NANETTE. He made himself a garden, everything in it was arranged as if for people only an inch high.
ROBERT. But there are no such people.
NANETTE. Of course not. That is why every one made fun of him. But he went on building it just the same. It was scaled so that he was a giant in it. There were little houses and little walks and little boats sailing on lakes two feet across. The geraniums were great trees, his pet turtle was like a prehistoric monster, and the hollyhocks pierced heaven itself. When people told him that no one could really enjoy such a garden he said that the ants could, and they ought to appreciate a little beauty because they were always so busy.
ROBERT. That was like Maurice. How vast the sky must have seemed to him who loved minute shadowy things!
NANETTE. He was always timid. Everything violent frightened him. They made him positively ill. And how he dreaded the sea! Do you remember how Madame tried to get him to swim?
ROBERT. But he did learn to swim finally.
NANETTE. Yes. But he told me one day--"Nanette, when I hear the surf my whole body shakes with fear. I feel as if some terrible giant were calling me. I hate the great sea."
ROBERT. And he fell into the sea, didn"t he?
NANETTE. Two thousand feet.
ROBERT. What he must have endured all alone!
NANETTE. No one can know.
[_After a pause._]
ROBERT. You say Madame has changed?
NANETTE [_looking toward left before speaking_]. Yes.
ROBERT. Why do you look around like that? Is there anything wrong?
NANETTE. Yes, there is.
ROBERT. What do you mean? Is Madame very ill?
NANETTE. There has been a change.
ROBERT. What kind of a change?
NANETTE. Madame has changed. You wouldn"t know her, Monsieur Robert.
ROBERT. You mean she has grown old? Madame was always so beautiful. Has her hair turned white?
NANETTE. No, it isn"t that.
ROBERT. You mean she is so stricken she can"t talk with me? She won"t see me?
NANETTE. She will see you. But for your own peace of mind I advise you to go away. I will tell her that you came. That will be the best way.
ROBERT. A change, you say? You mean she has altered so....
NANETTE. Yes. The truth is, it is Madame"s mind.
ROBERT. Her mind! No, no, don"t tell me that. That is the worst of all.
Do you mean that she is not clear in her mind? She wouldn"t know me? She wouldn"t be able to remember? Nanette, I can"t believe it. I can"t believe that this great and beautiful woman could give in like that.
Everywhere you see the small ones breaking down. But the great spirits like hers--oh they must keep up. What else is there left for us if they give up, too?
NANETTE. If you could hear her talk, Monsieur Robert. The things she says.... Sometimes I have to run away and lock my door. I am afraid of her.
ROBERT. I cannot stay now, Nanette. I couldn"t bear it. It was hard enough for me before. What can I say to her, Nanette, when my own grief finds no comfort? Maurice was like my own son. He was the fruit of my own soul. Into him went all the spiritual love I had for Madame, the love which for fourteen years....
NANETTE. Monsieur Robert!
ROBERT. Oh, Nanette, forget your piety for once and let me speak my heart out.
NANETTE [_with her strange, bitter coldness_]. No, Monsieur Robert, I can never forget what you call my--piety.
ROBERT. No, you never can. That is why I have never been able to talk to you. Your heart is closed to all but Maurice.
NANETTE. Yes, that is true. My heart has been like one of those vases of domestic use which the ancients buried with the dead in their tombs. All that was warm and beautiful in me is closed away forever with Maurice.
Although I was never more to him than a familiar object which was a part of his everyday life. Only his old nurse.
ROBERT. How did he come to inspire such love in every one who came near him?
NANETTE. Because he was young and beautiful.
ROBERT. But that is simply a temporary state.
NANETTE. Maurice would always have been young and beautiful.
ROBERT. Yes, he made you believe that. When he talked with you you felt glad and young as if you"d heard music.
NANETTE. He loved life.
ROBERT. Yet he was a coward.
NANETTE. But he always dared to do what he was afraid to do.
ROBERT. Yes, that is where he was different from me. That is what I have never been able to do--to dare as far as I could imagine.
[_He goes slowly toward the back._]
NANETTE [_rising_]. You are going?
ROBERT. Yes. I can"t see her. You see the state I am in. What could I say to her? I had better go.
NANETTE. Yes, it is the best way for you both.
[_Robert hesitates at the chair right. He tentatively puts a hand out to touch the arm of it, and regards it curiously._]