Asa Oh, I ain"t afraid of you--both on you together.
Mrs M People sometimes look a great way off, for that which is near at hand. [Glancing at Augusta and Asa alternatively.]
Asa You don"t mean, Miss Gusta. [Augusta casts sheeps eyes at him.] Now, don"t look at me in that way. I can"t stand it, if you do, I"ll bust.
Mrs M Oh, if you only knew how refreshing this ingenuousness of yours is to an old woman of the world like me.
Asa Be you an old woman of the world?
Mrs M Yes, sir.
Aug Oh yes.
Asa Well I don"t doubt it in the least. [Aside.] This gal and the old woman are trying to get me on a string. [Aloud.] Wal, then, if a rough spun fellow like me was to come forward as a suitor for you daughter"s hand, you wouldn"t treat me as some folks do, when they find out I wasn"t heir to the fortune.
Mrs M Not heir to the fortune, Mr. Trenchard?
Asa Oh, no.
Aug What, no fortune?
Asa Nary red, it all comes to their barkin up the wrong tree about the old man"s property.
Mrs M Which he left to you.
Asa Oh, no.
Aug Not to you?
Asa No, which he meant to leave to me, but he thought better on it, and left it to his granddaughter Miss Mary Meredith.
Mrs M Miss Mary Meredith! Oh, I"m delighted.
Aug Delighted?
Asa Yes, you both look tickled to death. Now, some gals, and mothers would go away from a fellow when they found that out, but you don"t valley fortune, Miss Gusty?
Mrs M [Aside, crosses to Aug.] My love, you had better go.
Asa You crave affection, _you_ do. Now I"ve no fortune, but I"m filling over with affections which I"m ready to pour out all over you like apple sa.s.s, over roast pork.
Mrs M Mr. Trenchard, you will please recollect you are addressing my daughter, and in my presence.
Asa Yes, I"m offering her my heart and hand just as she wants them with nothing in "em.
Mrs M Augusta, dear, to your room.
Aug Yes, ma, the nasty beast. [Exit R.]
Mrs M I am aware, Mr. Trenchard, you are not used to the manners of good society, and that, alone, will excuse the impertinence of which you have been guilty.
Asa Don"t know the manners of good society, eh? Well, I guess I know enough to turn you inside out, old gal--you sockdologizing old man-trap.
Wal, now, when I think what I"ve thrown away in hard cash to-day I"m apt to call myself some awful hard names, 400,000 dollars is a big pile for a man to light his cigar with. If that gal had only given me herself in exchange, it wouldn"t have been a bad bargain. But I dare no more ask that gal to be my wife, than I dare ask Queen Victoria to dance a Cape Cod reel.
Enter Florence, L. 1 E.
Flo What do you mean by doing all these dreadful things?
Asa Which things.
Flo Come here sir. [He does so.]
Asa What"s the matter?
Flo Do you know this piece of paper? [Showing burnt paper.]
Asa Well I think I have seen it before. [Aside.] Its old Mark Trenchard"s will that I left half burned up like a landhead, that I am.
Flo And you"re determined to give up this fortune to Mary Meredith?
Asa Well, I couldn"t help it if I tried.
Flo Oh, don"t say that.
Asa I didn"t mean to do it when I first came here--hadn"t the least idea in the world of it, but when I saw that everlasting angel of a gal movin around among them doing fixins like a sunbeam in a shady place; and when I pictured her without a dollar in the world--I--well my old Adam riz right up, and I said, ""Asa do it""--and I did it.
Flo Well, I don"t know who your old Adam may be, but whoever it is, he"s a very honest man to consult you to do so good an action. But how dare you do such an outrageous thing? you impudent--you unceremonious, oh!
you unselfish man! you! you, you! [Smothers him with kisses, and runs off, R. 1 E.]
Asa Well, if that ain"t worth four hundred thousand dollars, I don"t know what is, it was sweeter than sweet cider right out of the bung hole. Let me see how things stand round here. Thanks to old whiskers I"ve got that ship for the sailor man, and that makes him and Miss Florence all hunk. Then there"s that darned old Coyle. Well I guess me and old Murcott can fix his flint for him. Then there"s--[Looks off, L.]
Christopher Columbus, here comes Mary.
Enter Mary, L. 1 E.
Mary Mr. Trenchard, what can I say to you but offer you my lifelong grat.i.tude.
Asa Don"t now, Miss, don"t--
Mary If I knew what else to offer. Heaven knows there is nothing that is mine to give that I would keep back.
Asa Give me yourself. [Bus.] I know what a rude, ill-mannered block I am; but there"s a heart inside me worth something, if it"s only for the sake of your dear little image, that"s planted right plump in the middle of it.
Mary Asa Trenchard, there is my hand, and my heart is in it.