The studio. The easel is pushed
back to the wall. Cardinal Death, holding his
scythe and hour-glass like a sceptre and globe, sits
on the throne. On the hat-stand hang the hats
of Sir Patrick and Bloomfield Bonington. Walpole,
just come in, is hanging up his beside them. There
is a knock. He opens the door and finds Ridgeon
there.
Walpole. Hallo, Ridgeon!
They come into the middle of the room together, taking
off their gloves.
Ridgeon. Whats the matter! Have you
been sent for, too?
Walpole. Weve all been sent
for. Ive only just come: I havnt seen him
yet. The charwoman says that old Paddy Cullen
has been here with B. B. for the last half-hour. [Sir
Patrick, with bad news in his face, enters from the
inner room]. Well: whats up?
Sir Patrick. Go in and see. B.
B. is in there with him.
Walpole goes. Ridgeon is about
to follow him; but Sir Patrick stops him with a look.
Ridgeon. What has happened?
Sir Patrick. Do you remember Jane Marsh’s
arm?
Ridgeon. Is that whats happened?
Sir Patrick. Thats
whats happened. His lung has gone like Jane’s
arm. I never saw such a case. He has got
through three months galloping consumption in three
days.
Ridgeon. B. B. got in on the negative phase.
Sir Patrick. Negative
or positive, the lad’s done for. He wont
last out the afternoon. He’ll go suddenly:
Ive often seen it.
Ridgeon. So long as he goes before his wife
finds him out, I dont care.
I fully expected this.
Sir Patrick [drily] It’s
a little hard on a lad to be killed because his wife
has too high an opinion of him. Fortunately few
of us are in any danger of that.
Sir Ralph comes from the inner room
and hastens between them, humanely concerned, but
professionally elate and communicative.
B. B. Ah, here you are, Ridgeon.
Paddy’s told you, of course.
Ridgeon. Yes.
B. B. It’s an enormously interesting
case. You know, Colly, by Jupiter, if I didnt
know as a matter of scientific fact that I’d
been stimulating the phagocytes, I should say I’d
been stimulating the other things. What is the
explanation of it, Sir Patrick? How do you account
for it, Ridgeon? Have we over-stimulated the
phagocytes? Have they not only eaten up the bacilli,
but attacked and destroyed the red corpuscles as well?
a possibility suggested by the patient’s pallor.
Nay, have they finally begun to prey on the lungs
themselves? Or on one another? I shall write
a paper about this case.
Walpole comes back, very serious,
even shocked. He comes between B. B. and Ridgeon.
Walpole. Whew! B. B.: youve done
it this time.
B. B. What do you mean?
Walpole. Killed him.
The worst case of neglected blood-poisoning I ever
saw. It’s too late now to do anything.
He’d die under the anæsthetic.
B. B. [offended] Killed! Really,
Walpole, if your monomania were not well known, I
should take such an expession very seriously.
Sir Patrick. Come come!
When youve both killed as many people as I have in
my time youll feel humble enough about it. Come
and look at him, Colly.
Ridgeon and Sir Patrick go into the inner room.
Walpole. I apologize, B. B. But it’s
blood-poisoning.
B. B. [recovering his irresistible
good nature] My dear Walpole, everything is blood-poisoning.
But upon my soul, I shall not use any of that stuff
of Ridgeon’s again. What made me so sensitive
about what you said just now is that, strictly between
ourselves, Ridgeon cooked our young friend’s
goose.
Jennifer, worried and distressed,
but always gentle, comes between them from the inner
room. She wears a nurse’s apron.
Mrs. Dubedat. Sir Ralph:
what am I to do? That man who insisted on seeing
me, and sent in word that business was important to
Louis, is a newspaper man. A paragraph appeared
in the paper this morning saying that Louis is seriously
ill; and this man wants to interview him about it.
How can people be so brutally callous?
Walpole [moving vengefully towards
the door] You just leave me to deal with him!
Mrs Dubedat [stopping him]
But Louis insists on seeing him: he almost began
to cry about it. And he says he cant bear his
room any longer. He says he wants to [she struggles
with a sob] to die in his studio. Sir
Patrick says let him have his way: it can do no
harm. What shall we do?
B B. [encouragingly] Why, follow Sir
Patrick’s excellent advice, of course.
As he says, it can do him no harm; and it will no doubt
do him good a great deal of good.
He will be much the better for it.
Mrs Dubedat [a little cheered]
Will you bring the man up here, Mr Walpole, and tell
him that he may see Louis, but that he mustnt exhaust
him by talking? [Walpole nods and goes out by the outer
door]. Sir Ralph, dont be angry with me;
but Louis will die if he stays here. I must take
him to Cornwall. He will recover there.
B. B. [brightening wonderfully, as
if Dubedat were already saved] Cornwall! The
very place for him! Wonderful for the lungs.
Stupid of me not to think of it before. You are
his best physician after all, dear lady. An inspiration!
Cornwall: of course, yes, yes, yes.
Mrs Dubedat [comforted and
touched] You are so kind, Sir Ralph. But dont
give me much or I shall cry; and Louis cant bear that.
B. B. [gently putting his protecting
arm round her shoulders] Then let us come back to
him and help to carry him in. Cornwall! of course,
of course. The very thing! [They go together
into the bedroom].
Walpole returns with The Newspaper
Man, a cheerful, affable young man who is disabled
for ordinary business pursuits by a congenital erroneousness
which renders him incapable of describing accurately
anything he sees, or understanding or reporting accurately
anything he hears. As the only employment in
which these defects do not matter is journalism (for
a newspaper, not having to act on its description and
reports, but only to sell them to idly curious people,
has nothing but honor to lose by inaccuracy and unveracity),
he has perforce become a journalist, and has to keep
up an air of high spirits through a daily struggle
with his own illiteracy and the precariousness of his
employment. He has a note-book, and occasionally
attempts to make a note; but as he cannot write shorthand,
and does not write with ease in any hand, he generally
gives it up as a bad job before he succeeds in finishing
a sentence.
The newspaper man [looking
round and making indecisive attempts at notes] This
is the studio, I suppose.
Walpole. Yes.
The newspaper man [wittily] Where he
has his models, eh?
Walpole [grimly irresponsive] No doubt.
The newspaper man. Cubicle, you
said it was?
Walpole. Yes, tubercle.
The newspaper man.
Which way do you spell it: is it c-u-b-i-c-a-l
or c-l-e?
Walpole. Tubercle, man, not cubical. [Spelling
it for him]
T-u-b-e-r-c-l-e.
The newspaper man.
Oh! tubercle. Some disease, I suppose. I
thought he had consumption. Are you one of the
family or the doctor?
Walpole. I’m neither
one nor the other. I am Mister Cutler Walpole.
Put that down. Then put down Sir Colenso Ridgeon.
The newspaper man. Pigeon?
Walpole. Ridgeon. [Contemptuously
snatching his book] Here: youd better let me
write the names down for you: youre sure to get
them wrong. That comes of belonging to an illiterate
profession, with no qualifications and no public register.
[He writes the particulars].
The newspaper man.
Oh, I say: you have got your knife into us, havnt
you?
Walpole [vindictively] I wish
I had: I’d make a better man of you.
Now attend. [Shewing him the book] These are the names
of the three doctors. This is the patient.
This is the address. This is the name of the
disease. [He shuts the book with a snap which makes
the journalist blink, and returns it to him].
Mr Dubedat will be brought in here presently.
He wants to see you because he doesnt know how bad
he is. We’ll allow you to wait a few minutes
to humor him; but if you talk to him, out you go.
He may die at any moment.
The newspaper man [interested]
Is he as bad as that? I say: I am in luck
to-day. Would you mind letting me photograph you?
[He produces a camera]. Could you have a lancet
or something in your hand?
Walpole. Put it up.
If you want my photograph you can get it in Baker
Street in any of the series of celebrities.
The newspaper man.
But theyll want to be paid. If you wouldnt mind
[fingering the camera] ?
Walpole. I would. Put
it up, I tell you. Sit down there and be quiet.
The Newspaper Man quickly sits down
on the piano stool as Dubedat, in an invalid’s
chair, is wheeled in by Mrs Dubedat and Sir Ralph.
They place the chair between the dais and the sofa,
where the easel stood before. Louis is not changed
as a robust man would be; and he is not scared.
His eyes look larger; and he is so weak physically
that he can hardly move, lying on his cushions, with
complete languor; but his mind is active; it is making
the most of his condition, finding voluptuousness in
languor and drama in death. They are all impressed,
in spite of themselves, except Ridgeon, who is implacable.
B.B. is entirely sympathetic and forgiving. Ridgeon
follows the chair with a tray of milk and stimulants.
Sir Patrick, who accompanies him, takes the tea-table
from the corner and places it behind the chair for
the tray. B. B. takes the easel chair and places
it for Jennifer at Dubedat’s side, next the dais,
from which the lay figure ogles the dying artist.
B. B. then returns to Dubedat’s left. Jennifer
sits. Walpole sits down on the edge of the dais.
Ridgeon stands near him.
Louis [blissfully] Thats happiness!
To be in a studio! Happiness!
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, dear.
Sir Patrick says you may stay here as long as you
like.
Louis. Jennifer.
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, my darling.
Louis. Is the newspaper man here?
The newspaper man [glibly]
Yes, Mr Dubedat: I’m here, at your service.
I represent the press. I thought you might like
to let us have a few words about about er well,
a few words on your illness, and your plans for the
season.
Louis. My plans for the season are very
simple. I’m going to die.
Mrs Dubedat [tortured] Louis dearest
Louis. My darling:
I’m very weak and tired. Dont put on
me the horrible strain of pretending that I dont
know. Ive been lying there listening to the doctors laughing
to myself. They know. Dearest: dont
cry. It makes you ugly; and I cant bear that.
[She dries her eyes and recovers herself with a proud
effort]. I want you to promise me something.
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, yes:
you know I will. [Imploringly] Only, my love, my love,
dont talk: it will waste your strength.
Louis. No: it will
only use it up. Ridgeon: give me something
to keep me going for a few minutes one
of your confounded anti-toxins, if you dont mind.
I have some things to say before I go.
Ridgeon [looking at Sir Patrick]
I suppose it can do no harm? [He pours out some spirit,
and is about to add soda water when Sir Patrick corrects
him].
Sir Patrick. In milk. Dont
set him coughing.
Louis [after drinking] Jennifer.
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, dear.
Louis. If theres one thing I hate more than
another, it’s a widow.
Promise me that youll never be a widow.
Mrs Dubedat. My dear, what do you mean?
Louis. I want you to look
beautiful. I want people to see in your eyes
that you were married to me. The people in Italy
used to point at Dante and say “There goes the
man who has been in hell.” I want them to
point at you and say “There goes a woman who
has been in heaven.” It has been heaven,
darling, hasnt it sometimes?
MRs Dubedat. Oh yes, yes. Always, always.
Louis. If you wear black
and cry, people will say “Look at that miserable
woman: her husband made her miserable.”
Mrs Dubedat. No, never.
You are the light and the blessing of my life.
I never lived until I knew you.
Louis [his eyes glistening] Then
you must always wear beautiful dresses and splendid
magic jewels. Think of all the wonderful pictures
I shall never paint.
[She wins a terrible victory over
a sob] Well, you must be transfigured with all the
beauty of those pictures. Men must get such dreams
from seeing you as they never could get from any daubing
with paints and brushes. Painters must paint
you as they never painted any mortal woman before.
There must be a great tradition of beauty, a great
atmosphere of wonder and romance. That is what
men must always think of when they think of me.
That is the sort of immortality I want. You can
make that for me, Jennifer. There are lots of
things you dont understand that every woman in
the street understands; but you can understand that
and do it as nobody else can. Promise me that
immortality. Promise me you will not make a little
hell of crape and crying and undertaker’s horrors
and withering flowers and all that vulgar rubbish.
Mrs Dubedat. I promise.
But all that is far off, dear. You are to come
to Cornwall with me and get well. Sir Ralph says
so.
Louis. Poor old B. B.
B. B. [affected to tears, turns away
and whispers to Sir Patrick] Poor fellow! Brain
going.
Louis. Sir Patrick’s there, isn’t
he?
Sir Patrick. Yes, yes. I’m
here.
Louis. Sit down, wont you? It’s
a shame to keep you standing about.
Sir Patrick. Yes, Yes. Thank you.
All right.
Louis. Jennifer.
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, dear.
Louis [with a strange look of delight] Do you
remember the burning bush?
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, Yes.
Oh, my dear, how it strains my heart to remember it
now!
Louis. Does it? It fills me with joy.
Tell them about it.
Mrs Dubedat. It was
nothing only that once in my old Cornish
home we lit the first fire of the winter; and when
we looked through the window we saw the flames dancing
in a bush in the garden.
Louis. Such a color!
Garnet color. Waving like silk. Liquid lovely
flame flowing up through the bay leaves, and not burning
them. Well, I shall be a flame like that.
I’m sorry to disappoint the poor little worms;
but the last of me shall be the flame in the burning
bush. Whenever you see the flame, Jennifer, that
will be me. Promise me that I shall be burnt.
Mrs Dubedat. Oh, if I might be with
you, Louis!
Louis. No: you must
always be in the garden when the bush flames.
You are my hold on the world: you are my immortality.
Promise.
Mrs Dubedat. I’m listening.
I shall not forget. You know that I promise.
Louis. Well, thats about
all; except that you are to hang my pictures at the
one-man show. I can trust your eye. You wont
let anyone else touch them.
Mrs Dubedat. You can trust me.
Louis. Then theres nothing
more to worry about, is there? Give me some more
of that milk. I’m fearfully tired; but if
I stop talking I shant begin again. [Sir Ralph gives
him a drink. He takes it and looks up quaintly].
I say, B. B., do you think anything would stop you
talking?
B. B. [almost unmanned] He confuses me with you, Paddy.
Poor fellow!
Poor fellow!
Louis [musing] I used to be awfully
afraid of death; but now it’s come I have no
fear; and I’m perfectly happy. Jennifer.
Mrs Dubedat. Yes, dear?
Louis. I’ll tell you
a secret. I used to think that our marriage was
all an affectation, and that I’d break loose
and run away some day. But now that I’m
going to be broken loose whether I like it or not,
I’m perfectly fond of you, and perfectly satisfied
because I’m going to live as part of you and
not as my troublesome self.
Mrs Dubedat [heartbroken]
Stay with me, Louis. Oh, dont leave me,
dearest.
Louis. Not that I’m
selfish. With all my faults I dont think
Ive ever been really selfish. No artist can:
Art is too large for that. You will marry again,
Jennifer.
Mrs Dubedat. Oh, how can you, Louis?
Louis [insisting childishly]
Yes, because people who have found marriage happy
always marry again. Ah, I shant be jealous. [Slyly.]
But dont talk to the other fellow too much about
me: he wont like it. [Almost chuckling] I shall
be your lover all the time; but it will be a secret
from him, poor devil!
Sir Patrick. Come!
youve talked enough. Try to rest awhile.
Louis [wearily] Yes: I’m
fearfully tired; but I shall have a long rest presently.
I have something to say to you fellows. Youre
all there, arnt you? I’m too weak to see
anything but Jennifer’s bosom. That promises
rest.
Ridgeon. We are all here.
Louis [startled] That voice sounded
devilish. Take care, Ridgeon: my ears hear
things that other people’s cant. Ive been
thinking thinking. I’m cleverer
than you imagine.
Sir Patrick [whispering
to Ridgeon] Youve got on his nerves, Colly. Slip
out quietly.
Ridgeon [apart to Sir Patrick]
Would you deprive the dying actor of his audience?
Louis [his face lighting up faintly
with mischievous glee] I heard that, Ridgeon.
That was good. Jennifer dear: be kind to
Ridgeon always; because he was the last man who amused
me.
Ridgeon [relentless] Was I?
Louis. But it’s not
true. It’s you who are still on the stage.
I’m half way home already.
Mrs Dubedat [to Ridgeon] What did you say?
Louis [answering for him] Nothing,
dear. Only one of those little secrets that men
keep among themselves. Well, all you chaps have
thought pretty hard things of me, and said them.
B. B. [quite overcome] No, no, Dubedat. Not at
all.
Louis. Yes, you have.
I know what you all think of me. Dont imagine
I’m sore about it. I forgive you.
Walpole [involuntarily] Well,
damn me! [Ashamed] I beg your pardon.
Louis. That was old Walpole,
I know. Don’t grieve, Walpole. I’m
perfectly happy. I’m not in pain. I
don’t want to live. Ive escaped from myself.
I’m in heaven, immortal in the heart of my beautiful
Jennifer. I’m not afraid, and not ashamed.
[Reflectively, puzzling it out for himself weakly]
I know that in an accidental sort of way, struggling
through the unreal part of life, I havnt always been
able to live up to my ideal. But in my own real
world I have never done anything wrong, never denied
my faith, never been untrue to myself. Ive been
threatened and blackmailed and insulted and starved.
But Ive played the game. Ive fought the good
fight. And now it’s all over, theres an
indescribable peace. [He feebly folds his hands and
utters his creed] I believe in Michael Angelo, Velasquez,
and Rembrandt; in the might of design, the mystery
of color, the redemption of all things by Beauty everlasting,
and the message of Art that has made these hands blessed.
Amen. Amen. [He closes his eyes and lies still].
Mrs Dubedat [breathless] Louis: are
you
Walpole rises and comes quickly to see whether he
is dead.
Louis. Not yet, dear.
Very nearly, but not yet. I should like to rest
my head on your bosom; only it would tire you.
Mrs Dubedat. No, no,
no, darling: how could you tire me? [She lifts
him so that he lies on her bosom].
Louis. Thats good. Thats real.
Mrs Dubedat. Dont spare me, dear.
Indeed, indeed you will not tire me.
Lean on me with all your weight.
Louis [with a sudden half return
of his normal strength and comfort] Jinny Gwinny:
I think I shall recover after all. [Sir Patrick looks
significantly at Ridgeon, mutely warning him that this
is the end].
Mrs Dubedat [hopefully] Yes, yes: you
shall.
Louis. Because I suddenly want to sleep.
Just an ordinary sleep.
Mrs Dubedat [rocking him]
Yes, dear. Sleep. [He seems to go to sleep.
Walpole makes another movement. She protests].
Sh sh: please dont disturb
him. [His lips move]. What did you say, dear?
[In great distress] I cant listen without moving him.
[His lips move again; Walpole bends down and listens].
Walpole. He wants to know is the newspaper
man here.
The newspaper man [excited; for he
has been enjoying himself enormously]
Yes, Mr Dubedat. Here I am.
Walpole raises his hand warningly
to silence him. Sir Ralph sits down quietly on
the sofa and frankly buries his face in his handkerchief.
Mrs Dubedat [with great
relief] Oh thats right, dear: dont spare
me: lean with all your weight on me. Now
you are really resting.
Sir Patrick quickly comes forward
and feels Louis’s pulse; then takes him by the
shoulders.
Sir Patrick. Let me
put him back on the pillow, maam. He will be better
so.
Mrs Dubedat [piteously]
Oh no, please, please, doctor. He is not tiring
me; and he will be so hurt when he wakes if he finds
I have put him away.
Sir Patrick. He will
never wake again. [He takes the body from her and
replaces it in the chair. Ridgeon, unmoved, lets
down the back and makes a bier of it].
Mrs Dubedat [who has unexpectedly
sprung to her feet, and stands dry-eyed and stately]
Was that death?
Walpole. Yes.
Mrs Dubedat [with complete
dignity] Will you wait for me a moment? I will
come back. [She goes out].
Walpole. Ought we to follow
her? Is she in her right senses?
Sir Patrick [with quiet
conviction]. Yes. Shes all right. Leave
her alone. She’ll come back.
Ridgeon [callously] Let us get
this thing out of the way before she comes.
B. B. [rising, shocked] My dear Colly!
The poor lad! He died splendidly.
Sir Patrick. Aye! that is how the wicked
die.
For there are
no bands in their death;
But their strength
is firm:
They are not in
trouble as other men.
No matter: its not for us to
judge. Hes in another world now.
Walpole. Borrowing his first
five-pound note there, probably.
Ridgeon. I said the other
day that the most tragic thing in the world is a sick
doctor. I was wrong. The most tragic thing
in the world is a man of genius who is not also a
man of honor.
Ridgeon and Walpole wheel the chair into the recess.
The newspaper man [to
Sir Ralph] I thought it shewed a very nice feeling,
his being so particular about his wife going into proper
mourning for him and making her promise never to marry
again.
B. B. [impressively] Mrs Dubedat is
not in a position to carry the interview any further.
Neither are we.
Sir Patrick. Good afternoon to you.
The newspaper man. Mrs. Dubedat
said she was coming back.
B. B. After you have gone.
The newspaper man. Do you think
she would give me a few words on How It
Feels to be a Widow? Rather a good title for
an article, isnt it?
B. B. Young man: if you wait
until Mrs Dubedat comes back, you will be able to
write an article on How It Feels to be Turned Out of
the House.
The newspaper man [unconvinced] You
think she’d rather not
B. B. [cutting him short] Good day to you. [Giving
him a visiting-card]
Mind you get my name correctly. Good day.
The newspaper man.
Good day. Thank you. [Vaguely trying to read the
card] Mr
B. B. No, not Mister. This is
your hat, I think [giving it to him]. Gloves?
No, of course: no gloves. Good day to you.
[He edges him out at last; shuts the door on him;
and returns to Sir Patrick as Ridgeon and Walpole
come back from the recess, Walpole crossing the room
to the hat-stand, and Ridgeon coming between Sir Ralph
and Sir Patrick]. Poor fellow! Poor young
fellow! How well he died! I feel a better
man, really.
Sir Patrick. When youre
as old as I am, youll know that it matters very little
how a man dies. What matters is, how he lives.
Every fool that runs his nose against a bullet is
a hero nowadays, because he dies for his country.
Why dont he live for it to some purpose?
B. B. No, please, Paddy: dont
be hard on the poor lad. Not now, not now.
After all, was he so bad? He had only two failings:
money and women. Well, let us be honest.
Tell the truth, Paddy. Dont be hypocritical,
Ridgeon. Throw off the mask, Walpole. Are
these two matters so well arranged at present that
a disregard of the usual arrangements indicates real
depravity?
Walpole. I dont mind
his disregarding the usual arrangements. Confound
the usual arrangements! To a man of science theyre
beneath contempt both as to money and women.
What I mind is his disregarding everything except
his own pocket and his own fancy. He didn’t
disregard the usual arrangements when they paid him.
Did he give us his pictures for nothing? Do you
suppose he’d have hesitated to blackmail me if
I’d compromised myself with his wife? Not
he.
Sir Patrick. Dont
waste your time wrangling over him. A blackguard’s
a blackguard; an honest man’s an honest man;
and neither of them will ever be at a loss for a religion
or a morality to prove that their ways are the right
ways. It’s the same with nations, the same
with professions, the same all the world over and
always will be.
B. B. Ah, well, perhaps, perhaps,
perhaps. Still, de mortuis nil nisi
bonum. He died extremely well, remarkably
well. He has set us an example: let us endeavor
to follow it rather than harp on the weaknesses that
have perished with him. I think it is Shakespear
who says that the good that most men do lives after
them: the evil lies interred with their bones.
Yes: interred with their bones. Believe me,
Paddy, we are all mortal. It is the common lot,
Ridgeon. Say what you will, Walpole, Nature’s
debt must be paid. If tis not to-day, twill be
to-morrow.
To-morrow and to-morrow
and to-morrow
After life’s fitful
fever they sleep well
And like this insubstantial
bourne from which
No traveller returns
Leave not a wrack behind.
Walpole is about to speak, but B.
B., suddenly and vehemently proceeding, extinguishes
him.
Out, out, brief candle:
For nothing canst thou
to damnation add
The readiness is all.
Walpole [gently; for B. B.’s
feeling, absurdly expressed as it is, is too sincere
and humane to be ridiculed] Yes, B. B. Death makes
people go on like that. I dont know why
it should; but it does. By the way, what are
we going to do? Ought we to clear out; or had
we better wait and see whether Mrs Dubedat will come
back?
Sir Patrick. I think
we’d better go. We can tell the charwoman
what to do.
They take their hats and go to the door.
Mrs Dubedat [coming from
the inner door wonderfully and beautifully dressed,
and radiant, carrying a great piece of purple silk,
handsomely embroidered, over her arm] I’m so
sorry to have kept you waiting.
Sir Patrick } [amazed, all
{ Dont mention it, madam. B.B. } together
{ Not at all, not at all. Ridgeon } in a
confused { By no means. Walpole } murmur]
{ It doesnt matter in the least.
Mrs. Dubedat [coming to
them] I felt that I must shake hands with his friends
once before we part to-day. We have shared together
a great privilege and a great happiness. I dont
think we can ever think of ourselves ordinary people
again. We have had a wonderful experience; and
that gives us a common faith, a common ideal, that
nobody else can quite have. Life will always
be beautiful to us: death will always be beautiful
to us. May we shake hands on that?
Sir Patrick [shaking hands]
Remember: all letters had better be left to your
solicitor. Let him open everything and settle
everything. Thats the law, you know.
Mrs Dubedat. Oh, thank
you: I didnt know. [Sir Patrick goes].
Walpole. Good-bye.
I blame myself: I should have insisted on operating.
[He goes].
B.B. I will send the proper people:
they will know it to do: you shall have no trouble.
Good-bye, my dear lady. [He goes].
Ridgeon. Good-bye. [He offers his hand].
Mrs Dubedat [drawing back with gentle majesty]
I said his friends, Sir
Colenso. [He bows and goes].
She unfolds the great piece of silk,
and goes into the recess to cover her dead.