Inferiority
By Italo Svevo
()
About this ebook
In the company of gentlemen:
A gentleman bets a friend of his that he will be able to cow him into turning over his wallet before the evening is out. In an attempt to win his bet, he and another friend, Baron Squatti, enlist the help of their intended victim's manservant, Giovanni.
"Reading Svevo," says Peruvian Julio Ramón Ribeyro in his diary, "I have had the impression of reading my own work, not what I'm writing now, but what I would have written if I had been born in Trieste seventy years ago."
Genre: theater
Italo Svevo
Italian writer, born in Trieste, then in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, in 1861, and most well known for the novel _La coscienza di Zeno_.
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Inferiority - Italo Svevo
Inferiority
Italo Svevo
Translated from Italian by John Penuel
Original title: Inferiorità
English translation copyright 2011 by John Penuel
Published by John Penuel at Smashwords
Table of Contents
Dramatis Personae
Scene One
Scene Two
Scene Three
Scene Four
Scene Five
Scene Six
Dramatis Personae
Alfredo Picchi
Giovanni, his servant
Count Alberighi
Baron Squatti
A lavishly furnished room in Alfredo Picchi’s villa. Two doors at the back. The one on the right is the way out; the other is the door to Alfredo’s bedroom. To the spectator’s right is the door to Giovanni’s room. A table in the center and several ottomans and chairs. On the table a pitcher of water and several glasses.
It’s past midnight.
SCENE ONE
Giovanni, a well-built man of about thirty, lying on an ottoman, is asleep. The bell rings. Awakened, Giovanni gets up in a bad mood.
GIOVANNI. What on earth? It’s past midnight. (Goes to the door.)
SCENE TWO
Enter Baron Squatti and Count Alberighi. The former, about forty years of age, squat and paunchy, looks to be in his cups; the latter, about twenty-five, a strong and agile sportsman.
GIOVANNI (with surprise mitigated by respect). Gentlemen!? My master…
ALBERIGHI. We know. He’s not here. We were with him until just a little while ago. We’re here to pay you a visit, as it turns out. Can you at least offer us a seat? (Throws himself on the nearest ottoman, as Giovanni offers Baron Squatti another.)
SQUATTI (laughing). Don’t you have anything to offer us?
ALBERIGHI. Drop it. You’ve had enough to drink.
SQUATTI. But why? Let’s see what Alfredo drinks at home.
GIOVANNI (determined). I’m sure signor Picchi would have nothing against my offering you—if you would like—a certain favorite liqueur of his. French, I think. Very good, you know.
SQUATTI (pleased and smiling). Good answer, good answer. So let’s try this delicious liqueur