JAROSLAV KVAPIL
13
Hlaváček.—You didn’t say a word of this even in our last year at the Academy.
Dušek.—Indeed, I didn’t. I was a madcap boy. On the strength of a little warm water at the coffee-house, I babbled about the Bohemian life and I wanted to copy scenes from Murger. And I wanted to have in this Prague puddle of ours my own petite femme— you know in what a crazy state I returned from Paris? Made giddy by the frivolity and recklessness of a superficial life I wanted to enhance my supposed genius.
Hlaváček.—And who then is to blame? I? Or we? Or your surroundings, the atmosphere which you breathed, the soil into which you grew? (Waves his hand.) Kamilo, Kamilo,—everywhere on earth it’s the same! Except that it may have some other form.
Dušek.—Aha, some other form! Larger and freer; a form which does not strangle and lace you in. (Clasps his hands.) Lord, Lord,—how petty it all is and how useless! And you sit at the bottom—at the very bottom—and roll your eyes—and moralize!
Hlaváček (Surprised).—I?
Dušek (Cuttingly).—You, too!
Hlaváček.—It appears, then, that—(The bell in the front hall sounds.) Here you have them, go and open the door! We can finish telling each other another time.
Dušek (In the meantime goes to the front hall and opens the door).—My deepest respects, gracious lady—my deepest respects, Miss! (A rustle in the hall.) Enter, please. (He leads the ladies into the atelier.) My friend, the painter Hlaváček. (Mutual bows.)