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Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes

Belle Marshall Locke
4.9/5 (9185 ratings)
Description:This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1907. Excerpt: ... FRED S FIANCEE. 55 Mrs. Bidderby. My friend, Miss Dexter, who is visiting me for a week. Mrs. T. Miss Dexter, I am delighted. (To Mrs. BidDerby.) So kind of you to give me this pleasure. (Seats Miss Dexter by pile of photographs, and draws Mrs. BidDerby down beside her.) I suppose you have been in New York before, Miss Dexter? Miss D. Oh, yes; quite often. Mrs. T. No need to ask if you like New York; every one does, you know. Miss D. No--(quickly correcting herself)--I mean, yes--yes; of course I like New York. (Falls to examining photographs.) Mrs. B. (in a low tone to Mrs. Taxton). Engaged! A bit absent-minded, you know. He isn't here. Mrs. T. Oh! (Looks at Miss Dexter.) That reminds me. What do you think I've just heard from that precious cousin of mine? Mrs. B. Frederick the Great? Mrs. T. Yes. Mrs. B. Is it startling? Mrs. T. Well, rather. Mrs. B. Then it can't be that he's engaged; that happens too often to him to be anything out of the common. (At the word "engaged" Miss Dexter looks up, becomes interested, but goes on looking at the photographs.) Mrs. T. Oh, now, you're not quite fair to Fred. I know he flirts--Mrs. B. Flirts? Good heavens! That's no name for it. He used to propose to a girl on an average of once a month right along. Perhaps he has reformed, now that he's gone in for the right thing. Mrs. T. Oh, I assure you he is frightfully in earnest this time! Mrs. B. Now, what sort of a woman do you imagine he's going to marry? Large, black-eyed girl, don't you think? Mrs. T. Oh, yes a regular Juno. He always admired tall women. Miss D. (looks down on her small proportions a trifle depreciatingly, then smiles and murmurs aside). I'm glad my dear boy doesn't. I'm glad he likes small girls. Mrs. T. She has masses of dark hair, looks well in dia...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes. To get started finding Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed.
Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
General Books
Release
2012
ISBN
1151642908

Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes

Belle Marshall Locke
4.4/5 (1290744 ratings)
Description: This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1907. Excerpt: ... FRED S FIANCEE. 55 Mrs. Bidderby. My friend, Miss Dexter, who is visiting me for a week. Mrs. T. Miss Dexter, I am delighted. (To Mrs. BidDerby.) So kind of you to give me this pleasure. (Seats Miss Dexter by pile of photographs, and draws Mrs. BidDerby down beside her.) I suppose you have been in New York before, Miss Dexter? Miss D. Oh, yes; quite often. Mrs. T. No need to ask if you like New York; every one does, you know. Miss D. No--(quickly correcting herself)--I mean, yes--yes; of course I like New York. (Falls to examining photographs.) Mrs. B. (in a low tone to Mrs. Taxton). Engaged! A bit absent-minded, you know. He isn't here. Mrs. T. Oh! (Looks at Miss Dexter.) That reminds me. What do you think I've just heard from that precious cousin of mine? Mrs. B. Frederick the Great? Mrs. T. Yes. Mrs. B. Is it startling? Mrs. T. Well, rather. Mrs. B. Then it can't be that he's engaged; that happens too often to him to be anything out of the common. (At the word "engaged" Miss Dexter looks up, becomes interested, but goes on looking at the photographs.) Mrs. T. Oh, now, you're not quite fair to Fred. I know he flirts--Mrs. B. Flirts? Good heavens! That's no name for it. He used to propose to a girl on an average of once a month right along. Perhaps he has reformed, now that he's gone in for the right thing. Mrs. T. Oh, I assure you he is frightfully in earnest this time! Mrs. B. Now, what sort of a woman do you imagine he's going to marry? Large, black-eyed girl, don't you think? Mrs. T. Oh, yes a regular Juno. He always admired tall women. Miss D. (looks down on her small proportions a trifle depreciatingly, then smiles and murmurs aside). I'm glad my dear boy doesn't. I'm glad he likes small girls. Mrs. T. She has masses of dark hair, looks well in dia...We have made it easy for you to find a PDF Ebooks without any digging. And by having access to our ebooks online or by storing it on your computer, you have convenient answers with Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes. To get started finding Humorous Monologues and Dramatic Scenes, you are right to find our website which has a comprehensive collection of manuals listed.
Our library is the biggest of these that have literally hundreds of thousands of different products represented.
Pages
Format
PDF, EPUB & Kindle Edition
Publisher
General Books
Release
2012
ISBN
1151642908

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