The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith

Arthur Wing Pinero
The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith, by
Arthur Wing

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Arthur Wing Pinero
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Title: The Notorious Mrs. Ebbsmith
Author: Arthur Wing Pinero
Release Date: March 14, 2005 [eBook #15357]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE
NOTORIOUS MRS. EBBSMITH***
E-text prepared by Stephen Bishop

THE NOTORIOUS MRS. EBBSMITH
by

ARTHUR WING PINERO

THE PERSONS OF THE PLAY
AGNES LUCAS CLEEVE SYBIL CLEEVE SIR SANDFORD
CLEEVE DUKE OF ST. OLPHERTS GERTRUDE THORPE REV.
AMOS WINTERFIELD SIR GEORGE BRODRICK DR. KIRKE
FORTUNE ANTONIO POPPI NELLA HEPHZIBAH

The Scene is laid in Venice--first at the Palazzo Arconati, a lodging
house on the Grand Canal; afterwards in an apartment in the Campo S.
Bartolomeo.
It is Easter-tide, a week passing between the events of the First and
Second Acts.

THE FIRST ACT
The Scene is a room in the Palazzo Arconati, on the Grand Canal,
Venice. The room itself is beautiful in its decayed grandeur, but the
furnishings and hangings are either tawdry and meretricious or
avowedly modern. The three windows at the back open on to a narrow
covered balcony, or loggia, and through them can be seen the west side
of the canal. Between recessed double doors on either side of the room
is a fireplace out of use and a marble mantelpiece, but a tiled stove is
used for a wood fire. Breakfast things are laid on the table. The sun
streams into the room.
[ANTONIO POPPI and NELLA, two Venetian servants, with a touch
of the picturesque in their attire, are engaged in clearing the
breakfast-table.]
NELLA. [Turning her head.] Ascolta! (Listen!)

ANTONIO. Una gondola allo scalo. (A gondala at our steps.)[They
open the centre-window, go out on to the balcony, and look down
below.] La Signora Thorpe. (The Signora Thorpe.)
NELLO. Con suo fratello. (With her brother.)
ANTONIO. [Calling.] Buon di, Signor Winterfield! Iddio la benedica!
[Good day, Signor Winterfield! The blessing of God be upon you!]
NELLA. [Calling.] Buon di, Signora! La Madonna Passista! (Good day,
Signora! May the Virgin have you in her keeping!)
ANTONIO. [Returning to the room.] Noi siamo in ritardo di tutto
questa mattina. (We are behindhand with everything this morning.)
NELLA. [Following him.] E vero. (That is true.)
ANTONIO. [Bustling about.] La stufa! (The stove!)
NELLA. [Throwing wood into the stove.] Che tua sia benedetta per
rammentarmelo! Questi Inglesi non si contentono del sole. (Bless you
for remembering it. These English are not content with the sun.)
[Leaving only a vase of flowers upon the table, they hurry out with the
breakfast things. At the same moment, FORTUNE, a manservant,
enters, showing in MRS. THORPE and the REV. AMOS
WINTERFIELD. GERTRUDE THORPE is a pretty, frank-looking
young woman of about seven and twenty. She is in mourning, and has
sorrowful eyes and a complexion that is too delicate, but natural
cheerfulness and brightness are seen through all. AMOS is about
forty--big, burly, gruff; he is untidily dressed, and has a pipe in his
hand. FORTUNE is carrying a pair of freshly-cleaned tan-coloured
boots upon boot-trees.]
GERTRUDE. Now, Fortune, you ought to have told us downstairs that
Dr. Kirke is with Mrs. Cleeve.
AMOS. Come away, Gerty. Mrs. Cleeve can't want to be bored with us

just now.
FORTUNE. Mrs. Cleeve give 'er ordares she is always to be bored wiz
Madame Thorpe and Mr. Winterfield.
AMOS. Ha, Ha!
GERTRUDE. [Smiling.] Fortune!
FORTUNE. Besides, ze doctares vill go in 'alf a minute, you see.
GERTRUDE. Doctors!
AMOS. What, is there another doctor with Dr. Kirke?
FORTUNE. Ze great physician, Sir Brodrick.
GERTRUDE. Sir George Brodrick? Amos!
AMOS. Doesn't Mr. Cleeve feel so well?
FORTUNE. Oh, yes. But Mrs. Cleeve 'appen to read in a newspapare
zat Sir George Brodrick vas in Florence for ze Paque--ze Eastare. Sir
Brodrick vas Mr. Cleeve's doctor in London, Mrs. Cleeve tell me, so'e
is acquainted wiz Mr. Cleeve's inside.
AMOS. Ho, ho!
GERTRUDE. Mr. Cleeve's constitution, Fortune.
FORTUNE. Excuse, madame. Zerefore Mrs. Cleeve she telegraph for
Sir Brodrick to come to Venise.
AMOS. To consult with Dr. Kirke, I suppose.
FORTUNE. [Listening.] 'Ere is ze doctares.
[DR. KIRKE enters, followed by SIR GEORGE BRODRICK. KIRKE
is a shabby, snuff-taking old gentleman--blunt but kind; SIR GEORGE,

on the contrary, is scrupulously neat in his dress, and has a suave,
professional manner. FORTUNE withdraws]
KIRKE. Good morning, Mr. Winterfield. [To GERTRUDE.] How do
you do, my dear? You're getting some colour into your pretty face, I'm
glad to see. [To
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