Jacob McClosky, the man who ruined Judge Peyton, has come to inform George and his aunt (who was bequeathed a life interest in the estate) that their land will be sold and their slaves auctioned off separately. Why don't he return to his nation out West? At college they said I was a fool---I must be. And I remained here to induce you to offer that heart to Dora! See Injiun; look dar [shows him plate], see dat innocent: look, dar's de murderer of poor Paul. Ya! Why don't you speak, sir? He's yours, Captain Ratts, Magnolia steamer. Mrs. P.Yes; the firm has recovered itself, and I received a notice two months ago that some settlement might be anticipated. Well when I say go, den lift dis rag like dis, see! Why, I was dreaming---curse it! Pete, you old turkey-buzzard, saddle my mare. Scud. [All salute.]. M'Closky. I'll lend you all you want. Take that, and defend yourself. She nebber was 'worth much 'a dat nigger. I am free! Men talk of killing time, while time quietly kills them. Here, stay! Scud. See here, you imps; if I catch you, and your red skin yonder, gunning in my swamps, I'll give you rats, mind; them vagabonds, when the game's about, shoot my pigs. Zoe. Now, den, if Grace dere wid her chil'n were all sold, she'll begin screechin' like a cat. Go on, Pete, you've waked up the Christian here, and the old hoss responds. Here's the Picayune [producing paper] with the advertisement. Improvements---anything, from a stay-lace to a fire-engine. Dido. So it is here, in the wilds of the West, where our hatred of crime is measured by the speed of our executions---where necessity is law! [R.] Well, what's the use of argument whar guilt sticks out so plain; the boy and Injiun were alone when last seen. side.---A table and chairs,R.C. Gracediscovered sitting at breakfast-table with Children. We are always in a perpetual state of being created and creating ourselves. Scud. M'Closky. Sunny. She's won this race agin the white, anyhow; it's too late now to start her pedigree. I tell ye, 't'ain't so---we can't do it---we've got to be sold---, Pete. I fetch as much as any odder cook in Louisiana. [Rising.] Scud. I have come to say good-by, sir; two hard words---so hard, they might break many a heart; mightn't they? [Scudder*takes out watch.*]. [Throws mail bags down and sits on them,L. C.] Pret, now den go. Sunnyside, how good you are; so like my poor Peyton. When I travelled round with this machine, the homely folks used to sing out, "Hillo, mister, this ain't like me!" Scud. The Injiun means that he buried him there! [Raises hammer.] Wahnotee. Well, ma'am, I spose there's no law agin my bidding for it. [Tumbles upon the table.]. Let me proceed by illustration. O, my husband! Dido. Cum yer now---stand round, cause I've got to talk to you darkies---keep dem chil'n quiet---don't make no noise, de missus up dar har us. Sharon Gannon. O, aunt! Will ye? D'ye hear that, Jacob? [Enters house.]. Scud. We are catching fire forward; quick, set free from the shore. Scud. [*Takes Indian's tomahawk and steals to*Paul. Wahnotee. He loves me---what of that? clar out! Pete. Not lawful---no---but I am going to where there is no law---where there is only justice. I've got hold of the tail of a rat---come out. The devil I am! Ay, ay! The Octoroon Quotes & Sayings Happy to read and share the best inspirational The Octoroon quotes, sayings and quotations on Wise Famous Quotes. Despite the happiness Zoe stands dying and the play ends with her death on the sitting-room couch and George kneeling beside her. Brian Tracy, How you look at a situation is very important, for how you think about a problem may defeat you before you ever do anything about it. For what I have done, let me be tried. It wants an hour yet to daylight---here is Pete's hut---[Knocks.] Paul. We tender food to a stranger, not because he is a gentleman, but because he is hungry. [Looks through camera] O, golly! Come, Paul, are you ready? Dem doctors ain't no 'count; dey don't know nuffin. Eight hundred agin, then---I'll go it. Scud. Dis way, gen'l'men; now Solon---Grace---dey's hot and tirsty---sangaree, brandy, rum. Thib. he does not know, he does not know! McClosky desires Zoe for himself, and when she rejects his proposition, he plots to have her sold with the rest of the slaves, for he knows that she is an octoroon and is legally part of the Terrebonne property. As I swam down, I thought I heard something in the water, as if pursuing me---one of them darned alligators, I suppose---they swarm hereabout---may they crunch every limb of ye! Mrs. P.I fear that the property is so involved that the strictest economy will scarcely recover it. Get out, you cub! Salem Scudder, a kind Yankee, was Judge Peyton's business partner; though he wishes he could save Terrebonne, he has no money. Mrs. P.Sellyourself, George! this is worth taking to---in this desk the judge used to keep one paper I want---this should be it. Poor fellow, he has lost all. Sunny. Ratts. Why you speak so wild? Scud. I lost them in the cedar swamp---again they haunted my path down the bayou, moving as I moved, resting when I rested---hush! dead---and above him---Ah! Nebber mind, sar, we bring good news---it won't spile for de keeping. *Re-enter*Lafouche,R.,with smashed apparatus. Mrs. P.My dear George, you are left in your uncle's will heir to this estate. Save me---save me! I feel that I departed amid universal and sincere regret. [Going.]. EnterPete,R.U.E. [he is lame]; he carries a mop and pail. They do not notice Zoe.---[Aloud.] [Sits,R. C.]. I must see you no more. Don't b'lieve it, Mas'r George; dem black tings never was born at all; dey swarmed one mornin' on a sassafras tree in the swamp: I cotched 'em; dey ain't no 'count. [On sofa,C.] George---where---where---, Zoe. Five hundred dollars!---[*To*Thibodeaux.] Yah! Where's that man from Mobile that wanted to give one hundred and eighty thousand? Captain, you've loaded up here until the boat is sunk so deep in the mud she won't float. The earth has been stirred here lately. When the ship's abroad on the ocean, when the army is before the enemy where in thunder's the law? You begged me to call this morning. When he speaks to one he does it so easy, so gentle; it isn't bar-room style; love lined with drinks, sighs tinged with tobacco---and they say all the women in Paris were in love with him, which I feelIshall be; stop fanning me; what nice boots he wears. [*To*Ratts.] I will dine on oysters and palomitas and wash them down with white wine. M'Closky. Jackson. Isn't he sweet! Poor Injiun lub our little Paul. 3, Pete, a house servant. O, dear, has he suddenly come to his senses? Ratts. since you arrived! there's that noise again! No; the hitching line was cut with a knife. Wahnotee tracks him down and confronts him; in the ensuing struggle, Wahnotee kills McClosky. Come, Miss Dora, let me offer you my arm. MINNIE played by an African-American actress, a black actress, or an actress of color. I'll murder this yer crowd, [*He chases*Childrenabout; they leap over railing at back. "But, sir, it ain't agreeable." O! M'Closky. I've got engaged eight hundred bales at the next landing, and one hundred hogsheads of sugar at Patten's Slide---that'll take my guards under---hurry up thar. me! She loves him! Now, gentlemen, I'm proud to submit to you the finest lot of field hands and house servants that was ever offered for competition; they speak for themselves, and do credit to their owners.---[Reads.] I'm broke, Solon---I can't stop the Judge. I heard voices. Why don't he speak?---I mean, you feared I might not give you credit for sincere and pure feelings. Dear George, you now see what a miserable thing I am. Fellow-citizens, you are convened and assembled here under a higher power than the law. "No," say Mas'r George, "I'd rather sell myself fuss; but dey shan't suffer, nohow,---I see 'em dam fuss.". Let me relate you the worst cases. O, here he is. [*Takes fan from*Minnie.] Subject to your life interest and an annuity to Zoe, is it not so? Pete. Salem's looking a kinder hollowed out. Is my plantation at Comptableau worth this? See also George. 'Cos I's skeered to try! I shall endeavor not to be jealous of the past; perhaps I have no right to be. Scud. He is said to have "combined sentiment, wit and local colour with sensational and spectacular endings" (Nova). His greatest successes however, were on London's stages. Come, then, but if I catch you drinkin', O, laws a mussey, you'll get snakes! Will you hush? Sunny. Hold on yere, George Peyton; you sit down there. M'Closky. The first lot on here is the estate in block, with its sugar-houses, stock, machines, implements, good dwelling-houses and furniture. Tullian Tchividjian. I hope it will turn out better than most of my notions. I say, I'd like to say summit soft to the old woman; perhaps it wouldn't go well, would it? Let me hide them till I teach my heart. Go, Minnie, tell Pete; run! You've made me cry, then, and I hate you both! Dora. I'm going to straighten this account clear out. The Steamer moves off---fire kept up---M'Closky*re-enters,*R.,*swimming on.*. [Smiling.] No, [looks off,R.] 'tis Pete and the servants---they come this way. Nothing; but you must learn what I thought you already knew. I will! Then I will go to the Acme or Keating's or the Big Gold Bar and sit down and draw my cards and fill an inside straight and win myself a thousand dollars. This old nigger, the grandfather of the boy you murdered, speaks for you---don't that go through you? He's going to do an heroic act; don't spile it. Lafouche. A draft for eighty-five thousand dollars, and credit on Palisse and Co., of New Orleans, for the balance. A photographic plate. that's right. I felt it---and how she can love! What, Picayune Paul, as we called, him, that used to come aboard my boat?---poor little darkey, I Hope not; many a picayune he picked up for his dance and nigger-songs, and he supplied our table with fish and game from the Bayous. [Re-enters with phial.] No, ma'am; here's the plan of it. See also Trivia | Goofs | Crazy Credits | Alternate Versions | Connections | Soundtracks The judge drew money like Bourbon whiskey from a barrel, and never turned off the tap. For the first time, twenty-five thousand---last time! Paul. What was her past? My darling! Lafouche. Mrs. P.The child was a favorite of the judge, who encouraged his gambols. None o' ye ign'rant niggars could cry for yerselves like dat. ", Pete. [Aside,C.] Insolent as usual.---[Aloud.] [During the reading of letter he remains nearly motionless under the focus of the camera.] Zoe (an Octoroon Girl, free, the Natural Child of the late Judge by a Quadroon Slave) Mrs. J. H. Allen. You! No, no! This is folly, Dora. De time he gone just 'bout enough to cook dat dish plate. The Octoroon: The Story of the Turpentine Forest (1909) Quotes It looks like we don't have any Quotes for this title yet. Scud. Excuse me; one of the principal mortgagees has made the demand. Traduced! You'se a dead man, Mas'r Clusky---you got to b'lieve dat. Do you mean that I'm a pig? Zoe. Scud. George. [SeesPete,*who has set his pail down*L. C.up stage, and goes to sleep on it.] what are you blowing about like a steamboat with one wheel for? Lynch him! You are illegitimate, but love knows no prejudice. Glendon Swarthout, Never believe in any faith younger than you are." George. Dat's right, missus! We got the horses saddled, and galloped down the shell road over the Piney Patch; then coasting the Bayou Lake, we crossed the long swamps, by Paul's Path, and so came home again. Poor little Paul---poor little nigger! I have it. You know you can't be jealous of a poor creature like me. He who can love so well is honest---don't speak ill of poor Wahnotee. she would revolt from it, as all but you would; and if I consented to hear the cries of my heart, if I did not crush out my infant love, what would she say to the poor girl on whom she had bestowed so much? O, you horrible man! Let me be sold then, that I may free his name. Pete. It's dem black trash, Mas'r George; dis ere property wants claring; dem's getting too numerous round; when I gets time I'll kill some on 'em, sure! [Examines the ground.] Dar, do ye hear dat, ye mis'able darkies, dem gals is worth a boat load of kinder men dem is. We can leave this country, and go far away where none can know. M'Closky. Pete. Fifty against one! Hello! Don't you know that she is the natural daughter of the judge, your uncle, and that old lady thar just adored anything her husband cared for; and this girl, that another woman would a hated, she loves as if she'd been her own child. He is sitting on on my prize! Come, Judge, pick up. Have I slept upon the benefits I received, and never saw, never felt, never knew that I was forgetful and ungrateful? Am I late? Dora. [Raising his voice.] Beat that any of ye. The Octoroons have no apparent trace of the Negro in their appearance but still are subject to the legal disabilities which attach them to the condition of blacks. Lift me; so---[George*raises her head*]---let me look at you, that your face may be the last I see of this world. M'Closky. I won't go on; that man's down. What, you won't, won't ye? Bless'ee, Missey Zoe, here it be. my life, my happy life; why has it been so bright? M'Closky. [Enters inner room,R.U.E.]. So I came here to you; to you, my own dear nurse; to you, who so often hushed me to sleep when I was a child; who dried my eyes and put your little Zoe to rest. I say---he smoke and smoke, but nebber look out ob de fire; well knowing dem critters, I wait a long time---den he say, "Wahnotee, great chief;" den I say nothing---smoke anoder time---last, rising to go, he turn round at door, and say berry low---O, like a woman's voice, he say, "Omenee Pangeuk,"---dat is, Paul is dead---nebber see him since. Are they? Hold on now, Jacob; we've got to figure on that---let us look straight at the thing. Dion Boucicault. Ratts. what a bright, gay creature she is! They owed him over fifty thousand dollars. The child---'tis he! George offers to take her to a different country, but Zoe insists that she stay to help Terrebonne; Scudder then appears and suggests that George marry Dora. I thought I heard the sound of a paddle in the water. [R.U.E.] I was raised on dis yar plantation---neber see no door in it---always open, sar, for stranger to walk in. Zoe. All right, Judge; I thought there was a mistake. I only come back to find Wahnotee; whar is dat ign'ant Ingiun? Mr. Sunnyside, I can't do this job of showin' round the folks; my stomach goes agin it. Hee! Don't b'lieve dey'll turn out niggers when dey're growed; dey'll come out sunthin else. [Sits down.] You say the proceeds of the sale will not cover his debts. Scud. Come, Zoe, don't be a fool; I'd marry you if I could, but you know I can't; so just say what you want. Paul. [*With-draws slide, turns and sees*Paul.] E.---Wahnoteefaces him.---Fight---buss. One morning dey swarmed on a sassafras tree in de swamp, and I cotched 'em all in a sieve.---dat's how dey come on top of dis yearth---git out, you,---ya, ya! Pete. "Ma'am," says I, "the apparatus can't mistake." No; if you were I'd buy you, if you cost all I'm worth. Wahnotee Patira na sepau assa wigiran. drop dat banana! I didn't know whether they are completely honest. things have got so jammed in on top of us, we ain't got time to put kid gloves on to handle them. Dora. What! He said so---then I rose up, and stole from the house, and ran down to the bayou; but its cold, black, silent stream terrified me---drowning must be so horrible a death. That Indian is a nuisance. Say, Mas'r Scudder, s'pose we go in round by de quarters and raise de darkies, den dey cum long wid us, and we 'proach dat ole house like Gin'ral Jackson when he took London out dar. O, Zoe, my child! It's a good drink to see her come into the cotton fields---the niggers get fresh on the sight of her. Pete, speak to the red-skin. [DrivesChildrenaway; in escaping they tumble against and trip upSolon,who falls with tray; theChildrensteal the bananas and rolls that fall about.]. Ratts. Paul. Zoe, he's going; I want him to stay and make love to me that's what I came for to-day. Den say de missus, "'Tain't for de land I keer, but for dem poor niggars---dey'll be sold---dat wot stagger me." My father gives me freedom---at least he thought so. Sunny. George. Do you know what I am? what, dem?---get away! look at these fingers; do you see the nails are of a bluish tinge? Hold on now! Hold on! Point. No, it won't; we have confessed to Dora that we love each other. Mrs. Pey. No! Zoe. Is this a dream---for my brain reels with the blow? I don't like that man. M'Closkyruns off,L.1. *EnterPete, Dido, Solon, Minnie,and*Grace. The injiun! Would you rob me first, and murder me afterwards? If you haven't spoiled her, I fear I have. Come on, Pete, we shan't reach the house before midday. I hate 'em. there it comes---it comes---don't you hear a footstep on the dry leaves? M'Closky overhears their conversation, but still vows he'll "have her if it costs [him] [his] life" (44). I must keep you, Captain, to the eleven hundred. I must operate and take my own likeness too---how debbel I do dat? George. yar, you Wahnotee! [Laughs.]. He's too fond of thieving and whiskey. Born here! And dar's de 'paratus---O, gosh, if I could take a likeness ob dis child! Fair or foul, I'll have her---take that home with you! While the proceeds of this sale promises to realize less than the debts upon it, it is my duty to prevent any collusion for the depreciation of the property. Scud. You're trembling so, you'll fall down directly. O, my father! M'Closky. Yonder the boy still lurks with those mail-bags; the devil still keeps him here to tempt me, darn his yellow skin. O, how d'ye do, sir? Ratts. EnterLafoucheand*Jackson,L. Jackson. He loves Zoe, and has found out that she loves him. DORA played by a white actress or an actress who can pass as white. Is your heart free? "Judgment, 40,000, 'Thibodeaux against Peyton,'"---surely, that is the judgment under which this estate is now advertised for sale---[takes up paper and examines it]; yes, "Thibodeaux against Peyton, 1838." | Contact Us [Offers hand,Georgebows coldly,R. C.] [aside.] Act II Summary. Scud. Sunny. George. [*Seeing*Dora.] [Rising.] George, George, your words take away my breath! [Pete holds lantern up.] George. [To the men.] Ten years ago the judge took as overseer a bit of Connecticut hardware called M'Closky. She didn't mind how kind old judge was to her; and Solon, too, he'll holler, and break de ole lady's heart. Scud. Point. Dora. You don't see Zoe, Mr. Sunnyside. What's here? M'Closky. Scud. Synopsis. Lynch him! Scud. New York, NY, Linda Ray
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