Yank Samuel J.
Bernstein |
SCENE TWO |
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Two days out. A section of the promenade deck. MILDRED DOUGLAS and her aunt are discovered reclining in deck chairs. The former is a girl of twenty, slender, delicate, with a pale, pretty face marred by a self-conscious expression of disdainful superiority. She looks fretful, nervous and discontented, bored by her own anemia. Her aunt is a pompous and proudand fatold lady. She is a type even to the point of a double chin and lorgnettes. She is dressed pretentiously, as if afraid her face alone would never indicate her position in life. MILDRED is dressed all in white. |
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The impression to be conveyed by this scene is one of the beautiful, vivid life of the sea all aboutsunshine on the deck in a great flood, the fresh sea wind blowing across it. In the midst of this, these two incongruous, artificial figures, inert and disharmonious, the elder like a gray lump of dough touched up with rouge, the younger looking as if the vitality of her stock had been sapped before she was conceived, so that she is the expression not of its life energy but merely of the artificialities that energy had won for itself in the spending. |
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THE MONOLOGUE OF MILDRED'S AUNT |
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AUNT—(Singing; standing atone on the deck.) | |
When my brother asked me | |
To accompany | |
My niece on a trip | |
Across the sea | |
Of course I agreed | |
To be | |
Her chaperone— | |
For she is all alone— | |
On a trip | |
Across the sea | |
The trip has given me | |
An opportunity | |
To get to know my niece | |
More profoundly | |
And thus to assess | |
Her qualities | |
Realistically | |
(Spoken.)
Quite frankly, I possess two opinions on the matter of the endowments of
my niece: I am willing to share one, and one I keep to myself: For public consumption: |
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My niece is a model of propriety | |
Of chastity, | |
Nobility, | |
Exquisite femininity, | |
Moral superiority; | |
In a word she'll always be | |
A boon to society. | |
(Spoken.) But the truth is: | |
She is hollow | |
She is shallow | |
She's a fake | |
She's a fool | |
She's a poser | |
And she's vulgar | |
She's a tramp | |
She's a ghoul | |
Who'd drag our name through the mud | |
Who'd bring a taint upon our blood | |
Who makes me see red. | |
I wish she were dead. | |
(The AUNT walks over and sits on a deck chair beside MILDRED.) | |
MILDRED(Looking up with affected dreaminess.) How the black smoke swirls back against the sky! Is it not beautiful? |
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AUNT(Without looking up.) I dislike smoke of any kind. |
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MILDREDMy great-grandmother smoked a pipea clay pipe. |
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AUNT(Ruffling.) Vulgar! |
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MILDREDShe was too distant a relative to be vulgar. Time mellows pipes. |
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AUNT(Pretending boredom but irritated.) Did the sociology you took up at college teach you thatto play the ghoul on every possible occasion, excavating old bones? Why not let your great-grandmother rest in her grave? |
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MILDRED(Dreamily.) With her pipe beside herpuffing in Paradise. |
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AUNT(With spite.) Yes, you are a natural born ghoul. You are even getting to look like one, my dear. |
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MILDRED(In a passionless tone.) I detest you, Aunt. (Looking at her critically.) Do you know what you remind me of? Of a cold pork pudding against a background of linoleum tablecloth in the kitchen of abut the possibilities are wearisome. (She closes her eyes.) |
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AUNT(With a bitter laugh.) Merci for your candor. But since I am and must be your chaperone—in appearance, at least—let us patch up some sort of armed truce. For my part you are quite free to indulge any pose of eccentricity that beguiles you—as long as you observe the amenities— |
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MILDRED(Drawling.) The inanities? |
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AUNT(Going on as if she hadnt heard.) After exhausting the morbid thrills of social service work on New Yorks East Sidehow they must have hated you, by the way, the poor that you made so much poorer in their own eyes!you are now bent on making your slumming international. Well, I hope Whitechapel will provide the needed nerve tonic. Do not ask me to chaperone you there, however. I told your father I would not. I loathe deformity. We will hire an army of detectives and you may investigate everythingthey allow you to see. |
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MILDRED(Protesting with a trace of genuine earnestness.) Please do not mock at my attempts to discover how the other half lives. Give me credit for some sort of groping sincerity in that at least. I would like to help them. I would like to be some use in the world. Is it my fault I dont know how? I would like to be sincere, to touch life somewhere. |
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SONG OF THE PLASTIC APPLE |
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MILDRED—(Spoken.) | |
Do you know how to twiddle your thumbs? | |
I bet you do | |
I bet you do | |
But do you know how to twiddle your mind? | |
That's what I do | |
That's what I do | |
Over and over and over again | |
Till the morning's done | |
Till the night has come | |
And I start once more when the new day has begun | |
Over and over and over again | |
Till the morning's done | |
Till the night has come | |
And I start once more when the new day has begun | |
A plastic apple has no juice | |
has no taste |
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has no seeds |
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has no core |
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It looks like a succulent fruit | |
But in fact is hollow inside | |
I am a plastic apple | |
But of what variety? | |
That is the key | |
That is the key | |
That is the key | |
To me | |
I am a product of the Douglas orchard | |
Douglas. That's right. Douglas, | |
Does the name strike fear in your heart? | |
If it doesn't, it should. | |
For dear old daddy is the king of steel | |
the monarch of steel |
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the captain of steel |
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He's made of steel | |
He can steal your strength | |
He can steal your wealth | |
He can steal your health | |
He can steal your soul | |
He stole mine | |
Shortly after I was born | |
He touched my little head | |
My soft and ruddy innocence | |
Was turned to gold instead | |
In my veins, my blood ran cold | |
Before my teens, I was quite old | |
My father taught that anything of worth | |
Could be either bought or sold | |
Oh yes, I am the plastic apple | |
Of my father's beady eye | |
I've got no heart | |
I've got no soul | |
I cannot laugh or cry | |
I haven't got strength or will | |
Those family seeds ran dry | |
So I am the plastic apple of | |
My father's beady eye | |
What do I care? | |
What does it matter? | |
What's the difference? | |
What the hell! | |
Roses are red | |
Violets are blue | |
I'm a Douglas | |
And so I'm still Better | |
And Better off | |
Than you!! | |
AUNT(Unimpressedsuperciliously.) You seem to be going in for sincerity today. It isnt becoming to you, reallyexcept as an obvious pose. Be as artificial as you are, I advise. Theres a sort of sincerity in that, you know. And, after all, you must confess you like that better. |
MILDRED(Again affected and bored.) Yes, I suppose I do. Pardon me for my outburst. When a leopard complains of its spots, it must sound rather grotesque. (In a mocking tone.) Purr, little leopard. Purr, scratch, tear, kill, gorge yourself and be happyonly stay in the jungle where your spots are camouflage. In a cage they make you conspicuous. |
AUNTI dont know what you are talking about. |
MILDREDIt would be rude to talk about anything to you. Lets just talk. (She looks at her wrist watch.) Well, thank goodness, its about time for them to come for me. That ought to give me a new thrill, Aunt. |
AUNT(Affectedly troubled.) You don’t mean to say you’re really going? The dirt—the heat must be frightful— |
MILDREDGrandfather started as a puddler. I should have inherited an immunity to heat that would make a salamander shiver. It will be fun to put it to the test. |
AUNTBut dont you have to have the captainsor someonespermission to visit the stokehole? |
MILDRED(With a triumphant smile.) I have itboth his and the chief engineers. Oh, they didnt want to at first, in spite of my social service credentials. They didnt seem a bit anxious that I should investigate how the other half lives and works on a ship. So I had to tell them that my father, the president of Nazareth Steel, chairman of the board of directors of this line, had told me it would be all right. |
AUNTHe didnt. |
MILDREDHow naïve age makes one! But I said he did, Aunt. I even said he had given me a letter to themwhich I had lost. And they were afraid to take the chance that I might be lying. (Excitedly.) So its ho! for the stokehole. The second engineer is to escort me. (Looking at her watch again.) Its time. And here he comes, I think. (The SECOND ENGINEER enters. He is a husky, fine-looking man of thirty-five or so. He stops before the two and tips his cap, visibly embarrassed and ill-at-ease.) |
SECOND ENGINEERMiss Douglas? |
MILDREDYes. (Throwing off her rugs and getting to her feet.) Are we all ready to start? |
SECOND ENGINEERIn just a second, maam. Im waiting for the Fourth. Hes coming along. |
MILDRED(With a scornful smile.) You dont care to shoulder this responsibility alone, is that it? |
SECOND ENGINEER(Forcing a smile.) Two are better than one. (Disturbed by her eyes, glances out to seablurts out.) A fine day were having. |
MILDREDIs it? |
SECOND ENGINEER—A nice warm breeze— |
MILDREDIt feels cold to me. |
SECOND ENGINEER—But it’s hot enough in the sun— |
MILDREDNot hot enough for me. I dont like Nature. I was never athletic. |
SECOND ENGINEER(Forcing a smile.) Well, youll find it hot enough where youre going. |
MILDREDDo you mean hell? |
SECOND ENGINEER(Flabbergasted, decides to laugh.) Ho-ho! No, I mean the stokehole. |
MILDREDMy grandfather was a puddler. He played with boiling steel. |
SECOND ENGINEER(All at seauneasily.) Is that so? Hum, youll excuse me, maam, but are you intending to wear that dress. |
MILDREDWhy not? |
SECOND ENGINEERYoull likely rub against oil and dirt. It cant be helped. |
MILDREDIt doesnt matter. I have lots of white dresses. |
SECOND ENGINEER—I have an old coat you might throw over— |
MILDREDI have fifty dresses like this. I will throw this one into the sea when I come back. That ought to wash it clean, dont you think? |
SECOND ENGINEER(Doggedly.) There’s ladders to climb down that are none too clean—and dark alleyways— |
MILDREDI will wear this very dress and none other. |
SECOND ENGINEER—No offence meant. It’s none of my business. I was only warning you— |
MILDREDWarning? That sounds thrilling. |
SECOND ENGINEER(Looking down the deckwith a sigh of relief.)—There’s the Fourth now. He’s waiting for us. If you’ll come— |
MILDREDGo on. Ill follow you. (He goes. MILDRED turns a mocking smile on her aunt.) An oafbut a handsome, virile oaf. |
AUNT(Scornfully.) Poser! |
MILDRED—Take care. He said there were dark alleyways— |
AUNT(In the same tone.) Poser! |
MILDRED(Biting her lips angrily.) You are right. But would that my millions were not so anemically chaste! |
AUNTYes, for a fresh pose I have no doubt you would drag the name of Douglas in the gutter! |
MILDREDFrom which it sprang. Good-by, Aunt. Dont pray too hard that I may fall into the fiery furnace. |
AUNTPoser! |
MILDRED(Viciously.) Old hag! (She slaps her aunt insultingly across the face and walks off, laughing gaily.) |
AUNT(Screams after her.) I said poser! (Curtain) |
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