Skip to content
Linespedia

"Au Revoir." A Dramatic Vignette.

Topics: classic

SCENE.--The Fountain in the Garden of the Luxembourg. It is surrounded by Promenaders.     MONSIEUR JOLICOEUR.     A LADY (unknown).     M. JOLICOEUR.     'Tis she, no doubt. Brunette,--and tall:     A charming figure, above all!     This promises.--Ahem!     THE LADY.     Monsieur?     Ah! it is three. Then Monsieur's name     Is JOLICOEUR?...     M. JOLICOEUR.     Madame, the same.     THE LADY.     And Monsieur's goodness has to say?...     Your note?...     M. JOLICOEUR.     Your note.     THE LADY.     Forgive me.--Nay.     (Reads)     "If Madame [I omit] will be     Beside the Fountain-rail at Three,     Then Madame--possibly--may hear     News of her Spaniel. JOLICOEUR."     Monsieur denies his note?     M. JOLICOEUR.     I do.     Now let me read the one from you.     "If Monsieur Jolicoeur will be     Beside the Fountain-rail at Three,     Then Monsieur--possibly--may meet     An old Acquaintance. 'INDISCREET.'"     THE LADY (scandalized).     Ah, what a folly! 'Tis not true.     I never met Monsieur. And you?     M. JOLICOEUR (with gallantry).     Have lived in vain till now. But see:     We are observed.     THE LADY. (looking round).     I comprehend....     (After a pause.)     Monsieur, malicious brains combine     For your discomfiture, and mine.     Let us defeat that ill design.     If Monsieur but ... (hesitating).     M. JOLICOEUR (bowing).     Rely on me.     THE LADY (still hesitating).     Monsieur, I know, will understand ...     M. JOLICOEUR.     Madame, I wait but your command.     THE LADY.     You are too good. Then condescend     At once to be a new-found Friend!     M. JOLICOEUR (entering upon the part forthwith).     How? I am charmed,--enchanted. Ah!     What ages since we met ... at Spa?     THE LADY (a little disconcerted).     At Ems, I think. Monsieur, maybe,     Will recollect the Orangery?     M. JOLICOEUR.     At Ems, of course. But Madame's face     Might make one well forget a place.     THE LADY.     It seems so. Still, Monsieur recalls     The Krhaus, and the concert-balls?     M. JOLICOEUR.     Assuredly. Though there again     'Tis Madame's image I retain.     THE LADY.     Monsieur is skilled in ... repartee.     (How do they take it?--Can you see?)     M. JOLICOEUR.     Nay,--Madame furnishes the wit.     (They don't know what to make of it!)     THE LADY.     And Monsieur's friend who sometimes came?...     That clever ... I forget the name.     M. JOLICOEUR.     The BARON?... It escapes me, too.     'Twas doubtless he that Madame knew?     THE LADY (archly).     Precisely. But, my carriage waits.     Monsieur will see me to the gates?     M. JOLICOEUR (offering his arm).     I shall be charmed. (Your stratagem     Bids fair, I think, to conquer them.)      (Aside)     (Who is she? I must find that out.)     --And Madame's husband thrives, no doubt?     THE LADY (off her guard).     Monsieur de BEAU--?... He died at Dle!     M. JOLICOEUR.     Truly. How sad!     (Aside)     (Yet, on the whole,     How fortunate! BEAU-pr?--BEAU-vau?     Which can it be? Ah, there they go!)     --Madame, your enemies retreat     With all the honours of ... defeat.     THE LADY.     Thanks to Monsieur. Monsieur has shown     A skill PRVILLE could not disown.     M. JOLICOEUR.     You flatter me. We need no skill     To act so nearly what we will.     Nay,--what may come to pass, if Fate     And Madame bid me cultivate ...     THE LADY (anticipating).     Alas!--no farther than the gate.     Monsieur, besides, is too polite     To profit by a jest so slight.     M. JOLICOEUR.     Distinctly. Still, I did but glance     At possibilities ... of Chance.     THE LADY.     Which must not serve Monsieur, I fear,     Beyond the little grating here.     M. JOLICOEUR (aside).     (She's perfect. One may push too far,     Piano, sano.)     (They reach the gates.)     Here we are.     Permit me, then ...     (Placing her in the carriage.)     And Madame goes?...     Your coachman?... Can I?...     THE LADY (smiling).     Thanks! he knows.     Thanks! Thanks!     M. JOLICOEUR (insidiously).     And shall we not renew     Our ... "Ems acquaintanceship?"     THE LADY (still smiling).     Adieu!     My thanks instead!     M. JOLICOEUR (with pathos).     It is too hard!     (Laying his hand on the grating.)     To find one's Paradise is barred!!     THE LADY.     Nay.--"Virtue is her own Reward!"     [Exit.     M. JOLICOEUR (solus).     BEAU-vau?--BEAU-vallon?--BEAU-manoir?--     But that's a detail!     (Waving his hand after the carriage.)     AU REVOIR!

AI analysis available. Enable JavaScript to interact.

About this line

"SCENE.--The Fountain in the Garden of the Luxembourg. It is surrounded by Promenaders...."

Exploring the themes of classic, Henry Austin Dobson delivers a powerful performance in ""Au Revoir." A Dramatic Vignette."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

Classified Tags

Related lines

"To One who asked why he wrote it.     You ask me what was his intent?     In truth, I'm not a German;     'Tis plain though that he neither m"

"nellie     If I were you, when ladies at the play, Sir,         Beckon and nod, a melodrama through,     I would not tur"

"He set the trumpet to his lips, and lo!     The clash of waves, the roar of winds that blow,     The strife and stress of Nature's warring thing"

"(To James Russell Lowell.)     Not from the ranks of those we call     Philosopher or Admiral,--     Neither as LOCKE was, nor as BLAKE,     Is"

"Here morning in the ploughman's songs is met     Ere yet one footstep shows in all the sky,     And twilight in the east, a doubt as yet,     S"

"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Continue Reading

"To One who asked why he wrote it.     You ask me..."

Weekly Poetic Insight

Join our literary Sanctuary

Get the most inspiring lines, poetic analysis, and secret shayaris delivered to your inbox every Sunday.