiling, and the brown eyes are lost, and seem always to be asking something to which there is no answer.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [With that forced cheerfulness always assumed in the face of too great misfortune] Well, Jim! better? [At the faint brightening of the smile] That's right! Yu'm gettin' on bravely. Want Parson?
       JIM
       [Nodding and smiling, and speaking slowly] I want to tell 'un about my cat.
       

       [His face loses its smile.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Why! what's she been duin' then? Mr. Strangway's busy. Won't I du?
       JIM
       [Shaking his head] No. I want to tell him.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Whatever she been duin'? Havin' kittens?
       JIM
       No. She'm lost.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Dearie me! Aw! she'm not lost. Cats be like maids; they must get out a bit.
       JIM
       She'm lost. Maybe he'll know where she'll be.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Well, well. I'll go an' find 'im.
       JIM
       He's a gude man. He's very gude.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       That's certain zure.
       STRANGWAY
       [Entering from the house] MRS Burlacombe, I can't think where I've put my book on St. Francis--the large, squarish pale-blue one?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Aw! there now! I knu there was somethin' on me mind. Miss Willis she came in yesterday afternune when yu was out, to borrow it. Oh! yes--I said--I'm zure Mr. Strangway'll lend it 'ee. Now think o' that!
       STRANGWAY
       Of course, MRS Burlacombe; very glad she's got it.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Aw! but that's not all. When I tuk it up there come out a whole flutter o' little bits o' paper wi' little rhymes on 'em, same as I see yu writin'. Aw! my gudeness! I says to meself, Mr. Strangway widn' want no one seein' them.
       STRANGWAY
       Dear me! No; certainly not!
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       An' so I putt 'em in your secretary.
       STRANGWAY
       My-ah! Yes. Thank you; yes.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       But I'll goo over an' get the buke for yu. 'T won't take me 'alf a minit.
       

       [She goes out on to the green. JIM BERE has come in.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       [Gently] Well, Jim?
       JIM
       My cat's lost.
       STRANGWAY
       Lost?
       JIM
       Day before yesterday. She'm not come back. They've shot 'er, I think; or she'm caught in one o' they rabbit-traps.
       STRANGWAY
       Oh! no; my dear fellow, she'll come back. I'll speak to Sir Herbert's keepers.
       JIM
       Yes, zurr. I feel lonesome without 'er.
       STRANGWAY
       [With a faint smile--more to himself than to Jim] Lonesome! Yes! That's bad, Jim! That's bad!
       JIM
       I miss 'er when I sits than in the avenin'.
       STRANGWAY
       The evenings----They're the worst----and when the blackbirds sing in the morning.
       JIM
       She used to lie on my bed, ye know, zurr.
       

       [STRANGWAY turns his face away, contracted with pain]
       

       She'm like a Christian.
       STRANGWAY
       The beasts are.
       JIM
       There's plenty folk ain't 'alf as Christian as 'er be.
       STRANGWAY
       Well, dear Jim, I'll do my very best. And any time you're lonely, come up, and I'll play the flute to you.
       JIM
       [Wriggling slightly] No, zurr. Thank 'ee, zurr.
       STRANGWAY
       What--don't you like music?
       JIM
       Ye-es, zurr. [A figure passes the window. Seeing it he says with his slow smile] "'Ere's MRS Bradmere, comin' from the Rectory." [With queer malice] She don't like cats. But she'm a cat 'erself, I think.
       STRANGWAY
       [With his smile] Jim!
       JIM
       She'm always tellin' me I'm lukin' better. I'm not better, zurr.
       STRANGWAY
       That's her kindness.
       JIM
       I don't think it is. 'Tis laziness, an' 'avin' 'er own way. She'm very fond of 'er own way.
       

       [A knock on the door cuts off his speech. Following closely on the knock, as though no doors were licensed to be closed against her, a grey-haired lady enters; a capable, broad-faced woman of seventy, whose every tone and movement exhales authority. With a nod and a "good morning" to STRANGWAY she turns at face to JIM BERE.]
       

       MRS BRADMERE
       Ah! Jim; you're looking better.
       

       [JIM BERE shakes his head. MRS BRADMERE. Oh! yes, you are. Getting on splendidly. And now, I just want to speak to Mr. Strangway.]
       [JIM BERE touches his forelock, and slowly, leaning on his stick, goes out.]
       

       MRS BRADMERE
       [Waiting for the door to close] You know how that came on him? Caught the girl he was engaged to, one night, with another man, the rage broke something here. [She touches her forehead] Four years ago.
       STRANGWAY
       Poor fellow!
       MRS BRADMERE
       [Looking at him sharply] Is your wife back?
       STRANGWAY
       [Starting] No.
       MRS BRADMERE
       By the way, poor MRS Cremer--is she any better?
       STRANGWAY
       No; going fast: Wonderful--so patient.
       MRS BRADMERE
       [With gruff sympathy] Um! Yes. They know how to die! [Wide another sharp look at him] D'you expect your wife soon?
       STRANGWAY
       I I--hope so.
       MRS BRADMERE
       So do I. The sooner the better.
       STRANGWAY
       [Shrinking] I trust the Rector's not suffering so much this morning?
       MRS BRADMERE
       Thank you! His foot's very bad.
       

       [As she speaks MRS BURLACOMBE returns with a large pale-blue book in her bared.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Good day, M'm! [Taking the book across to STRANGWAY] Miss Willie, she says she'm very sorry, zurr.
       STRANGWAY
       She was very welcome, MRS Burlacombe. [To MRS BURLACOMBE] Forgive me--my sermon.
       

       [He goes into the house. The two women graze after him. Then, at once, as it were, draw into themselves, as if preparing for an encounter, and yet seem to expand as if losing the need for restraint.]
       

       MRS BRADMERE
       [Abruptly] He misses his wife very much, I'm afraid.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Ah! Don't he? Poor dear man; he keeps a terrible tight 'and over 'imself, but 'tis suthin' cruel the way he walks about at night. He'm just like a cow when its calf's weaned. 'T'as gone to me 'eart truly to see 'im these months past. T'other day when I went up to du his rume, I yeard a noise like this [she sniffs]; an' ther' 'e was at the wardrobe, snuffin' at 'er things. I did never think a man cud care for a woman so much as that.
       MRS BRADMERE
       H'm!
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       'Tis funny rest an' 'e comin' 'ere for quiet after that tearin' great London parish! 'E'm terrible absent-minded tu- -don't take no interest in 'is fude. Yesterday, goin' on for one o'clock, 'e says to me, "I expect 'tis nearly breakfast-time, MRS Burlacombe!" 'E'd 'ad it twice already!
       MRS BRADMERE
       Twice! Nonsense!
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Zurely! I give 'im a nummit afore 'e gets up; an' 'e 'as 'is brekjus reg'lar at nine. Must feed un up. He'm on 'is feet all day, gain' to zee folk that widden want to zee an angel, they're that busy; an' when 'e comes in 'e'll play 'is flute there. Hem wastin' away for want of 'is wife. That's what 'tis. An' 'im so sweet-spoken, tu, 'tes a pleasure to year 'im--Never says a word!
       MRS BRADMERE
       Yes, that's the kind of man who gets treated badly. I'm afraid she's not worthy of him, MRS Burlacombe.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Plaiting her apron] 'Tesn't for me to zay that. She'm a very pleasant lady.
       MRS BRADMERE
       Too pleasant. What's this story about her being seen in Durford?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Aw! I du never year no gossip, m'm.
       MRS BRADMERE
       [Drily] Of course not! But you see the Rector wishes to know.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Flustered] Well--folk will talk! But, as I says to Burlacombe--"'Tes paltry," I says; and they only married eighteen months, and Mr. Strangway so devoted-like. 'Tes nothing but love, with 'im.
       MRS BRADMERE
       Come!
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       There's puzzivantin' folk as'll set an' gossip the feathers off an angel. But I du never listen.
       MRS BRADMERE
       Now then, MRS Burlacombe?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       Well, they du say as how Dr. Desart over to Durford and MRS Strangway was sweethearts afore she wer' married.
       MRS BRADMERE
       I knew that. Who was it saw her coming out of Dr. Desart's house yesterday?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       In a manner of spakin' 'tes MRS Freman that says 'er Gladys seen her.
       MRS BRADMERE
       That child's got an eye like a hawk.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       'Tes wonderful how things du spread. 'Tesn't as if us gossiped. Du seem to grow-like in the naight.
       MRS BRADMERE
       [To herself] I never lied her. That Riviera excuse, MRS Burlacombe--Very convenient things, sick mothers. Mr. Strangway doesn't know?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       The Lord forbid! 'Twid send un crazy, I think. For all he'm so moony an' gentlelike, I think he'm a terrible passionate man inside. He've a-got a saint in 'im, for zure; but 'tes only 'alf-baked, in a manner of spakin'.
       MRS BRADMERE
       I shall go and see MRS Freman. There's been too much of this gossip all the winter.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       'Tes unfortunate-like 'tes the Fremans. Freman he'm a gipsy sort of a feller; and he've never forgiven Mr. Strangway for spakin' to 'im about the way he trates 'is 'orses.
       MRS BRADMERE
       Ah! I'm afraid Mr. Strangway's not too discreet when his feelings are touched.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       'E've a-got an 'eart so big as the full mune. But 'tes no yuse espectin' tu much o' this world. 'Tes a funny place, after that.
       MRS BRADMERE
       Yes, MRS Burlacombe; and I shall give some of these good people a rare rap over the knuckles for their want of charity. For all they look as if butter wouldn't melt in their mouths, they're an un-Christian lot. [Looking very directly at MRS BURLACOMBE] It's lucky we've some hold over the village. I'm not going to have scandal. I shall speak to Sir Herbert, and he and the Rector will take steps.
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [With covert malice] Aw! I du hope 'twon't upset the Rector, an' 'is fute so poptious!
       MRS BRADMERE
       [Grimly] His foot'll be sound enough to come down sharp. By the way, will you send me a duck up to the Rectory?
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Glad to get away] Zurely, m'm; at once. I've some luv'ly fat birds.
       

       [She goes into the house.]
       

       MRS BRADMERE
       Old puss-cat!
       

       [She turns to go, and in the doorway encounters a very little, red-cheeked girl in a peacock-blue cap, and pink frock, who curtsies stolidly.]
       

       MRS BRADMERE
       Well, Tibby Jarland, what do you want here? Always sucking something, aren't you?
       

       [Getting no reply from Tibby JARLAND, she passes out. Tibby comes in, looks round, takes a large sweet out of her mouth, contemplates it, and puts it back again. Then, in a perfunctory and very stolid fashion, she looks about the floor, as if she had been told to find something. While she is finding nothing and sucking her sweet, her sister MERCY comes in furtively, still frowning and vindictive.]
       

       MERCY
       What! Haven't you found it, Tibby? Get along with 'ee, then!
       

       [She accelerates the stolid Tissy's departure with a smack, searches under the seat, finds and picks up the deserted sixpence. Then very quickly she goes to the door: But it is opened before she reaches it, and, finding herself caught, she slips behind the chintz window-curtain. A woman has entered, who is clearly the original of the large photograph. She is not strictly pretty, but there is charm in her pale, resolute face, with its mocking lips, flexible brows, and greenish eyes, whose lids, square above them, have short, dark lashes. She is dressed in blue, and her fair hair is coiled up under a cap and motor-veil. She comes in swiftly, and closes the door behind her; becomes irresolute; then, suddenly deciding, moves towards the door into the house. MERCY slips from behind her curtain to make off, but at that moment the door into the house is opened, and she has at once to slip back again into covert. It is Ivy who has appeared.]
       

       IVY
       [Amazed] Oh! MRS Strangway!
       

       [Evidently disconcerted by this appearance, BEATRICE STRANGWAY pulls herself together and confronts the child with a smile.]
       

       BEATRICE
       Well, Ivy--you've grown! You didn't expect me, did you?
       IVY
       No, MRS Strangway; but I hoped yu'd be comin' soon.
       BEATRICE
       Ah! Yes. Is Mr. Strangway in?
       IVY
       [Hypnotized by those faintly smiling lips] Yes--oh, yes! He's writin' his sermon in the little room. He will be glad!
       BEATRICE
       [Going a little closer, and never taking her eyes off the child] Yes. Now, Ivy; will you do something for me?
       IVY
       [Fluttering] Oh, yes, MRS Strangway.
       BEATRICE
       Quite sure?
       IVY
       Oh, yes!
       BEATRICE
       Are you old enough to keep a secret?
       IVY
       [Nodding] I'm fourteen now.
       BEATRICE
       Well, then--, I don't want anybody but Mr. Strangway to know I've been here; nobody, not even your mother. D'you understand?
       IVY
       [Troubled] No. Only, I can keep a secret.
       BEATRICE
       Mind, if anybody hears, it will hurt Mr. Strangway.
       IVY
       Oh! I wouldn't--hurt--him. Must yu go away again? [Trembling towards her] I wish yu wer goin' to stay. And perhaps some one has seen yu--They----
       BEATRICE
       [Hastily] No, no one. I came motoring; like this. [She moves her veil to show how it can conceal her face] And I came straight down the little lane, and through the barn, across the yard.
       IVY
       [Timidly] People du see a lot.
       BEATRICE
       [Still with that hovering smile] I know, but----Now go and tell him quickly and quietly.
       IVY
       [Stopping at the door] Mother's pluckin' a duck. Only, please, MRS Strangway, if she comes in even after vu've gone, she'll know, because--because yu always have that particular nice scent.
       BEATRICE
       Thank you, my child. I'll see to that.
       

       [Ivy looks at her as if she would speak again, then turns suddenly, and goes out. BEATRICE'S face darkens; she shivers. Taking out a little cigarette case, she lights a cigarette, and watches the puff's of smoke wreathe shout her and die away. The frightened MERCY peers out, spying for a chance, to escape. Then from the house STRANGWAY comes in. All his dreaminess is gone.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       Thank God! [He stops at the look on her face] I don't understand, though. I thought you were still out there.
       BEATRICE
       [Letting her cigarette fall, and putting her foot on it] No.
       STRANGWAY
       You're staying? Oh! Beatrice; come! We'll get away from here at once--as far, as far--anywhere you like. Oh! my darling- -only come! If you knew----
       BEATRICE
       It's no good, Michael; I've tried and tried.
       STRANGWAY
       Not! Then, why--? Beatrice! You said, when you were right away--I've waited----
       BEATRICE
       I know. It's cruel--it's horrible. But I told you not to hope, Michael. I've done my best. All these months at Mentone, I've been wondering why I ever let you marry me--when that feeling wasn't dead!
       STRANGWAY
       You can't have come back just to leave me again?
       BEATRICE
       When you let me go out there with mother I thought--I did think I would be able; and I had begun--and then--spring came!
       STRANGWAY
       Spring came here too! Never so--aching! Beatrice, can't you?
       BEATRICE
       I've something to say.
       STRANGWAY
       No! No! No!
       BEATRICE
       You see--I've--fallen.
       STBANGWAY
       Ah! [In a twice sharpened by pain] Why, in the name of mercy, come here to tell me that? Was he out there, then?
       BEATRICE
       I came straight back to him.
       STRANGGWAY
       To Durford?
       BEATRICE
       To the Crossway Hotel, miles out--in my own name. They don't know me there. I told you not to hope, Michael. I've done my best; I swear it.
       STRANGWAY
       My God!
       BEATRICE
       It was your God that brought us to live near him!
       STRANGWAY
       Why have you come to me like this?
       BEATRICE
       To know what you're going to do. Are you going to divorce me? We're in your power. Don't divorce me--Doctor and patient--you must know--it ruins him. He'll lose everything. He'd be disqualified, and he hasn't a penny without his work.
       STRANGWAY
       Why should I spare him?
       BEATRICE
       Michael; I came to beg. It's hard.
       STRANGWAY
       No; don't beg! I can't stand it.
       

       [She shakes her head.]
       

       BEATRICE
       [Recovering her pride] What are you going to do, then? Keep us apart by the threat of a divorce? Starve us and prison us? Cage me up here with you? I'm not brute enough to ruin him.
       STRANGWAY
       Heaven!
       BEATRICE
       I never really stopped loving him. I never--loved you, Michael.
       STRANGWAY
       [Stunned] Is that true? [BEATRICE bends her head] Never loved me? Not--that night--on the river--not----?
       BEATRICE
       [Under her breath] No.
       STRANGWAY
       Were you lying to me, then? Kissing me, and--hating me?
       BEATRICE
       One doesn't hate men like you; but it wasn't love.
       STRANGWAY
       Why did you tell me it was?
       BEATRICE
       Yes. That was the worst thing I've ever done.
       STRANGWAY
       Do you think I would have married you? I would have burned first! I never dreamed you didn't. I swear it!
       BEATRICE
       [Very low] Forget it!
       STRANGWAY
       Did he try to get you away from me? [BEATRICE gives him a swift look] Tell me the truth!
       BEATRICE
       No. It was--I--alone. But--he loves me.
       STRANGWAY
       One does not easily know love, it seems.
       

       [But her smile, faint, mysterious, pitying, is enough, and he turns away from her.]
       

       BEATRICE
       It was cruel to come, I know. For me, too. But I couldn't write. I had to know.
       STRANGWAY
       Never loved me? Never loved me? That night at Tregaron? [At the look on her face] You might have told me before you went away! Why keep me all these----
       BEATRICE
       I meant to forget him again. I did mean to. I thought I could get back to what I was, when I married you; but, you see, what a girl can do, a woman that's been married--can't.
       STRANGWAY
       Then it was I--my kisses that----! [He laughs] How did you stand them? [His eyes dart at her face] Imagination helped you, perhaps!
       BEATRICE
       Michael, don't, don't! And--oh! don't make a public thing of it! You needn't be afraid I shall have too good a time!
       

       [He stays quite still and silent, and that which is writhing in him makes his face so strange that BEATRICE stands aghast. At last she goes stumbling on in speech]
       

       If ever you want to marry some one else--then, of course--that's only fair, ruin or not. But till then--till then----He's leaving Durford, going to Brighton. No one need know. And you--this isn't the only parish in the world.
       STRANGWAY
       [Quietly] You ask me to help you live in secret with another man?
       BEATRICE
       I ask for mercy.
       STRANGWAY
       [As to himself] What am I to do?
       BEATRICE
       What you feel in the bottom of your heart.
       STRANGWAY
       You ask me to help you live in sin?
       BEATRICE
       To let me go out of your life. You've only to do-- nothing. [He goes, slowly, close to her.]
       STRANGWAY
       I want you. Come back to me! Beatrice, come back!
       BEATRICE
       It would be torture, now.
       STANGWAY
       [Writhing] Oh!
       BEATRICE
       Whatever's in your heart--do!
       STRANGWAY
       You'd come back to me sooner than ruin him? Would you?
       BEATRICE
       I can't bring him harm.
       STRANGWAY
       [Turning away] God!--if there be one help me! [He stands leaning his forehead against the window. Suddenly his glance falls on the little bird cage, still lying on the window-seat] Never cage any wild thing! [He gives a laugh that is half a sob; then, turning to the door, says in a low voice] Go! Go please, quickly! Do what you will. I won't hurt you--can't----But--go! [He opens the door.]
       BEATRICE
       [Greatly moved] Thank you!
       

       [She passes him with her head down, and goes out quickly. STRANGWAY stands unconsciously tearing at the little bird-cage. And while he tears at it he utters a moaning sound. The terrified MERCY, peering from behind the curtain, and watching her chance, slips to the still open door; but in her haste and fright she knocks against it, and STRANGWAY sees her. Before he can stop her she has fled out on to the green and away.]
       [While he stands there, paralysed, the door from the house is opened, and MRS BURLACOMBE approaches him in a queer, hushed way.]
       

       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Her eyes mechanically fixed on the twisted bird-cage in his hands] 'Tis poor Sue Cremer, zurr, I didn't 'ardly think she'd last thru the mornin'. An' zure enough she'm passed away! [Seeing that he has not taken in her words] Mr. Strangway-- yu'm feelin' giddy?
       STRANGWAY
       No, no! What was it? You said----
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       'Tes Jack Cremer. His wife's gone. 'E'm in a terrible way. 'Tes only yu, 'e ses, can du 'im any gude. He'm in the kitchen.
       STRANGWAY
       Cremer? Yes! Of course. Let him----
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Still staring at the twisted cage] Yu ain't wantin' that--'tes all twizzled. [She takes it from him] Sure yu'm not feelin' yer 'ead?
       STRANGWAY
       [With a resolute effort] No!
       MRS BURLACOMBE
       [Doubtfully] I'll send 'im in, then. [She goes. When she is gone, Strangway passes his handkerchief across his forehead, and his lips move fast. He is standing motionless when CREMER, a big man in labourer's clothes, with a thick, broad face, and tragic, faithful eyes, comes in, and stands a little in from the elosed door, quite dumb.]
       STRANGWAY
       [After a moment's silence--going up to him and laying a hand on his shoulder] Jack! Don't give way. If we give way--we're done.
       CREMER
       Yes, zurr. [A quiver passes over his face.]
       STRANGWAY
       She didn't. Your wife was a brave woman. A dear woman.
       CREMER
       I never thought to luse 'er. She never told me 'ow bad she was, afore she tuk to 'er bed. 'Tis a dreadful thing to luse a wife, zurr.
       STRANGWAY
       [Tightening his lips, that tremble] Yes. But don't give way! Bear up, Jack!
       CREMER
       Seems funny 'er goin' blue-bell time, an' the sun shinin' so warm. I picked up an 'orse-shu yesterday. I can't never 'ave 'er back, zurr.
       

       [His face quivers again.]
       

       STRANGWAY
       Some day you'll join her. Think! Some lose their wives for ever.
       CREMER
       I don't believe as there's a future life, zurr. I think we goo to sleep like the beasts.
       STRANGWAY
       We're told otherwise. But come here! [Drawing him to the window] Look! Listen! To sleep in that! Even if we do, it won't be so bad, Jack, will it?
       CREMER
       She wer' a gude wife to me--no man didn't 'ave no better wife.
       STRANGWAY
       [Putting his hand out] Take hold--hard--harder! I want yours as much as you want mine. Pray for me, Jack, and I'll pray for you. And we won't give way, will we?
       CREMER
       [To whom the strangeness of these words has given some relief] No, zurr; thank 'ee, zurr. 'Tes no gude, I expect. Only, I'll miss 'er. Thank 'ee, zurr; kindly.
       

       [He lifts his hand to his head, turns, and uncertainly goes out to the kitchen. And STRANGWAY stays where he is, not knowing what to do. They blindly he takes up his flute, and hatless, hurries out into the air.]
       

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Persons of the Play
ACT I
act ii
   Scene I
   Scene II
   Scene III
act iii
   Scene I
   Scene II