- The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Woman of No Importance, by Oscar Wilde
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- Title: A Woman of No Importance
- A Play
- Author: Oscar Wilde
- Release Date: September 16, 2014 [eBook #854]
- [This file was first posted on 20 March 1997]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WOMAN OF NO IMPORTANCE***
- Transcribed from the 1919 Methuen & Co. Ltd. edition by David Price,
- email ccx074@pglaf.org
- A WOMAN OF
- NO IMPORTANCE
- A PLAY
- BY
- OSCAR WILDE
- * * * * *
- METHUEN & CO., LTD.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
- _Eighth Edition_
- * * * * *
- _First Printed_ _1894_
- _First Issued by Methuen and Co._ (_Limited _February_ _1908_
- Editions on Handmade Paper and Japanese
- Vellum_)
- _Third Edition_ _September_ _1909_
- _Fourth Edition_ _May_ _1910_
- _Fifth Edition_ _December_ _1911_
- _Sixth Edition_ _March_ _1913_
- _Seventh Edition_ (_Cheap Form_) _October_ _1916_
- _Eighth Edition_ _1919_
- _The dramatic rights of_ ‘_A Woman of No Importance_’ _belong to Sir
- Herbert Beerbohm Tree and to Robert Ross_, _executor and administrator of
- Oscar Wilde’s estate_.
- * * * * *
- TO
- GLADYS
- COUNTESS DE GREY
- [MARCHIONESS OF RIPON]
- * * * * *
- THE PERSONS OF THE PLAY
- LORD ILLINGWORTH
- SIR JOHN PONTEFRACT
- LORD ALFRED RUFFORD
- MR. KELVIL, M.P.
- THE VEN. ARCHDEACON DAUBENY, D.D.
- GERALD ARBUTHNOT
- FARQUHAR, Butler
- FRANCIS, Footman
- * * * * *
- LADY HUNSTANTON
- LADY CAROLINE PONTEFRACT
- LADY STUTFIELD
- MRS. ALLONBY
- MISS HESTER WORSLEY
- ALICE, Maid
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT
- THE SCENES OF THE PLAY
- ACT I. _The Terrace at Hunstanton Chase_.
- ACT II. _The Drawing-room at Hunstanton Chase_.
- ACT III. _The Hall at Hunstanton Chase_.
- ACT IV. _Sitting-room in Mrs. Arbuthnot’s House at Wrockley_.
- TIME: _The Present_.
- PLACE: _The Shires_.
- _The action of the play takes place within twenty-four hours_.
- LONDON: HAYMARKET THEATRE
- _Lessee and Manager_: _Mr. H Beerbohm Tree_
- _April_ 19_th_, 1893
- LORD ILLINGWORTH _Mr. Tree_.
- SIR JOHN PONTEFRACT _Mr. E. Holman Clark_.
- LORD ALFRED RUFFORD _Mr. Ernest Lawford_.
- MR. KELVIL, M.P. _Mr. Charles Allan_.
- THE VEN. ARCHDEACON DAUBENY, D.D. _Mr. Kemble_.
- GERALD ARBUTHNOT _Mr. Terry_.
- FARQUHAR (_Butler_) _Mr. Hay_.
- FRANCIS (_Footman_) _Mr. Montague_.
- LADY HUNSTANTON _Miss Rose Leclercq_.
- LADY CAROLINE PONTEFRACT _Miss Le Thière_.
- LADY STUTFIELD _Miss Blanche Horlock_.
- MRS. ALLONBY _Mrs. Tree_.
- MISS HESTER WORSLEY _Miss Julia Neilson_.
- ALICE (_Maid_) _Miss Kelly_.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT _Mrs. Bernard-Beere_.
- FIRST ACT
- SCENE
- _Lawn in front of the terrace at Hunstanton_.
- [SIR JOHN _and_ LADY CAROLINE PONTEFRACT, MISS WORSLEY, _on chairs under
- large yew tree_.]
- LADY CAROLINE. I believe this is the first English country house you
- have stayed at, Miss Worsley?
- HESTER. Yes, Lady Caroline.
- LADY CAROLINE. You have no country houses, I am told, in America?
- HESTER. We have not many.
- LADY CAROLINE. Have you any country? What we should call country?
- HESTER. [_Smiling_.] We have the largest country in the world, Lady
- Caroline. They used to tell us at school that some of our states are as
- big as France and England put together.
- LADY CAROLINE. Ah! you must find it very draughty, I should fancy.
- [_To_ SIR JOHN.] John, you should have your muffler. What is the use of
- my always knitting mufflers for you if you won’t wear them?
- SIR JOHN. I am quite warm, Caroline, I assure you.
- LADY CAROLINE. I think not, John. Well, you couldn’t come to a more
- charming place than this, Miss Worsley, though the house is excessively
- damp, quite unpardonably damp, and dear Lady Hunstanton is sometimes a
- little lax about the people she asks down here. [_To_ SIR JOHN.] Jane
- mixes too much. Lord Illingworth, of course, is a man of high
- distinction. It is a privilege to meet him. And that member of
- Parliament, Mr. Kettle—
- SIR JOHN. Kelvil, my love, Kelvil.
- LADY CAROLINE. He must be quite respectable. One has never heard his
- name before in the whole course of one’s life, which speaks volumes for a
- man, nowadays. But Mrs. Allonby is hardly a very suitable person.
- HESTER. I dislike Mrs. Allonby. I dislike her more than I can say.
- LADY CAROLINE. I am not sure, Miss Worsley, that foreigners like
- yourself should cultivate likes or dislikes about the people they are
- invited to meet. Mrs. Allonby is very well born. She is a niece of Lord
- Brancaster’s. It is said, of course, that she ran away twice before she
- was married. But you know how unfair people often are. I myself don’t
- believe she ran away more than once.
- HESTER. Mr. Arbuthnot is very charming.
- LADY CAROLINE. Ah, yes! the young man who has a post in a bank. Lady
- Hunstanton is most kind in asking him here, and Lord Illingworth seems to
- have taken quite a fancy to him. I am not sure, however, that Jane is
- right in taking him out of his position. In my young days, Miss Worsley,
- one never met any one in society who worked for their living. It was not
- considered the thing.
- HESTER. In America those are the people we respect most.
- LADY CAROLINE. I have no doubt of it.
- HESTER. Mr. Arbuthnot has a beautiful nature! He is so simple, so
- sincere. He has one of the most beautiful natures I have ever come
- across. It is a privilege to meet _him_.
- LADY CAROLINE. It is not customary in England, Miss Worsley, for a young
- lady to speak with such enthusiasm of any person of the opposite sex.
- English women conceal their feelings till after they are married. They
- show them then.
- HESTER. Do you, in England, allow no friendship to exist between a young
- man and a young girl?
- [_Enter_ LADY HUNSTANTON, _followed by Footman with shawls and a
- cushion_.]
- LADY CAROLINE. We think it very inadvisable. Jane, I was just saying
- what a pleasant party you have asked us to meet. You have a wonderful
- power of selection. It is quite a gift.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Dear Caroline, how kind of you! I think we all do fit
- in very nicely together. And I hope our charming American visitor will
- carry back pleasant recollections of our English country life. [_To
- Footman_.] The cushion, there, Francis. And my shawl. The Shetland.
- Get the Shetland. [_Exit Footman for shawl_.]
- [_Enter_ GERALD ARBUTHNOT.]
- GERALD. Lady Hunstanton, I have such good news to tell you. Lord
- Illingworth has just offered to make me his secretary.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. His secretary? That is good news indeed, Gerald. It
- means a very brilliant future in store for you. Your dear mother will be
- delighted. I really must try and induce her to come up here to-night.
- Do you think she would, Gerald? I know how difficult it is to get her to
- go anywhere.
- GERALD. Oh! I am sure she would, Lady Hunstanton, if she knew Lord
- Illingworth had made me such an offer.
- [_Enter Footman with shawl_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I will write and tell her about it, and ask her to come
- up and meet him. [_To Footman_.] Just wait, Francis. [_Writes
- letter_.]
- LADY CAROLINE. That is a very wonderful opening for so young a man as
- you are, Mr. Arbuthnot.
- GERALD. It is indeed, Lady Caroline. I trust I shall be able to show
- myself worthy of it.
- LADY CAROLINE. I trust so.
- GERALD. [_To_ HESTER.] _You_ have not congratulated me yet, Miss
- Worsley.
- HESTER. Are you very pleased about it?
- GERALD. Of course I am. It means everything to me—things that were out
- of the reach of hope before may be within hope’s reach now.
- HESTER. Nothing should be out of the reach of hope. Life is a hope.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I fancy, Caroline, that Diplomacy is what Lord
- Illingworth is aiming at. I heard that he was offered Vienna. But that
- may not be true.
- LADY CAROLINE. I don’t think that England should be represented abroad
- by an unmarried man, Jane. It might lead to complications.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You are too nervous, Caroline. Believe me, you are too
- nervous. Besides, Lord Illingworth may marry any day. I was in hopes he
- would have married lady Kelso. But I believe he said her family was too
- large. Or was it her feet? I forget which. I regret it very much. She
- was made to be an ambassador’s wife.
- LADY CAROLINE. She certainly has a wonderful faculty of remembering
- people’s names, and forgetting their faces.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, that is very natural, Caroline, is it not? [_To
- Footman_.] Tell Henry to wait for an answer. I have written a line to
- your dear mother, Gerald, to tell her your good news, and to say she
- really must come to dinner.
- [_Exit Footman_.]
- GERALD. That is awfully kind of you, Lady Hunstanton. [_To_ HESTER.]
- Will you come for a stroll, Miss Worsley?
- HESTER. With pleasure. [_Exit with_ GERALD.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I am very much gratified at Gerald Arbuthnot’s good
- fortune. He is quite a _protégé_ of mine. And I am particularly pleased
- that Lord Illingworth should have made the offer of his own accord
- without my suggesting anything. Nobody likes to be asked favours. I
- remember poor Charlotte Pagden making herself quite unpopular one season,
- because she had a French governess she wanted to recommend to every one.
- LADY CAROLINE. I saw the governess, Jane. Lady Pagden sent her to me.
- It was before Eleanor came out. She was far too good-looking to be in
- any respectable household. I don’t wonder Lady Pagden was so anxious to
- get rid of her.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, that explains it.
- LADY CAROLINE. John, the grass is too damp for you. You had better go
- and put on your overshoes at once.
- SIR JOHN. I am quite comfortable, Caroline, I assure you.
- LADY CAROLINE. You must allow me to be the best judge of that, John.
- Pray do as I tell you.
- [SIR JOHN _gets up and goes off_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You spoil him, Caroline, you do indeed!
- [_Enter_ MRS. ALLONBY _and_ LADY STUTFIELD.]
- [_To_ MRS. ALLONBY.] Well, dear, I hope you like the park. It is said
- to be well timbered.
- MRS. ALLONBY. The trees are wonderful, Lady Hunstanton.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Quite, quite wonderful.
- MRS. ALLONBY. But somehow, I feel sure that if I lived in the country
- for six months, I should become so unsophisticated that no one would take
- the slightest notice of me.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I assure you, dear, that the country has not that
- effect at all. Why, it was from Melthorpe, which is only two miles from
- here, that Lady Belton eloped with Lord Fethersdale. I remember the
- occurrence perfectly. Poor Lord Belton died three days afterwards of
- joy, or gout. I forget which. We had a large party staying here at the
- time, so we were all very much interested in the whole affair.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I think to elope is cowardly. It’s running away from
- danger. And danger has become so rare in modern life.
- LADY CAROLINE. As far as I can make out, the young women of the present
- day seem to make it the sole object of their lives to be always playing
- with fire.
- MRS. ALLONBY. The one advantage of playing with fire, Lady Caroline, is
- that one never gets even singed. It is the people who don’t know how to
- play with it who get burned up.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes; I see that. It is very, very helpful.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I don’t know how the world would get on with such a
- theory as that, dear Mrs. Allonby.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Ah! The world was made for men and not for women.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, don’t say that, Lady Stutfield. We have a much better
- time than they have. There are far more things forbidden to us than are
- forbidden to them.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes; that is quite, quite true. I had not thought of
- that.
- [_Enter_ SIR JOHN _and_ MR. KELVIL.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, Mr. Kelvil, have you got through your work?
- KELVIL. I have finished my writing for the day, Lady Hunstanton. It has
- been an arduous task. The demands on the time of a public man are very
- heavy nowadays, very heavy indeed. And I don’t think they meet with
- adequate recognition.
- LADY CAROLINE. John, have you got your overshoes on?
- SIR JOHN. Yes, my love.
- LADY CAROLINE. I think you had better come over here, John. It is more
- sheltered.
- SIR JOHN. I am quite comfortable, Caroline.
- LADY CAROLINE. I think not, John. You had better sit beside me. [SIR
- JOHN _rises and goes across_.]
- LADY STUTFIELD. And what have you been writing about this morning, Mr.
- Kelvil?
- KELVIL. On the usual subject, Lady Stutfield. On Purity.
- LADY STUTFIELD. That must be such a very, very interesting thing to
- write about.
- KELVIL. It is the one subject of really national importance, nowadays,
- Lady Stutfield. I purpose addressing my constituents on the question
- before Parliament meets. I find that the poorer classes of this country
- display a marked desire for a higher ethical standard.
- LADY STUTFIELD. How quite, quite nice of them.
- LADY CAROLINE. Are you in favour of women taking part in politics, Mr.
- Kettle?
- SIR JOHN. Kelvil, my love, Kelvil.
- KELVIL. The growing influence of women is the one reassuring thing in
- our political life, Lady Caroline. Women are always on the side of
- morality, public and private.
- LADY STUTFIELD. It is so very, very gratifying to hear you say that.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, yes!—the moral qualities in women—that is the
- important thing. I am afraid, Caroline, that dear Lord Illingworth
- doesn’t value the moral qualities in women as much as he should.
- [_Enter_ LORD ILLINGWORTH.]
- LADY STUTFIELD. The world says that Lord Illingworth is very, very
- wicked.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. But what world says that, Lady Stutfield? It must be
- the next world. This world and I are on excellent terms. [_Sits down
- beside_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- LADY STUTFIELD. Every one _I_ know says you are very, very wicked.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is perfectly monstrous the way people go about,
- nowadays, saying things against one behind one’s back that are absolutely
- and entirely true.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Dear Lord Illingworth is quite hopeless, Lady
- Stutfield. I have given up trying to reform him. It would take a Public
- Company with a Board of Directors and a paid Secretary to do that. But
- you have the secretary already, Lord Illingworth, haven’t you? Gerald
- Arbuthnot has told us of his good fortune; it is really most kind of you.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Oh, don’t say that, Lady Hunstanton. Kind is a
- dreadful word. I took a great fancy to young Arbuthnot the moment I met
- him, and he’ll be of considerable use to me in something I am foolish
- enough to think of doing.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. He is an admirable young man. And his mother is one of
- my dearest friends. He has just gone for a walk with our pretty
- American. She is very pretty, is she not?
- LADY CAROLINE. Far too pretty. These American girls carry off all the
- good matches. Why can’t they stay in their own country? They are always
- telling us it is the Paradise of women.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is, Lady Caroline. That is why, like Eve, they are
- so extremely anxious to get out of it.
- LADY CAROLINE. Who are Miss Worsley’s parents?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. American women are wonderfully clever in concealing
- their parents.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear Lord Illingworth, what do you mean? Miss
- Worsley, Caroline, is an orphan. Her father was a very wealthy
- millionaire or philanthropist, or both, I believe, who entertained my son
- quite hospitably, when he visited Boston. I don’t know how he made his
- money, originally.
- KELVIL. I fancy in American dry goods.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What are American dry goods?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. American novels.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. How very singular! . . . Well, from whatever source her
- large fortune came, I have a great esteem for Miss Worsley. She dresses
- exceedingly well. All Americans do dress well. They get their clothes
- in Paris.
- MRS. ALLONBY. They say, Lady Hunstanton, that when good Americans die
- they go to Paris.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Indeed? And when bad Americans die, where do they go
- to?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Oh, they go to America.
- KELVIL. I am afraid you don’t appreciate America, Lord Illingworth. It
- is a very remarkable country, especially considering its youth.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. The youth of America is their oldest tradition. It
- has been going on now for three hundred years. To hear them talk one
- would imagine they were in their first childhood. As far as civilisation
- goes they are in their second.
- KELVIL. There is undoubtedly a great deal of corruption in American
- politics. I suppose you allude to that?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I wonder.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Politics are in a sad way everywhere, I am told. They
- certainly are in England. Dear Mr. Cardew is ruining the country. I
- wonder Mrs. Cardew allows him. I am sure, Lord Illingworth, you don’t
- think that uneducated people should be allowed to have votes?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I think they are the only people who should.
- KELVIL. Do you take no side then in modern politics, Lord Illingworth?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One should never take sides in anything, Mr. Kelvil.
- Taking sides is the beginning of sincerity, and earnestness follows
- shortly afterwards, and the human being becomes a bore. However, the
- House of Commons really does very little harm. You can’t make people
- good by Act of Parliament,—that is something.
- KELVIL. You cannot deny that the House of Commons has always shown great
- sympathy with the sufferings of the poor.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. That is its special vice. That is the special vice of
- the age. One should sympathise with the joy, the beauty, the colour of
- life. The less said about life’s sores the better, Mr. Kelvil.
- KELVIL. Still our East End is a very important problem.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Quite so. It is the problem of slavery. And we are
- trying to solve it by amusing the slaves.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Certainly, a great deal may be done by means of cheap
- entertainments, as you say, Lord Illingworth. Dear Dr. Daubeny, our
- rector here, provides, with the assistance of his curates, really
- admirable recreations for the poor during the winter. And much good may
- be done by means of a magic lantern, or a missionary, or some popular
- amusement of that kind.
- LADY CAROLINE. I am not at all in favour of amusements for the poor,
- Jane. Blankets and coals are sufficient. There is too much love of
- pleasure amongst the upper classes as it is. Health is what we want in
- modern life. The tone is not healthy, not healthy at all.
- KELVIL. You are quite right, Lady Caroline.
- LADY CAROLINE. I believe I am usually right.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Horrid word ‘health.’
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Silliest word in our language, and one knows so well
- the popular idea of health. The English country gentleman galloping
- after a fox—the unspeakable in full pursuit of the uneatable.
- KELVIL. May I ask, Lord Illingworth, if you regard the House of Lords as
- a better institution than the House of Commons?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. A much better institution, of course. We in the House
- of Lords are never in touch with public opinion. That makes us a
- civilised body.
- KELVIL. Are you serious in putting forward such a view?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Quite serious, Mr. Kelvil. [_To_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- Vulgar habit that is people have nowadays of asking one, after one has
- given them an idea, whether one is serious or not. Nothing is serious
- except passion. The intellect is not a serious thing, and never has
- been. It is an instrument on which one plays, that is all. The only
- serious form of intellect I know is the British intellect. And on the
- British intellect the illiterates play the drum.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What are you saying, Lord Illingworth, about the drum?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I was merely talking to Mrs. Allonby about the leading
- articles in the London newspapers.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. But do you believe all that is written in the
- newspapers?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I do. Nowadays it is only the unreadable that occurs.
- [_Rises with_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Are you going, Mrs. Allonby?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Just as far as the conservatory. Lord Illingworth told me
- this morning that there was an orchid there as beautiful as the seven
- deadly sins.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear, I hope there is nothing of the kind. I will
- certainly speak to the gardener.
- [_Exit_ MRS. ALLONBY _and_ LORD ILLINGWORTH.]
- LADY CAROLINE. Remarkable type, Mrs. Allonby.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. She lets her clever tongue run away with her sometimes.
- LADY CAROLINE. Is that the only thing, Jane, Mrs. Allonby allows to run
- away with her?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I hope so, Caroline, I am sure.
- [_Enter_ LORD ALFRED.]
- Dear Lord Alfred, do join us. [LORD ALFRED _sits down beside_ LADY
- STUTFIELD.]
- LADY CAROLINE. You believe good of every one, Jane. It is a great
- fault.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Do you really, really think, Lady Caroline, that one
- should believe evil of every one?
- LADY CAROLINE. I think it is much safer to do so, Lady Stutfield.
- Until, of course, people are found out to be good. But that requires a
- great deal of investigation nowadays.
- LADY STUTFIELD. But there is so much unkind scandal in modern life.
- LADY CAROLINE. Lord Illingworth remarked to me last night at dinner that
- the basis of every scandal is an absolutely immoral certainty.
- KELVIL. Lord Illingworth is, of course, a very brilliant man, but he
- seems to me to be lacking in that fine faith in the nobility and purity
- of life which is so important in this century.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes, quite, quite important, is it not?
- KELVIL. He gives me the impression of a man who does not appreciate the
- beauty of our English home-life. I would say that he was tainted with
- foreign ideas on the subject.
- LADY STUTFIELD. There is nothing, nothing like the beauty of home-life,
- is there?
- KELVIL. It is the mainstay of our moral system in England, Lady
- Stutfield. Without it we would become like our neighbours.
- LADY STUTFIELD. That would be so, so sad, would it not?
- KELVIL. I am afraid, too, that Lord Illingworth regards woman simply as
- a toy. Now, I have never regarded woman as a toy. Woman is the
- intellectual helpmeet of man in public as in private life. Without her
- we should forget the true ideals. [_Sits down beside_ LADY STUTFIELD.]
- LADY STUTFIELD. I am so very, very glad to hear you say that.
- LADY CAROLINE. You a married man, Mr. Kettle?
- SIR JOHN. Kelvil, dear, Kelvil.
- KELVIL. I am married, Lady Caroline.
- LADY CAROLINE. Family?
- KELVIL. Yes.
- LADY CAROLINE. How many?
- KELVIL. Eight.
- [LADY STUTFIELD _turns her attention to_ LORD ALFRED.]
- LADY CAROLINE. Mrs. Kettle and the children are, I suppose, at the
- seaside? [SIR JOHN _shrugs his shoulders_.]
- KELVIL. My wife is at the seaside with the children, Lady Caroline.
- LADY CAROLINE. You will join them later on, no doubt?
- KELVIL. If my public engagements permit me.
- LADY CAROLINE. Your public life must be a great source of gratification
- to Mrs. Kettle.
- SIR JOHN. Kelvil, my love, Kelvil.
- LADY STUTFIELD. [_To_ LORD ALFRED.] How very, very charming those
- gold-tipped cigarettes of yours are, Lord Alfred.
- LORD ALFRED. They are awfully expensive. I can only afford them when
- I’m in debt.
- LADY STUTFIELD. It must be terribly, terribly distressing to be in debt.
- LORD ALFRED. One must have some occupation nowadays. If I hadn’t my
- debts I shouldn’t have anything to think about. All the chaps I know are
- in debt.
- LADY STUTFIELD. But don’t the people to whom you owe the money give you
- a great, great deal of annoyance?
- [_Enter Footman_.]
- LORD ALFRED. Oh, no, they write; I don’t.
- LADY STUTFIELD. How very, very strange.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, here is a letter, Caroline, from dear Mrs.
- Arbuthnot. She won’t dine. I am so sorry. But she will come in the
- evening. I am very pleased indeed. She is one of the sweetest of women.
- Writes a beautiful hand, too, so large, so firm. [_Hands letter to_ LADY
- CAROLINE.]
- LADY CAROLINE. [_Looking at it_.] A little lacking in femininity, Jane.
- Femininity is the quality I admire most in women.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Taking back letter and leaving it on table_.] Oh!
- she is very feminine, Caroline, and so good too. You should hear what
- the Archdeacon says of her. He regards her as his right hand in the
- parish. [_Footman speaks to her_.] In the Yellow Drawing-room. Shall
- we all go in? Lady Stutfield, shall we go in to tea?
- LADY STUTFIELD. With pleasure, Lady Hunstanton. [_They rise and proceed
- to go off_. SIR JOHN offers to carry LADY STUTFIELD’S cloak.]
- LADY CAROLINE. John! If you would allow your nephew to look after Lady
- Stutfield’s cloak, you might help me with my workbasket.
- [_Enter_ LORD ILLINGWORTH _and_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- SIR JOHN. Certainly, my love. [_Exeunt_.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. Curious thing, plain women are always jealous of their
- husbands, beautiful women never are!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Beautiful women never have time. They are always so
- occupied in being jealous of other people’s husbands.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I should have thought Lady Caroline would have grown tired
- of conjugal anxiety by this time! Sir John is her fourth!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. So much marriage is certainly not becoming. Twenty
- years of romance make a woman look like a ruin; but twenty years of
- marriage make her something like a public building.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Twenty years of romance! Is there such a thing?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Not in our day. Women have become too brilliant.
- Nothing spoils a romance so much as a sense of humour in the woman.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Or the want of it in the man.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You are quite right. In a Temple every one should be
- serious, except the thing that is worshipped.
- MRS. ALLONBY. And that should be man?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Women kneel so gracefully; men don’t.
- MRS. ALLONBY. You are thinking of Lady Stutfield!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I assure you I have not thought of Lady Stutfield for
- the last quarter of an hour.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Is she such a mystery?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. She is more than a mystery—she is a mood.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Moods don’t last.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is their chief charm.
- [_Enter_ HESTER _and_ GERALD.]
- GERALD. Lord Illingworth, every one has been congratulating me, Lady
- Hunstanton and Lady Caroline, and . . . every one. I hope I shall make a
- good secretary.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You will be the pattern secretary, Gerald. [_Talks to
- him_.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. You enjoy country life, Miss Worsley?
- HESTER. Very much indeed.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Don’t find yourself longing for a London dinner-party?
- HESTER. I dislike London dinner-parties.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I adore them. The clever people never listen, and the
- stupid people never talk.
- HESTER. I think the stupid people talk a great deal.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, I never listen!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear boy, if I didn’t like you I wouldn’t have made
- you the offer. It is because I like you so much that I want to have you
- with me.
- [_Exit_ HESTER _with_ GERALD.]
- Charming fellow, Gerald Arbuthnot!
- MRS. ALLONBY. He is very nice; very nice indeed. But I can’t stand the
- American young lady.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Why?
- MRS. ALLONBY. She told me yesterday, and in quite a loud voice too, that
- she was only eighteen. It was most annoying.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One should never trust a woman who tells one her real
- age. A woman who would tell one that, would tell one anything.
- MRS. ALLONBY. She is a Puritan besides—
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Ah, that is inexcusable. I don’t mind plain women
- being Puritans. It is the only excuse they have for being plain. But
- she is decidedly pretty. I admire her immensely. [_Looks steadfastly
- at_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. What a thoroughly bad man you must be!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What do you call a bad man?
- MRS. ALLONBY. The sort of man who admires innocence.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. And a bad woman?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh! the sort of woman a man never gets tired of.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You are severe—on yourself.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Define us as a sex.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Sphinxes without secrets.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Does that include the Puritan women?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Do you know, I don’t believe in the existence of
- Puritan women? I don’t think there is a woman in the world who would not
- be a little flattered if one made love to her. It is that which makes
- women so irresistibly adorable.
- MRS. ALLONBY. You think there is no woman in the world who would object
- to being kissed?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Very few.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Miss Worsley would not let you kiss her.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Are you sure?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Quite.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What do you think she’d do if I kissed her?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Either marry you, or strike you across the face with her
- glove. What would you do if she struck you across the face with her
- glove?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Fall in love with her, probably.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Then it is lucky you are not going to kiss her!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Is that a challenge?
- MRS. ALLONBY. It is an arrow shot into the air.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Don’t you know that I always succeed in whatever I
- try?
- MRS. ALLONBY. I am sorry to hear it. We women adore failures. They
- lean on us.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You worship successes. You cling to them.
- MRS. ALLONBY. We are the laurels to hide their baldness.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. And they need you always, except at the moment of
- triumph.
- MRS. ALLONBY. They are uninteresting then.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. How tantalising you are! [_A pause_.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. Lord Illingworth, there is one thing I shall always like
- you for.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Only one thing? And I have so many bad qualities.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, don’t be too conceited about them. You may lose them
- as you grow old.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I never intend to grow old. The soul is born old but
- grows young. That is the comedy of life.
- MRS. ALLONBY. And the body is born young and grows old. That is life’s
- tragedy.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Its comedy also, sometimes. But what is the
- mysterious reason why you will always like me?
- MRS. ALLONBY. It is that you have never made love to me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I have never done anything else.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Really? I have not noticed it.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. How fortunate! It might have been a tragedy for both
- of us.
- MRS. ALLONBY. We should each have survived.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One can survive everything nowadays, except death, and
- live down anything except a good reputation.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Have you tried a good reputation?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is one of the many annoyances to which I have never
- been subjected.
- MRS. ALLONBY. It may come.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Why do you threaten me?
- MRS. ALLONBY. I will tell you when you have kissed the Puritan.
- [_Enter Footman_.]
- FRANCIS. Tea is served in the Yellow Drawing-room, my lord.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Tell her ladyship we are coming in.
- FRANCIS. Yes, my lord.
- [_Exit_.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Shall we go in to tea?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Do you like such simple pleasures?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I adore simple pleasures. They are the last refuge of
- the complex. But, if you wish, let us stay here. Yes, let us stay here.
- The Book of Life begins with a man and a woman in a garden.
- MRS. ALLONBY. It ends with Revelations.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You fence divinely. But the button has come of your
- foil.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I have still the mask.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It makes your eyes lovelier.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Thank you. Come.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Sees_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT’S _letter on table_, _and takes
- it up and looks at envelope_.] What a curious handwriting! It reminds
- me of the handwriting of a woman I used to know years ago.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Who?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Oh! no one. No one in particular. A woman of no
- importance. [_Throws letter down_, _and passes up the steps of the
- terrace with_ MRS. ALLONBY. _They smile at each other_.]
- ACT DROP.
- SECOND ACT
- SCENE
- _Drawing-room at Hunstanton_, _after dinner_, _lamps lit_. _Door_ L.C.
- _Door_ R.C.
- [_Ladies seated on sofas_.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. What a comfort it is to have got rid of the men for a
- little!
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes; men persecute us dreadfully, don’t they?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Persecute us? I wish they did.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear!
- MRS. ALLONBY. The annoying thing is that the wretches can be perfectly
- happy without us. That is why I think it is every woman’s duty never to
- leave them alone for a single moment, except during this short breathing
- space after dinner; without which I believe we poor women would be
- absolutely worn to shadows.
- [_Enter Servants with coffee_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Worn to shadows, dear?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Yes, Lady Hunstanton. It is such a strain keeping men up
- to the mark. They are always trying to escape from us.
- LADY STUTFIELD. It seems to me that it is we who are always trying to
- escape from them. Men are so very, very heartless. They know their
- power and use it.
- LADY CAROLINE. [_Takes coffee from Servant_.] What stuff and nonsense
- all this about men is! The thing to do is to keep men in their proper
- place.
- MRS. ALLONBY. But what is their proper place, Lady Caroline?
- LADY CAROLINE. Looking after their wives, Mrs. Allonby.
- MRS. ALLONBY. [_Takes coffee from Servant_.] Really? And if they’re
- not married?
- LADY CAROLINE. If they are not married, they should be looking after a
- wife. It’s perfectly scandalous the amount of bachelors who are going
- about society. There should be a law passed to compel them all to marry
- within twelve months.
- LADY STUTFIELD. [_Refuses coffee_.] But if they’re in love with some
- one who, perhaps, is tied to another?
- LADY CAROLINE. In that case, Lady Stutfield, they should be married off
- in a week to some plain respectable girl, in order to teach them not to
- meddle with other people’s property.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I don’t think that we should ever be spoken of as other
- people’s property. All men are married women’s property. That is the
- only true definition of what married women’s property really is. But we
- don’t belong to any one.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Oh, I am so very, very glad to hear you say so.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. But do you really think, dear Caroline, that
- legislation would improve matters in any way? I am told that, nowadays,
- all the married men live like bachelors, and all the bachelors like
- married men.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I certainly never know one from the other.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Oh, I think one can always know at once whether a man
- has home claims upon his life or not. I have noticed a very, very sad
- expression in the eyes of so many married men.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, all that I have noticed is that they are horribly
- tedious when they are good husbands, and abominably conceited when they
- are not.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, I suppose the type of husband has completely
- changed since my young days, but I’m bound to state that poor dear
- Hunstanton was the most delightful of creatures, and as good as gold.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, my husband is a sort of promissory note; I’m tired of
- meeting him.
- LADY CAROLINE. But you renew him from time to time, don’t you?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh no, Lady Caroline. I have only had one husband as yet.
- I suppose you look upon me as quite an amateur.
- LADY CAROLINE. With your views on life I wonder you married at all.
- MRS. ALLONBY. So do I.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear child, I believe you are really very happy in
- your married life, but that you like to hide your happiness from others.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I assure you I was horribly deceived in Ernest.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Oh, I hope not, dear. I knew his mother quite well.
- She was a Stratton, Caroline, one of Lord Crowland’s daughters.
- LADY CAROLINE. Victoria Stratton? I remember her perfectly. A silly
- fair-haired woman with no chin.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, Ernest has a chin. He has a very strong chin, a
- square chin. Ernest’s chin is far too square.
- LADY STUTFIELD. But do you really think a man’s chin can be too square?
- I think a man should look very, very strong, and that his chin should be
- quite, quite square.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Then you should certainly know Ernest, Lady Stutfield. It
- is only fair to tell you beforehand he has got no conversation at all.
- LADY STUTFIELD. I adore silent men.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, Ernest isn’t silent. He talks the whole time. But he
- has got no conversation. What he talks about I don’t know. I haven’t
- listened to him for years.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Have you never forgiven him then? How sad that seems!
- But all life is very, very sad, is it not?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Life, Lady Stutfield, is simply a _mauvais quart d’heure_
- made up of exquisite moments.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes, there are moments, certainly. But was it something
- very, very wrong that Mr. Allonby did? Did he become angry with you, and
- say anything that was unkind or true?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh dear, no. Ernest is invariably calm. That is one of
- the reasons he always gets on my nerves. Nothing is so aggravating as
- calmness. There is something positively brutal about the good temper of
- most modern men. I wonder we women stand it as well as we do.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes; men’s good temper shows they are not so sensitive
- as we are, not so finely strung. It makes a great barrier often between
- husband and wife, does it not? But I would so much like to know what was
- the wrong thing Mr. Allonby did.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Well, I will tell you, if you solemnly promise to tell
- everybody else.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Thank you, thank you. I will make a point of repeating
- it.
- MRS. ALLONBY. When Ernest and I were engaged, he swore to me positively
- on his knees that he had never loved any one before in the whole course
- of his life. I was very young at the time, so I didn’t believe him, I
- needn’t tell you. Unfortunately, however, I made no enquiries of any
- kind till after I had been actually married four or five months. I found
- out then that what he had told me was perfectly true. And that sort of
- thing makes a man so absolutely uninteresting.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear!
- MRS. ALLONBY. Men always want to be a woman’s first love. That is their
- clumsy vanity. We women have a more subtle instinct about things. What
- we like is to be a man’s last romance.
- LADY STUTFIELD. I see what you mean. It’s very, very beautiful.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear child, you don’t mean to tell me that you won’t
- forgive your husband because he never loved any one else? Did you ever
- hear such a thing, Caroline? I am quite surprised.
- LADY CAROLINE. Oh, women have become so highly educated, Jane, that
- nothing should surprise us nowadays, except happy marriages. They
- apparently are getting remarkably rare.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, they’re quite out of date.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Except amongst the middle classes, I have been told.
- MRS. ALLONBY. How like the middle classes!
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes—is it not?—very, very like them.
- LADY CAROLINE. If what you tell us about the middle classes is true,
- Lady Stutfield, it redounds greatly to their credit. It is much to be
- regretted that in our rank of life the wife should be so persistently
- frivolous, under the impression apparently that it is the proper thing to
- be. It is to that I attribute the unhappiness of so many marriages we
- all know of in society.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Do you know, Lady Caroline, I don’t think the frivolity of
- the wife has ever anything to do with it. More marriages are ruined
- nowadays by the common sense of the husband than by anything else. How
- can a woman be expected to be happy with a man who insists on treating
- her as if she were a perfectly rational being?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear!
- MRS. ALLONBY. Man, poor, awkward, reliable, necessary man belongs to a
- sex that has been rational for millions and millions of years. He can’t
- help himself. It is in his race. The History of Woman is very
- different. We have always been picturesque protests against the mere
- existence of common sense. We saw its dangers from the first.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes, the common sense of husbands is certainly most,
- most trying. Do tell me your conception of the Ideal Husband. I think
- it would be so very, very helpful.
- MRS. ALLONBY. The Ideal Husband? There couldn’t be such a thing. The
- institution is wrong.
- LADY STUTFIELD. The Ideal Man, then, in his relations to _us_.
- LADY CAROLINE. He would probably be extremely realistic.
- MRS. CAROLINE. The Ideal Man! Oh, the Ideal Man should talk to us as if
- we were goddesses, and treat us as if we were children. He should refuse
- all our serious requests, and gratify every one of our whims. He should
- encourage us to have caprices, and forbid us to have missions. He should
- always say much more than he means, and always mean much more than he
- says.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. But how could he do both, dear?
- MRS. ALLONBY. He should never run down other pretty women. That would
- show he had no taste, or make one suspect that he had too much. No; he
- should be nice about them all, but say that somehow they don’t attract
- him.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Yes, that is always very, very pleasant to hear about
- other women.
- MRS. ALLONBY. If we ask him a question about anything, he should give us
- an answer all about ourselves. He should invariably praise us for
- whatever qualities he knows we haven’t got. But he should be pitiless,
- quite pitiless, in reproaching us for the virtues that we have never
- dreamed of possessing. He should never believe that we know the use of
- useful things. That would be unforgiveable. But he should shower on us
- everything we don’t want.
- LADY CAROLINE. As far as I can see, he is to do nothing but pay bills
- and compliments.
- MRS. ALLONBY. He should persistently compromise us in public, and treat
- us with absolute respect when we are alone. And yet he should be always
- ready to have a perfectly terrible scene, whenever we want one, and to
- become miserable, absolutely miserable, at a moment’s notice, and to
- overwhelm us with just reproaches in less than twenty minutes, and to be
- positively violent at the end of half an hour, and to leave us for ever
- at a quarter to eight, when we have to go and dress for dinner. And
- when, after that, one has seen him for really the last time, and he has
- refused to take back the little things he has given one, and promised
- never to communicate with one again, or to write one any foolish letters,
- he should be perfectly broken-hearted, and telegraph to one all day long,
- and send one little notes every half-hour by a private hansom, and dine
- quite alone at the club, so that every one should know how unhappy he
- was. And after a whole dreadful week, during which one has gone about
- everywhere with one’s husband, just to show how absolutely lonely one
- was, he may be given a third last parting, in the evening, and then, if
- his conduct has been quite irreproachable, and one has behaved really
- badly to him, he should be allowed to admit that he has been entirely in
- the wrong, and when he has admitted that, it becomes a woman’s duty to
- forgive, and one can do it all over again from the beginning, with
- variations.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. How clever you are, my dear! You never mean a single
- word you say.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Thank you, thank you. It has been quite, quite
- entrancing. I must try and remember it all. There are such a number of
- details that are so very, very important.
- LADY CAROLINE. But you have not told us yet what the reward of the Ideal
- Man is to be.
- MRS. ALLONBY. His reward? Oh, infinite expectation. That is quite
- enough for him.
- LADY STUTFIELD. But men are so terribly, terribly exacting, are they
- not?
- MRS. ALLONBY. That makes no matter. One should never surrender.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Not even to the Ideal Man?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Certainly not to him. Unless, of course, one wants to
- grow tired of him.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Oh! . . . yes. I see that. It is very, very helpful.
- Do you think, Mrs. Allonby, I shall ever meet the Ideal Man? Or are
- there more than one?
- MRS. ALLONBY. There are just four in London, Lady Stutfield.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Oh, my dear!
- MRS. ALLONBY. [_Going over to her_.] What has happened? Do tell me.
- LADY HUNSTANTON [_in a low voice_] I had completely forgotten that the
- American young lady has been in the room all the time. I am afraid some
- of this clever talk may have shocked her a little.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, that will do her so much good!
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Let us hope she didn’t understand much. I think I had
- better go over and talk to her. [_Rises and goes across to_ HESTER
- WORSLEY.] Well, dear Miss Worsley. [_Sitting down beside her_.] How
- quiet you have been in your nice little corner all this time! I suppose
- you have been reading a book? There are so many books here in the
- library.
- HESTER. No, I have been listening to the conversation.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You mustn’t believe everything that was said, you know,
- dear.
- HESTER. I didn’t believe any of it
- LADY HUNSTANTON. That is quite right, dear.
- HESTER. [_Continuing_.] I couldn’t believe that any women could really
- hold such views of life as I have heard to-night from some of your
- guests. [_An awkward pause_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I hear you have such pleasant society in America.
- Quite like our own in places, my son wrote to me.
- HESTER. There are cliques in America as elsewhere, Lady Hunstanton. But
- true American society consists simply of all the good women and good men
- we have in our country.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What a sensible system, and I dare say quite pleasant
- too. I am afraid in England we have too many artificial social barriers.
- We don’t see as much as we should of the middle and lower classes.
- HESTER. In America we have no lower classes.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Really? What a very strange arrangement!
- MRS. ALLONBY. What is that dreadful girl talking about?
- LADY STUTFIELD. She is painfully natural, is she not?
- LADY CAROLINE. There are a great many things you haven’t got in America,
- I am told, Miss Worsley. They say you have no ruins, and no curiosities.
- MRS. ALLONBY. [_To_ LADY STUTFIELD.] What nonsense! They have their
- mothers and their manners.
- HESTER. The English aristocracy supply us with our curiosities, Lady
- Caroline. They are sent over to us every summer, regularly, in the
- steamers, and propose to us the day after they land. As for ruins, we
- are trying to build up something that will last longer than brick or
- stone. [_Gets up to take her fan from table_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What is that, dear? Ah, yes, an iron Exhibition, is it
- not, at that place that has the curious name?
- HESTER. [_Standing by table_.] We are trying to build up life, Lady
- Hunstanton, on a better, truer, purer basis than life rests on here.
- This sounds strange to you all, no doubt. How could it sound other than
- strange? You rich people in England, you don’t know how you are living.
- How could you know? You shut out from your society the gentle and the
- good. You laugh at the simple and the pure. Living, as you all do, on
- others and by them, you sneer at self-sacrifice, and if you throw bread
- to the poor, it is merely to keep them quiet for a season. With all your
- pomp and wealth and art you don’t know how to live—you don’t even know
- that. You love the beauty that you can see and touch and handle, the
- beauty that you can destroy, and do destroy, but of the unseen beauty of
- life, of the unseen beauty of a higher life, you know nothing. You have
- lost life’s secret. Oh, your English society seems to me shallow,
- selfish, foolish. It has blinded its eyes, and stopped its ears. It
- lies like a leper in purple. It sits like a dead thing smeared with
- gold. It is all wrong, all wrong.
- LADY STUTFIELD. I don’t think one should know of these things. It is
- not very, very nice, is it?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear Miss Worsley, I thought you liked English
- society so much. You were such a success in it. And you were so much
- admired by the best people. I quite forget what Lord Henry Weston said
- of you—but it was most complimentary, and you know what an authority he
- is on beauty.
- HESTER. Lord Henry Weston! I remember him, Lady Hunstanton. A man with
- a hideous smile and a hideous past. He is asked everywhere. No
- dinner-party is complete without him. What of those whose ruin is due to
- him? They are outcasts. They are nameless. If you met them in the
- street you would turn your head away. I don’t complain of their
- punishment. Let all women who have sinned be punished.
- [MRS. ARBUTHNOT _enters from terrace behind in a cloak with a lace veil
- over her head_. _She hears the last words and starts_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear young lady!
- HESTER. It is right that they should be punished, but don’t let them be
- the only ones to suffer. If a man and woman have sinned, let them both
- go forth into the desert to love or loathe each other there. Let them
- both be branded. Set a mark, if you wish, on each, but don’t punish the
- one and let the other go free. Don’t have one law for men and another
- for women. You are unjust to women in England. And till you count what
- is a shame in a woman to be an infamy in a man, you will always be
- unjust, and Right, that pillar of fire, and Wrong, that pillar of cloud,
- will be made dim to your eyes, or be not seen at all, or if seen, not
- regarded.
- LADY CAROLINE. Might I, dear Miss Worsley, as you are standing up, ask
- you for my cotton that is just behind you? Thank you.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear Mrs. Arbuthnot! I am so pleased you have come
- up. But I didn’t hear you announced.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, I came straight in from the terrace, Lady Hunstanton,
- just as I was. You didn’t tell me you had a party.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Not a party. Only a few guests who are staying in the
- house, and whom you must know. Allow me. [_Tries to help her_. _Rings
- bell_.] Caroline, this is Mrs. Arbuthnot, one of my sweetest friends.
- Lady Caroline Pontefract, Lady Stutfield, Mrs. Allonby, and my young
- American friend, Miss Worsley, who has just been telling us all how
- wicked we are.
- HESTER. I am afraid you think I spoke too strongly, Lady Hunstanton.
- But there are some things in England—
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear young lady, there was a great deal of truth, I
- dare say, in what you said, and you looked very pretty while you said it,
- which is much more important, Lord Illingworth would tell us. The only
- point where I thought you were a little hard was about Lady Caroline’s
- brother, about poor Lord Henry. He is really such good company.
- [_Enter Footman_.]
- Take Mrs. Arbuthnot’s things.
- [_Exit Footman with wraps_.]
- HESTER. Lady Caroline, I had no idea it was your brother. I am sorry
- for the pain I must have caused you—I—
- LADY CAROLINE. My dear Miss Worsley, the only part of your little
- speech, if I may so term it, with which I thoroughly agreed, was the part
- about my brother. Nothing that you could possibly say could be too bad
- for him. I regard Henry as infamous, absolutely infamous. But I am
- bound to state, as you were remarking, Jane, that he is excellent
- company, and he has one of the best cooks in London, and after a good
- dinner one can forgive anybody, even one’s own relations.
- LADY HUNSTANTON [_to_ MISS WORSLEY] Now, do come, dear, and make friends
- with Mrs. Arbuthnot. She is one of the good, sweet, simple people you
- told us we never admitted into society. I am sorry to say Mrs. Arbuthnot
- comes very rarely to me. But that is not my fault.
- MRS. ALLONBY. What a bore it is the men staying so long after dinner! I
- expect they are saying the most dreadful things about us.
- LADY STUTFIELD. Do you really think so?
- MRS. ALLONBY. I was sure of it.
- LADY STUTFIELD. How very, very horrid of them! Shall we go onto the
- terrace?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, anything to get away from the dowagers and the
- dowdies. [_Rises and goes with_ LADY STUTFIELD _to door_ L.C.] We are
- only going to look at the stars, Lady Hunstanton.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You will find a great many, dear, a great many. But
- don’t catch cold. [_To_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] We shall all miss Gerald so
- much, dear Mrs. Arbuthnot.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. But has Lord Illingworth really offered to make Gerald
- his secretary?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Oh, yes! He has been most charming about it. He has
- the highest possible opinion of your boy. You don’t know Lord
- Illingworth, I believe, dear.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I have never met him.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You know him by name, no doubt?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I am afraid I don’t. I live so much out of the world,
- and see so few people. I remember hearing years ago of an old Lord
- Illingworth who lived in Yorkshire, I think.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, yes. That would be the last Earl but one. He was
- a very curious man. He wanted to marry beneath him. Or wouldn’t, I
- believe. There was some scandal about it. The present Lord Illingworth
- is quite different. He is very distinguished. He does—well, he does
- nothing, which I am afraid our pretty American visitor here thinks very
- wrong of anybody, and I don’t know that he cares much for the subjects in
- which you are so interested, dear Mrs. Arbuthnot. Do you think,
- Caroline, that Lord Illingworth is interested in the Housing of the Poor?
- LADY CAROLINE. I should fancy not at all, Jane.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. We all have our different tastes, have we not? But
- Lord Illingworth has a very high position, and there is nothing he
- couldn’t get if he chose to ask for it. Of course, he is comparatively a
- young man still, and he has only come to his title within—how long
- exactly is it, Caroline, since Lord Illingworth succeeded?
- LADY CAROLINE. About four years, I think, Jane. I know it was the same
- year in which my brother had his last exposure in the evening newspapers.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, I remember. That would be about four years ago.
- Of course, there were a great many people between the present Lord
- Illingworth and the title, Mrs. Arbuthnot. There was—who was there,
- Caroline?
- LADY CAROLINE. There was poor Margaret’s baby. You remember how anxious
- she was to have a boy, and it was a boy, but it died, and her husband
- died shortly afterwards, and she married almost immediately one of Lord
- Ascot’s sons, who, I am told, beats her.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, that is in the family, dear, that is in the family.
- And there was also, I remember, a clergyman who wanted to be a lunatic,
- or a lunatic who wanted to be a clergyman, I forget which, but I know the
- Court of Chancery investigated the matter, and decided that he was quite
- sane. And I saw him afterwards at poor Lord Plumstead’s with straws in
- his hair, or something very odd about him. I can’t recall what. I often
- regret, Lady Caroline, that dear Lady Cecilia never lived to see her son
- get the title.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Lady Cecilia?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Lord Illingworth’s mother, dear Mrs. Arbuthnot, was one
- of the Duchess of Jerningham’s pretty daughters, and she married Sir
- Thomas Harford, who wasn’t considered a very good match for her at the
- time, though he was said to be the handsomest man in London. I knew them
- all quite intimately, and both the sons, Arthur and George.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It was the eldest son who succeeded, of course, Lady
- Hunstanton?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. No, dear, he was killed in the hunting field. Or was
- it fishing, Caroline? I forget. But George came in for everything. I
- always tell him that no younger son has ever had such good luck as he has
- had.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Lady Hunstanton, I want to speak to Gerald at once.
- Might I see him? Can he be sent for?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Certainly, dear. I will send one of the servants into
- the dining-room to fetch him. I don’t know what keeps the gentlemen so
- long. [_Rings bell_.] When I knew Lord Illingworth first as plain
- George Harford, he was simply a very brilliant young man about town, with
- not a penny of money except what poor dear Lady Cecilia gave him. She
- was quite devoted to him. Chiefly, I fancy, because he was on bad terms
- with his father. Oh, here is the dear Archdeacon. [_To Servant_.] It
- doesn’t matter.
- [_Enter_ SIR JOHN _and_ DOCTOR DAUBENY. SIR JOHN _goes over to_ LADY
- STUTFIELD, DOCTOR DAUBENY _to_ LADY HUNSTANTON.]
- THE ARCHDEACON. Lord Illingworth has been most entertaining. I have
- never enjoyed myself more. [_Sees_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] Ah, Mrs. Arbuthnot.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_To_ DOCTOR BAUBENY.] You see I have got Mrs.
- Arbuthnot to come to me at last.
- THE ARCHDEACON. That is a great honour, Lady Hunstanton. Mrs. Daubeny
- will be quite jealous of you.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, I am so sorry Mrs. Daubeny could not come with you
- to-night. Headache as usual, I suppose.
- THE ARCHDEACON. Yes, Lady Hunstanton; a perfect martyr. But she is
- happiest alone. She is happiest alone.
- LADY CAROLINE. [_To her husband_.] John! [SIR JOHN _goes over to his
- wife_. DOCTOR BAUBENY _talks to_ LADY HUNSTANTON _and_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.]
- [MRS. ARBUTHNOT watches LORD ILLINGWORTH the whole time. He has passed
- across the room without noticing her, and approaches MRS. ALLONBY, who
- with LADY STUTFIELD is standing by the door looking on to the terrace.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. How is the most charming woman in the world?
- MRS. ALLONBY. [Taking LADY STUTFIELD by the hand.] We are both quite
- well, thank you, Lord Illingworth. But what a short time you have been
- in the dining-room! It seems as if we had only just left.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I was bored to death. Never opened my lips the whole
- time. Absolutely longing to come in to you.
- MRS. ALLONBY. You should have. The American girl has been giving us a
- lecture.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Really? All Americans lecture, I believe. I suppose
- it is something in their climate. What did she lecture about?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Oh, Puritanism, of course.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I am going to convert her, am I not? How long do you
- give me?
- MRS. ALLONBY. A week.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. A week is more than enough.
- [_Enter_ GERALD _and_ LORD ALFRED.]
- GERALD. [_Going to_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] Dear mother!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald, I don’t feel at all well. See me home, Gerald.
- I shouldn’t have come.
- GERALD. I am so sorry, mother. Certainly. But you must know Lord
- Illingworth first. [_Goes across room_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Not to-night, Gerald.
- GERALD. Lord Illingworth, I want you so much to know my mother.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. With the greatest pleasure. [_To_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- I’ll be back in a moment. People’s mothers always bore me to death. All
- women become like their mothers. That is their tragedy.
- MRS. ALLONBY. No man does. That is his.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What a delightful mood you are in to-night! [_Turns
- round and goes across with_ GERALD _to_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT. _When he sees
- her_, _he starts back in wonder_. _Then slowly his eyes turn towards_
- GERALD.]
- GERALD. Mother, this is Lord Illingworth, who has offered to take me as
- his private secretary. [MRS. ARBUTHNOT _bows coldly_.] It is a
- wonderful opening for me, isn’t it? I hope he won’t be disappointed in
- me, that is all. You’ll thank Lord Illingworth, mother, won’t you?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Lord Illingworth in very good, I am sure, to interest
- himself in you for the moment.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Putting his hand on_ GERALD’S _shoulder_.] Oh,
- Gerald and I are great friends already, Mrs . . . Arbuthnot.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. There can be nothing in common between you and my son,
- Lord Illingworth.
- GERALD. Dear mother, how can you say so? Of course Lord Illingworth is
- awfully clever and that sort of thing. There is nothing Lord Illingworth
- doesn’t know.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear boy!
- GERALD. He knows more about life than any one I have ever met. I feel
- an awful duffer when I am with you, Lord Illingworth. Of course, I have
- had so few advantages. I have not been to Eton or Oxford like other
- chaps. But Lord Illingworth doesn’t seem to mind that. He has been
- awfully good to me, mother.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Lord Illingworth may change his mind. He may not really
- want you as his secretary.
- GERALD. Mother!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You must remember, as you said yourself, you have had so
- few advantages.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Lord Illingworth, I want to speak to you for a moment. Do
- come over.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Will you excuse me, Mrs. Arbuthnot? Now, don’t let
- your charming mother make any more difficulties, Gerald. The thing is
- quite settled, isn’t it?
- GERALD. I hope so. [LORD ILLINGWORTH _goes across to_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. I thought you were never going to leave the lady in black
- velvet.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. She is excessively handsome. [_Looks at_ MRS.
- ARBUTHNOT.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Caroline, shall we all make a move to the music-room?
- Miss Worsley is going to play. You’ll come too, dear Mrs. Arbuthnot,
- won’t you? You don’t know what a treat is in store for you. [_To_
- DOCTOR BAUBENY.] I must really take Miss Worsley down some afternoon to
- the rectory. I should so much like dear Mrs. Daubeny to hear her on the
- violin. Ah, I forgot. Dear Mrs. Daubeny’s hearing is a little
- defective, is it not?
- THE ARCHDEACON. Her deafness is a great privation to her. She can’t
- even hear my sermons now. She reads them at home. But she has many
- resources in herself, many resources.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. She reads a good deal, I suppose?
- THE ARCHDEACON. Just the very largest print. The eyesight is rapidly
- going. But she’s never morbid, never morbid.
- GERALD. [_To_ LORD ILLINGWORTH.] Do speak to my mother, Lord
- Illingworth, before you go into the music-room. She seems to think,
- somehow, you don’t mean what you said to me.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Aren’t you coming?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. In a few moments. Lady Hunstanton, if Mrs. Arbuthnot
- would allow me, I would like to say a few words to her, and we will join
- you later on.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, of course. You will have a great deal to say to
- her, and she will have a great deal to thank you for. It is not every
- son who gets such an offer, Mrs. Arbuthnot. But I know you appreciate
- that, dear.
- LADY CAROLINE. John!
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Now, don’t keep Mrs. Arbuthnot too long, Lord
- Illingworth. We can’t spare her.
- [_Exit following the other guests_. _Sound of violin heard from
- music-room_.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. So that is our son, Rachel! Well, I am very proud of
- him. He in a Harford, every inch of him. By the way, why Arbuthnot,
- Rachel?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. One name is as good as another, when one has no right to
- any name.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I suppose so—but why Gerald?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. After a man whose heart I broke—after my father.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Well, Rachel, what in over is over. All I have got to
- say now in that I am very, very much pleased with our boy. The world
- will know him merely as my private secretary, but to me he will be
- something very near, and very dear. It is a curious thing, Rachel; my
- life seemed to be quite complete. It was not so. It lacked something,
- it lacked a son. I have found my son now, I am glad I have found him.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You have no right to claim him, or the smallest part of
- him. The boy is entirely mine, and shall remain mine.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear Rachel, you have had him to yourself for over
- twenty years. Why not let me have him for a little now? He is quite as
- much mine as yours.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Are you talking of the child you abandoned? Of the
- child who, as far as you are concerned, might have died of hunger and of
- want?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You forget, Rachel, it was you who left me. It was
- not I who left you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I left you because you refused to give the child a name.
- Before my son was born, I implored you to marry me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I had no expectations then. And besides, Rachel, I
- wasn’t much older than you were. I was only twenty-two. I was
- twenty-one, I believe, when the whole thing began in your father’s
- garden.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. When a man is old enough to do wrong he should be old
- enough to do right also.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear Rachel, intellectual generalities are always
- interesting, but generalities in morals mean absolutely nothing. As for
- saying I left our child to starve, that, of course, is untrue and silly.
- My mother offered you six hundred a year. But you wouldn’t take
- anything. You simply disappeared, and carried the child away with you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I wouldn’t have accepted a penny from her. Your father
- was different. He told you, in my presence, when we were in Paris, that
- it was your duty to marry me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Oh, duty is what one expects from others, it is not
- what one does oneself. Of course, I was influenced by my mother. Every
- man is when he is young.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I am glad to hear you say so. Gerald shall certainly
- not go away with you.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What nonsense, Rachel!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Do you think I would allow my son—
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. _Our_ son.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. My son [LORD ILLINGWORTH _shrugs his shoulders_]—to go
- away with the man who spoiled my youth, who ruined my life, who has
- tainted every moment of my days? You don’t realise what my past has been
- in suffering and in shame.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear Rachel, I must candidly say that I think
- Gerald’s future considerably more important than your past.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald cannot separate his future from my past.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. That is exactly what he should do. That is exactly
- what you should help him to do. What a typical woman you are! You talk
- sentimentally, and you are thoroughly selfish the whole time. But don’t
- let us have a scene. Rachel, I want you to look at this matter from the
- common-sense point of view, from the point of view of what is best for
- our son, leaving you and me out of the question. What is our son at
- present? An underpaid clerk in a small Provincial Bank in a third-rate
- English town. If you imagine he is quite happy in such a position, you
- are mistaken. He is thoroughly discontented.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He was not discontented till he met you. You have made
- him so.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Of course, I made him so. Discontent is the first
- step in the progress of a man or a nation. But I did not leave him with
- a mere longing for things he could not get. No, I made him a charming
- offer. He jumped at it, I need hardly say. Any young man would. And
- now, simply because it turns out that I am the boy’s own father and he my
- own son, you propose practically to ruin his career. That is to say, if
- I were a perfect stranger, you would allow Gerald to go away with me, but
- as he is my own flesh and blood you won’t. How utterly illogical you
- are!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will not allow him to go.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. How can you prevent it? What excuse can you give to
- him for making him decline such an offer as mine? I won’t tell him in
- what relations I stand to him, I need hardly say. But you daren’t tell
- him. You know that. Look how you have brought him up.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I have brought him up to be a good man.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Quite so. And what is the result? You have educated
- him to be your judge if he ever finds you out. And a bitter, an unjust
- judge he will be to you. Don’t be deceived, Rachel. Children begin by
- loving their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely, if ever, do
- they forgive them.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. George, don’t take my son away from me. I have had
- twenty years of sorrow, and I have only had one thing to love me, only
- one thing to love. You have had a life of joy, and pleasure, and
- success. You have been quite happy, you have never thought of us. There
- was no reason, according to your views of life, why you should have
- remembered us at all. Your meeting us was a mere accident, a horrible
- accident. Forget it. Don’t come now, and rob me of . . . of all I have
- in the whole world. You are so rich in other things. Leave me the
- little vineyard of my life; leave me the walled-in garden and the well of
- water; the ewe-lamb God sent me, in pity or in wrath, oh! leave me that.
- George, don’t take Gerald from me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Rachel, at the present moment you are not necessary to
- Gerald’s career; I am. There is nothing more to be said on the subject.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will not let him go.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Here is Gerald. He has a right to decide for himself.
- [_Enter_ GERALD.]
- GERALD. Well, dear mother, I hope you have settled it all with Lord
- Illingworth?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I have not, Gerald.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Your mother seems not to like your coming with me, for
- some reason.
- GERALD. Why, mother?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I thought you were quite happy here with me, Gerald. I
- didn’t know you were so anxious to leave me.
- GERALD. Mother, how can you talk like that? Of course I have been quite
- happy with you. But a man can’t stay always with his mother. No chap
- does. I want to make myself a position, to do something. I thought you
- would have been proud to see me Lord Illingworth’s secretary.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I do not think you would be suitable as a private
- secretary to Lord Illingworth. You have no qualifications.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I don’t wish to seem to interfere for a moment, Mrs.
- Arbuthnot, but as far as your last objection is concerned, I surely am
- the best judge. And I can only tell you that your son has all the
- qualifications I had hoped for. He has more, in fact, than I had even
- thought of. Far more. [MRS. ARBUTHNOT _remains silent_.] Have you any
- other reason, Mrs. Arbuthnot, why you don’t wish your son to accept this
- post?
- GERALD. Have you, mother? Do answer.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. If you have, Mrs. Arbuthnot, pray, pray say it. We
- are quite by ourselves here. Whatever it is, I need not say I will not
- repeat it.
- GERALD. Mother?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. If you would like to be alone with your son, I will
- leave you. You may have some other reason you don’t wish me to hear.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I have no other reason.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Then, my dear boy, we may look on the thing as
- settled. Come, you and I will smoke a cigarette on the terrace together.
- And Mrs. Arbuthnot, pray let me tell you, that I think you have acted
- very, very wisely.
- [_Exit with_ GERALD. MRS. ARBUTHNOT _is left alone_. _She stands
- immobile with a look of unutterable sorrow on her face_.]
- ACT DROP
- THIRD ACT
- SCENE
- _The Picture Gallery at Hunstanton_. _Door at back leading on to
- terrace_.
- [LORD ILLINGWORTH _and_ GERALD, R.C. LORD ILLINGWORTH _lolling on a
- sofa_. GERALD _in a chair_.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Thoroughly sensible woman, your mother, Gerald. I
- knew she would come round in the end.
- GERALD. My mother is awfully conscientious, Lord Illingworth, and I know
- she doesn’t think I am educated enough to be your secretary. She is
- perfectly right, too. I was fearfully idle when I was at school, and I
- couldn’t pass an examination now to save my life.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. My dear Gerald, examinations are of no value
- whatsoever. If a man is a gentleman, he knows quite enough, and if he is
- not a gentleman, whatever he knows is bad for him.
- GERALD. But I am so ignorant of the world, Lord Illingworth.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Don’t be afraid, Gerald. Remember that you’ve got on
- your side the most wonderful thing in the world—youth! There is nothing
- like youth. The middle-aged are mortgaged to Life. The old are in
- life’s lumber-room. But youth is the Lord of Life. Youth has a kingdom
- waiting for it. Every one is born a king, and most people die in exile,
- like most kings. To win back my youth, Gerald, there is nothing I
- wouldn’t do—except take exercise, get up early, or be a useful member of
- the community.
- GERALD. But you don’t call yourself old, Lord Illingworth?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I am old enough to be your father, Gerald.
- GERALD. I don’t remember my father; he died years ago.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. So Lady Hunstanton told me.
- GERALD. It is very curious, my mother never talks to me about my father.
- I sometimes think she must have married beneath her.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Winces slightly_.] Really? [_Goes over and puts
- his hand on_ GERALD’S _shoulder_.] You have missed not having a father,
- I suppose, Gerald?
- GERALD. Oh, no; my mother has been so good to me. No one ever had such
- a mother as I have had.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I am quite sure of that. Still I should imagine that
- most mothers don’t quite understand their sons. Don’t realise, I mean,
- that a son has ambitions, a desire to see life, to make himself a name.
- After all, Gerald, you couldn’t be expected to pass all your life in such
- a hole as Wrockley, could you?
- GERALD. Oh, no! It would be dreadful!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. A mother’s love is very touching, of course, but it is
- often curiously selfish. I mean, there is a good deal of selfishness in
- it.
- GERALD. [_Slowly_.] I suppose there is.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Your mother is a thoroughly good woman. But good
- women have such limited views of life, their horizon is so small, their
- interests are so petty, aren’t they?
- GERALD. They are awfully interested, certainly, in things we don’t care
- much about.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I suppose your mother is very religious, and that sort
- of thing.
- GERALD. Oh, yes, she’s always going to church.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Ah! she is not modern, and to be modern is the only
- thing worth being nowadays. You want to be modern, don’t you, Gerald?
- You want to know life as it really is. Not to be put of with any
- old-fashioned theories about life. Well, what you have to do at present
- is simply to fit yourself for the best society. A man who can dominate a
- London dinner-table can dominate the world. The future belongs to the
- dandy. It is the exquisites who are going to rule.
- GERALD. I should like to wear nice things awfully, but I have always
- been told that a man should not think too much about his clothes.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. People nowadays are so absolutely superficial that
- they don’t understand the philosophy of the superficial. By the way,
- Gerald, you should learn how to tie your tie better. Sentiment is all
- very well for the button-hole. But the essential thing for a necktie is
- style. A well-tied tie is the first serious step in life.
- GERALD. [_Laughing_.] I might be able to learn how to tie a tie, Lord
- Illingworth, but I should never be able to talk as you do. I don’t know
- how to talk.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Oh! talk to every woman as if you loved her, and to
- every man as if he bored you, and at the end of your first season you
- will have the reputation of possessing the most perfect social tact.
- GERALD. But it is very difficult to get into society isn’t it?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. To get into the best society, nowadays, one has either
- to feed people, amuse people, or shock people—that is all!
- GERALD. I suppose society is wonderfully delightful!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. To be in it is merely a bore. But to be out of it
- simply a tragedy. Society is a necessary thing. No man has any real
- success in this world unless he has got women to back him, and women rule
- society. If you have not got women on your side you are quite over. You
- might just as well be a barrister, or a stockbroker, or a journalist at
- once.
- GERALD. It is very difficult to understand women, is it not?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You should never try to understand them. Women are
- pictures. Men are problems. If you want to know what a woman really
- means—which, by the way, is always a dangerous thing to do—look at her,
- don’t listen to her.
- GERALD. But women are awfully clever, aren’t they?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One should always tell them so. But, to the
- philosopher, my dear Gerald, women represent the triumph of matter over
- mind—just as men represent the triumph of mind over morals.
- GERALD. How then can women have so much power as you say they have?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. The history of women is the history of the worst form
- of tyranny the world has ever known. The tyranny of the weak over the
- strong. It is the only tyranny that lasts.
- GERALD. But haven’t women got a refining influence?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Nothing refines but the intellect.
- GERALD. Still, there are many different kinds of women, aren’t there?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Only two kinds in society: the plain and the coloured.
- GERALD. But there are good women in society, aren’t there?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Far too many.
- GERALD. But do you think women shouldn’t be good?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One should never tell them so, they’d all become good
- at once. Women are a fascinatingly wilful sex. Every woman is a rebel,
- and usually in wild revolt against herself.
- GERALD. You have never been married, Lord Illingworth, have you?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Men marry because they are tired; women because they
- are curious. Both are disappointed.
- GERALD. But don’t you think one can be happy when one is married?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Perfectly happy. But the happiness of a married man,
- my dear Gerald, depends on the people he has not married.
- GERALD. But if one is in love?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. One should always be in love. That is the reason one
- should never marry.
- GERALD. Love is a very wonderful thing, isn’t it?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. When one is in love one begins by deceiving oneself.
- And one ends by deceiving others. That is what the world calls a
- romance. But a really _grande passion_ is comparatively rare nowadays.
- It is the privilege of people who have nothing to do. That is the one
- use of the idle classes in a country, and the only possible explanation
- of us Harfords.
- GERALD. Harfords, Lord Illingworth?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. That is my family name. You should study the Peerage,
- Gerald. It is the one book a young man about town should know
- thoroughly, and it is the best thing in fiction the English have ever
- done. And now, Gerald, you are going into a perfectly new life with me,
- and I want you to know how to live. [MRS. ARBUTHNOT _appears on terrace
- behind_.] For the world has been made by fools that wise men should live
- in it!
- [_Enter_ L.C. LADY HUNSTANTON _and_ DR. DAUBENY.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! here you are, dear Lord Illingworth. Well, I
- suppose you have been telling our young friend, Gerald, what his new
- duties are to be, and giving him a great deal of good advice over a
- pleasant cigarette.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I have been giving him the best of advice, Lady
- Hunstanton, and the best of cigarettes.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I am so sorry I was not here to listen to you, but I
- suppose I am too old now to learn. Except from you, dear Archdeacon,
- when you are in your nice pulpit. But then I always know what you are
- going to say, so I don’t feel alarmed. [_Sees_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] Ah!
- dear Mrs. Arbuthnot, do come and join us. Come, dear. [_Enter_ MRS.
- ARBUTHNOT.] Gerald has been having such a long talk with Lord
- Illingworth; I am sure you must feel very much flattered at the pleasant
- way in which everything has turned out for him. Let us sit down. [_They
- sit down_.] And how is your beautiful embroidery going on?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I am always at work, Lady Hunstanton.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Mrs. Daubeny embroiders a little, too, doesn’t she?
- THE ARCHDEACON. She was very deft with her needle once, quite a Dorcas.
- But the gout has crippled her fingers a good deal. She has not touched
- the tambour frame for nine or ten years. But she has many other
- amusements. She is very much interested in her own health.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! that is always a nice distraction, in it not? Now,
- what are you talking about, Lord Illingworth? Do tell us.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I was on the point of explaining to Gerald that the
- world has always laughed at its own tragedies, that being the only way in
- which it has been able to bear them. And that, consequently, whatever
- the world has treated seriously belongs to the comedy side of things.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Now I am quite out of my depth. I usually am when Lord
- Illingworth says anything. And the Humane Society is most careless.
- They never rescue me. I am left to sink. I have a dim idea, dear Lord
- Illingworth, that you are always on the side of the sinners, and I know I
- always try to be on the side of the saints, but that is as far as I get.
- And after all, it may be merely the fancy of a drowning person.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. The only difference between the saint and the sinner
- is that every saint has a past, and every sinner has a future.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! that quite does for me. I haven’t a word to say.
- You and I, dear Mrs. Arbuthnot, are behind the age. We can’t follow Lord
- Illingworth. Too much care was taken with our education, I am afraid.
- To have been well brought up is a great drawback nowadays. It shuts one
- out from so much.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I should be sorry to follow Lord Illingworth in any of
- his opinions.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You are quite right, dear.
- [GERALD _shrugs his shoulders and looks irritably over at his mother_.
- _Enter_ LADY CAROLINE.]
- LADY CAROLINE. Jane, have you seen John anywhere?
- LADY HUNSTANTON. You needn’t be anxious about him, dear. He is with
- Lady Stutfield; I saw them some time ago, in the Yellow Drawing-room.
- They seem quite happy together. You are not going, Caroline? Pray sit
- down.
- LADY CAROLINE. I think I had better look after John.
- [_Exit_ LADY CAROLINE.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. It doesn’t do to pay men so much attention. And
- Caroline has really nothing to be anxious about. Lady Stutfield is very
- sympathetic. She is just as sympathetic about one thing as she is about
- another. A beautiful nature.
- [_Enter_ SIR JOHN _and_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- Ah! here is Sir John! And with Mrs. Allonby too! I suppose it was Mrs.
- Allonby I saw him with. Sir John, Caroline has been looking everywhere
- for you.
- MRS. ALLONBY. We have been waiting for her in the Music-room, dear Lady
- Hunstanton.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! the Music-room, of course. I thought it was the
- Yellow Drawing-room, my memory is getting so defective. [_To the_
- ARCHDEACON.] Mrs. Daubeny has a wonderful memory, hasn’t she?
- THE ARCHDEACON. She used to be quite remarkable for her memory, but
- since her last attack she recalls chiefly the events of her early
- childhood. But she finds great pleasure in such retrospections, great
- pleasure.
- [_Enter_ LADY STUTFIELD _and_ MR. KELVIL.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! dear Lady Stutfield! and what has Mr. Kelvil been
- talking to you about?
- LADY STUTFIELD. About Bimetallism, as well as I remember.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Bimetallism! Is that quite a nice subject? However, I
- know people discuss everything very freely nowadays. What did Sir John
- talk to you about, dear Mrs. Allonby?
- MRS. ALLONBY. About Patagonia.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Really? What a remote topic! But very improving, I
- have no doubt.
- MRS. ALLONBY. He has been most interesting on the subject of Patagonia.
- Savages seem to have quite the same views as cultured people on almost
- all subjects. They are excessively advanced.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What do they do?
- MRS. ALLONBY. Apparently everything.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, it is very gratifying, dear Archdeacon, is it
- not, to find that Human Nature is permanently one.—On the whole, the
- world is the same world, is it not?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. The world is simply divided into two classes—those who
- believe the incredible, like the public—and those who do the improbable—
- MRS. ALLONBY. Like yourself?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Yes; I am always astonishing myself. It is the only
- thing that makes life worth living.
- LADY STUTFIELD. And what have you been doing lately that astonishes you?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I have been discovering all kinds of beautiful
- qualities in my own nature.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah! don’t become quite perfect all at once. Do it
- gradually!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I don’t intend to grow perfect at all. At least, I
- hope I shan’t. It would be most inconvenient. Women love us for our
- defects. If we have enough of them, they will forgive us everything,
- even our gigantic intellects.
- MRS. ALLONBY. It is premature to ask us to forgive analysis. We forgive
- adoration; that is quite as much as should be expected from us.
- [_Enter_ LORD ALFRED. _He joins_ LADY STUTFIELD.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! we women should forgive everything, shouldn’t we,
- dear Mrs. Arbuthnot? I am sure you agree with me in that.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I do not, Lady Hunstanton. I think there are many
- things women should never forgive.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. What sort of things?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. The ruin of another woman’s life.
- [_Moves slowly away to back of stage_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah! those things are very sad, no doubt, but I believe
- there are admirable homes where people of that kind are looked after and
- reformed, and I think on the whole that the secret of life is to take
- things very, very easily.
- MRS. ALLONBY. The secret of life is never to have an emotion that is
- unbecoming.
- LADY STUTFIELD. The secret of life is to appreciate the pleasure of
- being terribly, terribly deceived.
- KELVIL. The secret of life is to resist temptation, Lady Stutfield.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. There is no secret of life. Life’s aim, if it has
- one, is simply to be always looking for temptations. There are not
- nearly enough. I sometimes pass a whole day without coming across a
- single one. It is quite dreadful. It makes one so nervous about the
- future.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Shakes her fan at him_.] I don’t know how it is,
- dear Lord Illingworth, but everything you have said to-day seems to me
- excessively immoral. It has been most interesting, listening to you.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. All thought is immoral. Its very essence is
- destruction. If you think of anything, you kill it. Nothing survives
- being thought of.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I don’t understand a word, Lord Illingworth. But I
- have no doubt it is all quite true. Personally, I have very little to
- reproach myself with, on the score of thinking. I don’t believe in women
- thinking too much. Women should think in moderation, as they should do
- all things in moderation.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Moderation is a fatal thing, Lady Hunstanton. Nothing
- succeeds like excess.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I hope I shall remember that. It sounds an admirable
- maxim. But I’m beginning to forget everything. It’s a great misfortune.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is one of your most fascinating qualities, Lady
- Hunstanton. No woman should have a memory. Memory in a woman is the
- beginning of dowdiness. One can always tell from a woman’s bonnet
- whether she has got a memory or not.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. How charming you are, dear Lord Illingworth. You
- always find out that one’s most glaring fault is one’s most important
- virtue. You have the most comforting views of life.
- [_Enter_ FARQUHAR.]
- FARQUHAR. Doctor Daubeny’s carriage!
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear Archdeacon! It is only half-past ten.
- THE ARCHDEACON. [_Rising_.] I am afraid I must go, Lady Hunstanton.
- Tuesday is always one of Mrs. Daubeny’s bad nights.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Rising_.] Well, I won’t keep you from her. [_Goes
- with him towards door_.] I have told Farquhar to put a brace of
- partridge into the carriage. Mrs. Daubeny may fancy them.
- THE ARCHDEACON. It is very kind of you, but Mrs. Daubeny never touches
- solids now. Lives entirely on jellies. But she is wonderfully cheerful,
- wonderfully cheerful. She has nothing to complain of.
- [_Exit with_ LADY HUNSTANTON.]
- MRS. ALLONBY. [_Goes over to_ LORD ILLINGWORTH.] There is a beautiful
- moon to-night.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Let us go and look at it. To look at anything that is
- inconstant is charming nowadays.
- MRS. ALLONBY. You have your looking-glass.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is unkind. It merely shows me my wrinkles.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Mine is better behaved. It never tells me the truth.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Then it is in love with you.
- [_Exeunt_ SIR JOHN, LADY STUTFIELD, MR. KELVIL _and_ LORD ALFRED.]
- GERALD. [_To_ LORD ILLINGWORTH] May I come too?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Do, my dear boy. [_Moves towards with_ MRS. ALLONBY
- _and_ GERALD.]
- [LADY CAROLINE _enters_, _looks rapidly round and goes off in opposite
- direction to that taken by_ SIR JOHN _and_ LADY STUTFIELD.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald!
- GERALD. What, mother!
- [_Exit_ LORD ILLINGWORTH _with_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It is getting late. Let us go home.
- GERALD. My dear mother. Do let us wait a little longer. Lord
- Illingworth is so delightful, and, by the way, mother, I have a great
- surprise for you. We are starting for India at the end of this month.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Let us go home.
- GERALD. If you really want to, of course, mother, but I must bid
- good-bye to Lord Illingworth first. I’ll be back in five minutes.
- [_Exit_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Let him leave me if he chooses, but not with him—not
- with him! I couldn’t bear it. [_Walks up and down_.]
- [_Enter_ HESTER.]
- HESTER. What a lovely night it is, Mrs. Arbuthnot.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Is it?
- HESTER. Mrs. Arbuthnot, I wish you would let us be friends. You are so
- different from the other women here. When you came into the Drawing-room
- this evening, somehow you brought with you a sense of what is good and
- pure in life. I had been foolish. There are things that are right to
- say, but that may be said at the wrong time and to the wrong people.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I heard what you said. I agree with it, Miss Worsley.
- HESTER. I didn’t know you had heard it. But I knew you would agree with
- me. A woman who has sinned should be punished, shouldn’t she?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes.
- HESTER. She shouldn’t be allowed to come into the society of good men
- and women?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. She should not.
- HESTER. And the man should be punished in the same way?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. In the same way. And the children, if there are
- children, in the same way also?
- HESTER. Yes, it is right that the sins of the parents should be visited
- on the children. It is a just law. It is God’s law.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It is one of God’s terrible laws.
- [_Moves away to fireplace_.]
- HESTER. You are distressed about your son leaving you, Mrs. Arbuthnot?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes.
- HESTER. Do you like him going away with Lord Illingworth? Of course
- there is position, no doubt, and money, but position and money are not
- everything, are they?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. They are nothing; they bring misery.
- HESTER. Then why do you let your son go with him?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He wishes it himself.
- HESTER. But if you asked him he would stay, would he not?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He has set his heart on going.
- HESTER. He couldn’t refuse you anything. He loves you too much. Ask
- him to stay. Let me send him in to you. He is on the terrace at this
- moment with Lord Illingworth. I heard them laughing together as I passed
- through the Music-room.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Don’t trouble, Miss Worsley, I can wait. It is of no
- consequence.
- HESTER. No, I’ll tell him you want him. Do—do ask him to stay. [_Exit_
- HESTER.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He won’t come—I know he won’t come.
- [Enter LADY CAROLINE. _She looks round anxiously_. _Enter_ GERALD.]
- LADY CAROLINE. Mr. Arbuthnot, may I ask you is Sir John anywhere on the
- terrace?
- GERALD. No, Lady Caroline, he is not on the terrace.
- LADY CAROLINE. It is very curious. It is time for him to retire.
- [_Exit_ LADY CAROLINE.]
- GERALD. Dear mother, I am afraid I kept you waiting. I forgot all about
- it. I am so happy to-night, mother; I have never been so happy.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. At the prospect of going away?
- GERALD. Don’t put it like that, mother. Of course I am sorry to leave
- you. Why, you are the best mother in the whole world. But after all, as
- Lord Illingworth says, it is impossible to live in such a place as
- Wrockley. You don’t mind it. But I’m ambitions; I want something more
- than that. I want to have a career. I want to do something that will
- make you proud of me, and Lord Illingworth is going to help me. He is
- going to do everything for me.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald, don’t go away with Lord Illingworth. I implore
- you not to. Gerald, I beg you!
- GERALD. Mother, how changeable you are! You don’t seem to know your own
- mind for a single moment. An hour and a half ago in the Drawing-room you
- agreed to the whole thing; now you turn round and make objections, and
- try to force me to give up my one chance in life. Yes, my one chance.
- You don’t suppose that men like Lord Illingworth are to be found every
- day, do you, mother? It is very strange that when I have had such a
- wonderful piece of good luck, the one person to put difficulties in my
- way should be my own mother. Besides, you know, mother, I love Hester
- Worsley. Who could help loving her? I love her more than I have ever
- told you, far more. And if I had a position, if I had prospects, I
- could—I could ask her to—Don’t you understand now, mother, what it means
- to me to be Lord Illingworth’s secretary? To start like that is to find
- a career ready for one—before one—waiting for one. If I were Lord
- Illingworth’s secretary I could ask Hester to be my wife. As a wretched
- bank clerk with a hundred a year it would be an impertinence.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I fear you need have no hopes of Miss Worsley. I know
- her views on life. She has just told them to me. [_A pause_.]
- GERALD. Then I have my ambition left, at any rate. That is something—I
- am glad I have that! You have always tried to crush my ambition,
- mother—haven’t you? You have told me that the world is a wicked place,
- that success is not worth having, that society is shallow, and all that
- sort of thing—well, I don’t believe it, mother. I think the world must
- be delightful. I think society must be exquisite. I think success is a
- thing worth having. You have been wrong in all that you taught me,
- mother, quite wrong. Lord Illingworth is a successful man. He is a
- fashionable man. He is a man who lives in the world and for it. Well, I
- would give anything to be just like Lord Illingworth.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I would sooner see you dead.
- GERALD. Mother, what is your objection to Lord Illingworth? Tell
- me—tell me right out. What is it?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He is a bad man.
- GERALD. In what way bad? I don’t understand what you mean.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will tell you.
- GERALD. I suppose you think him bad, because he doesn’t believe the same
- things as you do. Well, men are different from women, mother. It is
- natural that they should have different views.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It is not what Lord Illingworth believes, or what he
- does not believe, that makes him bad. It is what he is.
- GERALD. Mother, is it something you know of him? Something you actually
- know?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It is something I know.
- GERALD. Something you are quite sure of?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Quite sure of.
- GERALD. How long have you known it?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. For twenty years.
- GERALD. Is it fair to go back twenty years in any man’s career? And
- what have you or I to do with Lord Illingworth’s early life? What
- business is it of ours?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. What this man has been, he is now, and will be always.
- GERALD. Mother, tell me what Lord Illingworth did? If he did anything
- shameful, I will not go away with him. Surely you know me well enough
- for that?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald, come near to me. Quite close to me, as you used
- to do when you were a little boy, when you were mother’s own boy.
- [GERALD _sits down betide his mother_. _She runs her fingers through his
- hair_, _and strokes his hands_.] Gerald, there was a girl once, she was
- very young, she was little over eighteen at the time. George
- Harford—that was Lord Illingworth’s name then—George Harford met her.
- She knew nothing about life. He—knew everything. He made this girl love
- him. He made her love him so much that she left her father’s house with
- him one morning. She loved him so much, and he had promised to marry
- her! He had solemnly promised to marry her, and she had believed him.
- She was very young, and—and ignorant of what life really is. But he put
- the marriage off from week to week, and month to month.—She trusted in
- him all the while. She loved him.—Before her child was born—for she had
- a child—she implored him for the child’s sake to marry her, that the
- child might have a name, that her sin might not be visited on the child,
- who was innocent. He refused. After the child was born she left him,
- taking the child away, and her life was ruined, and her soul ruined, and
- all that was sweet, and good, and pure in her ruined also. She suffered
- terribly—she suffers now. She will always suffer. For her there is no
- joy, no peace, no atonement. She is a woman who drags a chain like a
- guilty thing. She is a woman who wears a mask, like a thing that is a
- leper. The fire cannot purify her. The waters cannot quench her
- anguish. Nothing can heal her! no anodyne can give her sleep! no poppies
- forgetfulness! She is lost! She is a lost soul!—That is why I call Lord
- Illingworth a bad man. That is why I don’t want my boy to be with him.
- GERALD. My dear mother, it all sounds very tragic, of course. But I
- dare say the girl was just as much to blame as Lord Illingworth
- was.—After all, would a really nice girl, a girl with any nice feelings
- at all, go away from her home with a man to whom she was not married, and
- live with him as his wife? No nice girl would.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_After a pause_.] Gerald, I withdraw all my
- objections. You are at liberty to go away with Lord Illingworth, when
- and where you choose.
- GERALD. Dear mother, I knew you wouldn’t stand in my way. You are the
- best woman God ever made. And, as for Lord Illingworth, I don’t believe
- he is capable of anything infamous or base. I can’t believe it of him—I
- can’t.
- HESTER. [_Outside_.] Let me go! Let me go! [_Enter_ HESTER _in
- terror_, _and rushes over to_ GERALD _and flings herself in his arms_.]
- HESTER. Oh! save me—save me from him!
- GERALD. From whom?
- HESTER. He has insulted me! Horribly insulted me! Save me!
- GERALD. Who? Who has dared—?
- [LORD ILLINGWORTH _enters at back of stage_. HESTER _breaks from_
- GERALD’S _arms and points to him_.]
- GERALD [_He is quite beside himself with rage and indignation_.] Lord
- Illingworth, you have insulted the purest thing on God’s earth, a thing
- as pure as my own mother. You have insulted the woman I love most in the
- world with my own mother. As there is a God in Heaven, I will kill you!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Rushing across and catching hold of him_] No! no!
- GERALD. [_Thrusting her back_.] Don’t hold me, mother. Don’t hold
- me—I’ll kill him!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald!
- GERALD. Let me go, I say!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Stop, Gerald, stop! He is your own father!
- [GERALD _clutches his mother’s hands and looks into her face_. _She
- sinks slowly on the ground in shame_. HESTER _steals towards the door_.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH _frowns and bites his lip_. _After a time_ GERALD
- _raises his mother up_, _puts his am round her_, _and leads her from the
- room_.]
- ACT DROP
- FOURTH ACT
- SCENE
- _Sitting-room at Mrs. Arbuthnot’s_. _Large open French window at back_,
- _looking on to garden_. _Doors_ R.C. _and_ L.C.
- [GERALD ARBUTHNOT _writing at table_.]
- [_Enter_ ALICE R.C. _followed by_ LADY HUNSTANTON _and_ MRS. ALLONBY.]
- ALICE. Lady Hunstanton and Mrs. Allonby.
- [_Exit_ L.C.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Good morning, Gerald.
- GERALD. [_Rising_.] Good morning, Lady Hunstanton. Good morning, Mrs.
- Allonby.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Sitting down_.] We came to inquire for your dear
- mother, Gerald. I hope she is better?
- GERALD. My mother has not come down yet, Lady Hunstanton.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Ah, I am afraid the heat was too much for her last
- night. I think there must have been thunder in the air. Or perhaps it
- was the music. Music makes one feel so romantic—at least it always gets
- on one’s nerves.
- MRS. ALLONBY. It’s the same thing, nowadays.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. I am so glad I don’t know what you mean, dear. I am
- afraid you mean something wrong. Ah, I see you’re examining Mrs.
- Arbuthnot’s pretty room. Isn’t it nice and old-fashioned?
- MRS. ALLONBY. [_Surveying the room through her lorgnette_.] It looks
- quite the happy English home.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. That’s just the word, dear; that just describes it.
- One feels your mother’s good influence in everything she has about her,
- Gerald.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Lord Illingworth says that all influence is bad, but that
- a good influence is the worst in the world.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. When Lord Illingworth knows Mrs. Arbuthnot better he
- will change his mind. I must certainly bring him here.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I should like to see Lord Illingworth in a happy English
- home.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. It would do him a great deal of good, dear. Most women
- in London, nowadays, seem to furnish their rooms with nothing but
- orchids, foreigners, and French novels. But here we have the room of a
- sweet saint. Fresh natural flowers, books that don’t shock one, pictures
- that one can look at without blushing.
- MRS. ALLONBY. But I like blushing.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, there _is_ a good deal to be said for blushing,
- if one can do it at the proper moment. Poor dear Hunstanton used to tell
- me I didn’t blush nearly often enough. But then he was so very
- particular. He wouldn’t let me know any of his men friends, except those
- who were over seventy, like poor Lord Ashton: who afterwards, by the way,
- was brought into the Divorce Court. A most unfortunate case.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I delight in men over seventy. They always offer one the
- devotion of a lifetime. I think seventy an ideal age for a man.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. She is quite incorrigible, Gerald, isn’t she?
- By-the-by, Gerald, I hope your dear mother will come and see me more
- often now. You and Lord Illingworth start almost immediately, don’t you?
- GERALD. I have given up my intention of being Lord Illingworth’s
- secretary.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Surely not, Gerald! It would be most unwise of you.
- What reason can you have?
- GERALD. I don’t think I should be suitable for the post.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I wish Lord Illingworth would ask me to be his secretary.
- But he says I am not serious enough.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear, you really mustn’t talk like that in this
- house. Mrs. Arbuthnot doesn’t know anything about the wicked society in
- which we all live. She won’t go into it. She is far too good. I
- consider it was a great honour her coming to me last night. It gave
- quite an atmosphere of respectability to the party.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Ah, that must have been what you thought was thunder in
- the air.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. My dear, how can you say that? There is no resemblance
- between the two things at all. But really, Gerald, what do you mean by
- not being suitable?
- GERALD. Lord Illingworth’s views of life and mine are too different.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. But, my dear Gerald, at your age you shouldn’t have any
- views of life. They are quite out of place. You must be guided by
- others in this matter. Lord Illingworth has made you the most flattering
- offer, and travelling with him you would see the world—as much of it, at
- least, as one should look at—under the best auspices possible, and stay
- with all the right people, which is so important at this solemn moment in
- your career.
- GERALD. I don’t want to see the world: I’ve seen enough of it.
- MRS. ALLONBY. I hope you don’t think you have exhausted life, Mr.
- Arbuthnot. When a man says that, one knows that life has exhausted him.
- GERALD. I don’t wish to leave my mother.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Now, Gerald, that is pure laziness on your part. Not
- leave your mother! If I were your mother I would insist on your going.
- [_Enter_ ALICE L.C.]
- ALICE. Mrs. Arbuthnot’s compliments, my lady, but she has a bad
- headache, and cannot see any one this morning. [_Exit_ R.C.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Rising_.] A bad headache! I am so sorry! Perhaps
- you’ll bring her up to Hunstanton this afternoon, if she is better,
- Gerald.
- GERALD. I am afraid not this afternoon, Lady Hunstanton.
- LADY HUNSTANTON. Well, to-morrow, then. Ah, if you had a father,
- Gerald, he wouldn’t let you waste your life here. He would send you off
- with Lord Illingworth at once. But mothers are so weak. They give up to
- their sons in everything. We are all heart, all heart. Come, dear, I
- must call at the rectory and inquire for Mrs. Daubeny, who, I am afraid,
- is far from well. It is wonderful how the Archdeacon bears up, quite
- wonderful. He is the most sympathetic of husbands. Quite a model.
- Good-bye, Gerald, give my fondest love to your mother.
- MRS. ALLONBY. Good-bye, Mr. Arbuthnot.
- GERALD. Good-bye.
- [_Exit_ LADY HUNSTANTON _and_ MRS. ALLONBY. GERALD _sits down and reads
- over his letter_.]
- GERALD. What name can I sign? I, who have no right to any name.
- [_Signs name_, _puts letter into envelope_, _addresses it_, _and is about
- to seal it_, _when door_ L.C. _opens and_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT _enters_.
- GERALD _lays down sealing-wax_. _Mother and son look at each other_.]
- LADY HUNSTANTON. [_Through French window at the back_.] Good-bye again,
- Gerald. We are taking the short cut across your pretty garden. Now,
- remember my advice to you—start at once with Lord Illingworth.
- MRS. ALLONBY. _Au revoir_, Mr. Arbuthnot. Mind you bring me back
- something nice from your travels—not an Indian shawl—on no account an
- Indian shawl.
- [_Exeunt_.]
- GERALD. Mother, I have just written to him.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. To whom?
- GERALD. To my father. I have written to tell him to come here at four
- o’clock this afternoon.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He shall not come here. He shall not cross the
- threshold of my house.
- GERALD. He must come.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Gerald, if you are going away with Lord Illingworth, go
- at once. Go before it kills me: but don’t ask me to meet him.
- GERALD. Mother, you don’t understand. Nothing in the world would induce
- me to go away with Lord Illingworth, or to leave you. Surely you know me
- well enough for that. No: I have written to him to say—
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. What can you have to say to him?
- GERALD. Can’t you guess, mother, what I have written in this letter?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. No.
- GERALD. Mother, surely you can. Think, think what must be done, now, at
- once, within the next few days.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. There is nothing to be done.
- GERALD. I have written to Lord Illingworth to tell him that he must
- marry you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Marry me?
- GERALD. Mother, I will force him to do it. The wrong that has been done
- you must be repaired. Atonement must be made. Justice may be slow,
- mother, but it comes in the end. In a few days you shall be Lord
- Illingworth’s lawful wife.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. But, Gerald—
- GERALD. I will insist upon his doing it. I will make him do it: he will
- not dare to refuse.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. But, Gerald, it is I who refuse. I will not marry Lord
- Illingworth.
- GERALD. Not marry him? Mother!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will not marry him.
- GERALD. But you don’t understand: it is for your sake I am talking, not
- for mine. This marriage, this necessary marriage, this marriage which
- for obvious reasons must inevitably take place, will not help me, will
- not give me a name that will be really, rightly mine to bear. But surely
- it will be something for you, that you, my mother, should, however late,
- become the wife of the man who is my father. Will not that be something?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will not marry him.
- GERALD. Mother, you must.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I will not. You talk of atonement for a wrong done.
- What atonement can be made to me? There is no atonement possible. I am
- disgraced: he is not. That is all. It is the usual history of a man and
- a woman as it usually happens, as it always happens. And the ending is
- the ordinary ending. The woman suffers. The man goes free.
- GERALD. I don’t know if that is the ordinary ending, mother: I hope it
- is not. But your life, at any rate, shall not end like that. The man
- shall make whatever reparation is possible. It is not enough. It does
- not wipe out the past, I know that. But at least it makes the future
- better, better for you, mother.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I refuse to marry Lord Illingworth.
- GERALD. If he came to you himself and asked you to be his wife you would
- give him a different answer. Remember, he is my father.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. If he came himself, which he will not do, my answer
- would be the same. Remember I am your mother.
- GERALD. Mother, you make it terribly difficult for me by talking like
- that; and I can’t understand why you won’t look at this matter from the
- right, from the only proper standpoint. It is to take away the
- bitterness out of your life, to take away the shadow that lies on your
- name, that this marriage must take place. There is no alternative: and
- after the marriage you and I can go away together. But the marriage must
- take place first. It is a duty that you owe, not merely to yourself, but
- to all other women—yes: to all the other women in the world, lest he
- betray more.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I owe nothing to other women. There is not one of them
- to help me. There is not one woman in the world to whom I could go for
- pity, if I would take it, or for sympathy, if I could win it. Women are
- hard on each other. That girl, last night, good though she is, fled from
- the room as though I were a tainted thing. She was right. I am a
- tainted thing. But my wrongs are my own, and I will bear them alone. I
- must bear them alone. What have women who have not sinned to do with me,
- or I with them? We do not understand each other.
- [_Enter_ HESTER _behind_.]
- GERALD. I implore you to do what I ask you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. What son has ever asked of his mother to make so hideous
- a sacrifice? None.
- GERALD. What mother has ever refused to marry the father of her own
- child? None.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Let me be the first, then. I will not do it.
- GERALD. Mother, you believe in religion, and you brought me up to
- believe in it also. Well, surely your religion, the religion that you
- taught me when I was a boy, mother, must tell you that I am right. You
- know it, you feel it.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I do not know it. I do not feel it, nor will I ever
- stand before God’s altar and ask God’s blessing on so hideous a mockery
- as a marriage between me and George Harford. I will not say the words
- the Church bids us to say. I will not say them. I dare not. How could
- I swear to love the man I loathe, to honour him who wrought you
- dishonour, to obey him who, in his mastery, made me to sin? No: marriage
- is a sacrament for those who love each other. It is not for such as him,
- or such as me. Gerald, to save you from the world’s sneers and taunts I
- have lied to the world. For twenty years I have lied to the world. I
- could not tell the world the truth. Who can, ever? But not for my own
- sake will I lie to God, and in God’s presence. No, Gerald, no ceremony,
- Church-hallowed or State-made, shall ever bind me to George Harford. It
- may be that I am too bound to him already, who, robbing me, yet left me
- richer, so that in the mire of my life I found the pearl of price, or
- what I thought would be so.
- GERALD. I don’t understand you now.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Men don’t understand what mothers are. I am no
- different from other women except in the wrong done me and the wrong I
- did, and my very heavy punishments and great disgrace. And yet, to bear
- you I had to look on death. To nurture you I had to wrestle with it.
- Death fought with me for you. All women have to fight with death to keep
- their children. Death, being childless, wants our children from us.
- Gerald, when you were naked I clothed you, when you were hungry I gave
- you food. Night and day all that long winter I tended you. No office is
- too mean, no care too lowly for the thing we women love—and oh! how _I_
- loved _you_. Not Hannah, Samuel more. And you needed love, for you were
- weakly, and only love could have kept you alive. Only love can keep any
- one alive. And boys are careless often and without thinking give pain,
- and we always fancy that when they come to man’s estate and know us
- better they will repay us. But it is not so. The world draws them from
- our side, and they make friends with whom they are happier than they are
- with us, and have amusements from which we are barred, and interests that
- are not ours: and they are unjust to us often, for when they find life
- bitter they blame us for it, and when they find it sweet we do not taste
- its sweetness with them . . . You made many friends and went into their
- houses and were glad with them, and I, knowing my secret, did not dare to
- follow, but stayed at home and closed the door, shut out the sun and sat
- in darkness. What should I have done in honest households? My past was
- ever with me. . . . And you thought I didn’t care for the pleasant things
- of life. I tell you I longed for them, but did not dare to touch them,
- feeling I had no right. You thought I was happier working amongst the
- poor. That was my mission, you imagined. It was not, but where else was
- I to go? The sick do not ask if the hand that smooths their pillow is
- pure, nor the dying care if the lips that touch their brow have known the
- kiss of sin. It was you I thought of all the time; I gave to them the
- love you did not need: lavished on them a love that was not theirs . . .
- And you thought I spent too much of my time in going to Church, and in
- Church duties. But where else could I turn? God’s house is the only
- house where sinners are made welcome, and you were always in my heart,
- Gerald, too much in my heart. For, though day after day, at morn or
- evensong, I have knelt in God’s house, I have never repented of my sin.
- How could I repent of my sin when you, my love, were its fruit! Even now
- that you are bitter to me I cannot repent. I do not. You are more to me
- than innocence. I would rather be your mother—oh! much rather!—than have
- been always pure . . . Oh, don’t you see? don’t you understand? It is my
- dishonour that has made you so dear to me. It is my disgrace that has
- bound you so closely to me. It is the price I paid for you—the price of
- soul and body—that makes me love you as I do. Oh, don’t ask me to do
- this horrible thing. Child of my shame, be still the child of my shame!
- GERALD. Mother, I didn’t know you loved me so much as that. And I will
- be a better son to you than I have been. And you and I must never leave
- each other . . . but, mother . . . I can’t help it . . . you must become
- my father’s wife. You must marry him. It is your duty.
- HESTER. [_Running forwards and embracing_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] No, no; you
- shall not. That would be real dishonour, the first you have ever known.
- That would be real disgrace: the first to touch you. Leave him and come
- with me. There are other countries than England . . . Oh! other
- countries over sea, better, wiser, and less unjust lands. The world is
- very wide and very big.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. No, not for me. For me the world is shrivelled to a
- palm’s breadth, and where I walk there are thorns.
- HESTER. It shall not be so. We shall somewhere find green valleys and
- fresh waters, and if we weep, well, we shall weep together. Have we not
- both loved him?
- GERALD. Hester!
- HESTER. [_Waving him back_.] Don’t, don’t! You cannot love me at all,
- unless you love her also. You cannot honour me, unless she’s holier to
- you. In her all womanhood is martyred. Not she alone, but all of us are
- stricken in her house.
- GERALD. Hester, Hester, what shall I do?
- HESTER. Do you respect the man who is your father?
- GERALD. Respect him? I despise him! He is infamous.
- HESTER. I thank you for saving me from him last night.
- GERALD. Ah, that is nothing. I would die to save you. But you don’t
- tell me what to do now!
- HESTER. Have I not thanked you for saving _me_?
- GERALD. But what should I do?
- HESTER. Ask your own heart, not mine. I never had a mother to save, or
- shame.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He is hard—he is hard. Let me go away.
- GERALD. [_Rushes over and kneels down bedside his mother_.] Mother,
- forgive me: I have been to blame.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Don’t kiss my hands: they are cold. My heart is cold:
- something has broken it.
- HESTER. Ah, don’t say that. Hearts live by being wounded. Pleasure may
- turn a heart to stone, riches may make it callous, but sorrow—oh, sorrow
- cannot break it. Besides, what sorrows have you now? Why, at this
- moment you are more dear to him than ever, _dear_ though you have _been_,
- and oh! how dear you _have_ been always. Ah! be kind to him.
- GERALD. You are my mother and my father all in one. I need no second
- parent. It was for you I spoke, for you alone. Oh, say something,
- mother. Have I but found one love to lose another? Don’t tell me that.
- O mother, you are cruel. [_Gets up and flings himself sobbing on a
- sofa_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_To_ HESTER.] But has he found indeed another love?
- HESTER. You know I have loved him always.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. But we are very poor.
- HESTER. Who, being loved, is poor? Oh, no one. I hate my riches. They
- are a burden. Let him share it with me.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. But we are disgraced. We rank among the outcasts Gerald
- is nameless. The sins of the parents should be visited on the children.
- It is God’s law.
- HESTER. I was wrong. God’s law is only Love.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Rises_, _and taking_ HESTER _by the hand_, _goes
- slowly over to where_ GERALD _is lying on the sofa with his head buried
- in his hands_. _She touches him and he looks up_.] Gerald, I cannot
- give you a father, but I have brought you a wife.
- GERALD. Mother, I am not worthy either of her or you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. So she comes first, you are worthy. And when you are
- away, Gerald . . . with . . . her—oh, think of me sometimes. Don’t
- forget me. And when you pray, pray for me. We should pray when we are
- happiest, and you will be happy, Gerald.
- HESTER. Oh, you don’t think of leaving us?
- GERALD. Mother, you won’t leave us?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I might bring shame upon you!
- GERALD. Mother!
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. For a little then: and if you let me, near you always.
- HESTER. [_To_ MRS. ARBUTHNOT.] Come out with us to the garden.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Later on, later on. [_Exeunt_ HESTER _and_ GERALD.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT _goes towards door_ L.C. _Stops at looking-glass over
- mantelpiece and looks into it_. _Enter_ ALICE R.C.]
- ALICE. A gentleman to see you, ma’am.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Say I am not at home. Show me the card. [_Takes card
- from salver and looks at it_.] Say I will not see him.
- [LORD ILLINGWORTH _enters_. MRS. ARBUTHNOT _sees him in the glass and
- starts_, _but does not turn round_. _Exit_ ALICE.] What can you have to
- say to me to-day, George Harford? You can have nothing to say to me.
- You must leave this house.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Rachel, Gerald knows everything about you and me now,
- so some arrangement must be come to that will suit us all three. I
- assure you, he will find in me the most charming and generous of fathers.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. My son may come in at any moment. I saved you last
- night. I may not be able to save you again. My son feels my dishonour
- strongly, terribly strongly. I beg you to go.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Sitting down_.] Last night was excessively
- unfortunate. That silly Puritan girl making a scene merely because I
- wanted to kiss her. What harm is there in a kiss?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Turning round_.] A kiss may ruin a human life, George
- Harford. _I_ know that. _I_ know that too well.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. We won’t discuss that at present. What is of
- importance to-day, as yesterday, is still our son. I am extremely fond
- of him, as you know, and odd though it may seem to you, I admired his
- conduct last night immensely. He took up the cudgels for that pretty
- prude with wonderful promptitude. He is just what I should have liked a
- son of mine to be. Except that no son of mine should ever take the side
- of the Puritans: that is always an error. Now, what I propose is this.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Lord Illingworth, no proposition of yours interests me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. According to our ridiculous English laws, I can’t
- legitimise Gerald. But I can leave him my property. Illingworth is
- entailed, of course, but it is a tedious barrack of a place. He can have
- Ashby, which is much prettier, Harborough, which has the best shooting in
- the north of England, and the house in St. James Square. What more can a
- gentleman require in this world?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Nothing more, I am quite sure.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. As for a title, a title is really rather a nuisance in
- these democratic days. As George Harford I had everything I wanted. Now
- I have merely everything that other people want, which isn’t nearly so
- pleasant. Well, my proposal is this.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I told you I was not interested, and I beg you to go.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. The boy is to be with you for six months in the year,
- and with me for the other six. That is perfectly fair, is it not? You
- can have whatever allowance you like, and live where you choose. As for
- your past, no one knows anything about it except myself and Gerald.
- There is the Puritan, of course, the Puritan in white muslin, but she
- doesn’t count. She couldn’t tell the story without explaining that she
- objected to being kissed, could she? And all the women would think her a
- fool and the men think her a bore. And you need not be afraid that
- Gerald won’t be my heir. I needn’t tell you I have not the slightest
- intention of marrying.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You come too late. My son has no need of you. You are
- not necessary.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What do you mean, Rachel?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. That you are not necessary to Gerald’s career. He does
- not require you.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I do not understand you.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Look into the garden. [LORD ILLINGWORTH _rises and goes
- towards window_.] You had better not let them see you: you bring
- unpleasant memories. [LORD ILLINGWORTH _looks out and starts_.] She
- loves him. They love each other. We are safe from you, and we are going
- away.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Where?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. We will not tell you, and if you find us we will not
- know you. You seem surprised. What welcome would you get from the girl
- whose lips you tried to soil, from the boy whose life you have shamed,
- from the mother whose dishonour comes from you?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You have grown hard, Rachel.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I was too weak once. It is well for me that I have
- changed.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I was very young at the time. We men know life too
- early.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. And we women know life too late. That is the difference
- between men and women. [_A pause_.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Rachel, I want my son. My money may be of no use to
- him now. I may be of no use to him, but I want my son. Bring us
- together, Rachel. You can do it if you choose. [_Sees letter on
- table_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. There is no room in my boy’s life for you. He is not
- interested in _you_.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Then why does he write to me?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. What do you mean?
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What letter is this? [_Takes up letter_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. That—is nothing. Give it to me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is addressed to _me_.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You are not to open it. I forbid you to open it.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. And in Gerald’s handwriting.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It was not to have been sent. It is a letter he wrote
- to you this morning, before he saw me. But he is sorry now he wrote it,
- very sorry. You are not to open it. Give it to me.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It belongs to me. [_Opens it_, _sits down and reads
- it slowly_. MRS. ARBUTHNOT _watches him all the time_.] You have read
- this letter, I suppose, Rachel?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. No.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. You know what is in it?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I don’t admit for a moment that the boy is right in
- what he says. I don’t admit that it is any duty of mine to marry you. I
- deny it entirely. But to get my son back I am ready—yes, I am ready to
- marry you, Rachel—and to treat you always with the deference and respect
- due to my wife. I will marry you as soon as you choose. I give you my
- word of honour.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You made that promise to me once before and broke it.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I will keep it now. And that will show you that I
- love my son, at least as much as you love him. For when I marry you,
- Rachel, there are some ambitions I shall have to surrender. High
- ambitions, too, if any ambition is high.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I decline to marry you, Lord Illingworth.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Are you serious?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Do tell me your reasons. They would interest me
- enormously.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. I have already explained them to my son.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I suppose they were intensely sentimental, weren’t
- they? You women live by your emotions and for them. You have no
- philosophy of life.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. You are right. We women live by our emotions and for
- them. By our passions, and for them, if you will. I have two passions,
- Lord Illingworth: my love of him, my hate of you. You cannot kill those.
- They feed each other.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What sort of love is that which needs to have hate as
- its brother?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It is the sort of love I have for Gerald. Do you think
- that terrible? Well it is terrible. All love is terrible. All love is
- a tragedy. I loved you once, Lord Illingworth. Oh, what a tragedy for a
- woman to have loved you!
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. So you really refuse to marry me?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. Because you hate me?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Yes.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. And does my son hate me as you do?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. No.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. I am glad of that, Rachel.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. He merely despises you.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What a pity! What a pity for him, I mean.
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Don’t be deceived, George. Children begin by loving
- their parents. After a time they judge them. Rarely if ever do they
- forgive them.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Reads letter over again_, _very slowly_.] May I ask
- by what arguments you made the boy who wrote this letter, this beautiful,
- passionate letter, believe that you should not marry his father, the
- father of your own child?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. It was not I who made him see it. It was another.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. What _fin-de-siècle_ person?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. The Puritan, Lord Illingworth. [_A pause_.]
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. [_Winces_, _then rises slowly and goes over to table
- where his hat and gloves are_. MRS. ARBUTHNOT _is standing close to the
- table_. _He picks up one of the gloves, and begins pulling it on_.]
- There is not much then for me to do here, Rachel?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. Nothing.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. It is good-bye, is it?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. For ever, I hope, this time, Lord Illingworth.
- LORD ILLINGWORTH. How curious! At this moment you look exactly as you
- looked the night you left me twenty years ago. You have just the same
- expression in your mouth. Upon my word, Rachel, no woman ever loved me
- as you did. Why, you gave yourself to me like a flower, to do anything I
- liked with. You were the prettiest of playthings, the most fascinating
- of small romances . . . [_Pulls out watch_.] Quarter to two! Must be
- strolling back to Hunstanton. Don’t suppose I shall see you there again.
- I’m sorry, I am, really. It’s been an amusing experience to have met
- amongst people of one’s own rank, and treated quite seriously too, one’s
- mistress, and one’s—
- [MRS. ARBUTHNOT _snatches up glove and strikes_ LORD ILLINGWORTH _across
- the face with it_. LORD ILLINGWORTH _starts_. _He is dazed by the
- insult of his punishment_. _Then he controls himself_, _and goes to
- window and looks out at his son_. _Sighs and leaves the room_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Falls sobbing on the sofa_.] He would have said it.
- He would have said it.
- [_Enter_ GERALD _and_ HESTER _from the garden_.]
- GERALD. Well, dear mother. You never came out after all. So we have
- come in to fetch you. Mother, you have not been crying? [_Kneels down
- beside her_.]
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. My boy! My boy! My boy! [_Running her fingers through
- his hair_.]
- HESTER. [_Coming over_.] But you have two children now. You’ll let me
- be your daughter?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Looking up_.] Would you choose me for a mother?
- HESTER. You of all women I have ever known.
- [_They move towards the door leading into garden with their arms round
- each other’s waists_. GERALD _goes to table_ L.C. _for his hat_. _On
- turning round he sees_ LORD ILLINGWORTH’S _glove lying on the floor_,
- _and picks it up_.]
- GERALD. Hallo, mother, whose glove is this? You have had a visitor.
- Who was it?
- MRS. ARBUTHNOT. [_Turning round_.] Oh! no one. No one in particular.
- A man of no importance.
- CURTAIN
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