Minna von Barnhelm | Page 6

Gotthold Ephraim Lessing
with five hundred thalers' worth of louis d'ors, which the Landlord found in your desk?
MAJ. T. That is money given into my charge.
JUST. Not the hundred pistoles which your old sergeant brought you four or five weeks back?
MAJ. T. The same. Paul Werner's; right.
JUST. And you have not used them yet? Yet, sir, you may do what you please with them. I will answer for it that--
MAJ. T. Indeed!
JUST. Werner heard from me, how they had treated your claims upon the War Office. He heard--
MAJ. T. That I should certainly be a beggar soon, if I was not one already. I am much obliged to you, Just. And the news induced Werner to offer to share his little all with me. I am very glad that I guessed this. Listen, Just; let me have your account, directly, too; we must part.
JUST. How! what!
MAJ. T. Not a word. There is someone coming.

SCENE V. Lady /in mourning/, Major von Tellheim, Just
LADY. I ask your pardon, sir.
MAJ. T. Whom do you seek, Madam?
LADY. The worthy gentleman with whom I have the honour of speaking. You do not know me again. I am the widow of your late captain.
MAJ. T. Good heavens, Madam, how you are changed!
LADY. I have just risen from a sick bed, to which grief on the loss of my husband brought me. I am troubling you at a very early hour, Major von Tellheim, but I am going into the country, where a kind, but also unfortunate friend, has for the present offered me an asylum.
MAJ. T. (to Just). Leave us.

SCENE VI. Lady, Major von Tellheim
MAJ. T. Speak freely, Madam! You must not be ashamed of your bad fortune before me. Can I serve you in any way?
LADY. Major--
MAJ. T. I pity you, Madam! How can I serve you? You know your husband was my friend; my friend, I say, and I have always been sparing of this title.
LADY. Who knows better than I do how worthy you were of his friendship how worthy he was of yours? You would have been in his last thoughts, your name would have been the last sound on his dying lips, had not natural affection, stronger than friendship, demanded this sad prerogative for his unfortunate son, and his unhappy wife.
MAJ. T. Cease, Madam! I could willingly weep with you; but I have no tears to-day. Spare me! You come to me at a time when I might easily be misled to murmur against Providence. Oh! honest Marloff! Quick, Madam, what have you to request? If it is in my power to assist you, if it is in my power--
LADY. I cannot depart without fulfilling his last wishes. He recollected, shortly before his death, that he was dying a debtor to you, and he conjured me to discharge his debt with the first ready money I should have. I have sold his carriage, and come to redeem his note.
MAJ. T. What, Madam! Is that your object in coming?
LADY. It is. Permit me to count out the money to you.
MAJ. T. No, Madam. Marloff a debtor to me! that can hardly be. Let us look, however. (Takes out a pocketbook, and searches.) I find nothing of the kind.
LADY. You have doubtless mislaid his note; besides, it is nothing to the purpose. Permit me--
MAJ. T. No, Madam; I am careful not to mislay such documents. If I have not got it, it is a proof that I never had it, or that it has been honoured and already returned by me.
LADY. Major!
MAJ. T. Without doubt, Madam; Marloff does not owe me anything--nor can I remember that he ever did owe me anything. This is so, Madam. He has much rather left me in his debt. I have never been able to do anything to repay a man who shared with me good and ill luck, honour and danger, for six years. I shall not forget that he has left a son. He shall be my son, as soon as I can be a father to him. The embarrassment in which I am at present--
LADY. Generous man! But do not think so meanly of me. Take the money, Major, and then at least I shall be at ease.
MAJ. T. What more do you require to tranquillize you, than my assurance that the money does not belong to me? Or do you wish that I should rob the young orphan of my friend? Rob, Madam; for that it would be in the true meaning of the word. The money belongs to him; invest it for him.
LADY. I understand you; pardon me if I do not yet rightly know how to accept a kindness. Where have you learnt that a mother will do more for her child than for the preservation of her own life? I am going--
MAJ. T.
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