Pygmalion and Three Other Plays (Barnes & Noble Classics Series) (23 page)

BOOK: Pygmalion and Three Other Plays (Barnes & Noble Classics Series)
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UNDERSHAFT It does not belong to me. I belong to it. It is the Undershaft inheritance.
LADY BRITOMART It is not. Your ridiculous cannons and that noisy banging foundry may be the Undershaft inheritance; but all that plate and linen, all that furniture and those houses and orchards and gardens belong to us. They belong to m e: they are not a man’s business. I wont give them up. You must be out of your senses to throw them all away; and if you persist in such folly, I will call in a doctor.
UNDERSHAFT
[stooping to smell the bouquet]
Where did you get the flowers, my dear?
LADY BRITOMART Your men presented them to me in your William Morris Labor Church.
33
CUSINS
[springing up]
Oh! It needed only that. A Labor Church!
LADY BRITOMART Yes, with Morris’s words in mosaic letters ten feet high round the dome. NO MAN IS GOOD ENOUGH TO BE ANOTHER MAN’S MASTER. The cynicism of it!
UNDERSHAFT It shocked the men at first, I am afraid. But now they take no more notice of it than of the ten commandments in church.
LADY BRITOMART Andrew: you are trying to put me off the subject of the inheritance by profane jokes. Well, you shant. I dont ask it any longer for Stephen: he has inherited far too much of your perversity to be fit for it. But Barbara has rights as well as Stephen. Why should not Adolphus succeed to the inheritance? I could manage the town for him; and he can look after the cannons, if they are really necessary.
UNDERSHAFT I should ask nothing better if Adolphus were a foundling. He is exactly the sort of new blood that is wanted in English business. But hes not a foundling; and theres an end of it.
CUSINS
[diplomatically]
Not quite.
[They all turn and stare at him. He comes from the platform past the shed to UNDERSHAFT.
I think—Mind! I am not committing myself in any way as to my future course—but I think the foundling difficulty can be got over.
UNDERSHAFT What do you mean?
CUSINS Well, I have something to say which is in the nature of a confession.
CUSINS Yes, a confession. Listen, all. Until I met Barbara I thought myself in the main an honorable, truthful man, because I wanted the approval of my conscience more than I wanted anything else. But the moment I saw Barbara, I wanted her far more than the approval of my conscience.
LADY BRITOMART Adolphus!
CUSINS It is true.You accused me yourself, Lady Brit, of joining the Army to worship Barbara; and so I did. She bought my soul like a flower at a street corner; but she bought it for herself.
UNDERSHAFT What! Not for Dionysos or another?
CUSINS Dionysos and all the others are in herself. I adored what was divine in her, and was therefore a true worshipper. But I was romantic about her too. I thought she was a woman of the people, and that a marriage with a professor of Greek would be far beyond the wildest social ambitions of her rank.
LADY BRITOMART Adolphus!!
LOMAX Oh I say!!!
CUSINS When I learnt the horrible truth—
LADY BRITOMART What do you mean by the horrible truth, pray?
CUSINS That she was enormously rich; that her grandfather was an earl; that her father was the Prince of Darkness—
UNDERSHAFT Chut!
CUSINS—and that I was only an adventurer trying to catch a rich wife, then I stooped to deceive her about my birth.
BARBARA Dolly!
LADY BRITOMART Your birth! Now Adolphus, dont dare to make up a wicked story for the sake of these wretched cannons. Remember: I have seen photographs of your parents; and the Agent General for South Western Australia knows them personally and has assured me that they are most respectable married people.
CUSINS So they are in Australia; but here they are outcasts. Their marriage is legal in Australia, but not in England. My mother is my father’s deceased wife’s sister; and in this island I am consequently a foundling.
[Sensation.]
Is the subterfuge good enough, Machiavelli?
UNDERSHAFT
[thoughtfully]
Biddy: this may be a way out of the difficulty.
LADY BRITOMART Stuff! A man cant make cannons any the better for being his own cousin instead of his proper self [she
sits down in the deck chair with a bounce that expresses her downright contempt for their casuistry].
UNDERSHAFT [to CUSINS] You are an educated man. That is against the tradition.
CUSINS Once in ten thousand times it happens that the schoolboy is a born master of what they try to teach him. Greek has not destroyed my mind: it has nourished it. Besides, I did not learn it at an English public school.
UNDERSHAFT Hm! Well, I cannot afford to be too particular: you have cornered the foundling market. Let it pass. You are eligible, Euripides: you are eligible.
BARBARA
[coming from the platform and interposing between CUSINS and UNDERSHAFT]
Dolly: yesterday morning, when Stephen told us all about the tradition, you became very silent; and you have been strange and excited ever since. Were you thinking of your birth then?
CUSINS When the finger of Destiny suddenly points at a man in the middle of his breakfast, it makes him thoughtful.
[BARBARA turns away sadly and stands near her mother, listening perturbedly.]
UNDERSHAFT Aha! You have had your eye on the business, my young friend, have you?
CUSINS Take care! There is an abyss of moral horror between me and your accursed aerial battleships.
UNDERSHAFT Never mind the abyss for the present. Let us settle the practical details and leave your final decision open. You know that you will have to change your name. Do you object to that?
CUSINS Would any man named Adolphus—any man called Dolly!—object to be called something else?
UNDERSHAFT Good. Now, as to money! I propose to treat you handsomely from the beginning. You shall start at a thousand a year.
CUSINS
[with sudden heat, his spectacles twinkling with mischief
] A thousand! You dare offer a miserable thousand to the son-in-law of a millionaire! No, by Heavens, Machiavelli! you shall not cheat m e. You cannot do without me; and I can do without you. I must have two thousand five hundred a year for two years. At the end of that time, if I am a failure, I go. But if I am a success, and stay on, you must give me the other five thousand.
UNDERSHAFT What other five thousand?
CUSINS To make the two years up to five thousand a year. The two thousand five hundred is only half pay in case I should turn out a failure. The third year I must have ten per cent on the profits.
UNDERSHAFT
[taken aback]
Ten per cent! Why, man, do you know what my profits are?
CUSINS Enormous, I hope: otherwise I shall require twenty-five per cent.
UNDERSHAFT But, Mr. Cusins, this is a serious matter of business. You are not bringing any capital into the concern.
CUSINS What! no capital! Is my mastery of Greek no capital? Is my access to the subtlest thought, the loftiest poetry yet attained by humanity, no capital? My character! my intellect! my life! my career! what Barbara calls my soul! are these no capital? Say another word; and I double my salary.
UNDERSHAFT Be reasonable—
CUSINS
[peremptorily]
Mr. Undershaft: you have my terms. Take them or leave them.
UNDERSHAFT
[recovering himself]
Very well. I note your terms; and I offer you half.
CUSINS
[disgusted]
Half!
UNDERSHAFT
[firmly]
Half.
CUSINS You call yourself a gentleman; and you offer me half!!
UNDERSHAFT I do not call myself a gentleman; but I offer you half.
CUSINS This to your future partner! your successor! your son-in-law!
BARBARA You are selling your own soul, Dolly, not mine. Leave me out of the bargain, please.
UNDERSHAFT Come! I will go a step further for Barbara’s sake. I will give you three fifths; but that is my last word.
CUSINS Done!
LOMAX Done in the eye. Why,
I
only get eight hundred, you know.
CUSINS By the way, Mac, I am a classical scholar, not an arithmetical one. Is three fifths more than half or less?
UNDERSHAFT More, of course.
CUSINS I would have taken two hundred and fifty. How you can succeed in business when you are willing to pay all that money to a University don who is obviously not worth a junior clerk’s wages!—well! What will Lazarus say?
UNDERSHAFT Lazarus is a gentle romantic Jew who cares for nothing but string quartets and stalls at fashionable theatres. He will get the credit of your rapacity in money matters, as he has hitherto had the credit of mine. You are a shark of the first order, Euripides. So much the better for the firm!
BARBARA Is the bargain closed, Dolly? Does your soul belong to him now?
CUSINS No: the price is settled: that is all. The real tug of war is still to come. What about the moral question?
LADY BRITOMART There is no moral question in the matter at all, Adolphus. You must simply sell cannons and weapons to people whose cause is right and just, and refuse them to foreigners and criminals.
UNDERSHAFT
[determinedly]
No: none of that.You must keep the true faith of an Armorer, or you dont come in here.
CUSINS What on earth is the true faith of an Armorer?
UNDERSHAFT To give arms to all men who offer an honest price for them, without respect of persons or principles: to aristocrat and republican, to Nihilist and Tsar, to Capitalist and Socialist, to Protestant and Catholic, to burglar and policeman, to black man white man and yellow man, to all sorts and conditions, all nationalities, all faiths, all follies, all causes and all crimes. The first Undershaft wrote up in his shop IF GOD GAVE THE HAND, LET NOT MAN WITHHOLD THE SWORD. The second wrote up ALL HAVE THE RIGHT TO FIGHT: NONE HAVE THE RIGHT TO JUDGE. The third wrote up TO MAN THE WEAPON: TO HEAVEN THE VICTORY. The fourth had no literary turn; so he did not write up anything; but he sold cannons to Napoleon under the nose of George the Third. The fifth wrote up PEACE SHALL NOT PREVAIL SAVE WITH A SWORD IN HER HAND. The sixth, my master, was the best of all. He wrote up NOTHING IS EVER DONE IN THIS WORLD UNTIL MEN ARE PREPARED TO KILL ONE ANOTHER IF IT IS NOT DONE. After that, there was nothing left for the seventh to say. So he wrote up, simply, UNASHAMED.
CUSINS My good Machiavelli, I shall certainly write something up on the wall; only, as I shall write it in Greek, you wont be able to read it. But as to your Armorer’s faith, if I take my neck out of the noose of my own morality I am not going to put it into the noose of yours. I shall sell cannons to whom I please and refuse them to whom I please. So there!
UNDERSHAFT From the moment when you become Andrew Undershaft, you will never do as you please again. Dont come here lusting for power, young man.
CUSINS If power were my aim I should not come here for it. You have no power.
UNDERSHAFT None of my own, certainly.
CUSINS I have more power than you, more will. You do not drive this place: it drives you. And what drives the place?
UNDERSHAFT
[enigmatically]
A will of which I am a part.
BARBARA
[startled]
Father! Do you know what you are saying; or are you laying a snare for my soul?
34
CUSINS Dont listen to his metaphysics, Barbara. The place is driven by the most rascally part of society, the money hunters, the pleasure hunters, the military promotion hunters; and he is their slave.
UNDERSHAFT Not necessarily. Remember the Armorer’s Faith. I will take an order from a good man as cheerfully as from a bad one. If you good people prefer preaching and shirking to buying my weapons and fighting the rascals, dont blame me. I can make cannons: I cannot make courage and conviction. Bah! You tire me, Euripides, with your morality mongering. Ask Barbara: she understands.
[He suddenly
takes
BARBARA’s hands, and looks powerfully into her eyes.]
Tell him, my love, what power really means.
BARBARA
[hypnotized]
Before I joined the Salvation Army, I was in my own power; and the consequence was that I never knew what to do with myself. When I joined it, I had not time enough for all the things I had to do.
UNDERSHAFT
[approvingly]
Just so. And why was that, do you suppose?
BARBARA Yesterday I should have said, because I was in the power of God.
[She resumes her self-possession, withdrawing her hands from his with a power equal to his own.]
But you came and shewed me that I was in the power of Bodger and Undershaft. Today I feel—oh! how can I put into words? Sarah: do you remember the earthquake at Cannes, when we were little children?—how little the surprise of the first shock mattered compared to the dread and horror of waiting for the second? That is how I feel in this place today. I stood on the rock I thought eternal; and without a word of warning it reeled and crumbled under me. I was safe with an infinite wisdom watching me, an army marching to Salvation with me; and in a moment, at a stroke of your pen in a cheque book, I stood alone; and the heavens were empty. That was the first shock of the earthquake: I am waiting for the second.

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