FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46  
47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  
I do so want to know. You don't get what you ought to have. [Going to the fire, she takes the kettle off, and looks for coals.] And you're so naughty sending back the soup and things. MRS. ROBERTS. [With a faint smile.] Yes, M'm? ENID. [Resentfully.] Why, you have n't even got coals? MRS. ROBERTS. If you please, M'm, to put the kettle on again; Roberts won't have long for his tea when he comes in. He's got to meet the men at four. ENID. [Putting the kettle on.] That means he'll lash them into a fury again. Can't you stop his going, Annie? [MRS. ROBERTS smiles ironically.] Have you tried? [A silence.] Does he know how ill you are? MRS. ROBERTS. It's only my weak 'eard, M'm. ENID. You used to be so well when you were with us. MRS. ROBERTS. [Stiffening.] Roberts is always good to me. ENID. But you ought to have everything you want, and you have nothing! MRS. ROBERTS. [Appealingly.] They tell me I don't look like a dyin' woman? ENID. Of course you don't; if you could only have proper--- Will you see my doctor if I send him to you? I'm sure he'd do you good. MRS. ROBERTS. [With faint questioning.] Yes, M'm. ENID. Madge Thomas ought n't to come here; she only excites you. As if I did n't know what suffering there is amongst the men! I do feel for them dreadfully, but you know they have gone too far. MRS. ROBERTS. [Continually moving her fingers.] They say there's no other way to get better wages, M'm. ENID. [Earnestly.] But, Annie, that's why the Union won't help them. My husband's very sympathetic with the men, but he says they are not underpaid. MRS. ROBERTS. No, M'm? ENID. They never think how the Company could go on if we paid the wages they want. MRS. ROBERTS. [With an effort.] But the dividends having been so big, M'm. ENID. [Takes aback.] You all seem to think the shareholders are rich men, but they're not--most of them are really no better off than working men. [MRS. ROBERTS smiles.] They have to keep up appearances. MRS. ROBERTS. Yes, M'm? ENID. You don't have to pay rates and taxes, and a hundred other things that they do. If the men did n't spend such a lot in drink and betting they'd be quite well off! MRS. ROBERTS. They say, workin' so hard, they must have some pleasure. ENID. But surely not low pleasure like that. MRS. ROBERTS. [A little resentfully.] Roberts never touches a drop; a
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   22   23   24   25   26   27   28   29   30   31   32   33   34   35   36   37   38   39   40   41   42   43   44   45   46  
47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   >>  



Top keywords:

ROBERTS

 

Roberts

 

kettle

 

smiles

 

things

 

pleasure

 

Continually

 

Earnestly


Company

 
moving
 
sympathetic
 

husband

 

fingers

 
underpaid
 

working

 

betting


hundred
 

workin

 
resentfully
 

touches

 
surely
 

appearances

 

dividends

 

effort


shareholders

 

Putting

 

ironically

 

naughty

 

sending

 

Resentfully

 

silence

 

questioning


doctor

 
proper
 

Thomas

 

suffering

 

excites

 
Stiffening
 

Appealingly

 
dreadfully