Erdgeist (Earth-Spirit) - LightNovelsOnl.com
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ALVA. Since I've grown older, I can only pity him. He will never comprehend me. There he is making up a story for himself about a little diplomatic game that puts me in the role of laboring against his marriage with the Countess.
LULU. Does she still look as innocently as ever at the world?
ALVA. She loves him. I'm convinced of that. Her family has tried everything to make her turn back. I don't think any sacrifice in the world would be too great for her for his sake.
LULU. (Holds out her gla.s.s to him.) A little more, please.
ALVA. (Giving it to her.) You're drinking too much.
LULU. He shall learn to believe in my success! He doesn't believe in any art. He believes only in papers.
ALVA. He believes in nothing.
LULU. He brought me into the theater in order that someone might eventually be found rich enough to marry me.
ALVA. Well, alright. Why need that trouble us?
LULU. I am to be glad if I can dance myself into a millionaire's heart.
ALVA. G.o.d defend that anyone should take you from us!
LULU. You've composed the music for it, though.
ALVA. You know that it was always my wish to write a piece for you.
LULU. I am not at all made for the stage, however.
ALVA. You came into the world a dancer!
LULU. Why don't you write your things at least as interesting as life is?
ALVA. Because if we did no man would believe us.
LULU. If I didn't know more about acting than the people on the stage do, what might not have happened to me?
ALVA. I've provided your part with all the impossibilities imaginable, though.
LULU. With hocus-pocus like that no dog is lured from the stove in the real world.
ALVA. It's enough for me that the public finds itself most tremendously stirred up.
LULU. But _I_'d like to find myself most tremendously stirred up.
(Drinks.)
ALVA. You don't seem to be in need of much more for that.
LULU. No one of them realizes anything about the others. Each thinks that he alone is the unhappy victim.
ALVA. But how can you feel that?
LULU. There runs up one's body such an icy shudder.
ALVA. You are incredible. (An electric bell rings over the door.)
LULU. My cape.... I shall keep in the proscenium!
ALVA. (Putting a wide shawl round her shoulders.) Here is your cape.
LULU. He shall have nothing more to fear for his shameless boosting.
ALVA. Keep yourself under control!
LULU. G.o.d grant that I dance the last sparks of intelligence out of their heads. (Exit.)
ALVA. Yes, a more interesting piece could be written about her. (Sits, right, and takes out his note-book. Writes. Looks up.) First act: Dr. Goll. Rotten already! I can call up Dr. Goll from purgatory or wherever else he's doing penance for his orgies, but I'll be made responsible for his sins. (Long-continued but much deadened applause and bravos outside.) They rage there as in a menagery when the meat appears at the cage. Second act: Walter Schwarz. Still more impossible!
How our souls do strip off their last coverings in the light of such lightning-strokes! Third act? Is it really to go on this way? (The attendant opens the door from outside and lets Escerny enter. He acts as though he were at home, and without greeting Alva takes the chair near the mirror. Alva continues, not heeding him.) It can not go on this way in the third act!
ESCERNY. Up to the middle of the third act it didn't seem to go so well to-day as usual.
ALVA. I was not on the stage.
ESCERNY. Now she's in full career again.
ALVA. She's lengthening each number.
ESCERNY. I once had the pleasure of meeting the artiste at Schon's.
ALVA. My father has brought her before the public by some critiques in his paper.
ESCERNY. (Bowing slightly.) I was conferring with Dr. Schon about the publication of my discoveries at Lake Tanganika.
ALVA. (Bowing slightly.) His remarks leave no doubt that he takes the liveliest interest in your work.
ESCERNY. It's a very good thing in the artiste that the =public= does not exist for her at all.
ALVA. As a child she learned the quick changing of clothes; but I was surprised to discover such an expressive dancer in her.
ESCERNY. When she dances her solo she is intoxicated with her own beauty, with which she herself seems to be mortally in love.
ALVA. Here she comes. (Gets up and opens the door. Enter Lulu.)
LULU. (Without wreath or basket, to Alva.) You're called for. I was three times before the curtain. (To Escerny.) Dr. Schon is not in your box?
ESCERNY. Not in mine.
ALVA. (To Lulu.) Didn't you see him?
LULU. He is probably away again.