A moment before the curtain rises,
the Hon. Ernest Woolley drives up to the door of Loam
House in Mayfair. There is a happy smile on his
pleasant, insignificant face, and this presumably means
that he is thinking of himself. He is too busy
over nothing, this man about town, to be always thinking
of himself, but, on the other hand, he almost never
thinks of any other person. Probably Ernest’s
great moment is when he wakes of a morning and realises
that he really is Ernest, for we must all wish to
be that which is our ideal. We can conceive him
springing out of bed light-heartedly and waiting for
his man to do the rest. He is dressed in excellent
taste, with just the little bit more which shows that
he is not without a sense of humour: the dandiacal
are often saved by carrying a smile at the whole thing
in their spats, let us say. Ernest left Cambridge
the other day, a member of The Athenaeum (which he
would be sorry to have you confound with a club in
London of the same name). He is a bachelor, but
not of arts, no mean epigrammatist (as you shall see),
and a favourite of the ladies. He is almost a
celebrity in restaurants, where he dines frequently,
returning to sup; and during this last year he has
probably paid as much in them for the privilege of
handing his hat to an attendant as the rent of a working-man’s
flat. He complains brightly that he is hard up,
and that if somebody or other at Westminster does
not look out the country will go to the dogs.
He is no fool. He has the shrewdness to float
with the current because it is a labour-saving process,
but he has sufficient pluck to fight, if fight he
must (a brief contest, for he would soon be toppled
over). He has a light nature, which would enable
him to bob up cheerily in new conditions and return
unaltered to the old ones. His selfishness is
his most endearing quality. If he has his way
he will spend his life like a cat in pushing his betters
out of the soft places, and until he is old he will
be fondled in the process.
He gives his hat to one footman and
his cane to another, and mounts the great staircase
unassisted and undirected. As a nephew of the
house he need show no credentials even to Crichton,
who is guarding a door above.
It would not be good taste to describe
Crichton, who is only a servant; if to the scandal
of all good houses he is to stand out as a figure in
the play, he must do it on his own, as they say in
the pantry and the boudoir.
We are not going to help him.
We have had misgivings ever since we found his name
in the title, and we shall keep him out of his rights
as long as we can. Even though we softened to
him he would not be a hero in these clothes of servitude;
and he loves his clothes. How to get him out
of them? It would require a cataclysm. To
be an indoor servant at all is to Crichton a badge
of honour; to be a butler at thirty is the realisation
of his proudest ambitions. He is devotedly attached
to his master, who, in his opinion, has but one fault,
he is not sufficiently contemptuous of his inferiors.
We are immediately to be introduced to this solitary
failing of a great English peer.
This perfect butler, then, opens a
door, and ushers Ernest into a certain room.
At the same moment the curtain rises on this room,
and the play begins.
It is one of several reception-rooms
in Loam House, not the most magnificent but quite
the softest; and of a warm afternoon all that those
who are anybody crave for is the softest. The
larger rooms are magnificent and bare, carpetless,
so that it is an accomplishment to keep one’s
feet on them; they are sometimes lent for charitable
purposes; they are also all in use on the night of
a dinner-party, when you may find yourself alone in
one, having taken a wrong turning; or alone, save
for two others who are within hailing distance.
This room, however, is comparatively
small and very soft. There are so many cushions
in it that you wonder why, if you are an outsider and
don’t know that, it needs six cushions to make
one fair head comfy. The couches themselves are
cushions as large as beds, and there is an art of
sinking into them and of waiting to be helped out of
them. There are several famous paintings on the
walls, of which you may say ’Jolly thing that,’
without losing caste as knowing too much; and in cases
there are glorious miniatures, but the daughters of
the house cannot tell you of whom; ‘there is
a catalogue somewhere.’ There are a thousand
or so of roses in basins, several library novels,
and a row of weekly illustrated newspapers lying against
each other like fallen soldiers. If any one disturbs
this row Crichton seems to know of it from afar and
appears noiselessly and replaces the wanderer.
One thing unexpected in such a room is a great array
of tea things. Ernest spots them with a twinkle,
and has his epigram at once unsheathed. He dallies,
however, before delivering the thrust.
Ernest. I perceive, from the
tea cups, Crichton, that the great function is to
take place here.
Crichton (with a respectful sigh). Yes,
sir.
Ernest (chuckling heartlessly).
The servants’ hall coming up to have tea in
the drawing-room! (With terrible sarcasm.) No wonder
you look happy, Crichton.
Crichton (under the knife). No, sir.
Ernest. Do you know, Crichton,
I think that with an effort you might look even happier.
(Crichton smiles wanly.) You don’t approve
of his lordship’s compelling his servants to
be his equals-once a month?
Crichton. It is not for
me, sir, to disapprove of his lordship’s radical
views.
Ernest. Certainly not. And,
after all, it is only once a month that he is affable
to you.
Crichton. On all other days
of the month, sir, his lordship’s treatment
of us is everything that could be desired.
Ernest. (This is the epigram.)
Tea cups! Life, Crichton, is like a cup of tea;
the more heartily we drink, the sooner we reach the
dregs.
Crichton (obediently). Thank you, sir.
Ernest (becoming confidential, as we do when
we have need of an ally).
Crichton, in case I should be asked to say a few words
to the servants,
I have strung together a little speech. (His hand
strays to his pocket.)
I was wondering where I should stand.
(He tries various places and postures,
and comes to rest leaning over a high chair, whence,
in dumb show, he addresses a gathering. Crichton,
with the best intentions, gives him a footstool to
stand on, and departs, happily unconscious that Ernest
in some dudgeon has kicked the footstool across the
room.)
Ernest (addressing an imaginary
audience, and desirous of startling them at once).
Suppose you were all little fishes at the bottom of
the sea-
(He is not quite satisfied with his
position, though sure that the fault must lie with
the chair for being too high, not with him for being
too short. Crichton’s suggestion was
not perhaps a bad one after all. He lifts the
stool, but hastily conceals it behind him on the entrance
of the ladies Catherine and Agatha,
two daughters of the house. Catherine is
twenty, and Agatha two years younger. They
are very fashionable young women indeed, who might
wake up for a dance, but they are very lazy, Catherine
being two years lazier than Agatha.)
Ernest (uneasily jocular, because
he is concealing the footstool). And how are
my little friends to-day?
Agatha (contriving to reach a
settee). Don’t be silly, Ernest. If
you want to know how we are, we are dead. Even
to think of entertaining the servants is so exhausting.
Catherine (subsiding nearer the
door). Besides which, we have had to decide what
frocks to take with us on the yacht, and that is such
a mental strain.
Ernest. You poor over-worked
things. (Evidently Agatha is his favourite, for
he helps her to put her feet on the settee, while Catherine
has to dispose of her own feet.) Rest your weary limbs.
Catherine (perhaps in revenge).
But why have you a footstool in your hand?
Agatha. Yes?
Ernest. Why? (Brilliantly; but
to be sure he has had time to think it out.) You see,
as the servants are to be the guests I must be butler.
I was practising. This is a tray, observe.
(Holding the footstool as a tray,
he minces across the room like an accomplished footman.
The gods favour him, for just here lady Mary
enters, and he holds out the footstool to her.)
Tea, my lady?
(Lady Mary is a beautiful
creature of twenty-two, and is of a natural hauteur
which is at once the fury and the envy of her sisters.
If she chooses she can make you seem so insignificant
that you feel you might be swept away with the crumb-brush.
She seldom chooses, because of the trouble of preening
herself as she does it; she is usually content to
show that you merely tire her eyes. She often
seems to be about to go to sleep in the middle of
a remark: there is quite a long and anxious pause,
and then she continues, like a clock that hesitates,
bored in the middle of its strike.)
Lady Mary (arching her brows).
It is only you, Ernest; I thought there was some one
here (and she also bestows herself on cushions).
Ernest (a little piqued, and
deserting the footstool). Had a very tiring day
also, Mary?
Lady Mary (yawning).
Dreadfully. Been trying on engagement-rings all
the morning.
Ernest (who is as fond of gossip
as the oldest club member). What’s that?
(To Agatha.) Is it Brocklehurst?
(The energetic Agatha nods.)
You have given your warm young heart to Brocky?
(Lady Mary is impervious to his humour,
but he continues bravely.)
I don’t wish to fatigue you,
Mary, by insisting on a verbal answer, but if, without
straining yourself, you can signify Yes or No, won’t
you make the effort?
(She indolently flashes a ring on
her most important finger, and he starts back melodramatically.)
The ring! Then I am too late,
too late! (Fixing lady Mary sternly, like
a prosecuting counsel.) May I ask, Mary, does Brocky
know? Of course, it was that terrible mother
of his who pulled this through. Mother does everything
for Brocky. Still, in the eyes of the law you
will be, not her wife, but his, and, therefore, I
hold that Brocky ought to be informed. Now-
(He discovers that their languorous eyes have closed.)
If you girls are shamming sleep in
the expectation that I shall awaken you in the manner
beloved of ladies, abandon all such hopes.
(Catherine and Agatha look up without speaking.)
Lady Mary (speaking without looking up).
You impertinent boy.
Ernest (eagerly plucking another
epigram from his quiver). I knew that was it,
though I don’t know everything. Agatha,
I’m not young enough to know everything.
(He looks hopefully from one to another,
but though they try to grasp this, his brilliance
baffles them.)
Agatha (his secret admirer). Young enough?
Ernest (encouragingly).
Don’t you see? I’m not young enough
to know everything.
Agatha. I’m sure it’s
awfully clever, but it’s so puzzling.
(Here Crichton ushers in an athletic,
pleasant-faced young clergyman, Mr. Treherne,
who greets the company.)
Catherine. Ernest, say it to Mr. Treherne.
Ernest. Look here, Treherne, I’m not young
enough to know everything.
Treherne. How do you mean, Ernest?
Ernest. (a little nettled). I mean what
I say.
Lady Mary. Say it again; say it more
slowly.
Ernest. I’m-not-young-enough-to-know-everything.
Treherne. I see. What
you really mean, my boy, is that you are not old enough
to know everything.
Ernest. No, I don’t.
Treherne. I assure you that’s it.
Lady Mary. Of course it is.
Catherine. Yes, Ernest, that’s it.
(Ernest, in desperation, appeals to Crichton.)
Ernest. I am not young enough, Crichton, to know
everything.
(It is an anxious moment, but a smile is at length
extorted from
Crichton as with a corkscrew.)
Crichton. Thank you, sir. (He goes.)
Ernest (relieved). Ah, if
you had that fellow’s head, Treherne, you would
find something better to do with it than play cricket.
I hear you bowl with your head.
Treherne (with proper humility). I’m
afraid cricket is all I’m good for,
Ernest.
Catherine (who thinks he has
a heavenly nose). Indeed, it isn’t.
You are sure to get on, Mr. Treherne.
Treherne. Thank you, Lady Catherine.
Catherine. But it was the
bishop who told me so. He said a clergyman who
breaks both ways is sure to get on in England.
Treherne. I’m jolly glad.
(The master of the house comes in,
accompanied by lord Brocklehurst. The Earl
of Loam is a widower, a philanthropist, and
a peer of advanced ideas. As a widower he is
at least able to interfere in the domestic concerns
of his house-to rummage in the drawers,
so to speak, for which he has felt an itching all
his blameless life; his philanthropy has opened quite
a number of other drawers to him; and his advanced
ideas have blown out his figure. He takes in
all the weightiest monthly reviews, and prefers those
that are uncut, because he perhaps never looks better
than when cutting them; but he does not read them,
and save for the cutting it would suit him as well
merely to take in the covers. He writes letters
to the papers, which are printed in a type to scale
with himself, and he is very jealous of those other
correspondents who get his type. Let laws and
learning, art and commerce die, but leave the big
type to an intellectual aristocracy. He is really
the reformed House of Lords which will come some day.
Young lord Brocklehurst
is nothing save for his rank. You could pick
him up by the handful any day in Piccadilly or Holborn,
buying socks-or selling them.)
Lord Loam (expansively).
You are here, Ernest. Feeling fit for the voyage,
Treherne?
Treherne. Looking forward to it enormously.
Lord Loam. That’s
right. (He chases his children about as if they were
chickens.) Now then, Mary, up and doing, up and doing.
Time we had the servants in. They enjoy it so
much.
Lady Mary. They hate it.
Lord Loam. Mary, to
your duties. (And he points severely to the tea-table.)
Ernest (twinkling). Congratulations, Brocky.
Lord Brocklehurst (who detests humour).
Thanks.
Ernest. Mother pleased?
Lord Brocklehurst (with dignity). Mother
is very pleased.
Ernest. That’s good. Do you go on
the yacht with us?
Lord Brocklehurst. Sorry
I can’t. And look here, Ernest, I will not
be called Brocky.
Ernest. Mother don’t like it?
Lord Brocklehurst. She does
not. (He leaves Ernest, who forgives him and
begins to think about his speech. Crichton
enters.)
Lord Loam (speaking as one man to another).
We are quite ready,
Crichton. (Crichton is distressed.)
Lady Mary (sarcastically). How Crichton
enjoys it!
Lord Loam (frowning). He is the only
one who doesn’t; pitiful creature.
Crichton (shuddering under his lord’s displeasure).
I can’t help being a
Conservative, my lord.
Lord Loam. Be a man,
Crichton. You are the same flesh and blood as
myself.
Crichton (in pain). Oh, my lord!
Lord Loam (sharply).
Show them in; and, by the way, they were not all here
last time.
Crichton. All, my lord, except the merest
trifles.
Lord Loam. It must
be every one. (Lowering.) And remember this, Crichton,
for the time being you are my equal. (Testily.) I shall
soon show you whether you are not my equal. Do
as you are told.
(Crichton departs to obey, and
his lordship is now a general. He has no pity
for his daughters, and uses a terrible threat.)
And girls, remember, no condescension.
The first who condescends recites. (This sends them
skurrying to their labours.)
By the way, Brocklehurst, can you do anything?
Lord Brocklehurst. How do you mean?
Lord Loam. Can you
do anything-with a penny or a handkerchief,
make them disappear, for instance?
Lord Brocklehurst. Good heavens, no.
Lord Loam. It’s
a pity. Every one in our position ought to be
able to do something. Ernest, I shall probably
ask you to say a few words; something bright and sparkling.
Ernest. But, my dear uncle, I have prepared nothing.
Lord Loam. Anything impromptu will
do.
Ernest. Oh-well-if anything
strikes me on the spur of the moment.
(He unostentatiously gets the footstool
into position behind the chair. Crichton
reappears to announce the guests, of whom the first
is the housekeeper.)
Crichton (reluctantly). Mrs. Perkins.
Lord Loam (shaking hands).
Very delighted, Mrs. Perkins. Mary, our friend,
Mrs. Perkins.
Lady Mary. How do you do, Mrs. Perkins?
Won’t you sit here?
Lord Loam (threateningly). Agatha!
Agatha (hastily). How do you do? Won’t
you sit down?
Lord Loam (introducing). Lord Brocklehurst-my
valued friend, Mrs.
Perkins.
(Lord Brocklehurst bows and escapes.
He has to fall back on Ernest.)
Lord Brocklehurst. For heaven’s
sake, Ernest, don’t leave me for a moment; this
sort of thing is utterly opposed to all my principles.
Ernest (airily). You stick to me, Brocky,
and I’ll pull you through.
Crichton. Monsieur Fleury.
Ernest. The chef.
Lord Loam (shaking hands with the chef).
Very charmed to see you,
Monsieur Fleury.
Fleury. Thank you very much.
(Fleury bows to Agatha, who is not effusive.)
Lord Loam (warningly). Agatha-recitation!
(She tosses her head, but immediately finds a seat
and tea for M.
Fleury. Treherne and Ernest move
about, making themselves amiable. Lady
Mary is presiding at the tea-tray.)
Crichton. Mr. Rolleston.
Lord Loam (shaking hands with his valet).
How do you do, Rolleston?
(Catherine looks after the wants of Rolleston.)
Crichton. Mr. Tompsett.
(Tompsett, the coachman, is received
with honours, from which he shrinks.)
Crichton. Miss Fisher.
(This superb creature is no less than lady Mary’s
maid, and even lord
Loam is a little nervous.)
Lord Loam. This is a pleasure, Miss
Fisher.
Ernest (unabashed). If I
might venture, Miss Fisher (and he takes her unto
himself).
Crichton. Miss Simmons.
Lord Loam (to Catherine’s maid).
You are always welcome, Miss Simmons.
Ernest (perhaps to kindle jealousy in Miss Fisher).
At last we meet.
Won’t you sit down?
Crichton. Mademoiselle Jeanne.
Lord Loam. Charmed to see you, Mademoiselle
Jeanne.
(A place is found for Agatha’s
maid, and the scene is now an animated one; but still
our host thinks his girls are not sufficiently sociable.
He frowns on lady Mary.)
Lady Mary (in alarm). Mr. Treherne,
this is Fisher, my maid.
Lord Loam (sharply). Your what, Mary?
Lady Mary. My friend.
Crichton. Thomas.
Lord Loam. How do you do, Thomas?
(The first footman gives him a reluctant hand.)
Crichton. John.
Lord Loam. How do you do, John?
(Ernest signs to lord Brocklehurst,
who hastens to him.)
Ernest (introducing). Brocklehurst,
this is John. I think you have already met on
the door-step.
Crichton. Jane.
(She comes, wrapping her hands miserably in her apron.)
Lord Loam (doggedly). Give me your
hand, Jane.
Crichton. Gladys.
Ernest. How do you do, Gladys. You know
my uncle?
Lord Loam. Your hand, Gladys.
(He bestows her on Agatha.)
Crichton. Tweeny.
(She is a very humble and frightened
kitchenmaid, of whom we are to see more.)
Lord Loam. So happy to see you.
Fisher. John, I saw you
talking to Lord Brocklehurst just now; introduce me.
Lord Brocklehurst (at the
same moment to Ernest). That’s an uncommon
pretty girl; if I must feed one of them, Ernest, that’s
the one.
(But Ernest tries to part him
and Fisher as they are about to shake hands.)
Ernest. No you don’t, it
won’t do, Brocky. (To Miss Fisher.) You
are too pretty, my dear. Mother wouldn’t
like it. (Discovering tweeny.) Here’s something
safer. Charming girl, Brocky, dying to know you;
let me introduce you. Tweeny, Lord Brocklehurst-Lord
Brocklehurst, Tweeny.
(Brocklehurst accepts his fate;
but he still has an eye for Fisher, and something
may come of this.)
Lord Loam (severely). They are not
all here, Crichton.
Crichton (with a sigh). Odds and ends.
(A Stable-boy and a page
are shown in, and for a moment no daughter of the
house advances to them.)
Lord Loam (with a roving eye on his children).
Which is to recite?
(The last of the company are, so to say, embraced.)
Lord Loam (to Tompsett,
as they partake of tea together). And how are
all at home?
Tompsett. Fairish, my lord, if ’tis
the horses you are inquiring for?
Lord Loam. No, no, the family.
How’s the baby?
Tompsett. Blooming, your lordship.
Lord Loam. A very fine
boy. I remember saying so when I saw him; nice
little fellow.
Tompsett (not quite knowing whether
to let it pass). Beg pardon, my lord, it’s
a girl.
Lord Loam. A girl?
Aha! ha! ha! exactly what I said. I distinctly
remember saying, If it’s spared it will be a
girl.
(Crichton now comes down.)
Lord Loam. Very delighted to see you,
Crichton.
(Crichton has to shake hands.)
Mary, you know Mr. Crichton?
(He wanders off in search of other prey.)
Lady Mary. Milk and sugar, Crichton?
Crichton. I’m ashamed to be seen talking
to you, my lady.
Lady Mary. To such
a perfect servant as you all this must be most distasteful.
(Crichton is too respectful to answer.) Oh, please
do speak, or I shall have to recite. You do hate
it, don’t you?
Crichton. It pains me, your
ladyship. It disturbs the etiquette of the servants’
hall. After last month’s meeting the pageboy,
in a burst of equality, called me Crichton. He
was dismissed.
Lady Mary. I wonder-I really
do-how you can remain with us.
Crichton. I should have
felt compelled to give notice, my lady, if the master
had not had a seat in the Upper House. I cling
to that.
Lady Mary. Do go on
speaking. Tell me, what did Mr. Ernest mean by
saying he was not young enough to know everything?
Crichton. I have no idea, my lady.
Lady Mary. But you laughed.
Crichton. My lady, he is the second son
of a peer.
Lady Mary. Very proper sentiments.
You are a good soul, Crichton.
Lord Brocklehurst (desperately
to tweeny). And now tell me, have you been
to the Opera? What sort of weather have you been
having in the kitchen? (Tweeny gurgles.) For
Heaven’s sake, woman, be articulate.
Crichton (still talking to lady
Mary). No, my lady; his lordship may compel
us to be equal upstairs, but there will never be equality
in the servants’ hall.
Lord Loam (overhearing this).
What’s that? No equality? Can’t
you see, Crichton, that our divisions into classes
are artificial, that if we were to return to nature,
which is the aspiration of my life, all would be equal?
Crichton. If I may make
so bold as to contradict your lordship-
Lord Loam (with an effort). Go on.
Crichton. The divisions
into classes, my lord, are not artificial. They
are the natural outcome of a civilised society. (To
lady Mary.) There must always be a master
and servants in all civilised communities, my lady,
for it is natural, and whatever is natural is right.
Lord Loam (wincing).
It is very unnatural for me to stand here and allow
you to talk such nonsense.
Crichton (eagerly). Yes,
my lord, it is. That is what I have been striving
to point out to your lordship.
Agatha (to Catherine).
What is the matter with Fisher? She is looking
daggers.
Catherine. The tedious creature;
some question of etiquette, I suppose.
(She sails across to Fisher.)
How are you, Fisher?
Fisher (with a toss of her head).
I am nothing, my lady, I am nothing at all.
Agatha. Oh dear, who says so?
Fisher (affronted). His
lordship has asked that kitchen wench to have a second
cup of tea.
Catherine. But why not?
Fisher. If it pleases his
lordship to offer it to her before offering it to
me-
Agatha. So that is it. Do you want
another cup of tea, Fisher?
Fisher. No, my lady-but my position-I
should have been asked first.
Agatha. Oh dear.
(All this has taken some time, and
by now the feeble appetites of the uncomfortable guests
have been satiated. But they know there is still
another ordeal to face-his lordship’s
monthly speech. Every one awaits it with misgiving-the
servants lest they should applaud, as last time, in
the wrong place, and the daughters because he may be
personal about them, as the time before. Ernest
is annoyed that there should be this speech at all
when there is such a much better one coming, and Brocklehurst
foresees the degradation of the peerage. All are
thinking of themselves alone save Crichton, who
knows his master’s weakness, and fears he may
stick in the middle. Lord Loam, however,
advances cheerfully to his doom. He sees Ernest’s
stool, and artfully stands on it, to his nephew’s
natural indignation. The three ladies knit their
lips, the servants look down their noses, and the address
begins.)
Lord Loam. My friends,
I am glad to see you all looking so happy. It
used to be predicted by the scoffer that these meetings
would prove distasteful to you. Are they distasteful?
I hear you laughing at the question.
(He has not heard them, but he hears
them now, the watchful Crichton giving them a
lead.)
No harm in saying that among us to-day
is one who was formerly hostile to the movement, but
who to-day has been won over. I refer to Lord
Brocklehurst, who, I am sure, will presently say to
me that if the charming lady now by his side has derived
as much pleasure from his company as he has derived
from hers, he will be more than satisfied.
(All look at tweeny, who trembles.)
For the time being the artificial
and unnatural-I say unnatural (glaring
at Crichton, who bows slightly)-barriers
of society are swept away. Would that they could
be swept away for ever.
(The pageboy cheers, and has
the one moment of prominence in his life. He
grows up, marries and has children, but is never really
heard of again.)
But that is entirely and utterly out
of the question. And now for a few months we
are to be separated. As you know, my daughters
and Mr. Ernest and Mr. Treherne are to accompany me
on my yacht, on a voyage to distant parts of the earth.
In less than forty-eight hours we shall be under weigh.
(But for Crichton’s eye
the reckless pageboy would repeat his success.)
Do not think our life on the yacht
is to be one long idle holiday. My views on the
excessive luxury of the day are well known, and what
I preach I am resolved to practise. I have therefore
decided that my daughters, instead of having one maid
each as at present, shall on this voyage have but
one maid between them.
(Three maids rise; also three mistresses.)
Crichton. My lord!
Lord Loam. My mind is made up.
Ernest. I cordially agree.
Lord Loam. And now,
my friends, I should like to think that there is some
piece of advice I might give you, some thought, some
noble saying over which you might ponder in my absence.
In this connection I remember a proverb, which has
had a great effect on my own life. I first heard
it many years ago. I have never forgotten it.
It constantly cheers and guides me. That proverb
is-that proverb was-the proverb
I speak of-
(He grows pale and taps his forehead.)
Lady Mary. Oh dear, I believe he has
forgotten it.
Lord Loam (desperately). The proverb-that
proverb to which I refer-
(Alas, it has gone. The distress
is general. He has not even the sense to sit
down. He gropes for the proverb in the air.
They try applause, but it is no help.)
I have it now-(not he).
Lady Mary (with confidence). Crichton.
(He does not fail her. As quietly
as if he were in goloshes, mind as well as feet, he
dismisses the domestics; they go according to precedence
as they entered, yet, in a moment, they are gone.
Then he signs to Mr. Treherne, and they
conduct lord Loam with dignity from the
room. His hands are still catching flies; he still
mutters, ’The proverb-that proverb’;
but he continues, owing to Crichton’s skilful
treatment, to look every inch a peer. The ladies
have now an opportunity to air their indignation.)
Lady Mary. One maid among three grown
women!
Lord Brocklehurst. Mary,
I think I had better go. That dreadful kitchenmaid-
Lady Mary. I can’t blame you,
George.
(He salutes her.)
Lord Brocklehurst. Your
father’s views are shocking to me, and I am glad
I am not to be one of the party on the yacht.
My respect for myself, Mary, my natural anxiety as
to what mother will say. I shall see you, darling,
before you sail.
(He bows to the others and goes.)
Ernest. Selfish brute, only thinking of himself.
What about my speech?
Lady Mary. One maid among three of
us. What’s to be done?
Ernest. Pooh! You must do for yourselves,
that’s all.
Lady Mary. Do for ourselves. How
can we know where our things are kept?
Agatha. Are you aware that dresses button
up the back?
Catherine. How are we to
get into our shoes and be prepared for the carriage?
Lady Mary. Who is to
put us to bed, and who is to get us up, and how shall
we ever know it’s morning if there is no one
to pull up the blinds?
(Crichton crosses on his way out.)
Ernest. How is his lordship now?
Crichton. A little easier, sir.
Lady Mary. Crichton, send Fisher to
me.
(He goes.)
Ernest. I have no pity for you girls, I-
Lady Mary. Ernest, go away, and don’t
insult the broken-hearted.
Ernest. And uncommon glad I am
to go. Ta-ta, all of you. He asked
me to say a few words. I came here to say a few
words, and I’m not at all sure that I couldn’t
bring an action against him.
(He departs, feeling that he has left
a dart behind him. The girls are alone with their
tragic thoughts.)
Lady Mary (becomes a mother
to the younger ones at last). My poor sisters,
come here. (They go to her doubtfully.) We must make
this draw us closer together. I shall do my best
to help you in every way. Just now I cannot think
of myself at all.
Agatha. But how unlike you, Mary.
Lady Mary. It is my duty to protect
my sisters.
Catherine. I never knew
her so sweet before, Agatha. (Cautiously.) What do
you propose to do, Mary?
Lady Mary. I propose when we are on
the yacht to lend Fisher to you when
I don’t need her myself.
Agatha. Fisher?
Lady Mary (who has the most
character of the three). Of course, as the eldest,
I have decided that it is my maid we shall take with
us.
Catherine (speaking also for Agatha).
Mary, you toad.
Agatha. Nothing on earth
would induce Fisher to lift her hand for either me
or Catherine.
Lady Mary. I was afraid
of it, Agatha. That is why I am so sorry for
you.
(The further exchange of pleasantries
is interrupted by the arrival of Fisher.)
Lady Mary. Fisher, you heard what his
lordship said?
Fisher. Yes, my lady.
Lady Mary (coldly, though
the others would have tried blandishment). You
have given me some satisfaction of late, Fisher, and
to mark my approval I have decided that you shall
be the maid who accompanies us.
Fisher (acidly). I thank you, my lady.
Lady Mary. That is all; you may go.
Fisher (rapping it out). If you please,
my lady, I wish to give notice.
(Catherine and Agatha gleam, but lady
Mary is of sterner stuff.)
Lady Mary (taking up a book). Oh, certainly-you
may go.
Catherine. But why, Fisher?
Fisher. I could not undertake,
my lady, to wait upon three. We don’t do
it. (In an indignant outburst to lady Mary.)
Oh, my lady, to think that this affront-
Lady Mary (looking up). I thought I
told you to go, Fisher.
(Fisher stands for a moment irresolute;
then goes. As soon as she has gone lady
Mary puts down her book and weeps. She is
a pretty woman, but this is the only pretty thing
we have seen her do yet.)
Agatha (succinctly). Serves you right.
(Crichton comes.)
Catherine. It will be Simmons after all.
Send Simmons to me.
Crichton (after hesitating). My lady, might
I venture to speak?
Catherine. What is it?
Crichton. I happen to know,
your ladyship, that Simmons desires to give notice
for the same reason as Fisher.
Catherine. Oh!
Agatha (triumphant). Then, Catherine, we
take Jeanne.
Crichton. And Jeanne also, my lady.
(Lady Mary is reading, indifferent
though the heavens fall, but her sisters are not ashamed
to show their despair to Crichton.)
Agatha. We can’t blame
them. Could any maid who respected herself be
got to wait upon three?
Lady Mary (with languid interest).
I suppose there are such persons,
Crichton?
Crichton (guardedly). I have heard, my lady,
that there are such.
Lady Mary (a little desperate).
Crichton, what’s to be done? We sail in
two days; could one be discovered in the time?
Agatha (frankly a supplicant). Surely you
can think of some one?
Crichton (after hesitating).
There is in this establishment, your ladyship, a young
woman-
Lady Mary. Yes?
Crichton. A young woman, on whom I have
for some time cast an eye.
Catherine (eagerly). Do you mean as a possible
lady’s-maid?
Crichton. I had thought of her, my lady,
in another connection.
Lady Mary. Ah!
Crichton. But I believe she is quite the
young person you require.
Perhaps if you could see her, my lady-
Lady Mary. I shall
certainly see her. Bring her to me. (He goes.)
You two needn’t wait.
Catherine. Needn’t we? We see
your little game, Mary.
Agatha. We shall certainly remain and have
our two-thirds of her.
(They sit there doggedly until Crichton
returns with tweeny, who looks scared.)
Crichton. This, my lady, is the young person.
Catherine (frankly). Oh dear!
(It is evident that all three consider her quite unsuitable.)
Lady Mary. Come here, girl. Don’t
be afraid.
(Tweeny looks imploringly at her idol.)
Crichton. Her appearance,
my lady, is homely, and her manners, as you may have
observed, deplorable, but she has a heart of gold.
Lady Mary. What is your position downstairs?
Tweeny (bobbing). I’m a tweeny, your
ladyship.
Catherine. A what?
Crichton. A tweeny; that
is to say, my lady, she is not at present, strictly
speaking, anything; a between maid; she helps the vegetable
maid. It is she, my lady, who conveys the dishes
from the one end of the kitchen table, where they
are placed by the cook, to the other end, where they
enter into the charge of Thomas and John.
Lady Mary. I see. And you and
Crichton are-ah-keeping company?
(Crichton draws himself up.)
Tweeny (aghast). A butler don’t keep
company, my lady.
Lady Mary (indifferently). Does he
not?
Crichton. No, your ladyship,
we butlers may-(he makes a gesture with
his arms)-but we do not keep company.
Agatha. I know what it is; you are engaged?
(Tweeny looks longingly at Crichton.)
Crichton. Certainly not,
my lady. The utmost I can say at present is that
I have cast a favourable eye.
(Even this is much to tweeny.)
Lady Mary. As you choose.
But I am afraid, Crichton, she will not suit us.
Crichton. My lady, beneath
this simple exterior are concealed a very sweet nature
and rare womanly gifts.
Agatha. Unfortunately, that is not what
we want.
Crichton. And it is she,
my lady, who dresses the hair of the ladies’-maids
for our evening meals.
(The ladies are interested at last.)
Lady Mary. She dresses Fisher’s
hair?
Tweeny. Yes, my lady, and I does them up
when they goes to parties.
Crichton (pained, but not scolding). Does!
Tweeny. Doos. And it’s me what
alters your gowns to fit them.
Crichton. What alters!
Tweeny. Which alters.
Agatha. Mary?
Lady Mary. I shall certainly have her.
Catherine. We shall certainly
have her. Tweeny, we have decided to make a lady’s-maid
of you.
Tweeny. Oh lawks!
Agatha. We are doing this
for you so that your position socially may be more
nearly akin to that of Crichton.
Crichton (gravely). It will
undoubtedly increase the young person’s chances.
Lady Mary. Then if
I get a good character for you from Mrs. Perkins, she
will make the necessary arrangements.
(She resumes reading.)
Tweeny (elated). My lady!
Lady Mary. By the way, I hope you are
a good sailor.
Tweeny (startled). You don’t mean,
my lady, I’m to go on the ship?
Lady Mary. Certainly.
Tweeny. But-(To Crichton.)
You ain’t going, sir?
Crichton. No.
Tweeny (firm at last). Then neither ain’t
I.
Agatha. You must.
Tweeny. Leave him! Not me.
Lady Mary. Girl, don’t
be silly. Crichton will be-considered
in your wages.
Tweeny. I ain’t going.
Crichton. I feared this, my lady.
Tweeny. Nothing’ll budge me.
Lady Mary. Leave the room.
(Crichton shows tweeny out with marked politeness.)
Agatha. Crichton, I think
you might have shown more displeasure with her.
Crichton (contrite). I was
touched, my lady. I see, my lady, that to part
from her would be a wrench to me, though I could not
well say so in her presence, not having yet decided
how far I shall go with her.
(He is about to go when lord Loam returns,
fuming.)
Lord Loam. The ingrate! The smug!
The fop!
Catherine. What is it now, father?
Lord Loam. That man
of mine, Rolleston, refuses to accompany us because
you are to have but one maid.
Agatha. Hurrah!
Lady Mary (in better taste). Darling
father, rather than you should lose
Rolleston, we will consent to take all the three of
them.
Lord Loam. Pooh, nonsense!
Crichton, find me a valet who can do without three
maids.
Crichton. Yes, my lord.
(Troubled.) In the time-the more suitable
the party, my lord, the less willing will he be to
come without the-the usual perquisites.
Lord Loam. Any one will do.
Crichton (shocked). My lord!
Lord Loam. The ingrate! The puppy!
(Agatha has an idea, and whispers to lady
Mary.)
Lady Mary. I ask a favour of a servant?-never!
Agatha. Then I will.
Crichton, would it not be very distressing to you
to let his lordship go, attended by a valet who might
prove unworthy? It is only for three months;
don’t you think that you-you yourself-you-
(As Crichton sees what she wants
he pulls himself up with noble, offended dignity,
and she is appalled.)
I beg your pardon.
(He bows stiffly.)
Catherine (to Crichton). But think
of the joy to Tweeny.
(Crichton is moved, but he shakes his head.)
Lady Mary (so much the cleverest).
Crichton, do you think it safe to let the master you
love go so far away without you while he has these
dangerous views about equality?
(Crichton is profoundly stirred.
After a struggle he goes to his master, who has been
pacing the room.)
Crichton. My lord, I have found a man.
Lord Loam. Already? Who is he?
(Crichton presents himself with a gesture.)
Yourself?
Catherine. Father, how good of him.
Lord Loam (pleased, but
thinking it a small thing). Uncommon good.
Thank you, Crichton. This helps me nicely out
of a hole; and how it will annoy Rolleston! Come
with me, and we shall tell him. Not that I think
you have lowered yourself in any way. Come along.
(He goes, and Crichton is to
follow him, but is stopped by Agatha impulsively
offering him her hand.)
Crichton (who is much shaken). My lady-a
valet’s hand!
Agatha. I had no idea you would feel it
so deeply; why did you do it?
(Crichton is too respectful to reply.)
Lady Mary (regarding him).
Crichton, I am curious. I insist upon an answer.
Crichton. My lady, I am
the son of a butler and a lady’s-maid-perhaps
the happiest of all combinations, and to me the most
beautiful thing in the world is a haughty, aristocratic
English house, with every one kept in his place.
Though I were equal to your ladyship, where would be
the pleasure to me? It would be counterbalanced
by the pain of feeling that Thomas and John were equal
to me.
Catherine. But father says if we were to
return to nature-
Crichton. If we did, my
lady, the first thing we should do would be to elect
a head. Circumstances might alter cases; the same
person might not be master; the same persons might
not be servants. I can’t say as to that,
nor should we have the deciding of it. Nature
would decide for us.
Lady Mary. You seem to have thought
it all out carefully, Crichton.
Crichton. Yes, my lady.
Catherine. And you have
done this for us, Crichton, because you thought that-that
father needed to be kept in his place?
Crichton. I should prefer
you to say, my lady, that I have done it for the house.
Agatha. Thank you, Crichton.
Mary, be nicer to him. (But lady Mary has
begun to read again.) If there was any way in which
we could show our gratitude.
Crichton. If I might venture,
my lady, would you kindly show it by becoming more
like Lady Mary. That disdain is what we like from
our superiors. Even so do we, the upper servants,
disdain the lower servants, while they take it out
of the odds and ends.
(He goes, and they bury themselves in cushions.)
Agatha. Oh dear, what a tiring day.
Catherine. I feel dead. Tuck in your
feet, you selfish thing.
(Lady Mary is lying reading on another couch.)
Lady Mary. I wonder what he meant by
circumstances might alter cases.
Agatha (yawning). Don’t talk, Mary,
I was nearly asleep.
Lady Mary. I wonder
what he meant by the same person might not be master,
and the same persons might not be servants.
Catherine. Do be quiet,
Mary, and leave it to nature; he said nature would
decide.
Lady Mary. I wonder-
(But she does not wonder very much.
She would wonder more if she knew what was coming.
Her book slips unregarded to the floor. The ladies
are at rest until it is time to dress.)