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Tales of the Jazz Age by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is part of the HackerNoon Books Series. You can jump to any chapter in this book here. MR. ICKY, THE QUINTESSENCE OF QUAINTNESS IN ONE ACT
MR. ICKY, THE QUINTESSENCE OF QUAINTNESS IN ONE ACT
The Scene is the Exterior of a Cottage in West Issacshire on a desperately Arcadian afternoon in August. Mr. Icky, quaintly dressed in the costume of an Elizabethan peasant, is pottering and doddering among the pots and dods. He is an old man, well past the prime of life, no longer young. From the fact that there is a burr in his speech and that he has absent-mindedly put on his coat wrongside out, we surmise that he is either above or below the ordinary superficialities of life.
Near him on the grass lies Peter, a little boy. Peter, of course, has his chin on his palm like the pictures of the young Sir Walter Raleigh. He has a complete set of features, including serious, sombre, even funereal, gray eyes—and radiates that alluring air of never having eaten food. This air can best be radiated during the afterglow of a beef dinner. He is looking at Mr. Icky, fascinated.
Silence. . . . The song of birds.
Peter: Often at night I sit at my window and regard the stars. Sometimes I think they’re my stars.... (Gravely) I think I shall be a star some day....
Mr. Icky: (Whimsically) Yes, yes ... yes....
Mr. Icky: I don’t take no stock in astronomy.... I’ve been thinking o’ Lunnon, laddie. And calling to mind my daughter, who has gone for to be a typewriter.... (He sighs.)
Mr. Icky: Not worth the paper she was padded with, laddie. (He stumbles over a pile of pots and dods.)
Mr. Icky: Worse, thank God!...(Gloomily.) I’m a hundred years old... I’m getting brittle.
Peter: (Awed) How ghastly! Science is the bunk.
Mr. Icky: (Sighing) I got him pretty well subdued now. ’Tisn’t every one who has to tire out two sets o’ glands in his lifetime. I wouldn’t take another set for all the animal spirits in an orphan asylum.
Peter: (Considering) I shouldn’t think you’d object to a nice quiet old clergyman’s set.
(There is a low, sonorous honking off stage to indicate that a large motor-car has stopped in the immediate vicinity. Then a young man handsomely attired in a dress-suit and a patent-leather silk hat comes onto the stage. He is very mundane. His contrast to the spirituality of the other two is observable as far back as the first row of the balcony. This is Rodney Divine.)
(Mr. Icky rises and stands tremulously between two dods.)
(He reaches into the little mother-of-pearl satchel that hangs at his side for cigarettes. He selects one and scratching a match touches it to the cigarette. The cigarette instantly lights.)
(He waits. Several hours pass. There is no sound except an occasional cackle or hiss from the dods as they quarrel among themselves. Several songs can be introduced here or some card tricks by Divine or a tumbling act, as desired.)
(Suddenly a loudly dressed girl appears; she is very worldly. It is Ulsa Icky. On her is one of those shapeless faces peculiar to early Italian painting.)
Ulsa: (In a coarse, worldly voice) Feyther! Here I am! Ulsa did what?
Mr. Icky: (Tremulously) Ulsa, little Ulsa. (They embrace each other’s torsos.)
Mr. Icky: (Hopefully) You’ve come back to help with the ploughing.
Ulsa: (Sullenly) No, feyther; ploughing’s such a beyther. I’d reyther not.
(Though her accent is broad, the content of her speech is sweet and clean.)
Divine: (Conciliatingly) See here, Ulsa. Let’s come to an understanding.
(He advances toward her with the graceful, even stride that made him captain of the striding team at Cambridge.)
Divine: (Kindly) My dear, of course, it would be Jack. It couldn’t be Frank.
Ulsa: It would be Frank!
(Some risqué joke can be introduced here.)
Mr. Icky: (Whimsically) No good fighting...no good fighting...
Divine: (Reaching out to stroke her arm with the powerful movement that made him stroke of the crew at Oxford) You’d better marry me.
Ulsa: (Scornfully) Why, they wouldn’t let me in through the servants’ entrance of your house.
Divine: (Angrily) They wouldn’t! Never fear—you shall come in through the mistress’ entrance.
Divine: (In confusion) I beg your pardon. You know what I mean?
Mr. Icky: (Aching with whimsey) You want to marry my little Ulsa?...
Ulsa: (Sullenly) I can’t sleep except in a box. And I’ve heard that you were cashiered from your club.
Divine: (Hanging his head) I was cashiered.
Divine: (Almost inaudibly) I hid the polo balls one day for a joke.
Divine: (Gloomily) Fair. After all what is brilliance? Merely the tact to sow when no one is looking and reap when every one is.
Divine: (More gloomily) I assure you I’m a mere platitude. I often descend to the level of an innate idea.
Ulsa: (Dully) None of what you’re saying matters. I can’t marry a man who thinks it would be Jack. Why Frank would—
Divine: (Interrupting) Nonsense!
Ulsa: (Emphatically) You’re a fool!
Divine: (Morosely) Gotch.
Ulsa: (Angrily) Rot! He wouldn’t have a—
Divine: (Quickly) You win.
(Charles, Ulsa’s brother, coming out of the cottage. He is dressed as if to go to sea; a coil of rope is slung about his shoulder and an anchor is hanging from his neck.)
Charles: (Not seeing them) I’m going to sea! I’m going to sea!
(His voice is triumphant.)
Mr. Icky: (Sadly) You went to seed long ago.
Peter: (Dreamily) “Conrad,” ah! “Two Years Before the Mast,” by Henry James.
Charles: (To his feyther) I can’t stay here and rot with you. I want to live my life. I want to hunt eels.
Charles: (Contemptuously) Why, the worms are licking their chops already when they hear your name.
(It will be noticed that some of the characters have not spoken for some time. It will improve the technique if they can be rendering a spirited saxophone number.)
Mr. Icky: (Mournfully) These vales, these hills, these McCormick harvesters—they mean nothing to my children. I understand.
Charles: (More gently) Then you’ll think of me kindly, feyther. To understand is to forgive.
Charles: (Impatiently) I’m so beastly sick of your human nature line. And, anyway, I hate the hours around here.
(Several dozen more of Mr. Icky’s children trip out of the house, trip over the grass, and trip over the pots and dods. They are muttering “We are going away,” and “We are leaving you.”)
Mr. Icky: (His heart breaking) They’re all deserting me. I’ve been too kind. Spare the rod and spoil the fun. Oh, for the glands of a Bismarck.
(There is a honking outside—probably Divine’s chauffeur growing impatient for his master.)
Mr. Icky: (In misery) They do not love the soil! They have been faithless to the Great Potato Tradition! (He picks up a handful of soil passionately and rubs it on his bald head. Hair sprouts.) Oh, Wordsworth, Wordsworth, how true you spoke!
“No motion has she now, no force;
She does not hear or feel;
Roll’d round on earth’s diurnal course
In some one’s Oldsmobile.”
(They all groan and shouting “Life” and “Jazz” move slowly toward the wings.)
Mr. Icky: (Struggling with himself) I must be quaint. That’s all there is. It’s not life that counts, it’s the quaintness you bring to it....
(He finds a Bible lying in one of the dods and opening it at random begins to read.)
Charles: (Cruelly) Buy ten more rings and try again.
Mr. Icky: (Trying again) “How beautiful art thou my love, how beautiful art thou! Thy eyes are dove’s eyes, besides what is hid within. Thy hair is as flocks of goats which come up from Mount Galaad—Hm! Rather a coarse passage....”
(His children laugh at him rudely, shouting “Jazz!” and “All life is primarily suggestive!”)
Mr. Icky: (Despondently) It won’t work to-day. (Hopefully) Maybe it’s damp. (He feels it) Yes, it’s damp.... There was water in the dod.... It won’t work.
(Any other cue may be inserted here.)
( They all go out. Mr. Icky is left alone. He sighs and walking over to the cottage steps, lies down, and closes his eyes.)
Twilight has come down and the stage is flooded with such light as never was on land or sea. There is no sound except a sheep-herder’s wife in the distance playing an aria from Beethoven’s Tenth Symphony, on a mouth-organ. The great white and gray moths swoop down and light on the old man until he is completely covered by them. But he does not stir.
The curtain goes up and down several times to denote the lapse of several minutes. A good comedy effect can be obtained by having Mr. Icky cling to the curtain and go up and down with it. Fireflies or fairies on wires can also be introduced at this point.
Then Peter appears, a look of almost imbecile sweetness on his face. In his hand he clutches something and from time to time glances at it in a transport of ecstasy. After a struggle with himself he lays it on the old man’s body and then quietly withdraws.
The moths chatter among themselves and then scurry away in sudden fright. And as night deepens there still sparkles there, small, white and round, breathing a subtle perfume to the West Issacshire breeze, Peter’s gift of love—a moth-ball.
(The play can end at this point or can go on indefinitely.)
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This book is part of the public domain. F. Scott Fitzgerald (2004). Tales of the Jazz Age. Urbana, Illinois: Project Gutenberg. Retrieved October 2022
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