Plays: the Father; Countess Julie; the Outlaw; the Stronger by August Strindberg
page 32 of 215 (14%)
page 32 of 215 (14%)
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You may give me the accounts later.
LAURA [Curtesies.] Thanks so much. Do you too keep an account of what you spend besides the housekeeping money? CAPTAIN. That doesn't concern you. LAURA. No, that's true--just as little as my child's education concerns me. Have the gentlemen come to a decision after this evening's conference? CAPTAIN. I had already come to a decision, and therefore it only remained for me to talk it over with the one friend I and the family have in common. Bertha is to go to boarding school in town, and starts in a fortnight. LAURA. To which boarding school, if I may venture to ask? CAPTAIN. Professor Saefberg's. LAURA. That free thinker! CAPTAIN. According to the law, children are to be brought up in their father's faith. LAURA. And the mother has no voice in the matter? CAPTAIN. None whatever. She has sold her birthright by a legal transaction, and forfeited her rights in return for the man's responsibility of caring for her and her children. |
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