Category: Poetry

Geography and Plays

I see old peppers that are dried. We do not complain. We say winds are violent and I do not wish them. Wish for them. I do not wish to see the stars. Call it out of here. You mean that pole. No indeed I don't mean Inca.

Chapters

1. SCENE II.

I see old peppers that are dried. We do not complain. We say winds are violent and I do not wish them. Wish for them. I do not wish to see the stars. Call it out of here. You me...

85. SCENE IV.

When they were younger there may have been three of them sisters, and a mother. When they were younger there may have been three of them one of them a brother, and a mother. Whe...

10. ACT FIVE

What is a photograph a photograph is a sight and a sight is always a sight of something. Very likely there is a photograph that gives color if there is then there is that color...

32. ACT II.

(Mrs. Marchand.) Where was she born and with whom did she go to school. Did she know the Marquise of Bowers then or did she not. Did she come to know her in Italy. Did she learn...

31. SCENE XVII.

Yes and there is no necessity the explanation is not in your walking first of walking last of walking beside me the only reason that there is plenty of room is that I choose it.

94. PART II.

A long[log], what is a log to do when it floats Look pase[past] per. Look past per. Look past per. Look past fer. Leave little grace to bea, live[leave] little grace to bee. som...

47. Scene XI.

We are very careful to move together. For pleasure. For our pleasure. Oh yes indeed. We need you. More than ever. I am glad we are not cold. Not here. Believe me. Believe in me....

14. SCENE 3.

This was the way to reason. Did he leave after the other came. Was he a sea captain. Was the other one of the same profession although a citizen of another nation. Now as to the...

12. CHAPTER 3.

I understand why you are not better liked. A great many people expect you to teach them English. You do so and very well. You might be married and have a wife and son. With thes...

22. ACT II.

We will ride. We will come home. Yes we will. Don't bother. Yes you need to we understand. We will meet you at half past one old time. You need never be drunk. It is an older word.

93. Act 425.

Sweeter than water or cream or ice. Sweeter than bells of roses. Sweeter than winter or summer or spring. Sweeter than pretty posies. Sweeter than anything is my queen and lovin...

48. Act Three.

I spent I mentioned I spent that. I do reline most purses. I do so thoroughly. I do not please safer. This is in sailing. Don't be a silly. How can one sail.

49. Act Four.

When I mentioned still in mentioning I had to imagine that I did not estimate wild curses. I did not estimate wild curses. I don't like that name. I will not secrete more wishes...

50. Act Five.

I inquired into the exact celebration of visual memory. I met pleasing examples of amiable solicitude. I measured strength. I mean to go and stay. I shall certainly neglect sets...

51. Act Five.

We do understand our pleasure. Our pleasure is to do every day the work of that day, to cut our hair and not want blue eyes and to be reasonable and obedient. To obey and not sp...

15. SCENE 7.

Dear Mrs. Landor. How can you cease to be troubled about the rest of the winter. How can you cease to be troubled about the rest of the summer and the beginning of the winter.

6. ACT ONE

Silence is in blessing and chasing and coincidences being ripe. A simple melancholy clearly precious and on the surface and surrounded and mixed strangely. A vegetable window an...

86. Act I. The Schemils.

He runs away and stays away and strange to say he passes the lines and goes all the way and they do not find him but hear that he is there in the foreign legion in distant Algier.

17. SCENE II.

She would not insist. We were to have a saddle of mutton. We were served first with a not distasteful supply of vegetables. There was ham in it and pork. These had boiling and t...

9. ACT FOUR

A birthday, what is a birthday, a birthday is a speech, it is a second time when there is tobacco, it is only one time when there is poison. It is more than one time when the oc...

58. SCENE V.

53. ACT II.

We refuse to go to theater not because we don't like it but because we'd rather go to Penfolds. Penfolds have not a pleasant house we are going there for tea tomorrow.

75. SCENE III.

Wintering and rain it is not raining. It rains every day. Oh yes it makes the wood wet. We prefer it so. Thank you you will come to lunch. At what hour. One o'clock. John Russel...

16. SCENE I.

I do not wish to reply to a telegram, not because I find it difficult to explain in it that I wished to see you. I did wish to see you.

8. ACT THREE

A cut is a slice, a cut is the same slice. The reason that a cut is a slice is that if there is no hurry any time is just as useful.

11. Chapter 2.

Why can't you accomodate yourselves and leave me alone. I don't mean to day or yesterday or by counting. Everybody cannot count. An avenue goes through a city and a street cross...

67. SCENE II.

72. SCENE III.

20. SCENE V.

Sarah. I don't like him. I don't like his ways. I don't like it and I will not say it. I will do as you do and you do it so nicely. I will do as you do and then we were right. W...

66. ACT II.

We saw that and it was not a mistake to connect them with feeling pears so that they might know that they could answer very well. They were perfectly satisfactory. Millicent Mil...

63. PART II.

56. SCENE III.

62. SCENE IX.

28. SCENE XIV.

If you have as vacation one day a month and you take it every six months you have six days vacation. In those six days you can visit your family in the country or you can work i...

55. SCENE II.

7. ACT TWO

69. SCENE IV.

57. ACT IV.

18. SCENE III.

87. Act II.

19. SCENE IV.

If you were a Breton and read a book and understood Spanish would you be richer than a frenchman who talked in a field. If a man talked in a field and told about papers and cont...

71. SCENE II.

This is the end of the day. Tomorrow we will leave early. We meet everybody. Some all well fed. Will we be. Well I guess yes. It's foolish to be so abstemious. Are they really....

74. SCENE II.

92. Scene III.

65. SCENE III.

25. SCENE XI.

30. SCENE XVI.

45. Scene IX.

Were you surprised to see that we were so far long. You mean in stages. No of course not in selections. What have you selected. Very good sponges. But they are expensive. They a...

13. SCENE 2.

Dear Sir. Mr. Cousins told me that they were away when it happened. They recollected being asked if they were well if they had recovered from their emotion. They were also asked...

68. SCENE III.

77. ACT V.

23. SCENE IX.

The day I was settled down to making a fire I found that it came very easily. All I had to do was to be here when the wood came. We had not ordered any water.

26. SCENE XII.

80. SCENE IV.

52. Scene II.

84. SCENE III.

82. SCENE I.

73. ACT IV.

54. ACT III.

24. SCENE X.

21. SCENE VI.

38. Scene I.

27. SCENE XIII.

76. SCENE IV.

83. SCENE II.

3. ACT III.

She does speak very well doesn't she. She told them that there was not the slightest intention on the part of her countrymen to eat the fish that was not caught in their country.

59. SCENE VI.

2. ACT II.

29. SCENE XV.

5. Scene II.

64. SCENE II.

61. SCENE VIII.

Some roses which are here look like winter roses. That only means that they are bought Sunday instead of Friday that only means that they are bought Sunday instead of Friday.

46. Scene X.

You mean you didn't like the pottery. The brown one you mean. No the yellow. Yes I liked it very much at first. It was too big. This is not the way to say that you will come aga...

91. Scene II.

78. SCENE II.

81. SCENE V.

41. Scene V.

88. Act II.

43. Scene VII.

60. SCENE VII.

79. SCENE III.

90. Act 54.

37. ACT VI.

70. ACT III.

39. Scene III.

89. Act II.

44. Scene VIII.

40. Scene IV.

4. ACT IV.

34. ACT I.

33. ACT I.

36. ACT II.

42. Scene VI.

35. ACT I.