The Easiest Way - Representative Plays by American Dramatists: 1856-1911 by Eugene Walter
page 35 of 180 (19%)
page 35 of 180 (19%)
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LAURA. Mr. Madison is coming up the path.
MRS. WILLIAMS. [_Off stage_.] That's good. LAURA. Sha'n't you come and see him? MRS. WILLIAMS. [_Same_.] Lord, no! I'm six dollars and twenty cents out now, and up against an awful streak of luck. LAURA. Shall I give him some tea? MRS. WILLIAMS. [_Same_.] Yes, do, dear; and tell him to cross his fingers when he thinks of me. _In the meantime_ WILL _has leaned over the balustrade, evidently surveying the young man, who is supposed to be coming up the, path, with a great deal of interest. Underneath his stolid, businesslike demeanour of squareness, there is undoubtedly within his heart a very great affection for_ LAURA. _He realizes that during her whole career he has been the only one who has influenced her absolutely. Since the time they lived together, he has always dominated, and he has always endeavoured to lead her along a path that meant the better things of a Bohemian existence. His coming all the way from New York to Denver to accompany_ LAURA _home was simply another example of his keen interest in the woman, and he suddenly finds that she has drifted away from him in a manner to which he could not in the least object, and that she had been absolutely fair and square in her agreement with him._ WILL _is a man who, while rough and rugged in many ways, possesses many of the finer instincts of refinement, latent though they may be, and his meeting with_ JOHN _ought, therefore, to show much significance, |
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