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Miss Lulu Bett

Chapter 5: ACT I
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Credits: The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https: //www. pgdp. net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive) was awarded by Columbia University in June, 1921, the prize of $1, 000 established by Joseph Pulitzer for “The American original play, performed in New York, which shall best represent the educational value and power of the stage in raising the standard of good morals, good taste and good manners. ”

MISS LULU BETT

ACT I

Scene i

The Deacon dining room: Plain rose paper, oak sideboard, straight chairs, a soft old brown divan, table laid for supper. Large pictures of, say, “Paul and Virginia” and Abbott Thayer’s “Motherhood.” A door left leads to kitchen; a door right front leads to the passage and the “other” room. Back are two windows with lace curtains, revealing shrubbery or blossoming plants; and a shelf with a clock and a photograph of Ninian Deacon. Over the table is a gas burner in a glass globe. In the center of the table is a pink tulip in a pot. The stage is empty.

[Enter Monona. She tiptoes to the table, tastes a dish or two, hides a cooky in her frock; begins a terrible little chant on miscellaneous notes.]

[Enter Dwight Deacon.]

Dwight

What! You don’t mean you’re in time for supper, baby?

Monona

I ain’t a baby.

Dwight

Ain’t. Ain’t. Ain’t.

Monona

Well, I ain’t.

Dwight

We shall have to take you in hand, mama and I. We shall-have-to-take-you in hand.

Monona

I ain’t such a bad girl.

Dwight

Ain’t. Ain’t. Ain’t.

[Enter Ina, Door R. E.]

Ina

Dwightie! Have I kept you waiting?

Dwight

It’s all right, my pet. Bear and forbear. Bear and forbear.

Ina

Everything’s on the table. I didn’t hear Lulu call us, though. She’s fearfully careless. And Dwight, she looks so bad—when there’s company I hate to have her around.

[They seat themselves.]

Dwight

My dear Ina, your sister is very different from you.

Ina

Well, Lulu certainly is a trial. Come Monona.

Dwight

Live and let live, my dear. We have to overlook, you know. What have we on the festive board to-night?

Ina

We have creamed salmon. On toast.

Monona

I don’t want any.

Dwight

What’s this? No salmon?

Monona

No.

Ina

Oh now, pet! You liked it before.

Monona

I don’t want any.

Dwight

Just a little? A very little? What is this? Progeny will not eat?

Ina

She can eat if she will eat. The trouble is, she will not take the time.

Dwight

She don’t put her mind on her meals.

Ina

Now, pettie, you must eat or you’ll get sick.

Monona

I don’t want any.

Ina

Well, pettie—then how would you like a nice egg?

Monona

No.

Ina

Some bread and milk?

Monona

No.

[Enter Lulu Bett. She carries a plate of muffins.]

Ina

Lulu, Monona won’t eat a thing. I should think you might think of something to fix for her.

Lulu

Can’t I make her a little milk toast?

Monona

Yes!

Ina

Well now, sister. Don’t toast it too much. That last was too—and it’s no use, she will not eat it if it’s burned.

Lulu

I won’t burn it on purpose.

Ina

Well, see that you don’t … Lulu! Which milk are you going to take?

Lulu

The bottle that sets in front, won’t I?

Ina

But that’s yesterday’s milk. No, take the fresh bottle from over back. Monona must be nourished.

Lulu

But then the yesterday’s’ll sour and I can’t make a custard pie—

Dwight

Kindly settle these domestic matters without bringing them to my attention at meal time.

[Observes the tulip.]

Flowers! Who’s been having flowers sent in?

Ina

Ask Lulu.

Dwight

Suitors?

Lulu

It was a quarter. There’ll be five flowers.

Dwight

You bought it?

Lulu

Yes. Five flowers. That’s a nickel apiece.

Dwight

Yet we give you a home on the supposition that you have no money to spend, even for the necessities.

Ina

Well, but Dwightie. Lulu isn’t strong enough to work. What’s the use—

Dwight

The justice business and the dental profession do not warrant the purchase of spring flowers in my home.

Ina

Well, but Dwightie—

Dwight

No more. Lulu meant no harm.

Ina

The back bottle, Lulu. And be as quick as you can. Remember, the back bottle. She has a terrible will, hangs on to her own ideas, and hangs on—

[Exit Lulu.]

Dwight

Forbearance my pet, forbearance. Baked potatoes. That’s good—that’s good. The baked potato contains more nourishment than potatoes prepared in any other way. Roasting retains it.

Ina

That’s what I always think.

Dwight

Where’s your mother? Isn’t she coming to supper?

Ina

No. Tantrim.

Dwight

Oh ho, mama has a tantrim, eh? My dear Ina, your mother is getting old. She don’t have as many clear-headed days as she did.

Ina

Mama’s mind is just as good as it ever was, sometimes.

Dwight

Hadn’t I better call her up?

Ina

You know how mama is.

[Enter Lulu. She takes flowerpot from table and throws it out the window. Exit Lulu.]

Dwight

I’d better see.

[Goes to door and opens it.]

Mother Bett!… Come and have some supper…. Looks to me Lulu’s muffins’d go down pretty easy! Come on—I had something funny to tell you and Ina….

[Returns.]

No use. She’s got a tall one on to-night, evidently. What’s the matter with her?

Ina

Well, I told Lulu to put the creamed salmon on the new blue platter, and mama thought I ought to use the old deep dish.

Dwight

You reminded her that you are mistress here in your own home? But gently, I hope?

Ina

Well—I reminded her. She said if I kept on using the best dishes I wouldn’t have a cup left for my own wake.

Dwight

And my little puss insisted?

Ina

Why of course. I wanted to have the table look nice for you, didn’t I?

Dwight

My precious pussy.

Ina

So then she walked off to her room.

[Monona sings her terrible little chant.]

Quiet, pettie, quiet!

Dwight

Softly, softly, softly, SOFTLY!… Well, here we are, aren’t we? I tell you people don’t know what living is if they don’t belong in a little family circle.

Ina

That’s what I always think.

Dwight

Just coming home here and sort of settling down—it’s worth more than a tonic at a dollar the bottle. Look at this room. See this table. Could anything be pleasanter?

Ina

Monona! Now, it’s all over both ruffles. And mama does try so hard….

Dwight

My dear. Can’t you put your mind on the occasion?

Ina

Well, but Monona is so messy.

Dwight

Women cannot generalize.

[Clock strikes half hour.]

Curious how that clock loses. It must be fully quarter to. It is quarter to! I’m pretty good at guessing time.

Ina

I’ve often noticed that.

Dwight

That clock is a terrible trial. Last night it was only twenty-three after when the half hour struck.

Ina

Twenty-one I thought.

Dwight

Twenty-three. My dear Ina, didn’t I particularly notice. It was twenty-three.

Monona

[Like lightning.]

I want my milk toast, I want my milk toast, I want my milk toast.

Ina

Do hurry, sister. She’s going to get nervous.

[Monona chants her chant. Enter Lulu.]

Lulu

I’ve got the toast here.

Ina

Did you burn it?

Lulu

Not black.

Dwight

There we are. Milk toast like a ku-ween. Where is our young lady daughter to-night?

Ina

She’s at Jenny Plows, at a teaparty.

Dwight

Oh ho, teaparty. Is it?

Lulu

We told you that this noon.

Dwight

[Frowning at Lulu.]

How much is salmon the can now, Ina?

Ina

How much is it, Lulu?

Lulu

The large ones are forty, that used to be twenty-five. And the small ones that were ten, they’re twenty-five. The butter’s about all gone. Shall I wait for the butter woman or get some creamery?

Dwight

Not at meal time, if you please, Lulu. The conversation at my table must not deal with domestic matters.

Lulu

I suppose salmon made me think of butter.

Dwight

There is not the remotest connection. Salmon comes from a river. Butter comes from a cow. A cow bears no relation to a river. A cow may drink from a river, she may do that, but I doubt if that was in your mind when you spoke—you’re not that subtle.

Lulu

No, that wasn’t in my mind.

[Enter Mother Bett.]

Dwight

Well, Mama Bett, hungry now?

Mrs. Bett

No, I’m not hungry.

Ina

We put a potato in the oven for you, mama.

Mrs. Bett

No, I thank you.

Dwight

And a muffin, Mama Bett.

Mrs. Bett

No, I thank you.

Lulu

Mama, can’t I fix you some fresh tea?

Mrs. Bett

That’s right, Lulie. You’re a good girl. And see that you put in enough tea so as a body can taste tea part of the way down.

Ina

Sit here with us, mama.

Mrs. Bett

No, I thank you. I’ll stand and keep my figger.

Dwight

You know you look like a queen when you stand up, straight back, high head, a regular wonder for your years, you are.

Mrs. Bett

Sometimes I think you try to flatter me.

[Sits.]

[Doorbell.]

Monona

I’ll go. I’ll go. Let me go.

Dwight

Now what can anybody be thinking of to call just at meal time. Can’t I even have a quiet supper with my family without the outside world clamoring?

Lulu

Maybe that’s the butter woman.

Dwight

Lulu, no more about the butter, please.

Monona

Come on in. Here’s Bobby to see you, papa, let’s feed him.

Dwight

Oh ho! So I’m the favored one. Then draw up to the festive board, Robert. A baked potato?

Bobby

No, sir. I—I wanted something else.

Dwight

What’s this? Came to see the justice about getting married, did you? Or the dentist to have your tooth pulled—eh? Same thing—eh, Ina? Ha! ha! ha!

Bobby

I—I wondered whether—I thought if you would give me a job….

Dwight

So that’s it.

Bobby

I thought maybe I might cut the grass or cut—cut something.

Dwight

My boy, every man should cut his own grass. Every man should come home at night, throw off his coat and, in his vigor, cut his own grass.

Bobby

Yes, sir.

Dwight

Exercise, exercise is next to bread—next to gluten. Hold on, though—hold on. After dental hours I want to begin presently to work my garden. I have two lots. Property is a burden. Suppose you cut the grass on the one lot through the spring.

Bobby

Good enough, sir. Can I start right in now? It isn’t dark yet.

Dwight

That’s right, that’s right. Energy—it’s the driving power of the nation.

[They rise, Dwight goes toward the door with Bobby.]

Start right in, by all means. You’ll find the mower in the shed, oiled and ready. Tools always ready—that’s my motto, my boy.

[Enter Di and Cornish. Cornish carries many favors.]

Ah ha!

Di

Where is everybody? Oh, hullo, Bobby! You came to see me?

Bobby

Oh, hullo! No. I came to see your father.

Di

Did you? Well, there he is. Look at him.

Bobby

You don’t need to tell me where to look or what to do. Good-by. I’ll find the mower, Mr. Deacon.

[Exit.]

Dwight

Mama! What do you s’pose? Di thought she had a beau—How are you, Cornish?

Di

Oh, papa! Why, I just hate Bobby Larkin, and the whole school knows it. Mama, wasn’t Mr. Cornish nice to help carry my favors?

Ina

Ah, Mr. Cornish! You see what a popular little girl we have.

Cornish

Yes, I suppose so. That is—isn’t that remarkable, Mrs. Deacon?

[He tries to greet Lulu, who is clearing the table.]

Di

Oh, papa, the sweetest party—and the dearest supper and the darlingest decorations and the georgeousest— Monona, let go of me!

Dwight

Children, children, can’t we have peace in this house?

Monona

Ah, you’ll catch it for talking so smarty.

Di

Oh, will I?

Ina

Monona, don’t stand listening to older people. Run around and play.