ActII

13 0 00

Act

II

The yard of the West Ham shelter of the Salvation Army is a cold place on a January morning. The building itself, an old warehouse, is newly whitewashed. Its gabled end projects into the yard in the middle, with a door on the ground floor, and another in the loft above it without any balcony or ladder, but with a pulley rigged over it for hoisting sacks. Those who come from this central gable end into the yard have the gateway leading to the street on their left, with a stone horse-trough just beyond it, and, on the right, a penthouse shielding a table from the weather. There are forms at the table; and on them are seated a man and a woman, both much down on their luck, finishing a meal of bread (one thick slice each, with margarine and golden syrup) and diluted milk.

The man, a workman out of employment, is young, agile, a talker, a poser, sharp enough to be capable of anything in reason except honesty or altruistic considerations of any kind. The woman is a commonplace old bundle of poverty and hard-worn humanity. She looks sixty and probably is forty-five. If they were rich people, gloved and muffed and well wrapped up in furs and overcoats, they would be numbed and miserable; for it is a grindingly cold, raw, January day; and a glance at the background of grimy warehouses and leaden sky visible over the whitewashed walls of the yard would drive any idle rich person straight to the Mediterranean. But these two, being no more troubled with visions of the Mediterranean than of the moon, and being compelled to keep more of their clothes in the pawnshop, and less on their persons, in winter than in summer, are not depressed by the cold: rather are they stung into vivacity, to which their meal has just now given an almost jolly turn. The man takes a pull at his mug, and then gets up and moves about the yard with his hands deep in his pockets, occasionally breaking into a stepdance.

The Woman

Feel better arter your meal, sir?

The Man

No. Call that a meal! Good enough for you, props; but wot is it to me, an intelligent workin’ man.

The Woman

Workin’ man! Wot are you?

The Man

Painter.

The Woman

Sceptically. Yus, I dessay.

The Man

Yus, you dessay! I know. Every loafer that can’t do nothink calls isself a painter. Well, I’m a real painter: grainer, finisher, thirty-eight bob a week when I can get it.

The Woman

Then why don’t you go and get it?

The Man

I’ll tell you why. Fust: I’m intelligent⁠—fffff! it’s rotten cold here He dances a step or two.⁠—yes: intelligent beyond the station o’ life into which it has pleased the capitalists to call me; and they don’t like a man that sees through ’em. Second, an intelligent bein’ needs a doo share of ’appiness; so I drink somethink cruel when I get the chawnce. Third, I stand by my class and do as little as I can so’s to leave arf the job for me fellow workers. Fourth, I’m fly enough to know wots inside the law and wots outside it; and inside it I do as the capitalists do: pinch wot I can lay me ’ands on. In a proper state of society I am sober, industrious and honest: in Rome, so to speak, I do as the Romans do. Wots the consequence? When trade is bad⁠—and it’s rotten bad just now⁠—and the employers az to sack arf their men, they generally start on me.

The Woman

What’s your name?

The Man

Price. Bronterre O’Brien Price. Usually called Snobby Price, for short.

The Woman

Snobby’s a carpenter, ain’t it? You said you was a painter.

Price

Not that kind of snob, but the genteel sort. I’m too uppish, owing to my intelligence, and my father being a Chartist and a reading, thinking man: a stationer, too. I’m none of your common hewers of wood and drawers of water; and don’t you forget it. He returns to his seat at the table, and takes up his mug. Wots your name?

The Woman

Rummy Mitchens, sir.

Price

Quaffing the remains of his milk to her. Your ’elth, Miss Mitchens.

Rummy

Correcting him. Missis Mitchens.

Price

Wot! Oh Rummy, Rummy! Respectable married woman, Rummy, gittin rescued by the Salvation Army by pretendin’ to be a bad un. Same old game!

Rummy

What am I to do? I can’t starve. Them Salvation lasses is dear good girls; but the better you are, the worse they likes to think you were before they rescued you. Why shouldn’t they ’av a bit o’ credit, poor loves? They’re worn to rags by their work. And where would they get the money to rescue us if we was to let on we’re no worse than other people? You know what ladies and gentlemen are.

Price

Thievin swine! Wish I ad their job, Rummy, all the same. Wot does Rummy stand for? Pet name props?

Rummy

Short for Romola.

Price

For wot!?

Rummy

Romola. It was out of a new book. Somebody me mother wanted me to grow up like.

Price

We’re companions in misfortune, Rummy. Both on us got names that nobody cawnt pronounce. Consequently I’m Snobby and you’re Rummy because Bill and Sally wasn’t good enough for our parents. Such is life!

Rummy

Who saved you, Mr. Price? Was it Major Barbara?

Price

No: I come here on my own. I’m goin to be Bronterre O’Brien Price, the converted painter. I know wot they like. I’ll tell ’em how I blasphemed and gambled and wopped my poor old mother⁠—

Rummy

Shocked. Used you to beat your mother?

Price

Not likely. She used to beat me. No matter: you come and listen to the converted painter, and you’ll hear how she was a pious woman that taught me me prayers at ’er knee, an’ how I used to come home drunk and drag her out o’ bed be ’er snow white ’airs, an’ lam into ’er with the poker.

Rummy

That’s what’s so unfair to us women. Your confessions is just as big lies as ours: you don’t tell what you really done no more than us; but you men can tell your lies right out at the meetins and be made much of for it; while the sort o’ confessions we az to make az to be wispered to one lady at a time. It ain’t right, spite of all their piety.

Price

Right! Do you spose the Army’d be allowed if it went and did right? Not much. It combs our ’air and makes us good little blokes to be robbed and put upon. But I’ll play the game as good as any of ’em. I’ll see somebody struck by lightnin’, or hear a voice sayin “Snobby Price: where will you spend eternity?” I’ll ’ave a time of it, I tell you.

Rummy

You won’t be let drink, though.

Price

I’ll take it out in gorspellin’, then. I don’t want to drink if I can get fun enough any other way.

Jenny Hill, a pale, overwrought, pretty Salvation lass of 18, comes in through the yard gate, leading Peter Shirley, a half hardened, half worn-out elderly man, weak with hunger.

Jenny

Supporting him. Come! pluck up. I’ll get you something to eat. You’ll be all right then.

Price

Rising and hurrying officiously to take the old man off Jenny’s hands. Poor old man! Cheer up, brother: you’ll find rest and peace and ’appiness ’ere. Hurry up with the food, miss: ’e’s fair done. Jenny hurries into the shelter. ’Ere, buck up, daddy! She’s fetchin y’a thick slice o’ bread ’n’ treacle, an’ a mug o’ skyblue. He seats him at the corner of the table.

Rummy

Gaily. Keep up your old art! Never say die!

Shirley

I’m not an old man. I’m ony 46. I’m as good as ever I was. The grey patch come in my hair before I was thirty. All it wants is three pennorth o’ hair dye: am I to be turned on the streets to starve for it? Holy God! I’ve worked ten to twelve hours a day since I was thirteen, and paid my way all through; and now am I to be thrown into the gutter and my job given to a young man that can do it no better than me because I’ve black hair that goes white at the first change?

Price

Cheerfully. No good jawrin’ about it. You’re ony a jumped-up, jerked-off, ’orspittle-turned-out incurable of an ole workin man: who cares about you? Eh? Make the thievin’ swine give you a meal: they’ve stole many a one from you. Get a bit o’ your own back. Jenny returns with the usual meal. There you are, brother. Awsk a blessin an tuck that into you.

Shirley

Looking at it ravenously but not touching it, and crying like a child. I never took anything before.

Jenny

Petting him. Come, come! the Lord sends it to you: he wasn’t above taking bread from his friends; and why should you be? Besides, when we find you a job you can pay us for it if you like.

Shirley

Eagerly. Yes, yes: that’s true. I can pay you back: it’s only a loan. Shivering. Oh Lord! oh Lord! He turns to the table and attacks the meal ravenously.

Jenny

Well, Rummy, are you more comfortable now?

Rummy

God bless you, lovey! You’ve fed my body and saved my soul, haven’t you? Jenny, touched, kisses her. Sit down and rest a bit: you must be ready to drop.

Jenny

I’ve been going hard since morning. But there’s more work than we can do. I mustn’t stop.

Rummy

Try a prayer for just two minutes. You’ll work all the better after.

Jenny

Her eyes lighting up. Oh isn’t it wonderful how a few minutes prayer revives you! I was quite lightheaded at twelve o’clock, I was so tired; but Major Barbara just sent me to pray for five minutes; and I was able to go on as if I had only just begun. To Price. Did you have a piece of bread?

Paige

With unction. Yes, miss; but I’ve got the piece that I value more; and that’s the peace that passeth hall hannerstennin.

Rummy

Fervently. Glory Hallelujah!

Bill Walker, a rough customer of about 25, appears at the yard gate and looks malevolently at Jenny.

Jenny

That makes me so happy. When you say that, I feel wicked for loitering here. I must get to work again.

She is hurrying to the shelter, when the newcomer moves quickly up to the door and intercepts her. His manner is so threatening that she retreats as he comes at her truculently, driving her down the yard.

Bill

I know you. You’re the one that took away my girl. You’re the one that set ’er agen me. Well, I’m goin to ’av ’er out. Not that I care a curse for her or you: see? But I’ll let ’er know; and I’ll let you know. I’m goin to give ’er a doin that’ll teach ’er to cut away from me. Now in with you and tell ’er to come out afore I come in and kick ’er out. Tell ’er Bill Walker wants ’er. She’ll know what that means; and if she keeps me waitin’ it’ll be worse. You stop to jaw back at me; and I’ll start on you: d’ye hear? There’s your way. In you go. He takes her by the arm and slings her towards the door of the shelter. She falls on her hand and knee. Rummy helps her up again.

Price

Rising, and venturing irresolutely towards Bill. Easy there, mate. She ain’t doin you no ’arm.

Bill

Who are you callin mate? Standing over him threateningly. You’re goin to stand up for her, are you? Put up your ’ands.

Rummy

Running indignantly to him to scold him. Oh, you great brute⁠—He instantly swings his left hand back against her face. She screams and reels back to the trough, where she sits down, covering her bruised face with her hands and rocking and moaning with pain.

Jenny

Going to her. Oh God forgive you! How could you strike an old woman like that?

Bill

Seizing her by the hair so violently that she also screams, and tearing her away from the old woman. You Gawd forgive me again and I’ll Gawd forgive you one on the jaw that’ll stop you prayin for a week. Holding her and turning fiercely on Price. ’Av you anything to say agen it? Eh?

Price

Intimidated. No, matey: she ain’t anything to do with me.

Bill

Good job for you! I’d put two meals into you and fight you with one finger after, you starved cur. To Jenny. Now are you goin’ to fetch out Mog Habbijam; or am I to knock your face off you and fetch her myself?

Jenny

Writhing in his grasp. Oh please someone go in and tell Major Barbara⁠—She screams again as he wrenches her head down; and Price and Rummy flee into the shelter.

Bill

You want to go in and tell your Major of me, do you?

Jenny

Oh please don’t drag my hair. Let me go.

Bill

Do you or don’t you? She stifles a scream. Yes or no.

Jenny

God give me strength⁠—

Bill

Striking her with his fist in the face. Go and show her that, and tell her if she wants one like it to come and interfere with me. Jenny, crying with pain, goes into the shed. He goes to the form and addresses the old man. Here: finish your mess; and get out o’ my way.

Shirley

Springing up and facing him fiercely, with the mug in his hand. You take a liberty with me, and I’ll smash you over the face with the mug and cut your eye out. Ain’t you satisfied⁠—young whelps like you⁠—with takin the bread out o’ the mouths of your elders that have brought you up and slaved for you, but you must come shovin’ and cheekin’ and bullyin’ in here, where the bread o’ charity is sickenin’ in our stummicks?

Bill

Contemptuously, but backing a little. Wot good are you, you old palsy mug? Wot good are you?

Shirley

As good as you and better. I’ll do a day’s work agen you or any fat young soaker of your age. Go and take my job at Horrockses, where I worked for ten year. They want young men there: they can’t afford to keep men over forty-five. They’re very sorry⁠—give you a character and happy to help you to get anything suited to your years⁠—sure a steady man won’t be long out of a job. Well, let ’em try you. They’ll find the differ. What do you know? Not as much as how to beeyave yourself⁠—layin’ your dirty fist across the mouth of a respectable woman!

Bill

Don’t provoke me to lay it acrost yours: d’ye hear?

Shirley

With blighting contempt. Yes: you like an old man to hit, don’t you, when you’ve finished with the women. I ain’t seen you hit a young one yet.

Bill

Stung. You lie, you old soupkitchener, you. There was a young man here. Did I offer to hit him or did I not?

Shirley

Was he starvin’ or was he not? Was he a man or only a crosseyed thief an a loafer? Would you hit my son-in-law’s brother?

Bill

Who’s he?

Shirley

Todger Fairmile o’ Balls Pond. Him that won 20 pounds off the Japanese wrastler at the music hall by standin’ out 17 minutes 4 seconds agen him.

Bill

Sullenly. I’m no music hall wrastler. Can he box?

Shirley

Yes: an’ you can’t.

Bill

Wot! I can’t, can’t I? Wot’s that you say? Threatening him.

Shirley

Not budging an inch. Will you box Todger Fairmile if I put him on to you? Say the word.

Bill

Subsiding with a slouch. I’ll stand up to any man alive, if he was ten Todger Fairmiles. But I don’t set up to be a perfessional.

Shirley

Looking down on him with unfathomable disdain. You box! Slap an old woman with the back o’ your hand! You hadn’t even the sense to hit her where a magistrate couldn’t see the mark of it, you silly young lump of conceit and ignorance. Hit a girl in the jaw and ony make her cry! If Todger Fairmile’d done it, she wouldn’t a got up inside o’ ten minutes, no more than you would if he got on to you. Yah! I’d set about you myself if I had a week’s feedin’ in me instead o’ two months starvation. He returns to the table to finish his meal.

Bill

Following him and stooping over him to drive the taunt in. You lie! you have the bread and treacle in you that you come here to beg.

Shirley

Bursting into tears. Oh God! it’s true: I’m only an old pauper on the scrap heap. Furiously. But you’ll come to it yourself; and then you’ll know. You’ll come to it sooner than a teetotaller like me, fillin’ yourself with gin at this hour o’ the mornin’!

Bill

I’m no gin drinker, you old liar; but when I want to give my girl a bloomin’ good ’idin’ I like to ’av a bit o’ devil in me: see? An here I am, talkin’ to a rotten old blighter like you sted o’ givin’ her wot for. Working himself into a rage. I’m goin in there to fetch her out. He makes vengefully for the shelter door.

Shirley

You’re goin to the station on a stretcher, more likely; and they’ll take the gin and the devil out of you there when they get you inside. You mind what you’re about: the major here is the Earl o’ Stevenage’s granddaughter.

Bill

Checked. Garn!

Shirley

You’ll see.

Bill

His resolution oozing. Well, I ain’t done nothin’ to ’er.

Shirley

Spose she said you did! who’d believe you?

Bill

Very uneasy, skulking back to the corner of the penthouse. Gawd! There’s no jastice in this country. To think wot them people can do! I’m as good as ’er.

Shirley

Tell her so. It’s just what a fool like you would do.

Barbara, brisk and businesslike, comes from the shelter with a notebook, and addresses herself to Shirley. Bill, cowed, sits down in the corner on a form, and turns his back on them.

Barbara

Good morning.

Shirley

Standing up and taking off his hat. Good morning, miss.

Barbara

Sit down: make yourself at home. He hesitates; but she puts a friendly hand on his shoulder and makes him obey. Now then! since you’ve made friends with us, we want to know all about you. Names and addresses and trades.

Shirley

Peter Shirley. Fitter. Chucked out two months ago because I was too old.

Barbara

Not at all surprised. You’d pass still. Why didn’t you dye your hair?

Shirley

I did. Me age come out at a coroner’s inquest on me daughter.

Barbara

Steady?

Shirley

Teetotaller. Never out of a job before. Good worker. And sent to the knockers like an old horse!

Barbara

No matter: if you did your part God will do his.

Shirley

Suddenly stubborn. My religion’s no concern of anybody but myself.

Barbara

Guessing. I know. Secularist?

Shirley

Hotly. Did I offer to deny it?

Barbara

Why should you? My own father’s a Secularist, I think. Our Father⁠—yours and mine⁠—fulfils himself in many ways; and I daresay he knew what he was about when he made a Secularist of you. So buck up, Peter! we can always find a job for a steady man like you. Shirley, disarmed, touches his hat. She turns from him to Bill. What’s your name?

Bill

Insolently. Wot’s that to you?

Barbara

Calmly making a note. Afraid to give his name. Any trade?

Bill

Who’s afraid to give his name? Doggedly, with a sense of heroically defying the House of Lords in the person of Lord Stevenage. If you want to bring a charge agen me, bring it. She waits, unruffled. My name’s Bill Walker.

Barbara

As if the name were familiar: trying to remember how. Bill Walker? Recollecting. Oh, I know: you’re the man that Jenny Hill was praying for inside just now. She enters his name in her notebook.

Bill

Who’s Jenny Hill? And what call has she to pray for me?

Barbara

I don’t know. Perhaps it was you that cut her lip.

Bill

Defiantly. Yes, it was me that cut her lip. I ain’t afraid o’ you.

Barbara

How could you be, since you’re not afraid of God? You’re a brave man, Mr. Walker. It takes some pluck to do our work here; but none of us dare lift our hand against a girl like that, for fear of her father in heaven.

Bill

Sullenly. I want none o’ your cantin’ jaw. I suppose you think I come here to beg from you, like this damaged lot here. Not me. I don’t want your bread and scrape and catlap. I don’t believe in your Gawd, no more than you do yourself.

Barbara

Sunnily apologetic and ladylike, as on a new footing with him. Oh, I beg your pardon for putting your name down, Mr. Walker. I didn’t understand. I’ll strike it out.

Bill

Taking this as a slight, and deeply wounded by it. Eah! you let my name alone. Ain’t it good enough to be in your book?

Barbara

Considering. Well, you see, there’s no use putting down your name unless I can do something for you, is there? What’s your trade?

Bill

Still smarting. That’s no concern o’ yours.

Barbara

Just so. Very businesslike. I’ll put you down as Writing. the man who⁠—struck⁠—poor little Jenny Hill⁠—in the mouth.

Bill

Rising threateningly. See here. I’ve ’ad enough o’ this.

Barbara

Quite sunny and fearless. What did you come to us for?

Bill

I come for my girl, see? I come to take her out o’ this and to break ’er jawr for her.

Barbara

Complacently. You see I was right about your trade. Bill, on the point of retorting furiously, finds himself, to his great shame and terror, in danger of crying instead. He sits down again suddenly. What’s her name?

Bill

Dogged. ’Er name’s Mog Abbijam: thats wot her name is.

Barbara

Oh, she’s gone to Canning Town, to our barracks there.

Bill

Fortified by his resentment of Mog’s perfidy. Is she? Vindictively. Then I’m goin to Kennintahn arter her. He crosses to the gate; hesitates; finally comes back at Barbara. Are you lyin’ to me to get shut o’ me?

Barbara

I don’t want to get shut of you. I want to keep you here and save your soul. You’d better stay: you’re going to have a bad time today, Bill.

Bill

Who’s goin to give it to me? You, props.

Barbara

Someone you don’t believe in. But you’ll be glad afterwards.

Bill

Slinking off. I’ll go to Kennintahn to be out o’ the reach o’ your tongue. Suddenly turning on her with intense malice. And if I don’t find Mog there, I’ll come back and do two years for you, selp me Gawd if I don’t!

Barbara

A shade kindlier, if possible. It’s no use, Bill. She’s got another bloke.

Bill

Wot!

Barbara

One of her own converts. He fell in love with her when he saw her with her soul saved, and her face clean, and her hair washed.

Bill

Surprised. Wottud she wash it for, the carroty slut? It’s red.

Barbara

It’s quite lovely now, because she wears a new look in her eyes with it. It’s a pity you’re too late. The new bloke has put your nose out of joint, Bill.

Bill

I’ll put his nose out o’ joint for him. Not that I care a curse for her, mind that. But I’ll teach her to drop me as if I was dirt. And I’ll teach him to meddle with my Judy. Wots iz bleedin’ name?

Barbara

Sergeant Todger Fairmile.

Shirley

Rising with grim joy. I’ll go with him, miss. I want to see them two meet. I’ll take him to the infirmary when it’s over.

Bill

To Shirley, with undissembled misgiving. Is that ’im you was speakin on?

Shirley

That’s him.

Bill

’Im that wrastled in the music all?

Shirley

The competitions at the National Sportin Club was worth nigh a hundred a year to him. He’s gev ’em up now for religion; so he’s a bit fresh for want of the exercise he was accustomed to. He’ll be glad to see you. Come along.

Bill

Wots ’is weight?

Shirley

Thirteen four. Bill’s last hope expires.

Barbara

Go and talk to him, Bill. He’ll convert you.

Shirley

He’ll convert your head into a mashed potato.

Bill

Sullenly. I ain’t afraid of him. I ain’t afraid of ennybody. But he can lick me. She’s done me. He sits down moodily on the edge of the horse trough.

Shirley

You ain’t goin. I thought not. He resumes his seat.

Barbara

Calling. Jenny!

Jenny

Appearing at the shelter door with a plaster on the corner of her mouth. Yes, Major.

Barbara

Send Rummy Mitchens out to clear away here.

Jenny

I think she’s afraid.

Barbara

Her resemblance to her mother flashing out for a moment. Nonsense! she must do as she’s told.

Jenny

Calling into the shelter. Rummy: the Major says you must come.

Jenny comes to Barbara, purposely keeping on the side next Bill, lest he should suppose that she shrank from him or bore malice.

Barbara

Poor little Jenny! Are you tired? Looking at the wounded cheek. Does it hurt?

Jenny

No: it’s all right now. It was nothing.

Barbara

Critically. It was as hard as he could hit, I expect. Poor Bill! You don’t feel angry with him, do you?

Jenny

Oh no, no, no: indeed I don’t, Major, bless his poor heart! Barbara kisses her; and she runs away merrily into the shelter. Bill writhes with an agonizing return of his new and alarming symptoms, but says nothing. Rummy Mitchens comes from the shelter.

Barbara

Going to meet Rummy. Now Rummy, bustle. Take in those mugs and plates to be washed; and throw the crumbs about for the birds.

Rummy takes the three plates and mugs; but Shirley takes back his mug from her, as there it still come milk left in it.

Rummy

There ain’t any crumbs. This ain’t a time to waste good bread on birds.

Price

Appearing at the shelter door. Gentleman come to see the shelter, Major. Says he’s your father.

Barbara

All right. Coming. Snobby goes back into the shelter, followed by Barbara.

Rummy

Stealing across to Bill and addressing him in a subdued voice, but with intense conviction. I’d ’av the lor’ of you, you flat eared pignosed potwalloper, if she’d let me. You’re no gentleman, to hit a lady in the face. Bill, with greater things moving in him, takes no notice.

Shirley

Following her. Here! in with you and don’t get yourself into more trouble by talking.

Rummy

With hauteur. I ain’t ’ad the pleasure o’ being hintroduced to you, as I can remember. She goes into the shelter with the plates.

Bill

Savagely. Don’t you talk to me, d’ye hear. You lea’ me alone, or I’ll do you a mischief. I’m not dirt under your feet, anyway.

Shirley

Calmly. Don’t you be afeerd. You ain’t such prime company that you need expect to be sought after. He is about to go into the shelter when Barbara comes out, with Undershaft on her right.

Barbara

Oh there you are, Mr. Shirley! Between them. This is my father: I told you he was a Secularist, didn’t I? Perhaps you’ll be able to comfort one another.

Undershaft

Startled. A Secularist! Not the least in the world: on the contrary, a confirmed mystic.

Barbara

Sorry, I’m sure. By the way, papa, what is your religion⁠—in case I have to introduce you again?

Undershaft

My religion? Well, my dear, I am a Millionaire. That is my religion.

Barbara

Then I’m afraid you and Mr. Shirley won’t be able to comfort one another after all. You’re not a Millionaire, are you, Peter?

Shirley

No; and proud of it.

Undershaft

Gravely. Poverty, my friend, is not a thing to be proud of.

Shirley

Angrily. Who made your millions for you? Me and my like. What’s kep’ us poor? Keepin’ you rich. I wouldn’t have your conscience, not for all your income.

Undershaft

I wouldn’t have your income, not for all your conscience, Mr. Shirley. He goes to the penthouse and sits down on a form.

Barbara

Stopping Shirley adroitly as he is about to retort. You wouldn’t think he was my father, would you, Peter? Will you go into the shelter and lend the lasses a hand for a while: we’re worked off our feet.

Shirley

Bitterly. Yes: I’m in their debt for a meal, ain’t I?

Barbara

Oh, not because you’re in their debt; but for love of them, Peter, for love of them. He cannot understand, and is rather scandalized. There! Don’t stare at me. In with you; and give that conscience of yours a holiday Bustling him into the shelter.

Shirley

As he goes in. Ah! it’s a pity you never was trained to use your reason, miss. You’d have been a very taking lecturer on Secularism.

Barbara turns to her father.

Undershaft

Never mind me, my dear. Go about your work; and let me watch it for a while.

Barbara

All right.

Undershaft

For instance, what’s the matter with that outpatient over there?

Barbara

Looking at Bill, whose attitude has never changed, and whose expression of brooding wrath has deepened. Oh, we shall cure him in no time. Just watch. She goes over to Bill and waits. He glances up at her and casts his eyes down again, uneasy, but grimmer than ever. It would be nice to just stamp on Mog Habbijam’s face, wouldn’t it, Bill?

Bill

Starting up from the trough in consternation. It’s a lie: I never said so. She shakes her head. Who told you wot was in my mind?

Barbara

Only your new friend.

Bill

Wot new friend?

Barbara

The devil, Bill. When he gets round people they get miserable, just like you.

Bill

With a heartbreaking attempt at devil-may-care cheerfulness. I ain’t miserable. He sits down again, and stretches his legs in an attempt to seem indifferent.

Barbara

Well, if you’re happy, why don’t you look happy, as we do?

Bill

His legs curling back in spite of him. I’m ’appy enough, I tell you. Why don’t you lea’ me alown? Wot ’av I done to you? I ain’t smashed your face, ’av I?

Barbara

Softly: wooing his soul. It’s not me that’s getting at you, Bill.

Bill

Who else is it?

Barbara

Somebody that doesn’t intend you to smash women’s faces, I suppose. Somebody or something that wants to make a man of you.

Bill

Blustering. Make a man o’ me! Ain’t I a man? eh? ain’t I a man? Who sez I’m not a man?

Barbara

There’s a man in you somewhere, I suppose. But why did he let you hit poor little Jenny Hill? That wasn’t very manly of him, was it?

Bill

Tormented. ’Av done with it, I tell you. Chock it. I’m sick of your Jenny Ill and ’er silly little face.

Barbara

Then why do you keep thinking about it? Why does it keep coming up against you in your mind? You’re not getting converted, are you?

Bill

With conviction. Not me. Not likely. Not arf.

Barbara

That’s right, Bill. Hold out against it. Put out your strength. Don’t let’s get you cheap. Todger Fairmile said he wrestled for three nights against his Salvation harder than he ever wrestled with the Jap at the music hall. He gave in to the Jap when his arm was going to break. But he didn’t give in to his salvation until his heart was going to break. Perhaps you’ll escape that. You haven’t any heart, have you?

Bill

Wot d’ye mean? Wy ain’t I got a ’art the same as ennybody else?

Barbara

A man with a heart wouldn’t have bashed poor little Jenny’s face, would he?

Bill

Almost crying. Ow, will you lea’ me alown? ’Av I ever offered to meddle with you, that you come noggin’ and provowkin’ me lawk this? He writhes convulsively from his eyes to his toes.

Barbara

With a steady soothing hand on his arm and a gentle voice that never lets him go. It’s your soul that’s hurting you, Bill, and not me. We’ve been through it all ourselves. Come with us, Bill. He looks wildly round. To brave manhood on earth and eternal glory in heaven. He is on the point of breaking down. Come. A drum is heard in the shelter; and Bill, with a gasp, escapes from the spell as Barbara turns quickly. Adolphus enters from the shelter with a big drum. Oh! there you are, Dolly. Let me introduce a new friend of mine, Mr. Bill Walker. This is my bloke, Bill: Mr. Cusins. Cusins salutes with his drumstick.

Bill

Goin to marry ’im?

Barbara

Yes.

Bill

Fervently. Gawd ’elp ’im! Gawd ’elp ’im!

Barbara

Why? Do you think he won’t be happy with me?

Bill

I’ve only ’ad to stand it for a mornin’: ’e’ll ’av to stand it for a lifetime.

Cusins

That is a frightful reflection, Mr. Walker. But I can’t tear myself away from her.

Bill

Well, I can. To Barbara. Eah! do you know where I’m goin’ to, and wot I’m goin’ to do?

Barbara

Yes: you’re going to heaven; and you’re coming back here before the week’s out to tell me so.

Bill

You lie. I’m goin to Kennintahn, to spit in Todger Fairmile’s eye. I bashed Jenny Ill’s face; and now I’ll get me own face bashed and come back and show it to ’er. E’ll it me ’ardern I ’it ’er. That’ll make us square. To Adolphus. Is that fair or is it not? You’re a genlmn: you oughter know.

Barbara

Two black eyes won’t make one white one, Bill.

Bill

I didn’t ast you. Cawn’t you never keep your mahth shut? I ast the genlmn.

Cusins

Reflectively. Yes: I think you’re right, Mr. Walker. Yes: I should do it. It’s curious: it’s exactly what an ancient Greek would have done.

Barbara

But what good will it do?

Cusins

Well, it will give Mr. Fairmile some exercise; and it will satisfy Mr. Walker’s soul.

Bill

Rot! there ain’t no sach a thing as a soul. Ah kin you tell wether I’ve a soul or not? You never seen it.

Barbara

I’ve seen it hurting you when you went against it.

Bill

With compressed aggravation. If you was my girl and took the word out o’ me mahth lawk thet, I’d give you suthink you’d feel ’urtin’, so I would. To Adolphus. You take my tip, mate. Stop ’er jawr; or you’ll die afore your time. With intense expression. Wore aht: thets wot you’ll be: wore aht. He goes away through the gate.

Cusins

Looking after him. I wonder!

Barbara

Dolly! Indignant, in her mother’s manner.

Cusins

Yes, my dear, it’s very wearing to be in love with you. If it lasts, I quite think I shall die young.

Barbara

Should you mind?

Cusins

Not at all. He is suddenly softened, and kisses her over the drum, evidently not for the first time, as people cannot kiss over a big drum without practice. Undershaft coughs.

Barbara

It’s all right, papa, we’ve not forgotten you. Dolly: explain the place to papa: I haven’t time. She goes busily into the shelter.

Undershaft and Adolphus now have the yard to themselves. Undershaft, seated on a form, and still keenly attentive, looks hard at Adolphus. Adolphus looks hard at him.

Undershaft

I fancy you guess something of what is in my mind, Mr. Cusins. Cusins flourishes his drumsticks as if in the art of beating a lively rataplan, but makes no sound. Exactly so. But suppose Barbara finds you out!

Cusins

You know, I do not admit that I am imposing on Barbara. I am quite genuinely interested in the views of the Salvation Army. The fact is, I am a sort of collector of religions; and the curious thing is that I find I can believe them all. By the way, have you any religion?

Undershaft

Yes.

Cusins

Anything out of the common?

Undershaft

Only that there are two things necessary to Salvation.

Cusins

Disappointed, but polite. Ah, the Church Catechism. Charles Lomax also belongs to the Established Church.

Undershaft

The two things are⁠—

Cusins

Baptism and⁠—

Undershaft

No. Money and gunpowder.

Cusins

Surprised, but interested. That is the general opinion of our governing classes. The novelty is in hearing any man confess it.

Undershaft

Just so.

Cusins

Excuse me: is there any place in your religion for honor, justice, truth, love, mercy and so forth?

Undershaft

Yes: they are the graces and luxuries of a rich, strong, and safe life.

Cusins

Suppose one is forced to choose between them and money or gunpowder?

Undershaft

Choose money and gunpowder; for without enough of both you cannot afford the others.

Cusins

That is your religion?

Undershaft

Yes.

The cadence of this reply makes a full close in the conversation. Cusins twists his face dubiously and contemplates Undershaft. Undershaft contemplates him.

Cusins

Barbara won’t stand that. You will have to choose between your religion and Barbara.

Undershaft

So will you, my friend. She will find out that that drum of yours is hollow.

Cusins

Father Undershaft: you are mistaken: I am a sincere Salvationist. You do not understand the Salvation Army. It is the army of joy, of love, of courage: it has banished the fear and remorse and despair of the old hellridden evangelical sects: it marches to fight the devil with trumpet and drum, with music and dancing, with banner and palm, as becomes a sally from heaven by its happy garrison. It picks the waster out of the public house and makes a man of him: it finds a worm wriggling in a back kitchen, and lo! a woman! Men and women of rank too, sons and daughters of the Highest. It takes the poor professor of Greek, the most artificial and self-suppressed of human creatures, from his meal of roots, and lets loose the rhapsodist in him; reveals the true worship of Dionysos to him; sends him down the public street drumming dithyrambs. He plays a thundering flourish on the drum.

Undershaft

You will alarm the shelter.

Cusins

Oh, they are accustomed to these sudden ecstasies of piety. However, if the drum worries you⁠—He pockets the drumsticks; unhooks the drum; and stands it on the ground opposite the gateway.

Undershaft

Thank you.

Cusins

You remember what Euripides says about your money and gunpowder?

Undershaft

No.

Cusins

Declaiming.

One and another

In money and guns may outpass his brother;

And men in their millions float and flow

And seethe with a million hopes as leaven;

And they win their will; or they miss their will;

And their hopes are dead or are pined for still:

But whoe’er can know

As the long days go

That to live is happy, has found his heaven.

My translation: what do you think of it?

Undershaft

I think, my friend, that if you wish to know, as the long days go, that to live is happy, you must first acquire money enough for a decent life, and power enough to be your own master.

Cusins

You are damnably discouraging. He resumes his declamation.

Is it so hard a thing to see

That the spirit of God⁠—whate’er it be⁠—

The Law that abides and changes not, ages long,

The Eternal and Nature-born: these things be strong.

What else is Wisdom? What of Man’s endeavor,

Or God’s high grace so lovely and so great?

To stand from fear set free? to breathe and wait?

To hold a hand uplifted over Fate?

And shall not Barbara be loved forever?

Undershaft

Euripides mentions Barbara, does he?

Cusins

It is a fair translation. The word means Loveliness.

Undershaft

May I ask⁠—as Barbara’s father⁠—how much a year she is to be loved forever on?

Cusins

As Barbara’s father, that is more your affair than mine. I can feed her by teaching Greek: that is about all.

Undershaft

Do you consider it a good match for her?

Cusins

With polite obstinacy. Mr. Undershaft: I am in many ways a weak, timid, ineffectual person; and my health is far from satisfactory. But whenever I feel that I must have anything, I get it, sooner or later. I feel that way about Barbara. I don’t like marriage: I feel intensely afraid of it; and I don’t know what I shall do with Barbara or what she will do with me. But I feel that I and nobody else must marry her. Please regard that as settled.⁠—Not that I wish to be arbitrary; but why should I waste your time in discussing what is inevitable?

Undershaft

You mean that you will stick at nothing not even the conversion of the Salvation Army to the worship of Dionysos.

Cusins

The business of the Salvation Army is to save, not to wrangle about the name of the pathfinder. Dionysos or another: what does it matter?

Undershaft

Rising and approaching him. Professor Cusins you are a young man after my own heart.

Cusins

Mr. Undershaft: you are, as far as I am able to gather, a most infernal old rascal; but you appeal very strongly to my sense of ironic humor.

Undershaft mutely offers his hand. They shake.

Undershaft

Suddenly concentrating himself. And now to business.

Cusins

Pardon me. We were discussing religion. Why go back to such an uninteresting and unimportant subject as business?

Undershaft

Religion is our business at present, because it is through religion alone that we can win Barbara.

Cusins

Have you, too, fallen in love with Barbara?

Undershaft

Yes, with a father’s love.

Cusins

A father’s love for a grownup daughter is the most dangerous of all infatuations. I apologize for mentioning my own pale, coy, mistrustful fancy in the same breath with it.

Undershaft

Keep to the point. We have to win her; and we are neither of us Methodists.

Cusins

That doesn’t matter. The power Barbara wields here⁠—the power that wields Barbara herself⁠—is not Calvinism, not Presbyterianism, not Methodism⁠—

Undershaft

Not Greek Paganism either, eh?

Cusins

I admit that. Barbara is quite original in her religion.

Undershaft

Triumphantly. Aha! Barbara Undershaft would be. Her inspiration comes from within herself.

Cusins

How do you suppose it got there?

Undershaft

In towering excitement. It is the Undershaft inheritance. I shall hand on my torch to my daughter. She shall make my converts and preach my gospel.

Cusins

What! Money and gunpowder!

Undershaft

Yes, money and gunpowder; freedom and power; command of life and command of death.

Cusins

Urbanely: trying to bring him down to earth. This is extremely interesting, Mr. Undershaft. Of course you know that you are mad.

Undershaft

With redoubled force. And you?

Cusins

Oh, mad as a hatter. You are welcome to my secret since I have discovered yours. But I am astonished. Can a madman make cannons?

Undershaft

Would anyone else than a madman make them? And now With surging energy. question for question. Can a sane man translate Euripides?

Cusins

No.

Undershaft

Reining him by the shoulder. Can a sane woman make a man of a waster or a woman of a worm?

Cusins

Reeling before the storm. Father Colossus⁠—Mammoth Millionaire⁠—

Undershaft

Pressing him. Are there two mad people or three in this Salvation shelter today?

Cusins

You mean Barbara is as mad as we are!

Undershaft

Pushing him lightly off and resuming his equanimity suddenly and completely. Pooh, Professor! let us call things by their proper names. I am a millionaire; you are a poet; Barbara is a savior of souls. What have we three to do with the common mob of slaves and idolaters? He sits down again with a shrug of contempt for the mob.

Cusins

Take care! Barbara is in love with the common people. So am I. Have you never felt the romance of that love?

Undershaft

Cold and sardonic. Have you ever been in love with Poverty, like St. Francis? Have you ever been in love with Dirt, like St. Simeon? Have you ever been in love with disease and suffering, like our nurses and philanthropists? Such passions are not virtues, but the most unnatural of all the vices. This love of the common people may please an earl’s granddaughter and a university professor; but I have been a common man and a poor man; and it has no romance for me. Leave it to the poor to pretend that poverty is a blessing: leave it to the coward to make a religion of his cowardice by preaching humility: we know better than that. We three must stand together above the common people: how else can we help their children to climb up beside us? Barbara must belong to us, not to the Salvation Army.

Cusins

Well, I can only say that if you think you will get her away from the Salvation Army by talking to her as you have been talking to me, you don’t know Barbara.

Undershaft

My friend: I never ask for what I can buy.

Cusins

In a white fury. Do I understand you to imply that you can buy Barbara?

Undershaft

No; but I can buy the Salvation Army.

Cusins

Quite impossible.

Undershaft

You shall see. All religious organizations exist by selling themselves to the rich.

Cusins

Not the Army. That is the Church of the poor.

Undershaft

All the more reason for buying it.

Cusins

I don’t think you quite know what the Army does for the poor.

Undershaft

Oh yes I do. It draws their teeth: that is enough for me⁠—as a man of business⁠—

Cusins

Nonsense! It makes them sober⁠—

Undershaft

I prefer sober workmen. The profits are larger.

Cusins

—honest⁠—

Undershaft

Honest workmen are the most economical.

Cusins

—attached to their homes⁠—

Undershaft

So much the better: they will put up with anything sooner than change their shop.

Cusins

—happy⁠—

Undershaft

An invaluable safeguard against revolution.

Cusins

—unselfish⁠—

Undershaft

Indifferent to their own interests, which suits me exactly.

Cusins

—with their thoughts on heavenly things⁠—

Undershaft

Rising. And not on Trade Unionism nor Socialism. Excellent.

Cusins

Revolted. You really are an infernal old rascal.

Undershaft

Indicating Peter Shirley, who has just came from the shelter and strolled dejectedly down the yard between them. And this is an honest man!

Shirley

Yes; and what ’av I got by it? He passes on bitterly and sits on the form, in the corner of the penthouse.

Snobby Price, beaming sanctimoniously, and Jenny Hill, with a tambourine full of coppers, come from the shelter and go to the drum, on which Jenny begins to count the money.

Undershaft

Replying to Shirley. Oh, your employers must have got a good deal by it from first to last. He sits on the table, with one foot on the side form. Cusins, overwhelmed, sits down on the same form nearer the shelter. Barbara comes from the shelter to the middle of the yard. She is excited and a little overwrought.

Barbara

We’ve just had a splendid experience meeting at the other gate in Cripps’s lane. I’ve hardly ever seen them so much moved as they were by your confession, Mr. Price.

Price

I could almost be glad of my past wickedness if I could believe that it would ’elp to keep hathers stright.

Barbara

So it will, Snobby. How much, Jenny?

Jenny

Four and tenpence, Major.

Barbara

Oh Snobby, if you had given your poor mother just one more kick, we should have got the whole five shillings!

Price

If she heard you say that, miss, she’d be sorry I didn’t. But I’m glad. Oh what a joy it will be to her when she hears I’m saved!

Undershaft

Shall I contribute the odd twopence, Barbara? The millionaire’s mite, eh? He takes a couple of pennies from his pocket.

Barbara

How did you make that twopence?

Undershaft

As usual. By selling cannons, torpedoes, submarines, and my new patent Grand Duke hand grenade.

Barbara

Put it back in your pocket. You can’t buy your Salvation here for twopence: you must work it out.

Undershaft

Is twopence not enough? I can afford a little more, if you press me.

Barbara

Two million millions would not be enough. There is bad blood on your hands; and nothing but good blood can cleanse them. Money is no use. Take it away. She turns to Cusins. Dolly: you must write another letter for me to the papers. He makes a wry face. Yes: I know you don’t like it; but it must be done. The starvation this winter is beating us: everybody is unemployed. The General says we must close this shelter if we can’t get more money. I force the collections at the meetings until I am ashamed, don’t I, Snobby?

Price

It’s a fair treat to see you work it, miss. The way you got them up from three-and-six to four-and-ten with that hymn, penny by penny and verse by verse, was a caution. Not a Cheap Jack on Mile End Waste could touch you at it.

Barbara

Yes; but I wish we could do without it. I am getting at last to think more of the collection than of the people’s souls. And what are those hatfuls of pence and halfpence? We want thousands! tens of thousands! hundreds of thousands! I want to convert people, not to be always begging for the Army in a way I’d die sooner than beg for myself.

Undershaft

In profound irony. Genuine unselfishness is capable of anything, my dear.

Barbara

Unsuspectingly, as she turns away to take the money from the drum and put it in a cash bag she carries. Yes, isn’t it? Undershaft looks sardonically at Cusins.

Cusins

Aside to Undershaft. Mephistopheles! Machiavelli!

Barbara

Tears coming into her eyes as she ties the bag and pockets it. How are we to feed them? I can’t talk religion to a man with bodily hunger in his eyes. Almost breaking down. It’s frightful.

Jenny

Running to her. Major, dear⁠—

Barbara

Rebounding. No: don’t comfort me. It will be all right. We shall get the money.

Undershaft

How?

Jenny

By praying for it, of course. Mrs. Baines says she prayed for it last night; and she has never prayed for it in vain: never once. She goes to the gate and looks out into the street.

Barbara

Who has dried her eyes and regained her composure. By the way, dad, Mrs. Baines has come to march with us to our big meeting this afternoon; and she is very anxious to meet you, for some reason or other. Perhaps she’ll convert you.

Undershaft

I shall be delighted, my dear.

Jenny

At the gate: excitedly. Major! Major! Here’s that man back again.

Barbara

What man?

Jenny

The man that hit me. Oh, I hope he’s coming back to join us.

Bill Walker, with frost on his jacket, comes through the gate, his hands deep in his pockets and his chin sunk between his shoulders, like a cleaned-out gambler. He halts between Barbara and the drum.

Barbara

Hullo, Bill! Back already!

Bill

Nagging at her. Bin talkin ever sense, ’av you?

Barbara

Pretty nearly. Well, has Todger paid you out for poor Jenny’s jaw?

Bill

No he ain’t.

Barbara

I thought your jacket looked a bit snowy.

Bill

So it is snowy. You want to know where the snow come from, don’t you?

Barbara

Yes.

Bill

Well, it come from off the ground in Parkinses Corner in Kennintahn. It got rubbed off be my shoulders: see?

Barbara

Pity you didn’t rub some off with your knees, Bill! That would have done you a lot of good.

Bill

With sour mirthless humor. I was saving another man’s knees at the time. ’E was kneelin’ on my ’ed, so ’e was.

Jenny

Who was kneeling on your head?

Bill

Todger was. ’E was prayin’ for me: prayin’ comfortable with me as a carpet. So was Mog. So was the ’ole bloomin’ meetin. Mog she sez “O Lord break is stubborn spirit; but don’t ’urt ’is dear art.” That was wot she said. “Don’t ’urt ’is dear art”! An’ ’er bloke⁠—thirteen stun four!⁠—kneelin wiv all ’is weight on me. Funny, ain’t it?

Jenny

Oh no. We’re so sorry, Mr. Walker.

Barbara

Enjoying it frankly. Nonsense! of course it’s funny. Served you right, Bill! You must have done something to him first.

Bill

Doggedly. I did wot I said I’d do. I spit in ’is eye. ’E looks up at the sky and sez, “O that I should be fahnd worthy to be spit upon for the gospel’s sake!” ’e sez; an’ Mog sez “Glory Allelloolier!”; an’ then ’e called me Brother, an’ dahned me as if I was a kid and ’e was me mother washin’ me a Setterda nawt. I ’adn’t just no show wiv ’im at all. Arf the street prayed; an’ the tother arf larfed fit to split theirselves. To Barbara. There! are you settisfawd nah?

Barbara

Her eyes dancing. Wish I’d been there, Bill.

Bill

Yes: you’d a got in a hextra bit o’ talk on me, wouldn’t you?

Jenny

I’m so sorry, Mr. Walker.

Bill

Fiercely. Don’t you go bein’ sorry for me: you’ve no call. Listen ’ere. I broke your jawr.

Jenny

No, it didn’t hurt me: indeed it didn’t, except for a moment. It was only that I was frightened.

Bill

I don’t want to be forgive be you, or be ennybody. Wot I did I’ll pay for. I tried to get me own jawr broke to settisfaw you⁠—

Jenny

Distressed. Oh no⁠—

Bill

Impatiently. Tell y’I did: cawn’t you listen to wot’s bein told you? All I got be it was bein’ made a sight of in the public street for me pains. Well, if I cawn’t settisfaw you one way, I can another. Listen ’ere! I ’ad two quid saved agen the frost; an’ I’ve a pahnd of it left. A mate o’ mine last week ’ad words with the Judy ’e’s goin to marry. ’E give ’er wot-for; an’ ’e’s bin fined fifteen bob. ’E ’ad a right to it ’er because they was goin to be marrid; but I ’adn’t no right to it you; so put anather fawv bob on an’ call it a pahnd’s worth. He produces a sovereign. Ere’s the money. Take it; and let’s ’av no more o’ your forgivin’ an prayin’ and your Major jawrin’ me. Let wot I done be done and paid for; and let there be a end of it.

Jenny

Oh, I couldn’t take it, Mr. Walker. But if you would give a shilling or two to poor Rummy Mitchens! you really did hurt her; and she’s old.

Bill

Contemptuously. Not likely. I’d give her anather as soon as look at ’er. Let her ’av the lawr o’ me as she threatened! She ain’t forgiven me: not mach. Wot I done to ’er is not on me mawnd⁠—wot she indicating Barbara. might call on me conscience⁠—no more than stickin’ a pig. It’s this Christian game o’ yours that I won’t ’av played agen me: this bloomin’ forgivin’ an’ noggin’ an jawrin’ that makes a man that sore that iz lawf’s a burdn to ’im. I won’t ’av it, I tell you; so take your money and stop throwin’ your silly bashed face hup agen me.

Jenny

Major: may I take a little of it for the Army?

Barbara

No: the Army is not to be bought. We want your soul, Bill; and we’ll take nothing less.

Bill

Bitterly. I know. It ain’t enough. Me an’ me few shillins is not good enough for you. You’re a earl’s grendorter, you are. Nothin’ less than a underd pahnd for you.

Undershaft

Come, Barbara! you could do a great deal of good with a hundred pounds. If you will set this gentleman’s mind at ease by taking his pound, I will give the other ninety-nine Bill, astounded by such opulence, instinctively touches his cap.

Barbara

Oh, you’re too extravagant, papa. Bill offers twenty pieces of silver. All you need offer is the other ten. That will make the standard price to buy anybody who’s for sale. I’m not; and the Army’s not. To Bill. You’ll never have another quiet moment, Bill, until you come round to us. You can’t stand out against your salvation.

Bill

Sullenly. I cawn’t stend aht agen music all wrastlers and artful tongued women. I’ve offered to pay. I can do no more. Take it or leave it. There it is. He throws the sovereign on the drum, and sits down on the horse-trough. The coin fascinates Snobby Price, who takes an early opportunity of dropping his cap on it.

Mrs. Baines comes from the shelter. She is dressed as a Salvation Army Commissioner. She is an earnest looking woman of about 40, with a caressing, urgent voice, and an appealing manner.

Barbara

This is my father, Mrs. Baines. Undershaft comes from the table, taking his hat off with marked civility. Try what you can do with him. He won’t listen to me, because he remembers what a fool I was when I was a baby.

She leaves them together and chats with Jenny.

Mrs. Baines

Have you been shown over the shelter, Mr. Undershaft? You know the work we’re doing, of course.

Undershaft

Very civilly. The whole nation knows it, Mrs. Baines.

Mrs. Baines

No, Sir: the whole nation does not know it, or we should not be crippled as we are for want of money to carry our work through the length and breadth of the land. Let me tell you that there would have been rioting this winter in London but for us.

Undershaft

You really think so?

Mrs. Baines

I know it. I remember 1886, when you rich gentlemen hardened your hearts against the cry of the poor. They broke the windows of your clubs in Pall Mall.

Undershaft

Gleaming with approval of their method. And the Mansion House Fund went up next day from thirty thousand pounds to seventy-nine thousand! I remember quite well.

Mrs. Baines

Well, won’t you help me to get at the people? They won’t break windows then. Come here, Price. Let me show you to this gentleman Price comes to be inspected. Do you remember the window breaking?

Price

My ole father thought it was the revolution, ma’am.

Mrs. Baines

Would you break windows now?

Price

Oh no ma’m. The windows of eaven ’av bin opened to me. I know now that the rich man is a sinner like myself.

Rummy

Appearing above at the loft door. Snobby Price!

Price

Wot is it?

Rummy

Your mother’s askin for you at the other gate in Crippses Lane. She’s heard about your confession. Price turns pale.

Mrs. Baines

Go, Mr. Price; and pray with her.

Jenny

You can go through the shelter, Snobby.

Price

To Mrs. Baines. I couldn’t face her now; ma’am, with all the weight of my sins fresh on me. Tell her she’ll find her son at ’ome, waitin’ for her in prayer. He skulks off through the gate, incidentally stealing the sovereign on his way out by picking up his cap from the drum.

Mrs. Baines

With swimming eyes. You see how we take the anger and the bitterness against you out of their hearts, Mr. Undershaft.

Undershaft

It is certainly most convenient and gratifying to all large employers of labor, Mrs. Baines.

Mrs. Baines

Barbara: Jenny: I have good news: most wonderful news. Jenny runs to her. My prayers have been answered. I told you they would, Jenny, didn’t I?

Jenny

Yes, yes.

Barbara

Moving nearer to the drum. Have we got money enough to keep the shelter open?

Mrs. Baines

I hope we shall have enough to keep all the shelters open. Lord Saxmundham has promised us five thousand pounds⁠—

Barbara

Hooray!

Jenny

Glory!

Mrs. Baines

—if⁠—

Barbara

“If!” If what?

Mrs. Baines

If five other gentlemen will give a thousand each to make it up to ten thousand.

Barbara

Who is Lord Saxmundham? I never heard of him.

Undershaft

Who has pricked up his ears at the peer’s name, and is now watching Barbara curiously. A new creation, my dear. You have heard of Sir Horace Bodger?

Barbara

Bodger! Do you mean the distiller? Bodger’s whisky!

Undershaft

That is the man. He is one of the greatest of our public benefactors. He restored the cathedral at Hakington. They made him a baronet for that. He gave half a million to the funds of his party: they made him a baron for that.

Shirley

What will they give him for the five thousand?

Undershaft

There is nothing left to give him. So the five thousand, I should think, is to save his soul.

Mrs. Baines

Heaven grant it may! Oh Mr. Undershaft, you have some very rich friends. Can’t you help us towards the other five thousand? We are going to hold a great meeting this afternoon at the Assembly Hall in the Mile End Road. If I could only announce that one gentleman had come forward to support Lord Saxmundham, others would follow. Don’t you know somebody? Couldn’t you? Wouldn’t you? Her eyes fill with tears. oh, think of those poor people, Mr. Undershaft: think of how much it means to them, and how little to a great man like you.

Undershaft

Sardonically gallant. Mrs. Baines: you are irresistible. I can’t disappoint you; and I can’t deny myself the satisfaction of making Bodger pay up. You shall have your five thousand pounds.

Mrs. Baines

Thank God!

Undershaft

You don’t thank me?

Mrs. Baines

Oh sir, don’t try to be cynical: don’t be ashamed of being a good man. The Lord will bless you abundantly; and our prayers will be like a strong fortification round you all the days of your life. With a touch of caution. You will let me have the cheque to show at the meeting, won’t you? Jenny: go in and fetch a pen and ink. Jenny runs to the shelter door.

Undershaft

Do not disturb Miss Hill: I have a fountain pen. Jenny halts. He sits at the table and writes the cheque. Cusins rises to make more room for him. They all watch him silently.

Bill

Cynically, aside to Barbara, his voice and accent horribly debased. Wot prawce Selvytion nah?

Barbara

Stop. Undershaft stops writing: they all turn to her in surprise. Mrs. Baines: are you really going to take this money?

Mrs. Baines

Astonished. Why not, dear?

Barbara

Why not! Do you know what my father is? Have you forgotten that Lord Saxmundham is Bodger the whisky man? Do you remember how we implored the County Council to stop him from writing Bodger’s Whisky in letters of fire against the sky; so that the poor drink-ruined creatures on the embankment could not wake up from their snatches of sleep without being reminded of their deadly thirst by that wicked sky sign? Do you know that the worst thing I have had to fight here is not the devil, but Bodger, Bodger, Bodger, with his whisky, his distilleries, and his tied houses? Are you going to make our shelter another tied house for him, and ask me to keep it?

Bill

Rotten drunken whisky it is too.

Mrs. Baines

Dear Barbara: Lord Saxmundham has a soul to be saved like any of us. If heaven has found the way to make a good use of his money, are we to set ourselves up against the answer to our prayers?

Barbara

I know he has a soul to be saved. Let him come down here; and I’ll do my best to help him to his salvation. But he wants to send his cheque down to buy us, and go on being as wicked as ever.

Undershaft

With a reasonableness which Cusins alone perceives to be ironical. My dear Barbara: alcohol is a very necessary article. It heals the sick⁠—

Barbara

It does nothing of the sort.

Undershaft

Well, it assists the doctor: that is perhaps a less questionable way of putting it. It makes life bearable to millions of people who could not endure their existence if they were quite sober. It enables Parliament to do things at eleven at night that no sane person would do at eleven in the morning. Is it Bodger’s fault that this inestimable gift is deplorably abused by less than one percent of the poor? He turns again to the table; signs the cheque; and crosses it.

Mrs. Baines

Barbara: will there be less drinking or more if all those poor souls we are saving come tomorrow and find the doors of our shelters shut in their faces? Lord Saxmundham gives us the money to stop drinking⁠—to take his own business from him.

Cusins

Impishly. Pure self-sacrifice on Bodger’s part, clearly! Bless dear Bodger! Barbara almost breaks down as Adolpbus, too, fails her.

Undershaft

Tearing out the cheque and pocketing the book as he rises and goes past Cusins to Mrs. Baines. I also, Mrs. Baines, may claim a little disinterestedness. Think of my business! think of the widows and orphans! the men and lads torn to pieces with shrapnel and poisoned with lyddite! Mrs. Baines shrinks; but he goes on remorselessly. The oceans of blood, not one drop of which is shed in a really just cause! the ravaged crops! the peaceful peasants forced, women and men, to till their fields under the fire of opposing armies on pain of starvation! the bad blood of the fierce little cowards at home who egg on others to fight for the gratification of their national vanity! All this makes money for me: I am never richer, never busier than when the papers are full of it. Well, it is your work to preach peace on earth and goodwill to men. Mrs. Baines’s face lights up again. Every convert you make is a vote against war. Her lips move in prayer. Yet I give you this money to help you to hasten my own commercial ruin. He gives her the cheque.

Cusins

Mounting the form in an ecstasy of mischief. The millennium will be inaugurated by the unselfishness of Undershaft and Bodger. Oh be joyful! He takes the drumsticks from his pockets and flourishes them.

Mrs. Baines

Taking the cheque. The longer I live the more proof I see that there is an Infinite Goodness that turns everything to the work of salvation sooner or later. Who would have thought that any good could have come out of war and drink? And yet their profits are brought today to the feet of salvation to do its blessed work. She is affected to tears.

Jenny

Running to Mrs. Baines and throwing her arms round her. Oh dear! how blessed, how glorious it all is!

Cusins

In a convulsion of irony. Let us seize this unspeakable moment. Let us march to the great meeting at once. Excuse me just an instant. He rushes into the shelter. Jenny takes her tambourine from the drum head.

Mrs. Baines

Mr. Undershaft: have you ever seen a thousand people fall on their knees with one impulse and pray? Come with us to the meeting. Barbara shall tell them that the Army is saved, and saved through you.

Cusins

Returning impetuously from the shelter with a flag and a trombone, and coming between Mrs. Baines and Undershaft. You shall carry the flag down the first street, Mrs. Baines He gives her the flag. Mr. Undershaft is a gifted trombonist: he shall intone an Olympian diapason to the West Ham Salvation March. Aside to Undershaft, as he forces the trombone on him. Blow, Machiavelli, blow.

Undershaft

Aside to him, as he takes the trombone. The trumpet in Zion! Cusins rushes to the drum, which he takes up and puts on. Undershaft continues, aloud. I will do my best. I could vamp a bass if I knew the tune.

Cusins

It is a wedding chorus from one of Donizetti’s operas; but we have converted it. We convert everything to good here, including Bodger. You remember the chorus. “For thee immense rejoicing⁠—immenso giubilo⁠—immenso giubilo.” With drum obbligato. Rum tum ti tum tum, tum tum ti ta⁠—

Barbara

Dolly: you are breaking my heart.

Cusins

What is a broken heart more or less here? Dionysos Undershaft has descended. I am possessed.

Mrs. Baines

Come, Barbara: I must have my dear Major to carry the flag with me.

Jenny

Yes, yes, Major darling.

Cusins

Snatches the tambourine out of Jenny’s hand and mutely offers it to Barbara.

Barbara

Coming forward a little as she puts the offer behind her with a shudder, whilst Cusins recklessly tosses the tambourine back to Jenny and goes to the gate. I can’t come.

Jenny

Not come!

Mrs. Baines

With tears in her eyes. Barbara: do you think I am wrong to take the money?

Barbara

Impulsively going to her and kissing her. No, no: God help you, dear, you must: you are saving the Army. Go; and may you have a great meeting!

Jenny

But arn’t you coming?

Barbara

No. She begins taking off the silver brooch from her collar.

Mrs. Baines

Barbara: what are you doing?

Jenny

Why are you taking your badge off? You can’t be going to leave us, Major.

Barbara

Quietly. Father: come here.

Undershaft

Coming to her. My dear! Seeing that she is going to pin the badge on his collar, he retreats to the penthouse in some alarm.

Barbara

Following him. Don’t be frightened. She pins the badge on and steps back towards the table, showing him to the others. There! It’s not much for 5,000 pounds is it?

Mrs. Baines

Barbara: if you won’t come and pray with us, promise me you will pray for us.

Barbara

I can’t pray now. Perhaps I shall never pray again.

Mrs. Baines

Barbara!

Jenny

Major!

Barbara

Almost delirious. I can’t bear any more. Quick march!

Cusins

Calling to the procession in the street outside. Off we go. Play up, there! Immenso giubilo. He gives the time with his drum; and the band strikes up the march, which rapidly becomes more distant as the procession moves briskly away.

Mrs. Baines

I must go, dear. You’re overworked: you will be all right tomorrow. We’ll never lose you. Now Jenny: step out with the old flag. Blood and Fire! She marches out through the gate with her flag.

Jenny

Glory Hallelujah! Flourishing her tambourine and marching.

Undershaft

To Cusins, as he marches out past him easing the slide of his trombone. “My ducats and my daughter!”

Cusins

Following him out. Money and gunpowder!

Barbara

Drunkenness and Murder! My God: why hast thou forsaken me?

She sinks on the form with her face buried in her hands. The march passes away into silence. Bill Walker steals across to her.

Bill

Taunting. Wot prawce Selvytion nah?

Shirley

Don’t you hit her when she’s down.

Bill

She ’it me wen aw wiz dahn. Waw shouldn’t I git a bit o’ me own back?

Barbara

Raising her head. I didn’t take your money, Bill. She crosses the yard to the gate and turns her back on the two men to hide her face from them.

Bill

Sneering after her. Naow, it warn’t enough for you. Turning to the drum, he misses the money. Ellow! If you ain’t took it summun else az. Were’s it gorn? Blame me if Jenny Ill didn’t take it arter all!

Rummy

Screaming at him from the loft. You lie, you dirty blackguard! Snobby Price pinched it off the drum wen ’e took ap iz cap. I was ap ’ere all the time an’ see ’im do it.

Bill

Wot! Stowl maw money! Waw didn’t you call thief on him, you silly old mucker you?

Rummy

To serve you aht for ’ittin me acrost the face. It’s cost y’pahnd, that az. Raising a paean of squalid triumph. I done you. I’m even with you. I’ve ad it aht o’ y⁠—. Bill snatches up Shirley’s mug and hurls it at her. She slams the loft door and vanishes. The mug smashes against the door and falls in fragments.

Bill

Beginning to chuckle. Tell us, ole man, wot o’clock this morrun was it wen ’im as they call Snobby Prawce was sived?

Barbara

Turning to him more composedly, and with unspoiled sweetness. About half past twelve, Bill. And he pinched your pound at a quarter to two. I know. Well, you can’t afford to lose it. I’ll send it to you.

Bill

His voice and accent suddenly improving. Not if I was to starve for it. I ain’t to be bought.

Shirley

Ain’t you? You’d sell yourself to the devil for a pint o’ beer; ony there ain’t no devil to make the offer.

Bill

Unshamed. So I would, mate, and often ’av, cheerful. But she cawn’t buy me. Approaching Barbara. You wanted my soul, did you? Well, you ain’t got it.

Barbara

I nearly got it, Bill. But we’ve sold it back to you for ten thousand pounds.

Shirley

And dear at the money!

Barbara

No, Peter: it was worth more than money.

Bill

Salvationproof. It’s no good: you cawn’t get rahnd me nah. I don’t blieve in it; and I’ve seen today that I was right. Going. So long, old soupkitchener! Ta, ta, Major Earl’s Grendorter! Turning at the gate. Wot prawce Selvytion nah? Snobby Prawce! Ha! ha!

Barbara

Offering her hand. Goodbye, Bill.

Bill

Taken aback, half plucks his cap off then shoves it on again defiantly. Git aht. Barbara drops her hand, discouraged. He has a twinge of remorse. But thet’s aw rawt, you knaow. Nathink pasnl. Naow mellice. So long, Judy. He goes.

Barbara

No malice. So long, Bill.

Shirley

Shaking his head. You make too much of him, miss, in your innocence.

Barbara

Going to him. Peter: I’m like you now. Cleaned out, and lost my job.

Shirley

You’ve youth an hope. That’s two better than me. That’s hope for you.

Barbara

I’ll get you a job, Peter, the youth will have to be enough for me. She counts her money. I have just enough left for two teas at Lockharts, a Rowton doss for you, and my tram and bus home. He frowns and rises with offended pride. She takes his arm. Don’t be proud, Peter: it’s sharing between friends. And promise me you’ll talk to me and not let me cry. She draws him towards the gate.

Shirley

Well, I’m not accustomed to talk to the like of you⁠—

Barbara

Urgently. Yes, yes: you must talk to me. Tell me about Tom Paine’s books and Bradlaugh’s lectures. Come along.

Shirley

Ah, if you would only read Tom Paine in the proper spirit, miss! They go out through the gate together.