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<h1> MISALLIANCE </h1>
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<h2> By George Bernard Shaw </h2>
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<p>Transcriber's Notes on the editing: Punctuation and spelling<br/>
are retained as in the printed text. Shaw used a non-<br/>
standard system of spelling and punctuation. For example,<br/>
contractions usually have no apostrophe: "don't" is given<br/>
as "dont", "you've" as "youve", and so on. Abbreviated<br/>
honorifics have no trailing period: "Dr." is given as "Dr",<br/>
"Mrs." as "Mrs", and so on. "Shakespeare" is given as<br/>
"Shakespear". Where several characters in the play are<br/>
speaking at once, I have indicated it with vertical bars<br/>
("|"). The pound (currency) symbol has been replaced by the<br/>
word "pounds".<br/></p>
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<h2> MISALLIANCE </h2>
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<p><i>Johnny Tarleton, an ordinary young business man of thirty or less, is<br/>
taking his weekly Friday to Tuesday in the house of his father, John<br/>
Tarleton, who has made a great deal of money out of Tarleton's<br/>
Underwear. The house is in Surrey, on the slope of Hindhead; and<br/>
Johnny, reclining, novel in hand, in a swinging chair with a little<br/>
awning above it, is enshrined in a spacious half hemisphere of glass<br/>
which forms a pavilion commanding the garden, and, beyond it, a barren<br/>
but lovely landscape of hill profile with fir trees, commons of<br/>
bracken and gorse, and wonderful cloud pictures.</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>The glass pavilion springs from a bridgelike arch in the wall of the<br/>
house, through which one comes into a big hall with tiled flooring,<br/>
which suggests that the proprietor's notion of domestic luxury is<br/>
founded on the lounges of week-end hotels. The arch is not quite in<br/>
the centre of the wall. There is more wall to its right than to its<br/>
left, and this space is occupied by a hat rack and umbrella stand in<br/>
which tennis rackets, white parasols, caps, Panama hats, and other<br/>
summery articles are bestowed. Just through the arch at this corner<br/>
stands a new portable Turkish bath, recently unpacked, with its crate<br/>
beside it, and on the crate the drawn nails and the hammer used in<br/>
unpacking. Near the crate are open boxes of garden games: bowls and<br/>
croquet. Nearly in the middle of the glass wall of the pavilion is a<br/>
door giving on the garden, with a couple of steps to surmount the<br/>
hot-water pipes which skirt the glass. At intervals round the<br/>
pavilion are marble pillars with specimens of Viennese pottery on<br/>
them, very flamboyant in colour and florid in design. Between them<br/>
are folded garden chairs flung anyhow against the pipes. In the side<br/>
walls are two doors: one near the hat stand, leading to the interior<br/>
of the house, the other on the opposite side and at the other end,<br/>
leading to the vestibule.</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>There is no solid furniture except a sideboard which stands against<br/>
the wall between the vestibule door and the pavilion, a small writing<br/>
table with a blotter, a rack for telegram forms and stationery, and a<br/>
wastepaper basket, standing out in the hall near the sideboard, and a<br/>
lady's worktable, with two chairs at it, towards the other side of the<br/>
lounge. The writing table has also two chairs at it. On the<br/>
sideboard there is a tantalus, liqueur bottles, a syphon, a glass jug<br/>
of lemonade, tumblers, and every convenience for casual drinking.<br/>
Also a plate of sponge cakes, and a highly ornate punchbowl in the<br/>
same style as the keramic display in the pavilion. Wicker chairs and<br/>
little bamboo tables with ash trays and boxes of matches on them are<br/>
scattered in all directions. In the pavilion, which is flooded with<br/>
sunshine, is the elaborate patent swing seat and awning in which<br/>
Johnny reclines with his novel. There are two wicker chairs right and<br/>
left of him.</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley Summerhays, one of those smallish, thinskinned youths, who<br/>
from 17 to 70 retain unaltered the mental airs of the later and the<br/>
physical appearance of the earlier age, appears in the garden and<br/>
comes through the glass door into the pavilion. He is unmistakably a<br/>
grade above Johnny socially; and though he looks sensitive enough, his<br/>
assurance and his high voice are a little exasperating.</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Hallo! Wheres your luggage?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I left it at the station. Ive walked up from Haslemere.<br/>
<i>[He goes to the hat stand and hangs up his hat].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY <i>[shortly]</i> Oh! And who's to fetch it?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Dont know. Dont care. Providence, probably. If not, your<br/>
mother will have it fetched.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Not her business, exactly, is it?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[returning to the pavilion]</i> Of course not. Thats why one<br/>
loves her for doing it. Look here: chuck away your silly week-end<br/>
novel, and talk to a chap. After a week in that filthy office my<br/>
brain is simply blue-mouldy. Lets argue about something intellectual.<br/>
<i>[He throws himself into the wicker chair on Johnny's right].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[straightening up in the swing with a yell of protest]</i> No.<br/>
Now seriously, Bunny, Ive come down here to have a pleasant week-end;<br/>
and I'm not going to stand your confounded arguments. If you want to<br/>
argue, get out of this and go over to the Congregationalist<br/>
minister's. He's a nailer at arguing. He likes it.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. You cant argue with a person when his livelihood depends on<br/>
his not letting you convert him. And would you mind not calling me<br/>
Bunny. My name is Bentley Summerhays, which you please.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Whats the matter with Bunny?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. It puts me in a false position. Have you ever considered<br/>
the fact that I was an afterthought?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. An afterthought? What do you mean by that?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I—<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. No, stop: I dont want to know. It's only a dodge to start<br/>
an argument.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Dont be afraid: it wont overtax your brain. My father was<br/>
44 when I was born. My mother was 41. There was twelve years between<br/>
me and the next eldest. I was unexpected. I was probably<br/>
unintentional. My brothers and sisters are not the least like me.<br/>
Theyre the regular thing that you always get in the first batch from<br/>
young parents: quite pleasant, ordinary, do-the-regular-thing sort:<br/>
all body and no brains, like you.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Thank you.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Dont mention it, old chap. Now I'm different. By the time<br/>
I was born, the old couple knew something. So I came out all brains<br/>
and no more body than is absolutely necessary. I am really a good<br/>
deal older than you, though you were born ten years sooner. Everybody<br/>
feels that when they hear us talk; consequently, though it's quite<br/>
natural to hear me calling you Johnny, it sounds ridiculous and<br/>
unbecoming for you to call me Bunny. <i>[He rises].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Does it, by George? You stop me doing it if you can: thats<br/>
all.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. If you go on doing it after Ive asked you not, youll feel an<br/>
awful swine. <i>[He strolls away carelessly to the sideboard with his<br/>
eye on the sponge cakes].</i> At least I should; but I suppose youre not<br/>
so particular.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY <i>[rising vengefully and following Bentley, who is forced to<br/>
turn and listen]</i> I'll tell you what it is, my boy: you want a good<br/>
talking to; and I'm going to give it to you. If you think that<br/>
because your father's a K.C.B., and you want to marry my sister, you<br/>
can make yourself as nasty as you please and say what you like, youre<br/>
mistaken. Let me tell you that except Hypatia, not one person in this<br/>
house is in favor of her marrying you; and I dont believe shes happy<br/>
about it herself. The match isnt settled yet: dont forget that.<br/>
Youre on trial in the office because the Governor isnt giving his<br/>
daughter money for an idle man to live on her. Youre on trial here<br/>
because my mother thinks a girl should know what a man is like in the<br/>
house before she marries him. Thats been going on for two months now;<br/>
and whats the result? Youve got yourself thoroughly disliked in the<br/>
office; and youre getting yourself thoroughly disliked here, all<br/>
through your bad manners and your conceit, and the damned impudence<br/>
you think clever.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[deeply wounded and trying hard to control himself]</i> Thats<br/>
enough, thank you. You dont suppose, I hope, that I should have come<br/>
down if I had known that that was how you felt about me. <i>[He makes<br/>
for the vestibule door].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[collaring him].</i> No: you dont run away. I'm going to<br/>
have this out with you. Sit down: d'y' hear? <i>[Bentley attempts to<br/>
go with dignity. Johnny slings him into a chair at the writing table,<br/>
where he sits, bitterly humiliated, but afraid to speak lest he should<br/>
burst into tears].</i> Thats the advantage of having more body than<br/>
brains, you see: it enables me to teach you manners; and I'm going to<br/>
do it too. Youre a spoilt young pup; and you need a jolly good<br/>
licking. And if youre not careful youll get it: I'll see to that<br/>
next time you call me a swine.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I didnt call you a swine. But <i>[bursting into a fury of<br/>
tears]</i> you are a swine: youre a beast: youre a brute: youre a<br/>
cad: youre a liar: youre a bully: I should like to wring your<br/>
damned neck for you.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[with a derisive laugh]</i> Try it, my son. <i>[Bentley gives<br/>
an inarticulate sob of rage].</i> Fighting isnt in your line. Youre too<br/>
small and youre too childish. I always suspected that your cleverness<br/>
wouldnt come to very much when it was brought up against something<br/>
solid: some decent chap's fist, for instance.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I hope your beastly fist may come up against a mad bull or a<br/>
prizefighter's nose, or something solider than me. I dont care about<br/>
your fist; but if everybody here dislikes me— <i>[he is checked by a<br/>
sob].</i> Well, I dont care. <i>[Trying to recover himself]</i> I'm sorry I<br/>
intruded: I didnt know. <i>[Breaking down again]</i> Oh you beast! you<br/>
pig! Swine, swine, swine, swine, swine! Now!<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. All right, my lad, all right. Sling your mud as hard as you<br/>
please: it wont stick to me. What I want to know is this. How is it<br/>
that your father, who I suppose is the strongest man England has<br/>
produced in our time—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. You got that out of your halfpenny paper. A lot you know<br/>
about him!<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. I dont set up to be able to do anything but admire him and<br/>
appreciate him and be proud of him as an Englishman. If it wasnt for<br/>
my respect for him, I wouldnt have stood your cheek for two days, let<br/>
alone two months. But what I cant understand is why he didnt lick it<br/>
out of you when you were a kid. For twenty-five years he kept a place<br/>
twice as big as England in order: a place full of seditious<br/>
coffee-colored heathens and pestilential white agitators in the middle<br/>
of a lot of savage tribes. And yet he couldnt keep you in order. I<br/>
dont set up to be half the man your father undoubtedly is; but, by<br/>
George, it's lucky for you you were not my son. I dont hold with my<br/>
own father's views about corporal punishment being wrong. It's<br/>
necessary for some people; and I'd have tried it on you until you<br/>
first learnt to howl and then to behave yourself.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[contemptuously]</i> Yes: behavior wouldnt come naturally to<br/>
your son, would it?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[stung into sudden violence]</i> Now you keep a civil tongue<br/>
in your head. I'll stand none of your snobbery. I'm just as proud of<br/>
Tarleton's Underwear as you are of your father's title and his K.C.B.,<br/>
and all the rest of it. My father began in a little hole of a shop in<br/>
Leeds no bigger than our pantry down the passage there. He—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Oh yes: I know. Ive read it. "The Romance of Business, or<br/>
The Story of Tarleton's Underwear. Please Take One!" I took one the<br/>
day after I first met Hypatia. I went and bought half a dozen<br/>
unshrinkable vests for her sake.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Well: did they shrink?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Oh, dont be a fool.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Never mind whether I'm a fool or not. Did they shrink?<br/>
Thats the point. Were they worth the money?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I couldnt wear them: do you think my skin's as thick as<br/>
your customers' hides? I'd as soon have dressed myself in a nutmeg<br/>
grater.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Pity your father didnt give your thin skin a jolly good<br/>
lacing with a cane—!<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Pity you havnt got more than one idea! If you want to know,<br/>
they did try that on me once, when I was a small kid. A silly<br/>
governess did it. I yelled fit to bring down the house and went into<br/>
convulsions and brain fever and that sort of thing for three weeks.<br/>
So the old girl got the sack; and serve her right! After that, I was<br/>
let do what I like. My father didnt want me to grow up a<br/>
broken-spirited spaniel, which is your idea of a man, I suppose.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Jolly good thing for you that my father made you come into<br/>
the office and shew what you were made of. And it didnt come to much:<br/>
let me tell you that. When the Governor asked me where I thought we<br/>
ought to put you, I said, "Make him the Office Boy." The Governor<br/>
said you were too green. And so you were.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I daresay. So would you be pretty green if you were shoved<br/>
into my father's set. I picked up your silly business in a fortnight.<br/>
Youve been at it ten years; and you havnt picked it up yet.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Dont talk rot, child. You know you simply make me pity you.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "Romance of Business" indeed! The real romance of<br/>
Tarleton's business is the story that you understand anything about<br/>
it. You never could explain any mortal thing about it to me when I<br/>
asked you. "See what was done the last time": that was the beginning<br/>
and the end of your wisdom. Youre nothing but a turnspit.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. A what!<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. A turnspit. If your father hadnt made a roasting jack for<br/>
you to turn, youd be earning twenty-four shillings a week behind a<br/>
counter.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. If you dont take that back and apologize for your bad<br/>
manners, I'll give you as good a hiding as ever—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Help! Johnny's beating me! Oh! Murder! <i>[He throws<br/>
himself on the ground, uttering piercing yells].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Dont be a fool. Stop that noise, will you. I'm not going to<br/>
touch you. Sh—sh—<br/>
<br/>
<i>Hypatia rushes in through the inner door, followed by Mrs Tarleton,<br/>
and throws herself on her knees by Bentley. Mrs Tarleton, whose knees<br/>
are stiffer, bends over him and tries to lift him. Mrs Tarleton is a<br/>
shrewd and motherly old lady who has been pretty in her time, and is<br/>
still very pleasant and likeable and unaffected. Hypatia is a typical<br/>
English girl of a sort never called typical: that is, she has an<br/>
opaque white skin, black hair, large dark eyes with black brows and<br/>
lashes, curved lips, swift glances and movements that flash out of a<br/>
waiting stillness, boundless energy and audacity held in leash.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[pouncing on Bentley with no very gentle hand]</i> Bentley:<br/>
whats the matter? Dont cry like that: whats the use? Whats<br/>
happened?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Are you ill, child? <i>[They get him up.]</i> There, there,<br/>
pet! It's all right: dont cry <i>[they put him into a chair]</i>: there!<br/>
there! there! Johnny will go for the doctor; and he'll give you<br/>
something nice to make it well.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. What has happened, Johnny?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Was it a wasp?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[impatiently]</i> Wasp be dashed!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh Bunny! that was a naughty word.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Yes, I know: I beg your pardon. <i>[He rises, and extricates<br/>
himself from them]</i> Thats all right. Johnny frightened me. You know<br/>
how easy it is to hurt me; and I'm too small to defend myself against<br/>
Johnny.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Johnny: how often have I told you that you must not<br/>
bully the little ones. I thought youd outgrown all that.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[angrily]</i> I do declare, mamma, that Johnny's brutality<br/>
makes it impossible to live in the house with him.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[deeply hurt]</i> It's twenty-seven years, mother, since you<br/>
had that row with me for licking Robert and giving Hypatia a black eye<br/>
because she bit me. I promised you then that I'd never raise my hand<br/>
to one of them again; and Ive never broken my word. And now because<br/>
this young whelp begins to cry out before he's hurt, you treat me as<br/>
if I were a brute and a savage.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. No dear, not a savage; but you know you must not call<br/>
our visitor naughty names.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Oh, let him alone—<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[fiercely]</i> Dont you interfere between my mother and me:<br/>
d'y' hear?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Johnny's lost his temper, mother. We'd better go. Come,<br/>
Bentley.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Yes: that will be best. <i>[To Bentley]</i> Johnny doesnt<br/>
mean any harm, dear: he'll be himself presently. Come.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The two ladies go out through the inner door with Bentley, who turns<br/>
at the door to grin at Johnny as he goes out.</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Johnny, left alone, clenches his fists and grinds his teeth, but can<br/>
find no relief in that way for his rage. After choking and stamping<br/>
for a moment, he makes for the vestibule door. It opens before he<br/>
reaches it; and Lord Summerhays comes in. Johnny glares at him,<br/>
speechless. Lord Summerhays takes in the situation, and quickly takes<br/>
the punchbowl from the sideboard and offers it to Johnny.</i><br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Smash it. Dont hesitate: it's an ugly thing.<br/>
Smash it: hard. <i>[Johnny, with a stifled yell, dashes it in pieces,<br/>
and then sits down and mops his brow].</i> Feel better now? <i>[Johnny<br/>
nods].</i> I know only one person alive who could drive me to the point<br/>
of having either to break china or commit murder; and that person is<br/>
my son Bentley. Was it he? <i>[Johnny nods again, not yet able to<br/>
speak].</i> As the car stopped I heard a yell which is only too familiar<br/>
to me. It generally means that some infuriated person is trying to<br/>
thrash Bentley. Nobody has ever succeeded, though almost everybody<br/>
has tried. <i>[He seats himself comfortably close to the writing table,<br/>
and sets to work to collect the fragments of the punchbowl in the<br/>
wastepaper basket whilst Johnny, with diminishing difficulty, collects<br/>
himself].</i> Bentley is a problem which I confess I have never been<br/>
able to solve. He was born to be a great success at the age of fifty.<br/>
Most Englishmen of his class seem to be born to be great successes at<br/>
the age of twenty-four at most. The domestic problem for me is how to<br/>
endure Bentley until he is fifty. The problem for the nation is how<br/>
to get itself governed by men whose growth is arrested when they are<br/>
little more than college lads. Bentley doesnt really mean to be<br/>
offensive. You can always make him cry by telling him you dont like<br/>
him. Only, he cries so loud that the experiment should be made in the<br/>
open air: in the middle of Salisbury Plain if possible. He has a<br/>
hard and penetrating intellect and a remarkable power of looking facts<br/>
in the face; but unfortunately, being very young, he has no idea of<br/>
how very little of that sort of thing most of us can stand. On the<br/>
other hand, he is frightfully sensitive and even affectionate; so that<br/>
he probably gets as much as he gives in the way of hurt feelings.<br/>
Youll excuse me rambling on like this about my son.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[who has pulled himself together]</i> You did it on purpose.<br/>
I wasnt quite myself: I needed a moment to pull round: thank you.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all. Is your father at home?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. No: he's opening one of his free libraries. Thats another<br/>
nice little penny gone. He's mad on reading. He promised another<br/>
free library last week. It's ruinous. Itll hit you as well as me<br/>
when Bunny marries Hypatia. When all Hypatia's money is thrown away<br/>
on libraries, where will Bunny come in? Cant you stop him?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I'm afraid not. Hes a perfect whirlwind.<br/>
Indefatigable at public work. Wonderful man, I think.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Oh, public work! He does too much of it. It's really a sort<br/>
of laziness, getting away from your own serious business to amuse<br/>
yourself with other people's. Mind: I dont say there isnt another<br/>
side to it. It has its value as an advertisement. It makes useful<br/>
acquaintances and leads to valuable business connections. But it<br/>
takes his mind off the main chance; and he overdoes it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The danger of public business is that it never ends.<br/>
A man may kill himself at it.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Or he can spend more on it than it brings him in: thats how<br/>
I look at it. What I say is that everybody's business is nobody's<br/>
business. I hope I'm not a hard man, nor a narrow man, nor unwilling<br/>
to pay reasonable taxes, and subscribe in reason to deserving<br/>
charities, and even serve on a jury in my turn; and no man can say I<br/>
ever refused to help a friend out of a difficulty when he was worth<br/>
helping. But when you ask me to go beyond that, I tell you frankly I<br/>
dont see it. I never did see it, even when I was only a boy, and had<br/>
to pretend to take in all the ideas the Governor fed me up with. I<br/>
didnt see it; and I dont see it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. There is certainly no business reason why you should<br/>
take more than your share of the world's work.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. So I say. It's really a great encouragement to me to find<br/>
you agree with me. For of course if nobody agrees with you, how are<br/>
you to know that youre not a fool?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Quite so.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. I wish youd talk to him about it. It's no use my saying<br/>
anything: I'm a child to him still: I have no influence. Besides,<br/>
you know how to handle men. See how you handled me when I was making<br/>
a fool of myself about Bunny!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Oh yes I was: I know I was. Well, if my blessed father had<br/>
come in he'd have told me to control myself. As if I was losing my<br/>
temper on purpose!<br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley returns, newly washed. He beams when he sees his father, and<br/>
comes affectionately behind him and pats him on the shoulders.</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Hel-lo, commander! have you come? Ive been making a filthy<br/>
silly ass of myself here. I'm awfully sorry, Johnny, old chap: I beg<br/>
your pardon. Why dont you kick me when I go on like that?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. As we came through Godalming I thought I heard some<br/>
yelling—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I should think you did. Johnny was rather rough on me,<br/>
though. He told me nobody here liked me; and I was silly enough to<br/>
believe him.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. And all the women have been kissing you and pitying<br/>
you ever since to stop your crying, I suppose. Baby!<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I did cry. But I always feel good after crying: it<br/>
relieves my wretched nerves. I feel perfectly jolly now.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all ashamed of yourself, for instance?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. If I started being ashamed of myself I shouldnt have time<br/>
for anything else all my life. I say: I feel very fit and spry.<br/>
Lets all go down and meet the Grand Cham. <i>[He goes to the hatstand<br/>
and takes down his hat].</i><br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Does Mr Tarleton like to be called the Grand Cham,<br/>
do you think, Bentley?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Well, he thinks hes too modest for it. He calls himself<br/>
Plain John. But you cant call him that in his own office: besides,<br/>
it doesnt suit him: it's not flamboyant enough.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Flam what?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Flamboyant. Lets go and meet him. Hes telephoned from<br/>
Guildford to say hes on the road. The dear old son is always<br/>
telephoning or telegraphing: he thinks hes hustling along like<br/>
anything when hes only sending unnecessary messages.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Thank you: I should prefer a quiet afternoon.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Right O. I shant press Johnny: hes had enough of me for<br/>
one week-end. <i>[He goes out through the pavilion into the grounds].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Not a bad idea, that.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. What?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Going to meet the Governor. You know you wouldnt think it;<br/>
but the Governor likes Bunny rather. And Bunny is cultivating it. I<br/>
shouldnt be surprised if he thought he could squeeze me out one of<br/>
these days.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You dont say so! Young rascal! I want to consult<br/>
you about him, if you dont mind. Shall we stroll over to the Gibbet?<br/>
Bentley is too fast for me as a walking companion; but I should like a<br/>
short turn.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[rising eagerly, highly flattered]</i> Right you are. Thatll<br/>
suit me down to the ground. <i>[He takes a Panama and stick from the<br/>
hat stand].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Mrs Tarleton and Hypatia come back just as the two men are going out.<br/>
Hypatia salutes Summerhays from a distance with an enigmatic lift of<br/>
her eyelids in his direction and a demure nod before she sits down at<br/>
the worktable and busies herself with her needle. Mrs Tarleton,<br/>
hospitably fussy, goes over to him.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, Lord Summerhays, I didnt know you were here. Wont<br/>
you have some tea?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No, thank you: I'm not allowed tea. And I'm<br/>
ashamed to say Ive knocked over your beautiful punch-bowl. You must<br/>
let me replace it.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, it doesnt matter: I'm only too glad to be rid of<br/>
it. The shopman told me it was in the best taste; but when my poor<br/>
old nurse Martha got cataract, Bunny said it was a merciful provision<br/>
of Nature to prevent her seeing our china.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[gravely]</i> That was exceedingly rude of Bentley,<br/>
Mrs Tarleton. I hope you told him so.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, bless you! I dont care what he says; so long as he<br/>
says it to me and not before visitors.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. We're going out for a stroll, mother.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. All right: dont let us keep you. Never mind about<br/>
that crock: I'll get the girl to come and take the pieces away.<br/>
<i>[Recollecting herself]</i> There! Ive done it again!<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Done what?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Called her the girl. You know, Lord Summerhays, its a<br/>
funny thing; but now I'm getting old, I'm dropping back into all the<br/>
ways John and I had when we had barely a hundred a year. You should<br/>
have known me when I was forty! I talked like a duchess; and if<br/>
Johnny or Hypatia let slip a word that was like old times, I was down<br/>
on them like anything. And now I'm beginning to do it myself at every<br/>
turn.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. There comes a time when all that seems to matter so<br/>
little. Even queens drop the mask when they reach our time of life.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Let you alone for giving a thing a pretty turn! Youre<br/>
a humbug, you know, Lord Summerhays. John doesnt know it; and Johnny<br/>
doesnt know it; but you and I know it, dont we? Now thats something<br/>
that even you cant answer; so be off with you for your walk without<br/>
another word.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lord Summerhays smiles; bows; and goes out through the vestibule<br/>
door, followed by Johnny. Mrs Tarleton sits down at the worktable and<br/>
takes out her darning materials and one of her husband's socks.<br/>
Hypatia is at the other side of the table, on her mother's right.<br/>
They chat as they work.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I wonder whether they laugh at us when they are by<br/>
themselves!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Who?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Bentley and his father and all the toffs in their set.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, thats only their way. I used to think that the<br/>
aristocracy were a nasty sneering lot, and that they were laughing at<br/>
me and John. Theyre always giggling and pretending not to care much<br/>
about anything. But you get used to it: theyre the same to one<br/>
another and to everybody. Besides, what does it matter what they<br/>
think? It's far worse when theyre civil, because that always means<br/>
that they want you to lend them money; and you must never do that,<br/>
Hypatia, because they never pay. How can they? They dont make<br/>
anything, you see. Of course, if you can make up your mind to regard<br/>
it as a gift, thats different; but then they generally ask you again;<br/>
and you may as well say no first as last. You neednt be afraid of the<br/>
aristocracy, dear: theyre only human creatures like ourselves after<br/>
all; and youll hold your own with them easy enough.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, I'm not a bit afraid of them, I assure you.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, no, not afraid of them, exactly; but youve got to<br/>
pick up their ways. You know, dear, I never quite agreed with your<br/>
father's notion of keeping clear of them, and sending you to a school<br/>
that was so expensive that they couldnt afford to send their daughters<br/>
there; so that all the girls belonged to big business families like<br/>
ourselves. It takes all sorts to make a world; and I wanted you to<br/>
see a little of all sorts. When you marry Bunny, and go among the<br/>
women of his father's set, theyll shock you at first.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[incredulously]</i> How?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, the things they talk about.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh! scandalmongering?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh no: we all do that: thats only human nature. But<br/>
you know theyve no notion of decency. I shall never forget the first<br/>
day I spent with a marchioness, two duchesses, and no end of Ladies<br/>
This and That. Of course it was only a committee: theyd put me on to<br/>
get a big subscription out of John. I'd never heard such talk in my<br/>
life. The things they mentioned! And it was the marchioness that<br/>
started it.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. What sort of things?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Drainage!! She'd tried three systems in her castle;<br/>
and she was going to do away with them all and try another. I didnt<br/>
know which way to look when she began talking about it: I thought<br/>
theyd all have got up and gone out of the room. But not a bit of it,<br/>
if you please. They were all just as bad as she. They all had<br/>
systems; and each of them swore by her own system. I sat there with<br/>
my cheeks burning until one of the duchesses, thinking I looked out of<br/>
it, I suppose, asked me what system I had. I said I was sure I knew<br/>
nothing about such things, and hadnt we better change the subject.<br/>
Then the fat was in the fire, I can tell you. There was a regular<br/>
terror of a countess with an anaerobic system; and she told me,<br/>
downright brutally, that I'd better learn something about them before<br/>
my children died of diphtheria. That was just two months after I'd<br/>
buried poor little Bobby; and that was the very thing he died of, poor<br/>
little lamb! I burst out crying: I couldnt help it. It was as good<br/>
as telling me I'd killed my own child. I had to go away; but before I<br/>
was out of the door one of the duchesses—quite a young woman—began<br/>
talking about what sour milk did in her inside and how she expected to<br/>
live to be over a hundred if she took it regularly. And me listening<br/>
to her, that had never dared to think that a duchess could have<br/>
anything so common as an inside! I shouldnt have minded if it had<br/>
been children's insides: we have to talk about them. But grown-up<br/>
people! I was glad to get away that time.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. There was a physiology and hygiene class started at school;<br/>
but of course none of our girls were let attend it.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. If it had been an aristocratic school plenty would have<br/>
attended it. Thats what theyre like: theyve nasty minds. With<br/>
really nice good women a thing is either decent or indecent; and if<br/>
it's indecent, we just dont mention it or pretend to know about it;<br/>
and theres an end of it. But all the aristocracy cares about is<br/>
whether it can get any good out of the thing. Theyre what Johnny<br/>
calls cynical-like. And of course nobody can say a word to them for<br/>
it. Theyre so high up that they can do and say what they like.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, I think they might leave the drains to their husbands.<br/>
I shouldnt think much of a man that left such things to me.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, dont think that, dear, whatever you do. I never<br/>
let on about it to you; but it's me that takes care of the drainage<br/>
here. After what that countess said to me I wasnt going to lose<br/>
another child or trust John. And I don't want my grandchildren to die<br/>
any more than my children.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Do you think Bentley will ever be as big a man as his<br/>
father? I dont mean clever: I mean big and strong.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Not he. Hes overbred, like one of those expensive<br/>
little dogs. I like a bit of a mongrel myself, whether it's a man or<br/>
a dog: theyre the best for everyday. But we all have our tastes:<br/>
whats one woman's meat is another woman's poison. Bunny's a dear<br/>
little fellow; but I never could have fancied him for a husband when I<br/>
was your age.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Yes; but he has some brains. Hes not like all the rest.<br/>
One can't have everything.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, youre quite right, dear: quite right. It's a<br/>
great thing to have brains: look what it's done for your father!<br/>
Thats the reason I never said a word when you jilted poor Jerry<br/>
Mackintosh.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[excusing herself]</i> I really couldnt stick it out with<br/>
Jerry, mother. I know you liked him; and nobody can deny that hes a<br/>
splendid animal—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[shocked]</i> Hypatia! How can you! The things that<br/>
girls say nowadays!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, what else can you call him? If I'd been deaf or he'd<br/>
been dumb, I could have married him. But living with father, Ive got<br/>
accustomed to cleverness. Jerry would drive me mad: you know very<br/>
well hes a fool: even Johnny thinks him a fool.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[up in arms at once in defence of her boy]</i> Now dont<br/>
begin about my Johnny. You know it annoys me. Johnny's as clever as<br/>
anybody else in his own way. I dont say hes as clever as you in some<br/>
ways; but hes a man, at all events, and not a little squit of a thing<br/>
like your Bunny.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, I say nothing against your darling: we all know<br/>
Johnny's perfection.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont be cross, dearie. You let Johnny alone; and I'll<br/>
let Bunny alone. I'm just as bad as you. There!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, I dont mind your saying that about Bentley. It's true.<br/>
He is a little squit of a thing. I wish he wasnt. But who else is<br/>
there? Think of all the other chances Ive had! Not one of them has<br/>
as much brains in his whole body as Bentley has in his little finger.<br/>
Besides, theyve no distinction. It's as much as I can do to tell one<br/>
from the other. They wouldnt even have money if they werent the sons<br/>
of their fathers, like Johnny. Whats a girl to do? I never met<br/>
anybody like Bentley before. He may be small; but hes the best of the<br/>
bunch: you cant deny that.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[with a sigh]</i> Well, my pet, if you fancy him, theres<br/>
no more to be said.<br/>
<br/>
<i>A pause follows this remark: the two women sewing silently.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Mother: do you think marriage is as much a question of<br/>
fancy as it used to be in your time and father's?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, it wasnt much fancy with me, dear: your father<br/>
just wouldnt take no for an answer; and I was only too glad to be his<br/>
wife instead of his shop-girl. Still, it's curious; but I had more<br/>
choice than you in a way, because, you see, I was poor; and there are<br/>
so many more poor men than rich ones that I might have had more of a<br/>
pick, as you might say, if John hadnt suited me.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I can imagine all sorts of men I could fall in love with;<br/>
but I never seem to meet them. The real ones are too small, like<br/>
Bunny, or too silly, like Jerry. Of course one can get into a state<br/>
about any man: fall in love with him if you like to call it that.<br/>
But who would risk marrying a man for love? <i>I</i> shouldnt. I remember<br/>
three girls at school who agreed that the one man you should never<br/>
marry was the man you were in love with, because it would make a<br/>
perfect slave of you. Theres a sort of instinct against it, I think,<br/>
thats just as strong as the other instinct. One of them, to my<br/>
certain knowledge, refused a man she was in love with, and married<br/>
another who was in love with her; and it turned out very well.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Does all that mean that youre not in love with Bunny?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, how could anybody be in love with Bunny? I like him to<br/>
kiss me just as I like a baby to kiss me. I'm fond of him; and he<br/>
never bores me; and I see that hes very clever; but I'm not what you<br/>
call gone about him, if thats what you mean.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Then why need you marry him?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. What better can I do? I must marry somebody, I suppose.<br/>
Ive realized that since I was twenty-three. I always used to take it<br/>
as a matter of course that I should be married before I was twenty.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY'S VOICE. <i>[in the garden]</i> Youve got to keep yourself fresh:<br/>
to look at these things with an open mind.<br/>
<br/>
JOHN TARLETON'S VOICE. Quite right, quite right: I always say so.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Theres your father, and Bunny with him.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Keep young. Keep your eye on me. Thats the tip for you.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley and Mr Tarleton (an immense and genial veteran of trade) come<br/>
into view and enter the pavilion.</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHN TARLETON. You think youre young, do you? You think I'm old?<br/>
<i>[energetically shaking off his motoring coat and hanging it up with<br/>
his cap].</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[helping him with the coat]</i> Of course youre old. Look at<br/>
your face and look at mine. What you call your youth is nothing but<br/>
your levity. Why do we get on so well together? Because I'm a young<br/>
cub and youre an old josser. <i>[He throws a cushion at Hypatia's feet<br/>
and sits down on it with his back against her knees].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Old! Thats all you know about it, my lad. How do, Patsy!<br/>
<i>[Hypatia kisses him].</i> How is my Chickabiddy? <i>[He kisses Mrs<br/>
Tarleton's hand and poses expansively in the middle of the picture].</i><br/>
Look at me! Look at these wrinkles, these gray hairs, this repulsive<br/>
mask that you call old age! What is it? <i>[Vehemently]</i> I ask you,<br/>
what is it?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Jolly nice and venerable, old man. Dont be discouraged.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Nice? Not a bit of it. Venerable? Venerable be blowed!<br/>
Read your Darwin, my boy. Read your Weismann. <i>[He goes to the<br/>
sideboard for a drink of lemonade].</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. For shame, John! Tell him to read his Bible.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[manipulating the syphon]</i> Whats the use of telling<br/>
children to read the Bible when you know they wont. I was kept away<br/>
from the Bible for forty years by being told to read it when I was<br/>
young. Then I picked it up one evening in a hotel in Sunderland when<br/>
I had left all my papers in the train; and I found it wasnt half bad.<br/>
<i>[He drinks, and puts down the glass with a smack of enjoyment].</i><br/>
Better than most halfpenny papers, anyhow, if only you could make<br/>
people believe it. <i>[He sits down by the writing-table, near his<br/>
wife].</i> But if you want to understand old age scientifically, read<br/>
Darwin and Weismann. Of course if you want to understand it<br/>
romantically, read about Solomon.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Have you had tea, John?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes. Dont interrupt me when I'm improving the boy's mind.<br/>
Where was I? This repulsive mask—Yes. <i>[Explosively]</i> What is<br/>
death?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. John!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Death is a rather unpleasant subject, papa.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Not a bit. Not scientifically. Scientifically it's a<br/>
delightful subject. You think death's natural. Well, it isnt. You<br/>
read Weismann. There wasnt any death to start with. You go look in<br/>
any ditch outside and youll find swimming about there as fresh as<br/>
paint some of the identical little live cells that Adam christened in<br/>
the Garden of Eden. But if big things like us didnt die, we'd crowd<br/>
one another off the face of the globe. Nothing survived, sir, except<br/>
the sort of people that had the sense and good manners to die and make<br/>
room for the fresh supplies. And so death was introduced by Natural<br/>
Selection. You get it out of your head, my lad, that I'm going to die<br/>
because I'm wearing out or decaying. Theres no such thing as decay to<br/>
a vital man. I shall clear out; but I shant decay.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. And what about the wrinkles and the almond tree and the<br/>
grasshopper that becomes a burden and the desire that fails?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Does it? by George! No, sir: it spiritualizes. As to<br/>
your grasshopper, I can carry an elephant.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. You do say such things, Bunny! What does he mean by<br/>
the almond tree?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. He means my white hairs: the repulsive mask. That, my<br/>
boy, is another invention of Natural Selection to disgust young women<br/>
with me, and give the lads a turn.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. John: I wont have it. Thats a forbidden subject.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. They talk of the wickedness and vanity of women painting<br/>
their faces and wearing auburn wigs at fifty. But why shouldnt they?<br/>
Why should a woman allow Nature to put a false mask of age on her when<br/>
she knows that shes as young as ever? Why should she look in the<br/>
glass and see a wrinkled lie when a touch of fine art will shew her a<br/>
glorious truth? The wrinkles are a dodge to repel young men. Suppose<br/>
she doesnt want to repel young men! Suppose she likes them!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Bunny: take Hypatia out into the grounds for a walk:<br/>
theres a good boy. John has got one of his naughty fits this evening.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, never mind me. I'm used to him.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I'm not. I never heard such conversation: I cant believe<br/>
my ears. And mind you, this is the man who objected to my marrying<br/>
his daughter on the ground that a marriage between a member of the<br/>
great and good middle class with one of the vicious and corrupt<br/>
aristocracy would be a misalliance. A misalliance, if you please!<br/>
This is the man Ive adopted as a father!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Eh! Whats that? Adopted me as a father, have you?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Yes. Thats an idea of mine. I knew a chap named Joey<br/>
Percival at Oxford (you know I was two months at Balliol before I was<br/>
sent down for telling the old woman who was head of that silly college<br/>
what I jolly well thought of him. He would have been glad to have me<br/>
back, too, at the end of six months; but I wouldnt go: I just let him<br/>
want; and serve him right!) Well, Joey was a most awfully clever<br/>
fellow, and so nice! I asked him what made such a difference between<br/>
him and all the other pups—they were pups, if you like. He told me<br/>
it was very simple: they had only one father apiece; and he had<br/>
three.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont talk nonsense, child. How could that be?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Oh, very simple. His father—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Which father?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. The first one: the regulation natural chap. He kept a tame<br/>
philosopher in the house: a sort of Coleridge or Herbert Spencer kind<br/>
of card, you know. That was the second father. Then his mother was<br/>
an Italian princess; and she had an Italian priest always about. He<br/>
was supposed to take charge of her conscience; but from what I could<br/>
make out, she jolly well took charge of his. The whole three of them<br/>
took charge of Joey's conscience. He used to hear them arguing like<br/>
mad about everything. You see, the philosopher was a freethinker, and<br/>
always believed the latest thing. The priest didnt believe anything,<br/>
because it was sure to get him into trouble with someone or another.<br/>
And the natural father kept an open mind and believed whatever paid<br/>
him best. Between the lot of them Joey got cultivated no end. He<br/>
said if he could only have had three mothers as well, he'd have backed<br/>
himself against Napoleon.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[impressed]</i> Thats an idea. Thats a most interesting<br/>
idea: a most important idea.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. You always were one for ideas, John.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre right, Chickabiddy. What do I tell Johnny when he<br/>
brags about Tarleton's Underwear? It's not the underwear. The<br/>
underwear be hanged! Anybody can make underwear. Anybody can sell<br/>
underwear. Tarleton's Ideas: thats whats done it. Ive often thought<br/>
of putting that up over the shop.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Take me into partnership when you do, old man. I'm wasted<br/>
on the underwear; but I shall come in strong on the ideas.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. You be a good boy; and perhaps I will.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[scenting a plot against her beloved Johnny]</i> Now,<br/>
John: you promised—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes, yes. All right, Chickabiddy: dont fuss. Your<br/>
precious Johnny shant be interfered with. <i>[Bouncing up, too<br/>
energetic to sit still]</i> But I'm getting sick of that old shop.<br/>
Thirty-five years Ive had of it: same blessed old stairs to go up and<br/>
down every day: same old lot: same old game: sorry I ever started<br/>
it now. I'll chuck it and try something else: something that will<br/>
give a scope to all my faculties.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Theres money in underwear: theres none in wild-cat ideas.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Theres money in me, madam, no matter what I go into.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont boast, John. Dont tempt Providence.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Rats! You dont understand Providence. Providence likes to<br/>
be tempted. Thats the secret of the successful man. Read Browning.<br/>
Natural theology on an island, eh? Caliban was afraid to tempt<br/>
Providence: that was why he was never able to get even with Prospero.<br/>
What did Prospero do? Prospero didnt even tempt Providence: he was<br/>
Providence. Thats one of Tarleton's ideas; and dont you forget it.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. You are full of beef today, old man.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Beef be blowed! Joy of life. Read Ibsen. <i>[He goes into<br/>
the pavilion to relieve his restlessness, and stares out with his<br/>
hands thrust deep in his pockets].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[thoughtful]</i> Bentley: couldnt you invite your friend Mr<br/>
Percival down here?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Not if I know it. Youd throw me over the moment you set<br/>
eyes on him.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, Bunny! For shame!<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Well, who'd marry me, dyou suppose, if they could get my<br/>
brains with a full-sized body? No, thank you. I shall take jolly<br/>
good care to keep Joey out of this until Hypatia is past praying for.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Johnny and Lord Summerhays return through the pavilion from their<br/>
stroll.</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Welcome! welcome! Why have you stayed away so long?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[shaking hands]</i> Yes: I should have come sooner.<br/>
But I'm still rather lost in England. <i>[Johnny takes his hat and<br/>
hangs it up beside his own].</i> Thank you. <i>[Johnny returns to his<br/>
swing and his novel. Lord Summerhays comes to the writing table].</i><br/>
The fact is that as Ive nothing to do, I never have time to go<br/>
anywhere. <i>[He sits down next Mrs Tarleton].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[following him and sitting down on his left]</i> Paradox,<br/>
paradox. Good. Paradoxes are the only truths. Read Chesterton. But<br/>
theres lots for you to do here. You have a genius for government.<br/>
You learnt your job out there in Jinghiskahn. Well, we want to be<br/>
governed here in England. Govern us.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Ah yes, my friend; but in Jinghiskahn you have to<br/>
govern the right way. If you dont, you go under and come home. Here<br/>
everything has to be done the wrong way, to suit governors who<br/>
understand nothing but partridge shooting (our English native princes,<br/>
in fact) and voters who dont know what theyre voting about. I dont<br/>
understand these democratic games; and I'm afraid I'm too old to<br/>
learn. What can I do but sit in the window of my club, which consists<br/>
mostly of retired Indian Civil servants? We look on at the muddle and<br/>
the folly and amateurishness; and we ask each other where a single<br/>
fortnight of it would have landed us.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Very true. Still, Democracy's all right, you know. Read<br/>
Mill. Read Jefferson.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Yes. Democracy reads well; but it doesnt act well,<br/>
like some people's plays. No, no, my friend Tarleton: to make<br/>
Democracy work, you need an aristocratic democracy. To make<br/>
Aristocracy work, you need a democratic aristocracy. Youve got<br/>
neither; and theres an end of it.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Still, you know, the superman may come. The superman's an<br/>
idea. I believe in ideas. Read Whatshisname.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Reading is a dangerous amusement, Tarleton. I wish<br/>
I could persuade your free library people of that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Why, man, it's the beginning of education.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. On the contrary, it's the end of it. How can you<br/>
dare teach a man to read until youve taught him everything else first?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[intercepting his father's reply by coming out of the swing<br/>
and taking the floor]</i> Leave it at that. Thats good sense. Anybody<br/>
on for a game of tennis?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Oh, lets have some more improving conversation. Wouldnt you<br/>
rather, Johnny?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. If you ask me, no.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Johnny: you dont cultivate your mind. You dont read.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[coming between his mother and Lord Summerhays, book in<br/>
hand]</i> Yes I do. I bet you what you like that, page for page, I read<br/>
more than you, though I dont talk about it so much. Only, I dont read<br/>
the same books. I like a book with a plot in it. You like a book<br/>
with nothing in it but some idea that the chap that writes it keeps<br/>
worrying, like a cat chasing its own tail. I can stand a little of<br/>
it, just as I can stand watching the cat for two minutes, say, when<br/>
Ive nothing better to do. But a man soon gets fed up with that sort<br/>
of thing. The fact is, you look on an author as a sort of god. <i>I</i><br/>
look on him as a man that I pay to do a certain thing for me. I pay<br/>
him to amuse me and to take me out of myself and make me forget.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No. Wrong principle. You want to remember. Read Kipling.<br/>
"Lest we forget."<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. If Kipling wants to remember, let him remember. If he had to<br/>
run Tarleton's Underwear, he'd be jolly glad to forget. As he has a<br/>
much softer job, and wants to keep himself before the public, his cry<br/>
is, "Dont you forget the sort of things I'm rather clever at writing<br/>
about." Well, I dont blame him: it's his business: I should do the<br/>
same in his place. But what he wants and what I want are two<br/>
different things. I want to forget; and I pay another man to make me<br/>
forget. If I buy a book or go to the theatre, I want to forget the<br/>
shop and forget myself from the moment I go in to the moment I come<br/>
out. Thats what I pay my money for. And if I find that the author's<br/>
simply getting at me the whole time, I consider that hes obtained my<br/>
money under false pretences. I'm not a morbid crank: I'm a natural<br/>
man; and, as such, I dont like being got at. If a man in my<br/>
employment did it, I should sack him. If a member of my club did it,<br/>
I should cut him. If he went too far with it, I should bring his<br/>
conduct before the committee. I might even punch his head, if it came<br/>
to that. Well, who and what is an author that he should be privileged<br/>
to take liberties that are not allowed to other men?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. You see, John! What have I always told you? Johnny<br/>
has as much to say for himself as anybody when he likes.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. I'm no fool, mother, whatever some people may fancy. I dont<br/>
set up to have as many ideas as the Governor; but what ideas I have<br/>
are consecutive, at all events. I can think as well as talk.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[to Tarleton, chuckling]</i> Had you there, old man, hadnt<br/>
he? You are rather all over the shop with your ideas, aint you?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[handsomely]</i> I'm not saying anything against you,<br/>
Governor. But I do say that the time has come for sane, healthy,<br/>
unpretending men like me to make a stand against this conspiracy of<br/>
the writing and talking and artistic lot to put us in the back row.<br/>
It isnt a fact that we're inferior to them: it's a put-up job; and<br/>
it's they that have put the job up. It's we that run the country for<br/>
them; and all the thanks we get is to be told we're Philistines and<br/>
vulgar tradesmen and sordid city men and so forth, and that theyre all<br/>
angels of light and leading. The time has come to assert ourselves<br/>
and put a stop to their stuck-up nonsense. Perhaps if we had nothing<br/>
better to do than talking or writing, we could do it better than they.<br/>
Anyhow, theyre the failures and refuse of business (hardly a man of<br/>
them that didnt begin in an office) and we're the successes of it.<br/>
Thank God I havnt failed yet at anything; and I dont believe I should<br/>
fail at literature if it would pay me to turn my hand to it.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Hear, hear!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Fancy you writing a book, Johnny! Do you think he<br/>
could, Lord Summerhays?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Why not? As a matter of fact all the really<br/>
prosperous authors I have met since my return to England have been<br/>
very like him.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[again impressed]</i> Thats an idea. Thats a new idea. I<br/>
believe I ought to have made Johnny an author. Ive never said so<br/>
before for fear of hurting his feelings, because, after all, the lad<br/>
cant help it; but Ive never thought Johnny worth tuppence as a man of<br/>
business.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[sarcastic]</i> Oh! You think youve always kept that to<br/>
yourself, do you, Governor? I know your opinion of me as well as you<br/>
know it yourself. It takes one man of business to appreciate another;<br/>
and you arnt, and you never have been, a real man of business. I know<br/>
where Tarleton's would have been three of four times if it hadnt been<br/>
for me. <i>[With a snort and a nod to emphasize the implied warning, he<br/>
retreats to the Turkish bath, and lolls against it with an air of<br/>
good-humoured indifference].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, who denies it? Youre quite right, my boy. I don't<br/>
mind confessing to you all that the circumstances that condemned me to<br/>
keep a shop are the biggest tragedy in modern life. I ought to have<br/>
been a writer. I'm essentially a man of ideas. When I was a young<br/>
man I sometimes used to pray that I might fail, so that I should be<br/>
justified in giving up business and doing something: something<br/>
first-class. But it was no good: I couldnt fail. I said to myself<br/>
that if I could only once go to my Chickabiddy here and shew her a<br/>
chartered accountant's statement proving that I'd made 20 pounds less<br/>
than last year, I could ask her to let me chance Johnny's and<br/>
Hypatia's future by going into literature. But it was no good. First<br/>
it was 250 pounds more than last year. Then it was 700 pounds. Then<br/>
it was 2000 pounds. Then I saw it was no use: Prometheus was chained<br/>
to his rock: read Shelley: read Mrs Browning. Well, well, it was<br/>
not to be. <i>[He rises solemnly].</i> Lord Summerhays: I ask you to<br/>
excuse me for a few moments. There are times when a man needs to<br/>
meditate in solitude on his destiny. A chord is touched; and he sees<br/>
the drama of his life as a spectator sees a play. Laugh if you feel<br/>
inclined: no man sees the comic side of it more than I. In the<br/>
theatre of life everyone may be amused except the actor.<br/>
<i>[Brightening]</i> Theres an idea in this: an idea for a picture. What<br/>
a pity young Bentley is not a painter! Tarleton meditating on his<br/>
destiny. Not in a toga. Not in the trappings of the tragedian or the<br/>
philosopher. In plain coat and trousers: a man like any other man.<br/>
And beneath that coat and trousers a human soul. Tarleton's<br/>
Underwear! <i>[He goes out gravely into the vestibule].</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[fondly]</i> I suppose it's a wife's partiality, Lord<br/>
Summerhays; but I do think John is really great. I'm sure he was<br/>
meant to be a king. My father looked down on John, because he was a<br/>
rate collector, and John kept a shop. It hurt his pride to have to<br/>
borrow money so often from John; and he used to console himself by<br/>
saying, "After all, he's only a linendraper." But at last one day he<br/>
said to me, "John is a king."<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. How much did he borrow on that occasion?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[sharply]</i> Bentley!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, dont scold the child: he'd have to say something<br/>
like that if it was to be his last word on earth. Besides, hes quite<br/>
right: my poor father had asked for his usual five pounds; and John<br/>
gave him a hundred in his big way. Just like a king.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all. I had five kings to manage in<br/>
Jinghiskahn; and I think you do your husband some injustice, Mrs<br/>
Tarleton. They pretended to like me because I kept their brothers<br/>
from murdering them; but I didnt like them. And I like Tarleton.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Everybody does. I really must go and make the cook do<br/>
him a Welsh rabbit. He expects one on special occasions. <i>[She goes<br/>
to the inner door].</i> Johnny: when he comes back ask him where we're<br/>
to put that new Turkish bath. Turkish baths are his latest. <i>[She<br/>
goes out].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[coming forward again]</i> Now that the Governor has given<br/>
himself away, and the old lady's gone, I'll tell you something, Lord<br/>
Summerhays. If you study men whove made an enormous pile in business<br/>
without being keen on money, youll find that they all have a slate<br/>
off. The Governor's a wonderful man; but hes not quite all there, you<br/>
know. If you notice, hes different from me; and whatever my failings<br/>
may be, I'm a sane man. Erratic: thats what he is. And the danger<br/>
is that some day he'll give the whole show away.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Giving the show away is a method like any other<br/>
method. Keeping it to yourself is only another method. I should keep<br/>
an open mind about it.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Has it ever occurred to you that a man with an open mind must<br/>
be a bit of a scoundrel? If you ask me, I like a man who makes up his<br/>
mind once for all as to whats right and whats wrong and then sticks to<br/>
it. At all events you know where to have him.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. That may not be his object.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. He may want to have you, old chap.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Well, let him. If a member of my club wants to steal my<br/>
umbrella, he knows where to find it. If a man put up for the club who<br/>
had an open mind on the subject of property in umbrellas, I should<br/>
blackball him. An open mind is all very well in clever talky-talky;<br/>
but in conduct and in business give me solid ground.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Yes: the quicksands make life difficult. Still,<br/>
there they are. It's no use pretending theyre rocks.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. I dont know. You can draw a line and make other chaps toe<br/>
it. Thats what I call morality.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Very true. But you dont make any progress when<br/>
youre toeing a line.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[suddenly, as if she could bear no more of it]</i> Bentley:<br/>
do go and play tennis with Johnny. You must take exercise.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Do, my boy, do. <i>[To Johnny]</i> Take him out and<br/>
make him skip about.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[rising reluctantly]</i> I promised you two inches more round<br/>
my chest this summer. I tried exercises with an indiarubber expander;<br/>
but I wasnt strong enough: instead of my expanding it, it crumpled me<br/>
up. Come along, Johnny.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Do you no end of good, young chap. <i>[He goes out with<br/>
Bentley through the pavilion].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Hypatia throws aside her work with an enormous sigh of relief.</i><br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. At last!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. At last. Oh, if I might only have a holiday in an asylum<br/>
for the dumb. How I envy the animals! They cant talk. If Johnny<br/>
could only put back his ears or wag his tail instead of laying down<br/>
the law, how much better it would be! We should know when he was<br/>
cross and when he was pleased; and thats all we know now, with all his<br/>
talk. It never stops: talk, talk, talk, talk. Thats my life. All<br/>
the day I listen to mamma talking; at dinner I listen to papa talking;<br/>
and when papa stops for breath I listen to Johnny talking.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You make me feel very guilty. I talk too, I'm<br/>
afraid.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, I dont mind that, because your talk is a novelty. But<br/>
it must have been dreadful for your daughters.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I suppose so.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. If parents would only realize how they bore their children!<br/>
Three or four times in the last half hour Ive been on the point of<br/>
screaming.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Were we very dull?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Not at all: you were very clever. Thats whats so hard to<br/>
bear, because it makes it so difficult to avoid listening. You see,<br/>
I'm young; and I do so want something to happen. My mother tells me<br/>
that when I'm her age, I shall be only too glad that nothing's<br/>
happened; but I'm not her age; so what good is that to me? Theres my<br/>
father in the garden, meditating on his destiny. All very well for<br/>
him: hes had a destiny to meditate on; but I havnt had any destiny<br/>
yet. Everything's happened to him: nothing's happened to me. Thats<br/>
why this unending talk is so maddeningly uninteresting to me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It would be worse if we sat in silence.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. No it wouldnt. If you all sat in silence, as if you were<br/>
waiting for something to happen, then there would be hope even if<br/>
nothing did happen. But this eternal cackle, cackle, cackle about<br/>
things in general is only fit for old, old, OLD people. I suppose it<br/>
means something to them: theyve had their fling. All I listen for is<br/>
some sign of it ending in something; but just when it seems to be<br/>
coming to a point, Johnny or papa just starts another hare; and it all<br/>
begins over again; and I realize that it's never going to lead<br/>
anywhere and never going to stop. Thats when I want to scream. I<br/>
wonder how you can stand it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Well, I'm old and garrulous myself, you see.<br/>
Besides, I'm not here of my own free will, exactly. I came because<br/>
you ordered me to come.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Didnt you want to come?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. My dear: after thirty years of managing other<br/>
people's business, men lose the habit of considering what they want or<br/>
dont want.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, dont begin to talk about what men do, and about thirty<br/>
years experience. If you cant get off that subject, youd better send<br/>
for Johnny and papa and begin it all over again.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I'm sorry. I beg your pardon.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I asked you, didnt you want to come?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I did not stop to consider whether I wanted or not,<br/>
because when I read your letter I knew I had to come.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Why?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Oh come, Miss Tarleton! Really, really! Dont force<br/>
me to call you a blackmailer to your face. You have me in your power;<br/>
and I do what you tell me very obediently. Dont ask me to pretend I<br/>
do it of my own free will.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I dont know what a blackmailer is. I havnt even that much<br/>
experience.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. A blackmailer, my dear young lady, is a person who<br/>
knows a disgraceful secret in the life of another person, and extorts<br/>
money from that other person by threatening to make his secret public<br/>
unless the money is paid.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I havnt asked you for money.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No; but you asked me to come down here and talk to<br/>
you; and you mentioned casually that if I didnt youd have nobody to<br/>
talk about me to but Bentley. That was a threat, was it not?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, I wanted you to come.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. In spite of my age and my unfortunate talkativeness?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I like talking to you. I can let myself go with you. I can<br/>
say things to you I cant say to other people.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I wonder why?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, you are the only really clever, grown-up, high-class,<br/>
experienced man I know who has given himself away to me by making an<br/>
utter fool of himself with me. You cant wrap yourself up in your toga<br/>
after that. You cant give yourself airs with me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You mean you can tell Bentley about me if I do.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Even if there wasnt any Bentley: even if you didnt care<br/>
(and I really dont see why you should care so much) still, we never<br/>
could be on conventional terms with one another again. Besides, Ive<br/>
got a feeling for you: almost a ghastly sort of love for you.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[shrinking]</i> I beg you—no, please.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, it's nothing at all flattering: and, of course, nothing<br/>
wrong, as I suppose youd call it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Please believe that I know that. When men of my<br/>
age—<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[impatiently]</i> Oh, do talk about yourself when you mean<br/>
yourself, and not about men of your age.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I'll put it as bluntly as I can. When, as you say,<br/>
I made an utter fool of myself, believe me, I made a poetic fool of<br/>
myself. I was seduced, not by appetites which, thank Heaven, Ive long<br/>
outlived: not even by the desire of second childhood for a child<br/>
companion, but by the innocent impulse to place the delicacy and<br/>
wisdom and spirituality of my age at the affectionate service of your<br/>
youth for a few years, at the end of which you would be a grown,<br/>
strong, formed—widow. Alas, my dear, the delicacy of age reckoned,<br/>
as usual, without the derision and cruelty of youth. You told me that<br/>
you didnt want to be an old man's nurse, and that you didnt want to<br/>
have undersized children like Bentley. It served me right: I dont<br/>
reproach you: I was an old fool. But how you can imagine, after<br/>
that, that I can suspect you of the smallest feeling for me except the<br/>
inevitable feeling of early youth for late age, or imagine that I have<br/>
any feeling for you except one of shrinking humiliation, I cant<br/>
understand.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I dont blame you for falling in love with me. I shall be<br/>
grateful to you all my life for it, because that was the first time<br/>
that anything really interesting happened to me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Do you mean to tell me that nothing of that kind had<br/>
ever happened before? that no man had ever—<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, lots. Thats part of the routine of life here: the very<br/>
dullest part of it. The young man who comes a-courting is as familiar<br/>
an incident in my life as coffee for breakfast. Of course, hes too<br/>
much of a gentleman to misbehave himself; and I'm too much of a lady<br/>
to let him; and hes shy and sheepish; and I'm correct and<br/>
self-possessed; and at last, when I can bear it no longer, I either<br/>
frighten him off, or give him a chance of proposing, just to see how<br/>
he'll do it, and refuse him because he does it in the same silly way<br/>
as all the rest. You dont call that an event in one's life, do you?<br/>
With you it was different. I should as soon have expected the North<br/>
Pole to fall in love with me as you. You know I'm only a<br/>
linen-draper's daughter when all's said. I was afraid of you: you, a<br/>
great man! a lord! and older than my father. And then what a<br/>
situation it was! Just think of it! I was engaged to your son; and<br/>
you knew nothing about it. He was afraid to tell you: he brought you<br/>
down here because he thought if he could throw us together I could get<br/>
round you because I was such a ripping girl. We arranged it all: he<br/>
and I. We got Papa and Mamma and Johnny out of the way splendidly;<br/>
and then Bentley took himself off, and left us—you and me!—to take a<br/>
walk through the heather and admire the scenery of Hindhead. You<br/>
never dreamt that it was all a plan: that what made me so nice was<br/>
the way I was playing up to my destiny as the sweet girl that was to<br/>
make your boy happy. And then! and then! <i>[She rises to dance and<br/>
clap her hands in her glee].</i><br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[shuddering]</i> Stop, stop. Can no woman understand<br/>
a man's delicacy?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[revelling in the recollection]</i> And then—ha, ha!—you<br/>
proposed. You! A father! For your son's girl!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Stop, I tell you. Dont profane what you dont<br/>
understand.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. That was something happening at last with a vengeance. It<br/>
was splendid. It was my first peep behind the scenes. If I'd been<br/>
seventeen I should have fallen in love with you. Even as it is, I<br/>
feel quite differently towards you from what I do towards other old<br/>
men. So <i>[offering her hand]</i> you may kiss my hand if that will be<br/>
any fun for you.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[rising and recoiling to the table, deeply<br/>
revolted]</i> No, no, no. How dare you? <i>[She laughs mischievously].</i><br/>
How callous youth is! How coarse! How cynical! How ruthlessly<br/>
cruel!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Stuff! It's only that youre tired of a great many things<br/>
Ive never tried.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It's not alone that. Ive not forgotten the<br/>
brutality of my own boyhood. But do try to learn, glorious young<br/>
beast that you are, that age is squeamish, sentimental, fastidious.<br/>
If you cant understand my holier feelings, at least you know the<br/>
bodily infirmities of the old. You know that I darent eat all the<br/>
rich things you gobble up at every meal; that I cant bear the noise<br/>
and racket and clatter that affect you no more than they affect a<br/>
stone. Well, my soul is like that too. Spare it: be gentle with it<br/>
<i>[he involuntarily puts out his hands to plead: she takes them with a<br/>
laugh].</i> If you could possibly think of me as half an angel and half<br/>
an invalid, we should get on much better together.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. We get on very well, I think. Nobody else ever called me a<br/>
glorious young beast. I like that. Glorious young beast expresses<br/>
exactly what I like to be.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[extricating his hands and sitting down]</i> Where on<br/>
earth did you get these morbid tastes? You seem to have been well<br/>
brought up in a normal, healthy, respectable, middle-class family.<br/>
Yet you go on like the most unwholesome product of the rankest<br/>
Bohemianism.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Thats just it. I'm fed up with—<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Horrible expression. Dont.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, I daresay it's vulgar; but theres no other word for it.<br/>
I'm fed up with nice things: with respectability, with propriety!<br/>
When a woman has nothing to do, money and respectability mean that<br/>
nothing is ever allowed to happen to her. I dont want to be good; and<br/>
I dont want to be bad: I just dont want to be bothered about either<br/>
good or bad: I want to be an active verb.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. An active verb? Oh, I see. An active verb<br/>
signifies to be, to do, or to suffer.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Just so: how clever of you! I want to be; I want to do;<br/>
and I'm game to suffer if it costs that. But stick here doing nothing<br/>
but being good and nice and ladylike I simply wont. Stay down here<br/>
with us for a week; and I'll shew you what it means: shew it to you<br/>
going on day after day, year after year, lifetime after lifetime.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Shew me what?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Girls withering into ladies. Ladies withering into old<br/>
maids. Nursing old women. Running errands for old men. Good for<br/>
nothing else at last. Oh, you cant imagine the fiendish selfishness<br/>
of the old people and the maudlin sacrifice of the young.<br/>
It's more unbearable than any poverty: more horrible than any<br/>
regular-right-down wickedness. Oh, home! home! parents! family! duty!<br/>
how I loathe them! How I'd like to see them all blown to bits! The<br/>
poor escape. The wicked escape. Well, I cant be poor: we're rolling<br/>
in money: it's no use pretending we're not. But I can be wicked; and<br/>
I'm quite prepared to be.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You think that easy?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, isnt it? Being a man, you ought to know.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It requires some natural talent, which can no doubt<br/>
be cultivated. It's not really easy to be anything out of the common.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Anyhow, I mean to make a fight for living.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Living your own life, I believe the Suffragist<br/>
phrase is.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Living any life. Living, instead of withering without even<br/>
a gardener to snip you off when youre rotten.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Ive lived an active life; but Ive withered all the<br/>
same.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. No: youve worn out: thats quite different. And youve some<br/>
life in you yet or you wouldnt have fallen in love with me. You can<br/>
never imagine how delighted I was to find that instead of being the<br/>
correct sort of big panjandrum you were supposed to be, you were<br/>
really an old rip like papa.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No, no: not about your father: I really cant bear<br/>
it. And if you must say these terrible things: these heart-wounding<br/>
shameful things, at least find something prettier to call me than an<br/>
old rip.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, what would you call a man proposing to a girl who<br/>
might be—<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. His daughter: yes, I know.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I was going to say his granddaughter.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You always have one more blow to get in.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Youre too sensitive. Did you ever make mud pies when you<br/>
were a kid—beg pardon: a child.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I hope not.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. It's a dirty job; but Johnny and I were vulgar enough to<br/>
like it. I like young people because theyre not too afraid of dirt to<br/>
live. Ive grown out of the mud pies; but I like slang; and I like<br/>
bustling you up by saying things that shock you; and I'd rather put up<br/>
with swearing and smoking than with dull respectability; and there are<br/>
lots of things that would just shrivel you up that I think rather<br/>
jolly. Now!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Ive not the slightest doubt of it. Dont insist.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. It's not your ideal, is it?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Shall I tell you why? Your ideal is an old woman. I<br/>
daresay shes got a young face; but shes an old woman. Old, old, old.<br/>
Squeamish. Cant stand up to things. Cant enjoy things: not real<br/>
things. Always on the shrink.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. On the shrink! Detestable expression.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Bah! you cant stand even a little thing like that. What<br/>
good are you? Oh, what good are you?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Dont ask me. I dont know. I dont know.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Tarleton returns from the vestibule. Hypatia sits down demurely.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, papa: have you meditated on your destiny?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[puzzled]</i> What? Oh! my destiny. Gad, I forgot all<br/>
about it: Jock started a rabbit and put it clean out of my head.<br/>
Besides, why should I give way to morbid introspection? It's a sign<br/>
of madness. Read Lombroso. <i>[To Lord Summerhays]</i> Well, Summerhays,<br/>
has my little girl been entertaining you?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Yes. She is a wonderful entertainer.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I think my idea of bringing up a young girl has been rather<br/>
a success. Dont you listen to this, Patsy: it might make you<br/>
conceited. Shes never been treated like a child. I always said the<br/>
same thing to her mother. Let her read what she likes. Let her do<br/>
what she likes. Let her go where she likes. Eh, Patsy?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh yes, if there had only been anything for me to do, any<br/>
place for me to go, anything I wanted to read.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. There, you see! Shes not satisfied. Restless. Wants<br/>
things to happen. Wants adventures to drop out of the sky.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[gathering up her work]</i> If youre going to talk about me<br/>
and my education, I'm off.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, well, off with you. <i>[To Lord Summerhays]</i> Shes<br/>
active, like me. She actually wanted me to put her into the shop.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, they tell me that the girls there have adventures<br/>
sometimes. <i>[She goes out through the inner door]</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. She had me there, though she doesnt know it, poor innocent<br/>
lamb! Public scandal exaggerates enormously, of course; but moralize<br/>
as you will, superabundant vitality is a physical fact that cant be<br/>
talked away. <i>[He sits down between the writing table and the<br/>
sideboard].</i> Difficult question this, of bringing up children.<br/>
Between ourselves, it has beaten me. I never was so surprised in my<br/>
life as when I came to know Johnny as a man of business and found out<br/>
what he was really like. How did you manage with your sons?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Well, I really hadnt time to be a father: thats the<br/>
plain truth of the matter. Their poor dear mother did the usual thing<br/>
while they were with us. Then of course, Harrow, Cambridge, the usual<br/>
routine of their class. I saw very little of them, and thought very<br/>
little about them: how could I? with a whole province on my hands.<br/>
They and I are—acquaintances. Not perhaps, quite ordinary<br/>
acquaintances: theres a sort of—er—I should almost call it a sort<br/>
of remorse about the way we shake hands (when we do shake hands) which<br/>
means, I suppose, that we're sorry we dont care more for one another;<br/>
and I'm afraid we dont meet oftener than we can help. We put each<br/>
other too much out of countenance. It's really a very difficult<br/>
relation. To my mind not altogether a natural one.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[impressed, as usual]</i> Thats an idea, certainly. I dont<br/>
think anybody has ever written about that.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Bentley is the only one who was really my son in any<br/>
serious sense. He was completely spoilt. When he was sent to a<br/>
preparatory school he simply yelled until he was sent home. Harrow<br/>
was out of the question; but we managed to tutor him into Cambridge.<br/>
No use: he was sent down. By that time my work was over; and I saw a<br/>
good deal of him. But I could do nothing with him—except look on. I<br/>
should have thought your case was quite different. You keep up the<br/>
middle-class tradition: the day school and the business training<br/>
instead of the university. I believe in the day school part of it.<br/>
At all events, you know your own children.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Do you? I'm not so sure of it. Fact is, my dear<br/>
Summerhays, once childhood is over, once the little animal has got<br/>
past the stage at which it acquires what you might call a sense of<br/>
decency, it's all up with the relation between parent and child. You<br/>
cant get over the fearful shyness of it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Shyness?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes, shyness. Read Dickens.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS <i>[surprised]</i> Dickens!! Of all authors, Charles<br/>
Dickens! Are you serious?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I dont mean his books. Read his letters to his family.<br/>
Read any man's letters to his children. Theyre not human. Theyre not<br/>
about himself or themselves. Theyre about hotels, scenery, about the<br/>
weather, about getting wet and losing the train and what he saw on the<br/>
road and all that. Not a word about himself. Forced. Shy. Duty<br/>
letters. All fit to be published: that says everything. I tell you<br/>
theres a wall ten feet thick and ten miles high between parent and<br/>
child. I know what I'm talking about. Ive girls in my employment:<br/>
girls and young men. I had ideas on the subject. I used to go to the<br/>
parents and tell them not to let their children go out into the world<br/>
without instruction in the dangers and temptations they were going to<br/>
be thrown into. What did every one of the mothers say to me? "Oh,<br/>
sir, how could I speak of such things to my own daughter?" The men<br/>
said I was quite right; but they didnt do it, any more than I'd been<br/>
able to do it myself to Johnny. I had to leave books in his way; and<br/>
I felt just awful when I did it. Believe me, Summerhays, the relation<br/>
between the young and the old should be an innocent relation. It<br/>
should be something they could talk about. Well, the relation between<br/>
parent and child may be an affectionate relation. It may be a useful<br/>
relation. It may be a necessary relation. But it can never be an<br/>
innocent relation. Youd die rather than allude to it. Depend on it,<br/>
in a thousand years itll be considered bad form to know who your<br/>
father and mother are. Embarrassing. Better hand Bentley over to me.<br/>
I can look him in the face and talk to him as man to man. You can<br/>
have Johnny.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Thank you. Ive lived so long in a country where a<br/>
man may have fifty sons, who are no more to him than a regiment of<br/>
soldiers, that I'm afraid Ive lost the English feeling about it.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[restless again]</i> You mean Jinghiskahn. Ah yes. Good<br/>
thing the empire. Educates us. Opens our minds. Knocks the Bible<br/>
out of us. And civilizes the other chaps.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Yes: it civilizes them. And it uncivilizes us.<br/>
Their gain. Our loss, Tarleton, believe me, our loss.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, why not? Averages out the human race. Makes the<br/>
nigger half an Englishman. Makes the Englishman half a nigger.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Speaking as the unfortunate Englishman in question,<br/>
I dont like the process. If I had my life to live over again, I'd<br/>
stay at home and supercivilize myself.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Nonsense! dont be selfish. Think how youve improved the<br/>
other chaps. Look at the Spanish empire! Bad job for Spain, but<br/>
splendid for South America. Look at what the Romans did for Britain!<br/>
They burst up and had to clear out; but think of all they taught us!<br/>
They were the making of us: I believe there was a Roman camp on<br/>
Hindhead: I'll shew it to you tomorrow. Thats the good side of<br/>
Imperialism: it's unselfish. I despise the Little Englanders:<br/>
theyre always thinking about England. Smallminded. I'm for the<br/>
Parliament of man, the federation of the world. Read Tennyson. <i>[He<br/>
settles down again].</i> Then theres the great food question.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[apprehensively]</i> Need we go into that this<br/>
afternoon?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No; but I wish youd tell the Chickabiddy that the<br/>
Jinghiskahns eat no end of toasted cheese, and that it's the secret of<br/>
their amazing health and long life!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Unfortunately they are neither healthy nor long<br/>
lived. And they dont eat toasted cheese.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. There you are! They would be if they ate it. Anyhow,<br/>
say what you like, provided the moral is a Welsh rabbit for my supper.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. British morality in a nutshell!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[hugely amused]</i> Yes. Ha ha! Awful hypocrites, aint we?<br/>
<br/>
<i>They are interrupted by excited cries from the grounds.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. | Papa! Mamma! Come out as fast as you can.<br/>
| Quick. Quick.<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | Hello, governor! Come out. An aeroplane.<br/>
| Look, look.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[starting up]</i> Aeroplane! Did he say an aeroplane?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Aeroplane! <i>[A shadow falls on the pavilion; and<br/>
some of the glass at the top is shattered and falls on the floor].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Tarleton and Lord Summerhays rush out through the pavilion into the<br/>
garden.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. | Take care. Take care of the chimney.<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | Come this side: it's coming right<br/>
| where youre standing.<br/>
|<br/>
TARLETON. | Hallo! where the devil are you<br/>
| coming? youll have my roof off.<br/>
|<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| He's lost control.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Look, look, Hypatia. There are two people in it.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Theyve cleared it. Well steered!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. | Yes; but theyre coming slam into the greenhouse.<br/>
|<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| Look out for the glass.<br/>
|<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | Theyll break all the glass. Theyll<br/>
| spoil all the grapes.<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | Mind where youre coming. He'll<br/>
| save it. No: theyre down.<br/>
<br/>
<i>An appalling crash of breaking glass is heard. Everybody shrieks.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | Oh, are they killed? John: are they killed?<br/>
|<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| Are you hurt? Is anything broken? Can you stand?<br/>
|<br/>
HYPATIA. | Oh, you must be hurt. Are you sure? Shall I get<br/>
| you some water? Or some wine?<br/>
|<br/>
TARLETON. | Are you all right? Sure you wont have some<br/>
| brandy just to take off the shock.<br/>
<br/>
THE AVIATOR. No, thank you. Quite right. Not a scratch. I assure<br/>
you I'm all right.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. What luck! And what a smash! You are a lucky chap, I can<br/>
tell you.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The Aviator and Tarleton come in through the pavilion, followed by<br/>
Lord Summerhays and Bentley, the Aviator on Tarleton's right. Bentley<br/>
passes the Aviator and turns to have an admiring look at him. Lord<br/>
Summerhays overtakes Tarleton less pointedly on the opposite side with<br/>
the same object.</i><br/>
<br/>
THE AVIATOR. I'm really very sorry. I'm afraid Ive knocked your<br/>
vinery into a cocked hat. (<i>Effusively</i>) You dont mind, do you?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Not a bit. Come in and have some tea. Stay to dinner.<br/>
Stay over the week-end. All my life Ive wanted to fly.<br/>
<br/>
THE AVIATOR. <i>[taking off his goggles]</i> Youre really more than kind.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Why, its Joey Percival.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Hallo, Ben! That you?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. What! The man with three fathers!<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Oh! has Ben been talking about me?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Consider yourself as one of the family—if you will do me<br/>
the honor. And your friend too. Wheres your friend?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Oh, by the way! before he comes in: let me explain. I<br/>
dont know him.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Eh?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Havnt even looked at him. I'm trying to make a club record<br/>
with a passenger. The club supplied the passenger. He just got in;<br/>
and Ive been too busy handling the aeroplane to look at him. I havnt<br/>
said a word to him; and I cant answer for him socially; but hes an<br/>
ideal passenger for a flyer. He saved me from a smash.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I saw it. It was extraordinary. When you were<br/>
thrown out he held on to the top bar with one hand. You came past him<br/>
in the air, going straight for the glass. He caught you and turned<br/>
you off into the flower bed, and then lighted beside you like a bird.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. How he kept his head I cant imagine. Frankly, <i>I</i> didnt.<br/>
<br/>
<i>The Passenger, also begoggled, comes in through the pavilion with<br/>
Johnny and the two ladies. The Passenger comes between Percival and<br/>
Tarleton, Mrs Tarleton between Lord Summerhays and her husband,<br/>
Hypatia between Percival and Bentley, and Johnny to Bentley's right.</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Just discussing your prowess, my dear sir. Magnificent.<br/>
Youll stay to dinner. Youll stay the night. Stay over the week. The<br/>
Chickabiddy will be delighted.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Wont you take off your goggles and have some tea?<br/>
<br/>
<i>The Passenger begins to remove the goggles.</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Do. Have a wash. Johnny: take the gentleman to your<br/>
room: I'll look after Mr Percival. They must—<br/>
<br/>
<i>By this time the passenger has got the goggles off, and stands<br/>
revealed as a remarkably good-looking woman.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | Well I never!!! |<br/>
| |<br/>
BENTLEY. | [<i>in a whisper</i>] Oh, I say! |<br/>
| |<br/>
JOHNNY. | By George! |<br/>
| | <i>All<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| A lady! | to-<br/>
| | gether.</i><br/>
HYPATIA. | A woman! |<br/>
| |<br/>
TARLETON. | [<i>to Percival</i>] You never told me— |<br/>
| |<br/>
PERCIVAL. | I hadnt the least idea— |<br/>
<br/>
<i>An embarrassed pause.</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I assure you if I'd had the faintest notion that my<br/>
passenger was a lady I shouldnt have left you to shift for yourself in<br/>
that selfish way.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The lady seems to have shifted for both very<br/>
effectually, sir.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Saved my life. I admit it most gratefully.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I must apologize, madam, for having offered you the<br/>
civilities appropriate to the opposite sex. And yet, why opposite?<br/>
We are all human: males and females of the same species. When the<br/>
dress is the same the distinction vanishes. I'm proud to receive in<br/>
my house a lady of evident refinement and distinction. Allow me to<br/>
introduce myself: Tarleton: John Tarleton (<i>seeing conjecture in the<br/>
passenger's eye</i>)—yes, yes: Tarleton's Underwear. My wife, Mrs<br/>
Tarleton: youll excuse me for having in what I had taken to be a<br/>
confidence between man and man alluded to her as the Chickabiddy. My<br/>
daughter Hypatia, who has always wanted some adventure to drop out of<br/>
the sky, and is now, I hope, satisfied at last. Lord Summerhays: a<br/>
man known wherever the British flag waves. His son Bentley, engaged<br/>
to Hypatia. Mr Joseph Percival, the promising son of three highly<br/>
intellectual fathers.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[startled]</i> Bentley's friend? <i>[Bentley nods].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[continuing, to the passenger]</i> May I now ask to be<br/>
allowed the pleasure of knowing your name?<br/>
<br/>
THE PASSENGER. My name is Lina Szczepanowska <i>[pronouncing it<br/>
Sh-Chepanovska].</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Sh— I beg your pardon?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Szczepanowska.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[dubiously]</i> Thank you.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[very politely]</i> Would you mind saying it again?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Say fish.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Fish.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Say church.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Church.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Say fish church.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[remonstrating]</i> But it's not good sense.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[inexorable]</i> Say fish church.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Fish church.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Again.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No, but—<i>[resigning himself]</i> fish church.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Now say Szczepanowska.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Szczepanowska. Got it, by Gad. <i>[A sibilant whispering<br/>
becomes audible: they are all saying Sh-ch to themselves].</i><br/>
Szczepanowska! Not an English name, is it?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Polish. I'm a Pole.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Ah yes. Interesting nation. Lucky people to get the<br/>
government of their country taken off their hands. Nothing to do but<br/>
cultivate themselves. Same as we took Gibraltar off the hands of the<br/>
Spaniards. Saves the Spanish taxpayer. Jolly good thing for us if<br/>
the Germans took Portsmouth. Sit down, wont you?<br/>
<br/>
<i>The group breaks up. Johnny and Bentley hurry to the pavilion and<br/>
fetch the two wicker chairs. Johnny gives his to Lina. Hypatia and<br/>
Percival take the chairs at the worktable. Lord Summerhays gives the<br/>
chair at the vestibule end of the writing table to Mrs Tarleton; and<br/>
Bentley replaces it with a wicker chair, which Lord Summerhays takes.<br/>
Johnny remains standing behind the worktable, Bentley behind his<br/>
father.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[to Lina]</i> Have some tea now, wont you?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. I never drink tea.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[sitting down at the end of the writing table nearest<br/>
Lina]</i> Bad thing to aeroplane on, I should imagine. Too jumpy. Been<br/>
up much?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Not in an aeroplane. Ive parachuted; but thats child's play.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. But arnt you very foolish to run such a dreadful risk?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. You cant live without running risks.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, what a thing to say! Didnt you know you might have<br/>
been killed?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. That was why I went up.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Of course. Cant you understand the fascination of the<br/>
thing? the novelty! the daring! the sense of something happening!<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Oh no. It's too tame a business for that. I went up for<br/>
family reasons.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Eh? What? Family reasons?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. I hope it wasnt to spite your mother?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[quickly]</i> Or your husband?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. I'm not married. And why should I want to spite my mother?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[aside to Percival]</i> That was clever of you, Mr Percival.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. What?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. To find out.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I'm in a difficulty. I cant understand a lady going up in<br/>
an aeroplane for family reasons. It's rude to be curious and ask<br/>
questions; but then it's inhuman to be indifferent, as if you didnt<br/>
care.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. I'll tell you with pleasure. For the last hundred and fifty<br/>
years, not a single day has passed without some member of my family<br/>
risking his life—or her life. It's a point of honor with us to keep<br/>
up that tradition. Usually several of us do it; but it happens that<br/>
just at this moment it is being kept up by one of my brothers only.<br/>
Early this morning I got a telegram from him to say that there had<br/>
been a fire, and that he could do nothing for the rest of the week.<br/>
Fortunately I had an invitation from the Aerial League to see this<br/>
gentleman try to break the passenger record. I appealed to the<br/>
President of the League to let me save the honor of my family. He<br/>
arranged it for me.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh, I must be dreaming. This is stark raving nonsense.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[quietly]</i> You are quite awake, sir.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. We cant all be dreaming the same thing, Governor.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Of course not, you duffer; but then I'm dreaming you as<br/>
well as the lady.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont be silly, John. The lady is only joking, I'm<br/>
sure. <i>[To Lina]</i> I suppose your luggage is in the aeroplane.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Luggage was out of the question. If I stay to dinner I'm<br/>
afraid I cant change unless youll lend me some clothes.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Do you mean neither of you?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I'm afraid so.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh well, never mind: Hypatia will lend the lady a<br/>
gown.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Thank you: I'm quite comfortable as I am. I am not accustomed<br/>
to gowns: they hamper me and make me feel ridiculous; so if you dont<br/>
mind I shall not change.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, I'm beginning to think I'm doing a bit of<br/>
dreaming myself.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[impatiently]</i> Oh, it's all right, mamma. Johnny: look<br/>
after Mr. Percival. <i>[To Lina, rising]</i> Come with me.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lina follows her to the inner door. They all rise.</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[to Percival]</i> I'll shew you.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Thank you.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lina goes out with Hypatia, and Percival with Johnny.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, this is a nice thing to happen! And look at the<br/>
greenhouse! Itll cost thirty pounds to mend it. People have no right<br/>
to do such things. And you invited them to dinner too! What sort of<br/>
woman is that to have in our house when you know that all Hindhead<br/>
will be calling on us to see that aeroplane? Bunny: come with me and<br/>
help me to get all the people out of the grounds: I declare they came<br/>
running as if theyd sprung up out of the earth <i>[she makes for the<br/>
inner door].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No: dont you trouble, Chickabiddy: I'll tackle em.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Indeed youll do nothing of the kind: youll stay here<br/>
quietly with Lord Summerhays. Youd invite them all to dinner. Come,<br/>
Bunny. <i>[She goes out, followed by Bentley. Lord Summerhays sits<br/>
down again].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Singularly beautiful woman Summerhays. What do you make of<br/>
her? She must be a princess. Whats this family of warriors and<br/>
statesmen that risk their lives every day?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. They are evidently not warriors and statesmen, or<br/>
they wouldnt do that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, then, who the devil are they?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I think I know. The last time I saw that lady, she<br/>
did something I should not have thought possible.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. What was that?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Well, she walked backwards along a taut wire without<br/>
a balancing pole and turned a somersault in the middle. I remember<br/>
that her name was Lina, and that the other name was foreign; though I<br/>
dont recollect it.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Szcz! You couldnt have forgotten that if youd heard it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I didnt hear it: I only saw it on a program. But<br/>
it's clear shes an acrobat. It explains how she saved Percival. And<br/>
it accounts for her family pride.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. An acrobat, eh? Good, good, good! Summerhays: that<br/>
brings her within reach. Thats better than a princess. I steeled<br/>
this evergreen heart of mine when I thought she was a princess. Now I<br/>
shall let it be touched. She is accessible. Good.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I hope you are not serious. Remember: you have a<br/>
family. You have a position. You are not in your first youth.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No matter.<br/>
<br/>
Theres magic in the night<br/>
When the heart is young.<br/>
<br/>
My heart is young. Besides, I'm a married man, not a widower like<br/>
you. A married man can do anything he likes if his wife dont mind. A<br/>
widower cant be too careful. Not that I would have you think me an<br/>
unprincipled man or a bad husband. I'm not. But Ive a superabundance<br/>
of vitality. Read Pepys' Diary.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The woman is your guest, Tarleton.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, is she? A woman I bring into my house is my guest.<br/>
A woman you bring into my house is my guest. But a woman who drops<br/>
bang down out of the sky into my greenhouse and smashes every blessed<br/>
pane of glass in it must take her chance.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Still, you know that my name must not be associated<br/>
with any scandal. Youll be careful, wont you?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh Lord, yes. Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. I was only joking,<br/>
of course.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Mrs Tarleton comes back through the inner door.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well I never! John: I dont think that young woman's<br/>
right in her head. Do you know what shes just asked for?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Champagne?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. No. She wants a Bible and six oranges.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. What?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. A Bible and six oranges.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I understand the oranges: shes doing an orange cure of<br/>
some sort. But what on earth does she want the Bible for?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. I'm sure I cant imagine. She cant be right in her<br/>
head.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Perhaps she wants to read it.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. But why should she, on a weekday, at all events. What<br/>
would you advise me to do, Lord Summerhays?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Well, is there a Bible in the house?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Stacks of em. Theres the family Bible, and the Dore Bible,<br/>
and the parallel revised version Bible, and the Doves Press Bible, and<br/>
Johnny's Bible and Bobby's Bible and Patsy's Bible, and the<br/>
Chickabiddy's Bible and my Bible; and I daresay the servants could<br/>
raise a few more between them. Let her have the lot.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont talk like that before Lord Summerhays, John.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It doesnt matter, Mrs Tarleton: in Jinghiskahn it<br/>
was a punishable offence to expose a Bible for sale. The empire has<br/>
no religion.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lina comes in. She has left her cap in Hypatia's room. She stops on<br/>
the landing just inside the door, and speaks over the handrail.</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. Oh, Mrs Tarleton, shall I be making myself very troublesome if<br/>
I ask for a music-stand in my room as well?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Not at all. You can have the piano if you like. Or the<br/>
gramophone. Have the gramophone.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. No, thank you: no music.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[going to the steps]</i> Do you think it's good for you<br/>
to eat so many oranges? Arnt you afraid of getting jaundice?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[coming down]</i> Not in the least. But billiard balls will do<br/>
quite as well.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. But you cant eat billiard balls, child!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Get em, Chickabiddy. I understand. <i>[He imitates a<br/>
juggler tossing up balls].</i> Eh?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[going to him, past his wife]</i> Just so.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Billiard balls and cues. Plates, knives, and forks. Two<br/>
paraffin lamps and a hatstand.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. No: that is popular low-class business. In our family we<br/>
touch nothing but classical work. Anybody can do lamps and hatstands.<br/>
<i>I</i> can do silver bullets. That is really hard. <i>[She passes on to<br/>
Lord Summerhays, and looks gravely down at him as he sits by the<br/>
writing table].</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, I'm sure I dont know what youre talking about;<br/>
and I only hope you know yourselves. However, you shall have what you<br/>
want, of course. <i>[She goes up the steps and leaves the room].</i><br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Will you forgive my curiosity? What is the Bible<br/>
for?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. To quiet my soul.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS <i>[with a sigh]</i> Ah yes, yes. It no longer quiets<br/>
mine, I am sorry to say.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. That is because you do not know how to read it. Put it up<br/>
before you on a stand; and open it at the Psalms. When you can read<br/>
them and understand them, quite quietly and happily, and keep six<br/>
balls in the air all the time, you are in perfect condition; and youll<br/>
never make a mistake that evening. If you find you cant do that, then<br/>
go and pray until you can. And be very careful that evening.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Is that the usual form of test in your profession?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Nothing that we Szczepanowskis do is usual, my lord.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Are you all so wonderful?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. It is our profession to be wonderful.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Do you never condescend to do as common people do?<br/>
For instance, do you not pray as common people pray?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Common people do not pray, my lord: they only beg.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You never ask for anything?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. No.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Then why do you pray?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. To remind myself that I have a soul.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[walking about]</i> True. Fine. Good. Beautiful. All<br/>
this damned materialism: what good is it to anybody? Ive got a soul:<br/>
dont tell me I havnt. Cut me up and you cant find it. Cut up a steam<br/>
engine and you cant find the steam. But, by George, it makes the<br/>
engine go. Say what you will, Summerhays, the divine spark is a fact.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Have I denied it?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Our whole civilization is a denial of it. Read Walt<br/>
Whitman.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I shall go to the billiard room and get the balls<br/>
for you.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Thank you.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lord Summerhays goes out through the vestibule door.</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[going to her]</i> Listen to me. <i>[She turns quickly].</i><br/>
What you said just now was beautiful. You touch chords. You appeal<br/>
to the poetry in a man. You inspire him. Come now! Youre a woman of<br/>
the world: youre independent: you must have driven lots of men<br/>
crazy. You know the sort of man I am, dont you? See through me at a<br/>
glance, eh?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Yes. <i>[She sits down quietly in the chair Lord Summerhays has<br/>
just left].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Good. Well, do you like me? Dont misunderstand me: I'm<br/>
perfectly aware that youre not going to fall in love at first sight<br/>
with a ridiculous old shopkeeper. I cant help that ridiculous old<br/>
shopkeeper. I have to carry him about with me whether I like it or<br/>
not. I have to pay for his clothes, though I hate the cut of them:<br/>
especially the waistcoat. I have to look at him in the glass while<br/>
I'm shaving. I loathe him because hes a living lie. My soul's not<br/>
like that: it's like yours. I want to make a fool of myself. About<br/>
you. Will you let me?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[very calm]</i> How much will you pay?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Nothing. But I'll throw as many sovereigns as you like<br/>
into the sea to shew you that I'm in earnest.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Are those your usual terms?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No. I never made that bid before.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[producing a dainty little book and preparing to write in it]</i><br/>
What did you say your name was?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. John Tarleton. The great John Tarleton of Tarleton's<br/>
Underwear.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[writing]</i> T-a-r-l-e-t-o-n. Er—? <i>[She looks up at him<br/>
inquiringly].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[promptly]</i> Fifty-eight.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Thank you. I keep a list of all my offers. I like to know<br/>
what I'm considered worth.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Let me look.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[offering the book to him]</i> It's in Polish.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Thats no good. Is mine the lowest offer?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. No: the highest.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. What do most of them come to? Diamonds? Motor cars?<br/>
Furs? Villa at Monte Carlo?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Oh yes: all that. And sometimes the devotion of a lifetime.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Fancy that! A young man offering a woman his old age as a<br/>
temptation!<br/>
<br/>
LINA. By the way, you did not say how long.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Until you get tired of me.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Or until you get tired of me?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I never get tired. I never go on long enough for that.<br/>
But when it becomes so grand, so inspiring that I feel that everything<br/>
must be an anti-climax after that, then I run away.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Does she let you go without a struggle?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes. Glad to get rid of me. When love takes a man as it<br/>
takes me—when it makes him great—it frightens a woman.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. The lady here is your wife, isnt she? Dont you care for her?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes. And mind! she comes first always. I reserve her<br/>
dignity even when I sacrifice my own. Youll respect that point of<br/>
honor, wont you?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Only a point of honor?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[impulsively]</i> No, by God! a point of affection as well.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[smiling, pleased with him]</i> Shake hands, old pal <i>[she rises<br/>
and offers him her hand frankly].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[giving his hand rather dolefully]</i> Thanks. That means<br/>
no, doesnt it?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. It means something that will last longer than yes. I like you.<br/>
I admit you to my friendship. What a pity you were not trained when<br/>
you were young! Youd be young still.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I suppose, to an athlete like you, I'm pretty awful, eh?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Shocking.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Too much crumb. Wrinkles. Yellow patches that wont come<br/>
off. Short wind. I know. I'm ashamed of myself. I could do nothing<br/>
on the high rope.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Oh yes: I could put you in a wheelbarrow and run you along,<br/>
two hundred feet up.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[shuddering]</i> Ugh! Well, I'd do even that for you. Read<br/>
The Master Builder.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Have you learnt everything from books?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, have you learnt everything from the flying trapeze?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. On the flying trapeze there is often another woman; and her<br/>
life is in your hands every night and your life in hers.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Lina: I'm going to make a fool of myself. I'm going to<br/>
cry <i>[he crumples into the nearest chair].</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. Pray instead: dont cry. Why should you cry? Youre not the<br/>
first I've said no to.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. If you had said yes, should I have been the first then?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. What right have you to ask? Have I asked am <i>I</i> the first?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre right: a vulgar question. To a man like me,<br/>
everybody is the first. Life renews itself.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. The youngest child is the sweetest.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Dont probe too deep, Lina. It hurts.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. You must get out of the habit of thinking that these things<br/>
matter so much. It's linendraperish.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre quite right. Ive often said so. All the same, it<br/>
does matter; for I want to cry. <i>[He buries his face in his arms on<br/>
the work-table and sobs].</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[going to him]</i> O la la! <i>[She slaps him vigorously, but not<br/>
unkindly, on the shoulder].</i> Courage, old pal, courage! Have you a<br/>
gymnasium here?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Theres a trapeze and bars and things in the billiard room.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Come. You need a few exercises. I'll teach you how to stop<br/>
crying. <i>[She takes his arm and leads him off into the vestibule].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>A young man, cheaply dressed and strange in manner, appears in the<br/>
garden; steals to the pavilion door; and looks in. Seeing that there<br/>
is nobody, he enters cautiously until he has come far enough to see<br/>
into the hatstand corner. He draws a revolver, and examines it,<br/>
apparently to make sure that it is loaded. Then his attention is<br/>
caught by the Turkish bath. He looks down the lunette, and opens the<br/>
panels.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[calling in the garden]</i> Mr Percival! Mr Percival! Where<br/>
are you?<br/>
<br/>
<i>The young man makes for the door, but sees Percival coming. He turns<br/>
and bolts into the Turkish bath, which he closes upon himself just in<br/>
time to escape being caught by Percival, who runs in through the<br/>
pavilion, bareheaded. He also, it appears, is in search of a<br/>
hiding-place; for he stops and turns between the two tables to take a<br/>
survey of the room; then runs into the corner between the end of the<br/>
sideboard and the wall. Hypatia, excited, mischievous, her eyes<br/>
glowing, runs in, precisely on his trail; turns at the same spot; and<br/>
discovers him just as he makes a dash for the pavilion door. She<br/>
flies back and intercepts him.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Aha! arnt you glad Ive caught you?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[illhumoredly turning away from her and coming towards the<br/>
writing table]</i> No I'm not. Confound it, what sort of girl are you?<br/>
What sort of house is this? Must I throw all good manners to the<br/>
winds?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[following him]</i> Do, do, do, do, do. This is the house of<br/>
a respectable shopkeeper, enormously rich. This is the respectable<br/>
shopkeeper's daughter, tired of good manners. <i>[Slipping her left<br/>
hand into his right]</i> Come, handsome young man, and play with the<br/>
respectable shopkeeper's daughter.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[withdrawing quickly from her touch]</i> No, no: dont you<br/>
know you mustnt go on like this with a perfect stranger?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Dropped down from the sky. Dont you know that you must<br/>
always go on like this when you get the chance? You must come to the<br/>
top of the hill and chase me through the bracken. You may kiss me if<br/>
you catch me.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I shall do nothing of the sort.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Yes you will: you cant help yourself. Come along. <i>[She<br/>
seizes his sleeve].</i> Fool, fool: come along. Dont you want to?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. No: certainly not. I should never be forgiven if I did<br/>
it.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Youll never forgive yourself if you dont.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Nonsense. Youre engaged to Ben. Ben's my friend. What do<br/>
you take me for?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Ben's old. Ben was born old. Theyre all old here, except<br/>
you and me and the man-woman or woman-man or whatever you call her<br/>
that came with you. They never do anything: they only discuss<br/>
whether what other people do is right. Come and give them something<br/>
to discuss.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I will do nothing incorrect.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, dont be afraid, little boy: youll get nothing but a<br/>
kiss; and I'll fight like the devil to keep you from getting that.<br/>
But we must play on the hill and race through the heather.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Why?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Because we want to, handsome young man.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. But if everybody went on in this way—<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. How happy! oh how happy the world would be!<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. But the consequences may be serious.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Nothing is worth doing unless the consequences may be<br/>
serious. My father says so; and I'm my father's daughter.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I'm the son of three fathers. I mistrust these wild<br/>
impulses.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Take care. Youre letting the moment slip. I feel the first<br/>
chill of the wave of prudence. Save me.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Really, Miss Tarleton <i>[she strikes him across the face]</i><br/>
—Damn you! <i>[Recovering himself, horrified at his lapse]</i> I beg<br/>
your pardon; but since weve both forgotten ourselves, youll please<br/>
allow me to leave the house. <i>[He turns towards the inner door,<br/>
having left his cap in the bedroom].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[standing in his way]</i> Are you ashamed of having said<br/>
"Damn you" to me?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I had no right to say it. I'm very much ashamed of it. I<br/>
have already begged your pardon.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. And youre not ashamed of having said "Really, Miss<br/>
Tarleton."<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Why should I?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. O man, man! mean, stupid, cowardly, selfish masculine male<br/>
man! You ought to have been a governess. I was expelled from school<br/>
for saying that the very next person that said "Really, Miss<br/>
Tarleton," to me, I would strike her across the face. You were the<br/>
next.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I had no intention of being offensive. Surely there is<br/>
nothing that can wound any lady in—<i>[He hesitates, not quite<br/>
convinced].</i> At least—er—I really didnt mean to be disagreeable.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Liar.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Of course if youre going to insult me, I am quite helpless.<br/>
Youre a woman: you can say what you like.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. And you can only say what you dare. Poor wretch: it isnt<br/>
much. <i>[He bites his lip, and sits down, very much annoyed].</i><br/>
Really, Mr Percival! You sit down in the presence of a lady and leave<br/>
her standing. <i>[He rises hastily].</i> Ha, ha! Really, Mr Percival!<br/>
Oh really, really, really, really, really, Mr Percival! How do you<br/>
like it? Wouldnt you rather I damned you?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Miss Tarleton—<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[caressingly]</i> Hypatia, Joey. Patsy, if you like.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Look here: this is no good. You want to do what you like?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Dont you?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. No. Ive been too well brought up. Ive argued all through<br/>
this thing; and I tell you I'm not prepared to cast off the social<br/>
bond. It's like a corset: it's a support to the figure even if it<br/>
does squeeze and deform it a bit. I want to be free.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, I'm tempting you to be free.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Not at all. Freedom, my good girl, means being able to<br/>
count on how other people will behave. If every man who dislikes me<br/>
is to throw a handful of mud in my face, and every woman who likes me<br/>
is to behave like Potiphar's wife, then I shall be a slave: the slave<br/>
of uncertainty: the slave of fear: the worst of all slaveries. How<br/>
would you like it if every laborer you met in the road were to make<br/>
love to you? No. Give me the blessed protection of a good stiff<br/>
conventionality among thoroughly well-brought up ladies and gentlemen.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Another talker! Men like conventions because men made them.<br/>
I didnt make them: I dont like them: I wont keep them. Now, what<br/>
will you do?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Bolt. <i>[He runs out through the pavilion].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I'll catch you. <i>[She dashes off in pursuit].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>During this conversation the head of the scandalized man in the<br/>
Turkish bath has repeatedly risen from the lunette, with a strong<br/>
expression of moral shock. It vanishes abruptly as the two turn<br/>
towards it in their flight. At the same moment Tarleton comes back<br/>
through the vestibule door, exhausted by severe and unaccustomed<br/>
exercise.</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[looking after the flying figures with amazement]</i> Hallo,<br/>
Patsy: whats up? Another aeroplane? <i>[They are far too preoccupied<br/>
to hear him; and he is left staring after them as they rush away<br/>
through the garden. He goes to the pavilion door and looks up; but<br/>
the heavens are empty. His exhaustion disables him from further<br/>
inquiry. He dabs his brow with his handkerchief, and walks stiffly to<br/>
the nearest convenient support, which happens to be the Turkish bath.<br/>
He props himself upon it with his elbow, and covers his eyes with his<br/>
hand for a moment. After a few sighing breaths, he feels a little<br/>
better, and uncovers his eyes. The man's head rises from the lunette<br/>
a few inches from his nose. He recoils from the bath with a violent<br/>
start].</i> Oh Lord! My brain's gone. <i>[Calling piteously]</i><br/>
Chickabiddy! <i>[He staggers down to the writing table].</i><br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[coming out of the bath, pistol in hand]</i> Another sound;<br/>
and youre a dead man.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[braced]</i> Am I? Well, youre a live one: thats one<br/>
comfort. I thought you were a ghost. <i>[He sits down, quite<br/>
undisturbed by the pistol]</i> Who are you; and what the devil were you<br/>
doing in my new Turkish bath?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[with tragic intensity]</i> I am the son of Lucinda Titmus.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[the name conveying nothing to him]</i> Indeed? And how is<br/>
she? Quite well, I hope, eh?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. She is dead. Dead, my God! and youre alive.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[unimpressed by the tragedy, but sympathetic]</i> Oh! Lost<br/>
your mother? Thats sad. I'm sorry. But we cant all have the luck to<br/>
survive our mothers, and be nursed out of the world by the hands that<br/>
nursed us into it.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Much you care, damn you!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh, dont cut up rough. Face it like a man. You see I<br/>
didnt know your mother; but Ive no doubt she was an excellent woman.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Not know her! Do you dare to stand there by her open grave<br/>
and deny that you knew her?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[trying to recollect]</i> What did you say her name was?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Lucinda Titmus.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, I ought to remember a rum name like that if I ever<br/>
heard it. But I dont. Have you a photograph or anything?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Forgotten even the name of your victim!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh! she was my victim, was she?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. She was. And you shall see her face again before you die,<br/>
dead as she is. I have a photograph.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Good.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Ive two photographs.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Still better. Treasure the mother's pictures. Good boy!<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. One of them as you knew her. The other as she became when<br/>
you flung her aside, and she withered into an old woman.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. She'd have done that anyhow, my lad. We all grow old.<br/>
Look at me! <i>[Seeing that the man is embarrassed by his pistol in<br/>
fumbling for the photographs with his left hand in his breast pocket]</i><br/>
Let me hold the gun for you.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[retreating to the worktable]</i> Stand back. Do you take me<br/>
for a fool?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, youre a little upset, naturally. It does you credit.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Look here, upon this picture and on this. <i>[He holds out<br/>
the two photographs like a hand at cards, and points to them with the<br/>
pistol].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Good. Read Shakespear: he has a word for every occasion.<br/>
<i>[He takes the photographs, one in each hand, and looks from one to<br/>
the other, pleased and interested, but without any sign of<br/>
recognition]</i> What a pretty girl! Very pretty. I can imagine myself<br/>
falling in love with her when I was your age. I wasnt a bad-looking<br/>
young fellow myself in those days. <i>[Looking at the other]</i> Curious<br/>
that we should both have gone the same way.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. You and she the same way! What do you mean?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Both got stout, I mean.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Would you have had her deny herself food?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No: it wouldnt have been any use. It's constitutional.<br/>
No matter how little you eat you put on flesh if youre made that way.<br/>
<i>[He resumes his study of the earlier photograph].</i><br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Is that all the feeling that rises in you at the sight of<br/>
the face you once knew so well?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[too much absorbed in the portrait to heed him]</i> Funny<br/>
that I cant remember! Let this be a lesson to you, young man. I<br/>
could go into court tomorrow and swear I never saw that face before in<br/>
my life if it wasnt for that brooch <i>[pointing to the photograph].</i><br/>
Have you got that brooch, by the way? <i>[The man again resorts to his<br/>
breast pocket].</i> You seem to carry the whole family property in that<br/>
pocket.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[producing a brooch]</i> Here it is to prove my bona fides.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[pensively putting the photographs on the table and taking<br/>
the brooch]</i> I bought that brooch in Cheapside from a man with a<br/>
yellow wig and a cast in his left eye. Ive never set eyes on him from<br/>
that day to this. And yet I remember that man; and I cant remember<br/>
your mother.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Monster! Without conscience! without even memory! You left<br/>
her to her shame—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[throwing the brooch on the table and rising pepperily]</i><br/>
Come, come, young man! none of that. Respect the romance of your<br/>
mother's youth. Dont you start throwing stones at her. I dont recall<br/>
her features just at this moment; but Ive no doubt she was kind to me<br/>
and we were happy together. If you have a word to say against her,<br/>
take yourself out of my house and say it elsewhere.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. What sort of a joker are you? Are you trying to put me in<br/>
the wrong, when you have to answer to me for a crime that would make<br/>
every honest man spit at you as you passed in the street if I were to<br/>
make it known?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. You read a good deal, dont you?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. What if I do? What has that to do with your infamy and my<br/>
mother's doom?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. There, you see! Doom! Thats not good sense; but it's<br/>
literature. Now it happens that I'm a tremendous reader: always was.<br/>
When I was your age I read books of that sort by the bushel: the Doom<br/>
sort, you know. It's odd, isnt it, that you and I should be like one<br/>
another in that respect? Can you account for it in any way?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. No. What are you driving at?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, do you know who your father was?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. I see what you mean now. You dare set up to be my father.<br/>
Thank heaven Ive not a drop of your vile blood in my veins.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[sitting down again with a shrug]</i> Well, if you wont be<br/>
civil, theres no pleasure in talking to you, is there? What do you<br/>
want? Money?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. How dare you insult me?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, what do you want?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Justice.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre quite sure thats all?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. It's enough for me.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. A modest sort of demand, isnt it? Nobody ever had it since<br/>
the world began, fortunately for themselves; but you must have it,<br/>
must you? Well, youve come to the wrong shop for it: youll get no<br/>
justice here: we dont keep it. Human nature is what we stock.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Human nature! Debauchery! gluttony! selfishness! robbery of<br/>
the poor! Is that what you call human nature?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. No: thats what you call it. Come, my lad! Whats the<br/>
matter with you? You dont look starved; and youve a decent suit of<br/>
clothes.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Forty-two shillings.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. They can do you a very decent suit for forty-two shillings.<br/>
Have you paid for it?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Do you take me for a thief? And do you suppose I can get<br/>
credit like you?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Then you were able to lay your hand on forty-two shillings.<br/>
Judging from your conversational style, I should think you must spend<br/>
at least a shilling a week on romantic literature.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Where would I get a shilling a week to spend on books when I<br/>
can hardly keep myself decent? I get books at the Free Library.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON <i>[springing to his feet]</i> What!!!<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[recoiling before his vehemence]</i> The Free Library.<br/>
Theres no harm in that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Ingrate! I supply you with free books; and the use you<br/>
make of them is to persuade yourself that it's a fine thing to shoot<br/>
me. <i>[He throws himself doggedly back into his chair].</i> I'll never<br/>
give another penny to a Free Library.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Youll never give another penny to anything. This is the<br/>
end: for you and me.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Pooh! Come, come, man! talk business. Whats wrong? Are<br/>
you out of employment?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. No. This is my Saturday afternoon. Dont flatter yourself<br/>
that I'm a loafer or a criminal. I'm a cashier; and I defy you to say<br/>
that my cash has ever been a farthing wrong. Ive a right to call you<br/>
to account because my hands are clean.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, call away. What have I to account for? Had you a<br/>
hard time with your mother? Why didnt she ask me for money?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. She'd have died first. Besides, who wanted your money? Do<br/>
you suppose we lived in the gutter? My father maynt have been in as<br/>
large a way as you; but he was better connected; and his shop was as<br/>
respectable as yours.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I suppose your mother brought him a little capital.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. I dont know. Whats that got to do with you?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, you say she and I knew one another and parted. She<br/>
must have had something off me then, you know. One doesnt get out of<br/>
these things for nothing. Hang it, young man: do you suppose Ive no<br/>
heart? Of course she had her due; and she found a husband with it,<br/>
and set him up in business with it, and brought you up respectably; so<br/>
what the devil have you to complain of?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Are women to be ruined with impunity?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I havnt ruined any woman that I'm aware of. Ive been the<br/>
making of you and your mother.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Oh, I'm a fool to listen to you and argue with you. I came<br/>
here to kill you and then kill myself.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Begin with yourself, if you dont mind. Ive a good deal of<br/>
business to do still before I die. Havnt you?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. No. Thats just it: Ive no business to do. Do you know<br/>
what my life is? I spend my days from nine to six—nine hours of<br/>
daylight and fresh air—in a stuffy little den counting another man's<br/>
money. Ive an intellect: a mind and a brain and a soul; and the use<br/>
he makes of them is to fix them on his tuppences and his<br/>
eighteenpences and his two pound seventeen and tenpences and see how<br/>
much they come to at the end of the day and take care that no one<br/>
steals them. I enter and enter, and add and add, and take money and<br/>
give change, and fill cheques and stamp receipts; and not a penny of<br/>
that money is my own: not one of those transactions has the smallest<br/>
interest for me or anyone else in the world but him; and even he<br/>
couldnt stand it if he had to do it all himself. And I'm envied:<br/>
aye, envied for the variety and liveliness of my job, by the poor<br/>
devil of a bookkeeper that has to copy all my entries over again.<br/>
Fifty thousand entries a year that poor wretch makes; and not ten out<br/>
of the fifty thousand ever has to be referred to again; and when all<br/>
the figures are counted up and the balance sheet made out, the boss<br/>
isnt a penny the richer than he'd be if bookkeeping had never been<br/>
invented. Of all the damnable waste of human life that ever was<br/>
invented, clerking is the very worst.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Why not join the territorials?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Because I shouldnt be let. He hasnt even the sense to see<br/>
that it would pay him to get some cheap soldiering out of me. How can<br/>
a man tied to a desk from nine to six be anything—be even a man, let<br/>
alone a soldier? But I'll teach him and you a lesson. Ive had enough<br/>
of living a dog's life and despising myself for it. Ive had enough of<br/>
being talked down to by hogs like you, and wearing my life out for a<br/>
salary that wouldnt keep you in cigars. Youll never believe that a<br/>
clerk's a man until one of us makes an example of one of you.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Despotism tempered by assassination, eh?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Yes. Thats what they do in Russia. Well, a business office<br/>
is Russia as far as the clerks are concerned. So dont you take it so<br/>
coolly. You think I'm not going to do it; but I am.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[rising and facing him]</i> Come, now, as man to man! It's<br/>
not my fault that youre poorer than I am; and it's not your fault that<br/>
I'm richer than you. And if you could undo all that passed between me<br/>
and your mother, you wouldnt undo it; and neither would she. But<br/>
youre sick of your slavery; and you want to be the hero of a romance<br/>
and to get into the papers. Eh? A son revenges his mother's shame.<br/>
Villain weltering in his gore. Mother: look down from heaven and<br/>
receive your unhappy son's last sigh.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Oh, rot! do you think I read novelettes? And do you suppose<br/>
I believe such superstitions as heaven? I go to church because the<br/>
boss told me I'd get the sack if I didnt. Free England! Ha! <i>[Lina<br/>
appears at the pavilion door, and comes swiftly and noiselessly<br/>
forward on seeing the man with a pistol in his hand].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre afraid of getting the sack; but youre not afraid to<br/>
shoot yourself.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Damn you! youre trying to keep me talking until somebody<br/>
comes. <i>[He raises the pistol desperately, but not very resolutely].</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[at his right elbow]</i> Somebody has come.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN <i>[turning on her]</i> Stand off. I'll shoot you if you lay a<br/>
hand on me. I will, by God.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. You cant cover me with that pistol. Try.<br/>
<br/>
<i>He tries, presenting the pistol at her face. She moves round him in<br/>
the opposite direction to the hands of a clock with a light dancing<br/>
step. He finds it impossible to cover her with the pistol: she is<br/>
always too far to his left. Tarleton, behind him, grips his wrist and<br/>
drags his arm straight up, so that the pistol points to the ceiling.<br/>
As he tries to turn on his assailant, Lina grips his other wrist.</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. Please stop. I cant bear to twist anyone's wrist; but I must<br/>
if you dont let the pistol go.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[letting Tarleton take it from him]</i> All right: I'm done.<br/>
Couldnt even do that job decently. Thats a clerk all over. Very<br/>
well: send for your damned police and make an end of it. I'm<br/>
accustomed to prison from nine to six: I daresay I can stand it from<br/>
six to nine as well.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Dont swear. Thats a lady. <i>[He throws the pistol on the<br/>
writing table].</i><br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. <i>[looking at Lina in amazement]</i> Beaten by a female! It<br/>
needed only this. <i>[He collapses in the chair near the worktable, and<br/>
hides his face. They cannot help pitying him].</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. Old pal: dont call the police. Lend him a bicycle and let him<br/>
get away.<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. I cant ride a bicycle. I never could afford one. I'm not<br/>
even that much good.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. If I gave you a hundred pound note now to go and have a<br/>
good spree with, I wonder would you know how to set about it. Do you<br/>
ever take a holiday?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. Take! I got four days last August.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. What did you do?<br/>
<br/>
THE MAN. I did a cheap trip to Folkestone. I spent sevenpence on<br/>
dropping pennies into silly automatic machines and peepshows of rowdy<br/>
girls having a jolly time. I spent a penny on the lift and fourpence<br/>
on refreshments. That cleaned me out. The rest of the time I was so<br/>
miserable that I was glad to get back to the office. Now you know.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Come to the gymnasium: I'll teach you how to make a man of<br/>
yourself. <i>[The man is about to rise irresolutely, from the mere<br/>
habit of doing what he is told, when Tarleton stops him].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Young man: dont. Youve tried to shoot me; but I'm not<br/>
vindictive. I draw the line at putting a man on the rack. If you<br/>
want every joint in your body stretched until it's an agony to<br/>
live—until you have an unnatural feeling that all your muscles are<br/>
singing and laughing with pain—then go to the gymnasium with that<br/>
lady. But youll be more comfortable in jail.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[greatly amused]</i> Was that why you went away, old pal? Was<br/>
that the telegram you said you had forgotten to send?<br/>
<br/>
<i>Mrs Tarleton comes in hastily through the inner door.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[on the steps]</i> Is anything the matter, John? Nurse<br/>
says she heard you calling me a quarter of an hour ago; and that your<br/>
voice sounded as if you were ill. <i>[She comes between Tarleton and<br/>
the man.]</i> Is anything the matter?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. This is the son of an old friend of mine. Mr—er—Mr<br/>
Gunner. <i>[To the man, who rises awkwardly].</i> My wife.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Good evening to you.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Er— <i>[He is too nervous to speak, and makes a shambling<br/>
bow].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley looks in at the pavilion door, very peevish, and too<br/>
preoccupied with his own affairs to pay any attention to those of the<br/>
company.</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I say: has anybody seen Hypatia? She promised to come out<br/>
with me; and I cant find her anywhere. And wheres Joey?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[suddenly breaking out aggressively, being incapable of any<br/>
middle way between submissiveness and violence]</i> <i>I</i> can tell you<br/>
where Hypatia is. I can tell you where Joey is. And I say it's a<br/>
scandal and an infamy. If people only knew what goes on in this<br/>
so-called respectable house it would be put a stop to. These are the<br/>
morals of our pious capitalist class! This is your rotten<br/>
bourgeoisie! This!—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont you dare use such language in company. I wont<br/>
allow it.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. All right, Chickabiddy: it's not bad language: it's only<br/>
Socialism.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Well, I wont have any Socialism in my house.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[to Gunner]</i> You hear what Mrs Tarleton says. Well, in<br/>
this house everybody does what she says or out they go.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Do you suppose I want to stay? Do you think I would breathe<br/>
this polluted atmosphere a moment longer than I could help?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[running forward between Lina and Gunner]</i> But what did<br/>
you mean by what you said about Miss Tarleton and Mr Percival, you<br/>
beastly rotter, you?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[to Tarleton]</i> Oh! is Hypatia your daughter? And Joey is<br/>
Mister Percival, is he? One of your set, I suppose. One of the smart<br/>
set! One of the bridge-playing, eighty-horse-power, week-ender set!<br/>
One of the johnnies I slave for! Well, Joey has more decency than<br/>
your daughter, anyhow. The women are the worst. I never believed it<br/>
til I saw it with my own eyes. Well, it wont last for ever. The<br/>
writing is on the wall. Rome fell. Babylon fell. Hindhead's turn<br/>
will come.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[naively looking at the wall for the writing]</i><br/>
Whatever are you talking about, young man?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I know what I'm talking about. I went into that Turkish bath<br/>
a boy: I came out a man.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Good gracious! hes mad. <i>[To Lina]</i> Did John make him<br/>
take a Turkish bath?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. No. He doesnt need Turkish baths: he needs to put on a little<br/>
flesh. I dont understand what it's all about. I found him trying to<br/>
shoot Mr Tarleton.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[with a scream]</i> Oh! and John encouraging him, I'll<br/>
be bound! Bunny: you go for the police. <i>[To Gunner]</i> I'll teach<br/>
you to come into my house and shoot my husband.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Teach away. I never asked to be let off. I'm ashamed to be<br/>
free instead of taking my part with the rest. Women—beautiful women<br/>
of noble birth—are going to prison for their opinions. Girl students<br/>
in Russia go to the gallows; let themselves be cut in pieces with the<br/>
knout, or driven through the frozen snows of Siberia, sooner than<br/>
stand looking on tamely at the world being made a hell for the toiling<br/>
millions. If you were not all skunks and cowards youd be suffering<br/>
with them instead of battening here on the plunder of the poor.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[much vexed]</i> Oh, did you ever hear such silly<br/>
nonsense? Bunny: go and tell the gardener to send over one of his<br/>
men to Grayshott for the police.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I'll go with him. I intend to give myself up. I'm going to<br/>
expose what Ive seen here, no matter what the consequences may be to<br/>
my miserable self.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Stop. You stay where you are, Ben. Chickabiddy: youve<br/>
never had the police in. If you had, youd not be in a hurry to have<br/>
them in again. Now, young man: cut the cackle; and tell us, as short<br/>
as you can, what did you see?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I cant tell you in the presence of ladies.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, you are tiresome. As if it mattered to anyone what<br/>
you saw. Me! A married woman that might be your mother. <i>[To Lina]</i><br/>
And I'm sure youre not particular, if youll excuse my saying so.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Out with it. What did you see?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I saw your daughter with my own eyes—oh well, never mind<br/>
what I saw.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[almost crying with anxiety]</i> You beastly rotter, I'll get<br/>
Joey to give you such a hiding—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. You cant leave it at that, you know. What did you see my<br/>
daughter doing?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. After all, why shouldnt she do it? The Russian students do<br/>
it. Women should be as free as men. I'm a fool. I'm so full of your<br/>
bourgeois morality that I let myself be shocked by the application of<br/>
my own revolutionary principles. If she likes the man why shouldnt<br/>
she tell him so?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. I do wonder at you, John, letting him talk like this<br/>
before everybody. <i>[Turning rather tartly to Lina]</i> Would you mind<br/>
going away to the drawing-room just for a few minutes, Miss<br/>
Chipenoska. This is a private family matter, if you dont mind.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. I should have gone before, Mrs Tarleton, if there had been<br/>
anyone to protect Mr Tarleton and the young gentleman.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre quite right, Miss Lina: you must stand by. I could<br/>
have tackled him this morning; but since you put me through those<br/>
exercises I'd rather die than even shake hands with a man, much less<br/>
fight him.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. It's all of a piece here. The men effeminate, the women<br/>
unsexed—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Dont begin again, old chap. Keep it for Trafalgar Square.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA'S VOICE OUTSIDE. No, no. <i>[She breaks off in a stifled half<br/>
laugh, half scream, and is seen darting across the garden with<br/>
Percival in hot pursuit. Immediately afterwards she appears again,<br/>
and runs into the pavilion. Finding it full of people, including a<br/>
stranger, she stops; but Percival, flushed and reckless, rushes in and<br/>
seizes her before he, too, realizes that they are not alone. He<br/>
releases her in confusion].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>Dead silence. They are all afraid to look at one another except Mrs<br/>
Tarleton, who stares sternly at Hypatia. Hypatia is the first to<br/>
recover her presence of mind.</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Excuse me rushing in like this. Mr Percival has been<br/>
chasing me down the hill.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Who chased him up it? Dont be ashamed. Be fearless. Be<br/>
truthful.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Gunner: will you go to Paris for a fortnight? I'll pay<br/>
your expenses.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. What do you mean?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. There was a silent witness in the Turkish bath.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I found him hiding there. Whatever went on here, he saw<br/>
and heard. Thats what he means.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[sternly approaching Gunner, and speaking with deep but<br/>
contained indignation]</i> Am I to understand you as daring to put<br/>
forward the monstrous and blackguardly lie that this lady behaved<br/>
improperly in my presence?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[turning white]</i> You know what I saw and heard.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Hypatia, with a gleam of triumph in her eyes, slips noiselessly into<br/>
the swing chair, and watches Percival and Gunner, swinging slightly,<br/>
but otherwise motionless.</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I hope it is not necessary for me to assure you all that<br/>
there is not one word of truth—not one grain of substance—in this<br/>
rascally calumny, which no man with a spark of decent feeling would<br/>
have uttered even if he had been ignorant enough to believe it. Miss<br/>
Tarleton's conduct, since I have had the honor of knowing her, has<br/>
been, I need hardly say, in every respect beyond reproach. <i>[To<br/>
Gunner]</i> As for you, sir, youll have the goodness to come out with me<br/>
immediately. I have some business with you which cant be settled in<br/>
Mrs Tarleton's presence or in her house.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[painfully frightened]</i> Why should I go out with you?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Because I intend that you shall.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I wont be bullied by you. <i>[Percival makes a threatening<br/>
step towards him].</i> Police! <i>[He tries to bolt; but Percival seizes<br/>
him].</i> Leave me go, will you? What right have you to lay hands on<br/>
me?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Let him run for it, Mr Percival. Hes very poor company.<br/>
We shall be well rid of him. Let him go.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Not until he has taken back and made the fullest apology<br/>
for the abominable lie he has told. He shall do that or he shall<br/>
defend himself as best he can against the most thorough thrashing I'm<br/>
capable of giving him. <i>[Releasing Gunner, but facing him ominously]</i><br/>
Take your choice. Which is it to be?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Give me a fair chance. Go and stick at a desk from nine to<br/>
six for a month, and let me have your grub and your sport and your<br/>
lessons in boxing, and I'll fight you fast enough. You know I'm no<br/>
good or you darent bully me like this.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. You should have thought of that before you attacked a lady<br/>
with a dastardly slander. I'm waiting for your decision. I'm rather<br/>
in a hurry, please.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I never said anything against the lady.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | Oh, listen to that!<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | What a liar!<br/>
|<br/>
HYPATIA. | Oh!<br/>
|<br/>
TARLETON. | Oh, come!<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. We'll have it in writing, if you dont mind. <i>[Pointing to<br/>
the writing table]</i> Sit down; and take that pen in your hand.<br/>
<i>[Gunner looks irresolutely a little way round; then obeys].</i> Now<br/>
write. "I," whatever your name is—<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER <i>[after a vain attempt]</i> I cant. My hand's shaking too much.<br/>
You see it's no use. I'm doing my best. I cant.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Mr Summerhays will write it: you can sign it.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[insolently to Gunner]</i> Get up. <i>[Gunner obeys; and<br/>
Bentley, shouldering him aside towards Percival, takes his place and<br/>
prepares to write].</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Whats your name?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. John Brown.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh come! Couldnt you make it Horace Smith? or Algernon<br/>
Robinson?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[agitatedly]</i> But my name is John Brown. There are really<br/>
John Browns. How can I help it if my name's a common one?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Shew us a letter addressed to you.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. How can I? I never get any letters: I'm only a clerk. I<br/>
can shew you J. B. on my handkerchief. <i>[He takes out a not very<br/>
clean one].</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[with disgust]</i> Oh, put it up again. Let it go at John<br/>
Brown.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Where do you live?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. 4 Chesterfield Parade, Kentish Town, N.W.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[dictating]</i> I, John Brown, of 4 Chesterfield Parade,<br/>
Kentish Town, do hereby voluntarily confess that on the 31st May 1909<br/>
I— <i>[To Tarleton]</i> What did he do exactly?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[dictating]</i> —I trespassed on the land of John Tarleton<br/>
at Hindhead, and effected an unlawful entry into his house, where I<br/>
secreted myself in a portable Turkish bath—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Go slow, old man. Just a moment. "Turkish bath"—yes?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[continuing]</i> —with a pistol, with which I threatened to<br/>
take the life of the said John Tarleton—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, John! You might have been killed.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. —and was prevented from doing so only by the timely<br/>
arrival of the celebrated Miss Lina Szczepanowska.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Is she celebrated? <i>[Apologetically]</i> I never<br/>
dreamt—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Look here: I'm awfully sorry; but I cant spell<br/>
Szczepanowska.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I think it's S, z, c, z— <i>[Lina gives him her<br/>
visiting-card].</i> Thank you. <i>[He throws it on Bentley's blotter].</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Thanks awfully. <i>[He writes the name].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[to Percival]</i> Now it's your turn.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[dictating]</i> I further confess that I was guilty of<br/>
uttering an abominable calumny concerning Miss Hypatia Tarleton, for<br/>
which there was not a shred of foundation.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Impressive silence whilst Bentley writes.</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "foundation"?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I apologize most humbly to the lady and her family for my<br/>
conduct— <i>[he waits for Bentley to write].</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "conduct"?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. —and I promise Mr Tarleton not to repeat it, and to amend<br/>
my life—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "amend my life"?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. —and to do what in me lies to prove worthy of his kindness<br/>
in giving me another chance—<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "another chance"?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. —and refraining from delivering me up to the punishment I<br/>
so richly deserve.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. "richly deserve."<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[to Hypatia]</i> Does that satisfy you, Miss Tarleton?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Yes: that will teach him to tell lies next time.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[rising to make place for Gunner and handing him the pen]</i><br/>
You mean it will teach him to tell the truth next time.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Ahem! Do you, Patsy?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Be good enough to sign. <i>[Gunner sits down helplessly and<br/>
dips the pen in the ink].</i> I hope what you are signing is no mere<br/>
form of words to you, and that you not only say you are sorry, but<br/>
that you are sorry.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lord Summerhays and Johnny come in through the pavilion door.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Stop. Mr Percival: I think, on Hypatia's account,<br/>
Lord Summerhays ought to be told about this.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lord Summerhays, wondering what the matter is, comes forward between<br/>
Percival and Lina. Johnny stops beside Hypatia.</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Certainly.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[uneasily]</i> Take my advice, and cut it short. Get rid of<br/>
him.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Hypatia ought to have her character cleared.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. You let well alone, Chickabiddy. Most of our characters<br/>
will bear a little careful dusting; but they wont bear scouring.<br/>
Patsy is jolly well out of it. What does it matter, anyhow?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Mr Tarleton: we have already said either too much or not<br/>
enough. Lord Summerhays: will you be kind enough to witness the<br/>
declaration this man has just signed?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I havnt yet. Am I to sign now?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Of course. <i>[Gunner, who is now incapable of doing<br/>
anything on his own initiative, signs].</i> Now stand up and read your<br/>
declaration to this gentleman. <i>[Gunner makes a vague movement and<br/>
looks stupidly round. Percival adds peremptorily]</i> Now, please.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER <i>[rising apprehensively and reading in a hardly audible voice,<br/>
like a very sick man]</i> I, John Brown, of 4 Chesterfield Parade,<br/>
Kentish Town, do hereby voluntarily confess that on the 31st May 1909<br/>
I trespassed on the land of John Tarleton at Hindhead, and effected an<br/>
unlawful entry into his house, where I secreted myself in a portable<br/>
Turkish bath, with a pistol, with which I threatened to take the life<br/>
of the said John Tarleton, and was prevented from doing so only by the<br/>
timely arrival of the celebrated Miss Lena Sh-Sh-sheepanossika. I<br/>
further confess that I was guilty of uttering an abominable calumny<br/>
concerning Miss Hypatia Tarleton, for which there was not a shred of<br/>
foundation. I apologize most humbly to the lady and her family for my<br/>
conduct; and I promise Mr Tarleton not to repeat it, and to amend my<br/>
life, and to do what in me lies to prove worthy of his kindness in<br/>
giving me another chance and refraining from delivering me up to the<br/>
punishment I so richly deserve.<br/>
<br/>
<i>A short and painful silence follows. Then Percival speaks.</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Do you consider that sufficient, Lord Summerhays?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Oh quite, quite.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[to Hypatia]</i> Lord Summerhays would probably like to hear<br/>
you say that you are satisfied, Miss Tarleton.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[coming out of the swing, and advancing between Percival<br/>
and Lord Summerhays]</i> I must say that you have behaved like a perfect<br/>
gentleman, Mr. Percival.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[first bowing to Hypatia, and then turning with cold<br/>
contempt to Gunner, who is standing helpless]</i> We need not trouble<br/>
you any further. <i>[Gunner turns vaguely towards the pavilion].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY <i>[with less refined offensiveness, pointing to the pavilion]</i><br/>
Thats your way. The gardener will shew you the shortest way into the<br/>
road. Go the shortest way.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[oppressed and disconcerted, hardly knows how to get out of<br/>
the room]</i> Yes, sir. I— <i>[He turns again, appealing to Tarleton]</i><br/>
Maynt I have my mother's photographs back again? <i>[Mrs Tarleton<br/>
pricks up her ears].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Eh? What? Oh, the photographs! Yes, yes, yes: take<br/>
them. <i>[Gunner takes them from the table, and is creeping away, when<br/>
Mrs Tarleton puts out her hand and stops him].</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Whats this, John? What were you doing with his<br/>
mother's photographs?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Nothing, nothing. Never mind, Chickabiddy: it's all<br/>
right.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[snatching the photographs from Gunner's irresolute<br/>
fingers, and recognizing them at a glance]</i> Lucy Titmus! Oh John,<br/>
John!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[grimly, to Gunner]</i> Young man: youre a fool; but youve<br/>
just put the lid on this job in a masterly manner. I knew you would.<br/>
I told you all to let well alone. You wouldnt; and now you must take<br/>
the consequences—or rather <i>I</i> must take them.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[to Gunner]</i> Are you Lucy's son?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Yes.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. And why didnt you come to me? I didnt turn my back on<br/>
your mother when she came to me in her trouble. Didnt you know that?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. No. She never talked to me about anything.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. How could she talk to her own son? Shy, Summerhays, shy.<br/>
Parent and child. Shy. <i>[He sits down at the end of the writing<br/>
table nearest the sideboard like a man resigned to anything that fate<br/>
may have in store for him].</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Then how did you find out?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. From her papers after she died.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[shocked]</i> Is Lucy dead? And I never knew! <i>[With<br/>
an effusion of tenderness]</i> And you here being treated like that,<br/>
poor orphan, with nobody to take your part! Tear up that foolish<br/>
paper, child; and sit down and make friends with me.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. | Hallo, mother this is all very well, you know—<br/>
|<br/>
PERCIVAL. | But may I point out, Mrs Tarleton, that—<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | Do you mean that after what he said of—<br/>
|<br/>
HYPATIA. | Oh, look here, mamma: this is really—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Will you please speak one at a time?<br/>
<br/>
<i>Silence.</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL <i>[in a very gentlemanly manner]</i> Will you allow me to remind<br/>
you, Mrs Tarleton, that this man has uttered a most serious and<br/>
disgraceful falsehood concerning Miss Tarleton and myself?<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. I dont believe a word of it. If the poor lad was there<br/>
in the Turkish bath, who has a better right to say what was going on<br/>
here than he has? You ought to be ashamed of yourself, Patsy; and so<br/>
ought you too, Mr Percival, for encouraging her. <i>[Hypatia retreats<br/>
to the pavilion, and exchanges grimaces with Johnny, shamelessly<br/>
enjoying Percival's sudden reverse. They know their mother].</i><br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[gasping]</i> Mrs Tarleton: I give you my word of honor—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, go along with you and your word of honor. Do you<br/>
think I'm a fool? I wonder you can look the lad in the face after<br/>
bullying him and making him sign those wicked lies; and all the time<br/>
you carrying on with my daughter before youd been half an hour in my<br/>
house. Fie, for shame!<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Lord Summerhays: I appeal to you. Have I done the correct<br/>
thing or not?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Youve done your best, Mr Percival. But the correct<br/>
thing depends for its success on everybody playing the game very<br/>
strictly. As a single-handed game, it's impossible.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[suddenly breaking out lamentably]</i> Joey: have you taken<br/>
Hypatia away from me?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[severely]</i> Bentley! Bentley! Control yourself,<br/>
sir.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Come, Mr Percival! the shutters are up on the gentlemanly<br/>
business. Try the truth.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I am in a wretched position. If I tell the truth nobody<br/>
will believe me.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh yes they will. The truth makes everybody believe it.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. It also makes everybody pretend not to believe it. Mrs<br/>
Tarleton: youre not playing the game.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. I dont think youve behaved at all nicely, Mr Percival.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I wouldnt have played you such a dirty trick, Joey.<br/>
<i>[Struggling with a sob]</i> You beast.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Bentley: you must control yourself. Let me say at<br/>
the same time, Mr Percival, that my son seems to have been mistaken in<br/>
regarding you either as his friend or as a gentleman.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Miss Tarleton: I'm suffering this for your sake. I ask<br/>
you just to say that I am not to blame. Just that and nothing more.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[gloating mischievously over his distress]</i> You chased me<br/>
through the heather and kissed me. You shouldnt have done that if you<br/>
were not in earnest.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Oh, this is really the limit. <i>[Turning desperately to<br/>
Gunner]</i> Sir: I appeal to you. As a gentleman! as a man of honor!<br/>
as a man bound to stand by another man! You were in that Turkish<br/>
bath. You saw how it began. Could any man have behaved more<br/>
correctly than I did? Is there a shadow of foundation for the<br/>
accusations brought against me?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[sorely perplexed]</i> Well, what do you want me to say?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. He has said what he had to say already, hasnt he? Read that<br/>
paper.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. When I tell the truth, you make me go back on it. And now<br/>
you want me to go back on myself! What is a man to do?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[patiently]</i> Please try to get your mind clear, Mr Brown.<br/>
I pointed out to you that you could not, as a gentleman, disparage a<br/>
lady's character. You agree with me, I hope.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Yes: that sounds all right.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. But youre also bound to tell the truth. Surely youll not<br/>
deny that.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Who's denying it? I say nothing against it.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Of course not. Well, I ask you to tell the truth simply<br/>
and unaffectedly. Did you witness any improper conduct on my part<br/>
when you were in the bath?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. No, sir.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. | Then what do you mean by saying that—<br/>
|<br/>
HYPATIA. | Do you mean to say that I—<br/>
|<br/>
BENTLEY. | Oh, you are a rotter. Youre afraid—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[rising]</i> Stop. <i>[Silence].</i> Leave it at that. Enough<br/>
said. You keep quiet, Johnny. Mr Percival: youre whitewashed. So<br/>
are you, Patsy. Honors are easy. Lets drop the subject. The next<br/>
thing to do is to open a subscription to start this young man on a<br/>
ranch in some far country thats accustomed to be in a disturbed state.<br/>
He—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Now stop joking the poor lad, John: I wont have it.<br/>
Has been worried to death between you all. <i>[To Gunner]</i> Have you<br/>
had your tea?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Tea? No: it's too early. I'm all right; only I had no<br/>
dinner: I didnt think I'd want it. I didnt think I'd be alive.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, what a thing to say! You mustnt talk like that.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Hes out of his mind. He thinks it's past dinner-time.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, youve no sense, Johnny. He calls his lunch his<br/>
dinner, and has his tea at half-past six. Havnt you, dear?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[timidly]</i> Hasnt everybody?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[laughing]</i> Well, by George, thats not bad.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Now dont be rude, Johnny: you know I dont like it.<br/>
<i>[To Gunner]</i> A cup of tea will pick you up.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I'd rather not. I'm all right.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[going to the sideboard]</i> Here! try a mouthful of sloe<br/>
gin.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. No, thanks. I'm a teetotaler. I cant touch alcohol in any<br/>
form.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Nonsense! This isnt alcohol. Sloe gin. Vegetarian, you<br/>
know.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[hesitating]</i> Is it a fruit beverage?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Of course it is. Fruit beverage. Here you are. <i>[He<br/>
gives him a glass of sloe gin].</i><br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[going to the sideboard]</i> Thanks. <i>[he begins to drink it<br/>
confidently; but the first mouthful startles and almost chokes him].</i><br/>
It's rather hot.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Do you good. Dont be afraid of it.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[going to him]</i> Sip it, dear. Dont be in a hurry.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Gunner sips slowly, each sip making his eyes water.</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[coming forward into the place left vacant by Gunner's visit<br/>
to the sideboard]</i> Well, now that the gentleman has been attended to,<br/>
I should like to know where we are. It may be a vulgar business<br/>
habit; but I confess I like to know where I am.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I dont. Wherever you are, youre there anyhow. I tell you<br/>
again, leave it at that.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I want to know too. Hypatia's engaged to me.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Bentley: if you insult me again—if you say another word,<br/>
I'll leave the house and not enter it until you leave it.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Put that in your pipe and smoke it, my boy.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[inarticulate with fury and suppressed tears]</i> Oh!<br/>
Beasts! Brutes!<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Now dont hurt his feelings, poor little lamb!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[very sternly]</i> Bentley: you are not behaving<br/>
well. You had better leave us until you have recovered yourself.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley goes out in disgrace, but gets no further than half way to<br/>
the pavilion door, when, with a wild sob, he throws himself on the<br/>
floor and begins to yell.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | <i>[running to him]</i> Oh, poor child,<br/>
| poor child! Dont cry, duckie:<br/>
| he didnt mean it: dont cry.<br/>
|<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| Stop that infernal noise, sir: do you<br/>
| hear? Stop it instantly.<br/>
|<br/>
JOHNNY. | Thats the game he tried on me.<br/>
| There you are! Now, mother!<br/>
| Now, Patsy! You see for yourselves.<br/>
|<br/>
HYPATIA. | <i>[covering her ears]</i> Oh you little<br/>
| wretch! Stop him, Mr Percival. Kick him.<br/>
|<br/>
TARLETON. | Steady on, steady on. Easy, Bunny, easy.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Leave him to me, Mrs Tarleton. Stand clear, please.<br/>
<br/>
<i>She kneels opposite Bentley; quickly lifts the upper half of him from<br/>
the ground; dives under him; rises with his body hanging across her<br/>
shoulders; and runs out with him.</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[in scared, sobered, humble tones as he is borne off]</i><br/>
What are you doing? Let me down. Please, Miss Szczepanowska—<br/>
<i>[they pass out of hearing].</i><br/>
<br/>
<i>An awestruck silence falls on the company as they speculate on<br/>
Bentley's fate.</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. I wonder what shes going to do with him.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Spank him, I hope. Spank him hard.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I hope so. I hope so. Tarleton: I'm beyond<br/>
measure humiliated and annoyed by my son's behavior in your house. I<br/>
had better take him home.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Not at all: not at all. Now, Chickabiddy: as Miss Lina<br/>
has taken away Ben, suppose you take away Mr Brown for a while.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[with unexpected aggressiveness]</i> My name isnt Brown.<br/>
<i>[They stare at him: he meets their stare defiantly, pugnacious with<br/>
sloe gin; drains the last drop from his glass; throws it on the<br/>
sideboard; and advances to the writing table].</i> My name's Baker:<br/>
Julius Baker. Mister Baker. If any man doubts it, I'm ready for him.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. John: you shouldnt have given him that sloe gin. It's<br/>
gone to his head.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Dont you think it. Fruit beverages dont go to the head; and<br/>
what matter if they did? I say nothing to you, maam: I regard you<br/>
with respect and affection. <i>[Lachrymosely]</i> You were very good to<br/>
my mother: my poor mother! <i>[Relapsing into his daring mood]</i> But I<br/>
say my name's Baker; and I'm not to be treated as a child or made a<br/>
slave of by any man. Baker is my name. Did you think I was going to<br/>
give you my real name? Not likely. Not me.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. So you thought of John Brown. That was clever of you.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Clever! Yes: we're not all such fools as you think: we<br/>
clerks. It was the bookkeeper put me up to that. It's the only name<br/>
that nobody gives as a false name, he said. Clever, eh? I should<br/>
think so.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Come now, Julius—<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[reassuring her gravely]</i> Dont you be alarmed, maam. I<br/>
know what is due to you as a lady and to myself as a gentleman. I<br/>
regard you with respect and affection. If you had been my mother, as<br/>
you ought to have been, I should have had more chance. But you shall<br/>
have no cause to be ashamed of me. The strength of a chain is no<br/>
greater than its weakest link; but the greatness of a poet is the<br/>
greatness of his greatest moment. Shakespear used to get drunk.<br/>
Frederick the Great ran away from a battle. But it was what they<br/>
could rise to, not what they could sink to, that made them great.<br/>
They werent good always; but they were good on their day. Well, on my<br/>
day—on my day, mind you—I'm good for something too. I know that Ive<br/>
made a silly exhibition of myself here. I know I didnt rise to the<br/>
occasion. I know that if youd been my mother, youd have been ashamed<br/>
of me. I lost my presence of mind: I was a contemptible coward. But<br/>
<i>[slapping himself on the chest]</i> I'm not the man I was then. This<br/>
is my day. Ive seen the tenth possessor of a foolish face carried out<br/>
kicking and screaming by a woman. <i>[To Percival]</i> You crowed pretty<br/>
big over me. You hypnotized me. But when you were put through the<br/>
fire yourself, you were found wanting. I tell you straight I dont<br/>
give a damn for you.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. No: thats naughty. You shouldnt say that before me.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. I would cut my tongue out sooner than say anything vulgar in<br/>
your presence; for I regard you with respect and affection. I was not<br/>
swearing. I was affirming my manhood.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. What an idea! What puts all these things into your<br/>
head?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Oh, dont you think, because I'm a clerk, that I'm not one of<br/>
the intellectuals. I'm a reading man, a thinking man. I read in a<br/>
book—a high class six shilling book—this precept: Affirm your<br/>
manhood. It appealed to me. Ive always remembered it. I believe in<br/>
it. I feel I must do it to recover your respect after my cowardly<br/>
behavior. Therefore I affirm it in your presence. I tell that man<br/>
who insulted me that I dont give a damn for him. And neither I do.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I say, Summerhays: did you have chaps of this sort in<br/>
Jinghiskahn?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Oh yes: they exist everywhere: they are a most<br/>
serious modern problem.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Yes. Youre right. <i>[Conceitedly]</i> I'm a problem. And I<br/>
tell you that when we clerks realize that we're problems! well, look<br/>
out: thats all.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[suavely, to Gunner]</i> You read a great deal, you<br/>
say?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Ive read more than any man in this room, if the truth were<br/>
known, I expect. Thats whats going to smash up your Capitalism. The<br/>
problems are beginning to read. Ha! We're free to do that here in<br/>
England. What would you do with me in Jinghiskahn if you had me<br/>
there?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Well, since you ask me so directly, I'll tell you.<br/>
I should take advantage of the fact that you have neither sense enough<br/>
nor strength enough to know how to behave yourself in a difficulty of<br/>
any sort. I should warn an intelligent and ambitious policeman that<br/>
you are a troublesome person. The intelligent and ambitious policeman<br/>
would take an early opportunity of upsetting your temper by ordering<br/>
you to move on, and treading on your heels until you were provoked<br/>
into obstructing an officer in the discharge of his duty. Any trifle<br/>
of that sort would be sufficient to make a man like you lose your<br/>
self-possession and put yourself in the wrong. You would then be<br/>
charged and imprisoned until things quieted down.<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. And you call that justice!<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No. Justice was not my business. I had to govern a<br/>
province; and I took the necessary steps to maintain order in it. Men<br/>
are not governed by justice, but by law or persuasion. When they<br/>
refuse to be governed by law or persuasion, they have to be governed<br/>
by force or fraud, or both. I used both when law and persuasion<br/>
failed me. Every ruler of men since the world began has done so, even<br/>
when he has hated both fraud and force as heartily as I do. It is as<br/>
well that you should know this, my young friend; so that you may<br/>
recognize in time that anarchism is a game at which the police can<br/>
beat you. What have you to say to that?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. What have I to say to it! Well, I call it scandalous: thats<br/>
what I have to say to it.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Precisely: thats all anybody has to say to it,<br/>
except the British public, which pretends not to believe it. And now<br/>
let me ask you a sympathetic personal question. Havnt you a headache?<br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. Well, since you ask me, I have. Ive overexcited myself.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Poor lad! No wonder, after all youve gone through!<br/>
You want to eat a little and to lie down. You come with me. I want<br/>
you to tell me about your poor dear mother and about yourself. Come<br/>
along with me. <i>[She leads the way to the inner door].</i><br/>
<br/>
GUNNER. <i>[following her obediently]</i> Thank you kindly, madam. <i>[She<br/>
goes out. Before passing out after her, he partly closes the door and<br/>
stops an the landing for a moment to say]</i> Mind: I'm not knuckling<br/>
down to any man here. I knuckle down to Mrs Tarleton because shes a<br/>
woman in a thousand. I affirm my manhood all the same. Understand:<br/>
I dont give a damn for the lot of you. <i>[He hurries out, rather<br/>
afraid of the consequences of this defiance, which has provoked Johnny<br/>
to an impatient movement towards him].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Thank goodness hes gone! Oh, what a bore! WHAT a bore!!!<br/>
Talk, talk, talk!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Patsy: it's no good. We're going to talk. And we're<br/>
going to talk about you.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. It's no use shirking it, Pat. We'd better know where we are.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Come, Miss Tarleton. Wont you sit down? I'm very<br/>
tired of standing. <i>[Hypatia comes from the pavilion and takes a<br/>
chair at the worktable. Lord Summerhays takes the opposite chair, on<br/>
her right. Percival takes the chair Johnny placed for Lina on her<br/>
arrival. Tarleton sits down at the end of the writing table. Johnny<br/>
remains standing. Lord Summerhays continues, with a sigh of relief at<br/>
being seated.]</i> We shall now get the change of subject we are all<br/>
pining for.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[puzzled]</i> Whats that?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The great question. The question that men and women<br/>
will spend hours over without complaining. The question that occupies<br/>
all the novel readers and all the playgoers. The question they never<br/>
get tired of.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. But what question?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The question which particular young man some young<br/>
woman will mate with.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. As if it mattered!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[sharply]</i> Whats that you said?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I said: As if it mattered.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I call that ungentlemanly.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Do you care about that? you who are so magnificently<br/>
unladylike!<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Look here, Mr Percival: youre not supposed to insult my<br/>
sister.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, shut up, Johnny. I can take care of myself. Dont you<br/>
interfere.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Oh, very well. If you choose to give yourself away like<br/>
that—to allow a man to call you unladylike and then to be unladylike,<br/>
Ive nothing more to say.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I think Mr Percival is most ungentlemanly; but I wont be<br/>
protected. I'll not have my affairs interfered with by men on<br/>
pretence of protecting me. I'm not your baby. If I interfered<br/>
between you and a woman, you would soon tell me to mind my own<br/>
business.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Children: dont squabble. Read Dr Watts. Behave<br/>
yourselves.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Ive nothing more to say; and as I dont seem to be wanted<br/>
here, I shall take myself off. <i>[He goes out with affected calm<br/>
through the pavilion].</i><br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Summerhays: a family is an awful thing, an impossible<br/>
thing. Cat and dog. Patsy: I'm ashamed of you.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I'll make it up with Johnny afterwards; but I really cant<br/>
have him here sticking his clumsy hoof into my affairs.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The question is, Mr Percival, are you really a<br/>
gentleman, or are you not?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Was Napoleon really a gentleman or was he not? He made the<br/>
lady get out of the way of the porter and said, "Respect the burden,<br/>
madam." That was behaving like a very fine gentleman; but he kicked<br/>
Volney for saying that what France wanted was the Bourbons back again.<br/>
That was behaving rather like a navvy. Now I, like Napoleon, am not<br/>
all one piece. On occasion, as you have all seen, I can behave like a<br/>
gentleman. On occasion, I can behave with a brutal simplicity which<br/>
Miss Tarleton herself could hardly surpass.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Gentleman or no gentleman, Patsy: what are your<br/>
intentions?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. My intentions! Surely it's the gentleman who should be<br/>
asked his intentions.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Come now, Patsy! none of that nonsense. Has Mr Percival<br/>
said anything to you that I ought to know or that Bentley ought to<br/>
know? Have you said anything to Mr Percival?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Mr Percival chased me through the heather and kissed me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. As a gentleman, Mr Percival, what do you say to<br/>
that?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. As a gentleman, I do not kiss and tell. As a mere man: a<br/>
mere cad, if you like, I say that I did so at Miss Tarleton's own<br/>
suggestion.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Beast!<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I dont deny that I enjoyed it. But I did not initiate it.<br/>
And I began by running away.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. So Patsy can run faster than you, can she?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Yes, when she is in pursuit of me. She runs faster and<br/>
faster. I run slower and slower. And these woods of yours are full<br/>
of magic. There was a confounded fern owl. Did you ever hear the<br/>
churr of a fern owl? Did you ever hear it create a sudden silence by<br/>
ceasing? Did you ever hear it call its mate by striking its wings<br/>
together twice and whistling that single note that no nightingale can<br/>
imitate? That is what happened in the woods when I was running away.<br/>
So I turned; and the pursuer became the pursued.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I had to fight like a wild cat.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Please dont tell us this. It's not fit for old<br/>
people to hear.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Come: how did it end?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. It's not ended yet.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. How is it going to end?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Ask him.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. How is it going to end, Mr Percival?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I cant afford to marry, Mr Tarleton. Ive only a thousand a<br/>
year until my father dies. Two people cant possibly live on that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh, cant they? When <i>I</i> married, I should have been jolly<br/>
glad to have felt sure of the quarter of it.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. No doubt; but I am not a cheap person, Mr Tarleton. I was<br/>
brought up in a household which cost at least seven or eight times<br/>
that; and I am in constant money difficulties because I simply dont<br/>
know how to live on the thousand a year scale. As to ask a woman to<br/>
share my degrading poverty, it's out of the question. Besides, I'm<br/>
rather young to marry. I'm only 28.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Papa: buy the brute for me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[shrinking]</i> My dear Miss Tarleton: dont be so<br/>
naughty. I know how delightful it is to shock an old man; but there<br/>
is a point at which it becomes barbarous. Dont. Please dont.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Shall I tell Papa about you?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Tarleton: I had better tell you that I once asked<br/>
your daughter to become my widow.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[to Hypatia]</i> Why didnt you accept him, you young idiot?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I was too old.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. All this has been going on under my nose, I suppose. You<br/>
run after young men; and old men run after you. And I'm the last<br/>
person in the world to hear of it.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. How could I tell you?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Parents and children, Tarleton.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Oh, the gulf that lies between them! the impassable,<br/>
eternal gulf! And so I'm to buy the brute for you, eh?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. If you please, papa.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Whats the price, Mr Percival?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. We might do with another fifteen hundred if my father would<br/>
contribute. But I should like more.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. It's purely a question of money with you, is it?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[after a moment's consideration]</i> Practically yes: it<br/>
turns on that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I thought you might have some sort of preference for Patsy,<br/>
you know.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Well, but does that matter, do you think? Patsy fascinates<br/>
me, no doubt. I apparently fascinate Patsy. But, believe me, all<br/>
that is not worth considering. One of my three fathers (the priest)<br/>
has married hundreds of couples: couples selected by one another,<br/>
couples selected by the parents, couples forced to marry one another<br/>
by circumstances of one kind or another; and he assures me that if<br/>
marriages were made by putting all the men's names into one sack and<br/>
the women's names into another, and having them taken out by a<br/>
blindfolded child like lottery numbers, there would be just as high a<br/>
percentage of happy marriages as we have here in England. He said<br/>
Cupid was nothing but the blindfolded child: pretty idea that, I<br/>
think! I shall have as good a chance with Patsy as with anyone else.<br/>
Mind: I'm not bigoted about it. I'm not a doctrinaire: not the<br/>
slave of a theory. You and Lord Summerhays are experienced married<br/>
men. If you can tell me of any trustworthy method of selecting a<br/>
wife, I shall be happy to make use of it. I await your suggestions.<br/>
<i>[He looks with polite attention to Lord Summerhays, who, having<br/>
nothing to say, avoids his eye. He looks to Tarleton, who purses his<br/>
lips glumly and rattles his money in his pockets without a word].</i><br/>
Apparently neither of you has anything to suggest. Then Patsy will do<br/>
as well as another, provided the money is forthcoming.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, you beauty, you beauty!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. When I married Patsy's mother, I was in love with her.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. For the first time?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes: for the first time.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. For the last time?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. <i>[revolted]</i> Sir: you are in the presence of his<br/>
daughter.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh, dont mind me. I dont care. I'm accustomed to Papa's<br/>
adventures.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[blushing painfully]</i> Patsy, my child: that was not—not<br/>
delicate.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, papa, youve never shewn any delicacy in talking to me<br/>
about my conduct; and I really dont see why I shouldnt talk to you<br/>
about yours. It's such nonsense! Do you think young people dont<br/>
know?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I'm sure they dont feel. Tarleton: this is too<br/>
horrible, too brutal. If neither of these young people have<br/>
any—any—any—<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Shall we say paternal sentimentality? I'm extremely sorry<br/>
to shock you; but you must remember that Ive been educated to discuss<br/>
human affairs with three fathers simultaneously. I'm an adult person.<br/>
Patsy is an adult person. You do not inspire me with veneration.<br/>
Apparently you do not inspire Patsy with veneration. That may<br/>
surprise you. It may pain you. I'm sorry. It cant be helped. What<br/>
about the money?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. You dont inspire me with generosity, young man.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[laughing with genuine amusement]</i> He had you there, Joey.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I havnt been a bad father to you, Patsy.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I dont say you have, dear. If only I could persuade you Ive<br/>
grown up, we should get along perfectly.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Do you remember Bill Burt?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Why?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[to the others]</i> Bill Burt was a laborer here. I was<br/>
going to sack him for kicking his father. He said his father had<br/>
kicked him until he was big enough to kick back. Patsy begged him<br/>
off. I asked that man what it felt like the first time he kicked his<br/>
father, and found that it was just like kicking any other man. He<br/>
laughed and said that it was the old man that knew what it felt like.<br/>
Think of that, Summerhays! think of that!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I havnt kicked you, papa.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youve kicked me harder than Bill Burt ever kicked.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It's no use, Tarleton. Spare yourself. Do you<br/>
seriously expect these young people, at their age, to sympathize with<br/>
what this gentleman calls your paternal sentimentality?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[wistfully]</i> Is it nothing to you but paternal<br/>
sentimentality, Patsy?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Well, I greatly prefer your superabundant vitality, papa.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[violently]</i> Hold your tongue, you young devil. The<br/>
young are all alike: hard, coarse, shallow, cruel, selfish,<br/>
dirty-minded. You can clear out of my house as soon as you can coax<br/>
him to take you; and the sooner the better. <i>[To Percival]</i> I think<br/>
you said your price was fifteen hundred a year. Take it. And I wish<br/>
you joy of your bargain.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. If you wish to know who I am—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I dont care a tinker's curse who you are or what you are.<br/>
Youre willing to take that girl off my hands for fifteen hundred a<br/>
year: thats all that concerns me. Tell her who you are if you like:<br/>
it's her affair, not mine.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Dont answer him, Joey: it wont last. Lord Summerhays, I'm<br/>
sorry about Bentley; but Joey's the only man for me.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It may—<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Please dont say it may break your poor boy's heart. It's<br/>
much more likely to break yours.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Oh!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[springing to his feet]</i> Leave the room. Do you hear:<br/>
leave the room.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Arnt we getting a little cross? Dont be angry, Mr<br/>
Tarleton. Read Marcus Aurelius.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Dont you dare make fun of me. Take your aeroplane out of<br/>
my vinery and yourself out of my house.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[rising, to Hypatia]</i> I'm afraid I shall have to dine at<br/>
the Beacon, Patsy.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[rising]</i> Do. I dine with you.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Did you hear me tell you to leave the room?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I did. <i>[To Percival]</i> You see what living with one's<br/>
parents means, Joey. It means living in a house where you can be<br/>
ordered to leave the room. Ive got to obey: it's his house, not<br/>
mine.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Who pays for it? Go and support yourself as I did if you<br/>
want to be independent.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. I wanted to and you wouldnt let me. How can I support<br/>
myself when I'm a prisoner?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Hold your tongue.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Keep your temper.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. <i>[coming between them]</i> Lord Summerhays: youll join me,<br/>
I'm sure, in pointing out to both father and daughter that they have<br/>
now reached that very common stage in family life at which anything<br/>
but a blow would be an anti-climax. Do you seriously want to beat<br/>
Patsy, Mr Tarleton?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Yes. I want to thrash the life out of her. If she doesnt<br/>
get out of my reach, I'll do it. <i>[He sits down and grasps the<br/>
writing table to restrain himself].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[coolly going to him and leaning with her breast on his<br/>
writhing shoulders]</i> Oh, if you want to beat me just to relieve your<br/>
feelings—just really and truly for the fun of it and the satisfaction<br/>
of it, beat away. I dont grudge you that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[almost in hysterics]</i> I used to think that this sort of<br/>
thing went on in other families but that it never could happen in<br/>
ours. And now— <i>[He is broken with emotion, and continues<br/>
lamentably]</i> I cant say the right thing. I cant do the right thing.<br/>
I dont know what is the right thing. I'm beaten; and she knows it.<br/>
Summerhays: tell me what to do.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. When my council in Jinghiskahn reached the point of<br/>
coming to blows, I used to adjourn the sitting. Let us postpone the<br/>
discussion. Wait until Monday: we shall have Sunday to quiet down<br/>
in. Believe me, I'm not making fun of you; but I think theres<br/>
something in this young gentleman's advice. Read something.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. I'll read King Lear.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Dont. I'm very sorry, dear.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Youre not. Youre laughing at me. Serve me right! Parents<br/>
and children! No man should know his own child. No child should know<br/>
its own father. Let the family be rooted out of civilization! Let<br/>
the human race be brought up in institutions!<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh yes. How jolly! You and I might be friends then; and<br/>
Joey could stay to dinner.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Let him stay to dinner. Let him stay to breakfast. Let<br/>
him spend his life here. Dont you say I drove him out. Dont you say<br/>
I drove you out.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. I really have no right to inflict myself on you. Dropping<br/>
in as I did—<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Out of the sky. Ha! Dropping in. The new sport of<br/>
aviation. You just see a nice house; drop in; scoop up the man's<br/>
daughter; and off with you again.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Bentley comes back, with his shoulders hanging as if he too had been<br/>
exercised to the last pitch of fatigue. He is very sad. They stare<br/>
at him as he gropes to Percival's chair.</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I'm sorry for making a fool of myself. I beg your pardon.<br/>
Hypatia: I'm awfully sorry; but Ive made up my mind that I'll never<br/>
marry. <i>[He sits down in deep depression].</i><br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[running to him]</i> How nice of you, Bentley! Of course you<br/>
guessed I wanted to marry Joey. What did the Polish lady do to you?<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[turning his head away]</i> I'd rather not speak of her, if<br/>
you dont mind.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Youve fallen in love with her. <i>[She laughs].</i><br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. It's beastly of you to laugh.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Youre not the first to fall today under the lash of<br/>
that young lady's terrible derision, Bentley.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Lina, her cap on, and her goggles in her hand, comes impetuously<br/>
through the inner door.</i><br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[on the steps]</i> Mr Percival: can we get that aeroplane<br/>
started again? <i>[She comes down and runs to the pavilion door].</i> I<br/>
must get out of this into the air: right up into the blue.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. Impossible. The frame's twisted. The petrol has given<br/>
out: thats what brought us down. And how can we get a clear run to<br/>
start with among these woods?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[swooping back through the middle of the pavilion]</i> We can<br/>
straighten the frame. We can buy petrol at the Beacon. With a few<br/>
laborers we can get her out on to the Portsmouth Road and start her<br/>
along that.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. <i>[rising]</i> But why do you want to leave us, Miss Szcz?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Old pal: this is a stuffy house. You seem to think of nothing<br/>
but making love. All the conversation here is about love-making. All<br/>
the pictures are about love-making. The eyes of all of you are<br/>
sheep's eyes. You are steeped in it, soaked in it: the very texts on<br/>
the walls of your bedrooms are the ones about love. It is disgusting.<br/>
It is not healthy. Your women are kept idle and dressed up for no<br/>
other purpose than to be made love to. I have not been here an hour;<br/>
and already everybody makes love to me as if because I am a woman it<br/>
were my profession to be made love to. First you, old pal. I forgave<br/>
you because you were nice about your wife.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Oh! oh! oh! Oh, papa!<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Then you, Lord Summerhays, come to me; and all you have to say<br/>
is to ask me not to mention that you made love to me in Vienna two<br/>
years ago. I forgave you because I thought you were an ambassador;<br/>
and all ambassadors make love and are very nice and useful to people<br/>
who travel. Then this young gentleman. He is engaged to this young<br/>
lady; but no matter for that: he makes love to me because I carry him<br/>
off in my arms when he cries. All these I bore in silence. But now<br/>
comes your Johnny and tells me I'm a ripping fine woman, and asks me<br/>
to marry him. I, Lina Szczepanowska, MARRY him!!!!! I do not mind<br/>
this boy: he is a child: he loves me: I should have to give him<br/>
money and take care of him: that would be foolish, but honorable. I<br/>
do not mind you, old pal: you are what you call an old—ouf! but you<br/>
do not offer to buy me: you say until we are tired—until you are so<br/>
happy that you dare not ask for more. That is foolish too, at your<br/>
age; but it is an adventure: it is not dishonorable. I do not mind<br/>
Lord Summerhays: it was in Vienna: they had been toasting him at a<br/>
great banquet: he was not sober. That is bad for the health; but it<br/>
is not dishonorable. But your Johnny! Oh, your Johnny! with his<br/>
marriage. He will do the straight thing by me. He will give me a<br/>
home, a position. He tells me I must know that my present position is<br/>
not one for a nice woman. This to me, Lina Szczepanowska! I am an<br/>
honest woman: I earn my living. I am a free woman: I live in my own<br/>
house. I am a woman of the world: I have thousands of friends:<br/>
every night crowds of people applaud me, delight in me, buy my<br/>
picture, pay hard-earned money to see me. I am strong: I am skilful:<br/>
I am brave: I am independent: I am unbought: I am all that a woman<br/>
ought to be; and in my family there has not been a single drunkard for<br/>
four generations. And this Englishman! this linendraper! he dares to<br/>
ask me to come and live with him in this rrrrrrrabbit hutch, and take<br/>
my bread from his hand, and ask him for pocket money, and wear soft<br/>
clothes, and be his woman! his wife! Sooner than that, I would stoop<br/>
to the lowest depths of my profession. I would stuff lions with food<br/>
and pretend to tame them. I would deceive honest people's eyes with<br/>
conjuring tricks instead of real feats of strength and skill. I would<br/>
be a clown and set bad examples of conduct to little children. I<br/>
would sink yet lower and be an actress or an opera singer, imperilling<br/>
my soul by the wicked lie of pretending to be somebody else. All this<br/>
I would do sooner than take my bread from the hand of a man and make<br/>
him the master of my body and soul. And so you may tell your Johnny<br/>
to buy an Englishwoman: he shall not buy Lina Szczepanowska; and I<br/>
will not stay in the house where such dishonor is offered me. Adieu.<br/>
<i>[She turns precipitately to go, but is faced in the pavilion doorway<br/>
by Johnny, who comes in slowly, his hands in his pockets, meditating<br/>
deeply].</i><br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[confidentially to Lina]</i> You wont mention our little<br/>
conversation, Miss Shepanoska. It'll do no good; and I'd rather you<br/>
didnt.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Weve just heard about it, Johnny.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[shortly, but without ill-temper]</i> Oh: is that so?<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. The cat's out of the bag, Johnny, about everybody. They<br/>
were all beforehand with you: papa, Lord Summerhays, Bentley and all.<br/>
Dont you let them laugh at you.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[a grin slowly overspreading his countenance]</i> Well, theres<br/>
no use my pretending to be surprised at you, Governor, is there? I<br/>
hope you got it as hot as I did. Mind, Miss Shepanoska: it wasnt<br/>
lost on me. I'm a thinking man. I kept my temper. Youll admit that.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[frankly]</i> Oh yes. I do not quarrel. You are what is called<br/>
a chump; but you are not a bad sort of chump.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Thank you. Well, if a chump may have an opinion, I should<br/>
put it at this. You make, I suppose, ten pounds a night off your own<br/>
bat, Miss Lina?<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[scornfully]</i> Ten pounds a night! I have made ten pounds a<br/>
minute.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[with increased respect]</i> Have you indeed? I didnt know:<br/>
youll excuse my mistake, I hope. But the principle is the same. Now<br/>
I trust you wont be offended at what I'm going to say; but Ive thought<br/>
about this and watched it in daily experience; and you may take it<br/>
from me that the moment a woman becomes pecuniarily independent, she<br/>
gets hold of the wrong end of the stick in moral questions.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Indeed! And what do you conclude from that, Mister Johnny?<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. Well, obviously, that independence for women is wrong and<br/>
shouldnt be allowed. For their own good, you know. And for the good<br/>
of morality in general. You agree with me, Lord Summerhays, dont you?<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. It's a very moral moral, if I may so express myself.<br/>
<br/>
<i>Mrs Tarleton comes in softly through the inner door.</i><br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Dont make too much noise. The lad's asleep.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Chickabiddy: we have some news for you.<br/>
<br/>
JOHNNY. <i>[apprehensively]</i> Now theres no need, you know, Governor,<br/>
to worry mother with everything that passes.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[coming to Tarleton]</i> Whats been going on? Dont you<br/>
hold anything back from me, John. What have you been doing?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Bentley isnt going to marry Patsy.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Of course not. Is that your great news? I never<br/>
believed she'd marry him.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Theres something else. Mr Percival here—<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. <i>[to Percival]</i> Are you going to marry Patsy?<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL <i>[diplomatically]</i> Patsy is going to marry me, with your<br/>
permission.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Oh, she has my permission: she ought to have been<br/>
married long ago.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. Mother!<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Miss Lina here, though she has been so short a time with<br/>
us, has inspired a good deal of attachment in—I may say in almost all<br/>
of us. Therefore I hope she'll stay to dinner, and not insist on<br/>
flying away in that aeroplane.<br/>
<br/>
PERCIVAL. You must stay, Miss Szczepanowska. I cant go up again this<br/>
evening.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. Ive seen you work it. Do you think I require any help? And<br/>
Bentley shall come with me as a passenger.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[terrified]</i> Go up in an aeroplane! I darent.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. You must learn to dare.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. <i>[pale but heroic]</i> All right. I'll come.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS| No, no, Bentley, impossible. I<br/>
| shall not allow it.<br/>
|<br/>
MRS TARLETON. | Do you want to kill the child? He shant go.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I will. I'll lie down and yell until you let me go. I'm<br/>
not a coward. I wont be a coward.<br/>
<br/>
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Miss Szczepanowska: my son is very dear to me. I<br/>
implore you to wait until tomorrow morning.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. There may be a storm tomorrow. And I'll go: storm or no<br/>
storm. I must risk my life tomorrow.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. I hope there will be a storm.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[grasping his arm]</i> You are trembling.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Yes: it's terror, sheer terror. I can hardly see. I can<br/>
hardly stand. But I'll go with you.<br/>
<br/>
LINA. <i>[slapping him on the back and knocking a ghastly white smile<br/>
into his face]</i> You shall. I like you, my boy. We go tomorrow,<br/>
together.<br/>
<br/>
BENTLEY. Yes: together: tomorrow.<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, sufficient unto the day is the evil thereof. Read<br/>
the old book.<br/>
<br/>
MRS TARLETON. Is there anything else?<br/>
<br/>
TARLETON. Well, I—er <i>[he addresses Lina, and stops].</i> I—er <i>[he<br/>
addresses Lord Summerhays, and stops].</i> I—er <i>[he gives it up].</i><br/>
Well, I suppose—er—I suppose theres nothing more to be said.<br/>
<br/>
HYPATIA. <i>[fervently]</i> Thank goodness!<br/></p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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