FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75  
76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   >>  
a stand and insisted that the succession must be settled one way or the other; and of course he is quite right. You see, I haven't found a fit successor yet. LADY BRITOMART [obstinately] There is Stephen. UNDERSHAFT. That's just it: all the foundlings I can find are exactly like Stephen. LADY BRITOMART. Andrew!! UNDERSHAFT. I want a man with no relations and no schooling: that is, a man who would be out of the running altogether if he were not a strong man. And I can't find him. Every blessed foundling nowadays is snapped up in his infancy by Barnardo homes, or School Board officers, or Boards of Guardians; and if he shows the least ability, he is fastened on by schoolmasters; trained to win scholarships like a racehorse; crammed with secondhand ideas; drilled and disciplined in docility and what they call good taste; and lamed for life so that he is fit for nothing but teaching. If you want to keep the foundry in the family, you had better find an eligible foundling and marry him to Barbara. LADY BRITOMART. Ah! Barbara! Your pet! You would sacrifice Stephen to Barbara. UNDERSHAFT. Cheerfully. And you, my dear, would boil Barbara to make soup for Stephen. LADY BRITOMART. Andrew: this is not a question of our likings and dislikings: it is a question of duty. It is your duty to make Stephen your successor. UNDERSHAFT. Just as much as it is your duty to submit to your husband. Come, Biddy! these tricks of the governing class are of no use with me. I am one of the governing class myself; and it is waste of time giving tracts to a missionary. I have the power in this matter; and I am not to be humbugged into using it for your purposes. LADY BRITOMART. Andrew: you can talk my head off; but you can't change wrong into right. And your tie is all on one side. Put it straight. UNDERSHAFT [disconcerted] It won't stay unless it's pinned [he fumbles at it with childish grimaces]-- Stephen comes in. STEPHEN [at the door] I beg your pardon [about to retire]. LADY BRITOMART. No: come in, Stephen. [Stephen comes forward to his mother's writing table.] UNDERSHAFT [not very cordially] Good afternoon. STEPHEN [coldly] Good afternoon. UNDERSHAFT [to Lady Britomart] He knows all about the tradition, I suppose? LADY BRITOMART. Yes. [To Stephen] It is what I told you last night, Stephen. UNDERSHAFT [sulkily] I understand you want to come into the cannon business. STEPHEN. _I_ go into trade! Cer
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73   74   75  
76   77   78   79   80   81   82   83   >>  



Top keywords:
Stephen
 

UNDERSHAFT

 

BRITOMART

 

Barbara

 

STEPHEN

 

Andrew

 
foundling
 

question

 

afternoon

 

governing


successor

 

change

 

purposes

 

pinned

 
disconcerted
 

straight

 

tricks

 

husband

 

fumbles

 

matter


missionary
 

tracts

 

giving

 
humbugged
 
childish
 

suppose

 

tradition

 

Britomart

 

business

 

cannon


sulkily

 

understand

 

coldly

 

pardon

 

settled

 

submit

 

grimaces

 
retire
 

cordially

 

insisted


writing

 

succession

 
forward
 
mother
 

schoolmasters

 

trained

 
fastened
 

ability

 
Guardians
 

scholarships