[Scene shows a luxuriously furnished
drawing-room. Double doors, centre, opening to
hall and stairway. Grand piano at right, fireplace
next to it, with large easy-chair in front. Centre
table; windows left, and chairs.]
[At rise: Ethel standing
by table; a beautiful but rather frail girl of sixteen;
opening a package containing photograph in frame.]
Ethel. Oceana! Oceana!
[She gazes at it in rapture.] Oh, I wonder if she’ll
be as good as she is beautiful! She must be!
Oceana! [To Remson, an old, white-haired family
servant, who enters with flowers in vase.] No message
from my brother yet?
Remson. Nothing, Miss Ethel.
Ethel. Look at this, Remson.
Remson. [Takes photograph.] Is that your cousin,
Miss Ethel?
Ethel. That’s she. Isn’t
she lovely?
Remson. Yes, miss. Is that the way
they dress in those parts?
Ethel. The natives don’t even wear
that much, Remson.
Remson. It must be right warm there, I fancy.
Ethel. Oh, yes... they never know what cold
weather is.
Remson. What is the name of it, Miss Ethel?
Ethel. Maukuri it’s in
the South Seas.
Remson. It seems like I’ve heard of
cannibals in those parts, somewhere.
Ethel, Yes, in some of the groups.
But this is just one little island by itself... nothing
else for a hundred miles and more.
Remson. And she’s lived there all
this time, Miss Ethel?
Ethel. Fifteen years, Remson.
Remson. And no folks at all there?
Ethel. Not since her father died.
Remson. [Shakes his head.] Humph! She’d
ought to be glad to get home,
Miss Ethel.
Ethel. She didn’t
seem to feel that way. [Takes book and seats herself
by fireplace.] But we’ll try to make her change
her mind. Just think of it... she’s been
forty-six days on the steamer!
Remson. Can it be possible, miss?
Ethel. Wasn’t that the street door
just now, Remson?
Remson. I thought so, Miss Ethel. [Moves
to door.] Oh! Mrs. Masterson.
Mrs. Masterson. [In doorway;
a Boston Brahman, aged fifty, wearing street costume,
black.] Any news yet, Remson?
Remson. None, madam.
Mrs. Masterson. Master Frederick is
at the dock?
Remson. Yes, madam.
Dr. Masterson. [Enters;
slightly younger than his wife, a dapper little man,
bald and henpecked.] No news from the steamer, my dear?
Mrs. Masterson. None.
Remson. Anything further, madam?
Mrs. Masterson. Nothing.
[Exit Remson.]
Dr. Masterson. It’ll
be too bad if Oceana has to spend this evening on
the steamer.
Mrs. Masterson. Have
you taken to calling her by that ridiculous name also?
Dr. Masterson. Surely she has a right
to select her name!
Mrs. Masterson. I was present when
she was christened; and so were you,
Quincy. For me she will remain Anna Talbot
until the day she dies.
Dr. Masterson. Anna
or Oceana... there’s not much difference, it
seems. [Takes paper and sits by window; they do not
see Ethel.] Weren’t Letitia and Henry to
be here?
Mrs. Masterson. Letitia
was... but she’s never on time. There’s
the bell now. [Looks at photograph.] Humph! So
Ethel’s had it framed! I declare... people
ought not to be shown a photograph like that.. . it’s
not decent.
Dr. Masterson. My dear! It’s
the South Sea Islands!
Mrs. Masterson. [Severely.] This is Back
Bay. Oh! Letitia!
Letitia. [Enters; aged about
twenty-eight, prim and decorous, Patterned after her
mother; black street costume, with furs.] No news from
the steamer, it seems! Dear me, such weather!
Mrs. Masterson. You didn’t walk,
I hope?
Letitia. No, but even getting into the stores!
I’m exhausted.
Dr. Masterson. [Looking from paper.] Henry
coming?
Letitia. He said he might drop in.
He’s curious to see the lady.
Dr. Masterson. Humph! No doubt!
Letitia. Mother, I wish
you’d try to do something with Henry. He’s
so restless and discontented... he’s getting
to be simply impossible.
Mrs. Masterson. I’m going to
talk to him to-day, my dear.
Letitia. Fancy my going
out and burying myself in the country! And he
means it... he’s at me all the time about it!
Mrs. Masterson. Well, don’t go,
my dear!
Letitia. Don’t worry
yourself... I’ve not the least intention
of going. Such things as we modern women have
to endure! Only fancy, he’s got an idea
he wants to be where he can work with his hands!
Mrs. Masterson. Henry
ought to have discovered these yearnings before he
married one of the Mastersons. As my daughter,
you have certain social obligations to fill... your
friends have a claim upon you, quite as much as your
husband.
Letitia. He says he wants
to take the bungalow and make it over... wants to
plan it and work at it himself. And with me and
the children sitting out on the mountain-top in the
snow until he finishes, I suppose!
Mrs. Masterson. Quincy,
do you know anything about this whim of Henry’s
for a day-laborer’s life?
Dr. Masterson. My dear,
Henry’s a big, active man, and he wants something
to do.
Mrs. Masterson. But hasn’t he
his business?
Dr. Masterson. I dare
say there are things more thrilling to a man than
commercial law-cases. And Henry’s been thinking
for himself... he says the law’s a cheat.
Mrs. Masterson. Yes,
I know... I’ve heard all that. And
here we are, just at this critical moment, when the
girl is coming, and when he ought to be advising us
about that will.
Dr. Masterson. It seems
to me, my dear, you’ve managed to choose your
course without his aid. [A pause.] I hope we shan’t
have to get into any quarrel with Oceana.
Mrs. Masterson. We shall not if I
can help it, Quincy.
Letitia. We simply intend to be firm, father.
Mrs. Masterson. We
intend to make it clear that we are going to stand
by our legal rights. With no hard feelings for
her personally...
Ethel. [Rising from chair.] Mother!
Mrs. Masterson. Ethel!
Ethel. Mother, this has
gone just as far as it can go! I’ve felt
all along that something like this was preparing.
Mrs. Masterson. My dear...
Ethel. Mother, this concerns me as much
as it concerns any one of you.
And I tell you, you have simply got to let me know
about that will.
Mrs. Masterson. My dear...
Ethel. Do I understand that
it is your intention to threaten to go to law, unless
Oceana gives us a part of grandfather’s property?
Mrs. Masterson. Ethel, I refuse...
Dr. Masterson. You
might as well tell the child, Sophronia. It’s
perfectly certain, Ethel, that your grandfather was
not of sound mind when he made the will.
Ethel. It’s perfectly
certain that he hated you and mother and Aunt Letitia
and me and Freddy... every one of us; and that he had
hated us for years and years; and that he left his
money to Oceana to spite us all.
Mrs. Masterson. That’s precisely
it, Ethel...
Ethel. And I, for one, knowing that he hated
me, don’t want his money.
And what is more, I refuse to touch his money.
Dr. Masterson. Not being of age, my
dear, you can’t...
Ethel. I am near enough
of age to possess my self-respect. And I shall
refuse to touch one penny.
Dr. Masterson. My child,
there are a good many pennies in a half million dollars.
Mrs. Masterson. And
when you are of age, Ethel, you’ll appreciate..
Ethel. I shall be of age
two years from now, and then I shall return to Oceana
every penny of grandfather’s money that may have
been gotten for me.
Letitia. Ethel!
Mrs. Masterson. It
seems to me this is a strange way for a young girl
to be speaking to her parents!
Ethel. I can’t help
it, mother. I am meek and patient... I try
to let you have your way with me in everything.
But this is a matter of principle, and I can’t
let myself be sat on.
Mrs. Masterson. Sat
on! Is that your view of your mother’s attitude
towards you?
Ethel. You know, perfectly
well, mother; that it’s impossible for anybody
to preserve any individuality in contact with you...
that as a matter of fact, neither father nor Letitia
nor Freddy nor myself have preserved a shred of it.
Grandfather said that to you himself, the last time
you ever saw him... I know it, for I’ve
heard father say it a hundred times.
Dr. Masterson. Well!
Mrs. Masterson. It
seems to me there’s more than a trace of individuality
in this present outburst, Ethel.
Ethel. Yes, but it’s the first time,
mother.
Letitia. Some one is coming. [Turns to door.]
Oh! Henry!
Henry. [Enters; a handsome, powerfully-built
man; smooth shaven, immaculate, reserved in manner.]
Well, has the sea-witch arrived?
Mrs. Masterson. Not yet.
Dr. Masterson. Freddy’s gone
to meet her with the limousine.
Henry. I see. And the steamer?
Mrs. Masterson. It was to have docked
two hours ago.
Henry. Well, that means
that I won’t see her till tomorrow evening.
I’ve got to run down to Providence to-night.
Letitia. What’s the matter?
Henry. Nothing important...
just a business matter that requires my presence.
Make my apologies; and goodbye, my dear.
[Kisses Letitia.]
Letitia. Henry, I wish you’d wait
a moment.
Henry. What for, my dear?
Letitia. Mother has something to say...
Mrs. Masterson. I want
to talk to you about this idea of going to the country
in the winter-time.
Henry. Oh! There’s
no use talking about that, Mrs. Masterson. I see
I can’t have my way, so there’s no more
to be said. I’m not the sort of man to
sulk.
Mrs. Masterson. But such an idea, Henry!
For a delicate woman like
Letitia...
Henry. I know... I
know. I’d have taken care of her... but
that doesn’t interest her. And, of course,
I can’t take the children away from her, and
there’s not much fun in the country alone.
So what’s the use? I give up... as I give
up everything. Good-bye, all.
[Exit.]
Letitia. I declare such
a trial! A husband who’s lost his interest
in life!
Mrs. Masterson. It’s that new
cook of yours, Letitia.
Letitia. Every cook is worse.
Mrs. Masterson. What
he needs is some liver-pills. Quincy, you should
attend to it! [Rises.] Well, I’m going upstairs.
You’ll stay to dinner, Letitia?
Letitia. Yes, I want to lie down for a while.
Dr. Masterson. And I’ll beat
myself a game of billiards.
[Exit With Letitia and Mrs. Masterson.]
Ethel. [Drops her book to floor,
springs up and paces the room.] Oh! If only I
might change places with Oceana! If I could get
away to some South Sea island, and be my own mistress
and live my own life. [Takes photograph.] Oceana!
I’m wild to see you! I want to see you dancing.
Your Sunrise Dance... and to your own music! [Begins
to hum the Sunrise Dance.] Oceana! Oceana!
[A step in the hall, she turns.]
Freddy. [Enters briskly; a college
boy, about twenty-one, overgrown, narrow-chested,
good-natured and slangy.] Ethel!
Ethel. [Starts.] Freddy! Where’s Oceana?
Freddy. She won’t get here till morning.
Ethel. Oh, Freddy!
Freddy. They can’t
dock the steamer to-night... there’s some tangle
at the pier.
Ethel. Did you go and see?
Freddy. I telephoned about it. I didn’t
want to wait in this blizzard.
Ethel. I’m so sorry!
Freddy. Me, too. But there’s
no help for it.
Ethel. So long as she doesn’t
miss to-morrow night! Did I read you what she
said about that, Freddy? [Takes letter from pocket.]
“I’ll pray for fair weather, so that I
may get there to see the beautiful dancing. There
is nothing in all the world that I love more... my
whole being seems to flow into the dance. I send
you the music of my Sunrise Dance, that father composed
for me. You can learn it, and I’ll do it
for you. I don’t know, of course; but father
used to think that I was wonderful in it.. and he
had known all the great dances in Europe. It was
the last thing I heard him play, before he went out
in the boat, and I saw him perish before my eyes.”
Don’t you think that she writes beautifully,
Freddy?
Freddy. Yes; it’s surprising.
Ethel, Oh, yes. Her father
was an extraordinary man, Henry says... a musician
and a poet. They had books and everything, apparently.
You’d think she’s been living in Europe.
Freddy. I see.
Ethel. Listen to this:
[Reads.] “About my name... I forgot to explain.
You see, Anna sounds like England... or New England...
and I am not the least like those places. Father
used to see me, as a little tot, diving through the
breakers, and floating out in the sea, with the snow-white
frigate-birds flashing by overhead; and he said I was
the very spirit of the island and the wild, lonely
ocean. So he called me Oceana, and that’s
the name I’ve always borne.”
Freddy. It just fits my idea of her.
Ethel. She goes on:
“You mustn’t be surprised at what I am.
You may think it’s dreadful... even wicked.
But at least don’t expect anything like you’ve
ever known before. Fifteen years with only cocoa-palms
and naked savages... the Boston varnish rubs off one.
But I’m going to try to behave. I expect
to feel quite at home... I have pictures of all
of you, and a picture of the house... I even
have father’s keys, to let myself in with!”
Freddy. Can you play her music, Ethel?
Ethel. Play it? I could play it in
my sleep. [Opens piano.] The Sunrise
Dance! [She sits and plays.] Listen!
[She plunges into the ecstatic part
of the music. Freddy leans by the piano,
watching her; she plays, more and more enthralled.
The door opens softly.]
[Oceana enters; a girl of twenty-two,
superbly formed, dark-skinned, a picture of glowing
health. She is clad in a short skirt and a rough
sailor’s reefer with cap to match; underneath
this a knitted garment, tight-fitting and soft no
corsets. She carries two extremely heavy suitcases,
and with no apparent effort. She sets these down
and stands listening to the music, completely absorbed
in it. There is the faintest suggestion of the
Sunrise Dance in her attitude.]
[Oceana is trusting, and yet
with power of reserve. Throughout the action,
however vehemently she speaks, she seldom really grows
angry; she does not take the game seriously enough.
On the other hand her enjoyment, however keen, never
becomes boisterous. Her actions proceed from
a continual overflow of animal health. She is
like a little child, in that she cannot remain physically
still for very long at a time; she moves about the
room like an animal in a cage. Her speech proceeds
from an overwhelming interest in the truth, regardless
of all personality. She never conceals anything,
and she never represses anything.]
Ethel. [Finishes the music, then
turns, and leaps up.] Oceana!
Freddy. [Turns.] Oceana!
Oceana. Ethel! [Embraces her.] Oh, my dear!
How glad I am to see you!
Ethel. Oceana! But how did you get
here?
Oceana. I came on the steamer.
Freddy. But it isn’t docked
Oceana. They took us to another dock.
Ethel. [Holds her at arm’s length.] Oh,
how fine you are!
Oceana. And you you can play
my father’s music! I’m so glad!
Ethel. You liked the way I played it?
Oceana. I liked it!
And so I know I shall like you! And I’m
so happy about it I wanted to like you!
Ethel. But how big you are!
Oceana. [Laughing.] Oh, that’s
the clothes. I got them in Rio. They’re
queer, I guess, but I only had a couple of hours.
And this is Freddy! [They shake hands.] It’s
so good to be here!
Freddy. How did you get from the dock?
Oceana. I walked.
Ethel. Walked all the way?
Oceana. Of course... I enjoyed it.
Ethel. But in the storm!
Oceana. I didn’t mind
that. It’s all new to me, you see.
My dear, think of it... I’ve never seen
snow before. I was fairly crazy.
[She pulls off the coat and throws
it on one of the suitcases.]
Ethel. I must tell mother. And Letitia!
[Opens door and calls.] Mother!
Letitia! Oceana’s here!
Freddy. [Stoops to pick up the suitcases.] Why...
Oceana. What is it?
Freddy. [He moves them against
the wall with a great effort.] You don’t mean
you carried those!
Oceana. Why, yes.
Freddy. From the docks?
Oceana. [Laughs.] Oh, dear me! I didn’t
mind that.
Freddy. Well... I’ll be blowed!
[He has fallen head over heels in
love with her, and whenever he is in her presence
he follows her about with his eyes, like one bewitched.]
Oceana. You aren’t
strong as you ought to be! You stay too much in
the house!
Ethel. Here’s mother!
Oceana. Aunt Sophronia!
Mrs. Masterson. [Enters.]
My dear Anna! [Kisses her upon the cheek.] I am delighted
to see you safe.
Ethel. And Letitia!
Oceana. Cousin Letitia!
Letitia. [Enters.] My dear cousin! So glad
you are here!
Oceana. [Looking from one to
the other, as they eye her critically.] Oh, are you
really glad to see me? You must be, you know...
for I’ve come so far. And you’ve
no idea how homesick I’ve been.
Mrs. Masterson. Homesick, my dear?
For that wild place you left?
Oceana. But Aunt Sophronia,
that’s my home! And it’s God’s
own dream of beauty!
Mrs. Masterson. Yes, my dear...
I dare say...
Oceana. Ah, you’ve
never been there, or you wouldn’t feel that way!
Picture it as it is at this moment... the broad white
beach... the sun setting and the clouds aflame...
the great green breakers rolling in... the frigate-birds
calling... the palm trees rustling in the wind!
And you don’t have to wrap yourself up in clothes...
you don’t have to shut yourself up in houses!
You plunge through the surf, you dance upon the beach...
naked...
Mrs. Masterson. [Aghast.] My dear girl!
Oceana. Oh, oh! That’s so!
I beg your pardon!
Mrs. Masterson. [Coldly.]
It will take you, a little while to get used to civilized
ways...
Oceana. Oh, no, no, no!
I know about that... I know how it is. Father
told me about Boston.
Mrs. Masterson. My dear...
Oceana. Don’t worry
about me. I’m really going to try to behave
myself ... in every way. I want to get the right
sort of clothes, you know. I couldn’t get
them on my trip...
Mrs. Masterson. It’s
just as well, my dear. You’d best have us
attend to that. You will need mourning for quite
a while, you understand.
Oceana. Mourning!
Mrs. Masterson. Yes... for your grandfather.
Oceana. But, my dear Aunt Sophronia, I couldn’t
possibly wear mourning!
No, no! I couldn’t do that!
Mrs. Masterson. [Astonished.] Why not?
Oceana. In the first place, I never mourn.
Mrs. Masterson. But your own grandfather,
my dear!
Oceana. But I never knew
him. Aunt Sophronia... I never saw him in
my life!
Mrs. Masterson. Even so, my dear!
Hasn’t he left you all his fortune?
Oceana. But am I supposed
to mourn over that? Why, I’d naturally be
happy about that!
Letitia. Oceana!
Oceana. But surely.. wouldn’t you
be happy about it?
Mrs. Masterson. My
child, one is not supposed to set so much store by
mere money...
Oceana. But Aunt Sophronia,
money is power! And isn’t anybody glad to
have power? What else did I come here for?
Mrs. Masterson. I had
hoped you had come home for some other things. ..
to see your relatives, for instance.
Ethel. Here’s father!
Oceana. Uncle Quincy!
Dr. Masterson. [Enters.]
My dear girl! You have come! [Embraces her.]
Why, what a picture you are! A very storm from
the tropics! My dear Oceana!
Oceana. I’m so glad to get here.
Dr. Masterson. Yes,
indeed! I can believe it! And a strange experience
it must have been... your first plunge into civilization!
Oceana. Yes, Uncle Quincy! It’s
been horrible!
Dr. Masterson. Horrible, my dear?
In what way?
Oceana. It’s been
almost too much for me. Really... I could
understand how it might feel to be sick!
Dr. Masterson. Why, what did you see?
Oceana. Everything!
It rushed over me, all at once! The people...
their dreadful faces! And such noises and odors
and sights!
Dr. Masterson. I hadn’t realized...
Oceana. And then the saloons! Rows
and rows of them! It is ghastly!
Letitia. My dear cousin,
mother and I contribute regularly to a temperance
society.
Oceana. But that hasn’t
helped, has it? I’m almost wild about such
things they were the real reason I came
home, you know.
Mrs. Masterson. How do you mean?
Oceana. They had got to my island!
They are turning it into a hell!
Dr. Masterson. In what way?
Oceana. Why, it’s
a long story. I didn’t write... it would
have taken too long. Two years ago there was
a ship laid up... and the crew found, quite by accident,
that our island rock is all phosphate; something very
valuable... for fertilizer, it seems. So they
bought land from the natives, and now there’s
a company, and a trading-post, and all that.
And oh, my people are going all to pieces!
Mrs. Masterson. The natives, you mean?
Oceana. Yes... the people
I have loved all my life. And I’ve tried
so hard... I’ve pleaded with them, I’ve
wept and prayed with them! But they’re
lost!
Letitia. You mean rum?
Oceana. I mean everything.
Rum, and cocaine, and sugar, and canned food, and
clothes, and missionaries... all civilization!
And worse yet, Aunt Sophronia... ah, I can’t
bear to think of it!
Mrs. Masterson. What?
Oceana. You wouldn’t
let me tell you what. [In a low voice.] Imagine my
people, my beautiful people, with the soft, brown skins
and the big black eyes, and hair like the curtains
of night. They are not savages, you understand...
they are gentle and kindly. They ride the rushing
breakers in their frail canoes, they fish and gather
fruits in the forests, they dream in the soft, warm
sunshine... they are happy, they are care-free, their
whole life is a song. And they are trusting,
hospitable... the wonderful white strangers come, and
they take them into their homes, and open their hearts
to them. And the strangers go away and leave
them a ghastly disease, that rages like a fire in their
palm-thatched cabins, that sweeps through their villages
like a tornado. And the women’s hair falls
out... they wither up... they’re old hags in
a year or two. And the babies... I’ve
helped bring them into the world... and they had no
lips... their noses were gone! They were idiots...
blind...
Mrs. Masterson. [Wildly.]
Anna Talbot! I must beg you to have a little
discretion!
Letitia. Why should we hear about these
things, Oceana?
Oceana. My dear, it comes
from America. The ships came from here! There
was one of them I saw... “The Mary Jane,
of Boston, Mass.”
Mrs. Masterson. No
doubt, among such low men... men of vile life. ..
sailors...
Oceana. No, Aunt Sophronia...
you’re mistaken! It’s everywhere.
Isn’t it, Uncle Quincy? You’re a
doctor... You must know!
Dr. Masterson. Why, to tell the truth...
Oceana. Tell the truth! Am I not
right?
Freddy. Of course you’re right!
Mrs. Masterson. Freddy!
Oceana. Ah! You know!
Mrs. Masterson. This is outrageous!
Oceana. You mean you don’t teach your
children about it? Why...
[She stares at them, perplexed.]
Mrs. Masterson. You don’t understand
our ways, Anna...
Oceana. No, no... I
don’t. I don’t think I ever can.
You’d let some man come and make love to Ethel...
and you’d never warn her?
Ethel. They warned me to
turn my toes out when I walked, and not to eat fish
with a knife.
Mrs. Masterson. If
this conversation is to go on, I insist that the children
shall leave the room.
Oceana. Oh, I’m awfully
sorry, Aunt Sophronia! Why, I didn’t mean
any harm. It’s all so real to me. [She
gazes from one to the other, hoping for some sign
of a thaw.] Just think... these were the people that
I’d loved... that I’d grown up with all
my life. I’d fished in their canoes, I’d
hunted with them and basked on the beach with them.
I’d watched the young men and girls dancing
their love-dances in the moonlit glades... [She pauses
again.] Oughtn’t I to talk about that?
Dr. Masterson. My dear girl...
Oceana. [Stares at them; a sudden
idea occurs to her.] Perhaps I ought to explain to
you... you’re no doubt wondering. I’m
a virgin myself, you know.
Mrs. Masterson. [Starting up.] Oh!
Letitia. Oceana!
Oceana. But weren’t you thinking of
that?
Mrs. Masterson. Why, of course not!
Oceana. But Aunt Sophronia! You know
you were!
Mrs. Masterson. [Sputters.] Oh! Oh!
Oceana. You were thinking
to yourself, this girl’s been playing around
on the beaches with savages... and what’s been
happening to her?
Dr. Masterson. My dear
niece, I’m afraid you’ll have to take some
account of our civilized prejudices. We simply
don’t say everything that we think.
Oceana. [Springing up.] Oh, dear
me! I’m so sorry! I didn’t mean
to make you unhappy! I was going to be so good.
I was going to try to conform to everything.
Why, just think of it, Aunt Sophronia... in Rio I actually
bought a pair of corsets. And I tried to wear
them. I. .. Oceana! Around my waist!
Think of it! [She looks for sympathy.] I couldn’t
stand them... I climbed to the topmast and threw
them to the sharks. But now it seems that you
all wear corsets on your minds and souls. [A pause.]
Never mind... let’s talk about something else.
I’m getting restless. You see... I’m
not used to being in a room... it seems like a box
to me... I can hardly breathe. The air in
here is dreadful... hadn’t any of you noticed?
[Silence. Apparently nobody had.] Would you mind
if I opened a window?
Mrs. Masterson. It is storming outside,
Anna.
Oceana. Yes, but one can
exercise and keep warm. just a minute... please. [She
flings up a window; a gale blows in.] Ah, feel that!
[Mrs. Masterson, Letitia
and Dr. Masterson draw away from the window.]
Mrs. Masterson. This is simply outrageous!
Letitia. It is beyond all words!
Dr. Masterson. My dear, consider...
Mrs. Masterson. I won’t have
that creature in my house a minute longer.
Dr. Masterson. My dear, be reasonable!
Letitia. Reasonable?
Dr. Masterson. Consider what is at
stake!
Mrs. Masterson. But
what hope have we to get anything out of such a woman?
Dr. Masterson. We have some hope, I’m
sure. If we...
Mrs. Masterson. Didn’t
you hear her say she’d come home for nothing
but the money?
Dr. Masterson. Yes...
but at least she’s honest enough to say it,
Sophronia. And she’s here as our guest...
she wants to be friendly ... don’t let it come
to an open break with her!
Letitia. But how can we help it, father?
Dr. Masterson. It’s
just a matter of letting her talk. And what harm
will that do us?
Mrs. Masterson. But
we can’t lock her up in the house. And can
we introduce her to our friends? Tomorrow night,
for instance!
Dr. Masterson. We must
manage it somehow. When we’ve once had an
understanding with her, it won’t take long to
get the papers signed, and after that we won’t
care. Control yourself, Sophronia, I implore you!
Don’t let your prejudices ruin us!
Ethel. [Steals to them, in agitation.]
Mother, can’t you be good to her?
You don’t understand her at all.
Mrs. Masterson. [Coldly.] Thank you, Ethel...
Ethel. [To Freddy, who joins them.] Can’t
you say something to them,
Freddy? They treat her so badly.
Freddy. They hate her, Ethel! They
couldn’t understand her.
[Oceana takes deep breaths, expelling
them in short, sharp puffs.]
Letitia. What in the world are you doing?
Oceana. That’s one of the Yogi exercises.
Haven’t any of you studied the
Vedantas?
Letitia. We are all Episcopalians here,
Oceana.
Oceana. Oh, I see!
[She takes a deep breath and then
pounds her chest like a gorilla.]
Mrs. Masterson. And pray, what is that?
Oceana. I’m just getting some of the
civilization out of my lungs.
[A furious gale blows.]
Mrs. Masterson. Really,
my dear, we shall have to leave the room. We’ll
all catch our death of cold.
Oceana. My dear Aunt Sophronia,
nobody ever caught a cold from winter air. Colds
come from over-eating and bad ventilation. [She closes
the window.] However, there you are! [Eagerly.] Now,
let’s have something beautiful so
that I can forget my blunders. Let’s have
some music. Will you play for me, Cousin Letitia?
Letitia. I don’t play, my dear.
Oceana. What? Why, father told me you
played all the time!
Letitia. That was before my marriage.
Oceana. Oh, I see! [Laughs.]
The music has accomplished its purpose! [Stops, alarmed.]
Oh! I’ve done it again! [Goes to Letitia.]
My dear cousin, believe me, I meant no offense.
I’m never personal. I was simply formulating
a principle of sociology!
Mrs. Masterson. You have strange ways,
my dear niece.
Dr. Masterson. Are you always so direct,
so ruthless?
Oceana. That’s the
word, isn’t it? That’s what father
taught me. Never to think about personalities...
to go after the truth! He used to quote that
saying of Nietzsche’s: “To hunger
after knowledge as the lion for his food!”
Mrs. Masterson. Oh,
you read Nietzsche, do you? How could you get
such books?
Oceana. We had a government
steamer from New Zealand three times a year, you know.
That brought our mail.
Mrs. Masterson. And
your father permitted you to read these improper things?
Oceana. My father taught
me to face the facts of my being. My father was
a fighter, you know.
Mrs. Masterson. [Grimly.] Yes, I knew that.
Oceana. Life had hurt him.
Some day you must tell me about it... what it was
that happened to him here in Boston. He never
would talk about it, but I’ve often wondered.
It must have been my mother. What did she do to
him before she died? [She pauses, expecting an answer.]
Was it that she was just conventional like you? [She
pauses again.] It must have been something dreadful...
he felt so keenly about it. He burned it into
my very soul... his fear of civilization. And
here I am... right in the midst of it... I’m
letting it get its claws into me! I’m wearing
its clothes... [She tears at them.] I’m breathing
its air! I don’t believe I can stand it!
[She paces the room restlessly.] My soul is suffocating,
as well as my body. I must have something to remind
me of the sky, and the open sea, and the great spaces.
I must go back again to my home, to my island! [Stretches
out her arms to them appealingly.] Ah, can’t
some of you understand about it? Can’t
some of you take pity on me? It’s so strange
to me... so different from everything I’ve been
used to! Aunt Sophronia!
Mrs. Masterson. [Takes a step reluctantly.]
My dear!
Ethel. [Springing forward.] No!
No! They don’t understand! They don’t
really care.
Mrs. Masterson. Ethel!
Oceana. But you! Ethel!
Ethel. [Rushes and flings herself
at Oceana’s feet, clutching her dress.]
Take me with you! Take me away to your island!
Oceana. [Turning to Freddy.] And you...
won’t you be my friend?
Freddy. [Goes to her.] I will!
[She holds out her hand to him; he hesitates, gazing
at her awe-stricken.] May I... may I take your hand?
Oceana. Why certainly!
Freddy. [With fervor.] Oceana!
[Curtain]