- The Project Gutenberg eBook of An Ideal Husband, by Oscar Wilde
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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- Title: An Ideal Husband
- A Play
- Author: Oscar Wilde
- Release Date: March 27, 2009 [eBook #885]
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN IDEAL HUSBAND***
- Transcribed from the 1912 Methuen and Co. edition by David Price, email
- ccx074@pglaf.org
- AN IDEAL HUSBAND
- A PLAY
- BY
- OSCAR WILDE
- * * * * *
- METHUEN & CO. LTD.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
- * * * * *
- _First Published_, _at 1s. net_, _in 1912_
- * * * * *
- _This book was First Published in 1893_
- _First Published_ (_Second Edition_) _by _February_ _1908_
- Methuen & Co._
- _Third Edition_ _October_ _1909_
- _Fourth edition_ _October_ _1910_
- _Fifth Edition_ _May_ _1912_
- THE PERSONS OF THE PLAY
- THE EARL OF CAVERSHAM, K.G.
- VISCOUNT GORING, his Son
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN, Bart., Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC, Attaché at the French Embassy in London
- MR. MONTFORD
- MASON, Butler to Sir Robert Chiltern
- PHIPPS, Lord Goring’s Servant
- JAMES }
- HAROLD } Footmen
- LADY CHILTERN
- LADY MARKBY
- THE COUNTESS OF BASILDON
- MRS. MARCHMONT
- MISS MABEL CHILTERN, Sir Robert Chiltern’s Sister
- MRS. CHEVELEY
- THE SCENES OF THE PLAY
- ACT I. _The Octagon Room in Sir Robert Chiltern’s House in Grosvenor
- Square_.
- ACT II. _Morning-room in Sir Robert Chiltern’s House_.
- ACT III. _The Library of Lord Goring’s House in Curzon Street_.
- ACT IV. _Same as Act II_.
- TIME: _The Present_
- PLACE: _London_.
- _The action of the play is completed within twenty-four hours_.
- THEATRE ROYAL, HAYMARKET
- _Sole Lessee_: _Mr. Herbert Beerbohm Tree_
- _Managers_: _Mr. Lewis Waller and Mr. H. H. Morell_
- _January_ 3_rd_, 1895
- THE EARL OF CAVERSHAM _Mr. Alfred Bishop_.
- VISCOUNT GORING _Mr. Charles H. Hawtrey_.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _Mr. Lewis Waller_.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC _Mr. Cosmo Stuart_.
- MR. MONTFORD _Mr. Harry Stanford_.
- PHIPPS _Mr. C. H. Brookfield_.
- MASON _Mr. H. Deane_.
- JAMES _Mr. Charles Meyrick_.
- HAROLD _Mr. Goodhart_.
- LADY CHILTERN _Miss Julia Neilson_.
- LADY MARKBY _Miss Fanny Brough_.
- COUNTESS OF BASILDON _Miss Vane Featherston_.
- MRS. MARCHMONT _Miss Helen Forsyth_.
- MISS MABEL CHILTERN _Miss Maud Millet_.
- MRS. CHEVELEY _Miss Florence West_.
- FIRST ACT
- SCENE
- _The octagon room at Sir Robert Chiltern’s house in Grosvenor Square_.
- [_The room is brilliantly lighted and full of guests_. _At the top of
- the staircase stands_ LADY CHILTERN, _a woman of grave Greek beauty_,
- _about twenty-seven years of age_. _She receives the guests as they come
- up_. _Over the well of the staircase hangs a great chandelier with wax
- lights_, _which illumine a large eighteenth-century French
- tapestry—representing the Triumph of Love_, _from a design by
- Boucher—that is stretched on the staircase wall_. _On the right is the
- entrance to the music-room_. _The sound of a string quartette is faintly
- heard_. _The entrance on the left leads to other reception-rooms_. MRS.
- MARCHMONT _and_ LADY BASILDON, _two very pretty women_, _are seated
- together on a Louis Seize sofa_. _They are types of exquisite
- fragility_. _Their affectation of manner has a delicate charm_.
- _Watteau would have loved to paint them_.]
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Going on to the Hartlocks’ to-night, Margaret?
- LADY BASILDON. I suppose so. Are you?
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Yes. Horribly tedious parties they give, don’t they?
- LADY BASILDON. Horribly tedious! Never know why I go. Never know why I
- go anywhere.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. I come here to be educated.
- LADY BASILDON. Ah! I hate being educated!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. So do I. It puts one almost on a level with the
- commercial classes, doesn’t it? But dear Gertrude Chiltern is always
- telling me that I should have some serious purpose in life. So I come
- here to try to find one.
- LADY BASILDON. [_Looking round through her lorgnette_.] I don’t see
- anybody here to-night whom one could possibly call a serious purpose.
- The man who took me in to dinner talked to me about his wife the whole
- time.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. How very trivial of him!
- LADY BASILDON. Terribly trivial! What did your man talk about?
- MRS. MARCHMONT. About myself.
- LADY BASILDON. [_Languidly_.] And were you interested?
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Shaking her head_.] Not in the smallest degree.
- LADY BASILDON. What martyrs we are, dear Margaret!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Rising_.] And how well it becomes us, Olivia!
- [_They rise and go towards the music-room_. _The_ VICOMTE DE NANJAC, _a
- young attaché known for his neckties and his Anglomania_, _approaches
- with a low bow_, _and enters into conversation_.]
- MASON. [_Announcing guests from the top of the staircase_.] Mr. and
- Lady Jane Barford. Lord Caversham.
- [_Enter_ LORD CAVERSHAM, _an old gentleman of seventy_, _wearing the
- riband and star of the Garter_. _A fine Whig type_. _Rather like a
- portrait by Lawrence_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Good evening, Lady Chiltern! Has my good-for-nothing
- young son been here?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Smiling_.] I don’t think Lord Goring has arrived yet.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Coming up to_ LORD CAVERSHAM.] Why do you call Lord
- Goring good-for-nothing?
- [MABEL CHILTERN _is a perfect example of the English type of prettiness_,
- _the apple-blossom type_. _She has all the fragrance and freedom of a
- flower_. _There is ripple after ripple of sunlight in her hair_, _and
- the little mouth_, _with its parted lips_, _is expectant_, _like the
- mouth of a child_. _She has the fascinating tyranny of youth_, _and the
- astonishing courage of innocence_. _To sane people she is not
- reminiscent of any work of art_. _But she is really like a Tanagra
- statuette_, _and would be rather annoyed if she were told so_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Because he leads such an idle life.
- MABEL CHILTERN. How can you say such a thing? Why, he rides in the Row
- at ten o’clock in the morning, goes to the Opera three times a week,
- changes his clothes at least five times a day, and dines out every night
- of the season. You don’t call that leading an idle life, do you?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Looking at her with a kindly twinkle in his eyes_.]
- You are a very charming young lady!
- MABEL CHILTERN. How sweet of you to say that, Lord Caversham! Do come
- to us more often. You know we are always at home on Wednesdays, and you
- look so well with your star!
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Never go anywhere now. Sick of London Society.
- Shouldn’t mind being introduced to my own tailor; he always votes on the
- right side. But object strongly to being sent down to dinner with my
- wife’s milliner. Never could stand Lady Caversham’s bonnets.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh, I love London Society! I think it has immensely
- improved. It is entirely composed now of beautiful idiots and brilliant
- lunatics. Just what Society should be.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Hum! Which is Goring? Beautiful idiot, or the other
- thing?
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Gravely_.] I have been obliged for the present to put
- Lord Goring into a class quite by himself. But he is developing
- charmingly!
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Into what?
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_With a little curtsey_.] I hope to let you know very
- soon, Lord Caversham!
- MASON. [_Announcing guests_.] Lady Markby. Mrs. Cheveley.
- [_Enter_ LADY MARKBY _and_ MRS. CHEVELEY. LADY MARKBY _is a pleasant_,
- _kindly_, _popular woman_, _with gray hair à la marquise and good lace_.
- MRS. CHEVELEY, _who accompanies her_, _is tall and rather slight_. _Lips
- very thin and highly-coloured_, _a line of scarlet on a pallid face_.
- _Venetian red hair_, _aquiline nose_, _and long throat_. _Rouge
- accentuates the natural paleness of her complexion_. _Gray-green eyes
- that move restlessly_. _She is in heliotrope_, _with diamonds_. _She
- looks rather like an orchid_, _and makes great demands on one’s
- curiosity_. _In all her movements she is extremely graceful_. _A work
- of art_, _on the whole_, _but showing the influence of too many
- schools_.]
- LADY MARKBY. Good evening, dear Gertrude! So kind of you to let me
- bring my friend, Mrs. Cheveley. Two such charming women should know each
- other!
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Advances towards_ MRS. CHEVELEY _with a sweet smile_.
- _Then suddenly stops_, _and bows rather distantly_.] I think Mrs.
- Cheveley and I have met before. I did not know she had married a second
- time.
- LADY MARKBY. [_Genially_.] Ah, nowadays people marry as often as they
- can, don’t they? It is most fashionable. [_To_ DUCHESS OF MARYBOROUGH.]
- Dear Duchess, and how is the Duke? Brain still weak, I suppose? Well,
- that is only to be expected, is it not? His good father was just the
- same. There is nothing like race, is there?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Playing with her fan_.] But have we really met before,
- Lady Chiltern? I can’t remember where. I have been out of England for
- so long.
- LADY CHILTERN. We were at school together, Mrs. Cheveley.
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Superciliously_.] Indeed? I have forgotten all about my
- schooldays. I have a vague impression that they were detestable.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Coldly_.] I am not surprised!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_In her sweetest manner_.] Do you know, I am quite
- looking forward to meeting your clever husband, Lady Chiltern. Since he
- has been at the Foreign Office, he has been so much talked of in Vienna.
- They actually succeed in spelling his name right in the newspapers. That
- in itself is fame, on the continent.
- LADY CHILTERN. I hardly think there will be much in common between you
- and my husband, Mrs. Cheveley! [_Moves away_.]
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. Ah! chère Madame, queue surprise! I have not seen
- you since Berlin!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Not since Berlin, Vicomte. Five years ago!
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. And you are younger and more beautiful than ever.
- How do you manage it?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. By making it a rule only to talk to perfectly charming
- people like yourself.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. Ah! you flatter me. You butter me, as they say here.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Do they say that here? How dreadful of them!
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. Yes, they have a wonderful language. It should be
- more widely known.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _enters_. _A man of forty_, _but looking somewhat
- younger_. _Clean-shaven_, _with finely-cut features_, _dark-haired and
- dark-eyed_. _A personality of mark_. _Not popular—few personalities
- are_. _But intensely admired by the few_, _and deeply respected by the
- many_. _The note of his manner is that of perfect distinction_, _with a
- slight touch of pride_. _One feels that he is conscious of the success
- he has made in life_. _A nervous temperament_, _with a tired look_.
- _The firmly-chiselled mouth and chin contrast strikingly with the
- romantic expression in the deep-set eyes_. _The variance is suggestive
- of an almost complete separation of passion and intellect_, _as though
- thought and emotion were each isolated in its own sphere through some
- violence of will-power_. _There is nervousness in the nostrils_, _and in
- the pale_, _thin_, _pointed hands_. _It would be inaccurate to call him
- picturesque_. _Picturesqueness cannot survive the House of Commons_.
- _But Vandyck would have liked to have painted his head_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Good evening, Lady Markby! I hope you have brought
- Sir John with you?
- LADY MARKBY. Oh! I have brought a much more charming person than Sir
- John. Sir John’s temper since he has taken seriously to politics has
- become quite unbearable. Really, now that the House of Commons is trying
- to become useful, it does a great deal of harm.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I hope not, Lady Markby. At any rate we do our
- best to waste the public time, don’t we? But who is this charming person
- you have been kind enough to bring to us?
- LADY MARKBY. Her name is Mrs. Cheveley! One of the Dorsetshire
- Cheveleys, I suppose. But I really don’t know. Families are so mixed
- nowadays. Indeed, as a rule, everybody turns out to be somebody else.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Mrs. Cheveley? I seem to know the name.
- LADY MARKBY. She has just arrived from Vienna.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Ah! yes. I think I know whom you mean.
- LADY MARKBY. Oh! she goes everywhere there, and has such pleasant
- scandals about all her friends. I really must go to Vienna next winter.
- I hope there is a good chef at the Embassy.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. If there is not, the Ambassador will certainly have
- to be recalled. Pray point out Mrs. Cheveley to me. I should like to
- see her.
- LADY MARKBY. Let me introduce you. [_To_ MRS. CHEVELEY.] My dear, Sir
- Robert Chiltern is dying to know you!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Bowing_.] Every one is dying to know the
- brilliant Mrs. Cheveley. Our attachés at Vienna write to us about
- nothing else.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thank you, Sir Robert. An acquaintance that begins with
- a compliment is sure to develop into a real friendship. It starts in the
- right manner. And I find that I know Lady Chiltern already.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Really?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. She has just reminded me that we were at school
- together. I remember it perfectly now. She always got the good conduct
- prize. I have a distinct recollection of Lady Chiltern always getting
- the good conduct prize!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Smiling_.] And what prizes did you get, Mrs.
- Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. My prizes came a little later on in life. I don’t think
- any of them were for good conduct. I forget!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I am sure they were for something charming!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I don’t know that women are always rewarded for being
- charming. I think they are usually punished for it! Certainly, more
- women grow old nowadays through the faithfulness of their admirers than
- through anything else! At least that is the only way I can account for
- the terribly haggard look of most of your pretty women in London!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What an appalling philosophy that sounds! To
- attempt to classify you, Mrs. Cheveley, would be an impertinence. But
- may I ask, at heart, are you an optimist or a pessimist? Those seem to
- be the only two fashionable religions left to us nowadays.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, I’m neither. Optimism begins in a broad grin, and
- Pessimism ends with blue spectacles. Besides, they are both of them
- merely poses.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You prefer to be natural?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Sometimes. But it is such a very difficult pose to keep
- up.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What would those modern psychological novelists, of
- whom we hear so much, say to such a theory as that?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Ah! the strength of women comes from the fact that
- psychology cannot explain us. Men can be analysed, women . . . merely
- adored.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You think science cannot grapple with the problem
- of women?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Science can never grapple with the irrational. That is
- why it has no future before it, in this world.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. And women represent the irrational.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Well-dressed women do.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With a polite bow_.] I fear I could hardly agree
- with you there. But do sit down. And now tell me, what makes you leave
- your brilliant Vienna for our gloomy London—or perhaps the question is
- indiscreet?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Questions are never indiscreet. Answers sometimes are.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Well, at any rate, may I know if it is politics or
- pleasure?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Politics are my only pleasure. You see nowadays it is
- not fashionable to flirt till one is forty, or to be romantic till one is
- forty-five, so we poor women who are under thirty, or say we are, have
- nothing open to us but politics or philanthropy. And philanthropy seems
- to me to have become simply the refuge of people who wish to annoy their
- fellow-creatures. I prefer politics. I think they are more . . .
- becoming!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. A political life is a noble career!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Sometimes. And sometimes it is a clever game, Sir
- Robert. And sometimes it is a great nuisance.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Which do you find it?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I? A combination of all three. [_Drops her fan_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Picks up fan_.] Allow me!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. But you have not told me yet what makes you honour
- London so suddenly. Our season is almost over.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh! I don’t care about the London season! It is too
- matrimonial. People are either hunting for husbands, or hiding from
- them. I wanted to meet you. It is quite true. You know what a woman’s
- curiosity is. Almost as great as a man’s! I wanted immensely to meet
- you, and . . . to ask you to do something for me.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I hope it is not a little thing, Mrs. Cheveley. I
- find that little things are so very difficult to do.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_After a moment’s reflection_.] No, I don’t think it is
- quite a little thing.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I am so glad. Do tell me what it is.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Later on. [_Rises_.] And now may I walk through your
- beautiful house? I hear your pictures are charming. Poor Baron
- Arnheim—you remember the Baron?—used to tell me you had some wonderful
- Corots.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With an almost imperceptible start_.] Did you
- know Baron Arnheim well?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Smiling_.] Intimately. Did you?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. At one time.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Wonderful man, wasn’t he?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_After a pause_.] He was very remarkable, in many
- ways.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I often think it such a pity he never wrote his memoirs.
- They would have been most interesting.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes: he knew men and cities well, like the old
- Greek.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Without the dreadful disadvantage of having a Penelope
- waiting at home for him.
- MASON. Lord Goring.
- [_Enter_ LORD GORING. _Thirty-four_, _but always says he is younger_.
- _A well-bred_, _expressionless face_. _He is clever_, _but would not
- like to be thought so_. _A flawless dandy_, _he would be annoyed if he
- were considered romantic_. _He plays with life_, _and is on perfectly
- good terms with the world_. _He is fond of being misunderstood_. _It
- gives him a post of vantage_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Good evening, my dear Arthur! Mrs. Cheveley, allow
- me to introduce to you Lord Goring, the idlest man in London.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I have met Lord Goring before.
- LORD GORING. [_Bowing_.] I did not think you would remember me, Mrs.
- Cheveley.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. My memory is under admirable control. And are you still
- a bachelor?
- LORD GORING. I . . . believe so.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. How very romantic!
- LORD GORING. Oh! I am not at all romantic. I am not old enough. I
- leave romance to my seniors.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Lord Goring is the result of Boodle’s Club, Mrs.
- Cheveley.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. He reflects every credit on the institution.
- LORD GORING. May I ask are you staying in London long?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. That depends partly on the weather, partly on the
- cooking, and partly on Sir Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You are not going to plunge us into a European war,
- I hope?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. There is no danger, at present!
- [_She nods to_ LORD GORING, _with a look of amusement in her eyes_, _and
- goes out with_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. LORD GORING _saunters over to_ MABEL
- CHILTERN.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. You are very late!
- LORD GORING. Have you missed me?
- MABEL CHILTERN. Awfully!
- LORD GORING. Then I am sorry I did not stay away longer. I like being
- missed.
- MABEL CHILTERN. How very selfish of you!
- LORD GORING. I am very selfish.
- MABEL CHILTERN. You are always telling me of your bad qualities, Lord
- Goring.
- LORD GORING. I have only told you half of them as yet, Miss Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN. Are the others very bad?
- LORD GORING. Quite dreadful! When I think of them at night I go to
- sleep at once.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Well, I delight in your bad qualities. I wouldn’t have
- you part with one of them.
- LORD GORING. How very nice of you! But then you are always nice. By
- the way, I want to ask you a question, Miss Mabel. Who brought Mrs.
- Cheveley here? That woman in heliotrope, who has just gone out of the
- room with your brother?
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh, I think Lady Markby brought her. Why do you ask?
- LORD GORING. I haven’t seen her for years, that is all.
- MABEL CHILTERN. What an absurd reason!
- LORD GORING. All reasons are absurd.
- MABEL CHILTERN. What sort of a woman is she?
- LORD GORING. Oh! a genius in the daytime and a beauty at night!
- MABEL CHILTERN. I dislike her already.
- LORD GORING. That shows your admirable good taste.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. [_Approaching_.] Ah, the English young lady is the
- dragon of good taste, is she not? Quite the dragon of good taste.
- LORD GORING. So the newspapers are always telling us.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. I read all your English newspapers. I find them so
- amusing.
- LORD GORING. Then, my dear Nanjac, you must certainly read between the
- lines.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. I should like to, but my professor objects. [_To_
- MABEL CHILTERN.] May I have the pleasure of escorting you to the
- music-room, Mademoiselle?
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Looking very disappointed_.] Delighted, Vicomte,
- quite delighted! [_Turning to_ LORD GORING.] Aren’t you coming to the
- music-room?
- LORD GORING. Not if there is any music going on, Miss Mabel.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Severely_.] The music is in German. You would not
- understand it.
- [_Goes out with the_ VICOMTE DE NANJAC. LORD CAVERSHAM _comes up to his
- son_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, sir! what are you doing here? Wasting your life
- as usual! You should be in bed, sir. You keep too late hours! I heard
- of you the other night at Lady Rufford’s dancing till four o’clock in the
- morning!
- LORD GORING. Only a quarter to four, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Can’t make out how you stand London Society. The thing
- has gone to the dogs, a lot of damned nobodies talking about nothing.
- LORD GORING. I love talking about nothing, father. It is the only thing
- I know anything about.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. You seem to me to be living entirely for pleasure.
- LORD GORING. What else is there to live for, father? Nothing ages like
- happiness.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. You are heartless, sir, very heartless!
- LORD GORING. I hope not, father. Good evening, Lady Basildon!
- LADY BASILDON. [_Arching two pretty eyebrows_.] Are you here? I had no
- idea you ever came to political parties!
- LORD GORING. I adore political parties. They are the only place left to
- us where people don’t talk politics.
- LADY BASILDON. I delight in talking politics. I talk them all day long.
- But I can’t bear listening to them. I don’t know how the unfortunate men
- in the House stand these long debates.
- LORD GORING. By never listening.
- LADY BASILDON. Really?
- LORD GORING. [_In his most serious manner_.] Of course. You see, it is
- a very dangerous thing to listen. If one listens one may be convinced;
- and a man who allows himself to be convinced by an argument is a
- thoroughly unreasonable person.
- LADY BASILDON. Ah! that accounts for so much in men that I have never
- understood, and so much in women that their husbands never appreciate in
- them!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_With a sigh_.] Our husbands never appreciate anything
- in us. We have to go to others for that!
- LADY BASILDON. [_Emphatically_.] Yes, always to others, have we not?
- LORD GORING. [_Smiling_.] And those are the views of the two ladies who
- are known to have the most admirable husbands in London.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. That is exactly what we can’t stand. My Reginald is
- quite hopelessly faultless. He is really unendurably so, at times!
- There is not the smallest element of excitement in knowing him.
- LORD GORING. How terrible! Really, the thing should be more widely
- known!
- LADY BASILDON. Basildon is quite as bad; he is as domestic as if he was
- a bachelor.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Pressing_ LADY BASILDON’S _hand_.] My poor Olivia!
- We have married perfect husbands, and we are well punished for it.
- LORD GORING. I should have thought it was the husbands who were
- punished.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Drawing herself up_.] Oh, dear no! They are as happy
- as possible! And as for trusting us, it is tragic how much they trust
- us.
- LADY BASILDON. Perfectly tragic!
- LORD GORING. Or comic, Lady Basildon?
- LADY BASILDON. Certainly not comic, Lord Goring. How unkind of you to
- suggest such a thing!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. I am afraid Lord Goring is in the camp of the enemy, as
- usual. I saw him talking to that Mrs. Cheveley when he came in.
- LORD GORING. Handsome woman, Mrs. Cheveley!
- LADY BASILDON. [_Stiffly_.] Please don’t praise other women in our
- presence. You might wait for us to do that!
- LORD GORING. I did wait.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Well, we are not going to praise her. I hear she went
- to the Opera on Monday night, and told Tommy Rufford at supper that, as
- far as she could see, London Society was entirely made up of dowdies and
- dandies.
- LORD GORING. She is quite right, too. The men are all dowdies and the
- women are all dandies, aren’t they?
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_After a pause_.] Oh! do you really think that is what
- Mrs. Cheveley meant?
- LORD GORING. Of course. And a very sensible remark for Mrs. Cheveley to
- make, too.
- [_Enter_ MABEL CHILTERN. _She joins the group_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Why are you talking about Mrs. Cheveley? Everybody is
- talking about Mrs. Cheveley! Lord Goring says—what did you say, Lord
- Goring, about Mrs. Cheveley? Oh! I remember, that she was a genius in
- the daytime and a beauty at night.
- LADY BASILDON. What a horrid combination! So very unnatural!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_In her most dreamy manner_.] I like looking at
- geniuses, and listening to beautiful people.
- LORD GORING. Ah! that is morbid of you, Mrs. Marchmont!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Brightening to a look of real pleasure_.] I am so
- glad to hear you say that. Marchmont and I have been married for seven
- years, and he has never once told me that I was morbid. Men are so
- painfully unobservant!
- LADY BASILDON. [_Turning to her_.] I have always said, dear Margaret,
- that you were the most morbid person in London.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Ah! but you are always sympathetic, Olivia!
- MABEL CHILTERN. Is it morbid to have a desire for food? I have a great
- desire for food. Lord Goring, will you give me some supper?
- LORD GORING. With pleasure, Miss Mabel. [_Moves away with her_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. How horrid you have been! You have never talked to me
- the whole evening!
- LORD GORING. How could I? You went away with the child-diplomatist.
- MABEL CHILTERN. You might have followed us. Pursuit would have been
- only polite. I don’t think I like you at all this evening!
- LORD GORING. I like you immensely.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Well, I wish you’d show it in a more marked way! [_They
- go downstairs_.]
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Olivia, I have a curious feeling of absolute faintness.
- I think I should like some supper very much. I know I should like some
- supper.
- LADY BASILDON. I am positively dying for supper, Margaret!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Men are so horribly selfish, they never think of these
- things.
- LADY BASILDON. Men are grossly material, grossly material!
- [_The_ VICOMTE DE NANJAC _enters from the music-room with some other
- guests_. _After having carefully examined all the people present_, _he
- approaches_ LADY BASILDON.]
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. May I have the honour of taking you down to supper,
- Comtesse?
- LADY BASILDON. [_Coldly_.] I never take supper, thank you, Vicomte.
- [_The_ VICOMTE _is about to retire_. LADY BASILDON, _seeing this_,
- _rises at once and takes his arm_.] But I will come down with you with
- pleasure.
- VICOMTE DE NANJAC. I am so fond of eating! I am very English in all my
- tastes.
- LADY BASILDON. You look quite English, Vicomte, quite English.
- [_They pass out_. MR. MONTFORD, _a perfectly groomed young dandy_,
- _approaches_ MRS. MARCHMONT.]
- MR. MONTFORD. Like some supper, Mrs. Marchmont?
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Languidly_.] Thank you, Mr. Montford, I never touch
- supper. [_Rises hastily and takes his arm_.] But I will sit beside you,
- and watch you.
- MR. MONTFORD. I don’t know that I like being watched when I am eating!
- MRS. MARCHMONT. Then I will watch some one else.
- MR. MONTFORD. I don’t know that I should like that either.
- MRS. MARCHMONT. [_Severely_.] Pray, Mr. Montford, do not make these
- painful scenes of jealousy in public!
- [_They go downstairs with the other guests_, _passing_ SIR ROBERT
- CHILTERN _and_ MRS. CHEVELEY, _who now enter_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. And are you going to any of our country houses
- before you leave England, Mrs. Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, no! I can’t stand your English house-parties. In
- England people actually try to be brilliant at breakfast. That is so
- dreadful of them! Only dull people are brilliant at breakfast. And then
- the family skeleton is always reading family prayers. My stay in England
- really depends on you, Sir Robert. [_Sits down on the sofa_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Taking a seat beside her_.] Seriously?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Quite seriously. I want to talk to you about a great
- political and financial scheme, about this Argentine Canal Company, in
- fact.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What a tedious, practical subject for you to talk
- about, Mrs. Cheveley!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, I like tedious, practical subjects. What I don’t
- like are tedious, practical people. There is a wide difference.
- Besides, you are interested, I know, in International Canal schemes. You
- were Lord Radley’s secretary, weren’t you, when the Government bought the
- Suez Canal shares?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes. But the Suez Canal was a very great and
- splendid undertaking. It gave us our direct route to India. It had
- imperial value. It was necessary that we should have control. This
- Argentine scheme is a commonplace Stock Exchange swindle.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. A speculation, Sir Robert! A brilliant, daring
- speculation.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Believe me, Mrs. Cheveley, it is a swindle. Let us
- call things by their proper names. It makes matters simpler. We have
- all the information about it at the Foreign Office. In fact, I sent out
- a special Commission to inquire into the matter privately, and they
- report that the works are hardly begun, and as for the money already
- subscribed, no one seems to know what has become of it. The whole thing
- is a second Panama, and with not a quarter of the chance of success that
- miserable affair ever had. I hope you have not invested in it. I am
- sure you are far too clever to have done that.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I have invested very largely in it.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Who could have advised you to do such a foolish
- thing?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Your old friend—and mine.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Who?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Baron Arnheim.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Frowning_.] Ah! yes. I remember hearing, at the
- time of his death, that he had been mixed up in the whole affair.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. It was his last romance. His last but one, to do him
- justice.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rising_.] But you have not seen my Corots yet.
- They are in the music-room. Corots seem to go with music, don’t they?
- May I show them to you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Shaking her head_.] I am not in a mood to-night for
- silver twilights, or rose-pink dawns. I want to talk business.
- [_Motions to him with her fan to sit down again beside her_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I fear I have no advice to give you, Mrs. Cheveley,
- except to interest yourself in something less dangerous. The success of
- the Canal depends, of course, on the attitude of England, and I am going
- to lay the report of the Commissioners before the House to-morrow night.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. That you must not do. In your own interests, Sir Robert,
- to say nothing of mine, you must not do that.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Looking at her in wonder_.] In my own interests?
- My dear Mrs. Cheveley, what do you mean? [_Sits down beside her_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Sir Robert, I will be quite frank with you. I want you
- to withdraw the report that you had intended to lay before the House, on
- the ground that you have reasons to believe that the Commissioners have
- been prejudiced or misinformed, or something. Then I want you to say a
- few words to the effect that the Government is going to reconsider the
- question, and that you have reason to believe that the Canal, if
- completed, will be of great international value. You know the sort of
- things ministers say in cases of this kind. A few ordinary platitudes
- will do. In modern life nothing produces such an effect as a good
- platitude. It makes the whole world kin. Will you do that for me?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Mrs. Cheveley, you cannot be serious in making me
- such a proposition!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I am quite serious.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Coldly_.] Pray allow me to believe that you are
- not.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Speaking with great deliberation and emphasis_.] Ah!
- but I am. And if you do what I ask you, I . . . will pay you very
- handsomely!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Pay me!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I am afraid I don’t quite understand what you mean.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Leaning back on the sofa and looking at him_.] How
- very disappointing! And I have come all the way from Vienna in order
- that you should thoroughly understand me.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I fear I don’t.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_In her most nonchalant manner_.] My dear Sir Robert,
- you are a man of the world, and you have your price, I suppose.
- Everybody has nowadays. The drawback is that most people are so
- dreadfully expensive. I know I am. I hope you will be more reasonable
- in your terms.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rises indignantly_.] If you will allow me, I
- will call your carriage for you. You have lived so long abroad, Mrs.
- Cheveley, that you seem to be unable to realise that you are talking to
- an English gentleman.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Detains him by touching his arm with her fan_, _and
- keeping it there while she is talking_.] I realise that I am talking to
- a man who laid the foundation of his fortune by selling to a Stock
- Exchange speculator a Cabinet secret.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Biting his lip_.] What do you mean?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Rising and facing him_.] I mean that I know the real
- origin of your wealth and your career, and I have got your letter, too.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What letter?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Contemptuously_.] The letter you wrote to Baron
- Arnheim, when you were Lord Radley’s secretary, telling the Baron to buy
- Suez Canal shares—a letter written three days before the Government
- announced its own purchase.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Hoarsely_.] It is not true.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You thought that letter had been destroyed. How foolish
- of you! It is in my possession.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. The affair to which you allude was no more than a
- speculation. The House of Commons had not yet passed the bill; it might
- have been rejected.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. It was a swindle, Sir Robert. Let us call things by
- their proper names. It makes everything simpler. And now I am going to
- sell you that letter, and the price I ask for it is your public support
- of the Argentine scheme. You made your own fortune out of one canal.
- You must help me and my friends to make our fortunes out of another!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. It is infamous, what you propose—infamous!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, no! This is the game of life as we all have to play
- it, Sir Robert, sooner or later!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I cannot do what you ask me.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You mean you cannot help doing it. You know you are
- standing on the edge of a precipice. And it is not for you to make
- terms. It is for you to accept them. Supposing you refuse—
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What then?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. My dear Sir Robert, what then? You are ruined, that is
- all! Remember to what a point your Puritanism in England has brought
- you. In old days nobody pretended to be a bit better than his
- neighbours. In fact, to be a bit better than one’s neighbour was
- considered excessively vulgar and middle-class. Nowadays, with our
- modern mania for morality, every one has to pose as a paragon of purity,
- incorruptibility, and all the other seven deadly virtues—and what is the
- result? You all go over like ninepins—one after the other. Not a year
- passes in England without somebody disappearing. Scandals used to lend
- charm, or at least interest, to a man—now they crush him. And yours is a
- very nasty scandal. You couldn’t survive it. If it were known that as a
- young man, secretary to a great and important minister, you sold a
- Cabinet secret for a large sum of money, and that that was the origin of
- your wealth and career, you would be hounded out of public life, you
- would disappear completely. And after all, Sir Robert, why should you
- sacrifice your entire future rather than deal diplomatically with your
- enemy? For the moment I am your enemy. I admit it! And I am much
- stronger than you are. The big battalions are on my side. You have a
- splendid position, but it is your splendid position that makes you so
- vulnerable. You can’t defend it! And I am in attack. Of course I have
- not talked morality to you. You must admit in fairness that I have
- spared you that. Years ago you did a clever, unscrupulous thing; it
- turned out a great success. You owe to it your fortune and position.
- And now you have got to pay for it. Sooner or later we have all to pay
- for what we do. You have to pay now. Before I leave you to-night, you
- have got to promise me to suppress your report, and to speak in the House
- in favour of this scheme.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What you ask is impossible.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You must make it possible. You are going to make it
- possible. Sir Robert, you know what your English newspapers are like.
- Suppose that when I leave this house I drive down to some newspaper
- office, and give them this scandal and the proofs of it! Think of their
- loathsome joy, of the delight they would have in dragging you down, of
- the mud and mire they would plunge you in. Think of the hypocrite with
- his greasy smile penning his leading article, and arranging the foulness
- of the public placard.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Stop! You want me to withdraw the report and to
- make a short speech stating that I believe there are possibilities in the
- scheme?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Sitting down on the sofa_.] Those are my terms.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_In a low voice_.] I will give you any sum of
- money you want.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Even you are not rich enough, Sir Robert, to buy back
- your past. No man is.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I will not do what you ask me. I will not.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You have to. If you don’t . . . [_Rises from the sofa_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Bewildered and unnerved_.] Wait a moment! What
- did you propose? You said that you would give me back my letter, didn’t
- you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. That is agreed. I will be in the Ladies’ Gallery
- to-morrow night at half-past eleven. If by that time—and you will have
- had heaps of opportunity—you have made an announcement to the House in
- the terms I wish, I shall hand you back your letter with the prettiest
- thanks, and the best, or at any rate the most suitable, compliment I can
- think of. I intend to play quite fairly with you. One should always
- play fairly . . . when one has the winning cards. The Baron taught me
- that . . . amongst other things.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You must let me have time to consider your
- proposal.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. No; you must settle now!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Give me a week—three days!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Impossible! I have got to telegraph to Vienna to-night.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. My God! what brought you into my life?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Circumstances. [_Moves towards the door_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Don’t go. I consent. The report shall be
- withdrawn. I will arrange for a question to be put to me on the subject.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thank you. I knew we should come to an amicable
- agreement. I understood your nature from the first. I analysed you,
- though you did not adore me. And now you can get my carriage for me, Sir
- Robert. I see the people coming up from supper, and Englishmen always
- get romantic after a meal, and that bores me dreadfully. [_Exit_ SIR
- ROBERT CHILTERN.]
- [_Enter Guests_, LADY CHILTERN, LADY MARKBY, LORD CAVERSHAM, LADY
- BASILDON, MRS. MARCHMONT, VICOMTE DE NANJAC, MR. MONTFORD.]
- LADY MARKBY. Well, dear Mrs. Cheveley, I hope you have enjoyed yourself.
- Sir Robert is very entertaining, is he not?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Most entertaining! I have enjoyed my talk with him
- immensely.
- LADY MARKBY. He has had a very interesting and brilliant career. And he
- has married a most admirable wife. Lady Chiltern is a woman of the very
- highest principles, I am glad to say. I am a little too old now, myself,
- to trouble about setting a good example, but I always admire people who
- do. And Lady Chiltern has a very ennobling effect on life, though her
- dinner-parties are rather dull sometimes. But one can’t have everything,
- can one? And now I must go, dear. Shall I call for you to-morrow?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks.
- LADY MARKBY. We might drive in the Park at five. Everything looks so
- fresh in the Park now!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Except the people!
- LADY MARKBY. Perhaps the people are a little jaded. I have often
- observed that the Season as it goes on produces a kind of softening of
- the brain. However, I think anything is better than high intellectual
- pressure. That is the most unbecoming thing there is. It makes the
- noses of the young girls so particularly large. And there is nothing so
- difficult to marry as a large nose; men don’t like them. Good-night,
- dear! [_To_ LADY CHILTERN.] Good-night, Gertrude! [_Goes out on_ LORD
- CAVERSHAM’S _arm_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. What a charming house you have, Lady Chiltern! I have
- spent a delightful evening. It has been so interesting getting to know
- your husband.
- LADY CHILTERN. Why did you wish to meet my husband, Mrs. Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, I will tell you. I wanted to interest him in this
- Argentine Canal scheme, of which I dare say you have heard. And I found
- him most susceptible,—susceptible to reason, I mean. A rare thing in a
- man. I converted him in ten minutes. He is going to make a speech in
- the House to-morrow night in favour of the idea. We must go to the
- Ladies’ Gallery and hear him! It will be a great occasion!
- LADY CHILTERN. There must be some mistake. That scheme could never have
- my husband’s support.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, I assure you it’s all settled. I don’t regret my
- tedious journey from Vienna now. It has been a great success. But, of
- course, for the next twenty-four hours the whole thing is a dead secret.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Gently_.] A secret? Between whom?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a flash of amusement in her eyes_.] Between your
- husband and myself.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Entering_.] Your carriage is here, Mrs.
- Cheveley!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks! Good evening, Lady Chiltern! Good-night, Lord
- Goring! I am at Claridge’s. Don’t you think you might leave a card?
- LORD GORING. If you wish it, Mrs. Cheveley!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, don’t be so solemn about it, or I shall be obliged to
- leave a card on you. In England I suppose that would hardly be
- considered en règle. Abroad, we are more civilised. Will you see me
- down, Sir Robert? Now that we have both the same interests at heart we
- shall be great friends, I hope!
- [_Sails out on_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN’S _arm_. LADY CHILTERN _goes to the
- top of the staircase and looks down at them as they descend_. _Her
- expression is troubled_. _After a little time she is joined by some of
- the guests_, _and passes with them into another reception-room_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. What a horrid woman!
- LORD GORING. You should go to bed, Miss Mabel.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Lord Goring!
- LORD GORING. My father told me to go to bed an hour ago. I don’t see
- why I shouldn’t give you the same advice. I always pass on good advice.
- It is the only thing to do with it. It is never of any use to oneself.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Lord Goring, you are always ordering me out of the room.
- I think it most courageous of you. Especially as I am not going to bed
- for hours. [_Goes over to the sofa_.] You can come and sit down if you
- like, and talk about anything in the world, except the Royal Academy,
- Mrs. Cheveley, or novels in Scotch dialect. They are not improving
- subjects. [_Catches sight of something that is lying on the sofa half
- hidden by the cushion_.] What is this? Some one has dropped a diamond
- brooch! Quite beautiful, isn’t it? [_Shows it to him_.] I wish it was
- mine, but Gertrude won’t let me wear anything but pearls, and I am
- thoroughly sick of pearls. They make one look so plain, so good and so
- intellectual. I wonder whom the brooch belongs to.
- LORD GORING. I wonder who dropped it.
- MABEL CHILTERN. It is a beautiful brooch.
- LORD GORING. It is a handsome bracelet.
- MABEL CHILTERN. It isn’t a bracelet. It’s a brooch.
- LORD GORING. It can be used as a bracelet. [_Takes it from her_, _and_,
- _pulling out a green letter-case_, _puts the ornament carefully in it_,
- _and replaces the whole thing in his breast-pocket with the most perfect
- sang froid_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. What are you doing?
- LORD GORING. Miss Mabel, I am going to make a rather strange request to
- you.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Eagerly_.] Oh, pray do! I have been waiting for it
- all the evening.
- LORD GORING. [_Is a little taken aback_, _but recovers himself_.] Don’t
- mention to anybody that I have taken charge of this brooch. Should any
- one write and claim it, let me know at once.
- MABEL CHILTERN. That is a strange request.
- LORD GORING. Well, you see I gave this brooch to somebody once, years
- ago.
- MABEL CHILTERN. You did?
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- [LADY CHILTERN _enters alone_. _The other guests have gone_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Then I shall certainly bid you good-night. Good-night,
- Gertrude! [_Exit_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Good-night, dear! [_To_ LORD GORING.] You saw whom Lady
- Markby brought here to-night?
- LORD GORING. Yes. It was an unpleasant surprise. What did she come
- here for?
- LADY CHILTERN. Apparently to try and lure Robert to uphold some
- fraudulent scheme in which she is interested. The Argentine Canal, in
- fact.
- LORD GORING. She has mistaken her man, hasn’t she?
- LADY CHILTERN. She is incapable of understanding an upright nature like
- my husband’s!
- LORD GORING. Yes. I should fancy she came to grief if she tried to get
- Robert into her toils. It is extraordinary what astounding mistakes
- clever women make.
- LADY CHILTERN. I don’t call women of that kind clever. I call them
- stupid!
- LORD GORING. Same thing often. Good-night, Lady Chiltern!
- LADY CHILTERN. Good-night!
- [_Enter_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. My dear Arthur, you are not going? Do stop a
- little!
- LORD GORING. Afraid I can’t, thanks. I have promised to look in at the
- Hartlocks’. I believe they have got a mauve Hungarian band that plays
- mauve Hungarian music. See you soon. Good-bye!
- [_Exit_]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. How beautiful you look to-night, Gertrude!
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert, it is not true, is it? You are not going to lend
- your support to this Argentine speculation? You couldn’t!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Starting_.] Who told you I intended to do so?
- LADY CHILTERN. That woman who has just gone out, Mrs. Cheveley, as she
- calls herself now. She seemed to taunt me with it. Robert, I know this
- woman. You don’t. We were at school together. She was untruthful,
- dishonest, an evil influence on every one whose trust or friendship she
- could win. I hated, I despised her. She stole things, she was a thief.
- She was sent away for being a thief. Why do you let her influence you?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude, what you tell me may be true, but it
- happened many years ago. It is best forgotten! Mrs. Cheveley may have
- changed since then. No one should be entirely judged by their past.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Sadly_.] One’s past is what one is. It is the only
- way by which people should be judged.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. That is a hard saying, Gertrude!
- LADY CHILTERN. It is a true saying, Robert. And what did she mean by
- boasting that she had got you to lend your support, your name, to a thing
- I have heard you describe as the most dishonest and fraudulent scheme
- there has ever been in political life?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Biting his lip_.] I was mistaken in the view I
- took. We all may make mistakes.
- LADY CHILTERN. But you told me yesterday that you had received the
- report from the Commission, and that it entirely condemned the whole
- thing.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Walking up and down_.] I have reasons now to
- believe that the Commission was prejudiced, or, at any rate, misinformed.
- Besides, Gertrude, public and private life are different things. They
- have different laws, and move on different lines.
- LADY CHILTERN. They should both represent man at his highest. I see no
- difference between them.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Stopping_.] In the present case, on a matter of
- practical politics, I have changed my mind. That is all.
- LADY CHILTERN. All!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Sternly_.] Yes!
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert! Oh! it is horrible that I should have to ask you
- such a question—Robert, are you telling me the whole truth?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Why do you ask me such a question?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_After a pause_.] Why do you not answer it?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Sitting down_.] Gertrude, truth is a very
- complex thing, and politics is a very complex business. There are wheels
- within wheels. One may be under certain obligations to people that one
- must pay. Sooner or later in political life one has to compromise.
- Every one does.
- LADY CHILTERN. Compromise? Robert, why do you talk so differently
- to-night from the way I have always heard you talk? Why are you changed?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I am not changed. But circumstances alter things.
- LADY CHILTERN. Circumstances should never alter principles!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. But if I told you—
- LADY CHILTERN. What?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. That it was necessary, vitally necessary?
- LADY CHILTERN. It can never be necessary to do what is not honourable.
- Or if it be necessary, then what is it that I have loved! But it is not,
- Robert; tell me it is not. Why should it be? What gain would you get?
- Money? We have no need of that! And money that comes from a tainted
- source is a degradation. Power? But power is nothing in itself. It is
- power to do good that is fine—that, and that only. What is it, then?
- Robert, tell me why you are going to do this dishonourable thing!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude, you have no right to use that word. I
- told you it was a question of rational compromise. It is no more than
- that.
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert, that is all very well for other men, for men who
- treat life simply as a sordid speculation; but not for you, Robert, not
- for you. You are different. All your life you have stood apart from
- others. You have never let the world soil you. To the world, as to
- myself, you have been an ideal always. Oh! be that ideal still. That
- great inheritance throw not away—that tower of ivory do not destroy.
- Robert, men can love what is beneath them—things unworthy, stained,
- dishonoured. We women worship when we love; and when we lose our
- worship, we lose everything. Oh! don’t kill my love for you, don’t kill
- that!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude!
- LADY CHILTERN. I know that there are men with horrible secrets in their
- lives—men who have done some shameful thing, and who in some critical
- moment have to pay for it, by doing some other act of shame—oh! don’t
- tell me you are such as they are! Robert, is there in your life any
- secret dishonour or disgrace? Tell me, tell me at once, that—
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. That what?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Speaking very slowly_.] That our lives may drift
- apart.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Drift apart?
- LADY CHILTERN. That they may be entirely separate. It would be better
- for us both.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude, there is nothing in my past life that you
- might not know.
- LADY CHILTERN. I was sure of it, Robert, I was sure of it. But why did
- you say those dreadful things, things so unlike your real self? Don’t
- let us ever talk about the subject again. You will write, won’t you, to
- Mrs. Cheveley, and tell her that you cannot support this scandalous
- scheme of hers? If you have given her any promise you must take it back,
- that is all!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Must I write and tell her that?
- LADY CHILTERN. Surely, Robert! What else is there to do?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I might see her personally. It would be better.
- LADY CHILTERN. You must never see her again, Robert. She is not a woman
- you should ever speak to. She is not worthy to talk to a man like you.
- No; you must write to her at once, now, this moment, and let your letter
- show her that your decision is quite irrevocable!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Write this moment!
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. But it is so late. It is close on twelve.
- LADY CHILTERN. That makes no matter. She must know at once that she has
- been mistaken in you—and that you are not a man to do anything base or
- underhand or dishonourable. Write here, Robert. Write that you decline
- to support this scheme of hers, as you hold it to be a dishonest scheme.
- Yes—write the word dishonest. She knows what that word means. [SIR
- ROBERT CHILTERN _sits down and writes a letter_. _His wife takes it up
- and reads it_.] Yes; that will do. [_Rings bell_.] And now the
- envelope. [_He writes the envelope slowly_. _Enter_ MASON.] Have this
- letter sent at once to Claridge’s Hotel. There is no answer. [_Exit_
- MASON. LADY CHILTERN _kneels down beside her husband_, _and puts her
- arms around him_.] Robert, love gives one an instinct to things. I feel
- to-night that I have saved you from something that might have been a
- danger to you, from something that might have made men honour you less
- than they do. I don’t think you realise sufficiently, Robert, that you
- have brought into the political life of our time a nobler atmosphere, a
- finer attitude towards life, a freer air of purer aims and higher
- ideals—I know it, and for that I love you, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Oh, love me always, Gertrude, love me always!
- LADY CHILTERN. I will love you always, because you will always be worthy
- of love. We needs must love the highest when we see it! [_Kisses him
- and rises and goes out_.]
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _walks up and down for a moment_; _then sits down
- and buries his face in his hands_. _The Servant enters and begins
- pulling out the lights_. SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _looks up_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Put out the lights, Mason, put out the lights!
- [_The Servant puts out the lights_. _The room becomes almost dark_.
- _The only light there is comes from the great chandelier that hangs over
- the staircase and illumines the tapestry of the Triumph of Love_.]
- ACT DROP
- SECOND ACT
- SCENE
- _Morning-room at Sir Robert Chiltern’s house_.
- [LORD GORING, _dressed in the height of fashion_, _is lounging in an
- armchair_. SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _is standing in front of the fireplace_.
- _He is evidently in a state of great mental excitement and distress_.
- _As the scene progresses he paces nervously up and down the room_.]
- LORD GORING. My dear Robert, it’s a very awkward business, very awkward
- indeed. You should have told your wife the whole thing. Secrets from
- other people’s wives are a necessary luxury in modern life. So, at
- least, I am always told at the club by people who are bald enough to know
- better. But no man should have a secret from his own wife. She
- invariably finds it out. Women have a wonderful instinct about things.
- They can discover everything except the obvious.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Arthur, I couldn’t tell my wife. When could I have
- told her? Not last night. It would have made a life-long separation
- between us, and I would have lost the love of the one woman in the world
- I worship, of the only woman who has ever stirred love within me. Last
- night it would have been quite impossible. She would have turned from me
- in horror . . . in horror and in contempt.
- LORD GORING. Is Lady Chiltern as perfect as all that?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes; my wife is as perfect as all that.
- LORD GORING. [_Taking off his left-hand glove_.] What a pity! I beg
- your pardon, my dear fellow, I didn’t quite mean that. But if what you
- tell me is true, I should like to have a serious talk about life with
- Lady Chiltern.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. It would be quite useless.
- LORD GORING. May I try?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes; but nothing could make her alter her views.
- LORD GORING. Well, at the worst it would simply be a psychological
- experiment.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. All such experiments are terribly dangerous.
- LORD GORING. Everything is dangerous, my dear fellow. If it wasn’t so,
- life wouldn’t be worth living. . . . Well, I am bound to say that I think
- you should have told her years ago.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. When? When we were engaged? Do you think she
- would have married me if she had known that the origin of my fortune is
- such as it is, the basis of my career such as it is, and that I had done
- a thing that I suppose most men would call shameful and dishonourable?
- LORD GORING. [_Slowly_.] Yes; most men would call it ugly names. There
- is no doubt of that.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Bitterly_.] Men who every day do something of
- the same kind themselves. Men who, each one of them, have worse secrets
- in their own lives.
- LORD GORING. That is the reason they are so pleased to find out other
- people’s secrets. It distracts public attention from their own.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. And, after all, whom did I wrong by what I did? No
- one.
- LORD GORING. [_Looking at him steadily_.] Except yourself, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_After a pause_.] Of course I had private
- information about a certain transaction contemplated by the Government of
- the day, and I acted on it. Private information is practically the
- source of every large modern fortune.
- LORD GORING. [_Tapping his boot with his cane_.] And public scandal
- invariably the result.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Pacing up and down the room_.] Arthur, do you
- think that what I did nearly eighteen years ago should be brought up
- against me now? Do you think it fair that a man’s whole career should be
- ruined for a fault done in one’s boyhood almost? I was twenty-two at the
- time, and I had the double misfortune of being well-born and poor, two
- unforgiveable things nowadays. Is it fair that the folly, the sin of
- one’s youth, if men choose to call it a sin, should wreck a life like
- mine, should place me in the pillory, should shatter all that I have
- worked for, all that I have built up. Is it fair, Arthur?
- LORD GORING. Life is never fair, Robert. And perhaps it is a good thing
- for most of us that it is not.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Every man of ambition has to fight his century with
- its own weapons. What this century worships is wealth. The God of this
- century is wealth. To succeed one must have wealth. At all costs one
- must have wealth.
- LORD GORING. You underrate yourself, Robert. Believe me, without wealth
- you could have succeeded just as well.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. When I was old, perhaps. When I had lost my
- passion for power, or could not use it. When I was tired, worn out,
- disappointed. I wanted my success when I was young. Youth is the time
- for success. I couldn’t wait.
- LORD GORING. Well, you certainly have had your success while you are
- still young. No one in our day has had such a brilliant success.
- Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs at the age of forty—that’s good
- enough for any one, I should think.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. And if it is all taken away from me now? If I lose
- everything over a horrible scandal? If I am hounded from public life?
- LORD GORING. Robert, how could you have sold yourself for money?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Excitedly_.] I did not sell myself for money. I
- bought success at a great price. That is all.
- LORD GORING. [_Gravely_.] Yes; you certainly paid a great price for it.
- But what first made you think of doing such a thing?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Baron Arnheim.
- LORD GORING. Damned scoundrel!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. No; he was a man of a most subtle and refined
- intellect. A man of culture, charm, and distinction. One of the most
- intellectual men I ever met.
- LORD GORING. Ah! I prefer a gentlemanly fool any day. There is more to
- be said for stupidity than people imagine. Personally I have a great
- admiration for stupidity. It is a sort of fellow-feeling, I suppose.
- But how did he do it? Tell me the whole thing.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Throws himself into an armchair by the
- writing-table_.] One night after dinner at Lord Radley’s the Baron began
- talking about success in modern life as something that one could reduce
- to an absolutely definite science. With that wonderfully fascinating
- quiet voice of his he expounded to us the most terrible of all
- philosophies, the philosophy of power, preached to us the most marvellous
- of all gospels, the gospel of gold. I think he saw the effect he had
- produced on me, for some days afterwards he wrote and asked me to come
- and see him. He was living then in Park Lane, in the house Lord Woolcomb
- has now. I remember so well how, with a strange smile on his pale,
- curved lips, he led me through his wonderful picture gallery, showed me
- his tapestries, his enamels, his jewels, his carved ivories, made me
- wonder at the strange loveliness of the luxury in which he lived; and
- then told me that luxury was nothing but a background, a painted scene in
- a play, and that power, power over other men, power over the world, was
- the one thing worth having, the one supreme pleasure worth knowing, the
- one joy one never tired of, and that in our century only the rich
- possessed it.
- LORD GORING. [_With great deliberation_.] A thoroughly shallow creed.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rising_.] I didn’t think so then. I don’t think
- so now. Wealth has given me enormous power. It gave me at the very
- outset of my life freedom, and freedom is everything. You have never
- been poor, and never known what ambition is. You cannot understand what
- a wonderful chance the Baron gave me. Such a chance as few men get.
- LORD GORING. Fortunately for them, if one is to judge by results. But
- tell me definitely, how did the Baron finally persuade you to—well, to do
- what you did?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. When I was going away he said to me that if I ever
- could give him any private information of real value he would make me a
- very rich man. I was dazed at the prospect he held out to me, and my
- ambition and my desire for power were at that time boundless. Six weeks
- later certain private documents passed through my hands.
- LORD GORING. [_Keeping his eyes steadily fixed on the carpet_.] State
- documents?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes. [LORD GORING _sighs_, _then passes his hand
- across his forehead and looks up_.]
- LORD GORING. I had no idea that you, of all men in the world, could have
- been so weak, Robert, as to yield to such a temptation as Baron Arnheim
- held out to you.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Weak? Oh, I am sick of hearing that phrase. Sick
- of using it about others. Weak? Do you really think, Arthur, that it is
- weakness that yields to temptation? I tell you that there are terrible
- temptations that it requires strength, strength and courage, to yield to.
- To stake all one’s life on a single moment, to risk everything on one
- throw, whether the stake be power or pleasure, I care not—there is no
- weakness in that. There is a horrible, a terrible courage. I had that
- courage. I sat down the same afternoon and wrote Baron Arnheim the
- letter this woman now holds. He made three-quarters of a million over
- the transaction.
- LORD GORING. And you?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I received from the Baron £110,000.
- LORD GORING. You were worth more, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. No; that money gave me exactly what I wanted, power
- over others. I went into the House immediately. The Baron advised me in
- finance from time to time. Before five years I had almost trebled my
- fortune. Since then everything that I have touched has turned out a
- success. In all things connected with money I have had a luck so
- extraordinary that sometimes it has made me almost afraid. I remember
- having read somewhere, in some strange book, that when the gods wish to
- punish us they answer our prayers.
- LORD GORING. But tell me, Robert, did you never suffer any regret for
- what you had done?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. No. I felt that I had fought the century with its
- own weapons, and won.
- LORD GORING. [_Sadly_.] You thought you had won.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I thought so. [_After a long pause_.] Arthur, do
- you despise me for what I have told you?
- LORD GORING. [_With deep feeling in his voice_.] I am very sorry for
- you, Robert, very sorry indeed.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I don’t say that I suffered any remorse. I didn’t.
- Not remorse in the ordinary, rather silly sense of the word. But I have
- paid conscience money many times. I had a wild hope that I might disarm
- destiny. The sum Baron Arnheim gave me I have distributed twice over in
- public charities since then.
- LORD GORING. [_Looking up_.] In public charities? Dear me! what a lot
- of harm you must have done, Robert!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Oh, don’t say that, Arthur; don’t talk like that!
- LORD GORING. Never mind what I say, Robert! I am always saying what I
- shouldn’t say. In fact, I usually say what I really think. A great
- mistake nowadays. It makes one so liable to be misunderstood. As
- regards this dreadful business, I will help you in whatever way I can.
- Of course you know that.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Thank you, Arthur, thank you. But what is to be
- done? What can be done?
- LORD GORING. [_Leaning back with his hands in his pockets_.] Well, the
- English can’t stand a man who is always saying he is in the right, but
- they are very fond of a man who admits that he has been in the wrong. It
- is one of the best things in them. However, in your case, Robert, a
- confession would not do. The money, if you will allow me to say so, is
- . . . awkward. Besides, if you did make a clean breast of the whole
- affair, you would never be able to talk morality again. And in England a
- man who can’t talk morality twice a week to a large, popular, immoral
- audience is quite over as a serious politician. There would be nothing
- left for him as a profession except Botany or the Church. A confession
- would be of no use. It would ruin you.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. It would ruin me. Arthur, the only thing for me to
- do now is to fight the thing out.
- LORD GORING. [_Rising from his chair_.] I was waiting for you to say
- that, Robert. It is the only thing to do now. And you must begin by
- telling your wife the whole story.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. That I will not do.
- LORD GORING. Robert, believe me, you are wrong.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I couldn’t do it. It would kill her love for me.
- And now about this woman, this Mrs. Cheveley. How can I defend myself
- against her? You knew her before, Arthur, apparently.
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Did you know her well?
- LORD GORING. [_Arranging his necktie_.] So little that I got engaged to
- be married to her once, when I was staying at the Tenbys’. The affair
- lasted for three days . . . nearly.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Why was it broken off?
- LORD GORING. [_Airily_.] Oh, I forget. At least, it makes no matter.
- By the way, have you tried her with money? She used to be confoundedly
- fond of money.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I offered her any sum she wanted. She refused.
- LORD GORING. Then the marvellous gospel of gold breaks down sometimes.
- The rich can’t do everything, after all.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Not everything. I suppose you are right. Arthur,
- I feel that public disgrace is in store for me. I feel certain of it. I
- never knew what terror was before. I know it now. It is as if a hand of
- ice were laid upon one’s heart. It is as if one’s heart were beating
- itself to death in some empty hollow.
- LORD GORING. [_Striking the table_.] Robert, you must fight her. You
- must fight her.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. But how?
- LORD GORING. I can’t tell you how at present. I have not the smallest
- idea. But every one has some weak point. There is some flaw in each one
- of us. [_Strolls to the fireplace and looks at himself in the glass_.]
- My father tells me that even I have faults. Perhaps I have. I don’t
- know.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. In defending myself against Mrs. Cheveley, I have a
- right to use any weapon I can find, have I not?
- LORD GORING. [_Still looking in the glass_.] In your place I don’t
- think I should have the smallest scruple in doing so. She is thoroughly
- well able to take care of herself.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Sits down at the table and takes a pen in his
- hand_.] Well, I shall send a cipher telegram to the Embassy at Vienna,
- to inquire if there is anything known against her. There may be some
- secret scandal she might be afraid of.
- LORD GORING. [_Settling his buttonhole_.] Oh, I should fancy Mrs.
- Cheveley is one of those very modern women of our time who find a new
- scandal as becoming as a new bonnet, and air them both in the Park every
- afternoon at five-thirty. I am sure she adores scandals, and that the
- sorrow of her life at present is that she can’t manage to have enough of
- them.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Writing_.] Why do you say that?
- LORD GORING. [_Turning round_.] Well, she wore far too much rouge last
- night, and not quite enough clothes. That is always a sign of despair in
- a woman.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Striking a bell_.] But it is worth while my
- wiring to Vienna, is it not?
- LORD GORING. It is always worth while asking a question, though it is
- not always worth while answering one.
- [_Enter_ MASON.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Is Mr. Trafford in his room?
- MASON. Yes, Sir Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Puts what he has written into an envelope_,
- _which he then carefully closes_.] Tell him to have this sent off in
- cipher at once. There must not be a moment’s delay.
- MASON. Yes, Sir Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Oh! just give that back to me again.
- [_Writes something on the envelope_. MASON _then goes out with the
- letter_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. She must have had some curious hold over Baron
- Arnheim. I wonder what it was.
- LORD GORING. [_Smiling_.] I wonder.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I will fight her to the death, as long as my wife
- knows nothing.
- LORD GORING. [_Strongly_.] Oh, fight in any case—in any case.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With a gesture of despair_.] If my wife found
- out, there would be little left to fight for. Well, as soon as I hear
- from Vienna, I shall let you know the result. It is a chance, just a
- chance, but I believe in it. And as I fought the age with its own
- weapons, I will fight her with her weapons. It is only fair, and she
- looks like a woman with a past, doesn’t she?
- LORD GORING. Most pretty women do. But there is a fashion in pasts just
- as there is a fashion in frocks. Perhaps Mrs. Cheveley’s past is merely
- a slightly décolleté one, and they are excessively popular nowadays.
- Besides, my dear Robert, I should not build too high hopes on frightening
- Mrs. Cheveley. I should not fancy Mrs. Cheveley is a woman who would be
- easily frightened. She has survived all her creditors, and she shows
- wonderful presence of mind.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Oh! I live on hopes now. I clutch at every chance.
- I feel like a man on a ship that is sinking. The water is round my feet,
- and the very air is bitter with storm. Hush! I hear my wife’s voice.
- [_Enter_ LADY CHILTERN _in walking dress_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Good afternoon, Lord Goring!
- LORD GORING. Good afternoon, Lady Chiltern! Have you been in the Park?
- LADY CHILTERN. No; I have just come from the Woman’s Liberal
- Association, where, by the way, Robert, your name was received with loud
- applause, and now I have come in to have my tea. [_To_ LORD GORING.]
- You will wait and have some tea, won’t you?
- LORD GORING. I’ll wait for a short time, thanks.
- LADY CHILTERN. I will be back in a moment. I am only going to take my
- hat off.
- LORD GORING. [_In his most earnest manner_.] Oh! please don’t. It is
- so pretty. One of the prettiest hats I ever saw. I hope the Woman’s
- Liberal Association received it with loud applause.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_With a smile_.] We have much more important work to do
- than look at each other’s bonnets, Lord Goring.
- LORD GORING. Really? What sort of work?
- LADY CHILTERN. Oh! dull, useful, delightful things, Factory Acts, Female
- Inspectors, the Eight Hours’ Bill, the Parliamentary Franchise. . . .
- Everything, in fact, that you would find thoroughly uninteresting.
- LORD GORING. And never bonnets?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_With mock indignation_.] Never bonnets, never!
- [LADY CHILTERN _goes out through the door leading to her boudoir_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Takes_ LORD GORING’S _hand_.] You have been a
- good friend to me, Arthur, a thoroughly good friend.
- LORD GORING. I don’t know that I have been able to do much for you,
- Robert, as yet. In fact, I have not been able to do anything for you, as
- far as I can see. I am thoroughly disappointed with myself.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You have enabled me to tell you the truth. That is
- something. The truth has always stifled me.
- LORD GORING. Ah! the truth is a thing I get rid of as soon as possible!
- Bad habit, by the way. Makes one very unpopular at the club . . . with
- the older members. They call it being conceited. Perhaps it is.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I would to God that I had been able to tell the
- truth . . . to live the truth. Ah! that is the great thing in life, to
- live the truth. [_Sighs_, _and goes towards the door_.] I’ll see you
- soon again, Arthur, shan’t I?
- LORD GORING. Certainly. Whenever you like. I’m going to look in at the
- Bachelors’ Ball to-night, unless I find something better to do. But I’ll
- come round to-morrow morning. If you should want me to-night by any
- chance, send round a note to Curzon Street.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Thank you.
- [_As he reaches the door_, LADY CHILTERN _enters from her boudoir_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. You are not going, Robert?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I have some letters to write, dear.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Going to him_.] You work too hard, Robert. You seem
- never to think of yourself, and you are looking so tired.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. It is nothing, dear, nothing.
- [_He kisses her and goes out_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. [_To_ LORD GORING.] Do sit down. I am so glad you have
- called. I want to talk to you about . . . well, not about bonnets, or
- the Woman’s Liberal Association. You take far too much interest in the
- first subject, and not nearly enough in the second.
- LORD GORING. You want to talk to me about Mrs. Cheveley?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes. You have guessed it. After you left last night I
- found out that what she had said was really true. Of course I made
- Robert write her a letter at once, withdrawing his promise.
- LORD GORING. So he gave me to understand.
- LADY CHILTERN. To have kept it would have been the first stain on a
- career that has been stainless always. Robert must be above reproach.
- He is not like other men. He cannot afford to do what other men do.
- [_She looks at_ LORD GORING, _who remains silent_.] Don’t you agree with
- me? You are Robert’s greatest friend. You are our greatest friend, Lord
- Goring. No one, except myself, knows Robert better than you do. He has
- no secrets from me, and I don’t think he has any from you.
- LORD GORING. He certainly has no secrets from me. At least I don’t
- think so.
- LADY CHILTERN. Then am I not right in my estimate of him? I know I am
- right. But speak to me frankly.
- LORD GORING. [_Looking straight at her_.] Quite frankly?
- LADY CHILTERN. Surely. You have nothing to conceal, have you?
- LORD GORING. Nothing. But, my dear Lady Chiltern, I think, if you will
- allow me to say so, that in practical life—
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Smiling_.] Of which you know so little, Lord Goring—
- LORD GORING. Of which I know nothing by experience, though I know
- something by observation. I think that in practical life there is
- something about success, actual success, that is a little unscrupulous,
- something about ambition that is unscrupulous always. Once a man has set
- his heart and soul on getting to a certain point, if he has to climb the
- crag, he climbs the crag; if he has to walk in the mire—
- LADY CHILTERN. Well?
- LORD GORING. He walks in the mire. Of course I am only talking
- generally about life.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Gravely_.] I hope so. Why do you look at me so
- strangely, Lord Goring?
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern, I have sometimes thought that . . . perhaps
- you are a little hard in some of your views on life. I think that . . .
- often you don’t make sufficient allowances. In every nature there are
- elements of weakness, or worse than weakness. Supposing, for instance,
- that—that any public man, my father, or Lord Merton, or Robert, say, had,
- years ago, written some foolish letter to some one . . .
- LADY CHILTERN. What do you mean by a foolish letter?
- LORD GORING. A letter gravely compromising one’s position. I am only
- putting an imaginary case.
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert is as incapable of doing a foolish thing as he is
- of doing a wrong thing.
- LORD GORING. [_After a long pause_.] Nobody is incapable of doing a
- foolish thing. Nobody is incapable of doing a wrong thing.
- LADY CHILTERN. Are you a Pessimist? What will the other dandies say?
- They will all have to go into mourning.
- LORD GORING. [_Rising_.] No, Lady Chiltern, I am not a Pessimist.
- Indeed I am not sure that I quite know what Pessimism really means. All
- I do know is that life cannot be understood without much charity, cannot
- be lived without much charity. It is love, and not German philosophy,
- that is the true explanation of this world, whatever may be the
- explanation of the next. And if you are ever in trouble, Lady Chiltern,
- trust me absolutely, and I will help you in every way I can. If you ever
- want me, come to me for my assistance, and you shall have it. Come at
- once to me.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Looking at him in surprise_.] Lord Goring, you are
- talking quite seriously. I don’t think I ever heard you talk seriously
- before.
- LORD GORING. [_Laughing_.] You must excuse me, Lady Chiltern. It won’t
- occur again, if I can help it.
- LADY CHILTERN. But I like you to be serious.
- [_Enter_ MABEL CHILTERN, _in the most ravishing frock_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Dear Gertrude, don’t say such a dreadful thing to Lord
- Goring. Seriousness would be very unbecoming to him. Good afternoon
- Lord Goring! Pray be as trivial as you can.
- LORD GORING. I should like to, Miss Mabel, but I am afraid I am . . . a
- little out of practice this morning; and besides, I have to be going now.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Just when I have come in! What dreadful manners you
- have! I am sure you were very badly brought up.
- LORD GORING. I was.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I wish I had brought you up!
- LORD GORING. I am so sorry you didn’t.
- MABEL CHILTERN. It is too late now, I suppose?
- LORD GORING. [_Smiling_.] I am not so sure.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Will you ride to-morrow morning?
- LORD GORING. Yes, at ten.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Don’t forget.
- LORD GORING. Of course I shan’t. By the way, Lady Chiltern, there is no
- list of your guests in _The Morning Post_ of to-day. It has apparently
- been crowded out by the County Council, or the Lambeth Conference, or
- something equally boring. Could you let me have a list? I have a
- particular reason for asking you.
- LADY CHILTERN. I am sure Mr. Trafford will be able to give you one.
- LORD GORING. Thanks, so much.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Tommy is the most useful person in London.
- LORD GORING [_Turning to her_.] And who is the most ornamental?
- MABEL CHILTERN [_Triumphantly_.] I am.
- LORD GORING. How clever of you to guess it! [_Takes up his hat and
- cane_.] Good-bye, Lady Chiltern! You will remember what I said to you,
- won’t you?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes; but I don’t know why you said it to me.
- LORD GORING. I hardly know myself. Good-bye, Miss Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN [_With a little moue of disappointment_.] I wish you were
- not going. I have had four wonderful adventures this morning; four and a
- half, in fact. You might stop and listen to some of them.
- LORD GORING. How very selfish of you to have four and a half! There
- won’t be any left for me.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I don’t want you to have any. They would not be good
- for you.
- LORD GORING. That is the first unkind thing you have ever said to me.
- How charmingly you said it! Ten to-morrow.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Sharp.
- LORD GORING. Quite sharp. But don’t bring Mr. Trafford.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_With a little toss of the head_.] Of course I shan’t
- bring Tommy Trafford. Tommy Trafford is in great disgrace.
- LORD GORING. I am delighted to hear it. [_Bows and goes out_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Gertrude, I wish you would speak to Tommy Trafford.
- LADY CHILTERN. What has poor Mr. Trafford done this time? Robert says
- he is the best secretary he has ever had.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Well, Tommy has proposed to me again. Tommy really does
- nothing but propose to me. He proposed to me last night in the
- music-room, when I was quite unprotected, as there was an elaborate trio
- going on. I didn’t dare to make the smallest repartee, I need hardly
- tell you. If I had, it would have stopped the music at once. Musical
- people are so absurdly unreasonable. They always want one to be
- perfectly dumb at the very moment when one is longing to be absolutely
- deaf. Then he proposed to me in broad daylight this morning, in front of
- that dreadful statue of Achilles. Really, the things that go on in front
- of that work of art are quite appalling. The police should interfere.
- At luncheon I saw by the glare in his eye that he was going to propose
- again, and I just managed to check him in time by assuring him that I was
- a bimetallist. Fortunately I don’t know what bimetallism means. And I
- don’t believe anybody else does either. But the observation crushed
- Tommy for ten minutes. He looked quite shocked. And then Tommy is so
- annoying in the way he proposes. If he proposed at the top of his voice,
- I should not mind so much. That might produce some effect on the public.
- But he does it in a horrid confidential way. When Tommy wants to be
- romantic he talks to one just like a doctor. I am very fond of Tommy,
- but his methods of proposing are quite out of date. I wish, Gertrude,
- you would speak to him, and tell him that once a week is quite often
- enough to propose to any one, and that it should always be done in a
- manner that attracts some attention.
- LADY CHILTERN. Dear Mabel, don’t talk like that. Besides, Robert thinks
- very highly of Mr. Trafford. He believes he has a brilliant future
- before him.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh! I wouldn’t marry a man with a future before him for
- anything under the sun.
- LADY CHILTERN. Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN. I know, dear. You married a man with a future, didn’t
- you? But then Robert was a genius, and you have a noble,
- self-sacrificing character. You can stand geniuses. I have no character
- at all, and Robert is the only genius I could ever bear. As a rule, I
- think they are quite impossible. Geniuses talk so much, don’t they?
- Such a bad habit! And they are always thinking about themselves, when I
- want them to be thinking about me. I must go round now and rehearse at
- Lady Basildon’s. You remember, we are having tableaux, don’t you? The
- Triumph of something, I don’t know what! I hope it will be triumph of
- me. Only triumph I am really interested in at present. [_Kisses_ LADY
- CHILTERN _and goes out_; _then comes running back_.] Oh, Gertrude, do
- you know who is coming to see you? That dreadful Mrs. Cheveley, in a
- most lovely gown. Did you ask her?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Rising_.] Mrs. Cheveley! Coming to see me?
- Impossible!
- MABEL CHILTERN. I assure you she is coming upstairs, as large as life
- and not nearly so natural.
- LADY CHILTERN. You need not wait, Mabel. Remember, Lady Basildon is
- expecting you.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh! I must shake hands with Lady Markby. She is
- delightful. I love being scolded by her.
- [_Enter_ MASON.]
- MASON. Lady Markby. Mrs. Cheveley.
- [_Enter_ LADY MARKBY _and_ MRS. CHEVELEY.]
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Advancing to meet them_.] Dear Lady Markby, how nice
- of you to come and see me! [_Shakes hands with her_, _and bows somewhat
- distantly to_ MRS. CHEVELEY.] Won’t you sit down, Mrs. Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks. Isn’t that Miss Chiltern? I should like so much
- to know her.
- LADY CHILTERN. Mabel, Mrs. Cheveley wishes to know you.
- [MABEL CHILTERN _gives a little nod_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Sitting down_.] I thought your frock so charming last
- night, Miss Chiltern. So simple and . . . suitable.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Really? I must tell my dressmaker. It will be such a
- surprise to her. Good-bye, Lady Markby!
- LADY MARKBY. Going already?
- MABEL CHILTERN. I am so sorry but I am obliged to. I am just off to
- rehearsal. I have got to stand on my head in some tableaux.
- LADY MARKBY. On your head, child? Oh! I hope not. I believe it is most
- unhealthy. [_Takes a seat on the sofa next_ LADY CHILTERN.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. But it is for an excellent charity: in aid of the
- Undeserving, the only people I am really interested in. I am the
- secretary, and Tommy Trafford is treasurer.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. And what is Lord Goring?
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh! Lord Goring is president.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. The post should suit him admirably, unless he has
- deteriorated since I knew him first.
- LADY MARKBY. [_Reflecting_.] You are remarkably modern, Mabel. A
- little too modern, perhaps. Nothing is so dangerous as being too modern.
- One is apt to grow old-fashioned quite suddenly. I have known many
- instances of it.
- MABEL CHILTERN. What a dreadful prospect!
- LADY MARKBY. Ah! my dear, you need not be nervous. You will always be
- as pretty as possible. That is the best fashion there is, and the only
- fashion that England succeeds in setting.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_With a curtsey_.] Thank you so much, Lady Markby, for
- England . . . and myself. [_Goes out_.]
- LADY MARKBY. [_Turning to_ LADY CHILTERN.] Dear Gertrude, we just
- called to know if Mrs. Cheveley’s diamond brooch has been found.
- LADY CHILTERN. Here?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. I missed it when I got back to Claridge’s, and I
- thought I might possibly have dropped it here.
- LADY CHILTERN. I have heard nothing about it. But I will send for the
- butler and ask. [_Touches the bell_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, pray don’t trouble, Lady Chiltern. I dare say I lost
- it at the Opera, before we came on here.
- LADY MARKBY. Ah yes, I suppose it must have been at the Opera. The fact
- is, we all scramble and jostle so much nowadays that I wonder we have
- anything at all left on us at the end of an evening. I know myself that,
- when I am coming back from the Drawing Room, I always feel as if I hadn’t
- a shred on me, except a small shred of decent reputation, just enough to
- prevent the lower classes making painful observations through the windows
- of the carriage. The fact is that our Society is terribly
- over-populated. Really, some one should arrange a proper scheme of
- assisted emigration. It would do a great deal of good.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I quite agree with you, Lady Markby. It is nearly six
- years since I have been in London for the Season, and I must say Society
- has become dreadfully mixed. One sees the oddest people everywhere.
- LADY MARKBY. That is quite true, dear. But one needn’t know them. I’m
- sure I don’t know half the people who come to my house. Indeed, from all
- I hear, I shouldn’t like to.
- [_Enter_ MASON.]
- LADY CHILTERN. What sort of a brooch was it that you lost, Mrs.
- Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. A diamond snake-brooch with a ruby, a rather large ruby.
- LADY MARKBY. I thought you said there was a sapphire on the head, dear?
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Smiling_.] No, lady Markby—a ruby.
- LADY MARKBY. [_Nodding her head_.] And very becoming, I am quite sure.
- LADY CHILTERN. Has a ruby and diamond brooch been found in any of the
- rooms this morning, Mason?
- MASON. No, my lady.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. It really is of no consequence, Lady Chiltern. I am so
- sorry to have put you to any inconvenience.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Coldly_.] Oh, it has been no inconvenience. That will
- do, Mason. You can bring tea.
- [_Exit_ MASON.]
- LADY MARKBY. Well, I must say it is most annoying to lose anything. I
- remember once at Bath, years ago, losing in the Pump Room an exceedingly
- handsome cameo bracelet that Sir John had given me. I don’t think he has
- ever given me anything since, I am sorry to say. He has sadly
- degenerated. Really, this horrid House of Commons quite ruins our
- husbands for us. I think the Lower House by far the greatest blow to a
- happy married life that there has been since that terrible thing called
- the Higher Education of Women was invented.
- LADY CHILTERN. Ah! it is heresy to say that in this house, Lady Markby.
- Robert is a great champion of the Higher Education of Women, and so, I am
- afraid, am I.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. The higher education of men is what I should like to see.
- Men need it so sadly.
- LADY MARKBY. They do, dear. But I am afraid such a scheme would be
- quite unpractical. I don’t think man has much capacity for development.
- He has got as far as he can, and that is not far, is it? With regard to
- women, well, dear Gertrude, you belong to the younger generation, and I
- am sure it is all right if you approve of it. In my time, of course, we
- were taught not to understand anything. That was the old system, and
- wonderfully interesting it was. I assure you that the amount of things I
- and my poor dear sister were taught not to understand was quite
- extraordinary. But modern women understand everything, I am told.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Except their husbands. That is the one thing the modern
- woman never understands.
- LADY MARKBY. And a very good thing too, dear, I dare say. It might
- break up many a happy home if they did. Not yours, I need hardly say,
- Gertrude. You have married a pattern husband. I wish I could say as
- much for myself. But since Sir John has taken to attending the debates
- regularly, which he never used to do in the good old days, his language
- has become quite impossible. He always seems to think that he is
- addressing the House, and consequently whenever he discusses the state of
- the agricultural labourer, or the Welsh Church, or something quite
- improper of that kind, I am obliged to send all the servants out of the
- room. It is not pleasant to see one’s own butler, who has been with one
- for twenty-three years, actually blushing at the side-board, and the
- footmen making contortions in corners like persons in circuses. I assure
- you my life will be quite ruined unless they send John at once to the
- Upper House. He won’t take any interest in politics then, will he? The
- House of Lords is so sensible. An assembly of gentlemen. But in his
- present state, Sir John is really a great trial. Why, this morning
- before breakfast was half over, he stood up on the hearthrug, put his
- hands in his pockets, and appealed to the country at the top of his
- voice. I left the table as soon as I had my second cup of tea, I need
- hardly say. But his violent language could be heard all over the house!
- I trust, Gertrude, that Sir Robert is not like that?
- LADY CHILTERN. But I am very much interested in politics, Lady Markby.
- I love to hear Robert talk about them.
- LADY MARKBY. Well, I hope he is not as devoted to Blue Books as Sir John
- is. I don’t think they can be quite improving reading for any one.
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Languidly_.] I have never read a Blue Book. I prefer
- books . . . in yellow covers.
- LADY MARKBY. [_Genially unconscious_.] Yellow is a gayer colour, is it
- not? I used to wear yellow a good deal in my early days, and would do so
- now if Sir John was not so painfully personal in his observations, and a
- man on the question of dress is always ridiculous, is he not?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh, no! I think men are the only authorities on dress.
- LADY MARKBY. Really? One wouldn’t say so from the sort of hats they
- wear? would one?
- [_The butler enters_, _followed by the footman_. _Tea is set on a small
- table close to_ LADY CHILTERN.]
- LADY CHILTERN. May I give you some tea, Mrs. Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks. [_The butler hands_ MRS. CHEVELEY _a cup of tea
- on a salver_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Some tea, Lady Markby?
- LADY MARKBY. No thanks, dear. [_The servants go out_.] The fact is, I
- have promised to go round for ten minutes to see poor Lady Brancaster,
- who is in very great trouble. Her daughter, quite a well-brought-up
- girl, too, has actually become engaged to be married to a curate in
- Shropshire. It is very sad, very sad indeed. I can’t understand this
- modern mania for curates. In my time we girls saw them, of course,
- running about the place like rabbits. But we never took any notice of
- them, I need hardly say. But I am told that nowadays country society is
- quite honeycombed with them. I think it most irreligious. And then the
- eldest son has quarrelled with his father, and it is said that when they
- meet at the club Lord Brancaster always hides himself behind the money
- article in _The Times_. However, I believe that is quite a common
- occurrence nowadays and that they have to take in extra copies of _The
- Times_ at all the clubs in St. James’s Street; there are so many sons who
- won’t have anything to do with their fathers, and so many fathers who
- won’t speak to their sons. I think myself, it is very much to be
- regretted.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. So do I. Fathers have so much to learn from their sons
- nowadays.
- LADY MARKBY. Really, dear? What?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. The art of living. The only really Fine Art we have
- produced in modern times.
- LADY MARKBY. [_Shaking her head_.] Ah! I am afraid Lord Brancaster
- knew a good deal about that. More than his poor wife ever did.
- [_Turning to_ LADY CHILTERN.] You know Lady Brancaster, don’t you, dear?
- LADY CHILTERN. Just slightly. She was staying at Langton last autumn,
- when we were there.
- LADY MARKBY. Well, like all stout women, she looks the very picture of
- happiness, as no doubt you noticed. But there are many tragedies in her
- family, besides this affair of the curate. Her own sister, Mrs. Jekyll,
- had a most unhappy life; through no fault of her own, I am sorry to say.
- She ultimately was so broken-hearted that she went into a convent, or on
- to the operatic stage, I forget which. No; I think it was decorative
- art-needlework she took up. I know she had lost all sense of pleasure in
- life. [_Rising_.] And now, Gertrude, if you will allow me, I shall
- leave Mrs. Cheveley in your charge and call back for her in a quarter of
- an hour. Or perhaps, dear Mrs. Cheveley, you wouldn’t mind waiting in
- the carriage while I am with Lady Brancaster. As I intend it to be a
- visit of condolence, I shan’t stay long.
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Rising_.] I don’t mind waiting in the carriage at all,
- provided there is somebody to look at one.
- LADY MARKBY. Well, I hear the curate is always prowling about the house.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I am afraid I am not fond of girl friends.
- LADY CHILTERN [_Rising_.] Oh, I hope Mrs. Cheveley will stay here a
- little. I should like to have a few minutes’ conversation with her.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. How very kind of you, Lady Chiltern! Believe me, nothing
- would give me greater pleasure.
- LADY MARKBY. Ah! no doubt you both have many pleasant reminiscences of
- your schooldays to talk over together. Good-bye, dear Gertrude! Shall I
- see you at Lady Bonar’s to-night? She has discovered a wonderful new
- genius. He does . . . nothing at all, I believe. That is a great
- comfort, is it not?
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert and I are dining at home by ourselves to-night,
- and I don’t think I shall go anywhere afterwards. Robert, of course,
- will have to be in the House. But there is nothing interesting on.
- LADY MARKBY. Dining at home by yourselves? Is that quite prudent? Ah,
- I forgot, your husband is an exception. Mine is the general rule, and
- nothing ages a woman so rapidly as having married the general rule.
- [_Exit_ LADY MARKBY.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Wonderful woman, Lady Markby, isn’t she? Talks more and
- says less than anybody I ever met. She is made to be a public speaker.
- Much more so than her husband, though he is a typical Englishman, always
- dull and usually violent.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Makes no answer_, _but remains standing_. _There is a
- pause_. _Then the eyes of the two women meet_. LADY CHILTERN _looks
- stern and pale_. MRS. CHEVELEY _seem rather amused_.] Mrs. Cheveley, I
- think it is right to tell you quite frankly that, had I known who you
- really were, I should not have invited you to my house last night.
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_With an impertinent smile_.] Really?
- LADY CHILTERN. I could not have done so.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I see that after all these years you have not changed a
- bit, Gertrude.
- LADY CHILTERN. I never change.
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Elevating her eyebrows_.] Then life has taught you
- nothing?
- LADY CHILTERN. It has taught me that a person who has once been guilty
- of a dishonest and dishonourable action may be guilty of it a second
- time, and should be shunned.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Would you apply that rule to every one?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes, to every one, without exception.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Then I am sorry for you, Gertrude, very sorry for you.
- LADY CHILTERN. You see now, I was sure, that for many reasons any
- further acquaintance between us during your stay in London is quite
- impossible?
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_Leaning back in her chair_.] Do you know, Gertrude, I
- don’t mind your talking morality a bit. Morality is simply the attitude
- we adopt towards people whom we personally dislike. You dislike me. I
- am quite aware of that. And I have always detested you. And yet I have
- come here to do you a service.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Contemptuously_.] Like the service you wished to
- render my husband last night, I suppose. Thank heaven, I saved him from
- that.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Starting to her feet_.] It was you who made him write
- that insolent letter to me? It was you who made him break his promise?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Then you must make him keep it. I give you till
- to-morrow morning—no more. If by that time your husband does not
- solemnly bind himself to help me in this great scheme in which I am
- interested—
- LADY CHILTERN. This fraudulent speculation—
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Call it what you choose. I hold your husband in the
- hollow of my hand, and if you are wise you will make him do what I tell
- him.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Rising and going towards her_.] You are impertinent.
- What has my husband to do with you? With a woman like you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY [_With a bitter laugh_.] In this world like meets with
- like. It is because your husband is himself fraudulent and dishonest
- that we pair so well together. Between you and him there are chasms. He
- and I are closer than friends. We are enemies linked together. The same
- sin binds us.
- LADY CHILTERN. How dare you class my husband with yourself? How dare
- you threaten him or me? Leave my house. You are unfit to enter it.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _enters from behind_. _He hears his wife’s last
- words_, _and sees to whom they are addressed_. _He grows deadly pale_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Your house! A house bought with the price of dishonour.
- A house, everything in which has been paid for by fraud. [_Turns round
- and sees_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.] Ask him what the origin of his fortune
- is! Get him to tell you how he sold to a stockbroker a Cabinet secret.
- Learn from him to what you owe your position.
- LADY CHILTERN. It is not true! Robert! It is not true!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Pointing at him with outstretched finger_.] Look at
- him! Can he deny it? Does he dare to?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Go! Go at once. You have done your worst now.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. My worst? I have not yet finished with you, with either
- of you. I give you both till to-morrow at noon. If by then you don’t do
- what I bid you to do, the whole world shall know the origin of Robert
- Chiltern.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _strikes the bell_. _Enter_ MASON.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Show Mrs. Cheveley out.
- [MRS. CHEVELEY _starts_; _then bows with somewhat exaggerated politeness
- to_ LADY CHILTERN, _who makes no sign of response_. _As she passes by_
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN, _who is standing close to the door_, _she pauses for
- a moment and looks him straight in the face_. _She then goes out_,
- _followed by the servant_, _who closes the door after him_. _The husband
- and wife are left alone_. LADY CHILTERN _stands like some one in a
- dreadful dream_. _Then she turns round and looks at her husband_. _She
- looks at him with strange eyes_, _as though she were seeing him for the
- first time_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. You sold a Cabinet secret for money! You began your life
- with fraud! You built up your career on dishonour! Oh, tell me it is
- not true! Lie to me! Lie to me! Tell me it is not true!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What this woman said is quite true. But, Gertrude,
- listen to me. You don’t realise how I was tempted. Let me tell you the
- whole thing. [_Goes towards her_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Don’t come near me. Don’t touch me. I feel as if you
- had soiled me for ever. Oh! what a mask you have been wearing all these
- years! A horrible painted mask! You sold yourself for money. Oh! a
- common thief were better. You put yourself up to sale to the highest
- bidder! You were bought in the market. You lied to the whole world.
- And yet you will not lie to me.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rushing towards her_.] Gertrude! Gertrude!
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Thrusting him back with outstretched hands_.] No,
- don’t speak! Say nothing! Your voice wakes terrible memories—memories
- of things that made me love you—memories of words that made me love
- you—memories that now are horrible to me. And how I worshipped you! You
- were to me something apart from common life, a thing pure, noble, honest,
- without stain. The world seemed to me finer because you were in it, and
- goodness more real because you lived. And now—oh, when I think that I
- made of a man like you my ideal! the ideal of my life!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. There was your mistake. There was your error. The
- error all women commit. Why can’t you women love us, faults and all?
- Why do you place us on monstrous pedestals? We have all feet of clay,
- women as well as men; but when we men love women, we love them knowing
- their weaknesses, their follies, their imperfections, love them all the
- more, it may be, for that reason. It is not the perfect, but the
- imperfect, who have need of love. It is when we are wounded by our own
- hands, or by the hands of others, that love should come to cure us—else
- what use is love at all? All sins, except a sin against itself, Love
- should forgive. All lives, save loveless lives, true Love should pardon.
- A man’s love is like that. It is wider, larger, more human than a
- woman’s. Women think that they are making ideals of men. What they are
- making of us are false idols merely. You made your false idol of me, and
- I had not the courage to come down, show you my wounds, tell you my
- weaknesses. I was afraid that I might lose your love, as I have lost it
- now. And so, last night you ruined my life for me—yes, ruined it! What
- this woman asked of me was nothing compared to what she offered to me.
- She offered security, peace, stability. The sin of my youth, that I had
- thought was buried, rose up in front of me, hideous, horrible, with its
- hands at my throat. I could have killed it for ever, sent it back into
- its tomb, destroyed its record, burned the one witness against me. You
- prevented me. No one but you, you know it. And now what is there before
- me but public disgrace, ruin, terrible shame, the mockery of the world, a
- lonely dishonoured life, a lonely dishonoured death, it may be, some day?
- Let women make no more ideals of men! let them not put them on alters and
- bow before them, or they may ruin other lives as completely as you—you
- whom I have so wildly loved—have ruined mine!
- [_He passes from the room_. LADY CHILTERN _rushes towards him_, _but the
- door is closed when she reaches it_. _Pale with anguish_, _bewildered_,
- _helpless_, _she sways like a plant in the water_. _Her hands_,
- _outstretched_, _seem to tremble in the air like blossoms in the mind_.
- _Then she flings herself down beside a sofa and buries her face_. _Her
- sobs are like the sobs of a child_.]
- ACT DROP
- THIRD ACT
- SCENE
- _The Library in Lord Goring’s house_. _An Adam room_. _On the right is
- the door leading into the hall_. _On the left_, _the door of the
- smoking-room_. _A pair of folding doors at the back open into the
- drawing-room_. _The fire is lit_. _Phipps_, _the butler_, _is arranging
- some newspapers on the writing-table_. _The distinction of Phipps is his
- impassivity_. _He has been termed by enthusiasts the Ideal Butler_. _The
- Sphinx is not so incommunicable_. _He is a mask with a manner_. _Of his
- intellectual or emotional life_, _history knows nothing_. _He represents
- the dominance of form_.
- [_Enter_ LORD GORING _in evening dress with a buttonhole_. _He is
- wearing a silk hat and Inverness cape_. _White-gloved_, _he carries a
- Louis Seize cane_. _His are all the delicate fopperies of Fashion_.
- _One sees that he stands in immediate relation to modern life_, _makes it
- indeed_, _and so masters it_. _He is the first well-dressed philosopher
- in the history of thought_.]
- LORD GORING. Got my second buttonhole for me, Phipps?
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord. [_Takes his hat_, _cane_, _and cape_, _and
- presents new buttonhole on salver_.]
- LORD GORING. Rather distinguished thing, Phipps. I am the only person
- of the smallest importance in London at present who wears a buttonhole.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord. I have observed that,
- LORD GORING. [_Taking out old buttonhole_.] You see, Phipps, Fashion is
- what one wears oneself. What is unfashionable is what other people wear.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. Just as vulgarity is simply the conduct of other people.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. [_Putting in a new buttonhole_.] And falsehoods the truths
- of other people.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. Other people are quite dreadful. The only possible society
- is oneself.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. To love oneself is the beginning of a lifelong romance,
- Phipps.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. [_Looking at himself in the glass_.] Don’t think I quite
- like this buttonhole, Phipps. Makes me look a little too old. Makes me
- almost in the prime of life, eh, Phipps?
- PHIPPS. I don’t observe any alteration in your lordship’s appearance.
- LORD GORING. You don’t, Phipps?
- PHIPPS. No, my lord.
- LORD GORING. I am not quite sure. For the future a more trivial
- buttonhole, Phipps, on Thursday evenings.
- PHIPPS. I will speak to the florist, my lord. She has had a loss in her
- family lately, which perhaps accounts for the lack of triviality your
- lordship complains of in the buttonhole.
- LORD GORING. Extraordinary thing about the lower classes in England—they
- are always losing their relations.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord! They are extremely fortunate in that respect.
- LORD GORING. [_Turns round and looks at him_. PHIPPS _remains
- impassive_.] Hum! Any letters, Phipps?
- PHIPPS. Three, my lord. [_Hands letters on a salver_.]
- LORD GORING. [_Takes letters_.] Want my cab round in twenty minutes.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord. [_Goes towards door_.]
- LORD GORING. [_Holds up letter in pink envelope_.] Ahem! Phipps, when
- did this letter arrive?
- PHIPPS. It was brought by hand just after your lordship went to the
- club.
- LORD GORING. That will do. [_Exit_ PHIPPS.] Lady Chiltern’s
- handwriting on Lady Chiltern’s pink notepaper. That is rather curious.
- I thought Robert was to write. Wonder what Lady Chiltern has got to say
- to me? [_Sits at bureau and opens letter_, _and reads it_.] ‘I want
- you. I trust you. I am coming to you. Gertrude.’ [_Puts down the
- letter with a puzzled look_. _Then takes it up_, _and reads it again
- slowly_.] ‘I want you. I trust you. I am coming to you.’ So she has
- found out everything! Poor woman! Poor woman! [ _Pulls out watch and
- looks at it_.] But what an hour to call! Ten o’clock! I shall have to
- give up going to the Berkshires. However, it is always nice to be
- expected, and not to arrive. I am not expected at the Bachelors’, so I
- shall certainly go there. Well, I will make her stand by her husband.
- That is the only thing for her to do. That is the only thing for any
- woman to do. It is the growth of the moral sense in women that makes
- marriage such a hopeless, one-sided institution. Ten o’clock. She
- should be here soon. I must tell Phipps I am not in to any one else.
- [_Goes towards bell_]
- [_Enter_ PHIPPS.]
- PHIPPS. Lord Caversham.
- LORD GORING. Oh, why will parents always appear at the wrong time? Some
- extraordinary mistake in nature, I suppose. [_Enter_ LORD CAVERSHAM.]
- Delighted to see you, my dear father. [_Goes to meet him_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Take my cloak off.
- LORD GORING. Is it worth while, father?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Of course it is worth while, sir. Which is the most
- comfortable chair?
- LORD GORING. This one, father. It is the chair I use myself, when I
- have visitors.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Thank ye. No draught, I hope, in this room?
- LORD GORING. No, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Sitting down_.] Glad to hear it. Can’t stand
- draughts. No draughts at home.
- LORD GORING. Good many breezes, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Eh? Eh? Don’t understand what you mean. Want to have
- a serious conversation with you, sir.
- LORD GORING. My dear father! At this hour?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, sir, it is only ten o’clock. What is your
- objection to the hour? I think the hour is an admirable hour!
- LORD GORING. Well, the fact is, father, this is not my day for talking
- seriously. I am very sorry, but it is not my day.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What do you mean, sir?
- LORD GORING. During the Season, father, I only talk seriously on the
- first Tuesday in every month, from four to seven.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, make it Tuesday, sir, make it Tuesday.
- LORD GORING. But it is after seven, father, and my doctor says I must
- not have any serious conversation after seven. It makes me talk in my
- sleep.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Talk in your sleep, sir? What does that matter? You
- are not married.
- LORD GORING. No, father, I am not married.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Hum! That is what I have come to talk to you about,
- sir. You have got to get married, and at once. Why, when I was your
- age, sir, I had been an inconsolable widower for three months, and was
- already paying my addresses to your admirable mother. Damme, sir, it is
- your duty to get married. You can’t be always living for pleasure.
- Every man of position is married nowadays. Bachelors are not fashionable
- any more. They are a damaged lot. Too much is known about them. You
- must get a wife, sir. Look where your friend Robert Chiltern has got to
- by probity, hard work, and a sensible marriage with a good woman. Why
- don’t you imitate him, sir? Why don’t you take him for your model?
- LORD GORING. I think I shall, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I wish you would, sir. Then I should be happy. At
- present I make your mother’s life miserable on your account. You are
- heartless, sir, quite heartless.
- LORD GORING. I hope not, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. And it is high time for you to get married. You are
- thirty-four years of age, sir.
- LORD GORING. Yes, father, but I only admit to thirty-two—thirty-one and
- a half when I have a really good buttonhole. This buttonhole is not . . .
- trivial enough.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I tell you you are thirty-four, sir. And there is a
- draught in your room, besides, which makes your conduct worse. Why did
- you tell me there was no draught, sir? I feel a draught, sir, I feel it
- distinctly.
- LORD GORING. So do I, father. It is a dreadful draught. I will come
- and see you to-morrow, father. We can talk over anything you like. Let
- me help you on with your cloak, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. No, sir; I have called this evening for a definite
- purpose, and I am going to see it through at all costs to my health or
- yours. Put down my cloak, sir.
- LORD GORING. Certainly, father. But let us go into another room.
- [_Rings bell_.] There is a dreadful draught here. [_Enter_ PHIPPS.]
- Phipps, is there a good fire in the smoking-room?
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. Come in there, father. Your sneezes are quite
- heartrending.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, sir, I suppose I have a right to sneeze when I
- choose?
- LORD GORING. [_Apologetically_.] Quite so, father. I was merely
- expressing sympathy.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Oh, damn sympathy. There is a great deal too much of
- that sort of thing going on nowadays.
- LORD GORING. I quite agree with you, father. If there was less sympathy
- in the world there would be less trouble in the world.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Going towards the smoking-room_.] That is a paradox,
- sir. I hate paradoxes.
- LORD GORING. So do I, father. Everybody one meets is a paradox
- nowadays. It is a great bore. It makes society so obvious.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Turning round_, _and looking at his son beneath his
- bushy eyebrows_.] Do you always really understand what you say, sir?
- LORD GORING. [_After some hesitation_.] Yes, father, if I listen
- attentively.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Indignantly_.] If you listen attentively! . . .
- Conceited young puppy!
- [_Goes off grumbling into the smoking-room_. PHIPPS _enters_.]
- LORD GORING. Phipps, there is a lady coming to see me this evening on
- particular business. Show her into the drawing-room when she arrives.
- You understand?
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. It is a matter of the gravest importance, Phipps.
- PHIPPS. I understand, my lord.
- LORD GORING. No one else is to be admitted, under any circumstances.
- PHIPPS. I understand, my lord. [_Bell rings_.]
- LORD GORING. Ah! that is probably the lady. I shall see her myself.
- [_Just as he is going towards the door_ LORD CAVERSHAM _enters from the
- smoking-room_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, sir? am I to wait attendance on you?
- LORD GORING. [_Considerably perplexed_.] In a moment, father. Do
- excuse me. [LORD CAVERSHAM _goes back_.] Well, remember my
- instructions, Phipps—into that room.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- [LORD GORING _goes into the smoking-room_. HAROLD, _the footman shows_
- MRS. CHEVELEY _in_. _Lamia-like_, _she is in green and silver_. _She
- has a cloak of black satin_, _lined with dead rose-leaf silk_.]
- HAROLD. What name, madam?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_To_ PHIPPS, _who advances towards her_.] Is Lord
- Goring not here? I was told he was at home?
- PHIPPS. His lordship is engaged at present with Lord Caversham, madam.
- [_Turns a cold_, _glassy eye on_ HAROLD, _who at once retires_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_To herself_.] How very filial!
- PHIPPS. His lordship told me to ask you, madam, to be kind enough to
- wait in the drawing-room for him. His lordship will come to you there.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a look of surprise_.] Lord Goring expects me?
- PHIPPS. Yes, madam.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Are you quite sure?
- PHIPPS. His lordship told me that if a lady called I was to ask her to
- wait in the drawing-room. [_Goes to the door of the drawing-room and
- opens it_.] His lordship’s directions on the subject were very precise.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_To herself_] How thoughtful of him! To expect the
- unexpected shows a thoroughly modern intellect. [_Goes towards the
- drawing-room and looks in_.] Ugh! How dreary a bachelor’s drawing-room
- always looks. I shall have to alter all this. [PHIPPS _brings the lamp
- from the writing-table_.] No, I don’t care for that lamp. It is far too
- glaring. Light some candles.
- PHIPPS. [_Replaces lamp_.] Certainly, madam.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I hope the candles have very becoming shades.
- PHIPPS. We have had no complaints about them, madam, as yet.
- [_Passes into the drawing-room and begins to light the candles_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_To herself_.] I wonder what woman he is waiting for
- to-night. It will be delightful to catch him. Men always look so silly
- when they are caught. And they are always being caught. [_Looks about
- room and approaches the writing-table_.] What a very interesting room!
- What a very interesting picture! Wonder what his correspondence is like.
- [_Takes up letters_.] Oh, what a very uninteresting correspondence!
- Bills and cards, debts and dowagers! Who on earth writes to him on pink
- paper? How silly to write on pink paper! It looks like the beginning of
- a middle-class romance. Romance should never begin with sentiment. It
- should begin with science and end with a settlement. [_Puts letter
- down_, _then takes it up again_.] I know that handwriting. That is
- Gertrude Chiltern’s. I remember it perfectly. The ten commandments in
- every stroke of the pen, and the moral law all over the page. Wonder
- what Gertrude is writing to him about? Something horrid about me, I
- suppose. How I detest that woman! [_Reads it_.] ‘I trust you. I want
- you. I am coming to you. Gertrude.’ ‘I trust you. I want you. I am
- coming to you.’
- [_A look of triumph comes over her face_. _She is just about to steal
- the letter_, _when_ PHIPPS _comes in_.]
- PHIPPS. The candles in the drawing-room are lit, madam, as you directed.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thank you. [_Rises hastily and slips the letter under a
- large silver-cased blotting-book that is lying on the table_.]
- PHIPPS. I trust the shades will be to your liking, madam. They are the
- most becoming we have. They are the same as his lordship uses himself
- when he is dressing for dinner.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a smile_.] Then I am sure they will be perfectly
- right.
- PHIPPS. [_Gravely_.] Thank you, madam.
- [MRS. CHEVELEY _goes into the drawing-room_. PHIPPS _closes the door and
- retires_. _The door is then slowly opened_, _and_ MRS. CHEVELEY _comes
- out and creeps stealthily towards the writing-table_. _Suddenly voices
- are heard from the smoking-room_. MRS. CHEVELEY _grows pale_, _and
- stops_. _The voices grow louder_, _and she goes back into the
- drawing-room_, _biting her lip_.]
- [_Enter_ LORD GORING _and_ LORD CAVERSHAM.]
- LORD GORING. [_Expostulating_.] My dear father, if I am to get married,
- surely you will allow me to choose the time, place, and person?
- Particularly the person.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Testily_.] That is a matter for me, sir. You would
- probably make a very poor choice. It is I who should be consulted, not
- you. There is property at stake. It is not a matter for affection.
- Affection comes later on in married life.
- LORD GORING. Yes. In married life affection comes when people
- thoroughly dislike each other, father, doesn’t it? [_Puts on_ LORD
- CAVERSHAM’S _cloak for him_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Certainly, sir. I mean certainly not, air. You are
- talking very foolishly to-night. What I say is that marriage is a matter
- for common sense.
- LORD GORING. But women who have common sense are so curiously plain,
- father, aren’t they? Of course I only speak from hearsay.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. No woman, plain or pretty, has any common sense at all,
- sir. Common sense is the privilege of our sex.
- LORD GORING. Quite so. And we men are so self-sacrificing that we never
- use it, do we, father?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I use it, sir. I use nothing else.
- LORD GORING. So my mother tells me.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. It is the secret of your mother’s happiness. You are
- very heartless, sir, very heartless.
- LORD GORING. I hope not, father.
- [_Goes out for a moment_. _Then returns_, _looking rather put out_,
- _with_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. My dear Arthur, what a piece of good luck meeting
- you on the doorstep! Your servant had just told me you were not at home.
- How extraordinary!
- LORD GORING. The fact is, I am horribly busy to-night, Robert, and I
- gave orders I was not at home to any one. Even my father had a
- comparatively cold reception. He complained of a draught the whole time.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Ah! you must be at home to me, Arthur. You are my
- best friend. Perhaps by to-morrow you will be my only friend. My wife
- has discovered everything.
- LORD GORING. Ah! I guessed as much!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Looking at him_.] Really! How?
- LORD GORING. [_After some hesitation_.] Oh, merely by something in the
- expression of your face as you came in. Who told her?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Mrs. Cheveley herself. And the woman I love knows
- that I began my career with an act of low dishonesty, that I built up my
- life upon sands of shame—that I sold, like a common huckster, the secret
- that had been intrusted to me as a man of honour. I thank heaven poor
- Lord Radley died without knowing that I betrayed him. I would to God I
- had died before I had been so horribly tempted, or had fallen so low.
- [_Burying his face in his hands_.]
- LORD GORING. [_After a pause_.] You have heard nothing from Vienna yet,
- in answer to your wire?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Looking up_.] Yes; I got a telegram from the
- first secretary at eight o’clock to-night.
- LORD GORING. Well?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Nothing is absolutely known against her. On the
- contrary, she occupies a rather high position in society. It is a sort
- of open secret that Baron Arnheim left her the greater portion of his
- immense fortune. Beyond that I can learn nothing.
- LORD GORING. She doesn’t turn out to be a spy, then?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Oh! spies are of no use nowadays. Their profession
- is over. The newspapers do their work instead.
- LORD GORING. And thunderingly well they do it.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Arthur, I am parched with thirst. May I ring for
- something? Some hock and seltzer?
- LORD GORING. Certainly. Let me. [_Rings the bell_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Thanks! I don’t know what to do, Arthur, I don’t
- know what to do, and you are my only friend. But what a friend you
- are—the one friend I can trust. I can trust you absolutely, can’t I?
- [_Enter_ PHIPPS.]
- LORD GORING. My dear Robert, of course. Oh! [_To_ PHIPPS.] Bring some
- hock and seltzer.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. And Phipps!
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord.
- LORD GORING. Will you excuse me for a moment, Robert? I want to give
- some directions to my servant.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Certainly.
- LORD GORING. When that lady calls, tell her that I am not expected home
- this evening. Tell her that I have been suddenly called out of town.
- You understand?
- PHIPPS. The lady is in that room, my lord. You told me to show her into
- that room, my lord.
- LORD GORING. You did perfectly right. [_Exit_ PHIPPS.] What a mess I
- am in. No; I think I shall get through it. I’ll give her a lecture
- through the door. Awkward thing to manage, though.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Arthur, tell me what I should do. My life seems to
- have crumbled about me. I am a ship without a rudder in a night without
- a star.
- LORD GORING. Robert, you love your wife, don’t you?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I love her more than anything in the world. I used
- to think ambition the great thing. It is not. Love is the great thing
- in the world. There is nothing but love, and I love her. But I am
- defamed in her eyes. I am ignoble in her eyes. There is a wide gulf
- between us now. She has found me out, Arthur, she has found me out.
- LORD GORING. Has she never in her life done some folly—some
- indiscretion—that she should not forgive your sin?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. My wife! Never! She does not know what weakness
- or temptation is. I am of clay like other men. She stands apart as good
- women do—pitiless in her perfection—cold and stern and without mercy.
- But I love her, Arthur. We are childless, and I have no one else to
- love, no one else to love me. Perhaps if God had sent us children she
- might have been kinder to me. But God has given us a lonely house. And
- she has cut my heart in two. Don’t let us talk of it. I was brutal to
- her this evening. But I suppose when sinners talk to saints they are
- brutal always. I said to her things that were hideously true, on my
- side, from my stand-point, from the standpoint of men. But don’t let us
- talk of that.
- LORD GORING. Your wife will forgive you. Perhaps at this moment she is
- forgiving you. She loves you, Robert. Why should she not forgive?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. God grant it! God grant it! [_Buries his face in
- his hands_.] But there is something more I have to tell you, Arthur.
- [_Enter_ PHIPPS _with drinks_.]
- PHIPPS. [_Hands hock and seltzer to_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.] Hock and
- seltzer, sir.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Thank you.
- LORD GORING. Is your carriage here, Robert?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. No; I walked from the club.
- LORD GORING. Sir Robert will take my cab, Phipps.
- PHIPPS. Yes, my lord. [_Exit_.]
- LORD GORING. Robert, you don’t mind my sending you away?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Arthur, you must let me stay for five minutes. I
- have made up my mind what I am going to do to-night in the House. The
- debate on the Argentine Canal is to begin at eleven. [_A chair falls in
- the drawing-room_.] What is that?
- LORD GORING. Nothing.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I heard a chair fall in the next room. Some one
- has been listening.
- LORD GORING. No, no; there is no one there.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. There is some one. There are lights in the room,
- and the door is ajar. Some one has been listening to every secret of my
- life. Arthur, what does this mean?
- LORD GORING. Robert, you are excited, unnerved. I tell you there is no
- one in that room. Sit down, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Do you give me your word that there is no one
- there?
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Your word of honour? [_Sits down_.]
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rises_.] Arthur, let me see for myself.
- LORD GORING. No, no.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. If there is no one there why should I not look in
- that room? Arthur, you must let me go into that room and satisfy myself.
- Let me know that no eavesdropper has heard my life’s secret. Arthur, you
- don’t realise what I am going through.
- LORD GORING. Robert, this must stop. I have told you that there is no
- one in that room—that is enough.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Rushes to the door of the room_.] It is not
- enough. I insist on going into this room. You have told me there is no
- one there, so what reason can you have for refusing me?
- LORD GORING. For God’s sake, don’t! There is some one there. Some one
- whom you must not see.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Ah, I thought so!
- LORD GORING. I forbid you to enter that room.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Stand back. My life is at stake. And I don’t care
- who is there. I will know who it is to whom I have told my secret and my
- shame. [_Enters room_.]
- LORD GORING. Great heavens! his own wife!
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _comes back_, _with a look of scorn and anger on his
- face_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What explanation have you to give me for the
- presence of that woman here?
- LORD GORING. Robert, I swear to you on my honour that that lady is
- stainless and guiltless of all offence towards you.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. She is a vile, an infamous thing!
- LORD GORING. Don’t say that, Robert! It was for your sake she came
- here. It was to try and save you she came here. She loves you and no
- one else.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You are mad. What have I to do with her intrigues
- with you? Let her remain your mistress! You are well suited to each
- other. She, corrupt and shameful—you, false as a friend, treacherous as
- an enemy even—
- LORD GORING. It is not true, Robert. Before heaven, it is not true. In
- her presence and in yours I will explain all.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Let me pass, sir. You have lied enough upon your
- word of honour.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _goes out_. LORD GORING _rushes to the door of the
- drawing-room_, _when_ MRS. CHEVELEY _comes out_, _looking radiant and
- much amused_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a mock curtsey_] Good evening, Lord Goring!
- LORD GORING. Mrs. Cheveley! Great heavens! . . . May I ask what you
- were doing in my drawing-room?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Merely listening. I have a perfect passion for listening
- through keyholes. One always hears such wonderful things through them.
- LORD GORING. Doesn’t that sound rather like tempting Providence?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh! surely Providence can resist temptation by this time.
- [_Makes a sign to him to take her cloak off_, _which he does_.]
- LORD GORING. I am glad you have called. I am going to give you some
- good advice.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Oh! pray don’t. One should never give a woman anything
- that she can’t wear in the evening.
- LORD GORING. I see you are quite as wilful as you used to be.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Far more! I have greatly improved. I have had more
- experience.
- LORD GORING. Too much experience is a dangerous thing. Pray have a
- cigarette. Half the pretty women in London smoke cigarettes. Personally
- I prefer the other half.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks. I never smoke. My dressmaker wouldn’t like it,
- and a woman’s first duty in life is to her dressmaker, isn’t it? What
- the second duty is, no one has as yet discovered.
- LORD GORING. You have come here to sell me Robert Chiltern’s letter,
- haven’t you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. To offer it to you on conditions. How did you guess
- that?
- LORD GORING. Because you haven’t mentioned the subject. Have you got it
- with you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Sitting down_.] Oh, no! A well-made dress has no
- pockets.
- LORD GORING. What is your price for it?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. How absurdly English you are! The English think that a
- cheque-book can solve every problem in life. Why, my dear Arthur, I have
- very much more money than you have, and quite as much as Robert Chiltern
- has got hold of. Money is not what I want.
- LORD GORING. What do you want then, Mrs. Cheveley?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Why don’t you call me Laura?
- LORD GORING. I don’t like the name.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You used to adore it.
- LORD GORING. Yes: that’s why. [MRS. CHEVELEY _motions to him to sit
- down beside her_. _He smiles_, _and does so_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Arthur, you loved me once.
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. And you asked me to be your wife.
- LORD GORING. That was the natural result of my loving you.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. And you threw me over because you saw, or said you saw,
- poor old Lord Mortlake trying to have a violent flirtation with me in the
- conservatory at Tenby.
- LORD GORING. I am under the impression that my lawyer settled that
- matter with you on certain terms . . . dictated by yourself.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. At that time I was poor; you were rich.
- LORD GORING. Quite so. That is why you pretended to love me.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Shrugging her shoulders_.] Poor old Lord Mortlake, who
- had only two topics of conversation, his gout and his wife! I never
- could quite make out which of the two he was talking about. He used the
- most horrible language about them both. Well, you were silly, Arthur.
- Why, Lord Mortlake was never anything more to me than an amusement. One
- of those utterly tedious amusements one only finds at an English country
- house on an English country Sunday. I don’t think any one at all morally
- responsible for what he or she does at an English country house.
- LORD GORING. Yes. I know lots of people think that.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I loved you, Arthur.
- LORD GORING. My dear Mrs. Cheveley, you have always been far too clever
- to know anything about love.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I did love you. And you loved me. You know you loved
- me; and love is a very wonderful thing. I suppose that when a man has
- once loved a woman, he will do anything for her, except continue to love
- her? [_Puts her hand on his_.]
- LORD GORING. [_Taking his hand away quietly_.] Yes: except that.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_After a pause_.] I am tired of living abroad. I want
- to come back to London. I want to have a charming house here. I want to
- have a salon. If one could only teach the English how to talk, and the
- Irish how to listen, society here would be quite civilised. Besides, I
- have arrived at the romantic stage. When I saw you last night at the
- Chilterns’, I knew you were the only person I had ever cared for, if I
- ever have cared for anybody, Arthur. And so, on the morning of the day
- you marry me, I will give you Robert Chiltern’s letter. That is my
- offer. I will give it to you now, if you promise to marry me.
- LORD GORING. Now?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Smiling_.] To-morrow.
- LORD GORING. Are you really serious?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes, quite serious.
- LORD GORING. I should make you a very bad husband.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I don’t mind bad husbands. I have had two. They amused
- me immensely.
- LORD GORING. You mean that you amused yourself immensely, don’t you?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. What do you know about my married life?
- LORD GORING. Nothing: but I can read it like a book.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. What book?
- LORD GORING. [_Rising_.] The Book of Numbers.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Do you think it is quite charming of you to be so rude to
- a woman in your own house?
- LORD GORING. In the case of very fascinating women, sex is a challenge,
- not a defence.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I suppose that is meant for a compliment. My dear
- Arthur, women are never disarmed by compliments. Men always are. That
- is the difference between the two sexes.
- LORD GORING. Women are never disarmed by anything, as far as I know
- them.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_After a pause_.] Then you are going to allow your
- greatest friend, Robert Chiltern, to be ruined, rather than marry some
- one who really has considerable attractions left. I thought you would
- have risen to some great height of self-sacrifice, Arthur. I think you
- should. And the rest of your life you could spend in contemplating your
- own perfections.
- LORD GORING. Oh! I do that as it is. And self-sacrifice is a thing that
- should be put down by law. It is so demoralising to the people for whom
- one sacrifices oneself. They always go to the bad.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. As if anything could demoralise Robert Chiltern! You
- seem to forget that I know his real character.
- LORD GORING. What you know about him is not his real character. It was
- an act of folly done in his youth, dishonourable, I admit, shameful, I
- admit, unworthy of him, I admit, and therefore . . . not his true
- character.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. How you men stand up for each other!
- LORD GORING. How you women war against each other!
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Bitterly_.] I only war against one woman, against
- Gertrude Chiltern. I hate her. I hate her now more than ever.
- LORD GORING. Because you have brought a real tragedy into her life, I
- suppose.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a sneer_.] Oh, there is only one real tragedy in
- a woman’s life. The fact that her past is always her lover, and her
- future invariably her husband.
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern knows nothing of the kind of life to which
- you are alluding.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. A woman whose size in gloves is seven and three-quarters
- never knows much about anything. You know Gertrude has always worn seven
- and three-quarters? That is one of the reasons why there was never any
- moral sympathy between us. . . . Well, Arthur, I suppose this romantic
- interview may be regarded as at an end. You admit it was romantic, don’t
- you? For the privilege of being your wife I was ready to surrender a
- great prize, the climax of my diplomatic career. You decline. Very
- well. If Sir Robert doesn’t uphold my Argentine scheme, I expose him.
- Voilà tout.
- LORD GORING. You mustn’t do that. It would be vile, horrible, infamous.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Shrugging her shoulders_.] Oh! don’t use big words.
- They mean so little. It is a commercial transaction. That is all.
- There is no good mixing up sentimentality in it. I offered to sell
- Robert Chiltern a certain thing. If he won’t pay me my price, he will
- have to pay the world a greater price. There is no more to be said. I
- must go. Good-bye. Won’t you shake hands?
- LORD GORING. With you? No. Your transaction with Robert Chiltern may
- pass as a loathsome commercial transaction of a loathsome commercial age;
- but you seem to have forgotten that you came here to-night to talk of
- love, you whose lips desecrated the word love, you to whom the thing is a
- book closely sealed, went this afternoon to the house of one of the most
- noble and gentle women in the world to degrade her husband in her eyes,
- to try and kill her love for him, to put poison in her heart, and
- bitterness in her life, to break her idol, and, it may be, spoil her
- soul. That I cannot forgive you. That was horrible. For that there can
- be no forgiveness.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Arthur, you are unjust to me. Believe me, you are quite
- unjust to me. I didn’t go to taunt Gertrude at all. I had no idea of
- doing anything of the kind when I entered. I called with Lady Markby
- simply to ask whether an ornament, a jewel, that I lost somewhere last
- night, had been found at the Chilterns’. If you don’t believe me, you
- can ask Lady Markby. She will tell you it is true. The scene that
- occurred happened after Lady Markby had left, and was really forced on me
- by Gertrude’s rudeness and sneers. I called, oh!—a little out of malice
- if you like—but really to ask if a diamond brooch of mine had been found.
- That was the origin of the whole thing.
- LORD GORING. A diamond snake-brooch with a ruby?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. How do you know?
- LORD GORING. Because it is found. In point of fact, I found it myself,
- and stupidly forgot to tell the butler anything about it as I was
- leaving. [_Goes over to the writing-table and pulls out the drawers_.]
- It is in this drawer. No, that one. This is the brooch, isn’t it?
- [_Holds up the brooch_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. I am so glad to get it back. It was . . a present.
- LORD GORING. Won’t you wear it?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Certainly, if you pin it in. [LORD GORING _suddenly
- clasps it on her arm_.] Why do you put it on as a bracelet? I never
- knew it could he worn as a bracelet.
- LORD GORING. Really?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Holding out her handsome arm_.] No; but it looks very
- well on me as a bracelet, doesn’t it?
- LORD GORING. Yes; much better than when I saw it last.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. When did you see it last?
- LORD GORING. [_Calmly_.] Oh, ten years ago, on Lady Berkshire, from
- whom you stole it.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Starting_.] What do you mean?
- LORD GORING. I mean that you stole that ornament from my cousin, Mary
- Berkshire, to whom I gave it when she was married. Suspicion fell on a
- wretched servant, who was sent away in disgrace. I recognised it last
- night. I determined to say nothing about it till I had found the thief.
- I have found the thief now, and I have heard her own confession.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Tossing her head_.] It is not true.
- LORD GORING. You know it is true. Why, thief is written across your
- face at this moment.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I will deny the whole affair from beginning to end. I
- will say that I have never seen this wretched thing, that it was never in
- my possession.
- [MRS. CHEVELEY _tries to get the bracelet off her arm_, _but fails_.
- LORD GORING _looks on amused_. _Her thin fingers tear at the jewel to no
- purpose_. _A curse breaks from her_.]
- LORD GORING. The drawback of stealing a thing, Mrs. Cheveley, is that
- one never knows how wonderful the thing that one steals is. You can’t
- get that bracelet off, unless you know where the spring is. And I see
- you don’t know where the spring is. It is rather difficult to find.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. You brute! You coward! [_She tries again to unclasp the
- bracelet_, _but fails_.]
- LORD GORING. Oh! don’t use big words. They mean so little.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Again tears at the bracelet in a paroxysm of rage_,
- _with inarticulate sounds_. _Then stops_, _and looks at_ LORD GORING.]
- What are you going to do?
- LORD GORING. I am going to ring for my servant. He is an admirable
- servant. Always comes in the moment one rings for him. When he comes I
- will tell him to fetch the police.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Trembling_.] The police? What for?
- LORD GORING. To-morrow the Berkshires will prosecute you. That is what
- the police are for.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Is now in an agony of physical terror_. _Her face is
- distorted_. _Her mouth awry_. _A mask has fallen from her_. _She it_,
- _for the moment_, _dreadful to look at_.] Don’t do that. I will do
- anything you want. Anything in the world you want.
- LORD GORING. Give me Robert Chiltern’s letter.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Stop! Stop! Let me have time to think.
- LORD GORING. Give me Robert Chiltern’s letter.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I have not got it with me. I will give it to you
- to-morrow.
- LORD GORING. You know you are lying. Give it to me at once. [MRS.
- CHEVELEY _pulls the letter out_, _and hands it to him_. _She is horribly
- pale_.] This is it?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_In a hoarse voice_.] Yes.
- LORD GORING. [_Takes the letter_, _examines it_, _sighs_, _and burns it
- with the lamp_.] For so well-dressed a woman, Mrs. Cheveley, you have
- moments of admirable common sense. I congratulate you.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Catches sight of_ LADY CHILTERN’S _letter_, _the cover
- of which is just showing from under the blotting-book_.] Please get me a
- glass of water.
- LORD GORING. Certainly. [_Goes to the corner of the room and pours out
- a glass of water_. _While his back is turned_ MRS. CHEVELEY _steals_
- LADY CHILTERN’S _letter_. _When_ LORD GORING _returns the glass she
- refuses it with a gesture_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thank you. Will you help me on with my cloak?
- LORD GORING. With pleasure. [_Puts her cloak on_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Thanks. I am never going to try to harm Robert Chiltern
- again.
- LORD GORING. Fortunately you have not the chance, Mrs. Cheveley.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Well, if even I had the chance, I wouldn’t. On the
- contrary, I am going to render him a great service.
- LORD GORING. I am charmed to hear it. It is a reformation.
- MRS. CHEVELEY. Yes. I can’t bear so upright a gentleman, so honourable
- an English gentleman, being so shamefully deceived, and so—
- LORD GORING. Well?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. I find that somehow Gertrude Chiltern’s dying speech and
- confession has strayed into my pocket.
- LORD GORING. What do you mean?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_With a bitter note of triumph in her voice_.] I mean
- that I am going to send Robert Chiltern the love-letter his wife wrote to
- you to-night.
- LORD GORING. Love-letter?
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_Laughing_.] ‘I want you. I trust you. I am coming to
- you. Gertrude.’
- [LORD GORING _rushes to the bureau and takes up the envelope_, _finds is
- empty_, _and turns round_.]
- LORD GORING. You wretched woman, must you always be thieving? Give me
- back that letter. I’ll take it from you by force. You shall not leave
- my room till I have got it.
- [_He rushes towards her_, _but_ MRS. CHEVELEY _at once puts her hand on
- the electric bell that is on the table_. _The bell sounds with shrill
- reverberations_, _and_ PHIPPS _enters_.]
- MRS. CHEVELEY. [_After a pause_.] Lord Goring merely rang that you
- should show me out. Good-night, Lord Goring!
- [_Goes out followed by_ PHIPPS. _Her face is illumined with evil
- triumph_. _There is joy in her eyes_. _Youth seems to have come back to
- her_. _Her last glance is like a swift arrow_. LORD GORING _bites his
- lip_, _and lights his a cigarette_.]
- ACT DROPS
- FOURTH ACT
- SCENE
- _Same as Act II_.
- [LORD GORING _is standing by the fireplace with his hands in his
- pockets_. _He is looking rather bored_.]
- LORD GORING. [_Pulls out his watch_, _inspects it_, _and rings the
- bell_.] It is a great nuisance. I can’t find any one in this house to
- talk to. And I am full of interesting information. I feel like the
- latest edition of something or other.
- [_Enter servant_.]
- JAMES. Sir Robert is still at the Foreign Office, my lord.
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern not down yet?
- JAMES. Her ladyship has not yet left her room. Miss Chiltern has just
- come in from riding.
- LORD GORING. [_To himself_.] Ah! that is something.
- JAMES. Lord Caversham has been waiting some time in the library for Sir
- Robert. I told him your lordship was here.
- LORD GORING. Thank you! Would you kindly tell him I’ve gone?
- JAMES. [_Bowing_.] I shall do so, my lord.
- [_Exit servant_.]
- LORD GORING. Really, I don’t want to meet my father three days running.
- It is a great deal too much excitement for any son. I hope to goodness
- he won’t come up. Fathers should be neither seen nor heard. That is the
- only proper basis for family life. Mothers are different. Mothers are
- darlings. [_Throws himself down into a chair_, _picks up a paper and
- begins to read it_.]
- [_Enter_ LORD CAVERSHAM.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Well, sir, what are you doing here? Wasting your time
- as usual, I suppose?
- LORD GORING. [_Throws down paper and rises_.] My dear father, when one
- pays a visit it is for the purpose of wasting other people’s time, not
- one’s own.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Have you been thinking over what I spoke to you about
- last night?
- LORD GORING. I have been thinking about nothing else.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Engaged to be married yet?
- LORD GORING. [_Genially_.] Not yet: but I hope to be before lunch-time.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Caustically_.] You can have till dinner-time if it
- would be of any convenience to you.
- LORD GORING. Thanks awfully, but I think I’d sooner be engaged before
- lunch.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Humph! Never know when you are serious or not.
- LORD GORING. Neither do I, father.
- [_A pause_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I suppose you have read _The Times_ this morning?
- LORD GORING. [_Airily_.] The Times? Certainly not. I only read _The
- Morning Post_. All that one should know about modern life is where the
- Duchesses are; anything else is quite demoralising.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Do you mean to say you have not read _The Times_ leading
- article on Robert Chiltern’s career?
- LORD GORING. Good heavens! No. What does it say?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What should it say, sir? Everything complimentary, of
- course. Chiltern’s speech last night on this Argentine Canal scheme was
- one of the finest pieces of oratory ever delivered in the House since
- Canning.
- LORD GORING. Ah! Never heard of Canning. Never wanted to. And did . . .
- did Chiltern uphold the scheme?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Uphold it, sir? How little you know him! Why, he
- denounced it roundly, and the whole system of modern political finance.
- This speech is the turning-point in his career, as _The Times_ points
- out. You should read this article, sir. [_Opens_ The Times.] ‘Sir
- Robert Chiltern . . . most rising of our young statesmen . . . Brilliant
- Orator . . . Unblemished career . . . Well-known integrity of character
- . . . Represents what is best in English public life . . . Noble contrast
- to the lax morality so common among foreign politicians.’ They will
- never say that of you, sir.
- LORD GORING. I sincerely hope not, father. However, I am delighted at
- what you tell me about Robert, thoroughly delighted. It shows he has got
- pluck.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. He has got more than pluck, sir, he has got genius.
- LORD GORING. Ah! I prefer pluck. It is not so common, nowadays, as
- genius is.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I wish you would go into Parliament.
- LORD GORING. My dear father, only people who look dull ever get into the
- House of Commons, and only people who are dull ever succeed there.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Why don’t you try to do something useful in life?
- LORD GORING. I am far too young.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Testily_.] I hate this affectation of youth, sir. It
- is a great deal too prevalent nowadays.
- LORD GORING. Youth isn’t an affectation. Youth is an art.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Why don’t you propose to that pretty Miss Chiltern?
- LORD GORING. I am of a very nervous disposition, especially in the
- morning.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I don’t suppose there is the smallest chance of her
- accepting you.
- LORD GORING. I don’t know how the betting stands to-day.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. If she did accept you she would be the prettiest fool in
- England.
- LORD GORING. That is just what I should like to marry. A thoroughly
- sensible wife would reduce me to a condition of absolute idiocy in less
- than six months.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. You don’t deserve her, sir.
- LORD GORING. My dear father, if we men married the women we deserved, we
- should have a very bad time of it.
- [_Enter_ MABEL CHILTERN.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh! . . . How do you do, Lord Caversham? I hope Lady
- Caversham is quite well?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Lady Caversham is as usual, as usual.
- LORD GORING. Good morning, Miss Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Taking no notice at all of_ LORD GORING, _and
- addressing herself exclusively to_ LORD CAVERSHAM.] And Lady Caversham’s
- bonnets . . . are they at all better?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. They have had a serious relapse, I am sorry to say.
- LORD GORING. Good morning, Miss Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_To_ LORD CAVERSHAM.] I hope an operation will not be
- necessary.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Smiling at her pertness_.] If it is, we shall have to
- give Lady Caversham a narcotic. Otherwise she would never consent to
- have a feather touched.
- LORD GORING. [_With increased emphasis_.] Good morning, Miss Mabel!
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Turning round with feigned surprise_.] Oh, are you
- here? Of course you understand that after your breaking your appointment
- I am never going to speak to you again.
- LORD GORING. Oh, please don’t say such a thing. You are the one person
- in London I really like to have to listen to me.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Lord Goring, I never believe a single word that either
- you or I say to each other.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. You are quite right, my dear, quite right . . . as far
- as he is concerned, I mean.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Do you think you could possibly make your son behave a
- little better occasionally? Just as a change.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I regret to say, Miss Chiltern, that I have no influence
- at all over my son. I wish I had. If I had, I know what I would make
- him do.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I am afraid that he has one of those terribly weak
- natures that are not susceptible to influence.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. He is very heartless, very heartless.
- LORD GORING. It seems to me that I am a little in the way here.
- MABEL CHILTERN. It is very good for you to be in the way, and to know
- what people say of you behind your back.
- LORD GORING. I don’t at all like knowing what people say of me behind my
- back. It makes me far too conceited.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. After that, my dear, I really must bid you good morning.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Oh! I hope you are not going to leave me all alone with
- Lord Goring? Especially at such an early hour in the day.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I am afraid I can’t take him with me to Downing Street.
- It is not the Prime Minster’s day for seeing the unemployed.
- [_Shakes hands with_ MABEL CHILTERN, _takes up his hat and stick_, _and
- goes out_, _with a parting glare of indignation at_ LORD GORING.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Takes up roses and begins to arrange them in a bowl on
- the table_.] People who don’t keep their appointments in the Park are
- horrid.
- LORD GORING. Detestable.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I am glad you admit it. But I wish you wouldn’t look so
- pleased about it.
- LORD GORING. I can’t help it. I always look pleased when I am with you.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Sadly_.] Then I suppose it is my duty to remain with
- you?
- LORD GORING. Of course it is.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Well, my duty is a thing I never do, on principle. It
- always depresses me. So I am afraid I must leave you.
- LORD GORING. Please don’t, Miss Mabel. I have something very particular
- to say to you.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Rapturously_.] Oh! is it a proposal?
- LORD GORING. [_Somewhat taken aback_.] Well, yes, it is—I am bound to
- say it is.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_With a sigh of pleasure_.] I am so glad. That makes
- the second to-day.
- LORD GORING. [_Indignantly_.] The second to-day? What conceited ass
- has been impertinent enough to dare to propose to you before I had
- proposed to you?
- MABEL CHILTERN. Tommy Trafford, of course. It is one of Tommy’s days
- for proposing. He always proposes on Tuesdays and Thursdays, during the
- Season.
- LORD GORING. You didn’t accept him, I hope?
- MABEL CHILTERN. I make it a rule never to accept Tommy. That is why he
- goes on proposing. Of course, as you didn’t turn up this morning, I very
- nearly said yes. It would have been an excellent lesson both for him and
- for you if I had. It would have taught you both better manners.
- LORD GORING. Oh! bother Tommy Trafford. Tommy is a silly little ass. I
- love you.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I know. And I think you might have mentioned it before.
- I am sure I have given you heaps of opportunities.
- LORD GORING. Mabel, do be serious. Please be serious.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Ah! that is the sort of thing a man always says to a
- girl before he has been married to her. He never says it afterwards.
- LORD GORING. [_Taking hold of her hand_.] Mabel, I have told you that I
- love you. Can’t you love me a little in return?
- MABEL CHILTERN. You silly Arthur! If you knew anything about . . .
- anything, which you don’t, you would know that I adore you. Every one in
- London knows it except you. It is a public scandal the way I adore you.
- I have been going about for the last six months telling the whole of
- society that I adore you. I wonder you consent to have anything to say
- to me. I have no character left at all. At least, I feel so happy that
- I am quite sure I have no character left at all.
- LORD GORING. [_Catches her in his arms and kisses her_. _Then there is
- a pause of bliss_.] Dear! Do you know I was awfully afraid of being
- refused!
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Looking up at him_.] But you never have been refused
- yet by anybody, have you, Arthur? I can’t imagine any one refusing you.
- LORD GORING. [_After kissing her again_.] Of course I’m not nearly good
- enough for you, Mabel.
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Nestling close to him_.] I am so glad, darling. I
- was afraid you were.
- LORD GORING. [_After some hesitation_.] And I’m . . . I’m a little over
- thirty.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Dear, you look weeks younger than that.
- LORD GORING. [_Enthusiastically_.] How sweet of you to say so! . . .
- And it is only fair to tell you frankly that I am fearfully extravagant.
- MABEL CHILTERN. But so am I, Arthur. So we’re sure to agree. And now I
- must go and see Gertrude.
- LORD GORING. Must you really? [_Kisses her_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Yes.
- LORD GORING. Then do tell her I want to talk to her particularly. I
- have been waiting here all the morning to see either her or Robert.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Do you mean to say you didn’t come here expressly to
- propose to me?
- LORD GORING. [_Triumphantly_.] No; that was a flash of genius.
- MABEL CHILTERN. Your first.
- LORD GORING. [_With determination_.] My last.
- MABEL CHILTERN. I am delighted to hear it. Now don’t stir. I’ll be
- back in five minutes. And don’t fall into any temptations while I am
- away.
- LORD GORING. Dear Mabel, while you are away, there are none. It makes
- me horribly dependent on you.
- [_Enter_ LADY CHILTERN.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Good morning, dear! How pretty you are looking!
- MABEL CHILTERN. How pale you are looking, Gertrude! It is most
- becoming!
- LADY CHILTERN. Good morning, Lord Goring!
- LORD GORING. [_Bowing_.] Good morning, Lady Chiltern!
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_Aside to_ LORD GORING.] I shall be in the
- conservatory under the second palm tree on the left.
- LORD GORING. Second on the left?
- MABEL CHILTERN. [_With a look of mock surprise_.] Yes; the usual palm
- tree.
- [_Blows a kiss to him_, _unobserved by_ LADY CHILTERN, _and goes out_.]
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern, I have a certain amount of very good news to
- tell you. Mrs. Cheveley gave me up Robert’s letter last night, and I
- burned it. Robert is safe.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Sinking on the sofa_.] Safe! Oh! I am so glad of
- that. What a good friend you are to him—to us!
- LORD GORING. There is only one person now that could be said to be in
- any danger.
- LADY CHILTERN. Who is that?
- LORD GORING. [_Sitting down beside her_.] Yourself.
- LADY CHILTERN. I? In danger? What do you mean?
- LORD GORING. Danger is too great a word. It is a word I should not have
- used. But I admit I have something to tell you that may distress you,
- that terribly distresses me. Yesterday evening you wrote me a very
- beautiful, womanly letter, asking me for my help. You wrote to me as one
- of your oldest friends, one of your husband’s oldest friends. Mrs.
- Cheveley stole that letter from my rooms.
- LADY CHILTERN. Well, what use is it to her? Why should she not have it?
- LORD GORING. [_Rising_.] Lady Chiltern, I will be quite frank with you.
- Mrs. Cheveley puts a certain construction on that letter and proposes to
- send it to your husband.
- LADY CHILTERN. But what construction could she put on it? . . . Oh! not
- that! not that! If I in—in trouble, and wanting your help, trusting you,
- propose to come to you . . . that you may advise me . . . assist me . . .
- Oh! are there women so horrible as that . . .? And she proposes to send
- it to my husband? Tell me what happened. Tell me all that happened.
- LORD GORING. Mrs. Cheveley was concealed in a room adjoining my library,
- without my knowledge. I thought that the person who was waiting in that
- room to see me was yourself. Robert came in unexpectedly. A chair or
- something fell in the room. He forced his way in, and he discovered her.
- We had a terrible scene. I still thought it was you. He left me in
- anger. At the end of everything Mrs. Cheveley got possession of your
- letter—she stole it, when or how, I don’t know.
- LADY CHILTERN. At what hour did this happen?
- LORD GORING. At half-past ten. And now I propose that we tell Robert
- the whole thing at once.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Looking at him with amazement that is almost terror_.]
- You want me to tell Robert that the woman you expected was not Mrs.
- Cheveley, but myself? That it was I whom you thought was concealed in a
- room in your house, at half-past ten o’clock at night? You want me to
- tell him that?
- LORD GORING. I think it is better that he should know the exact truth.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Rising_.] Oh, I couldn’t, I couldn’t!
- LORD GORING. May I do it?
- LADY CHILTERN. No.
- LORD GORING. [_Gravely_.] You are wrong, Lady Chiltern.
- LADY CHILTERN. No. The letter must be intercepted. That is all. But
- how can I do it? Letters arrive for him every moment of the day. His
- secretaries open them and hand them to him. I dare not ask the servants
- to bring me his letters. It would be impossible. Oh! why don’t you tell
- me what to do?
- LORD GORING. Pray be calm, Lady Chiltern, and answer the questions I am
- going to put to you. You said his secretaries open his letters.
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- LORD GORING. Who is with him to-day? Mr. Trafford, isn’t it?
- LADY CHILTERN. No. Mr. Montford, I think.
- LORD GORING. You can trust him?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_With a gesture of despair_.] Oh! how do I know?
- LORD GORING. He would do what you asked him, wouldn’t he?
- LADY CHILTERN. I think so.
- LORD GORING. Your letter was on pink paper. He could recognise it
- without reading it, couldn’t he? By the colour?
- LADY CHILTERN. I suppose so.
- LORD GORING. Is he in the house now?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- LORD GORING. Then I will go and see him myself, and tell him that a
- certain letter, written on pink paper, is to be forwarded to Robert
- to-day, and that at all costs it must not reach him. [_Goes to the
- door_, _and opens it_.] Oh! Robert is coming upstairs with the letter in
- his hand. It has reached him already.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_With a cry of pain_.] Oh! you have saved his life;
- what have you done with mine?
- [_Enter_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. _He has the letter in his hand_, _and is
- reading it_. _He comes towards his wife_, _not noticing_ LORD GORING’S
- _presence_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. ‘I want you. I trust you. I am coming to you.
- Gertrude.’ Oh, my love! Is this true? Do you indeed trust me, and want
- me? If so, it was for me to come to you, not for you to write of coming
- to me. This letter of yours, Gertrude, makes me feel that nothing that
- the world may do can hurt me now. You want me, Gertrude?
- [LORD GORING, _unseen by_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN, _makes an imploring sign
- to_ LADY CHILTERN _to accept the situation and_ SIR ROBERT’S _error_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. You trust me, Gertrude?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Ah! why did you not add you loved me?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Taking his hand_.] Because I loved you.
- [LORD GORING _passes into the conservatory_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Kisses her_.] Gertrude, you don’t know what I
- feel. When Montford passed me your letter across the table—he had opened
- it by mistake, I suppose, without looking at the handwriting on the
- envelope—and I read it—oh! I did not care what disgrace or punishment was
- in store for me, I only thought you loved me still.
- LADY CHILTERN. There is no disgrace in store for you, nor any public
- shame. Mrs. Cheveley has handed over to Lord Goring the document that
- was in her possession, and he has destroyed it.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Are you sure of this, Gertrude?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes; Lord Goring has just told me.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Then I am safe! Oh! what a wonderful thing to be
- safe! For two days I have been in terror. I am safe now. How did
- Arthur destroy my letter? Tell me.
- LADY CHILTERN. He burned it.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I wish I had seen that one sin of my youth burning
- to ashes. How many men there are in modern life who would like to see
- their past burning to white ashes before them! Is Arthur still here?
- LADY CHILTERN. Yes; he is in the conservatory.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I am so glad now I made that speech last night in
- the House, so glad. I made it thinking that public disgrace might be the
- result. But it has not been so.
- LADY CHILTERN. Public honour has been the result.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I think so. I fear so, almost. For although I am
- safe from detection, although every proof against me is destroyed, I
- suppose, Gertrude . . . I suppose I should retire from public life? [_He
- looks anxiously at his wife_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Eagerly_.] Oh yes, Robert, you should do that. It is
- your duty to do that.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. It is much to surrender.
- LADY CHILTERN. No; it will be much to gain.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _walks up and down the room with a troubled
- expression_. _Then comes over to his wife_, _and puts his hand on her
- shoulder_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. And you would be happy living somewhere alone with
- me, abroad perhaps, or in the country away from London, away from public
- life? You would have no regrets?
- LADY CHILTERN. Oh! none, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Sadly_.] And your ambition for me? You used to
- be ambitious for me.
- LADY CHILTERN. Oh, my ambition! I have none now, but that we two may
- love each other. It was your ambition that led you astray. Let us not
- talk about ambition.
- [LORD GORING _returns from the conservatory_, _looking very pleased with
- himself_, _and with an entirely new buttonhole that some one has made for
- him_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Going towards him_.] Arthur, I have to thank you
- for what you have done for me. I don’t know how I can repay you.
- [_Shakes hands with him_.]
- LORD GORING. My dear fellow, I’ll tell you at once. At the present
- moment, under the usual palm tree . . . I mean in the conservatory . . .
- [_Enter_ MASON.]
- MASON. Lord Caversham.
- LORD GORING. That admirable father of mine really makes a habit of
- turning up at the wrong moment. It is very heartless of him, very
- heartless indeed.
- [_Enter_ LORD CAVERSHAM. MASON _goes out_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Good morning, Lady Chiltern! Warmest congratulations to
- you, Chiltern, on your brilliant speech last night. I have just left the
- Prime Minister, and you are to have the vacant seat in the Cabinet.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With a look of joy and triumph_.] A seat in the
- Cabinet?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Yes; here is the Prime Minister’s letter. [_Hands
- letter_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Takes letter and reads it_.] A seat in the
- Cabinet!
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Certainly, and you well deserve it too. You have got
- what we want so much in political life nowadays—high character, high
- moral tone, high principles. [_To_ LORD GORING.] Everything that you
- have not got, sir, and never will have.
- LORD GORING. I don’t like principles, father. I prefer prejudices.
- [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _is on the brink of accepting the Prime Minister’s
- offer_, _when he sees wife looking at him with her clear_, _candid eyes_.
- _He then realises that it is impossible_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I cannot accept this offer, Lord Caversham. I have
- made up my mind to decline it.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Decline it, sir!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. My intention is to retire at once from public life.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Angrily_.] Decline a seat in the Cabinet, and retire
- from public life? Never heard such damned nonsense in the whole course
- of my existence. I beg your pardon, Lady Chiltern. Chiltern, I beg your
- pardon. [_To_ LORD GORING.] Don’t grin like that, sir.
- LORD GORING. No, father.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Lady Chiltern, you are a sensible woman, the most
- sensible woman in London, the most sensible woman I know. Will you
- kindly prevent your husband from making such a . . . from taking such
- . . . Will you kindly do that, Lady Chiltern?
- LADY CHILTERN. I think my husband in right in his determination, Lord
- Caversham. I approve of it.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. You approve of it? Good heavens!
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Taking her husband’s hand_.] I admire him for it. I
- admire him immensely for it. I have never admired him so much before.
- He is finer than even I thought him. [_To_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.] You
- will go and write your letter to the Prime Minister now, won’t you?
- Don’t hesitate about it, Robert.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With a touch of bitterness_.] I suppose I had
- better write it at once. Such offers are not repeated. I will ask you
- to excuse me for a moment, Lord Caversham.
- LADY CHILTERN. I may come with you, Robert, may I not?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes, Gertrude.
- [LADY CHILTERN _goes out with him_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What is the matter with this family? Something wrong
- here, eh? [_Tapping his forehead_.] Idiocy? Hereditary, I suppose.
- Both of them, too. Wife as well as husband. Very sad. Very sad indeed!
- And they are not an old family. Can’t understand it.
- LORD GORING. It is not idiocy, father, I assure you.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What is it then, sir?
- LORD GORING. [_After some hesitation_.] Well, it is what is called
- nowadays a high moral tone, father. That is all.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Hate these new-fangled names. Same thing as we used to
- call idiocy fifty years ago. Shan’t stay in this house any longer.
- LORD GORING. [_Taking his arm_.] Oh! just go in here for a moment,
- father. Third palm tree to the left, the usual palm tree.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What, sir?
- LORD GORING. I beg your pardon, father, I forgot. The conservatory,
- father, the conservatory—there is some one there I want you to talk to.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What about, sir?
- LORD GORING. About me, father,
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Grimly_.] Not a subject on which much eloquence is
- possible.
- LORD GORING. No, father; but the lady is like me. She doesn’t care much
- for eloquence in others. She thinks it a little loud.
- [LORD CAVERSHAM _goes out into the conservatory_. LADY CHILTERN
- _enters_.]
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern, why are you playing Mrs. Cheveley’s cards?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Startled_.] I don’t understand you.
- LORD GORING. Mrs. Cheveley made an attempt to ruin your husband. Either
- to drive him from public life, or to make him adopt a dishonourable
- position. From the latter tragedy you saved him. The former you are now
- thrusting on him. Why should you do him the wrong Mrs. Cheveley tried to
- do and failed?
- LADY CHILTERN. Lord Goring?
- LORD GORING. [_Pulling himself together for a great effort_, _and
- showing the philosopher that underlies the dandy_.] Lady Chiltern, allow
- me. You wrote me a letter last night in which you said you trusted me
- and wanted my help. Now is the moment when you really want my help, now
- is the time when you have got to trust me, to trust in my counsel and
- judgment. You love Robert. Do you want to kill his love for you? What
- sort of existence will he have if you rob him of the fruits of his
- ambition, if you take him from the splendour of a great political career,
- if you close the doors of public life against him, if you condemn him to
- sterile failure, he who was made for triumph and success? Women are not
- meant to judge us, but to forgive us when we need forgiveness. Pardon,
- not punishment, is their mission. Why should you scourge him with rods
- for a sin done in his youth, before he knew you, before he knew himself?
- A man’s life is of more value than a woman’s. It has larger issues,
- wider scope, greater ambitions. A woman’s life revolves in curves of
- emotions. It is upon lines of intellect that a man’s life progresses.
- Don’t make any terrible mistake, Lady Chiltern. A woman who can keep a
- man’s love, and love him in return, has done all the world wants of
- women, or should want of them.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Troubled and hesitating_.] But it is my husband
- himself who wishes to retire from public life. He feels it is his duty.
- It was he who first said so.
- LORD GORING. Rather than lose your love, Robert would do anything, wreck
- his whole career, as he is on the brink of doing now. He is making for
- you a terrible sacrifice. Take my advice, Lady Chiltern, and do not
- accept a sacrifice so great. If you do, you will live to repent it
- bitterly. We men and women are not made to accept such sacrifices from
- each other. We are not worthy of them. Besides, Robert has been
- punished enough.
- LADY CHILTERN. We have both been punished. I set him up too high.
- LORD GORING. [_With deep feeling in his voice_.] Do not for that reason
- set him down now too low. If he has fallen from his altar, do not thrust
- him into the mire. Failure to Robert would be the very mire of shame.
- Power is his passion. He would lose everything, even his power to feel
- love. Your husband’s life is at this moment in your hands, your
- husband’s love is in your hands. Don’t mar both for him.
- [_Enter_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude, here is the draft of my letter. Shall I
- read it to you?
- LADY CHILTERN. Let me see it.
- [SIR ROBERT _hands her the letter_. _She reads it_, _and then_, _with a
- gesture of passion_, _tears it up_.]
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What are you doing?
- LADY CHILTERN. A man’s life is of more value than a woman’s. It has
- larger issues, wider scope, greater ambitions. Our lives revolve in
- curves of emotions. It is upon lines of intellect that a man’s life
- progresses. I have just learnt this, and much else with it, from Lord
- Goring. And I will not spoil your life for you, nor see you spoil it as
- a sacrifice to me, a useless sacrifice!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Gertrude! Gertrude!
- LADY CHILTERN. You can forget. Men easily forget. And I forgive. That
- is how women help the world. I see that now.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Deeply overcome by emotion_, _embraces her_.] My
- wife! my wife! [_To_ LORD GORING.] Arthur, it seems that I am always to
- be in your debt.
- LORD GORING. Oh dear no, Robert. Your debt is to Lady Chiltern, not to
- me!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. I owe you much. And now tell me what you were
- going to ask me just now as Lord Caversham came in.
- LORD GORING. Robert, you are your sister’s guardian, and I want your
- consent to my marriage with her. That is all.
- LADY CHILTERN. Oh, I am so glad! I am so glad! [_Shakes hands with_
- LORD GORING.]
- LORD GORING. Thank you, Lady Chiltern.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_With a troubled look_.] My sister to be your
- wife?
- LORD GORING. Yes.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Speaking with great firmness_.] Arthur, I am
- very sorry, but the thing is quite out of the question. I have to think
- of Mabel’s future happiness. And I don’t think her happiness would be
- safe in your hands. And I cannot have her sacrificed!
- LORD GORING. Sacrificed!
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Yes, utterly sacrificed. Loveless marriages are
- horrible. But there is one thing worse than an absolutely loveless
- marriage. A marriage in which there is love, but on one side only;
- faith, but on one side only; devotion, but on one side only, and in which
- of the two hearts one is sure to be broken.
- LORD GORING. But I love Mabel. No other woman has any place in my life.
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert, if they love each other, why should they not be
- married?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Arthur cannot bring Mabel the love that she
- deserves.
- LORD GORING. What reason have you for saying that?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_After a pause_.] Do you really require me to
- tell you?
- LORD GORING. Certainly I do.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. As you choose. When I called on you yesterday
- evening I found Mrs. Cheveley concealed in your rooms. It was between
- ten and eleven o’clock at night. I do not wish to say anything more.
- Your relations with Mrs. Cheveley have, as I said to you last night,
- nothing whatsoever to do with me. I know you were engaged to be married
- to her once. The fascination she exercised over you then seems to have
- returned. You spoke to me last night of her as of a woman pure and
- stainless, a woman whom you respected and honoured. That may be so. But
- I cannot give my sister’s life into your hands. It would be wrong of me.
- It would be unjust, infamously unjust to her.
- LORD GORING. I have nothing more to say.
- LADY CHILTERN. Robert, it was not Mrs. Cheveley whom Lord Goring
- expected last night.
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. Not Mrs. Cheveley! Who was it then?
- LORD GORING. Lady Chiltern!
- LADY CHILTERN. It was your own wife. Robert, yesterday afternoon Lord
- Goring told me that if ever I was in trouble I could come to him for
- help, as he was our oldest and best friend. Later on, after that
- terrible scene in this room, I wrote to him telling him that I trusted
- him, that I had need of him, that I was coming to him for help and
- advice. [SIR ROBERT CHILTERN _takes the letter out of his pocket_.]
- Yes, that letter. I didn’t go to Lord Goring’s, after all. I felt that
- it is from ourselves alone that help can come. Pride made me think that.
- Mrs. Cheveley went. She stole my letter and sent it anonymously to you
- this morning, that you should think . . . Oh! Robert, I cannot tell you
- what she wished you to think. . . .
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. What! Had I fallen so low in your eyes that you
- thought that even for a moment I could have doubted your goodness?
- Gertrude, Gertrude, you are to me the white image of all good things, and
- sin can never touch you. Arthur, you can go to Mabel, and you have my
- best wishes! Oh! stop a moment. There is no name at the beginning of
- this letter. The brilliant Mrs. Cheveley does not seem to have noticed
- that. There should be a name.
- LADY CHILTERN. Let me write yours. It is you I trust and need. You and
- none else.
- LORD GORING. Well, really, Lady Chiltern, I think I should have back my
- own letter.
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Smiling_.] No; you shall have Mabel. [_Takes the
- letter and writes her husband’s name on it_.]
- LORD GORING. Well, I hope she hasn’t changed her mind. It’s nearly
- twenty minutes since I saw her last.
- [_Enter_ MABEL CHILTERN _and_ LORD CAVERSHAM.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. Lord Goring, I think your father’s conversation much
- more improving than yours. I am only going to talk to Lord Caversham in
- the future, and always under the usual palm tree.
- LORD GORING. Darling! [_Kisses her_.]
- LORD CAVERSHAM. [_Considerably taken aback_.] What does this mean, sir?
- You don’t mean to say that this charming, clever young lady has been so
- foolish as to accept you?
- LORD GORING. Certainly, father! And Chiltern’s been wise enough to
- accept the seat in the Cabinet.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. I am very glad to hear that, Chiltern . . . I
- congratulate you, sir. If the country doesn’t go to the dogs or the
- Radicals, we shall have you Prime Minister, some day.
- [_Enter_ MASON.]
- MASON. Luncheon is on the table, my Lady!
- [MASON _goes out_.]
- MABEL CHILTERN. You’ll stop to luncheon, Lord Caversham, won’t you?
- LORD CAVERSHAM. With pleasure, and I’ll drive you down to Downing Street
- afterwards, Chiltern. You have a great future before you, a great
- future. Wish I could say the same for you, sir. [_To_ LORD GORING.]
- But your career will have to be entirely domestic.
- LORD GORING. Yes, father, I prefer it domestic.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. And if you don’t make this young lady an ideal husband,
- I’ll cut you off with a shilling.
- MABEL CHILTERN. An ideal husband! Oh, I don’t think I should like that.
- It sounds like something in the next world.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. What do you want him to be then, dear?
- MABEL CHILTERN. He can be what he chooses. All I want is to be . . . to
- be . . . oh! a real wife to him.
- LORD CAVERSHAM. Upon my word, there is a good deal of common sense in
- that, Lady Chiltern.
- [_They all go out except_ SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. _He sinks in a chair_,
- _wrapt in thought_. _After a little time_ LADY CHILTERN _returns to look
- for him_.]
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Leaning over the back of the chair_.] Aren’t you
- coming in, Robert?
- SIR ROBERT CHILTERN. [_Taking her hand_.] Gertrude, is it love you feel
- for me, or is it pity merely?
- LADY CHILTERN. [_Kisses him_.] It is love, Robert. Love, and only
- love. For both of us a new life is beginning.
- CURTAIN
- * * * * *
- * * * * *
- THE NORTHUMBERLAND PRESS, NEWCASTLE-UPON-TYNE
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