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Tanner Turgeon at Aug 04, 2020 12:57 PM

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A RECONCILIATION.

A Comedy in One Act by Elia W. Peattie.

CHARACTERS.

FRANZ [?]. }
KARL SCHULTZ. } Musicians.

Mercy Woods -- Her daughter.

(Scene: Two very small lodging rooms in a large city. The partition between the two rooms divides the stage in halves. Each room contains a single bed, a table, and some chairs. One room has a piano. The other [?] a violin case conspicuously placed.

Mrs. Woods and Mercy enter the room of Franz [?] -- the one which contains the piano. "Mercy" carries a bunch of roses. Mrs. Woods has a tea tray.)

MRS WOODS -- It's fifteen minutes past his time. When he does come he'll be in such a rush to get away again to that dreadful society, where the men drink beer and sing bass choruses. It's raining worse than ever outside, and if he gets wet it will make his cough a great deal worse.

(Mercy puts in it the roses in a Flemish jug on the trouble and carries the rest of the roses [?] the adjoining room and puts them in a vase on the table beside the violin. There is a slight noise without us of the elevator stopping. The women look up expectantly. And Mueller enters his room. Throughout he speaks with a slight German accent not necessary to indicate in the spelling, and more a matter of ludiction than anything else. The same applies to Heri Schultze.)

MUELLER Good evening, Mrs. Woods. I see you have not forgotten to bring up [?]. You are very kind, I assure you.

MRS. WOODS -- I knew you would be wet to the skin. You see, I have a fire started. What a shame it is you have to go out tonight! Come over here and dry yourself Why is it, I should like to know, that you never carry an umbrella?

[MURILLER?] -- My dear Mrs. Woods, you so exaggerate. I do sometimes carry an umbrella. But the truth is, Mr. Schultze until I have only one between us, and he has it.

MRS. WOODS -- Now you see the inconveniences of falling out! Here are you with a tire, and [?] without any. And him with an umbrella, and you without any, and all because of a quarrel over goodness known what. When are you going to make up? You promised me last night --

MUELLER -- Pardon me, Mrs. Woods. I promised you nothing. You tried to make me apologize to a man to whom I owe no apology -- to [?], madam, who, under the preleuse of friendliness, has wounded my feelings -- a man who had the impertinence to say that I did not know how to phrase Ratt's andanto in A major. A composition, [?], that I know as well as you know your alphabet!

256

A RECONCILIATION.

A Comedy in One Act by Elia W. Peattie.

CHARACTERS.

FRANZ [?]. }
KARL SCHULTZ. } Musicians.

Mercy Woods -- Her daughter.

(Scene: Two very small lodging rooms in a large city. The partition between the two rooms divides the stage in halves. Each room contains a single bed, a table, and some chairs. One room has a piano. The other [?] a violin case conspicuously placed.

Mrs. Woods and Mercy enter the room of Franz [?] -- the one which contains the piano. "Mercy" carries a bunch of roses. Mrs. Woods has a tea tray.)

MRS WOODS -- It's fifteen minutes past his time. When he does come he'll be in such a rush to get away again to that dreadful society, where the men drink beer and sing bass choruses. It's raining worse than ever outside, and if he gets wet it will make his cough a great deal worse.