Campbell: "You know better than that, Amy."
Mrs. Somers: "Amy again! Aren't you a little previous, Mr. Campbell?"
Campbell, with a sigh: "Ah, that's for you to say."
Mrs. Somers: "Wouldn't it be impolite?"
Campbell; "Oh, not for you ."
Mrs. Somers: "If you're so sarcastic, I shall be afraid of you."
Campbell: "Under what circumstances?"
Mrs. Somers, dropping her eyes: "I don't know." He makes a rush upon her. "Oh! here comes Mrs. Curwen! Shake hands, as if you were going."
IXMRS. CURWEN; MRS. SOMERS; MR. CAMPBELL
tooMrs. Somers: "Too? You're not going, Mrs. Curwen?"
Mrs. Curwen: "Yes, I'm going. The likeness is perfect, Mrs. Somers. It's a speaking likeness, if there ever was one."
Campbell: "Did it do all the talking?"
Mrs. Curwen: "It would if Mrs. Roberts and Dr. Lawton hadn't been there. Well, I must go."
Campbell: "So must I."
Mrs. Somers, in surprise: "Must you?"
Campbell: "Yes; these drifts will be over my ears directly."
Mrs. Curwen: "You poor man! You don't mean to say you're walking ?"
Campbell: "I shall be, in about half a minute."
Mrs. Curwen: "Indeed you shall not! You shall be driving with me. I've a vacancy in the coupé, and I'll set you down wherever you like."
Campbell: "Won't it crowd you?"
Mrs. Curwen: "Not at all."
Campbell: "Or incommode you in any way?"
Mrs. Curwen: "It will oblige me in every way."
Campbell: "Then I will go, and a thousand thanks. Good-by again, Mrs. Somers."
Mrs. Curwen: "Good-by, Mrs. Somers. Poor Mrs. Somers! It seems too bad to leave you here alone, bowed in an elegiac attitude over your tea-urn."
Mrs. Somers: "Oh, not at all! Remember me to Mr. Curwen."
Mrs. Curwen: "I will. Well, Mr. Campbell "
Mrs. Somers: "Mr. Campbell "
Campbell: "Well?"
Mrs. Curwen: "To which?"
Campbell: "Both."
Mrs. Somers: "Neither!"
Mrs. Curwen: "Ah! ha, ha, ha! Mr. Campbell, do you know much about women?"
Campbell: "I had a mother."
Mrs. Curwen: "Oh, a mother won't do."
Campbell: "Well, I have an only sister who is a woman."
Mrs. Curwen: "A sister won't do, either not your own. You can't learn a woman's meaning in that way."
Campbell: "I will sit at your feet, Mrs. Curwen, if you'll instruct me."
Mrs. Curwen: "I shall be delighted. I'll begin now. Oh, you needn't really prostrate yourself!" She stops him in a burlesque attempt to do so. "And I'll concentrate the wisdom of the whole first lesson in a single word."
Campbell, with clasped hands of entreaty: "Speak, blessed ghost!"
Mrs. Curwen: "Stay! Ah! ha, ha, ha!" She flies at Mrs. Somers and kisses her. "You can't say I'm ill-natured, my dear, whatever I am!"
Mrs. Somers, pursuing her exit with the word: "No, merely atrocious." A pause ensues, in which Campbell stands irresolute.
XMRS. SOMERS; MR. CAMPBELL
Mrs. Somers, airily: "I? Oh no! It was Mrs. Curwen."
Campbell: "Then I think I'll accept her kind offer of a seat in her coupé."
Mrs. Somers: "Oh! I thought, of course, you'd stay at her request."
Campbell: "No; I shall only stay at yours."
Mrs. Somers: "And I shall not ask you. In fact, I warn you not to."
Campbell: "Why?"
Mrs. Somers: "Because, if you urge me to speak now, I shall say "
Campbell: "I wasn't going to urge you."
Mrs. Somers: "No matter! I shall say it now without being urged. Yes, I've made
up my mind. I can't marry a flirt."
Campbell: "I can, Amy."
Mrs. Somers: "Sir!"
Campbell: "You know very well you sent those people into the other room to keep me here and torment me "
Mrs. Somers: "Now you've insulted me, and all is over."
Campbell: "To tantalize me with your loveliness, your beauty, your grace, Amy!"
Mrs. Somers, softening: "Oh, that's all very well "
Campbell: "I'm glad you like it. I could go on at much greater length. But you know I love you dearly, Amy, and why should you delight in my agonies? But only marry me, and you shall delight in them as long as you live, and "
Mrs. Somers: "You must hold me very cheap to think I would take you from that creature."
Campbell: "Confound her! I wasn't hers to give. I offered myself first."
Mrs. Somers: "She offered you last, and no, thank you, please."
Campbell: "Do you really mean it?"
Mrs. Somers: "I shall not say. Or, yes, I will say. If that woman, who seems to have you at her beck and call, had not intermeddled, I might have made you a very different answer. But now my eyes are opened, and I see what I should have to expect, and no, thank you, please."
Campbell: "And if she hadn't offered me "
Mrs. Somers, drawing out her handkerchief and putting it to her eyes: "I was feeling kindly towards you I was such a little fool "
Campbell: "Amy!"
Mrs. Somers: "And you knew how much I disliked her."
Campbell: "Yes, I saw by the way you kissed each other."
Mrs. Somers: "Nonsense! You knew that meant nothing. But if it had been anybody else in the world but her, I shouldn't have minded it. And now "
Campbell: "Now "
Mrs. Somers: "Now all those geese are coming back from the other room, and they'll see that I've been crying, and everybody will know everything. Willis "