The Importance of Being Earnest (9 page)

BOOK: The Importance of Being Earnest
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L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(Outside.)
Nonsense, dear Windermere, you must not leave me!

M
RS
. E
RLYNNE
. Lord Augustus! Then it is I who am lost!
(Hesitates for a moment, then looks round and sees door R., and exit through it.) (Enter Lord Darlington, Mr. Dumby, Lord Windermere, Lord Augustus Lorton, and Mr. Cecil Graham.)

D
UMBY
. What a nuisance their turning us out of the club at this hour! It’s only two o’clock.
(Sinks into a chair.)
The lively part of the evening is only just beginning.
(Yawns and closes his eyes.)

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. It is very good of you, Lord Darlington, allowing Augustus to force our company on you, but I’m afraid I can’t stay long.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Really! I am so sorry! You’ll take a cigar, won’t you?

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. Thanks!
(Sits down.)

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(To Lord Windermere.)
My dear boy, you must not dream of going. I have a great deal to talk to you about, of demmed importance, too.
(Sits down with him at L. table.)

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Oh! We all know what that is! Tuppy can’t talk about anything but Mrs. Erlynne!

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. Well, that is no business of yours, is it, Cecil?

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. None! That is why it interests me. My own business always bores me to death. I prefer other people’s.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Have something to drink, you fellows. Cecil, you’ll have a whisky and soda?

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Thanks.
(Goes to table with Lord Darlington.)
Mrs. Erlynne looked very handsome to-night, didn’t she?

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. I am not one of her admirers.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. I usen’t to be, but I am now. Why! she actually made me introduce her to poor dear Aunt Caroline. I believe she is going to lunch there.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
.
(In surprise.)
No?

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. She is, really.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Excuse me, you fellows. I’m going away tomorrow. And I have to write a few letters.
(Goes to writing table and sits down.)

D
UMBY
. Clever woman, Mrs. Erlynne.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Hallo, Dumby! I thought you were asleep.

D
UMBY
. I am, I usually am!

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. A very clever woman. Knows perfectly well what a demmed fool I am—knows it as well as I do myself.

(Cecil Graham comes towards him laughing.)

Ah! you may laugh, my boy, but it is a great thing to come across a woman who thoroughly understands one.

D
UMBY
. It is an awfully dangerous thing. They always end by marrying one.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. But I thought, Tuppy, you were never going to see her again. Yes! you told me so yesterday evening at the club. You said you’d heard——    
(Whispering to him.)

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. Oh, she’s explained that.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. And the Wiesbaden affair?

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. She’s explained that too.

D
UMBY
. And her income, Tuppy? Has she explained that?

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(In a very serious voice.)
She’s going to explain that to-morrow.

(Cecil Graham goes back to C. table.)

D
UMBY
. Awfully commercial, women now-a-days. Our grandmothers threw their caps over the mills, of course, but, by Jove, their granddaughters only throw their caps over mills that can raise the wind for them.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. You want to make her out a wicked woman. She is not!

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Oh! Wicked women bother one. Good women bore one. That is the only difference between them.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(Puffing a cigar.)
Mrs. Erlynne has a future before her.

D
UMBY
. Mrs. Erlynne has a past before her.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. I prefer women with a past. They’re always so demmed amusing to talk to.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Well, you’ll have lots of topics of conversation with
her
, Tuppy.
(Rising and going to him.)

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. You’re getting annoying, dear boy; you’re getting demmed annoying.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
.
(Puts his hands on his shoulders.)
Now, Tuppy, you’ve
lost your figure and you’ve lost your character. Don’t lose your temper; you have only got one.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. My dear boy, if I wasn’t the most good-natured man in London——

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. We’d treat you with more respect, wouldn’t we, Tuppy?
(Strolls away.)

D
UMBY
. The youth of the present day are quite monstrous. They have absolutely no respect for dyed hair.
(Lord Augustus looks round angrily.)

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Mrs. Erlynne has a very great respect for dear Tuppy.

D
UMBY
. Then Mrs. Erlynne sets an admirable example to the rest of her sex. It is perfectly brutal the way most women now-a-days behave to men who are not their husbands.

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. Dumby, you are ridiculous, and Cecil, you let your tongue run away with you. You must leave Mrs. Erlynne alone. You don’t really know anything about her, and you’re always talking scandal against her.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
.
(Coming towards him L.C.)
My dear Arthur, I never talk scandal.
I
only talk gossip.

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. What is the difference between scandal and gossip?

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Oh! gossip is charming! History is merely gossip. But scandal is gossip made tedious by morality. Now, I never moralise. A man who moralises is usually a hypocrite, and a woman who moralises is invariably plain. There is nothing in the whole world so unbecoming to a woman as a Nonconformist conscience. And most women know it, I’m glad to say.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. Just my sentiments, dear boy, just my sentiments.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Sorry to hear it, Tuppy; whenever people agree with me, I always feel I must be wrong.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
. My dear boy, when I was your age——

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. But you never were, Tuppy, and you never will be.
(Goes up C.)
I say, Darlington, let us have some cards. You’ll play, Arthur, won’t you.

L
ORD
W
INDERMERE
. No, thanks, Cecil.

D
UMBY
.
(With a sigh.)
Good heavens! how marriage ruins a man! It’s as demoralising as cigarettes, and far more expensive.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM.
You’ll play, of course, Tuppy?

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(Pouring himself out a brandy and soda at table.)
Can’t, dear boy. Promised Mrs. Erlynne never to play or drink again.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM.
Now, my dear Tuppy, don’t be led astray into the paths of virtue. Reformed, you would be perfectly tedious. That is the worst of women. They always want one to be good. And if we are good, when they meet us, they don’t love us at all. They like to find us quite irretrievably bad, and to leave us quite unattractively good.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
.
(Rising from R. table, where he has been writing letters.)
They always do find us bad!

D
UMBY
. I don’t think we are bad. I think we are all good, except Tuppy.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. No, we are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.
(Sits down at C. table.)

D
UMBY
. We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars? Upon my word, you are very romantic to-night, Darlington.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Too romantic! You must be in love. Who is the girl?

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. The woman I love is not free, or thinks she isn’t.
(Glances instinctively at Lord Windermere while he speaks.)

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. A married woman, then! Well, there’s nothing in the world like the devotion of a married woman. It’s a thing no married man knows anything about.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Oh! she doesn’t love me. She is a good woman. She is the only good woman I have ever met in my life.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. The only good woman you have ever met in your life?

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Yes!

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
.
(Lighting a cigarette.)
Well, you are a lucky fellow! Why, I have met hundreds of good women. I never seem to meet any but good women. The world is perfectly packed with good women. To know them is a middle-class education.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. This woman has purity and innocence. She has everything we men have lost.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. My dear fellow, what on earth should we men do going about with purity and innocence? A carefully thought-out buttonhole is much more effective.

D
UMBY
. She doesn’t really love you then?

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. No, she does not!

D
UMBY
. I congratulate you, my dear fellow. In this world there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what one wants, and the other is getting it. The last is much the worst, the last is a real tragedy! But I’m interested to hear she does not love you. How long could you love a woman who didn’t love you, Cecil?

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. A woman who didn’t love me? Oh, all my life!

D
UMBY
. So could I. But it’s so difficult to meet one.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. How can you be so conceited, Dumby?

D
UMBY
. I didn’t say it as a matter of conceit. I said it as a matter of regret. I have been wildly, madly adored. I am sorry I have. It has been an immense nuisance. I should like to be allowed a little time to myself now and then.

L
ORD
A
UGUSTUS
.
(Looking round.)
Time to educate yourself, I suppose.

D
UMBY
. No, time to forget all I have learned. That is much more important, dear Tuppy.
(Lord Augustus moves uneasily in his chair.)

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. What cynics you fellows are!

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. What is a cynic?
(Sitting on the back of the sofa.)

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. A man who knows the price of everything and the value of nothing.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. And a sentimentalist, my dear Darlington, is a man who sees an absurd value in everything, and doesn’t know the market price of any single thing.

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. You always amuse me, Cecil. You talk as if you were a man of experience.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. I am.
(Moves up to front of fireplace.)

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. You are far too young!

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. That is a great error. Experience is a question of
instinct about life. I have got it. Tuppy hasn’t. Experience is the name Tuppy gives to his mistakes. That is all.
(Lord Augustus looks round indignantly.)

D
UMBY
. Experience is the name every one gives to their mistakes.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
.
(Standing with his back to the fireplace.)
One shouldn’t commit any.
(Sees Lady Windermere’s fan on sofa.)

D
UMBY
. Life would be very dull without them.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Of course you are quite faithful to this woman you are in love with, Darlington, to this good woman?

L
ORD
D
ARLINGTON
. Cecil, if one really loves a woman, all other women in the world become absolutely meaningless to one. Love changes one—
I
am changed.

C
ECIL
G
RAHAM
. Dear me! How very interesting! Tuppy, I want to talk to you.
(Lord Augustus takes no notice.)

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