Part 33 (1/2)
ERNEST
[_with the same scorn and a snap of the fingers_]
Then _that_ for my career. I'll go back into private practice and make a million.
HELEN
That's just what I said you'd do. Just what you must not do! Your work is needed by the world.
ERNEST
[_wooing_]
You are my world and I need you.... But there is no love without marriage, no marriage without money.... We can take it or leave it. Can we leave it? No! I can't--you can't! Come! [_She steps back slowly._]
Why should we sacrifice the best! Come!
HELEN
So _this_ is what marriage means! Then I _cannot_ marry you, Ernest!
ERNEST
You cannot do without me, Helen! [_Holds out his arms._] Come! You have been in my arms once. You and I can never forget that now. We can never go back now. It's all--or nothing now. Come! [_She is struggling against her pa.s.sion. He stands still, with arms held out._] I shall not woo you against your will, but you are coming to me! Because, by all the powers of earth and heaven, you are mine and I am yours! Come!
[_Like a homing pigeon she darts into his arms with a gasp of joy.
A rapturous embrace in silence with the moonlight streaming down upon them. The music has stopped._
_JOHN, dressed for dinner, strolls out upon the terrace. He stops abruptly upon discovering them. The lovers are too absorbed to be aware of his presence._
ACT II
_It is the next morning, Sunday._
_It appears that at JOHN'S country place they have breakfast at small tables out upon the broad, shaded terrace overlooking the glorious view of his little farm._
_ERNEST and THEODORE, the scientist and the clergyman, are breakfasting together. The others are either breakfasting in their rooms or are not yet down, it being Sunday._
_The man of G.o.d is enjoying his material blessings heartily. Also he seems to be enjoying his view of the man of science, who eats little and says less._
THEODORE