Three Plays by Granville-Barker Part 103
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At TREBELL'S again; later, the same evening.
_His room is in darkness but for the flicker the fire makes and the streaks of moonlight between the curtains. The door is open, though, and you see the light of the lamp on the stairs. You hear his footstep too.
On his way he stops to draw back the curtains of the pa.s.sage-way window; the moonlight makes his face look very pale. Then he serves the curtains of his own window the same; flings it open, moreover, and stands looking out. Something below draws his attention. After leaning over the balcony with a short_ "Hullo" _he goes quickly downstairs again. In a minute_ WEDGECROFT _comes up_. TREBELL _follows, pausing by the door a moment to light up the room_. WEDGECROFT _is radiant_.
TREBELL. [_With a twist of his mouth._] Promised, has he?
WEDGECROFT. Suddenly broke out as we walked along, that he liked the look of you and that men must stand by one another nowadays against these women. Then he said good-night and walked away.
TREBELL. Back to Ireland and the thirteenth century.
WEDGECROFT. After to-morrow.
TREBELL. [_Taking all the meaning of to-morrow._] Yes. Are you in for perjury, too?
WEDGECROFT. [_His thankfulness checked a little._] No . . not exactly.
TREBELL _walks away from him_.
TREBELL. It's a pity the truth isn't to be told, I think. I suppose the verdict will be murder.
WEDGECROFT. They won't catch the man.
TREBELL. You don't mean . . me.
WEDGECROFT. No, no . . my dear fellow.
TREBELL. You might, you know. But n.o.body seems to see this thing as I see it. If I were on that jury I'd say murder too and accuse . . so many circ.u.mstances, Gilbert, that we should go home . . and look in the cupboards. What a lumber of opinions we inherit and keep!
WEDGECROFT. [_Humouring him._] Ought we to burn the house down?
TREBELL. Rules and regulations for the preservation of rubbish are the laws of England . . and I was adding to their number.
WEDGECROFT. And so you shall . . to the applause of a grateful country.
TREBELL. [_Studying his friend's kindly encouraging face._] Gilbert, it is not so much that you're an incorrigible optimist . . but why do you subdue your mind to flatter people into cheerfulness?
WEDGECROFT. I'm a doctor, my friend.
TREBELL. You're a part of our tendency to keep things alive by hook or by crook . . not a spark but must be carefully blown upon. The world's old and tired; it dreads extinction. I think I disapprove . . I think I've more faith.
WEDGECROFT. [_Scolding him._] Nonsense . . you've the instinct to preserve your life as everyone else has . . and I'm here to show you how.
TREBELL. [_Beyond the reach of his kindness._] I a.s.sure you that these two days while you've been fussing around O'Connell--bless your kind heart--I've been waiting events, indifferent enough to understand his indifference.
WEDGECROFT. Not indifferent.
TREBELL. Lifeless enough already, then. [_Suddenly a thought strikes him._] D'you think it was Horsham and his little committee persuaded O'Connell?
WEDGECROFT. On the contrary.
TREBELL. So you need not have let them into the secret?
WEDGECROFT. No.
TREBELL. Think of that.
_He almost laughs; but_ WEDGECROFT _goes on quite innocently_.
WEDGECROFT. Yes . . I'm sorry.
TREBELL. Upsetting their moral digestion for nothing.
WEDGECROFT. But when O'Connell wouldn't listen to us we had to rope in the important people.
TREBELL. With their united wisdom. [_Then he breaks away again into great bitterness._] No . . what do they make of this woman's death? I saw them in that room, Gilbert, like men seen through the wrong end of a telescope. D'you think if the little affair with Nature . . her offence and mine against the conveniences of civilization . . had ended in my death too . . then they'd have stopped to wonder at the misuse and waste of the only force there is in the world . . come to think of it, there is no other . . than this desire for expression . . in words . . or through children. Would they have thought of that and stopped whispering about the scandal?
_Through this_ WEDGECROFT _has watched him very gravely_.
WEDGECROFT. Trebell . . if the inquest to-morrow had put you out of action . .
TREBELL. Should I have grown a beard and travelled abroad and after ten years timidly tried to climb my way back into politics? When public opinion takes its heel from your face it keeps it for your finger-tips.
After twenty years to be forgiven by your more broad-minded friends and tolerated as a dotard by a new generation. . .
WEDGECROFT. Nonsense. What age are you now . . forty-six . .
forty-seven?
TREBELL. Well . . let's instance a good man. Gladstone had done his best work by sixty-five. Then he began to be popular. Think of his last years of oratory.
_He has gone to his table and now very methodically starts to tidy his papers_, WEDGECROFT _still watching him_.
WEDGECROFT. You'd have had to thank Heaven for a little that there were more lives than one to lead.
TREBELL. That's another of your faults, Gilbert . . it's a comfort just now to enumerate them. You're an anarchist . . a kingdom to yourself.
You make little treaties with Truth and with Beauty, and what can disturb you? I'm a part of the machine I believe in. If my life as I've made it is to be cut short . . the rest of me shall walk out of the world and slam the door . . with the noise of a pistol shot.
WEDGECROFT. [_Concealing some uneasiness._] Then I'm glad it's not to be cut short. You and your cabinet rank and your disestablishment bill!
TREBELL _starts to enjoy his secret_.
TREBELL. Yes . . our minds have been much relieved within the last half hour, haven't they?
WEDGECROFT. I scribbled Horsham a note in a messenger office and sent it as soon as O'Connell had left me.
TREBELL. He'd be glad to get that.
WEDGECROFT. He has been most kind about the whole thing.
TREBELL. Oh, he means well.
Three Plays by Granville-Barker Part 103
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Three Plays by Granville-Barker Part 103 summary
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