LightNovesOnl.com

Seven Short Plays Part 7

Seven Short Plays - LightNovelsOnl.com

You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.

_Mr. Quirke:_ (_Gloomily._) Sometimes they will, and more times they will not.

_Miss Joyce:_ And where will you be finding a lodging, Mr. Halvey?

_Hyacinth:_ I was going to ask that myself, ma'am. I don't know the town.

_Miss Joyce:_ I know of a good lodging, but it is only a very good man would be taken into it.

_Mrs. Delane:_ Sure there could be no objection there to Mr. Halvey.

There is no appearance on him but what is good, and the Sergeant after taking him up the way he is doing.

_Miss Joyce:_ You will be near to the Sergeant in the lodging I speak of. The house is convenient to the barracks.

_Hyacinth:_ (_Doubtfully._) To the barracks?

_Miss Joyce:_ Alongside of it and the barrack yard behind. And that's not all. It is opposite to the priest's house.

_Hyacinth:_ Opposite, is it?

_Miss Joyce:_ A very respectable place, indeed, and a very clean room you will get. I know it well. The curate can see into it from his window.

_Hyacinth:_ Can he now?

_Fardy:_ There was a good many, I am thinking, went into that lodging and left it after.

_Miss Joyce:_ (_Sharply._) It is a lodging you will never be let into or let stop in, Fardy. If they did go they were a good riddance.

_Fardy:_ John Hart, the plumber, left it--

_Miss Joyce:_ If he did it was because he dared not pa.s.s the police coming in, as he used, with a rabbit he was after snaring in his hand.

_Fardy:_ The schoolmaster himself left it.

_Miss Joyce:_ He needn't have left it if he hadn't taken to card-playing. What way could you say your prayers, and shadows shuffling and dealing before you on the blind?

_Hyacinth:_ I think maybe I'd best look around a bit before I'll settle in a lodging--

_Miss Joyce:_ Not at all. _You_ won't be wanting to pull down the blind.

_Mrs. Delane:_ It is not likely _you_ will be snaring rabbits.

_Miss Joyce:_ Or bringing in a bottle and taking an odd gla.s.s the way James Kelly did.

_Mrs. Delane:_ Or writing threatening notices, and the police taking a view of you from the rear.

_Miss Joyce:_ Or going to roadside dances, or running after good-for-nothing young girls--

_Hyacinth:_ I give you my word I'm not so harmless as you think.

_Mrs. Delane:_ Would you be putting a lie on these, Mr. Halvey?

(_Touching testimonials._) I know well the way you will be spending the evenings, writing letters to your relations--

_Miss Joyce:_ Learning O'Growney's exercises--

_Mrs. Delane:_ Sticking post cards in an alb.u.m for the convent bazaar.

_Miss Joyce:_ Reading the _Catholic Young Man_--

_Mrs. Delane:_ Playing the melodies on a melodeon--

_Miss Joyce:_ Looking at the pictures in the _Lives of the Saints_.

I'll hurry on and engage the room for you.

_Hyacinth:_ Wait. Wait a minute--

_Miss Joyce:_ No trouble at all. I told you it was just opposite.

(_Goes._)

_Mr. Quirke:_ I suppose I must go upstairs and ready myself for the meeting. If it wasn't for the contract I have for the soldiers'

barracks and the Sergeant's good word, I wouldn't go anear it. (_Goes into shop._)

_Mrs. Delane:_ I should be making myself ready too. I must be in good time to see you being made an example of, Mr. Halvey. It is I myself was the first to say it; you will be a credit to the town. (_Goes._)

_Hyacinth:_ (_In a tone of agony._) I wish I had never seen Cloon.

_Fardy:_ What is on you?

_Hyacinth:_ I wish I had never left Carrow. I wish I had been drowned the first day I thought of it, and I'd be better off.

_Fardy:_ What is it ails you?

_Hyacinth:_ I wouldn't for the best pound ever I had be in this place to-day.

_Fardy:_ I don't know what you are talking about.

_Hyacinth:_ To have left Carrow, if it was a poor place, where I had my comrades, and an odd spree, and a game of cards-and a coursing match coming on, and I promised a new greyhound from the city of Cork. I'll die in this place, the way I am. I'll be too much closed in.

_Fardy:_ Sure it mightn't be as bad as what you think.

_Hyacinth:_ Will you tell me, I ask you, what way can I undo it?

_Fardy:_ What is it you are wanting to undo?

_Hyacinth:_ Will you tell me what way can I get rid of my character?

_Fardy:_ To get rid of it, is it?

_Hyacinth:_ That is what I said. Aren't you after hearing the great character they are after putting on me?

Click Like and comment to support us!

RECENTLY UPDATED NOVELS

About Seven Short Plays Part 7 novel

You're reading Seven Short Plays by Author(s): Lady Gregory. This novel has been translated and updated at LightNovelsOnl.com and has already 586 views. And it would be great if you choose to read and follow your favorite novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest novels, a novel list updates everyday and free. LightNovelsOnl.com is a very smart website for reading novels online, friendly on mobile. If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact us at [email protected] or just simply leave your comment so we'll know how to make you happy.