The Golden Age by Louis Nowra
Author:Louis Nowra
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Currency Press
Published: 2011-12-06T00:00:00+00:00
ACT TWO
SCENE ONE
The living room of a working-class house, morning. A coffin lies on a table surrounded by flowers. FRANCIS stands before it. MRS WITCOMBE, a neighbour, enters.
MRS WITCOMBE: Theyâll be in in a moment.
FRANCIS: And what happens then?
MRS WITCOMBE: We follow them to the cemetery. [Pause.] So itâll be only us and her mates from work?
FRANCIS nods.
No relatives?
FRANCIS: I think she had relations in the countryâin New South Wales, I thinkâbut they didnât get on. Once Dad remarried, I was the only person she had.
MRS WITCOMBE: Your mum was always quiet. Kept to herself. Lived next door for twenty-odd years and⦠When I die, itâll be the same. Some distant cousins in Perth, very distant cousins in England⦠But, of course, we donât keep in touch. [Looking at the corpse] Never seen this dress before; itâs gorgeous.
FRANCIS: Her honeymoon dress.
MRS WITCOMBE: Looking so calm. [Pause.] At least it was quick.
PETER enters. MRS WITCOMBE doesnât notice him.
She was very proud of you. âMy son the engineer!â Such rotten luck. When I was young and I saw a car for the first timeâI was a country girl like your motherâI was as frightened of it as my horse was. I had every right to be. She gripped my hand so tightly as we waited for the ambulance to come⦠see, itâs still bruised. Iâll see whatâs happening outside.
She exits. Silence.
PETER: Lots of flowers; she must have been well liked.
FRANCIS: Her workmates. She worked in the same shoe factory for years and all her boss could give her was a brand new pair of shoes. In our neighbourhood flowers mean death. Mum said she had only ever saved money for herself twice: the first time for her trousseau, the second for her funeral, so she could go off âlike a real swellâ.
Silence.
PETER: Do you still want to return to Hobart with me tomorrow?
FRANCIS nods.
But what about the house and things?
FRANCIS: It was rented. The landlord wants it cleaned up and empty by Tuesday. I told Mrs Witcombe that if she cleaned it up she could have anything she wanted.
PETER: But donât you want to keep a few mementos? You canât cut loose entirely.
FRANCIS: Iâve got a few photographs; thatâs all I want. [Looking around the room] What a life, eh? Struggle hard, marry a bastard, struggle hard, have an ungrateful son, earn enough to live in a dump. Second-hand furniture, concrete backyard, and on the walls Saint Teresa, and facing her a picture of the nineteen thirty Collingwood football team. If Collingwood won we had fish and chips; if they lost we didnât eat. [Moving over to it] Signed by all of them: Collier, Coventry⦠She plucked up all her courage to go down to training one night and got all of the team to sign it. I was with her, crimson with embarrassment. She was so happy you would have thought she had had an audience with the Pope.
PETER: Why donât you take it with you?
FRANCIS: Mrs Witcombeâs daughter has had her eye on it for years.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
The Spy by Paulo Coelho(1554)
The Covenant of Water by Abraham Verghese(1540)
Cain by Jose Saramago(1492)
La Catedral del Mar by Ildefonso Falcones(1130)
The Prince: Jonathan by Francine Rivers(1123)
Bridge to Haven by Francine Rivers(1116)
The August Few Book One: Amygdala by Sam Fennah(1074)
La Catedral del Mar by ILDEFONSO FALCONES(1048)
La dama azul by Sierra Javier(1017)
Cain by Saramago José(1015)
La dama azul(v.1) by Javier Sierra(1012)
A Proper Pursuit by Lynn Austin(1004)
Quo Vadis: A Narrative of the Time of Nero (World Classics) by Henryk Sienkiewicz(986)
Devil Water by Anya Seton(975)
Sons of Encouragement by Francine Rivers(952)
The Book of Saladin by Tariq Ali(945)
The Sacrifice by Beverly Lewis(939)
Murder by Vote by Rose Pascoe(919)
Creacion by Gore Vidal(895)