Pamela Giraud

Honoré de Balzac

Pamela Giraud

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Title: Pamela Giraud
Author: Honore de Balzac
Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8079] [Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on June 12, 2003]
Edition: 10
Language: English
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Produced by John Bickers and Dagny

PAMELA GIRAUD by Honore de Balzac
Etext prepared by Dagny, [email protected] and John Bickers, [email protected]

PAMELA GIRAUD A PLAY IN FIVE ACTS
BY
HONORE DE BALZAC

Presented for the First Time at Paris at the Theatre de la Gaite, September 26, 1843

PERSONS OF THE PLAY
General de Verby Dupre, a lawyer Rousseau, a wealthy merchant Jules Rousseau, his son Joseph Binet Giraud, a porter Chief of Special Police Antoine, servant to the Rousseaus
Pamela Giraud Madame du Brocard, a widow; aunt of Jules Rousseau Madame Rousseau Madame Giraud Justine, chambermaid to Madame Rousseau
Sheriff Magistrate Police Officers Gendarmes
SCENE: Paris
TIME: During the Napoleonic plots under Louis XVIII. (1815-1824)

PAMELA GIRAUD

ACT I
SCENE FIRST
(Setting is an attic and workshop of an artificial flower-maker. It is poorly lighted by means of a candle placed on the work-table. The ceiling slopes abruptly at the back allowing space to conceal a man. On the right is a door, on the left a fireplace. Pamela is discovered at work, and Joseph Binet is seated near her.)
Pamela, Joseph Binet and later Jules Rousseau.
Pamela Monsieur Joseph Binet!
Joseph Mademoiselle Pamela Giraud!
Pamela I plainly see that you wish me to hate you.
Joseph The idea! What? And this is the beginning of our love--Hate me!
Pamela Oh, come! Let us talk sensibly.
Joseph You do not wish, then, that I should express how much I love you?
Pamela Ah! I may as well tell you plainly, since you compel me to do so, that I do not wish to become the wife of an upholsterer's apprentice.
Joseph Is it necessary to become an emperor, or something like that, in order to marry a flower-maker?
Pamela No. But it is necessary to be loved, and I don't love you in any way whatever.
Joseph In any way! I thought there was only one way of loving.
Pamela So there is, but there are many ways of not loving. You can be my friend, without my loving you.
Joseph Oh!
Pamela I can look upon you with indifference--
Joseph Ah!
Pamela You can be odious to me! And at this moment you weary me, which is worse!
Joseph I weary her! I who would cut myself into fine pieces to do all that she wishes!
Pamela If you would do what I wish, you would not remain here.
Joseph And if I go away--Will you love me a little?
Pamela Yes, for the only time I like you is when you are away!
Joseph And if I never came back?
Pamela I should be delighted.
Joseph Zounds! Why should I, senior apprentice with M. Morel, instead of aiming at setting up business for myself, fall in love with this young lady? It is folly! It certainly hinders me in my career; and yet I dream of her--I am infatuated with her. Suppose my uncle knew it!--But she is not the only woman in Paris, and, after all, Mlle. Pamela Giraud, who are you that you should be so high and mighty?
Pamela I am the daughter of a poor ruined tailor, now become a porter. I gain my own living--if working night and day can be called living--and it is with difficulty that I snatch a little holiday to gather lilacs in the Pres-Saint-Gervais; and I certainly recognize that the senior apprentice of M. Morel is altogether too good for me. I do not wish to enter a family which believes that it would thus form a mesalliance. The Binets indeed!
Joseph But what has happened to you in the last eight or ten days, my dear little pet of a Pamela? Up to ten days ago I used to come and cut out your flowers for you, I used to make the stalks for the roses, and the
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