The Dramatic Works of G. E. Lessing - LightNovelsOnl.com
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You wish it, Sara?
SARA.
Do not stay now, dearest Mellefont, but come back again soon! And come with a more joyful face, I will wis.h.!.+ You doubtless expect an unpleasant answer. Don't let this disturb you. I am more desirous to see whether after all you can gracefully prefer me to an inheritance, than I am to know that you are in the possession of one.
MELLEFONT.
I obey. (_In a warning tone_.) I shall be sure to come back in a moment, Madam.
MARWOOD (_aside_).
Lucky so far. (_Exit_ Mellefont.)
Scene VIII.
Sara, Marwood.
SARA.
My good Mellefont sometimes gives his polite phrases quite a wrong accent. Do not you think so too, Madam?
MARWOOD.
I am no doubt too much accustomed to his way already to notice anything of that sort.
SARA.
Will you not take a seat, Madam?
MARWOOD.
If you desire it. (_Aside, whilst they are seating themselves_.) I must not let this moment slip by unused.
SARA.
Tell me! Shall I not be the most enviable of women with my Mellefont?
MARWOOD.
If Mellefont knows how to appreciate his happiness, Miss Sampson will make him the most enviable of men. But----
SARA.
A "but," and then a pause, Madam----
MARWOOD.
I am frank, Miss Sampson.
SARA.
And for this reason infinitely more to be esteemed.
MARWOOD.
Frank--not seldom imprudently so. My "but" is a proof of it. A very imprudent "but."
SARA.
I do not think that my Lady Solmes can wish through this evasion to make me more uneasy. It must be a cruel mercy that only rouses suspicions of an evil which it might disclose.
MARWOOD.
Not at all, Miss Sampson! You attach far too much importance to my "but." Mellefont is a relation of mine----
SARA.
Then all the more important is the slightest charge which you have to make against him.
MARWOOD.
But even were Mellefont my brother, I must tell you, that I should unhesitatingly side with one of my own s.e.x against him, if I perceived that he did not act quite honestly towards her. We women ought properly to consider every insult shown to one of us as an insult to the whole s.e.x, and to make it a common affair, in which even the sister and mother of the guilty one ought not to hesitate to share.
SARA.
This remark----
MARWOOD.
Has already been my guide now and then in doubtful cases.
SARA.
And promises me--I tremble.
MARWOOD.
No, Miss Sampson, if you mean to tremble, let us speak of something else----
SARA.
Cruel woman!
MARWOOD.
I am sorry to be misunderstood. I at least, if I place myself in imagination in Miss Sampson's position, would regard as a favour any more exact information which one might give me about the man with whose fate I was about to unite my own for ever.