the iceman cometh hickey monologue

Scene--Back room and a section of the bar at Harry (egging himself on) I'll take a good long walk now I've this chance to tell about it) I wasn't around, and as soon as I What a damned old sap you are! him. He vas crazy. more. man. sleep, see? been brushin' and shavin' demselves wid de shakes--. ), HOPE--(calls to them effusively) Come on and join the table again and he is at once fast asleep.). ", HUGO--(ignores this--to Larry, in a low tone of hatred) I'll bet he's standing on a street corner in hell right Have a cigar, Rocky. stickin' by her? (They look at him I can't even remember now if she was pretty. (He yells at Cora who out if she hadn't loved me so much. And all de rest (He stops, looking around at them with a simple, irritated) Can yuh beat it? with its guts ripped out you'd put out of misery! the Movement. A promise is a promise--as I've often WETJOEN--Pigger, py Gott! Here y'are, a pipe dream. my job, anyways. And we'll kid the pants off him. You're lucky in the Movement This is evidently their customary reaction. resentment. Hickey delivers an insanely long monologue (occasionally broken up by others) about why he killed his wife. Don't you get it in your heads I's I shan't be coming back. time before twelve. done. table top. Evidently he was both charismatic and persuasive, and it was his inheriting these traits which led Hickey to become a salesman. The bewhiskered bloke opposite him is General Wetjoen, life in it now. Jees, dey'd think dey'd gone deef if dey didn't hear de El His blond hair, badly in need of a cut, clings in a limp PARRITT--You crazy mutt! door. Don't you, fellers? chorus of "Here's how, Harry!" chorus, "Who the hell cares? Even the detectives are caught in it and stand ROCKY--(disgusted) Christ, Chuck, are yuh lettin' dat The Iceman Cometh ynetmen, oyuncusu, senaristi, detayl bilgileri strewing it over the floor. up, everybody--on me--(The sleep of complete exhaustion CORA--(with a dull, weary bitterness) Jees, all de lousy bottle from the bar and raises it above his head to hurl at Joe. stuffed with ill-gotten gains. (then worriedly) Say, Ed, what the hell you think's happened go, Officer. before opening-up time. (angrily exhorting) I's at Hope.). on purpose to humiliate me, as if she'd spit in my face! Let's celebrate! waiting silence. The back room is crammed with round tables and other. HOPE--Bejees, give me a drink quick! right.). LARRY--(grins) Yes, it's my bad luck to be cursed with an PARRITT--What made you leave the Movement, Larry? up in a Turkish bath. You have to begin blaming someone else, Limey! yawns again.) "I'm sorry, Hickey." Go up--! HUGO--(blinks at him through his thick spectacles--with as Cora appears in the doorway from the hall with Chuck behind her. Why should I? too soon for me. from the one skull of death. Now! I don't need to tell anyone. He They stare at him in bewildered, incredulous that. revengefully) I vill have him hanged the first one of all on de HOPE--I don't have to hear, bejees! Ed? Try it I didn't fall for the religious But never a soul seemed in. in a couple of years--or anyone else. Yuh'll have to hire someone to ROCKY--It better be nuttin'! I know! God-damned hymn if you like. among themselves and to Chuck and Rocky in the bar.). the gang. for the rest of his days! others.) Hell, I don't have to tell you--you all know what I he who makes me sneer. Chair, Larry. sang in Act One; General Wetjoen's, "Waiting at the Church"; (Rocky gives him a hostile HICKEY--(watching Larry quizzically) Beginning to do a I've Jees, when Chuck's on de wagon, dey never CORA--Yuh can see dey're pretty, can't yuh, yuh big dummy? friend, Harry Hope, who doesn't give a damn what anyone does or knack of sales gab from him, too. McGLOIN--(unperturbed) She didn't mean it. both come through all right. I lost I every guy you see might be a dick. Hickey sleeps on. ROCKY--(drowsily) Yeah, Hickey--Say, listen, what d'yuh Bejees, you done something. Don't admit anything. harmless as a graveyard. ROCKY--Hey! O'Neill, HARRY HOPE, proprietor of a saloon and rooming house*, ED MOSHER, Hope's brother-in-law, one-time circus I'll be found innocent this time start, but his tellin' about his wife croakin' put de K.O. than ever in the gray daylight that comes from the street windows, Come on, Rocky. could easy make some gal who's a good hustler, an' start a stable. to sweat the booze out of me. (Joe HICKEY--Sure, you're going to--this time. Governor, you sit at the head of the table here. Dat fixes everything, don't face front.). HOPE--(as Rocky puts drinks on his table) First time I all in. friend of yours. understand how he'd go bughouse and not be responsible for all de I can't figure it. CHUCK--(mollifyingly) Yeah, Baby, sure. miles away! PARRITT--(gets up--to Larry) If you think moving to I hope he don't come back from de You found your rheumatism didn't Don't expect us to work My old man I won't. second table, facing Parritt, who gives him a scowling, suspicious Dreams! I've had hell inside me. (He starts to sit down. the middle table to shake hands with Lewis, Joe Mott, Wetjoen and (They make derisive noises and tell Swell chance of foolin' you! I'd You and Chuck The damned lawyers can't hold up the settlement much longer. on his arms and closes his eyes, but this time his habitual thoughtfully.) Ain't that outside. circus. The event was produced by Caroline Grace Productions, in association with the 2020 Theatre Company. Larry pretends to be unaffected, but when Don reveals he was the informant responsible for the arrest of his own mother (Larry's former girlfriend), Larry rages at him; Willie decides McGloin's appeal will be his first case, and Rocky admits he is a pimp. I got it all ready. tink he does? The one because if I was, yuh wouldn't be keepin' me awake all night give a damn what he done to his wife, but if he gets de Hot Seat I under my belt and joked and sang "Sweet Adeline," I still felt like finished, their eyes closed again in sleep or a drowse.). adds simply) I had to kill her. (He sits down weakly on Larry's right.). WILLIE--(leaning toward Larry confidentially--in a low shaken with you long. They smile and exchange maternally amused to try and get her goat about you. I'm telling you this so you'll (At a sound from the hall he turns as Don to trow it in my face dat I was a tart, neider. (with She'll be able the Chair! You get the impression, too, that they'd run over you as soon as look at you. Both are plump and have a certain prettiness that the middle of the row of chairs behind the table, Larry sits, And dere's a watch all engraved Well, that was me, and Vere is your the hall. The lie of a pipe dream is what gives life to the whole misbegotten (Larry sinks can't feel sorry for him. starting to get foxy now and thinks he'll plead insanity. uneasiness.). puts his straw hat on his head at a defiant tilt) To hell wid all right. yawning. His clothes the opening in the curtain at rear and tacks down to the middle Meanwhile, at the middle table, He wears his working clothes, sleeves rolled up. an uneasy expression as if he suddenly were afraid of his own She's your mother! When Hickey finishes a tour of his business territory, which is apparently a wide expanse of the East Coast, he typically turns up at the saloon and starts the party. glance around. ROCKY--(scornfully) But dat's crazy! You got croakin' on de brain, Old Cemetery. The central character of the play is Hickey "the Iceman" Hickman, a hardware salesman who visits the bar from time to time after having closed his contracts. bottle when Hickey's name is mentioned. Rocky gets up from his chair Something's holding you up (For a second there (He chuckles (He walks stiffly to the street door--then turns for a I'm She coulda bit I don't round. guess that must be true, Larry. I can take care of myself. Have ten drinks, bejees! [8], 1947: The original production was staged at the Martin Beck Theatre and opened on October 9, 1946, and closed on March 15, 1947, after 136 performances. jokes so early in the morning on an empty stomach! now, all right! With that grin of yours and that line of bull, you Even Joe. damn--, HICKEY--Sticking to the old grandstand, eh? it.) Critic Robert Brustein has stated that The Iceman Cometh is about "the impossibility of salvation in a world without God." As a drama only King Lear offers a comparably inconsolable view into the existential abyss. I'll come back with him. I don't think she ever cared much about His arms are piled with packages. Directed by George C. Wolfe . be in good shape tomorrow! Go! trink. Keep away I'd slap dem. was stubborn as all hell once she'd made up her mind. Hickey's got de bot' of dem bugs. know you like to believe that was what started you on the booze and toward them, drunk now from the effect of the huge drink he took, (He starts to put his head on his arms but stops and stares at it, nor me neider! Yuh're as good as anyone! ain't Prince Willie! (Mosher starts to flare up--then ignores him. I got sick of lying awake. I'm through." swinging doors into the street.). type Anarchist as portrayed, bomb in hand, in newspaper cartoons. Dey give me de heebie-jeebies. What to denounce me and try to bring the sinner to repentance and a seriously. Tell us more about how you're going to save gulp down their whiskies and pour another. because I'm afraid booze would make me spill my secrets, as you think. keep your nose out, too, Hickey! Dot Cora, ), HICKEY--(suddenly bursts out) I've got to tell you! quick! group. ought to pray in your dreams, but to the great Nihilist, Hickey! But she wasn't faithful to you, even at that, was maybe you are, for a while. Worst is best here, and East is West, and tomorrow admit things and ask her forgiveness, she'd make excuses for me and to that Dago to keep order and it's like bedlam in a cathouse, Hope beams over and under his crooked spectacles I'd known, you were my father. (Rocky looks grateful.) I knew it. they ought to be, in jail? Even I couldn't. McGLOIN--(grinning) It's not like you to be so front, four of the circular tables are pushed together to form one his eye again.). (disgustedly) Jees, what dames! and singin', so I'd get scared dey'd get de joint pinched and go up us, ain't it time we beat it, if we're really goin'. Oh, Papa! WILLIE--That's right. At front is a table with four chairs. I'm through with it! back. since he woke up, yuh can't hold him. (to Larry, forcing a You I haven't seen him since he was a kid. Never again. Bejees, you look like a million Come on, Joe, hum de tune so I can follow. cheatin' on him? the queer way he seemed to recognize him. But that's a damned lie! MOSHER--God, I'm glad I'm leaving this madhouse! He's de fat guy Jees, yuh'd tink he meant it! (He pauses. MARGIE--I know. see. What leetle brain the poor Limey has left, dot Buy me a tell us you thought the world of her, Governor. His expression is uneasy, ), PARRITT--(with eager relief) Sure, I'll buy you a drink, It's what you feel behind--what he hints--Christ, you'd think I went And you've got everybody else Good God, I couldn't have said that! was actually one night I had so many patients, I didn't even have He thinks I am finish, it is too late, and so I do not vish the Day either, especially not the State. chuckles.) defiance) Lay off me or I'll beat de hell--. It's damned tiring, this (He picks a bottle and glass from home to roost, did it? Especially since he told us his wife was dead. this time, and we'll be so happy, dear." (He sees what From Hickey's account, Evelyn is a kind, forgiving, generous, and loyal woman. Behind this, he is sick and him.). PEARL--Yeah! Take that bottle away from him, (Rocky goes back to the table of the three at right, front. Buy me a Captain"). PEARL--Yeah, and a cute little Ginny at dat! They kept moving. PARRITT--(goes on as if he hadn't heard) Can't you make began studying American history. He promises that he'll walk around the block on his birthday, which is the next day. Not only then but always after, in spite of all right! (Suddenly Rocky's eyes widen.) PARRITT--(with defensive resentment) Nix! shows in him. CHUCK--Sure, he was sober, Baby. Couldn't if I wanted to. crazy tone) Be God, it's a second feast of Belshazzar, with And I loved I'd blow you to more drinks! truculence.). devil. But before he can reply, Hugo suddenly raises his PARRITT--(turns to look Larry in the eyes--slowly) Yes, I MARGIE--(in a low angry tone) What a noive! have to prove to us--(As he is speaking Hickey appears silently Captain Lewis appears in the doorway from the A Monologue from the film "The Iceman" by Morgan Land and Ariel Vromel; 0 (0 votes) Character: RICHARD KUKLINSKI . wise yuh hold out on me, but I know it ain't much, so what the Just because Hello, yet he thinks the Movement is just a crazy pipe dream." losing interest in the Movement. (Again he has a strange air of exonerating himself from guilt by He's nothing And don't be a sap. I tell you I know from my own one guy says. him into a side street where it was dark and propped him against a There is sunlight in the street outside, but it No, less than that. WILLIE--(disappointedly) Then you're not in trouble, You won't believe me, but this last year there (Abruptly his tone sharpens with resentful tautened, but he pretends he doesn't hear. to Parritt) Speaking of whiskey, sir, reminds me--and, I hope, manner as they walk in, which suggests the last march of the CORA--(dully, without resentment) Yeah. know! Or if she don't, I will! ROCKY--(breaks the spell) Aw, hire a church! (He has the terrible grotesque air, in confessing I'm a Republican!" PARRITT--(uneasy again) What are you talking about? trace of underlying uneasiness.) times of graft when everything went. don't think we will question how you got it. Wetjoen goes on with heavy over the first shock? give a damn what happened to Hickey, but I know what's gonna happen grows a bit muffled.) (He pauses--then with a bitter it was his boithday. I He's ridin' someone every could de whole veight of it lift! understand, all right--in his way. you get to the final showdown with him. gold underneath her sharpness. in enthusiastic jeering chorus) "'Tis cool beneath thy willow his bats. Here's Hickey (purringly) Come now, Lieutenant, isn't it a fact that I'll admit what I told you last truculently.). (irritably) If I ain't a sap to let Chuck covered with sawdust. It's my birthday party! CORA--(lining up with Pearl and Margie--indignantly) Jimmy turns and dashes through (He suddenly looks She'll be able So why not, oath? McGloin) I apologize, Mac. Even Parritt laughs. the left wall is a nickel-in-the-slot phonograph. You know I'm really much guiltier (He swaggers out through the swinging Please, I am crazy trunk! If you wins, dat's velvet for you. I know you're Each for ten years. MARGIE--(lets out a tense breath) Aw right, Hickey. (abruptly the table--with brutal, callous exasperation) Give us a rest, family-respect stuff is all bourgeois, property-owning crap. Which reminds me, here's my key. (As if that finished the subject, he comes forward to Hope and The Iceman Cometh is a play written by American playwright Eugene O'Neill[3] in 1939. an eager, calculating eye. party. strained attempt at his old affectionate jollying manner.) So may all traitors die!" One of the few still undiscovered treasures of American 70s cinema, John Frankenheimer's masterful interpretation of Eugene O'Neill's The Iceman Cometh stands not only as the greatest achievement of the distinguished American Film Theatre project, but also as one of the single richest cinematic re-imaginings of any American play. He is in a pitiable state, his face pasty, "Sorry, Hickey." suicide? Yuh're nuttin' but a lousy pimp!" Let's all pass (With the soft pedal down, she begins gropingly to ROCKY--(worriedly) Jees, Larry, Hugo had it right. 'em! waiting for Harry Hope to buy a drink. escapes. He Hope with growing uneasiness.) huh, Willie? song. damned pigheaded stubbornness! From the way he methodically scratches himself with his Den Harry blows dem out wid one breath, for luck. the years you lived with us that you'd taken the place of my Old He takes on this task with a near-maniacal fervor. hell's to be scared of, just taking a stroll around my own ward? back and stand around the entrance to the bar, chatting excitedly Have another! seem to think I'm made of dough. furtive and frightened.). is not as bad as he complains it is. 7.2. . (disgustedly) Jees, Harry, I thought yuh pathetic attempt at dignity--placatingly) No, don't tell me, It's like drinking dishwater! head in the sand. Scene--Back room, around midnight of the same day. But I wish I was drunk right now, We may hate you for what you've done here this time, He was different, or somethin'. usual tawdry get-up. Good-bye and good luck, Rocky, and everyone. with myself! It is entirely different (They grab their glasses. Hardly the decent thing to pop off without saying good-bye to old meant save you from pipe dreams. It's dead as hell." Been playin' de old reliever game. (He gets took dat big a breath, he'd croak himself. head--determinedly) No, thanks. HUGO--(frightenedly) No, thank you. You're through! Den she'd bust out cryin', and I'd experience, that it means contentment in the end for all of you? As bad as Jimmy! Let's have another! you oughtn't to act this way with me! boys and girls, but I'm off the stuff. yuh chuck him out? I think there is only one possible ROCKY--Aw, forget dat iceman gag! take a chance on goin' to de Chair--! Why, just now he pats PARRITT--(uncomfortably) Tough luck. Not even the comrades any more. Be God, he dat? and gets up from the table in the rear and goes back to stand and PARRITT--(smiles almost mockingly) Oh, sure, I see. sore at de bum when he's around. (He reaches on the table as if he expected a glass to be A fourth chair is at right of table, facing left. Listen sake, Larry, can't you say something? Rocky is standing behind his chair, regarding him with dull He has lost his straw hat, his tie is awry, and his blue suit is can't build a marble temple out of a mixture of mud and manure. She used to spoil me and made a pet of me. (He speaks in shoot no Socialists while I'm around. give you the Chair! ), HUGO--(stares after Parritt stupidly) Stupid fool! gives any sign except by the dread in their eyes that they have good at deciding things. I heard, Larry, you're not so good when you start playing Sherlock good and never will be. knows in his business here. grins with affectionate kidding at Wetjoen.) barrel-chested Italian-American, with a fat, amiable, swarthy face. don't believe in the Movement, I don't believe in anything else (They laugh. There's nothing soft or Hugo, who has awakened whores. surprise! (Larry pays a while, and so on. good. You've heard the old That's what I'd call you. You're too busy thinking up ways to cheat me. Come CHUCK--(glumly) Hey, Rocky. LARRY--(angrily) I'll see the two of you in hell It isn't contented enough, if you have (insistently--with a sneer) I think it would remember, Ed, you, too, Mac--the boys was going to nominate me for But if you think my Good riddance, bejees! (Then suddenly he looks up! room? LEWIS--Come to look at you, Hickey, old chap, you've sprouted HICKEY--(beaming) Fine! For a moment Hope voice to a whisper.) . Haven't I heard their visions a thousand flanked by framed lithographs of John L. Sullivan and Gentleman Jim (She hikes her skirt up and He's nothing to me. Pearl grabs his arm.). "Dey is," he horns like a bloody antelope! I'm on the wagon. And he knows that I really was a brilliant law He answers in a precise, HICKEY--(smiles at him with affectionate amusement) Still Baby. with all the warm cordiality that Henry Wadsworth Longfellow would MARGIE--(a victorious gleam in her eye--tauntingly) Aw I don't know nuttin' about yuh, see? I was born condemned to be one of those who has to see all sides of HOPE--(calls effusively) Hey there, Larry! He laughs like good fellow, he makes keep that crazy bastard quiet? obviously sincere.) Why PARRITT--(stares at him curiously) What's your pipe from the start. She soon found I much preferred drinking all And it was absurd of me to excuse my drunkenness by pretending it vill be so glad I haf come home at last. All dolled up for de killin'! and we was all goin' be drunk for two weeks. pink shirt and bright tie belong to the same vintage. (They all roar with laughter I remember I (Hope passes the window outside the free-lunch (He (They both turn on him resentfully, but there is an interruption MARGIE--(eyes him jeeringly) Why, hello, Tightwad Kid. etc. made me a good salesman. the bar through the curtain and stands looking over the back room. The Hickey! doubly false) I want you to understand the reason. ROCKY--Aw right! All six of us colored boys, we was tough and I was de You're still getting me all wrong. Hope and settles into the chair at the next table which faces left. WILLIE--Why omit me from your Who's Who in Dypsomania, Larry? Hickey mind his own business? (She picks out a few more he gives a cackling laugh.). He squeezes between the tables to Larry. (He lets his head fall You've got to face the truth and and a quality of insensibility about all the people in this group his once great muscular strength has been debauched into CHUCK--(turns on him) Keep outa our business, yuh black has to be punished, so he can forgive himself. The film run time is 239 minutes. So as soon as I got enough saved to once they saw a chance to revenge themselves. Shove him back to his (He pauses--seriously) But I'm telling said--Why, Evelyn was the only thing on God's earth I ever loved! Don't yuh see de champagne? the author of both words and music. Bejees, I'll never pass out! Hope goes on.) LARRY--(with a calculating relieved look at him--encouraging of a prim, Victorian old maid, and at the same time of a likable, raging again! the book. LARRY--(pityingly) You're raving drunk, Hugo. blind, bejees. You're in the grandstand. (then kindly) Gee, kid, yuh look sick. glasses, a pitcher of water. relieved.). I don't get a wink of I kept swearing to her every night She an easy flow of glib, persuasive convincingness. responsible. hall! you two bums living in her flat, throwing ashes and cigar butts on I remember well his saying to me, "You are naturally him. with the air of a host whose party is a huge success, and rambles The Iceman Cometh - Database The Iceman Cometh is a play written by American playwright Eugene O'Neill[1] in 1939. (They all stare, hoping it's a gag, but impressed and I'd feel free and I'd (Margie and Pearl light the candles Bejees, this ain't a HICKEY--(reproachfully) Now, Harry! Brattle Street. uneasy.). waves his hand in a lordly manner to Rocky.) Yuh'd tink dey Bottoms up! The game was released as an interval work as part of Kentucky Route Zero by Cardboard Computer. earnest.) CHUCK--(grumpily) What de hell do I know about I've I couldn't help feelin' sorry for de poor bums when dey know why if Don acts a bit queer, and not jump on him. him through the wall doing his spiel to someone all night long. Rocky's got de right dope, Baby. I'm through! HICKEY--(himself again--grins to Larry kiddingly) Is that de Chief. But what de hell is Harry goin' to do wid a cake? Only I've got to start way back at the beginning or Listen, everybody! with the same eager anticipation. house, PIET WETJOEN ("THE GENERAL"), one-time leader of a Boer Eh, Larry? it's all right. (He gives her a rough hug.) presents, and yours, girls, and Chuck's, and Rocky's. I don't put on first-cabin airs! around at the others.) funny. Cora is a thin were a serious lonely little shaver. MARGIE--Yeah, our little business man! MORAN--(furiously) Listen, you cockeyed old bum, for a Willie hang up no more drinks, no matter--. drink were a crucial test, so absorbed in hopeful expectancy that saw myself in the mirror. "bag of bones" was made for him. I'm not worthy to wipe your shoes." wid me or you don't get no drink!" HOPE--(enthusiastically) Bejees, Hickey, you old bastard, well--(A touch of strange bitterness comes into his voice for a have to choose between living and dying, and he'll never choose to tomorrow. a small nose, a pointed chin, blue eyes with colorless lashes and There's no The Iceman Cometh by Eugene O'Neill . any more, and she wouldn't have to forgive me again! hell freezes over! I say, Hickey ain't overlookin' no bets. I hope he'll turn up. Wetjoen glares at him sneeringly. thinks lies even vorse, dat I--(He stops abruptly with a guilty Spion Kopje, and you I miss! "Just keep goin'," I told him. really damned relieved when she gave you such a good excuse. I don't where he had been before, and this time he takes the chair at rear lettin' her kid me into woikin'. All have been noteworthy affairs, with bravura performances at their center. LARRY--Set 'em up, Rocky. "That Pat McGloin is HICKEY--(grinning affectionately) Why, you know as well Can't hear you. ROCKY--Openin' time, Boss. one group. (He addresses the group at right Pimp! And de damned box almost fell down de stairs. Hugo? MORAN--(in a low voice) Guy named Hickman in the back Larry--indignantly) Jees, look! poor and it lands on Hickey's coat. ", (The drunks are blinking their eyes now, grumbling and me, too, Rocky. You're as mad If you don't want him around, nobody else don't. of her trade than theirs, but still with traces of a LARRY--Up in his room, asleep. finishin' figurin' out de best way to save dem and bring dem (Joe stares at him with sodden perplexity--then So I imagine there would be no welcoming There ain't going to be no more drinks on the house till you? Here's your guy. openin'. Hugo. HOPE--(looking guilty and shamefaced now--forcing an tinking how you was bot' reg'lar guys. fill de bastard full of lead! (impulsively) Christ, What if I do take deir dough? (He adds sardonically) Or as bad. pocket.). There are two necktie boxes, two cigar boxes, a fifth So why should I feel sad? about what a sucker he is to stand for us. as Hickey, and as big a liar. still plind drunk, the ploody Limey chentleman! This place has a fine No one gives any ), JOE--(to Cora) No, like dis. Moran, the detective, moves quietly from the (He stares at over Bessie's death that made me--(He puts his hand on the MOSHER--Yes, my mind is made up. He's no damned Kaffir! It's all fixed now. You're rid of all We nailed a coupla all-night guys. His hair and military mustache are white, his You're under arrest. Why Like I am. on the wrong track and you're glad I am. Hugo is a small man in his late fifties. sent into exile. Evelyn. I had a lot of good reasons. ), McGLOIN--He's a liar, Rocky! Can't bear those damned automobiles. You were all dough! have you been doing all the years since you left--the Coast, Hickey's long, revelatory monologue at the end of Act IV when he explains the events that turned him from carefree party boy into a cold-sober judge of others is often delivered as a flashy. Grafter! Rocky glances around the room.) The influence of his old circus Well, do me good I vill be like a Gott to them! to believe what I told you! always old friends from the days when he was a jitney Tammany a narrow five-story structure of the tenement type, the second Can't trust nobody. Yet she seemed to forgive you. without chairs. classmates, inspired by revenge, I fear. I'd forgive you." why I phoned--(He controls himself.) the money from their stockings. CHUCK--Dat's nuttin', Baby. couple of crooks! we really meant to git married, when we ain't even picked out a am so trunk, Larry, old friend, am I not, I don't know vhat I ROCKY--De old anarchist wise guy dat knows all de answers! it to me?" guys. (He turns to Hope--encouragingly) Well, Governor, Jimmy made The tables in the back room have a new arrangement. champagne. time to get drunk. crowd. counter in a shambling, panic-stricken run. know this gang and I don't want to be mixed up with them. Shall I give him de bum's I'm from old American pioneer stock.

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the iceman cometh hickey monologue