Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works. Knowledge house

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Oscar Wilde: The Complete Works - Knowledge house

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      lord illingworth

      I will keep it now. And that will show you that I love my son, at least as much as you love him. For when I marry you, Rachel, there are some ambitions I shall have to surrender. High ambitions too, if any ambition is high.

      ·149· mrs. arbuthnot

      I decline to marry you, Lord Illingworth.

      lord illingworth

      Are you serious?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      Yes.

      lord illingworth

      Do tell me your reasons. They would interest me enormously.

      mrs. arbuthnot

      I have already explained them to my son.

      lord illingworth

      I suppose they were intensely sentimental, weren’t they? You women live by your emotions and for them. You have no philosophy of life.

      mrs. arbuthnot

      You are right. We women live by our emotions and for them. By our passions, and for them, if you will. I have two passions, Lord Illingworth: my love of him, my hate of you. You cannot kill those. They feed each other.

      ·150· lord illingworth

      What sort of love is that which needs to have hate as its brother?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      It is the sort of love I have for Gerald. Do you think that terrible? Well, it is terrible. All love is terrible. All love is a tragedy. I loved you once, Lord Illingworth. Oh, what a tragedy for a woman to have loved you!

      lord illingworth

      So you really refuse to marry me?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      Yes.

      lord illingworth

      Because you hate me?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      Yes.

      lord illingworth

      And does my son hate me as you do?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      No.

      ·151· lord illingworth

      I am glad of that, Rachel.

      mrs. arbuthnot

      He merely despises you.

      lord illingworth

      What a pity! What a pity for him, I mean.

      mrs. arbuthnot

      Don’t be deceived, George. Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely if ever do they forgive them.

      lord illingworth

      [Reads letter over again, very slowly.] May I ask by what arguments you made the boy who wrote this letter, this beautiful, passionate letter, believe that you should not marry his father, the father of your own child. [E: child?]

      mrs. arbuthnot

      It was not I who made him see it. It was another.

      lord illingworth

      What fin-de-siècle person?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      The Puritan, Lord Illingworth. [A pause.]

      ·152· lord illingworth

      [Winces, then rises slowly and goes over to table where his hat and gloves are. Mrs. Arbuthnot is standing close to the table. He picks up one of the gloves and begins putting it on.] There is not much then for me to do here, Rachel?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      Nothing.

      lord illingworth

      It is good-bye, is it?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      For ever, I hope, this time, Lord Illingworth.

      lord illingworth

      How curious! At this moment you look exactly as you looked the night you left me twenty years ago. You have just the same expression in your mouth. Upon my word, Rachel, no woman ever loved me as you did. Why, you gave yourself to me like a flower, to do anything I liked with. You were the prettiest of playthings, the most fascinating of small romances…. [Pulls out watch.] Quarter to two! Must be strolling back to Hunstanton. Don’t suppose I shall see you there again. I’m sorry, I am, really. It’s been an amusing experience to have met amongst ·153· people of one’s own rank, and treated quite seriously too, one’s mistress, and one’s——

      [Mrs. Arbuthnot snatches up glove and strikes Lord Illingworth across the face with it. Lord Illingworth starts. He is dazed by the insult of his punishment. Then he controls himself, and goes to window and looks out at his son. Sighs, and leaves the room.]

      mrs. arbuthnot

      [Falls sobbing on the sofa.] He would have said it. He would have said it.

      [Enter Gerald and Hester from the garden.]

      gerald

      Well, dear mother. You never came out after all. So we have come in to fetch you. Mother, you have not been crying? [Kneels down beside her.]

      mrs. arbuthnot

      My boy! My boy! My boy! [Running her fingers through his hair.]

      hester

      [Coming over.] But you have two children now. You’ll let me be your daughter?

      mrs. arbuthnot

      [Looking up.] Would you choose me for a mother?

      ·154· hester

      You of all women I have ever known.

      [They move towards the door leading into garden with their arms round each other’s waists. Gerald goes to table L.C. for his hat. On turning round he sees Lord Illingworth’s glove lying on the floor, and picks it up.]

      gerald

      Hallo, mother, whose glove is this? You have had a visitor. Who was it?

      mrs.

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