A ROOM IN THE HOUSE OF SENATOR CHALMERS
Scene. In Senator Chalmers’
home. It is four o’clock in the afternoon,
in a modern living room with appropriate furnishings.
In particular, in front, on left, a table prepared
for the serving of tea, all excepting the tea urn
itself. At rear, right of center, is main entrance
to the room. Also, doorways at sides, on left
and right. Curtain discloses Chalmers and Hubbard
seated loungingly at the right front.
{Hubbard}
(After an apparent pause for cogitation.)
I can’t understand why an old wheel-horse like
Elsworth should kick over the traces that way.
{Chalmers}
Disgruntled. Thinks he didn’t
get his fair share of plums out of the Tariff Committee.
Besides, it’s his last term. He’s
announced that he’s going to retire.
{Hubbard}
(Snorting contemptuously, mimicking
an old man’s pompous enunciation.) “A
Resolution to Investigate the High Cost of Living!” old
Senator Elsworth introducing a measure like that!
The old buck! How are you going
to handle it?
{Chalmers}
It’s already handled.
{Hubbard}
Yes?
{Chalmers}
(Pulling his mustache.) Turned
it over to the Committee to Audit and Control the
Contingent Expenses of the Senate.
{Hubbard}
(Grinning his appreciation.)
And you’re chairman. Poor old Elsworth.
This way to the lethal chamber, and the bill’s
on its way.
{Chalmers}
Elsworth will be retired before it’s
ever reported. In the meantime, say after a decent
interval, Senator Hodge will introduce another resolution
to investigate the high cost of living. It will
be like Elsworth’s, only it won’t.
{Hubbard}
(Nodding his head and anticipating.)
And it will go to the Committee on Finance and come
back for action inside of twenty-four hours.
{Chalmers}
By the way, I see Cartwright’s Magazine
has ceased muck-raking.
{Hubbard}
Cartwrights never did muck-rake that
is, not the big Interests only the small
independent businesses that didn’t advertise.
{Chalmers}
Yes, it deftly concealed its reactionary tendencies.
{Hubbard}
And from now on the concealment will
be still more deft. I’ve gone into it myself.
I have a majority of the stock right now.
{Chalmers}
I thought I had noticed a subtle change in the last
two numbers.
{Hubbard}
(Nodding.) We’re still
going on muck-raking. We have a splendid series
on Aged Paupers, demanding better treatment and more
sanitary conditions. Also we are going to run
“Barbarous Venezuela” and show up thoroughly
the rotten political management of that benighted
country.
{Chalmers}
(Nods approvingly, and, after a
pause.) And now concerning Knox. That’s
what I sent for you about. His speech comes off
tomorrow per schedule. At last we’ve got
him where we want him.
{Hubbard}
I have the ins and outs of it pretty
well. Everything’s arranged. The boys
have their cue, though they don’t know just what’s
going to be pulled off; and this time to-morrow afternoon
their dispatches will be singing along the wires.
{Chalmers}
(Firmly and harshly.) This
man Knox must be covered with ridicule, swamped with
ridicule, annihilated with ridicule.
{Hubbard}
It is to laugh. Trust the great
American people for that. We’ll make those
little Western editors sit up. They’ve been
swearing by Knox, like a little tin god. Roars
of laughter for them.
{Chalmers}
Do you do anything yourself?
{Hubbard}
Trust me. I have my own article
for Cartwright’s blocked out. They’re
holding the presses for it. I shall wire it along
hot-footed to-morrow evening. Say ?
{Chalmers}
(After a pause.) Well?
{Hubbard}
Wasn’t it a risky thing to give him his chance
with that speech?
{Chalmers}
It was the only feasible thing.
He never has given us an opening. Our service
men have camped on his trail night and day. Private
life as unimpeachable as his public life. But
now is our chance. The gods have given him into
our hands. That speech will do more to break
his influence
{Hubbard}
(Interrupting.) Than a Fairbanks cocktail.
(Both laugh.) But don’t
forget that this Knox is a live wire. Somebody
might get stung. Are you sure, when he gets up
to make that speech, that he won’t be able to
back it up?
{Chalmers}
No danger at all.
{Hubbard}
But there are hooks and crooks by
which facts are sometimes obtained.
{Chalmers}
(Positively.) Knox has nothing
to go on but suspicions and hints, and unfounded assertions
from the yellow press.
(Man-servant enters, goes to tea-table,
looks it over, and makes slight rearrangements.)
(Lowering his voice.) He will make himself
a laughing stock. His charges will turn into boomerangs.
His speech will be like a sheet from a Sunday supplement,
with not a fact to back it up. (Glances at Servant.)
We’d better be getting out of here. They’re
going to have tea.
(The Servant, however, makes exit.)
Come to the library and have a high-ball. (They
pause as Hubbard speaks.)
{Hubbard}
(With quiet glee.) And to-morrow
Ali Baba gets his.
{Chalmers}
Ali Baba?
{Hubbard}
That’s what your wife calls him Knox.
{Chalmers}
Oh, yes, I believe I’ve heard
it before. It’s about time he hanged himself,
and now we’ve given him the rope.
{Hubbard}
(Sinking voice and becoming deprecatingly
confidential. )
Oh, by the way, just a little friendly
warning, Senator Chalmers. Not so fast and loose
up New York way. That certain lady, not to be
mentioned there’s gossip about it
in the New York newspaper offices. Of course,
all such stories are killed. But be discreet,
be discreet If Gherst gets hold of it, he’ll
play it up against the Administration in all his papers.
(Chalmers, who throughout this
speech is showing a growing resentment, is about to
speak, when voices are heard without and he checks
himself.)
(Enter. Mrs. Starkweather,
rather flustered and imminently in danger of a collapse,
followed by Connie Starkweather, fresh, radiant, and
joyous.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(With appeal and relief.)
Oh Tom!
(Chalmers takes her hand sympathetically
and protectingly.)
{Connie}
(Who is an exuberant young woman,
bursts forth.) Oh, brother-in-law! Such excitement!
That’s what’s the matter with mother.
We ran into a go-cart. Our chauffeur was not to
blame. It was the woman’s fault. She
tried to cross just as we were turning the corner.
But we hardly grazed it. Fortunately the baby
was not hurt only spilled. It was
ridiculous. (Catching sight of Hubbard.) Oh,
there you are, Mr. Hubbard. How de do.
(Steps half way to meet him and
shakes hands with him.) (Mrs. Starkweather
looks around helplessly for a chair, and Chalmers
conducts her to one soothingly.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Oh, it was terrible! The little
child might have been killed. And such persons
love their babies, I know.
{Connie}
(To Chalmers.) Has father come?
We were to pick him up here. Where’s Madge?
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Espying Hubbard, faintly.)
Oh, there is Mr. Hubbard.
(Hubbard comes to her and shakes
hands.) I simply can’t get used to these
rapid ways of modern life. The motor-car is the
invention of the devil. Everything is too
quick. When I was a girl, we lived sedately,
decorously. There was time for meditation and
repose. But in this age there is time for nothing.
How Anthony keeps his head is more than I can understand.
But, then, Anthony is a wonderful man.
{Hubbard}
I am sure Mr. Starkweather never lost his head in
his life.
{Chalmers}
Unless when he was courting you, mother.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(A trifle grimly.) I’m not so sure about
that.
{Connie}
(Imitating a grave, business-like
enunciation.) Father probably conferred first
with his associates, then turned the affair over for
consideration by his corporation lawyers, and, when
they reported no flaws, checked the first spare half
hour in his notebook to ask mother if she would have
him.
(They laugh.) And looked at
his watch at least twice while he was proposing.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Anthony was not so busy then as all that.
{Hubbard}
He hadn’t yet taken up the job of running the
United States.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
I’m sure I don’t know
what he is running, but he is a very busy man business,
politics, and madness; madness, politics, and business.
(She stops breathlessly and glances
at tea-table.) Tea. I should like a cup of
tea. Connie, I shall stay for a cup of tea, and
then, if your father hasn’t come, we’ll
go home. (To Chalmers.) Where is Tommy?
{Chalmers}
Out in the car with Madge.
(Glances at tea-table and consults
watch.) She should be back now.
{Connie}
Mother, you mustn’t stay long. I have to
dress.
{Chalmers}
Oh, yes, that dinner.
(Yawns.) I wish I could loaf to-night.
{Connie}
(Explaining to Hubbard.) The
Turkish Charge d’Affaires I never
can remember his name. But he’s great fun a
positive joy. He’s giving the dinner to
the British Ambassador.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Starting forward in her chair
and listening intently.) There’s Tommy,
now.
(Voices of Margaret Chalmers and
of Tommy heard from without. Hers is laughingly
protesting, while Tommy’s is gleefully insistent.)
(Margaret and Tommy appear and pause just outside
door, holding each other’s hands, facing each
other, too immersed in each other to be aware of the
presence of those inside the room. Margaret and
Tommy are in street costume.)
{Tommy} (Laughing.)
But mama.
{Margaret}
(Herself laughing, but shaking
her head.) No. Tommy First
{Margaret}
No; you must run along to Linda, now,
mother’s boy. And we’ll talk about
that some other time.
(Tommy notices for the first time
that there are persons in the room. He peeps
in around the door and espies Mrs. Starkweather.
At the same moment, impulsively, he withdraws his hands
and runs in to Mrs. Starkweather.)
{Tommy}
(Who is evidently fond of his grandmother.)
Grandma!
(They embrace and make much of each other.)
(Margaret enters, appropriately
greeting the others a kiss (maybe_)
to Connie, and a slightly cold handshake to Hubbard._)
{Margaret}
(To Chalmers.) Now that you’re
here, Tom, you mustn’t run away.
(Greets Mrs. Starkweather.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Turning Tommy’s face to
the light and looking at it anxiously.) A trifle
thin, Margaret.
{Margaret}
On the contrary, mother
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(To Chalmers.) Don’t you think so, Tom?
{Connie}
(Aside to Hubbard.) Mother
continually worries about his health.
{Hubbard}
A sturdy youngster, I should say.
{Tommy}
(To Chalmers.) I’m an Indian, aren’t
I, daddy?
{Chalmers}
(Nodding his head emphatically.)
And the stoutest-hearted in the tribe.
(Linda appears in doorway, evidently
looking for Tommy, and Chalmers notices her.)
There’s Linda looking for you, young stout heart.
{Margaret}
Take Tommy, Linda. Run along, mother’s
boy.
{Tommy}
Come along, grandma. I want to show you something.
(He catches Mrs. Starkweather by
the hand. Protesting, but highly pleased, she
allows him to lead her to the door, where he extends
his other hand to Linda. Thus, pausing in doorway,
leading a woman by either hand, he looks back at Margaret.)
(Roguishly.) Remember, mama, we’re going
to scout in a little while.
{Margaret}
(Going to Tommy, and bending down
with her arms around him.) No, Tommy. Mama
has to go to that horrid dinner to-night. But
to-morrow we’ll play.
(Tommy is cast down and looks as
if he might pout.) Where is my little Indian now?
{Hubbard}
Be an Indian, Tommy.
{Tommy}
(Brightening up.)
All right, mama. To-morrow. if
you can’t find time to-day.
(Margaret kisses him.) (Exit
Tommy, Mrs. Starkweather, and Linda, Tommy leading
them by a hand in each of theirs.)
{Chalmers}
(Nodding to Hubbard, in low voice
to Hubbard and starting to make exit to right.)
That high-ball.
(Hubbard disengages himself from
proximity of Connie, and starts to follow.)
{Connie}
(Reproachfully.) If you run
away, I won’t stop for tea.
{Margaret}
Do stop, Tom. Father will be here in a few minutes.
{Connie}
A regular family party.
{Chalmers}
All right. We’ll be back. We’re
just going to have a little talk.
(Chalmers and Hubbard make exit
to right.) (Margaret puts her arm impulsively
around Connie a sheerly spontaneous act
of affection kisses her, and at same time
evinces preparation to leave.)
{Margaret}
I’ve got to get my things off.
Won’t you wait here, dear, in case anybody comes?
It’s nearly time.
(Starts toward exit to rear, but
is stopped by Connie.) Madge.
(Margaret immediately pauses and
waits expectantly, smiling, while Connie is hesitant.)
I want to speak to you about something,
Madge. You don’t mind?
(Margaret, still smiling, shakes
her head.) Just a warning. Not that anybody
could believe for a moment, there is anything wrong,
but
{Margaret}
(Dispelling a shadow of irritation
that has crossed her face.)
If it concerns Tom, don’t tell
me, please. You know he does do ridiculous things
at times. But I don’t let him worry me any
more; so don’t worry me about him.
(Connie remains silent, and Margaret
grows curious.) Well?
{Connie}
It’s not about Tom
(Pauses.) It’s about you.
{Margaret}
Oh.
{Connie}
I don’t know how to begin.
{Margaret}
By coming right out with it, the worst of it, all
at once, first.
{Connie}
It isn’t serious at all, but well,
mother is worrying about it. You know how old-fashioned
she is. And when you consider our position father’s
and Tom’s, I mean it doesn’t
seem just right for you to be seeing so much of such
an enemy of theirs. He has abused them dreadfully,
you know. And there’s that dreadful speech
he is going to give to-morrow. You haven’t
seen the afternoon papers. He has made the most
terrible charges against everybody all
of us, our friends, everybody.
{Margaret}
You mean Mr. Knox, of course. But he wouldn’t
harm anybody,
Connie, dear.
{Connie}
(Bridling,) Oh, he wouldn’t?
He as good as publicly called father a thief.
{Margaret}
When did that happen? I never heard of it.
{Connie}
Well, he said that the money magnates
had grown so unprincipled, sunk so low, that they
would steal a mouse from a blind kitten.
{Margaret}
I don’t see what father has to do with that.
{Connie}
He meant him just the same.
{Margaret}
You silly goose. He couldn’t
have meant father. Father? Why, father wouldn’t
look at anything less than fifty or a hundred millions.
{Connie}
And you speak to him and make much
of him when you meet him places. You talked with
him for half an hour at that Dugdale reception.
You have him here in your own house Tom’s
house when he’s such a bitter enemy
of Tom’s. (During the foregoing speech, Anthony
Starkweather makes entrance from rear. His face
is grave, and he is in a brown study, as if pondering
weighty problems. At sight of the two women he
pauses and surveys them. They are unaware of
his presence.)
{Margaret}
You are wrong, Connie. He is
nobody’s enemy. He is the truest, cleanest,
most right-seeking man I have ever seen.
{Connie}
(Interrupting.) He is a trouble-maker,
a disturber of the public peace, a shallow-pated demagogue
{Margaret}
(Reprovingly.)
Now you’re quoting somebody
father, I suppose. To think of him being so abused poor,
dear Ali Baba
{Starkweather}
(Clearing his throat in advertisement
of his presence.) A-hem.
(Margaret and Connie turn around
abruptly and discover him.)
{Margaret}
And Connie Father!
(Both come forward to greet him,
Margaret leading.)
{Starkweather}
(Anticipating, showing the deliberate
method of the busy man saving time by eliminating
the superfluous.) Fine, thank you. Quite
well in every particular. This Ali Baba?
Who is Ali Baba?
(Margaret looks amused reproach at Connie.)
{Connie}
Mr. Howard Knox.
{Starkweather}
And why is he called Ali Baba?
{Margaret}
That is my nickname for him.
In the den of thieves, you know. You remember
your Arabian Nights.
{Starkweather}
(Severely.) I have been wanting
to speak to you for some time, Margaret, about that
man. You know that I have never interfered with
your way of life since your marriage, nor with your
and Tom’s housekeeping arrangements. But
this man Knox. I understand that you have even
had him here in your house
{Margaret}
(Interrupting.) He is very
liable to be here this afternoon, any time, now.
(Connie displays irritation at Margaret.)
{Starkweather}
(Continuing imperturbably.)
Your house you, my daughter,
and the wife of Senator Chalmers. As I said,
I have not interfered with you since your marriage.
But this Knox affair transcends household arrangements.
It is of political importance. The man is an
enemy to our class, a firebrand. Why do you have
him here?
{Margaret}
Because I like him. Because he
is a man I am proud to call “friend.”
Because I wish there were more men like him, many
more men like him, in the world. Because I have
ever seen in him nothing but the best and highest.
And, besides, it’s such good fun to see how
one virtuous man can so disconcert you captains of
industry and arbiters of destiny. Confess that
you are very much disconcerted, father, right now.
He will be here in a few minutes, and you will be
more disconcerted. Why? Because it is an
affair that transcends family arrangements. And
it is your affair, not mine.
{Starkweather}
This man Knox is a dangerous character one
that I am not pleased to see any of my family take
up with. He is not a gentleman.
{Margaret}
He is a self-made man, if that is
what you mean, and he certainly hasn’t any money.
{Connie}
(Interrupting.) He says that
money is theft at least when it is in the
hands of a wealthy person.
{Starkweather}
He is uncouth ignorant.
{Margaret}
I happen to know that he is a graduate of the University
of
Oregon.
{Starkweather}
(Sneeringly.) A cow college.
But that is not what I mean. He is a demagogue,
stirring up the wild-beast passions of the people.
{Margaret}
Surely you would not call his advocacy
of that child labor bill and of the conservation of
the forest and coal lands stirring up the wild-beast
passions of the people?
{Starkweather}
(Wearily.) You don’t
understand. When I say he is dangerous it is
because he threatens all the stabilities, because he
threatens us who have made this country and upon whom
this country and its prosperity rest.
(Connie, scenting trouble, walks
across stage away from them.)
{Margaret}
The captains of industry the banking magnates
and the mergers?
{Starkweather}
Call it so. Call it what you
will. Without us the country falls into the hands
of scoundrels like that man Knox and smashes to ruin.
{Margaret}
(Reprovingly.) Not a scoundrel, father.
{Starkweather}
He is a sentimental dreamer, a hair-brained
enthusiast. It is the foolish utterances of men
like him that place the bomb and the knife in the
hand of the assassin.
{Margaret}
He is at least a good man, even if
he does disagree with you on political and industrial
problems. And heaven knows that good men are
rare enough these days.
{Starkweather}
I impugn neither his morality nor
his motives only his rationality.
Really, Margaret, there is nothing inherently vicious
about him. I grant that. And it is precisely
that which makes him such a power for evil.
{Margaret}
When I think of all the misery and
pain which he is trying to remedy I can
see in him only a power for good. He is not working
for himself but for the many. That is why he has
no money. You have heaven alone knows how many
millions you don’t; you have worked
for yourself.
{Starkweather}
I, too, work for the many. I
give work to the many. I make life possible for
the many. I am only too keenly alive to the responsibilities
of my stewardship of wealth.
{Margaret}
But what of the child laborers working
at the machines? Is that necessary, O steward
of wealth? How my heart has ached for them!
How I have longed to do something for them to
change conditions so that it will no longer be necessary
for the children to toil, to have the playtime of
childhood stolen away from them. Theft that
is what it is, the playtime of the children coined
into profits. That is why I like Howard Knox.
He calls theft theft. He is trying to do something
for those children. What are you trying to do
for them?
{Starkweather}
Sentiment. Sentiment. The
question is too vast and complicated, and you cannot
understand. No woman can understand. That
is why you run to sentiment. That is what is
the matter with this Knox sentiment.
You can’t run a government of ninety millions
of people on sentiment, nor on abstract ideas of justice
and right.
{Margaret}
But if you eliminate justice and right, what remains?
{Starkweather}
This is a practical world, and it
must be managed by practical men by thinkers,
not by near-thinkers whose heads are addled with the
half-digested ideas of the French Encyclopedists and
Revolutionists of a century and a half ago.
(Margaret shows signs of impatience she
is not particularly perturbed by this passage-at-arms
with her father, and is anxious to get off her street
things.)
Don’t forget, my daughter, that
your father knows the books as well as any cow college
graduate from Oregon. I, too, in my student days,
dabbled in theories of universal happiness and righteousness,
saw my vision and dreamed my dream. I did not
know then the weakness, and frailty, and grossness
of the human clay. But I grew out of that and
into a man. Some men never grow out of that stage.
That is what is the trouble with Knox. He is still
a dreamer, and a dangerous one.
(He pauses a moment, and then his
thin lips shut grimly. But he has just about
shot his bolt.)
{Margaret}
What do you mean?
{Starkweather}
He has let himself in to give a speech
to-morrow, wherein he will be called upon to deliver
the proofs of all the lurid charges he has made against
the Administration against us, the stewards
of wealth if you please. He will be unable to
deliver the proofs, and the nation will laugh.
And that will be the political end of Mr. Ali Baba
and his dream.
{Margaret}
It is a beautiful dream. Were
there more like him the dream would come true.
After all, it is the dreamers that build and that
never die. Perhaps you will find that he is not
so easily to be destroyed. But I can’t
stay and argue with you, father. I simply must
go and get my things off.
(To Connie.) You’ll have
to receive, dear. I’ll be right back.
(Julius Rutland enters. Margaret
advances to meet him, shaking his hand.) You must
forgive me for deserting for a moment.
{Rutland}
(Greeting the others.) A family council, I
see.
{Margaret}
(On way to exit at rear.) No;
a discussion on dreams and dreamers. I leave
you to bear my part.
{Rutland}
(Bowing.) With pleasure.
The dreamers are the true architects. But a what
is the dream and who is the dreamer?
{Margaret}
(Pausing in the doorway.) The
dream of social justice, of fair play and a square
deal to everybody. The dreamer Mr.
Knox.
(Rutland is so patently irritated,
that Margaret lingers in the doorway to enjoy.)
{Rutland}
That man! He has insulted and reviled the Church my
calling.
He
{Connie}
(Interrupting.) He said the
churchmen stole from God. I remember he once
said there had been only one true Christian and that
He died on the Cross.
{Margaret}
He quoted that from Nietzsche.
{Starkweather}
(To Rutland, in quiet glee.) He had you there.
{Rutland}
(In composed fury.) Nietzsche
is a blasphemer, sir. Any man who reads Nietzsche
or quotes Nietzsche is a blasphemer. It augurs
ill for the future of America when such pernicious
literature has the vogue it has.
{Margaret}
(Interrupting, laughing.) I
leave the quarrel in your hands, sir knight.
Remember the dreamer and the dream. (Margaret
makes exit.)
{Rutland}
(Shaking his head.) I cannot
understand what is coming over the present generation.
Take your daughter, for instance. Ten years ago
she was an earnest, sincere lieutenant of mine in all
our little charities.
{Starkweather}
Has she given charity up?
{Connie}
It’s settlement work, now, and kindergartens.
{Rutland}
(Ominously.) It’s writers
like Nietzsche, and men who read him, like Knox, who
are responsible.
(Senator Dowsett and Mrs. Dowsett
enter from rear.)
(Connie advances to greet them.
Rutland knows Mrs. Dowsett, and Connie introduces
him to Senator Dowsett.)
(In the meantime, not bothering
to greet anybody, evincing his own will and way, Starkweather
goes across to right front, selects one of several
chairs, seats himself, pulls a thin note-book from
inside coat pocket, and proceeds to immerse himself
in contents of same.) (Dowsett and Rutland pair
and stroll to left rear and seat themselves, while
Connie and Mrs. Dowsett seat themselves at tea-table
to left front. Connie rings the bell for Servant.)
{Mrs. Dowsett}
(Glancing significantly at Starkweather,
and speaking in a low voice.) That’s your
father, isn’t it? I have so wanted to meet
him.
{Connie} (Softly.) You know
he’s peculiar. He is liable to ignore everybody
here this afternoon, and get up and go away abruptly,
without saying good-bye.
{Mrs. Dowsett}
(Sympathetically. ) Yes, I
know, a man of such large affairs. He must have
so much on his mind. He is a wonderful man my
husband says the greatest in contemporary history more
powerful than a dozen presidents, the King of England,
and the Kaiser, all rolled into one.
(Servant enters with tea urn and
accessories, and Connie proceeds to serve tea, all
accompanied by appropriate patter “Two
lumps?” “One, please.” “Lemon;”
etc.)
(Rutland and Dowsett come forward
to table for their tea, where they remain.)
(Connie, glancing apprehensively
across at her father and debating a moment, prepares
a cup for him and a small plate with crackers, and
hands them to Dowsett, who likewise betrays apprehensiveness.)
{Connie}
Take it to father, please, senator.
(Note: Throughout the
rest of this act, Starkweather is like a being apart,
a king sitting on his throne. He divides the tea
function with Margaret. Men come up to him and
speak with him. He sends for men. They come
and go at his bidding. The whole attitude, perhaps
unconsciously on his part, is that wherever he may
be he is master. This attitude is accepted by
all the others; forsooth, he is indeed a great man
and master. The only one who is not really afraid
of him is Margaret; yet she gives in to him in so
far as she lets him do as he pleases at her afternoon
tea.) (Dowsett carries the cup of tea and small
plate across stage to Starkweather. Starkweather
does not notice him at first.)
{Connie}
(Who has been watching.) Tea,
father, won’t you have a cup of tea?
(Through the following scene between
Starkweather and Dowsett, the latter holds cup of
tea and crackers, helplessly, at a disadvantage.
At the same time Rutland is served with tea and remains
at the table, talking with the two women.)
{Starkweather}
(Looking first at Connie, then
peering into cup of tea. He grunts refusal, and
for the first time looks up into the other man’s
face. He immediately closes note-book down on
finger to keep the place.) Oh, it’s you.
Dowsett.
(Painfully endeavoring to be at
ease.) A pleasure, Mr. Starkweather, an entirely
unexpected pleasure to meet you here. I was not
aware you frequented frivolous gatherings of this nature.
{Starkweather}
(Abruptly and peremptorily.)
Why didn’t you come when you were sent for this
morning?
{Dowsett}
I was sick I was in bed.
{Starkweather}
That is no excuse, sir. When
you are sent for you are to come. Understand?
That bill was reported back. Why was it reported
back? You told Dobleman you would attend to it.
{Dowsett}
It was a slip up. Such things will happen.
{Starkweather}
What was the matter with that committee?
Have you no influence with the Senate crowd?
If not, say so, and I’ll get some one who has.
{Dowsett}
(Angrily.) I refuse to be treated
in this manner, Mr. Starkweather. I have some
self-respect
(Starkweather grunts incredulously.)
Some decency
(Starkweather grunts.) A position
of prominence in my state. You forget, sir, that
in our state organization I occupy no mean place.
{Starkweather}
(Cutting him off so sharply that
Dowsett drops cup and saucer.) Don’t you
show your teeth to me. I can make you or break
you. That state organization of yours belongs
to me.
(Dowsett starts he is
learning something new. To hide his feelings,
he stoops to pick up cup and saucer.) Let it alone!
I am talking to you.
(Dowsett straightens up to attention
with alacrity.) (Connie, who has witnessed,
rings for Servant.) I bought that state organization,
and paid for it. You are one of the chattels that
came along with the machine. You were made senator
to obey my orders. Understand? Do you understand?
{Dowsett}
(Beaten.) I I understand.
{Starkweather}
That bill is to be killed.
{Dowsett}
Yes, sir.
{Starkweather}
Quietly, no headlines about it.
(Dowsett nods.) Now you can go.
(Dowsett proceeds rather limply
across to join group at tea-table.) (Chalmers
and Hubbard enter from right, laughing about something.
At sight of Starkweather they immediately become sober.)
(No hands are shaken. Starkweather barely acknowledges
Hubbard’s greeting.)
{Starkweather}
Tom, I want to see you.
(Hubbard takes his cue, and proceeds
across to tea-table.)
(Enter Servant. Connie directs
him to remove broken cup and saucer. While this
is being done, Starkweather remains silent. He
consults note-book, and Chalmers stands, not quite
at ease, waiting the other’s will. At the
same time, patter at tea-table. Hubbard, greeting
others and accepting or declining cup of tea.)
(Servant makes exit).
{Starkweather}
(Closing finger on book and looking
sharply at Chalmers.) Tom, this affair of yours
in New York must come to an end. Understand?
{Chalmers}
(Starting.) Hubbard has been talking.
{Starkweather}
No, it is not Hubbard. I have the reports from
other sources.
{Chalmers}
It is a harmless affair.
{Starkweather}
I happen to know better. I have
the whole record. If you wish, I can give you
every detail, every meeting. I know. There
is no discussion whatever. I want no more of
it.
{Chalmers}
I never dreamed for a moment that I was er indiscreet.
{Starkweather}
Never forget that every indiscretion
of a man in your position is indiscreet. We have
a duty, a great and solemn duty to perform. Upon
our shoulders rest the destinies of ninety million
people. If we fail in our duty, they go down
to destruction. Ignorant demagogues are working
on the beast-passions of the people. If they
have their way, they are lost, the country is lost,
civilization is lost. We want no more Dark Ages.
{Chalmers}
Really, I never thought it was as serious as all that.
{Starkweather}
(Shrugging shoulders and lifting
eyebrows.) After all, why should you? You
are only a cog in the machine. I, and the several
men grouped with me, am the machine. You are
a useful cog too useful to lose
{Chalmers}
Lose? Me?
{Starkweather}
I have but to raise my hand, any time do
you understand? any time, and you are lost.
You control your state. Very well. But never
forget that to-morrow, if I wished, I could buy your
whole machine out from under you. I know you
cannot change yourself, but, for the sake of the big
issues at stake, you must be careful, exceedingly
careful. We are compelled to work with weak tools.
You are a good liver, a flesh-pot man. You drink
too much. Your heart is weak. Oh,
I have the report of your doctor. Nevertheless,
don’t make a fool of yourself, nor of us.
Besides, do not forget that your wife is my daughter.
She is a strong woman, a credit to both of us.
Be careful that you are not a discredit to her.
{Chalmers}
All right, I’ll be careful.
But while we are er on this
subject, there’s something I’d like to
speak to you about.
(A pause, in which Starkweather
waits non-committally.) It’s this man Knox,
and Madge. He comes to the house. They are
as thick as thieves.
{Starkweather}
Yes?
{Chalmers}
(Hastily.) Oh, not a breath
of suspicion or anything of that sort, I assure you.
But it doesn’t strike me as exactly appropriate
that your daughter and my wife should be friendly
with this fire-eating anarchist who is always attacking
us and all that we represent.
{Starkweather}
I started to speak with her on that subject, but was
interrupted.
(Puckers brow and thinks.)
You are her husband. Why don’t you take
her in hand yourself?
(Enters Mrs. Starkweather from
rear, looking about, bowing, then locating Starkweather
and proceeding toward him.)
{Chalmers}
What can I do? She has a will
of her own the same sort of a will that
you have. Besides, I think she knows about my about
some of my indiscretions.
{Starkweather}
(Slyly.)
Harmless indiscretions?
(Chalmers is about to reply, but
observes Mrs. Starkweather approaching.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Speaks in a peevish, complaining
voice, and during her harrangue Starkweather immerses
himself in notebook.) Oh, there you are, Anthony.
Talking politics, I suppose. Well, as soon as
I get a cup of tea we must go. Tommy is not looking
as well as I could wish. Margaret loves him,
but she does not take the right care of him.
I don’t know what the world is coming to when
mothers do not know how to rear their offspring.
There is Margaret, with her slum kindergartens, taking
care of everybody else’s children but her own.
If she only performed her church duties as eagerly!
Mr. Rutland is displeased with her. I shall give
her a talking to only, you’d better
do it, Anthony. Somehow, I have never counted
much with Margaret. She is as set in doing what
she pleases as you are. In my time children paid
respect to their parents. This is what comes
of speed. There is no time for anything.
And now I must get my tea and run. Connie has
to dress for that dinner.
(Mrs. Starkweather crosses to table,
greets others characteristically and is served with
tea by Connie.)
(Chalmers waits respectfully on Starkweather.)
{Starkweather}
(Looking up from note-book.) That will do,
Tom.
(Chalmers is just starting across
to join others, when voices are heard outside rear
entrance, and Margaret enters with Dolores Ortega,
wife of the Peruvian Minister, and Matsu Sakari, Secretary
of Japanese Legation both of whom she has
met as they were entering the house.)
(Chalmers changes his course, and
meets the above advancing group. He knows Dolores
Ortega, whom he greets, and is introduced to Sakari.)
(Margaret passes on among guests,
greeting them, etc. Then she displaces Connie
at tea-table and proceeds to dispense tea to the newcomers.)
(Groups slowly form and seat themselves
about stage as follows: Chalmers and Dolores
Ortega; Rutland, Dowsett, Mrs. Starkweather; Connie,
Mr. Dowsett, and Hubbard.)
(Chalmers carries tea to Dolores Ortega.)
(Sakari has been lingering by table,
waiting for tea and pattering with Margaret, Chalmers,
etc.)
{Margaret}
(Handing cup to Sakari.) I
am very timid in offering you this, for I am sure
you must be appalled by our barbarous methods of making
tea.
{Sakari}
(Bowing.) It is true, your
American tea, and the tea of the English, are quite
radically different from the tea in my country.
But one learns, you know. I served my apprenticeship
to American tea long years ago, when I was at Yale.
It was perplexing, I assure you at first,
only at first I really believe that I am beginning
to have a how shall I call it? a
tolerance for tea in your fashion.
{Margaret}
You are very kind in overlooking our shortcomings.
{Sakari}
(Bowing.) On the contrary,
I am unaware, always unaware, of any shortcomings
of this marvelous country of yours.
{Margaret}
(Laughing.) You are incorrigibly
gracious, Mr. Sakari. (Knox appears at threshold
of rear entrance and pauses irresolutely for a moment)
{Sakari}
(Noticing Knox, and looking about
him to select which group he will join.) If I
may be allowed, I shall now retire and consume this tea.
(Joins group composed of Connie,
Mrs. Dowsett, and Hubbard.)
(Knox comes forward to Margaret,
betraying a certain awkwardness due to lack of experience
in such social functions. He greets Margaret
and those in the group nearest her.)
{Knox}
(To Margaret.) I don’t
know why I come here. I do not belong. All
the ways are strange.
{Margaret}
(Lightly, at the same time preparing
his tea.) The same Ali Baba once again
in the den of the forty thieves. But your watch
and pocket-book are safe here, really they are.
(Knox makes a gesture of dissent
at her facetiousness.) Now don’t be serious.
You should relax sometimes. You live too tensely.
(Looking at Starkweather.)
There’s the arch-anarch over there, the dragon
you are trying to slay.
(Knox looks at Starkweather and
is plainly perplexed.) The man who handles all
the life insurance funds, who controls more strings
of banks and trust companies than all the Rothschilds
a hundred times over the merger of iron
and steel and coal and shipping and all the other
things the man who blocks your child labor
bill and all the rest of the remedial legislation you
advocate. In short, my father.
{Knox}
(Looking intently at Starkweather.)
I should have recognized him from his photographs.
But why do you say such things?
{Margaret}
Because they are true.
(He remains silent.) Now, aren’t
they? (She laughs.) Oh, you don’t need
to answer. You know the truth, the whole bitter
truth. This is a den of thieves.
There is Mr. Hubbard over there, for instance, the
trusty journalist lieutenant of the corporations.
{Knox}
(With an expression of disgust.)
I know him. It was he that wrote the Standard
Oil side of the story, after having abused Standard
Oil for years in the pseudo-muck-raking magazines.
He made them come up to his price, that was all.
He’s the star writer on Cartwright’s,
now, since that magazine changed its policy and became
subsidizedly reactionary. I know him a
thoroughly dishonest man. Truly am I Ali Baba,
and truly I wonder why I am here.
{Margaret}
You are here, sir, because I like you to come.
{Knox}
We do have much in common, you and I.
{Margaret}
The future.
{Knox}
(Gravely, looking at her with shining
eyes.) I sometimes fear for more immediate reasons
than that.
(Margaret looks at him in alarm,
and at the same time betrays pleasure in what he has
said.) For you.
{Margaret}
(Hastily.) Don’t look
at me that way. Your eyes are flashing.
Some one might see and misunderstand.
{Knox}
(In confusion, awkwardly.)
I was unaware that I that I was looking
at you in any way that
{Margaret}
I’ll tell you why you are here. Because
I sent for you.
{Knox}
(With signs of ardor.) I would
come whenever you sent for me, and go wherever you
might send me.
{Margaret}
(Reprovingly.)
Please, please
It was about that speech. I have been hearing
about it from everybody rumblings and mutterings
and dire prophecies. I know how busy you are,
and I ought not to have asked you to come. But
there was no other way, and I was so anxious.
{Knox}
(Pleased.) It seems so strange
that you, being what you are, affiliated as you are,
should be interested in the welfare of the common
people.
{Margaret}
(Judicially.) I do seem like
a traitor in my own camp. But as father said
a while ago, I, too, have dreamed my dream. I
did it as a girl Plato’s Republic,
Moore’s Utopia I was steeped
in all the dreams of the social dreamers.
(During all that follows of her
speech, Knox is keenly interested, his eyes glisten
and he hangs on her words.)
And I dreamed that I, too, might do
something to bring on the era of universal justice
and fair play. In my heart I dedicated myself
to the cause of humanity. I made Lincoln my hero-he
still is. But I was only a girl, and where was
I to find this cause? how to work for it?
I was shut in by a thousand restrictions, hedged in
by a thousand conventions. Everybody laughed
at me when I expressed the thoughts that burned in
me. What could I do? I was only a woman.
I had neither vote nor right of utterance. I
must remain silent. I must do nothing. Men,
in their lordly wisdom, did all. They voted,
orated, governed. The place for women was in
the home, taking care of some lordly man who did all
these lordly things.
{Knox}
You understand, then, why I am for equal suffrage.
{Margaret}
But I learned or thought
I learned. Power, I discovered early. My
father had power. He was a magnate I
believe that is the correct phrase. Power was
what I needed. But how? I was a woman.
Again I dreamed my dream a modified dream.
Only by marriage could I win to power. And there
you have the clew to me and what I am and have become.
I met the man who was to become my husband. He
was clean and strong and an athlete, an outdoor man,
a wealthy man and a rising politician. Father
told me that if I married him he would make him the
power of his state, make him governor, send him to
the United States Senate. And there you have it
all.
{Knox}
Yes? Yes?
{Margaret}
I married. I found that there
were greater forces at work than I had ever dreamed
of. They took my husband away from me and molded
him into the political lieutenant of my father.
And I was without power. I could do nothing for
the cause. I was beaten. Then it was that
I got a new vision. The future belonged to the
children. There I could play my woman’s
part. I was a mother. Very well. I
could do no better than to bring into the world a healthy
son and bring him up to manhood healthy and wholesome,
clean, noble, and alive. Did I do my part well,
through him the results would be achieved. Through
him would the work of the world be done in making
the world healthier and happier for all the human
creatures in it. I played the mother’s part.
That is why I left the pitiful little charities of
the church and devoted myself to settlement work and
tenement house reform, established my kindergartens,
and worked for the little men and women who come so
blindly and to whom the future belongs to make or mar.
{Knox}
You are magnificent. I know,
now, why I come when you bid me come.
{Margaret}
And then you came. You were magnificent.
You were my knight of the windmills, tilting against
all power and privilege, striving to wrest the future
from the future and realize it here in the present,
now. I was sure you would be destroyed. Yet
you are still here and fighting valiantly. And
that speech of yours to-morrow
{Chalmers}
(Who has approached, bearing Dolores
Ortega’s cup.) Yes, that speech. How
do you do, Mr. Knox.
(They shake hands.) A cup of
tea, Madge. For Mrs. Ortega. Two lumps,
please.
(Margaret prepares the cup of tea.)
Everybody is excited over that speech. You are
going to give us particular fits, to-morrow, I understand.
{Knox}
(Smiling.) Really, no more than is deserved.
{Chalmers}
The truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth?
{Knox}
Precisely.
(Receiving back cup of tea from Margaret.)
{Chalmers}
Believe me, we are not so black as
we’re painted. There are two sides to this
question. Like you, we do our best to do what
is right. And we hope, we still hope, to win
you over to our side.
(Knox shakes his head with a quiet smile.)
{Margaret}
Oh, Tom, be truthful. You don’t
hope anything of the sort. You know you are hoping
to destroy him.
{Chalmers}
(Smiling grimly.) That is what
usually happens to those who are not won over.
(Preparing to depart with cup of
tea; speaking to Knox.) You might accomplish much
good, were you with us. Against us you accomplish
nothing, absolutely nothing.
(Returns to Dolores Ortega.)
{Margaret}
(Hurriedly.) You see.
That is why I was anxious why I sent for
you. Even Tom admits that they who are not won
over are destroyed. This speech is a crucial
event. You know how rigidly they rule the House
and gag men like you. It is they, and they alone,
who have given you opportunity for this speech?
Why? Why?
{Knox}
(Smiling confidently.) I know
their little scheme. They have heard my charges.
They think I am going to make a firebrand speech,
and they are ready to catch me without the proofs.
They are ready in every way for me. They are
going to laugh me down. The Associated Press,
the Washington correspondents all are ready
to manufacture, in every newspaper in the land, the
great laugh that will destroy me. But I am fully
prepared, I have
{Margaret}
The proofs?
{Knox}
Yes.
{Margaret}
Now?
{Knox}
They will be delivered to me to-night original
documents, photographs of documents, affidavits
{Margaret}
Tell me nothing. But oh, do be careful!
Be careful!
{Mrs. Dowsett}
(Appealing to Margaret.) Do
give me some assistance, Mrs. Chalmers.
(Indicating Sakari.) Mr. Sakari
is trying to make me ridiculous.
{Margaret}
Impossible.
{Mrs. Dowsett}
But he is. He has had the effrontery
{Chalmers}
(Mimicking Mrs. Dowsett.) Effrontery! O,
Sakari!
{Sakari}
The dear lady is pleased to be facetious.
{Mrs. Dowsett}
He has had the effrontery to ask me
to explain the cause of high prices. Mr. Dowsett
says the reason is that the people are living so high.
{Sakari}
Such a marvelous country. They
are poor because they have so much to spend.
{Chalmers}
Are not high prices due to the increased output of
gold?
{Mrs. Dowsett}
Mr. Sakari suggested that himself,
and when I agreed with him he proceeded to demolish
it. He has treated me dreadfully.
{Rutland}
(Clearing his throat and expressing
himself with ponderous unction.) You will find
the solution in the drink traffic. It is liquor,
alcohol, that is undermining our industry, our institutions,
our faith in God everything. Yearly
the working people drink greater quantities of alcohol.
Naturally, through resulting inefficiency, the cost
of production is higher, and therefore prices are
higher.
{Dowsett}
Partly so, partly so. And in
line with it, and in addition to it, prices are high
because the working class is no longer thrifty.
If our working class saved as the French peasant does,
we would sell more in the world market and have better
times.
{Sakari} (Bowing.) As I understand
it then, the more thrifty you are the more you save,
and the more you save the more you have to sell, the
more you sell, the better the times?
{Dowsett}
Exactly so. Exactly.
{Sakari}
The less you sell, the harder are the times?
{Dowsett}
Just so.
{Sakari}
Then if the people are thrifty, and
buy less, times will be harder?
{Dowsett}
(Perplexed.) Er it would seem so.
{Sakari}
Then it would seem that the present
bad times are due to the fact that the people are
thrifty, rather than not thrifty?
(Dowsett is nonplussed, and Mrs.
Dowsett throws up her hands in despair.)
{Mrs. Dowsett}
(Turning to Knox.) Perhaps
you can explain to us, Mr. Knox, the reason for this
terrible condition of affairs.
(Starkweather closes note-book
on finger and listens.) (Knox smiles, but does
not speak.)
{Dolores Ortega}
Please do, Mr. Knox. I am so
dreadfully anxious to know why living is so high now.
Only this morning I understand meat went up again.
(Knox hesitates and looks questioningly
at Margaret.)
{Hubbard}
I am sure Mr. Knox can shed new light on this perplexing
problem.
{Chalmers}
Surely you, the whirlwind of oratorical
swords in the House, are not timid here among
friends.
{Knox} (Sparring.) I had no
idea that questions of such nature were topics of
conversation at affairs like this.
{Starkweather}
(Abruptly and imperatively.)
What causes the high prices?
{Knox}
(Equally abrupt and just as positive
as the other was imperative.) Theft!
(It is a sort of a bombshell he
has exploded, but they receive it politely and smilingly,
even though it has shaken them up.)
{Dolores Ortega}
What a romantic explanation.
I suppose everybody who has anything has stolen it.
{Knox}
Not quite, but almost quite.
Take motorcars, for example. This year five hundred
million dollars has been spent for motor-cars.
It required men toiling in the mines and foundries,
women sewing their eyes out in sweat-shops, shop girls
slaving for four and five dollars a week, little children
working in the factories and cotton-mills all
these it required to produce those five hundred millions
spent this year in motor-cars. And all this has
been stolen from those who did the work.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
I always knew those motor-cars were to blame for terrible
things.
{Dolores Ortega}
But Mr. Knox, I have a motor-car.
{Knox}
Somebody’s labor made that car. Was it
yours?
{Dolores Ortega}
Mercy, no! I bought it and
paid for it.
{Knox}
Then did you labor at producing something
else, and exchange the fruits of that labor for the
motor-car?
(A pause.)
You do not answer. Then I am
to understand that you have a motor-car which was
made by somebody else’s labor and for which
you gave no labor of your own. This I call theft.
You call it property. Yet it is theft.
{Starkweather}
(Interrupting Dolores Ortega who
was just about to speak.)
But surely you have intelligence to
see the question in larger ways than stolen motor-cars.
I am a man of affairs. I don’t steal motor-cars.
{Knox}
(Smiling.) Not concrete little
motor-cars, no. You do things on a large scale.
{Starkweather}
Steal?
{Knox}
(Shrugging his shoulders.) If you will have
it so.
{Starkweather}
I am like a certain gentleman from
Missouri. You’ve got to show me.
{Knox}
And I’m like the man from Texas. It’s
got to be put in my hand.
{Starkweather}
I shift my residence at once to Texas.
Put it in my hand that I steal on a large scale.
{Knox}
Very well. You are the great
financier, merger, and magnate. Do you mind a
few statistics?
{Starkweather}
Go ahead.
{Knox}
You exercise a controlling interest
in nine billion dollars’ worth of railways;
in two billion dollars’ worth of industrial
concerns; in one billion dollars’ worth of life
insurance groups; in one billion dollars’ worth
of banking groups; in two billion dollars’ worth
of trust companies. Mind you, I do not say you
own all this, but that you exercise a controlling
interest. That is all that is necessary.
In short, you exercise a controlling interest in such
a proportion of the total investments of the United
States, as to set the pace for all the rest. Now
to my point. In the last few years seventy billions
of dollars have been artificially added to the capitalization
of the nation’s industries. By that I mean
water pure, unadulterated water. You,
the merger, know what water means. I say seventy
billions. It doesn’t matter if we call
it forty billions or eighty billions; the amount,
whatever it is, is a huge one. And what does seventy
billions of water mean? It means, at five per
cent, that three billions and a half must be paid
for things this year, and every year, more than things
are really worth. The people who labor have to
pay this. There is theft for you. There is
high prices for you. Who put in the water?
Who gets the theft of the water? Have I put it
in your hand?
{Starkweather}
Are there no wages for stewardship?
{Knox}
Call it any name you please.
{Starkweather}
Do I not make two dollars where one
was before? Do I not make for more happiness
than was before I came?
{Knox}
Is that any more than the duty any man owes to his
fellowman?
{Starkweather}
Oh, you unpractical dreamer. (Returns to his note-book.)
{Rutland}
(Throwing himself into the breach.)
Where do I steal, Mr. Knox? I who get a
mere salary for preaching the Lord’s Word.
{Knox}
Your salary comes out of that water
I mentioned. Do you want to know who pays your
salary? Not your parishioners. But the little
children toiling in the mills, and all the rest all
the slaves on the wheel of labor pay you your salary.
{Rutland} I earn it.
{Knox}
They pay it.
{Mrs. Dowsett}
Why, I declare, Mr. Knox, you are
worse than Mr. Sakari. You are an anarchist.
(She simulates shivering with fear.)
{Chalmers}
(To Knox.) I suppose that’s
part of your speech to-morrow.
{Dolores Ortega}
(Clapping her hands.) A rehearsal!
He’s trying it out on us!
{Sakari}
How would you remedy this er this
theft?
(Starkweather again closes note-book
on finger and listens as Knox begins to speak.)
{Knox}
Very simply. By changing the
governmental machinery by which this household of
ninety millions of people conducts its affairs.
{Sakari}
I thought I was taught
so at Yale that your governmental machinery
was excellent, most excellent.
{Knox}
It is antiquated. It is ready
for the scrap-heap. Instead of being our servant,
it has mastered us. We are its slaves. All
the political brood of grafters and hypocrites have
run away with it, and with us as well. In short,
from the municipalities up, we are dominated by the
grafters. It is a reign of theft.
{Hubbard}
But any government is representative
of its people. No people is worthy of a better
government than it possesses. Were it worthier,
it would possess a better government.
(Starkweather nods his head approvingly.)
{Knox}
That is a lie. And I say to you
now that the average morality and desire for right
conduct of the people of the United States is far
higher than that of the government which misrepresents
it. The people are essentially worthy of a better
government than that which is at present in the hands
of the politicians, for the benefit of the politicians
and of the interests the politicians represent.
I wonder, Mr. Sakari, if you have ever heard the story
of the four aces.
{Sakari}
I cannot say that I have.
{Knox}
Do you understand the game of poker?
{Sakari}
(Considering.) Yes, a marvelous
game. I have learned it at Yale.
It was very expensive.
{Knox}
Well, that story reminds me of our
grafting politicians. They have no moral compunctions.
They look upon theft as right eminently
right. They see nothing wrong in the arrangement
that the man who deals the cards should give himself
the best in the deck. Never mind what he deals
himself, they’ll have the deal next and make
up for it.
{Dolores Ortega}
But the story, Mr. Knox. I, too, understand poker.
{Knox}
It occurred out in Nevada, in a mining
camp. A tenderfoot was watching a game of poker,
He stood behind the dealer, and he saw the dealer
deal himself four aces from the bottom of the deck.
(From now on, he tells the story
in the slow, slightly drawling Western fashion.)
The tenderfoot went around to the player on the opposite
side of the table.
“Say,” he says, “I
just seen the dealer give himself four aces off the
bottom.”
The player looked at him a moment,
and said, “What of it?”
“Oh, nothing,” said the
tenderfoot, “only I thought you might want to
know. I tell you I seen the dealer give himself
four aces off the bottom.”
“Look here, Mister,” said
the player, “you’d better get out of this.
You don’t understand the game. It’s
HIS deal, ain’t it?”
{Margaret}
(Arising while they are laughing.)
We’ve talked politics long enough. Dolores,
I want you to tell me about your new car.
{Knox}
(As if suddenly recollecting himself.)
And I must be going.
(In a low voice to Margaret.)
Do I have to shake hands with all these people?
{Margaret}
(Shaking her head, speaking low.)
Dear delightful Ali Baba.
{Knox}
(Glumly.) I suppose I’ve made a fool
of myself.
{Margaret}
(Earnestly.) On the contrary,
you were delightful. I am proud of you.
(As Knox shakes hands with Margaret,
Sakari arises and comes forward).
{Sakari}
I, too, must go. I have had a charming half hour,
Mrs. Chalmers.
But I shall not attempt to thank you.
(He shakes hands with Margaret.)
(Knox and Sakari proceed to make exit to rear.)
(Just as they go out, Servant enters,
carrying card-tray, and advances toward Starkweather.)
(Margaret joins Dolores Ortega
and Chalmers, seats herself with them, and proceeds
to talk motor-cars.)
(Servant has reached Starkweather,
who has taken a telegram from tray, opened it, and
is reading it.)
{Starkweather}
Damnation!
{Servant}
I beg your pardon, sir.
{Starkweather}
Send Senator Chalmers to me, and Mr. Hubbard.
{Servant}
Yes, sir.
(Servant crosses to Chalmers and
Hubbard, both of whom immediately arise and cross
to Starkweather.)
(While this is being done, Margaret
reassembles the three broken groups into one, seating
herself so that she can watch Starkweather and his
group across the stage.)
(Servant lingers to receive a command
from Margaret.)
(Chalmers and Hubbard wait a moment,
standing, while Starkweather rereads telegram.)
{Starkweather}
(Standing up.) Dobleman has
just forwarded this telegram. It’s from
New York from Martinaw. There’s
been rottenness. My papers and letter-files have
been ransacked. It’s the confidential stenographer
who has been tampered with you remember
that middle-aged, youngish-oldish woman, Tom?
That’s the one. Where’s that
servant?
(Servant is just making exit.) Here! Come
here!
(Servant comes over to Starkweather.)
Go to the telephone and call up Dobleman. Tell
him to come here.
{Servant}
(Perplexed.) I beg pardon, sir.
{Starkweather}
(Irritably.) My secretary.
At my house. Dobleman. Tell him to come
at once.
(Servant makes exit.)
{Chalmers}
But who can be the principal behind this theft?
(Starkweather shrugs his shoulders.)
{Hubbard}
A blackmailing device most probably.
They will attempt to bleed you
{Chalmers}
Unless
{Starkweather}
(Impatiently.) Yes?
{Chalmers}
Unless they are to be used to-morrow in that speech
of Knox.
(Comprehension dawns on the faces
of the other two men.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
(Who has arisen.) Anthony,
we must go now. Are you ready? Connie has
to dress.
{Starkweather}
I am not going now. You and Connie take the car.
{Mrs. Starkweather}
You mustn’t forget you are going to that dinner.
{Starkweather}
(Wearily.) Do I ever forget?
(Servant enters and proceeds toward
Starkweather, where he stands waiting while Mrs. Starkweather
finishes the next speech. Starkweather listens
to her with a patient, stony face.)
{Mrs. Starkweather}
Oh, these everlasting politics!
That is what it has been all afternoon high
prices, graft, and theft; theft, graft, and high prices.
It is terrible. When I was a girl we did not talk
of such things. Well, come on, Connie.
{Mrs. Dowsett}
(Rising and glancing at Dowsett.)
And we must be going, too.
(During the following scene, which
takes place around Starkweather, Margaret is saying
good-bye to her departing guests.)
(Mrs. Starkweather and Connie make exit.)
(Dowsett and Mrs. Dowsett make exit.)
(The instant Mrs. Dowsett’s
remark puts a complete end to Mrs. Starkweather’s
speech, Starkweather, without answer or noticing his
wife, turns and interrogates Servant with a glance.)
{Servant}
Mr. Dobleman has already left some time to come here,
sir.
{Starkweather}
Show him in as soon as he comes.
{Servant}
Yes, sir.
(Servant makes exit.)
(Margaret, Dolores Ortega, and
Rutland are left in a group together, this time around
tea-table, where Margaret serves Rutland another cup
of tea. From time to time Margaret glances curiously
at the serious group of men across the stage.)
(Starkweather is thinking hard
with knitted brows. Hubbard is likewise pondering.)
{Chalmers}
If I were certain Knox had those papers
I would take him by the throat and shake them out
of him.
{Starkweather}
No foolish talk like that, Tom. This is a serious
matter.
{Hubbard}
But Knox has no money. A Starkweather stenographer
comes high.
{Starkweather}
There is more than Knox behind this.
(Enter Dobleman, walking quickly and in a state
of controlled excitement.)
{Dobleman}
(To Starkweather.) You received
that telegram, sir?
(Starkweather nods.) I got
the New York office Martinaw right
along afterward, by long distance. I thought best
to follow and tell you.
{Starkweather}
What did Martinaw say?
{Dobleman}
The files seem in perfect order.
{Starkweather}
Thank God!
(During the following speech of
Dobleman, Rutland says good-bye to Margaret and Dolores
Ortega and makes exit.)
(Margaret and Dolores Ortega rise
a minute afterward and go toward exit, throwing curious
glances at the men but not disturbing them.)
(Dolores Ortega makes exit.)
(Margaret pauses in doorway a moment,
giving a final anxious glance at the men, and makes
exit.)
{Dobleman}
But they are not. The stenographer,
Miss Standish, has confessed. For a long time
she has followed the practice of taking two or three
letters and documents at a time away from the office.
Many have been photographed and returned. But
the more important ones were retained and clever copies
returned. Martinaw says that Miss Standish herself
does not know and cannot tell which of the ones she
returned are genuine and which are copies.
{Hubbard}
Knox never did this.
{Starkweather}
Did Martinaw say whom Miss Standish was acting for?
{Dobleman}
Gherst.
(The alarm on the three men’s faces is patent.)
{Starkweather}
Gherst!
(Pauses to think.)
{Hubbard}
Then it is not so grave after all.
A yellow journal sensation is the best Gherst can
make of it. And, documents or not, the very medium
by which it is made public discredits it.
{Starkweather}
Trust Gherst for more ability than
that. He will certainly exploit them in his newspapers,
but not until after Knox has used them in his speech.
Oh, the cunning dog! Never could he have chosen
a better mode and moment to strike at me, at the Administration,
at everything. That is Gherst all over. Playing
to the gallery. Inducing Knox to make this spectacular
exposure on the floor of the House just at the critical
time when so many important bills are pending.
(To Dobleman.)
Did Martinaw give you any idea of
the nature of the stolen documents?
{Dobleman}
(Referring to notes he has brought.)
Of course I don’t know anything about it, but
he spoke of the Goodyear letters
(Starkweather betrays by his face
the gravity of the information.)
the Caledonian letters, all the Black
Rider correspondence. He mentioned, too, (Referring
to notes.) the Astonbury and Glutz letters.
And there were others, many others, not designated.
{Starkweather}
This is terrible!
(Recollecting himself.)
Thank you, Dobleman. Will you please return to
the house at once.
Get New York again, and fullest details. I’ll
follow you shortly.
Have you a machine?
{Dobleman}
A taxi, sir.
{Starkweather}
All right, and be careful.
(Dobleman makes exit)
{Chalmers}
I don’t know the import of all
these letters, but I can guess, and it does seem serious.
{Starkweather}
(Furiously.) Serious!
Let me tell you that there has been no exposure like
this in the history of the country. It means
hundreds of millions of dollars. It means more the
loss of power. And still more, it means the mob,
the great mass of the child-minded people rising up
and destroying all that I have labored to do for them.
Oh, the fools! The fools!
{Hubbard}
(Shaking his head ominously.)
There is no telling what may happen if Knox makes
that speech and delivers the proofs.
{Chalmers}
It is unfortunate. The people
are restless and excited as it is. They are being
constantly prodded on by the mouthings of the radical
press, of the muck-raking magazines and of the demagogues.
The people are like powder awaiting the spark.
{Starkweather}
This man Knox is no fool, if he is
a dreamer. He is a shrewd knave. He is a
fighter. He comes from the West the
old pioneer stock. His father drove an ox-team
across the Plains to Oregon. He knows how to
play his cards, and never could circumstances have
placed more advantageous cards in his hands.
{Chalmers}
And nothing like this has ever touched you before.
{Starkweather}
I have always stood above the muck
and ruck clear and clean and unassailable.
But this this is too much! It is the
spark. There is no forecasting what it may develop
into.
{Chalmers}
A political turnover.
{Starkweather}
(Nodding savagely.) A new party,
a party of demagogues, in power. Government ownership
of the railways and telegraphs. A graduated income
tax that will mean no less than the confiscation of
private capital.
{Chalmers}
And all that mass of radical legislation the
Child Labor Bill, the new Employers’ Liability
Act, the government control of the Alaskan coal fields,
that interference with Mexico. And that big power
corporation you have worked so hard to form.
{Starkweather}
It must not be. It is an unthinkable
calamity. It means that the very process of capitalistic
development is hindered, stopped. It means a
setback of ten years in the process. It means
work, endless work, to overcome the setback.
It means not alone the passage of all this radical
legislation with the consequent disadvantages, but
it means the fingers of the mob clutching at our grip
of control. It means anarchy. It means ruin
and misery for all the blind fools and led-cattle
of the mass who will strike at the very sources of
their own existence and comfort.
(Tommy enters from left, evidently
playing a game, in the course of which he is running
away. By his actions he shows that he is pursued.
He intends to cross stage, but is stopped by sight
of the men. Unobserved by them, he retraces his
steps and crawls under the tea-table.)
{Chalmers}
Without doubt, Knox is in possession of the letters
right now.
{Starkweather}
There is but one thing to do, and that is get
them back.
(He looks questioningly at the two men.)
(Margaret enters from left, in
flushed and happy pursuit of Tommy for
it is a game she is playing with him. She startles
at sight of the three men, whom she first sees as
she gains the side of the tea-table, where she pauses
abruptly, resting one hand on the table.)
{Hubbard}
I’ll undertake it.
{Starkweather}
There is little time to waste.
In twenty hours from now he will be on the floor making
his speech. Try mild measures first. Offer
him inducements any inducement. I empower
you to act for me. You will find he has a price.
{Hubbard}
And if not?
{Starkweather}
Then you must get them at any cost.
{Hubbard}
(Tentatively.) You mean ?
{Starkweather}
I mean just that. But no matter
what happens, I must never be brought in. Do
you understand?
{Hubbard}
Thoroughly.
{Margaret}
(Acting her part, and speaking
with assumed gayety.) What are you three conspiring
about? (All three men are startled.)
{Chalmers}
We are arranging to boost prices a little higher.
{Hubbard}
And so be able to accumulate more motorcars.
{Starkweather}
(Taking no notice of Margaret and
starting toward exit to rear.) I must be going.
Hubbard, you have your work cut out for you.
Tom, I want you to come with me.
{Chalmers}
(As the three men move toward exit.) Home?
{Starkweather}
Yes, we have much to do.
{Chalmers}
Then I’ll dress first and follow you.
(Turning to Margaret.) Pick
me up on the way to that dinner.
(Margaret nods. Starkweather
makes exit without speaking. Hub-bard says good-bye
to Margaret and makes exit, followed by Chalmers.)
(Margaret remains standing, one
hand resting on table, the other hand to her breast.
She is thinking, establishing in her mind the connection
between Knox and what she has overheard, and in process
of reaching the conclusion that Knox is in danger.)
(Tommy, having vainly waited to
be discovered, crawls out dispiritedly, and takes
Margaret by the hand. She scarcely notices him.)
{Tommy} (Dolefully.) Don’t
you want to play any more? (Margaret does not reply).
I was a good Indian.
{Margaret}
(Suddenly becoming aware of herself
and breaking down. She stoops and clasps Tommy
in her arms, crying out, in anxiety and fear, and
from love of her boy.) Oh, Tommy! Tommy!
Curtain