Candida
Candida
by
A fine October morning in the north east suburbs of London, a vast district many
miles away from the London of Mayfair and St. James's, much less known there than
the Paris of the Rue de Rivoli and the Champs Elysees, and much less narrow,
squalid, fetid and airless in its slums; strong in comfortable, prosperous middle class
life; wide-streeted, myriad-populated; well-served with ugly iron urinals, Radical
clubs, tram lines, and a perpetual stream of yellow cars; enjoying in its main
thoroughfares the luxury of grass-grown "front gardens," untrodden by the foot of
man save as to the path from the gate to the hall door; but blighted by an intolerable
monotony of miles and miles of graceless, characterless brick houses, black iron
railings, stony pavements, slaty roofs, and respectably ill dressed or disreputably
poorly dressed people, quite accustomed to the place, and mostly plodding about
somebody else's work, which they would not do if they themselves could help it. The
little energy and eagerness that crop up show themselves in cockney cupidity and
business "push." Even the policemen and the chapels are not infrequent enough to
break the monotony. The sun is shining cheerfully; there is no fog; and though the
smoke effectually prevents anything, whether faces and hands or bricks and mortar,
from looking fresh and clean, it is not hanging heavily enough to trouble a Londoner.
This desert of unattractiveness has its oasis. Near the outer end of the Hackney Road
is a park of 217 acres, fenced in, not by railings, but by a wooden paling, and
containing plenty of greensward, trees, a lake for bathers, flower beds with the flowers
arranged carefully in patterns by the admired cockney art of carpet gardening and a
sandpit, imported from the seaside for the delight of the children, but speedily
deserted on its becoming a natural vermin preserve for all the petty fauna of
Kingsland, Hackney and Hoxton. A bandstand, an unfinished forum for religious,
anti-religious and political orators, cricket pitches, a gymnasium, and an old fashioned
stone kiosk are among its attractions. Wherever the prospect is bounded by trees or
rising green grounds, it is a pleasant place. Where the ground stretches far to the grey
palings, with bricks and mortar, sky signs, crowded chimneys and smoke beyond, the
prospect makes it desolate and sordid.
The best view of Victoria Park is from the front window of St. Dominic's Parsonage,
from which not a single chimney is visible. The parsonage is a semi-detached villa
with a front garden and a porch. Visitors go up the flight of steps to the porch:
tradespeople and members of the family go down by a door under the steps to the
basement, with a breakfast room, used for all meals, in front, and the kitchen at the
back. Upstairs, on the level of the hall door, is the drawing-room, with its large plate
glass window looking on the park. In this room, the only sitting-room that can be
spared from the children and the family meals, the parson, the Reverend James Mavor
Morell does his work. He is sitting in a strong round backed revolving chair at the
right hand end of a long table, which stands across the window, so that he can cheer
himself with the view of the park at his elbow. At the opposite end of the table,
adjoining it, is a little table; only half the width of the other, with a typewriter on it.
His typist is sitting at this machine, with her back to the window. The large table is
littered with pamphlets, journals, letters, nests of drawers, an office diary, postage
scales and the like. A spare chair for visitors having business with the parson is in the
middle, turned to his end. Within reach of his hand is a stationery case, and a cabinet
photograph in a frame. Behind him the right hand wall, recessed above the fireplace,
is fitted with bookshelves, on which an adept eye can measure the parson's divinity
and casuistry by a complete set of Browning's poems and Maurice's Theological
Essays, and guess at his politics from a yellow backed Progress and Poverty, Fabian
Essays, a Dream of John Ball, Marx's Capital, and half a dozen other literary
landmarks in Socialism. Opposite him on the left, near the typewriter, is the door.
Further down the room, opposite the fireplace, a bookcase stands on a cellaret, with a
sofa near it. There is a generous fire burning; and the hearth, with a comfortable
armchair and a japanned flower painted coal scuttle at one side, a miniature chair for a
boy or girl on the other, a nicely varnished wooden mantelpiece, with neatly moulded
shelves, tiny bits of mirror let into the panels, and a travelling clock in a leather case
(the inevitable wedding present), and on the wall above a large autotype of the chief
figure in Titian's Virgin of the Assumption, is very inviting. Altogether the room is
the room of a good housekeeper, vanquished, as far as the table is concerned, by an
untidy man, but elsewhere mistress of the situation. The furniture, in its ornamental
aspect, betrays the style of the advertised "drawing-room suite" of the pushing
suburban furniture dealer; but there is nothing useless or pretentious in the room. The
paper and panelling are dark, throwing the big cheery window and the park outside
into strong relief.
The Reverend James Mavor Morell is a Christian Socialist clergyman of the Church
of England, and an active member of the Guild of St. Matthew and the Christian
Social Union. A vigorous, genial, popular man of forty, robust and goodlooking, full
of energy, with pleasant, hearty, considerate manners, and a sound, unaffected voice,
which he uses with the clean, athletic articulation of a practised orator, and with a
wide range and perfect command of expression. He is a first rate clergyman, able to
say what he likes to whom he likes, to lecture people without setting himself up
against them, to impose his authority on them without humiliating them, and to
interfere in their business without impertinence. His well-spring of spiritual
enthusiasm and sympathetic emotion has never run dry for a moment: he still eats and
sleeps heartily enough to win the daily battle between exhaustion and recuperation
triumphantly. Withal, a great baby, pardonably vain of his powers and unconsciously
pleased with himself. He has a healthy complexion, a good forehead, with the brows
somewhat blunt, and the eyes bright and eager, a mouth resolute, but not particularly
well cut, and a substantial nose, with the mobile, spreading nostrils of the dramatic
orator, but, like all his features, void of subtlety.
The typist, Miss Proserpine Garnett, is a brisk little woman of about 30, of the lower
middle class, neatly but cheaply dressed in a black merino skirt and a blouse, rather
pert and quick of speech, and not very civil in her manner, but sensitive and
affectionate. She is clattering away busily at her machine whilst Morell opens the last
of his morning's letters. He realizes its contents with a comic groan of despair.
 MORELL. Yes. The Hoxton Freedom Group want me to address them on Sunday morning
    (great emphasis on "Sunday," this being the unreasonable part of the business). What are
    they?
 MORELL. Just like Anarchists not to know that they can't have a parson on Sunday! Tell them
    to come to church if they want to hear me: it will do them good. Say I can only come on
    Mondays and Thursdays. Have you the diary there?
MORELL (amused). Ah; but you see they're near relatives of mine, Miss Garnett.
MORELL (with a sadness which is a luxury to a man whose voice expresses it so finely). Ah,
   you don't believe it. Everybody says it: nobody believes it—nobody. (Briskly, getting
   back to business.) Well, well! Come, Miss Proserpine, can't you find a date for the
   costers? What about the 25th?: that was vacant the day before yesterday.
PROSERPINE. City dinner. You're invited to dine with the Founder's Company.
MORELL. That'll do; I'll go to the Hoxton Group of Freedom instead. (She enters the
   engagement in silence, with implacable disparagement of the Hoxton Anarchists in
   every line of her face. Morell bursts open the cover of a copy of The Church Reformer,
   which has come by post, and glances through Mr. Stewart Hendlam's leader and the
   Guild of St. Matthew news. These proceedings are presently enlivened by the
   appearance of Morell's curate, the Reverend Alexander Mill, a young gentleman
   gathered by Morell from the nearest University settlement, whither he had come from
   Oxford to give the east end of London the benefit of his university training. He is a
   conceitedly well intentioned, enthusiastic, immature person, with nothing positively
   unbearable about him except a habit of speaking with his lips carefully closed for half an
   inch from each corner, a finicking arthulation, and a set of horribly corrupt vowels,
   notably ow for o, this being his chief means of bringing Oxford refinement to bear on
   Hackney vulgarity. Morell, whom he has won over by a doglike devotion, looks up
   indulgently from The Church Reformer as he enters, and remarks) Well, Lexy! Late
   again, as usual.
MORELL (exulting in his own energy). Ha! ha! (Whimsically.) Watch and pray, Lexy: watch
   and pray.
LEXY. I know. (Rising wittily to the occasion.) But how can I watch and pray when I am
    asleep? Isn't that so, Miss Prossy?
LEXY. Why?
PROSERPINE. Never mind why. It will do you good to earn your supper before you eat it, for
    once in a way, as I do. Come: don't dawdle. You should have been off on your rounds
    half an hour ago.
MORELL (in the highest spirits—his eyes dancing). Yes. I am going to dawdle to-day.
MORELL (heartily). Ha! ha! Don't I? I'm going to have this day all to myself—or at least the
   forenoon. My wife's coming back: she's due here at 11.45.
LEXY (surprised). Coming back already—with the children? I thought they were to stay to the
    end of the month.
MORELL. So they are: she's only coming up for two days, to get some flannel things for
   Jimmy, and to see how we're getting on without her.
LEXY (anxiously). But, my dear Morell, if what Jimmy and Fluffy had was scarlatina, do you
    think it wise—
MORELL. Scarlatina!—rubbish, German measles. I brought it into the house myself from the
   Pycroft Street School. A parson is like a doctor, my boy: he must face infection as a
   soldier must face bullets. (He rises and claps Lexy on the shoulder.) Catch the measles if
   you can, Lexy: she'll nurse you; and what a piece of luck that will be for you!—eh?
LEXY (smiling uneasily). It's so hard to understand you about Mrs. Morell—
MORELL (tenderly). Ah, my boy, get married—get married to a good woman; and then you'll
   understand. That's a foretaste of what will be best in the Kingdom of Heaven we are
   trying to establish on earth. That will cure you of dawdling. An honest man feels that he
   must pay Heaven for every hour of happiness with a good spell of hard, unselfish work
   to make others happy. We have no more right to consume happiness without producing
   it than to consume wealth without producing it. Get a wife like my Candida; and you'll
   always be in arrear with your repayment. (He pats Lexy affectionately on the back, and
   is leaving the room when Lexy calls to him.)
LEXY. Oh, wait a bit: I forgot. (Morell halts and turns with the door knob in his hand.) Your
    father-in-law is coming round to see you. (Morell shuts the door again, with a complete
    change of manner.)
LEXY. Yes. I passed him in the park, arguing with somebody. He gave me good day and
    asked me to let you know that he was coming.
MORELL (half incredulous). But he hasn't called here for—I may almost say for years. Are
   you sure, Lexy? You're not joking, are you?
MORELL (thoughtfully). Hm! Time for him to take another look at Candida before she grows
   out of his knowledge. (He resigns himself to the inevitable, and goes out. Lexy looks
   after him with beaming, foolish worship.)
LEXY. What a good man! What a thorough, loving soul he is! (He takes Morell's place at the
    table, making himself very comfortable as he takes out a cigaret.)
PROSERPINE (impatiently, pulling the letter she has been working at off the typewriter and
    folding it.) Oh, a man ought to be able to be fond of his wife without making a fool of
    himself about her.
PROSERPINE (rising busily and coming to the stationery case to get an envelope, in which
    she encloses the letter as she speaks). Candida here, and Candida there, and Candida
    everywhere! (She licks the envelope.) It's enough to drive anyone out of their SENSES
    (thumping the envelope to make it stick) to hear a perfectly commonplace woman raved
    about in that absurd manner merely because she's got good hair, and a tolerable figure.
LEXY (with reproachful gravity). I think her extremely beautiful, Miss Garnett. (He takes the
    photograph up; looks at it; and adds, with even greater impressiveness) EXTREMELY
    beautiful. How fine her eyes are!
PROSERPINE. Her eyes are not a bit better than mine—now! (He puts down the photograph
    and stares austerely at her.) And you know very well that you think me dowdy and
    second rate enough.
LEXY (rising majestically). Heaven forbid that I should think of any of God's creatures in such
    a way! (He moves stiffly away from her across the room to the neighbourhood of the
    bookcase.)
LEXY (saddened by her depravity). I had no idea you had any feeling against Mrs. Morell.
PROSERPINE (indignantly). I have no feeling against her. She's very nice, very good-hearted:
    I'm very fond of her and can appreciate her real qualities far better than any man can.
    (He shakes his head sadly and turns to the bookcase, looking along the shelves for a
    volume. She follows him with intense pepperiness.) You don't believe me? (He turns
    and faces her. She pounces at him with spitfire energy.) You think I'm jealous. Oh, what
    a profound knowledge of the human heart you have, Mr. Lexy Mill! How well you
      know the weaknesses of Woman, don't you? It must be so nice to be a man and have a
      fine penetrating intellect instead of mere emotions like us, and to know that the reason
      we don't share your amorous delusions is that we're all jealous of one another! (She
      abandons him with a toss of her shoulders, and crosses to the fire to warm her hands.)
LEXY. Ah, if you women only had the same clue to Man's strength that you have to his
    weakness, Miss Prossy, there would be no Woman Question.
PROSERPINE (over her shoulder, as she stoops, holding her hands to the blaze). Where did
    you hear Morell say that? You didn't invent it yourself: you're not clever enough.
LEXY. That's quite true. I am not ashamed of owing him that, as I owe him so many other
    spiritual truths. He said it at the annual conference of the Women's Liberal Federation.
    Allow me to add that though they didn't appreciate it, I, a mere man, did. (He turns to the
    bookcase again, hoping that this may leave her crushed.)
PROSERPINE (putting her hair straight at the little panel of mirror in the mantelpiece). Well,
    when you talk to me, give me your own ideas, such as they are, and not his. You never
    cut a poorer figure than when you are trying to imitate him.
PROSERPINE (coming at him again on her way back to her work). Yes, you do: you
    IMITATE him. Why do you tuck your umbrella under your left arm instead of carrying
    it in your hand like anyone else? Why do you walk with your chin stuck out before you,
    hurrying along with that eager look in your eyes—you, who never get up before half
    past nine in the morning? Why do you say "knoaledge" in church, though you always
    say "knolledge" in private conversation! Bah! do you think I don't know? (She goes back
    to the typewriter.) Here, come and set about your work: we've wasted enough time for
    one morning. Here's a copy of the diary for to-day. (She hands him a memorandum.)
LEXY (deeply offended). Thank you. (He takes it and stands at the table with his back to her,
    reading it. She begins to transcribe her shorthand notes on the typewriter without
    troubling herself about his feelings. Mr. Burgess enters unannounced. He is a man of
    sixty, made coarse and sordid by the compulsory selfishness of petty commerce, and
    later on softened into sluggish bumptiousness by overfeeding and commercial success.
    A vulgar, ignorant, guzzling man, offensive and contemptuous to people whose labor is
    cheap, respectful to wealth and rank, and quite sincere and without rancour or envy in
    both attitudes. Finding him without talent, the world has offered him no decently paid
    work except ignoble work, and he has become in consequence, somewhat hoggish. But
    he has no suspicion of this himself, and honestly regards his commercial prosperity as
    the inevitable and socially wholesome triumph of the ability, industry, shrewdness and
    experience in business of a man who in private is easygoing, affectionate and
    humorously convivial to a fault. Corporeally, he is a podgy man, with a square, clean
    shaven face and a square beard under his chin; dust colored, with a patch of grey in the
      centre, and small watery blue eyes with a plaintively sentimental expression, which he
      transfers easily to his voice by his habit of pompously intoning his sentences.)
BURGESS (stopping on the threshold, and looking round). They told me Mr. Morell was here.
BURGESS (staring boorishly at her). You're not the same young lady as used to typewrite for
    him?
PROSERPINE. No.
BURGESS (assenting). No: she was younger. (Miss Garnett stolidly stares at him; then goes
    out with great dignity. He receives this quite obtusely, and crosses to the hearth-rug,
    where he turns and spreads himself with his back to the fire.) Startin' on your rounds,
    Mr. Mill?
LEXY (folding his paper and pocketing it). Yes: I must be off presently.
BURGESS (momentously). Don't let me detain you, Mr. Mill. What I come about is private
    between me and Mr. Morell.
LEXY (huffily). I have no intention of intruding, I am sure, Mr. Burgess. Good morning.
BURGESS (patronizingly). Oh, good morning to you. (Morell returns as Lexy is making for
    the door.)
MORELL (patting him affectionately on the shoulder). Take my silk handkerchief and wrap
   your throat up. There's a cold wind. Away with you.
BURGESS. Spoilin' your curates, as usu'l, James. Good mornin'. When I pay a man, an' 'is
    livin' depen's on me, I keep him in his place.
MORELL (rather shortly). I always keep my curates in their places as my helpers and
   comrades. If you get as much work out of your clerks and warehousemen as I do out of
   my curates, you must be getting rich pretty fast. Will you take your old chair?
              (He points with curt authority to the arm chair beside the
              fireplace; then takes the spare chair from the table and sits
              down in front of Burgess.)
BURGESS (without moving). Just the same as hever, James!
MORELL. When you last called—it was about three years ago, I think—you said the same
   thing a little more frankly. Your exact words then were: "Just as big a fool as ever,
   James?"
BURGESS (soothingly). Well, perhaps I did; but (with conciliatory cheerfulness) I meant no
    offence by it. A clergyman is privileged to be a bit of a fool, you know: it's on'y
    becomin' in his profession that he should. Anyhow, I come here, not to rake up hold
    differences, but to let bygones be bygones. (Suddenly becoming very solemn, and
    approaching Morell.) James: three year ago, you done me a hill turn. You done me hout
    of a contrac'; an' when I gev you 'arsh words in my nat'ral disappointment, you turned
    my daughrter again me. Well, I've come to act the part of a Cherischin. (Offering his
    hand.) I forgive you, James.
BURGESS (retreating, with almost lachrymose deprecation of this treatment). Is that becomin'
    language for a clergyman, James?—and you so partic'lar, too?
MORELL (hotly). No, sir, it is not becoming language for a clergyman. I used the wrong
   word. I should have said damn your impudence: that's what St. Paul, or any honest priest
   would have said to you. Do you think I have forgotten that tender of yours for the
   contract to supply clothing to the workhouse?
BURGESS (in a paroxysm of public spirit). I acted in the interest of the ratepayers, James. It
    was the lowest tender: you can't deny that.
MORELL. Yes, the lowest, because you paid worse wages than any other employer—
   starvation wages—aye, worse than starvation wages—to the women who made the
   clothing. Your wages would have driven them to the streets to keep body and soul
   together. (Getting angrier and angrier.) Those women were my parishioners. I shamed
   the Guardians out of accepting your tender: I shamed the ratepayers out of letting them
   do it: I shamed everybody but you. (Boiling over.) How dare you, sir, come here and
   offer to forgive me, and talk about your daughter, and—
BURGESS. Easy, James, easy, easy. Don't git hinto a fluster about nothink. I've howned I was
    wrong.
BURGESS. Of course I did. I hown it now. Come: I harsk your pardon for the letter I wrote
    you. Is that enough?
MORELL (snapping his fingers). That's nothing. Have you raised the wages?
BURGESS (triumphantly). Yes.
BURGESS (unctuously). I've turned a moddle hemployer. I don't hemploy no women now:
    they're all sacked; and the work is done by machinery. Not a man 'as less than sixpence a
    hour; and the skilled 'ands gits the Trade Union rate. (Proudly.) What 'ave you to say to
    me now?
MORELL (overwhelmed). Is it possible! Well, there's more joy in heaven over one sinner that
   repenteth— (Going to Burgess with an explosion of apologetic cordiality.) My dear
   Burgess, I most heartily beg your pardon for my hard thoughts of you. (Grasps his
   hand.) And now, don't you feel the better for the change? Come, confess, you're happier.
   You look happier.
BURGESS (ruefully). Well, p'raps I do. I s'pose I must, since you notice it. At all events, I git
    my contrax asseppit (accepted) by the County Council. (Savagely.) They dussent'ave
    nothink to do with me unless I paid fair wages—curse 'em for a parcel o' meddlin' fools!
MORELL (dropping his hand, utterly discouraged). So that was why you raised the wages!
   (He sits down moodily.)
BURGESS (severely, in spreading, mounting tones). Why else should I do it? What does it
    lead to but drink and huppishness in workin' men? (He seats himself magisterially in the
    easy chair.) It's hall very well for you, James: it gits you hinto the papers and makes a
    great man of you; but you never think of the 'arm you do, puttin' money into the pockets
    of workin' men that they don't know 'ow to spend, and takin' it from people that might be
    makin' a good huse on it.
MORELL (with a heavy sigh, speaking with cold politeness). What is your business with me
   this morning? I shall not pretend to believe that you are here merely out of family
   sentiment.
BURGESS (rising threateningly). Don't say that to me again, James Mavor Morell.
MORELL (unmoved). I'll say it just as often as may be necessary to convince you that it's true.
   I don't believe you.
BURGESS (collapsing into an abyss of wounded feeling). Oh, well, if you're determined to be
    unfriendly, I s'pose I'd better go. (He moves reluctantly towards the door. Morell makes
    no sign. He lingers.) I didn't hexpect to find a hunforgivin' spirit in you, James. (Morell
    still not responding, he takes a few more reluctant steps doorwards. Then he comes back
      whining.) We huseter git on well enough, spite of our different opinions. Why are you so
      changed to me? I give you my word I come here in pyorr (pure) frenliness, not wishin' to
      be on bad terms with my hown daughrter's 'usban'. Come, James: be a Cherishin and
      shake 'ands. (He puts his hand sentimentally on Morell's shoulder.)
MORELL (cutting him short). Yes, you did. And I thought you an old scoundrel.
BURGESS (most vehemently deprecating this gross self-accusation on Morell's part). No, you
    didn't, James. Now you do yourself a hinjustice.
MORELL. Yes, I did. Well, that did not prevent our getting on very well together. God made
   you what I call a scoundrel as he made me what you call a fool. (The effect of this
   observation on Burgess is to remove the keystone of his moral arch. He becomes bodily
   weak, and, with his eyes fixed on Morell in a helpless stare, puts out his hand
   apprehensively to balance himself, as if the floor had suddenly sloped under him. Morell
   proceeds in the same tone of quiet conviction.) It was not for me to quarrel with his
   handiwork in the one case more than in the other. So long as you come here honestly as
   a self-respecting, thorough, convinced scoundrel, justifying your scoundrelism, and
   proud of it, you are welcome. But (and now Morell's tone becomes formidable; and he
   rises and strikes the back of the chair for greater emphasis) I won't have you here
   snivelling about being a model employer and a converted man when you're only an
   apostate with your coat turned for the sake of a County Council contract. (He nods at
   him to enforce the point; then goes to the hearth-rug, where he takes up a comfortably
   commanding position with his back to the fire, and continues) No: I like a man to be true
   to himself, even in wickedness. Come now: either take your hat and go; or else sit down
   and give me a good scoundrelly reason for wanting to be friends with me. (Burgess,
   whose emotions have subsided sufficiently to be expressed by a dazed grin, is relieved
   by this concrete proposition. He ponders it for a moment, and then, slowly and very
   modestly, sits down in the chair Morell has just left.) That's right. Now, out with it.
BURGESS (chuckling in spite of himself.) Well, you ARE a queer bird, James, and no
    mistake. But (almost enthusiastically) one carnt 'elp likin' you; besides, as I said afore, of
    course one don't take all a clorgyman says seriously, or the world couldn't go on. Could
      it now? (He composes himself for graver discourse, and turning his eyes on Morell
      proceeds with dull seriousness.) Well, I don't mind tellin' you, since it's your wish we
      should be free with one another, that I did think you a bit of a fool once; but I'm
      beginnin' to think that p'r'aps I was be'ind the times a bit.
MORELL (delighted ). Aha! You're finding that out at last, are you?
BURGESS (portentously). Yes, times 'as changed mor'n I could a believed. Five yorr (year)
    ago, no sensible man would a thought o' takin' up with your ideas. I hused to wonder you
    was let preach at all. Why, I know a clorgyman that 'as bin kep' hout of his job for yorrs
    by the Bishop of London, although the pore feller's not a bit more religious than you are.
    But to-day, if henyone was to offer to bet me a thousan' poun' that you'll end by bein' a
    bishop yourself, I shouldn't venture to take the bet. You and yore crew are gettin'
    hinfluential: I can see that. They'll 'ave to give you something someday, if it's only to
    stop yore mouth. You 'ad the right instinc' arter all, James: the line you took is the payin'
    line in the long run fur a man o' your sort.
MORELL (decisively—offering his hand). Shake hands, Burgess. Now you're talking
   honestly. I don't think they'll make me a bishop; but if they do, I'll introduce you to the
   biggest jobbers I can get to come to my dinner parties.
BURGESS (who has risen with a sheepish grin and accepted the hand of friendship). You will
    'ave your joke, James. Our quarrel's made up now, isn't it?
               Startled, they turn quickly and find that Candida has just come
               in, and is looking at them with an amused maternal indulgence
               which is her characteristic expression. She is a woman of 33,
               well built, well nourished, likely, one guesses, to become
               matronly later on, but now quite at her best, with the double
               charm of youth and motherhood. Her ways are those of a
               woman who has found that she can always manage people by
               engaging their affection, and who does so frankly and
               instinctively without the smallest scruple. So far, she is like any
               other pretty woman who is just clever enough to make the most
               of her sexual attractions for trivially selfish ends; but Candida's
               serene brow, courageous eyes, and well set mouth and chin
               signify largeness of mind and dignity of character to ennoble
               her cunning in the affections. A wisehearted observer, looking
               at her, would at once guess that whoever had placed the Virgin
               of the Assumption over her hearth did so because he fancied
               some spiritual resemblance between them, and yet would not
               suspect either her husband or herself of any such idea, or
               indeed of any concern with the art of Titian.
              Just now she is in bonnet and mantle, laden with a strapped rug
              with her umbrella stuck through it, a handbag, and a supply of
              illustrated papers.
MORELL (shocked at his remissness). Candida! Why—(looks at his watch, and is horrified to
   find it so late.) My darling! (Hurrying to her and seizing the rug strap, pouring forth his
   remorseful regrets all the time.) I intended to meet you at the train. I let the time slip.
   (Flinging the rug on the sofa.) I was so engrossed by—(returning to her)—I forgot—oh!
   (He embraces her with penitent emotion.)
BURGESS (a little shamefaced and doubtful of his reception). How ors you, Candy? (She, still
    in Morell's arms, offers him her cheek, which he kisses.) James and me is come to a
    unnerstandin'—a honourable unnerstandin'. Ain' we, James?
MORELL (impetuously). Oh, bother your understanding! You've kept me late for Candida.
   (With compassionate fervor.) My poor love: how did you manage about the luggage?—
   how—
CANDIDA (stopping him and disengaging herself ). There, there, there. I wasn't alone. Eugene
    came down yesterday; and we traveled up together.
CANDIDA. Yes: he's struggling with my luggage, poor boy. Go out, dear, at once; or he will
    pay for the cab; and I don't want that. (Morell hurries out. Candida puts down her
    handbag; then takes off her mantle and bonnet and puts them on the sofa with the rug,
    chatting meanwhile.) Well, papa, how are you getting on at home?
BURGESS. The 'ouse ain't worth livin' in since you left it, Candy. I wish you'd come round
    and give the gurl a talkin' to. Who's this Eugene that's come with you?
CANDIDA. Oh, Eugene's one of James's discoveries. He found him sleeping on the
    Embankment last June. Haven't you noticed our new picture (pointing to the Virgin)? He
    gave us that.
BURGESS (incredulously). Garn! D'you mean to tell me—your hown father!—that cab touts
    or such like, orf the Embankment, buys pictur's like that? (Severely.) Don't deceive me,
    Candy: it's a 'Igh Church pictur; and James chose it hisself.
BURGESS (pretending to belittle the aristocracy, but with his eyes gleaming). Hm, I thort you
    wouldn't git a piorr's (peer's) nevvy visitin' in Victoria Park unless he were a bit of a flat.
    (Looking again at the picture.) Of course I don't 'old with that pictur, Candy; but still it's
    a 'igh class, fust rate work of art: I can see that. Be sure you hintroduce me to him,
    Candy. (He looks at his watch anxiously.) I can only stay about two minutes.
MORELL (as he enters). Come along: you can spare us quarter of an hour, at all events. This is
   my father-in-law, Mr. Burgess—Mr. Marchbanks.
MARCHBANKS (nervously backing against the bookcase). Glad to meet you, sir.
BURGESS (crossing to him with great heartiness, whilst Morell joins Candida at the fire).
    Glad to meet YOU, I'm shore, Mr. Morchbanks. (Forcing him to shake hands.) 'Ow do
      you find yoreself this weather? 'Ope you ain't lettin' James put no foolish ideas into your
      'ed?
BURGESS. That's right. (Again looking at his watch.) Well, I must go now: there's no 'elp for
    it. Yo're not comin' my way, are you, Mr. Morchbanks?
BURGESS. Well, well, I shan't press you: I bet you'd rather lunch with Candy. Some night, I
    'ope, you'll come and dine with me at my club, the Freeman Founders in Nortn Folgit.
    Come, say you will.
MARCHBANKS. Thank you, Mr. Burgess. Where is Norton Folgate—down in Surrey, isn't
   it? (Burgess, inexpressibly tickled, begins to splutter with laughter.)
CANDIDA (coming to the rescue). You'll lose your train, papa, if you don't go at once. Come
    back in the afternoon and tell Mr. Marchbanks where to find the club.
BURGESS (roaring with glee). Down in Surrey—har, har! that's not a bad one. Well, I never
    met a man as didn't know Nortn Folgit before.(Abashed at his own noisiness.) Good-
    bye, Mr. Morchbanks: I know yo're too 'ighbred to take my pleasantry in bad part. (He
    again offers his hand.)
BURGESS. Bye, bye, Candy. I'll look in again later on. So long, James.
MORELL. Oh, I'll see you out. (He follows him out. Eugene stares after them apprehensively,
   holding his breath until Burgess disappears.)
CANDIDA (laughing). Well, Eugene. (He turns with a start and comes eagerly towards her,
    but stops irresolutely as he meets her amused look.) What do you think of my father?
MARCHBANKS. I—I hardly know him yet. He seems to be a very nice old gentleman.
CANDIDA (with gentle irony). And you'll go to the Freeman Founders to dine with him, won't
    you?
CANDIDA (touched). Do you know, you are a very nice boy, Eugene, with all your queerness.
    If you had laughed at my father I shouldn't have minded; but I like you ever so much
    better for being nice to him.
MARCHBANKS. Ought I to have laughed? I noticed that he said something funny; but I am
   so ill at ease with strangers; and I never can see a joke! I'm very sorry. (He sits down on
   the sofa, his elbows on his knees and his temples between his fists, with an expression of
   hopeless suffering.)
CANDIDA (bustling him goodnaturedly). Oh, come! You great baby, you! You are worse than
    usual this morning. Why were you so melancholy as we came along in the cab?
MARCHBANKS. Oh, that was nothing. I was wondering how much I ought to give the
   cabman. I know it's utterly silly; but you don't know how dreadful such things are to
   me—how I shrink from having to deal with strange people. (Quickly and reassuringly.)
   But it's all right. He beamed all over and touched his hat when Morell gave him two
   shillings. I was on the point of offering him ten. (Candida laughs heartily. Morell comes
   back with a few letters and newspapers which have come by the midday post.)
CANDIDA. Oh, James, dear, he was going to give the cabman ten shillings—ten shillings for
    a three minutes' drive—oh, dear!
MORELL (at the table, glancing through the letters). Never mind her, Marchbanks. The
   overpaying instinct is a generous one: better than the underpaying instinct, and not so
   common.
MARCHBANKS (relapsing into dejection). No: cowardice, incompetence. Mrs. Morell's quite
   right.
CANDIDA. Of course she is. (She takes up her handbag.) And now I must leave you to James
    for the present. I suppose you are too much of a poet to know the state a woman finds
    her house in when she's been away for three weeks. Give me my rug. (Eugene takes the
    strapped rug from the couch, and gives it to her. She takes it in her left hand, having the
    bag in her right.) Now hang my cloak across my arm. (He obeys.) Now my hat. (He puts
    it into the hand which has the bag.) Now open the door for me. (He hurries up before her
    and opens the door.) Thanks. (She goes out; and Marchbanks shuts the door.)
MORELL (still busy at the table). You'll stay to lunch, Marchbanks, of course.
MARCHBANKS (scared). I mustn't. (He glances quickly at Morell, but at once avoids his
   frank look, and adds, with obvious disingenuousness) I can't.
MORELL (over his shoulder). You mean you won't.
MARCHBANKS (earnestly). No: I should like to, indeed. Thank you very much. But—but—
MORELL (breezily, finishing with the letters and coming close to him). But—but—but—
   but—bosh! If you'd like to stay, stay. You don't mean to persuade me you have anything
   else to do. If you're shy, go and take a turn in the park and write poetry until half past
   one; and then come in and have a good feed.
MARCHBANKS. Thank you, I should like that very much. But I really mustn't. The truth is,
   Mrs. Morell told me not to. She said she didn't think you'd ask me to stay to lunch, but
   that I was to remember, if you did, that you didn't really want me to. (Plaintively.) She
   said I'd understand; but I don't. Please don't tell her I told you.
MORELL (drolly). Oh, is that all? Won't my suggestion that you should take a turn in the park
   meet the difficulty?
MARCHBANKS. How?
MORELL (buoyantly). I know it, my lad. La Rochefoucauld said that there are convenient
   marriages, but no delightful ones. You don't know the comfort of seeing through and
   through a thundering liar and rotten cynic like that fellow. Ha, ha! Now off with you to
   the park, and write your poem. Half past one, sharp, mind: we never wait for anybody.
MARCHBANKS (wildly). No: stop: you shan't. I'll force it into the light.
MARCHBANKS. I must speak to you. There is something that must be settled between us.
MORELL (without moving, and gravely, perceiving now that there is something serious the
   matter). I'm not going to leave it, my dear boy: I thought YOU were. (Eugene, baffled by
   his firm tone, turns his back on him, writhing with anger. Morell goes to him and puts
   his hand on his shoulder strongly and kindly, disregarding his attempt to shake it off)
   Come: sit down quietly; and tell me what it is. And remember; we are friends, and need
   not fear that either of us will be anything but patient and kind to the other, whatever we
   may have to say.
MARCHBANKS (twisting himself round on him). Oh, I am not forgetting myself: I am only
   (covering his face desperately with his hands) full of horror. (Then, dropping his hands,
   and thrusting his face forward fiercely at Morell, he goes on threateningly.) You shall
   see whether this is a time for patience and kindness. (Morell, firm as a rock, looks
   indulgently at him.) Don't look at me in that self-complacent way. You think yourself
   stronger than I am; but I shall stagger you if you have a heart in your breast.
MARCHBANKS. First—
MORELL. First?
MORELL (sitting down to have his laugh out). Why, my dear child, of course you do.
   Everybody loves her: they can't help it. I like it. But (looking up whimsically at him) I
   say, Eugene: do you think yours is a case to be talked about? You're under twenty: she's
   over thirty. Doesn't it look rather too like a case of calf love?
MARCHBANKS (vehemently). YOU dare say that of her! You think that way of the love she
   inspires! It is an insult to her!
MORELL (rising; quickly, in an altered tone). To her! Eugene: take care. I have been patient. I
   hope to remain patient. But there are some things I won't allow. Don't force me to show
   you the indulgence I should show to a child. Be a man.
MARCHBANKS (with a gesture as if sweeping something behind him). Oh, let us put aside
   all that cant. It horrifies me when I think of the doses of it she has had to endure in all
   the weary years during which you have selfishly and blindly sacrificed her to minister to
      your self-sufficiency—YOU (turning on him) who have not one thought—one sense—in
      common with her.
MORELL (philosophically). She seems to bear it pretty well. (Looking him straight in the
   face.) Eugene, my boy: you are making a fool of yourself—a very great fool of yourself.
   There's a piece of wholesome plain speaking for you.
MARCHBANKS. Oh, do you think I don't know all that? Do you think that the things people
   make fools of themselves about are any less real and true than the things they behave
   sensibly about? (Morell's gaze wavers for the first time. He instinctively averts his face
   and stands listening, startled and thoughtful.) They are more true: they are the only
   things that are true. You are very calm and sensible and moderate with me because you
   can see that I am a fool about your wife; just as no doubt that old man who was here just
   now is very wise over your socialism, because he sees that YOU are a fool about it.
   (Morell's perplexity deepens markedly. Eugene follows up his advantage, plying him
   fiercely with questions.) Does that prove you wrong? Does your complacent superiority
   to me prove that I am wrong?
MORELL (turning on Eugene, who stands his ground). Marchbanks: some devil is putting
   these words into your mouth. It is easy—terribly easy—to shake a man's faith in himself.
   To take advantage of that to break a man's spirit is devil's work. Take care of what you
   are doing. Take care.
MARCHBANKS (ruthlessly). I know. I'm doing it on purpose. I told you I should stagger you.
MORELL (with noble tenderness). Eugene: listen to me. Some day, I hope and trust, you will
   be a happy man like me. (Eugene chafes intolerantly, repudiating the worth of his
   happiness. Morell, deeply insulted, controls himself with fine forbearance, and continues
   steadily, with great artistic beauty of delivery) You will be married; and you will be
   working with all your might and valor to make every spot on earth as happy as your own
   home. You will be one of the makers of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth; and—who
   knows?—you may be a pioneer and master builder where I am only a humble
   journeyman; for don't think, my boy, that I cannot see in you, young as you are, promise
   of higher powers than I can ever pretend to. I well know that it is in the poet that the
   holy spirit of man—the god within him—is most godlike. It should make you tremble to
   think of that—to think that the heavy burthen and great gift of a poet may be laid upon
   you.
MARCHBANKS (unimpressed and remorseless, his boyish crudity of assertion telling sharply
   against Morell's oratory). It does not make me tremble. It is the want of it in others that
   makes me tremble.
MORELL (redoubling his force of style under the stimulus of his genuine feeling and Eugene's
   obduracy). Then help to kindle it in them—in ME—-not to extinguish it. In the future—
   when you are as happy as I am—I will be your true brother in the faith. I will help you
   to believe that God has given us a world that nothing but our own folly keeps from being
   a paradise. I will help you to believe that every stroke of your work is sowing happiness
   for the great harvest that all—even the humblest—shall one day reap. And last, but trust
   me, not least, I will help you to believe that your wife loves you and is happy in her
   home. We need such help, Marchbanks: we need it greatly and always. There are so
   many things to make us doubt, if once we let our understanding be troubled. Even at
   home, we sit as if in camp, encompassed by a hostile army of doubts. Will you play the
   traitor and let them in on me?
MARCHBANKS (looking round him). Is it like this for her here always? A woman, with a
   great soul, craving for reality, truth, freedom, and being fed on metaphors, sermons, stale
   perorations, mere rhetoric. Do you think a woman's soul can live on your talent for
   preaching?
MORELL (Stung). Marchbanks: you make it hard for me to control myself. My talent is like
   yours insofar as it has any real worth at all. It is the gift of finding words for divine truth.
MARCHBANKS (impetuously). It's the gift of the gab, nothing more and nothing less. What
   has your knack of fine talking to do with the truth, any more than playing the organ has?
   I've never been in your church; but I've been to your political meetings; and I've seen
   you do what's called rousing the meeting to enthusiasm: that is, you excited them until
   they behaved exactly as if they were drunk. And their wives looked on and saw clearly
   enough what fools they were. Oh, it's an old story: you'll find it in the Bible. I imagine
   King David, in his fits of enthusiasm, was very like you. (Stabbing him with the words.)
   "But his wife despised him in her heart."
MORELL (wrathfully). Leave my house. Do you hear? (He advances on him threateningly.)
MARCHBANKS (shrinking back against the couch). Let me alone. Don't touch me. (Morell
   grasps him powerfully by the lapel of his coat: he cowers down on the sofa and screams
   passionately.) Stop, Morell, if you strike me, I'll kill myself. I won't bear it. (Almost in
   hysterics.) Let me go. Take your hand away.
MORELL (with slow, emphatic scorn.) You little snivelling, cowardly whelp. (Releasing him.)
   Go, before you frighten yourself into a fit.
MARCHBANKS (on the sofa, gasping, but relieved by the withdrawal of Morell's hand). I'm
   not afraid of you: it's you who are afraid of me.
MORELL (quietly, as he stands over him). It looks like it, doesn't it?
MORELL (with cold scorn). Wait a moment: I am not going to touch you: don't be afraid.
   When my wife comes back she will want to know why you have gone. And when she
   finds that you are never going to cross our threshold again, she will want to have that
   explained, too. Now I don't wish to distress her by telling her that you have behaved like
   a blackguard.
MARCHBANKS (Coming back with renewed vehemence). You shall—you must. If you give
   any explanation but the true one, you are a liar and a coward. Tell her what I said; and
   how you were strong and manly, and shook me as a terrier shakes a rat; and how I
   shrank and was terrified; and how you called me a snivelling little whelp and put me out
   of the house. If you don't tell her, I will: I'll write to her.
MARCHBANKS (with lyric rapture.) Because she will understand me, and know that I
   understand her. If you keep back one word of it from her—if you are not ready to lay the
   truth at her feet as I am—then you will know to the end of your days that she really
   belongs to me and not to you. Good-bye. (Going.)
MARCHBANKS (turning near the door). Either the truth or a lie you MUST tell her, if I go.
MARCHBANKS (cutting him short). I know—to lie. It will be useless. Good-bye, Mr.
   Clergyman.
CANDIDA. Are you going, Eugene?(Looking more observantly at him.) Well, dear me, just
    look at you, going out into the street in that state! You ARE a poet, certainly. Look at
    him, James! (She takes him by the coat, and brings him forward to show him to Morell.)
    Look at his collar! look at his tie! look at his hair! One would think somebody had been
       throttling you. (The two men guard themselves against betraying their consciousness.)
       Here! Stand still. (She buttons his collar; ties his neckerchief in a bow; and arranges his
       hair.) There! Now you look so nice that I think you'd better stay to lunch after all,
       though I told you you mustn't. It will be ready in half an hour. (She puts a final touch to
       the bow. He kisses her hand.) Don't be silly.
 MARCHBANKS. I want to stay, of course—unless the reverend gentleman, your husband, has
    anything to advance to the contrary.
 CANDIDA. Shall he stay, James, if he promises to be a good boy and to help me to lay the
     table? (Marchbanks turns his head and looks steadfastly at Morell over his shoulder,
     challenging his answer.)
 MORELL (shortly). Oh, yes, certainly: he had better. (He goes to the table and pretends to
    busy himself with his papers there.)
 MARCHBANKS (offering his arm to Candida). Come and lay the table.(She takes it and they
    go to the door together. As they go out he adds) I am the happiest of men.
ACT II
The same day. The same room. Late in the afternoon. The spare chair for visitors has
been replaced at the table, which is, if possible, more untidy than before. Marchbanks,
alone and idle, is trying to find out how the typewriter works. Hearing someone at the
door, he steals guiltily away to the window and pretends to be absorbed in the view.
Miss Garnett, carrying the notebook in which she takes down Morell's letters in
shorthand from his dictation, sits down at the typewriter and sets to work transcribing
them, much too busy to notice Eugene. Unfortunately the first key she strikes sticks.
 PROSERPINE. Bother! You've been meddling with my typewriter, Mr. Marchbanks; and
     there's not the least use in your trying to look as if you hadn't.
MARCHBANKS (timidly). I'm very sorry, Miss Garnett. I only tried to make it write.
PROSERPINE. Oh, now I understand. (She sets the machine to rights, talking volubly all the
    time.) I suppose you thought it was a sort of barrel-organ. Nothing to do but turn the
    handle, and it would write a beautiful love letter for you straight off, eh?
MARCHBANKS. I beg your pardon. I thought clever people—people who can do business
   and write letters, and that sort of thing—always had love affairs.
PROSERPINE (rising, outraged). Mr. Marchbanks! (She looks severely at him, and marches
    with much dignity to the bookcase.)
MARCHBANKS (approaching her humbly). I hope I haven't offended you. Perhaps I shouldn't
   have alluded to your love affairs.
PROSERPINE (plucking a blue book from the shelf and turning sharply on him). I haven't any
    love affairs. How dare you say such a thing?
MARCHBANKS (simply). Really! Oh, then you are shy, like me. Isn't that so?
MARCHBANKS (secretly). You must be: that is the reason there are so few love affairs in the
   world. We all go about longing for love: it is the first need of our natures, the loudest cry
   Of our hearts; but we dare not utter our longing: we are too shy. (Very earnestly.) Oh,
   Miss Garnett, what would you not give to be without fear, without shame—
MARCHBANKS (with petulant impatience). Ah, don't say those stupid things to me: they
   don't deceive me: what use are they? Why are you afraid to be your real self with me? I
   am just like you.
PROSERPINE. Like me! Pray, are you flattering me or flattering yourself? I don't feel quite
    sure which. (She turns to go back to the typewriter.)
MARCHBANKS (stopping her mysteriously). Hush! I go about in search of love; and I find it
   in unmeasured stores in the bosoms of others. But when I try to ask for it, this horrible
   shyness strangles me; and I stand dumb, or worse than dumb, saying meaningless
      things—foolish lies. And I see the affection I am longing for given to dogs and cats and
      pet birds, because they come and ask for it. (Almost whispering.) It must be asked for: it
      is like a ghost: it cannot speak unless it is first spoken to. (At his normal pitch, but with
      deep melancholy.) All the love in the world is longing to speak; only it dare not, because
      it is shy, shy, shy. That is the world's tragedy. (With a deep sigh he sits in the spare chair
      and buries his face in his hands.)
PROSERPINE (amazed, but keeping her wits about her—her point of honor in encounters with
    strange young men). Wicked people get over that shyness occasionally, don't they?
MARCHBANKS (scrambling up almost fiercely). Wicked people means people who have no
   love: therefore they have no shame. They have the power to ask love because they don't
   need it: they have the power to offer it because they have none to give. (He collapses
   into his seat, and adds, mournfully) But we, who have love, and long to mingle it with
   the love of others: we cannot utter a word. (Timidly.) You find that, don't you?
PROSERPINE. Look here: if you don't stop talking like this, I'll leave the room, Mr.
    Marchbanks: I really will. It's not proper. (She resumes her seat at the typewriter,
    opening the blue book and preparing to copy a passage from it.)
MARCHBANKS (hopelessly). Nothing that's worth saying IS proper. (He rises, and wanders
   about the room in his lost way, saying) I can't understand you, Miss Garnett. What am I
   to talk about?
PROSERPINE (snubbing him). Talk about indifferent things, talk about the weather.
MARCHBANKS. Would you stand and talk about indifferent things if a child were by, crying
   bitterly with hunger?
MARCHBANKS. Well: I can't talk about indifferent things with my heart crying out bitterly in
   ITS hunger.
MARCHBANKS. Yes: that is what it always comes to. We hold our tongues. Does that stop
   the cry of your heart?—for it does cry: doesn't it? It must, if you have a heart.
PROSERPINE (suddenly rising with her hand pressed on her heart). Oh, it's no use trying to
    work while you talk like that. (She leaves her little table and sits on the sofa. Her
    feelings are evidently strongly worked on.) It's no business of yours, whether my heart
    cries or not; but I have a mind to tell you, for all that.
MARCHBANKS (compassionately). Yes, I know. And so you haven't the courage to tell him?
MARCHBANKS. Whoever he is. The man you love. It might be anybody. The curate, Mr.
   Mill, perhaps.
PROSERPINE (with disdain). Mr. Mill!!! A fine man to break my heart about, indeed! I'd
    rather have you than Mr. Mill.
MARCHBANKS (recoiling). No, really—I'm very sorry; but you mustn't think of that. I—
PROSERPINE. (testily, crossing to the fire and standing at it with her back to him). Oh, don't
    be frightened: it's not you. It's not any one particular person.
MARCHBANKS. I know. You feel that you could love anybody that offered—
PROSERPINE (exasperated). Anybody that offered! No, I do not. What do you take me for?
MARCHBANKS. That is what all poets do: they talk to themselves out loud; and the world
   overhears them. But it's horribly lonely not to hear someone else talk sometimes.
PROSERPINE. Wait until Mr. Morell comes. HE'LL talk to you. (Marchbanks shudders.) Oh,
    you needn't make wry faces over him: he can talk better than you. (With temper.) He'd
    talk your little head off. (She is going back angrily to her place, when, suddenly
    enlightened, he springs up and stops her.)
MARCHBANKS. Your secret. Tell me: is it really and truly possible for a woman to love
   him?
PROSERPINE (attempting to snub him by an air of cool propriety). I simply don't know what
    you're talking about. I don't understand you.
PROSERPINE. Oh!
PROSERPINE (looking him straight in the face.) Yes. (He covers his face with his hands.)
    Whatever is the matter with you! (He takes down his hands and looks at her. Frightened
    at the tragic mask presented to her, she hurries past him at the utmost possible distance,
    keeping her eyes on his face until he turns from her and goes to the child's chair beside
    the hearth, where he sits in the deepest dejection. As she approaches the door, it opens
    and Burgess enters. On seeing him, she ejaculates) Praise heaven, here's somebody! (and
    sits down, reassured, at her table. She puts a fresh sheet of paper into the typewriter as
    Burgess crosses to Eugene.)
BURGESS (bent on taking care of the distinguished visitor). Well: so this is the way they
    leave you to yourself, Mr. Morchbanks. I've come to keep you company. (Marchbanks
    looks up at him in consternation, which is quite lost on him.) James is receivin' a
    deppitation in the dinin' room; and Candy is hupstairs educatin' of a young stitcher gurl
    she's hinterusted in. She's settin' there learnin' her to read out of the "'Ev'nly Twins."
    (Condolingly.) You must find it lonesome here with no one but the typist to talk to. (He
    pulls round the easy chair above fire, and sits down.)
PROSERPINE (highly incensed). He'll be all right now that he has the advantage of YOUR
    polished conversation: that's one comfort, anyhow. (She begins to typewrite with
    clattering asperity.)
BURGESS (amazed at her audacity). Hi was not addressin' myself to you, young woman, that
    I'm awerr of.
PROSERPINE (tartly, to Marchbanks). Did you ever see worse manners, Mr. Marchbanks?
BURGESS (with pompous severity). Mr. Morchbanks is a gentleman and knows his place,
    which is more than some people do.
PROSERPINE (fretfully). It's well you and I are not ladies and gentlemen: I'd talk to you
    pretty straight if Mr. Marchbanks wasn't here. (She pulls the letter out of the machine so
      crossly that it tears.) There, now I've spoiled this letter—have to be done all over again.
      Oh, I can't contain myself—silly old fathead!
BURGESS (rising, breathless with indignation). Ho! I'm a silly ole fathead, am I? Ho, indeed
    (gasping). Hall right, my gurl! Hall right. You just wait till I tell that to your employer.
    You'll see. I'll teach you: see if I don't.
PROSERPINE. I—
BURGESS (cutting her short). No, you've done it now. No huse a-talkin' to me. I'll let you
    know who I am. (Proserpine shifts her paper carriage with a defiant bang, and
    disdainfully goes on with her work.) Don't you take no notice of her, Mr. Morchbanks.
    She's beneath it. (He sits down again loftily.)
MARCHBANKS (miserably nervous and disconcerted). Hadn't we better change the subject.
   I—I don't think Miss Garnett meant anything.
PROSERPINE (gathering up her note-book and papers). That's for me. (She hurries out.)
BURGESS (calling after her). Oh, we can spare you. (Somewhat relieved by the triumph of
    having the last word, and yet half inclined to try to improve on it, he looks after her for a
    moment; then subsides into his seat by Eugene, and addresses him very confidentially.)
    Now we're alone, Mr. Morchbanks, let me give you a friendly 'int that I wouldn't give to
    everybody. 'Ow long 'ave you known my son-in-law James here?
MARCHBANKS. I don't know. I never can remember dates. A few months, perhaps.
BURGESS (impressively). No more you wouldn't. That's the danger in it. Well, he's mad.
MARCHBANKS. Mad!
BURGESS. Mad as a Morch 'are. You take notice on him and you'll see.
MARCHBANKS. What?
BURGESS. He sez to me—this is as sure as we're settin' here now—he sez: "I'm a fool," he
    sez;—"and yore a scounderl"—as cool as possible. Me a scounderl, mind you! And then
    shook 'ands with me on it, as if it was to my credit! Do you mean to tell me that that
    man's sane?
MORELL. (outside, calling to Proserpine, holding the door open). Get all their names and
   addresses, Miss Garnett.
BURGESS (aside to Marchbanks). Yorr he is. Just you keep your heye on him and see. (Rising
    momentously.) I'm sorry, James, to 'ave to make a complaint to you. I don't want to do
    it; but I feel I oughter, as a matter o' right and duty.
BURGESS. Mr. Morchbanks will bear me out: he was a witness. (Very solemnly.) Your young
    woman so far forgot herself as to call me a silly ole fat 'ead.
MORELL (delighted—with tremendous heartiness). Oh, now, isn't that EXACTLY like
   Prossy? She's so frank: she can't contain herself! Poor Prossy! Ha! Ha!
BURGESS (trembling with rage). And do you hexpec me to put up with it from the like of
    'ER?
MORELL. Pooh, nonsense! you can't take any notice of it. Never mind. (He goes to the
   cellaret and puts the papers into one of the drawers.)
BURGESS. Oh, I don't mind. I'm above it. But is it RIGHT?—that's what I want to know. Is it
    right?
MORELL. That's a question for the Church, not for the laity. Has it done you any harm, that's
   the question for you, eh? Of course, it hasn't. Think no more of it. (He dismisses the
   subject by going to his place at the table and setting to work at his correspondence.)
BURGESS (aside to Marchbanks). What did I tell you? Mad as a 'atter. (He goes to the table
    and asks, with the sickly civility of a hungry man) When's dinner, James?
BURGESS (with plaintive resignation). Gimme a nice book to read over the fire, will you,
    James: thur's a good chap.
BURGESS (with almost a yell of remonstrance). Nah-oo! Summat pleasant, just to pass the
    time. (Morell takes an illustrated paper from the table and offers it. He accepts it
    humbly.) Thank yer, James. (He goes back to his easy chair at the fire, and sits there at
    his ease, reading.)
MORELL (as he writes). Candida will come to entertain you presently. She has got rid of her
   pupil. She is filling the lamps.
MARCHBANKS (starting up in the wildest consternation). But that will soil her hands. I can't
   bear that, Morell: it's a shame. I'll go and fill them. (He makes for the door.)
MORELL. You'd better not. (Marchbanks stops irresolutely.) She'd only set you to clean my
   boots, to save me the trouble of doing it myself in the morning.
BURGESS (with grave disapproval). Don't you keep a servant now, James?
MORELL. Yes; but she isn't a slave; and the house looks as if I kept three. That means that
   everyone has to lend a hand. It's not a bad plan: Prossy and I can talk business after
   breakfast whilst we're washing up. Washing up's no trouble when there are two people to
   do it.
BURGESS (emphatically). That's quite right, Mr. Morchbanks. That's quite right. She IS
    corse-grained.
MARCHBANKS. Yes.
MARCHBANKS. Oh, I don't know. (He comes back uneasily to the sofa, as if to get as far as
   possible from Morell's questioning, and sits down in great agony of mind, thinking of
   the paraffin.)
MORELL. (very gravely). So many that you don't know. (More aggressively.) Anyhow, when
   there's anything coarse-grained to be done, you ring the bell and throw it on to
   somebody else, eh? That's one of the great facts in YOUR existence, isn't it?
MARCHBANKS. Oh, don't torture me. The one great fact now is that your wife's beautiful
   fingers are dabbling in paraffin oil, and that you are sitting here comfortably preaching
   about it—everlasting preaching, preaching, words, words, words.
BURGESS (intensely appreciating this retort). Ha, ha! Devil a better. (Radiantly.) 'Ad you
    there, James, straight.
CANDIDA (brushing her finger tips together with a slight twitch of her nose). If you stay with
    us, Eugene, I think I will hand over the lamps to you.
MARCHBANKS. I will stay on condition that you hand over all the rough work to me.
CANDIDA. That's very gallant; but I think I should like to see how you do it first. (Turning to
    Morell.) James: you've not been looking after the house properly.
CANDIDA (with serious vexation). My own particular pet scrubbing brush has been used for
    blackleading. (A heart-breaking wail bursts from Marchbanks. Burgess looks round,
    amazed. Candida hurries to the sofa.) What's the matter? Are you ill, Eugene?
MARCHBANKS. No, not ill. Only horror, horror, horror! (He bows his head on his hands.)
BURGESS (shocked). What! Got the 'orrors, Mr. Morchbanks! Oh, that's bad, at your age.
    You must leave it off grajally.
CANDIDA (reassured). Nonsense, papa. It's only poetic horror, isn't it, Eugene? (Petting him.)
BURGESS (abashed). Oh, poetic 'orror, is it? I beg your pordon, I'm shore. (He turns to the
    fire again, deprecating his hasty conclusion.)
CANDIDA. What is it, Eugene—the scrubbing brush? (He shudders.) Well, there! never mind.
    (She sits down beside him.) Wouldn't you like to present me with a nice new one, with
    an ivory back inlaid with mother-of-pearl?
MARCHBANKS (softly and musically, but sadly and longingly). No, not a scrubbing brush,
   but a boat—a tiny shallop to sail away in, far from the world, where the marble floors
   are washed by the rain and dried by the sun, where the south wind dusts the beautiful
      green and purple carpets. Or a chariot—to carry us up into the sky, where the lamps are
      stars, and don't need to be filled with paraffin oil every day.
MORELL (harshly). And where there is nothing to do but to be idle, selfish and useless.
MARCHBANKS (firing up). Yes, to be idle, selfish and useless: that is to be beautiful and free
   and happy: hasn't every man desired that with all his soul for the woman he loves?
   That's my ideal: what's yours, and that of all the dreadful people who live in these
   hideous rows of houses? Sermons and scrubbing brushes! With you to preach the
   sermon and your wife to scrub.
CANDIDA (quaintly). He cleans the boots, Eugene. You will have to clean them to-morrow
    for saying that about him.
MARCHBANKS. Oh! don't talk about boots. Your feet should be beautiful on the mountains.
CANDIDA. My feet would not be beautiful on the Hackney Road without boots.
BURGESS (scandalized). Come, Candy, don't be vulgar. Mr. Morchbanks ain't accustomed to
    it. You're givin' him the 'orrors again. I mean the poetic ones.
PROSERPINE (handing the telegram to Morell). Reply paid. The boy's waiting. (To Candida,
    coming back to her machine and sitting down.) Maria is ready for you now in the
    kitchen, Mrs. Morell. (Candida rises.) The onions have come.
CANDIDA. Yes, onions. Not even Spanish ones—nasty little red onions. You shall help me to
    slice them. Come along.
              (She catches him by the wrist and runs out, pulling him after
              her. Burgess rises in consternation, and stands aghast on the
              hearth-rug, staring after them.)
BURGESS. Candy didn't oughter 'andle a peer's nevvy like that. It's goin' too fur with it.
    Lookee 'ere, James: do 'e often git taken queer like that?
BURGESS (sentimentally). He talks very pretty. I allus had a turn for a bit of potery. Candy
    takes arter me that-a-way: huse ter make me tell her fairy stories when she was on'y a
    little kiddy not that 'igh (indicating a stature of two feet or thereabouts).
MORELL (preoccupied). Ah, indeed. (He blots the telegram, and goes out.)
PROSERPINE. Used you to make the fairy stories up out of your own head?
PROSERPINE (calmly). I should never have supposed you had it in you. By the way, I'd better
    warn you, since you've taken such a fancy to Mr. Marchbanks. He's mad.
PROSERPINE. Mad as a March hare. He did frighten me, I can tell you just before you came
    in that time. Haven't you noticed the queer things he says?
BURGESS. So that's wot the poetic 'orrors means. Blame me if it didn't come into my head
    once or twyst that he must be off his chump! (He crosses the room to the door, lifting up
    his voice as he goes.) Well, this is a pretty sort of asylum for a man to be in, with no one
    but you to take care of him!
PROSERPINE (as he passes her). Yes, what a dreadful thing it would be if anything happened
    to YOU!
BURGESS (loftily). Don't you address no remarks to me. Tell your hemployer that I've gone
    into the garden for a smoke.
MORELL (brusquely). Oh, all right, all right. (Burgess goes out pathetically in the character of
   the weary old man. Morell stands at the table, turning over his papers, and adding,
   across to Proserpine, half humorously, half absently) Well, Miss Prossy, why have you
   been calling my father-in-law names?
PROSERPINE (blushing fiery red, and looking quickly up at him, half scared, half
    reproachful). I— (She bursts into tears.)
MORELL (with tender gaiety, leaning across the table towards her, and consoling her). Oh,
   come, come, come! Never mind, Pross: he IS a silly old fathead, isn't he?
              (Candida comes in. She has finished her household work and
              taken of the apron. She at once notices his dejected appearance,
              and posts herself quietly at the spare chair, looking down at
              him attentively; but she says nothing.)
MORELL (looking up, but with his pen raised ready to resume his work). Well? Where is
   Eugene?
CANDIDA. Washing his hands in the scullery—under the tap. He will make an excellent cook
    if he can only get over his dread of Maria.
CANDIDA (going nearer, and putting her hand down softly on his to stop him, as she says).
    Come here, dear. Let me look at you. (He drops his pen and yields himself at her
    disposal. She makes him rise and brings him a little away from the table, looking at him
    critically all the time.) Turn your face to the light. (She places him facing the window.)
    My boy is not looking well. Has he been overworking?
CANDIDA. He looks very pale, and grey, and wrinkled, and old. (His melancholy deepens;
    and she attacks it with wilful gaiety.) Here (pulling him towards the easy chair) you've
    done enough writing for to-day. Leave Prossy to finish it and come and talk to me.
MORELL. But—
CANDIDA. Yes, I MUST be talked to sometimes. (She makes him sit down, and seats herself
    on the carpet beside his knee.) Now (patting his hand) you're beginning to look better
    already. Why don't you give up all this tiresome overworking—going out every night
    lecturing and talking? Of course what you say is all very true and very right; but it does
    no good: they don't mind what you say to them one little bit. Of course they agree with
    you; but what's the use of people agreeing with you if they go and do just the opposite of
    what you tell them the moment your back is turned? Look at our congregation at St.
    Dominic's! Why do they come to hear you talking about Christianity every Sunday?
      Why, just because they've been so full of business and money-making for six days that
      they want to forget all about it and have a rest on the seventh, so that they can go back
      fresh and make money harder than ever! You positively help them at it instead of
      hindering them.
MORELL (with energetic seriousness). You know very well, Candida, that I often blow them
   up soundly for that. But if there is nothing in their church-going but rest and diversion,
   why don't they try something more amusing—more self-indulgent? There must be some
   good in the fact that they prefer St. Dominic's to worse places on Sundays.
CANDIDA. Oh, the worst places aren't open; and even if they were, they daren't be seen going
    to them. Besides, James, dear, you preach so splendidly that it's as good as a play for
    them. Why do you think the women are so enthusiastic?
CANDIDA. Oh, I know. You silly boy: you think it's your Socialism and your religion; but if it
    was that, they'd do what you tell them instead of only coming to look at you. They all
    have Prossy's complaint.
CANDIDA. Yes, Prossy, and all the other secretaries you ever had. Why does Prossy
    condescend to wash up the things, and to peel potatoes and abase herself in all manner of
    ways for six shillings a week less than she used to get in a city office? She's in love with
    you, James: that's the reason. They're all in love with you. And you are in love with
    preaching because you do it so beautifully. And you think it's all enthusiasm for the
    kingdom of Heaven on earth; and so do they. You dear silly!
MORELL. Candida: what dreadful, what soul-destroying cynicism! Are you jesting? Or—can
   it be?—are you jealous?
CANDIDA (laughing). No, no, no, no. Not jealous of anybody. Jealous for somebody else,
    who is not loved as he ought to be.
MORELL. Me!
CANDIDA. You! Why, you're spoiled with love and worship: you get far more than is good
    for you. No: I mean Eugene.
MORELL (hastily). Not at all. (Looking at her with troubled intensity.) You know that I have
   perfect confidence in you, Candida.
CANDIDA. You vain thing! Are you so sure of your irresistible attractions?
MORELL. Candida: you are shocking me. I never thought of my attractions. I thought of your
   goodness—your purity. That is what I confide in.
CANDIDA. What a nasty, uncomfortable thing to say to me! Oh, you ARE a clergyman,
    James—a thorough clergyman.
CANDIDA (with lively interest, leaning over to him with her arms on his knee). Eugene's
    always right. He's a wonderful boy: I have grown fonder and fonder of him all the time I
    was away. Do you know, James, that though he has not the least suspicion of it himself,
    he is ready to fall madly in love with me?
CANDIDA. Not a bit. (She takes her arms from his knee, and turns thoughtfully, sinking into a
    more restful attitude with her hands in her lap.) Some day he will know when he is
    grown up and experienced, like you. And he will know that I must have known. I
    wonder what he will think of me then.
CANDIDA (looking at him). Yes: it will depend on what happens to him. (He look vacantly at
    her.) Don't you see? It will depend on how he comes to learn what love really is. I mean
    on the sort of woman who will teach it to him.
MORELL (quite at a loss). Yes. No. I don't know what you mean.
CANDIDA (explaining). If he learns it from a good woman, then it will be all right: he will
    forgive me.
MORELL. Forgive!
CANDIDA. But suppose he learns it from a bad woman, as so many men do, especially poetic
    men, who imagine all women are angels! Suppose he only discovers the value of love
    when he has thrown it away and degraded himself in his ignorance. Will he forgive me
    then, do you think?
CANDIDA (realizing how stupid he is, and a little disappointed, though quite tenderly so).
    Don't you understand? (He shakes his head. She turns to him again, so as to explain with
    the fondest intimacy.) I mean, will he forgive me for not teaching him myself? For
    abandoning him to the bad women for the sake of my goodness—my purity, as you call
    it? Ah, James, how little you understand me, to talk of your confidence in my goodness
    and purity! I would give them both to poor Eugene as willingly as I would give my
    shawl to a beggar dying of cold, if there were nothing else to restrain me. Put your trust
    in my love for you, James, for if that went, I should care very little for your sermons—
    mere phrases that you cheat yourself and others with every day. (She is about to rise.)
CANDIDA (checking herself quickly in the act of getting up, so that she is on her knees, but
    upright). Whose words?
MORELL. Eugene's.
MORELL. How can you bear to do that when—oh, Candida (with anguish in his voice) I had
   rather you had plunged a grappling iron into my heart than given me that kiss.
MORELL (deadly white, putting an iron constraint on himself). Nothing but this: that either
   you were right this morning, or Candida is mad.
BURGESS (in loudest protest). Wot! Candy mad too! Oh, come, come, come! (He crosses the
    room to the fireplace, protesting as he goes, and knocks the ashes out of his pipe on the
    bars. Morell sits down desperately, leaning forward to hide his face, and interlacing his
    fingers rigidly to keep them steady.)
CANDIDA (to Morell, relieved and laughing). Oh, you're only shocked! Is that all? How
    conventional all you unconventional people are!
BURGESS. Come: be'ave yourself, Candy. What'll Mr. Morchbanks think of you?
CANDIDA. This comes of James teaching me to think for myself, and never to hold back out
    of fear of what other people may think of me. It works beautifully as long as I think the
    same things as he does. But now, because I have just thought something different!—
    look at him—just look!
BURGESS (on the hearth-rug). Well, James, you certainly ain't as himpressive lookin' as usu'l.
MORELL (with a laugh which is half a sob). I suppose not. I beg all your pardons: I was not
   conscious of making a fuss. (Pulling himself together.) Well, well, well, well, well! (He
   goes back to his place at the table, setting to work at his papers again with resolute
   cheerfulness.)
CANDIDA (going to the sofa and sitting beside Marchbanks, still in a bantering humor). Well,
    Eugene, why are you so sad? Did the onions make you cry?
MARCHBANKS (aside to her). It is your cruelty. I hate cruelty. It is a horrible thing to see
   one person make another suffer.
CANDIDA (petting him ironically). Poor boy, have I been cruel? Did I make it slice nasty
    little red onions?
MARCHBANKS (earnestly). Oh, stop, stop: I don't mean myself. You have made him suffer
   frightfully. I feel his pain in my own heart. I know that it is not your fault—it is
   something that must happen; but don't make light of it. I shudder when you torture him
   and laugh.
CANDIDA (incredulously). I torture James! Nonsense, Eugene: how you exaggerate! Silly!
    (She looks round at Morell, who hastily resumes his writing. She goes to him and stands
    behind his chair, bending over him.) Don't work any more, dear. Come and talk to us.
MORELL (affectionately but bitterly). Ah no: I can't talk. I can only preach.
BURGESS (strongly remonstrating). Aw, no, Candy. 'Ang it all! (Lexy Mill comes in, looking
    anxious and important.)
LEXY (hastening to shake hands with Candida). How do you do, Mrs. Morell? So glad to see
    you back again.
LEXY (to Morell). I've just come from the Guild of St. Matthew. They are in the greatest
    consternation about your telegram. There's nothing wrong, is there?
LEXY (to Candida). He was to have spoken for them tonight. They've taken the large hall in
    Mare Street and spent a lot of money on posters. Morell's telegram was to say he
    couldn't come. It came on them like a thunderbolt.
BURGESS. First time in his life, I'll bet. Ain' it, Candy?
LEXY (to Morell). They decided to send an urgent telegram to you asking whether you could
    not change your mind. Have you received it?
MORELL (almost fiercely). Because I don't choose. These people forget that I am a man: they
   think I am a talking machine to be turned on for their pleasure every evening of my life.
   May I not have ONE night at home, with my wife, and my friends?
              (They are all amazed at this outburst, except Eugene. His
              expression remains unchanged.)
CANDIDA. Oh, James, you know you'll have an attack of bad conscience to-morrow;
    and I shall have to suffer for that.
LEXY (intimidated, but urgent). I know, of course, that they make the most unreasonable
    demands on you. But they have been telegraphing all over the place for another speaker:
    and they can get nobody but the President of the Agnostic League.
LEXY. But he always insists so powerfully on the divorce of Socialism from Christianity. He
    will undo all the good we have been doing. Of course you know best; but—(He
    hesitates.)
BURGESS (grumbling). Look 'ere, Candy! I say! Let's stay at home by the fire, comfortable.
    He won't need to be more'n a couple-o'-hour away.
CANDIDA. You'll be just as comfortable at the meeting. We'll all sit on the platform and be
    great people.
EUGENE (terrified). Oh, please don't let us go on the platform. No—everyone will stare at
    us—I couldn't. I'll sit at the back of the room.
CANDIDA. Don't be afraid. They'll be too busy looking at James to notice you.
MORELL (turning his head and looking meaningly at her over his shoulder). Prossy's
   complaint, Candida! Eh?
BURGESS (mystified). Prossy's complaint. Wot are you talking about, James?
MORELL (not heeding him, rises; goes to the door; and holds it open, shouting in a
   commanding voice). Miss Garnett.
PROSERPINE (in the distance). Yes, Mr. Morell. Coming. (They all wait, except Burgess,
    who goes stealthily to Lexy and draws him aside.)
BURGESS. Listen here, Mr. Mill. Wot's Prossy's complaint? Wot's wrong with 'er?
LEXY (confidentially). Well, I don't exactly know; but she spoke very strangely to me this
    morning. I'm afraid she's a little out of her mind sometimes.
BURGESS (overwhelmed). Why, it must be catchin'! Four in the same 'ouse! (He goes back to
    the hearth, quite lost before the instability of the human intellect in a clergyman's house.)
BURGESS (in deprecation). Oh, don't put it like that, James. It's only that it ain't Sunday, you
    know.
MORELL. I'm sorry. I thought you might like to be introduced to the chairman. He's on the
   Works Committee of the County Council and has some influence in the matter of
   contracts. (Burgess wakes up at once. Morell, expecting as much, waits a moment, and
   says) Will you come?
BURGESS (with enthusiasm). Course I'll come, James. Ain' it always a pleasure to 'ear you.
MORELL (turning from him). I shall want you to take some notes at the meeting, Miss
   Garnett, if you have no other engagement. (She nods, afraid to speak.) You are coming,
   Lexy, I suppose.
LEXY. Certainly.
MORELL. No: you are not coming; and Eugene is not coming. You will stay here and
   entertain him—to celebrate your return home. (Eugene rises, breathless.)
MORELL (authoritatively). I insist. You do not want to come; and he does not want to come.
   (Candida is about to protest.) Oh, don't concern yourselves: I shall have plenty of people
   without you: your chairs will be wanted by unconverted people who have never heard
   me before.
 MARCHBANKS (to himself, with vivid feeling). That's brave. That's beautiful. (He sits down
    again listening with parted lips.)
 CANDIDA (with anxious misgiving). But—but—Is anything the matter, James? (Greatly
     troubled.) I can't understand—
 MORELL. Ah, I thought it was I who couldn't understand, dear. (He takes her tenderly in his
    arms and kisses her on the forehead; then looks round quietly at Marchbanks.)
ACT III
Late in the evening. Past ten. The curtains are drawn, and the lamps lighted. The
typewriter is in its case; the large table has been cleared and tidied; everything
indicates that the day's work is done.
Candida and Marchbanks are seated at the fire. The reading lamp is on the mantelshelf
above Marchbanks, who is sitting on the small chair reading aloud from a manuscript.
A little pile of manuscripts and a couple of volumes of poetry are on the carpet beside
him. Candida is in the easy chair with the poker, a light brass one, upright in her hand.
She is leaning back and looking at the point of it curiously, with her feet stretched
towards the blaze and her heels resting on the fender, profoundly unconscious of her
appearance and surroundings.
 MARCHBANKS (breaking off in his recitation): Every poet that ever lived has put that
    thought into a sonnet. He must: he can't help it. (He looks to her for assent, and notices
    her absorption in the poker.) Haven't you been listening? (No response.) Mrs. Morell!
 CANDIDA (with a guilty excess of politeness). Oh, yes. It's very nice. Go on, Eugene. I'm
     longing to hear what happens to the angel.
MARCHBANKS (crushed—the manuscript dropping from his hand to the floor). I beg your
   pardon for boring you.
CANDIDA. But you are not boring me, I assure you. Please go on. Do, Eugene.
MARCHBANKS. I finished the poem about the angel quarter of an hour ago. I've read you
   several things since.
CANDIDA (remorsefully). I'm so sorry, Eugene. I think the poker must have fascinated me.
    (She puts it down.)
CANDIDA. Why didn't you tell me? I'd have put it down at once.
MARCHBANKS. I was afraid of making you uneasy, too. It looked as if it were a weapon. If I
   were a hero of old, I should have laid my drawn sword between us. If Morell had come
   in he would have thought you had taken up the poker because there was no sword
   between us.
CANDIDA (wondering). What? (With a puzzled glance at him.) I can't quite follow that.
    Those sonnets of yours have perfectly addled me. Why should there be a sword between
    us?
MARCHBANKS (evasively). Oh, never mind. (He stoops to pick up the manuscript.)
CANDIDA. Put that down again, Eugene. There are limits to my appetite for poetry—even
    your poetry. You've been reading to me for more than two hours—ever since James
    went out. I want to talk.
MARCHBANKS (rising, scared). No: I mustn't talk. (He looks round him in his lost way, and
   adds, suddenly) I think I'll go out and take a walk in the park. (Making for the door.)
CANDIDA. Nonsense: it's shut long ago. Come and sit down on the hearth-rug, and talk
    moonshine as you usually do. I want to be amused. Don't you want to?
CANDIDA. Then come along. (She moves her chair back a little to make room. He hesitates;
    then timidly stretches himself on the hearth-rug, face upwards, and throws back his head
    across her knees, looking up at her.)
MARCHBANKS. Oh, I've been so miserable all the evening, because I was doing right. Now
   I'm doing wrong; and I'm happy.
CANDIDA (tenderly amused at him). Yes: I'm sure you feel a great grown up wicked
    deceiver—quite proud of yourself, aren't you?
MARCHBANKS (raising his head quickly and turning a little to look round at her). Take care.
   I'm ever so much older than you, if you only knew. (He turns quite over on his knees,
   with his hands clasped and his arms on her lap, and speaks with growing impulse, his
   blood beginning to stir.) May I say some wicked things to you?
CANDIDA (without the least fear or coldness, quite nobly, and with perfect respect for his
    passion, but with a touch of her wise-hearted maternal humor). No. But you may say
    anything you really and truly feel. Anything at all, no matter what it is. I am not afraid,
    so long as it is your real self that speaks, and not a mere attitude—a gallant attitude, or a
    wicked attitude, or even a poetic attitude. I put you on your honor and truth. Now say
    whatever you want to.
MARCHBANKS (the eager expression vanishing utterly from his lips and nostrils as his eyes
   light up with pathetic spirituality). Oh, now I can't say anything: all the words I know
   belong to some attitude or other—all except one.
MARCHBANKS (softly, losing himself in the music of the name). Candida, Candida,
   Candida, Candida, Candida. I must say that now, because you have put me on my honor
   and truth; and I never think or feel Mrs. Morell: it is always Candida.
MARCHBANKS. Nothing, but to repeat your name a thousand times. Don't you feel that
   every time is a prayer to you?
CANDIDA. Well, that happiness is the answer to your prayer. Do you want anything more?
MARCHBANKS (in beatitude). No: I have come into heaven, where want is unknown.
MORELL (grave and self-contained). I hope I don't disturb you. (Candida starts up violently,
   but without the smallest embarrassment, laughing at herself. Eugene, still kneeling,
   saves himself from falling by putting his hands on the seat of the chair, and remains
   there, staring open mouthed at Morell.)
CANDIDA (as she rises). Oh, James, how you startled me! I was so taken up with Eugene that
    I didn't hear your latch-key. How did the meeting go off? Did you speak well?
CANDIDA. That was first rate! How much was the collection?
CANDIDA (to Eugene). He must have spoken splendidly, or he would never have forgotten
    that. (To Morell.) Where are all the others?
MORELL. They left long before I could get away: I thought I should never escape. I believe
   they are having supper somewhere.
CANDIDA (in her domestic business tone). Oh; in that case, Maria may go to bed. I'll tell her.
    (She goes out to the kitchen.)
MARCHBANKS (squatting cross-legged on the hearth-rug, and actually at ease with Morell—
   even impishly humorous). Well?
MARCHBANKS. Only that I have been making a fool of myself here in private whilst you
   have been making a fool of yourself in public.
MARCHBANKS (scrambling up—eagerly). The very, very, VERY same way. I have been
   playing the good man just like you. When you began your heroics about leaving me here
   with Candida—
MARCHBANKS. Oh, yes: I've got that far. Heroics are infectious: I caught the disease from
   you. I swore not to say a word in your absence that I would not have said a month ago in
   your presence.
MARCHBANKS. (suddenly perching himself grotesquely on the easy chair). I was ass enough
   to keep it until about ten minutes ago. Up to that moment I went on desperately reading
   to her—reading my own poems—anybody's poems—to stave off a conversation. I was
      standing outside the gate of Heaven, and refusing to go in. Oh, you can't think how
      heroic it was, and how uncomfortable! Then—
MARCHBANKS (prosaically slipping down into a quite ordinary attitude in the chair). Then
   she couldn't bear being read to any longer.
MARCHBANKS. Yes.
MORELL. Well? (Fiercely.) Speak, man: have you no feeling for me?
MARCHBANKS (softly and musically). Then she became an angel; and there was a flaming
   sword that turned every way, so that I couldn't go in; for I saw that that gate was really
   the gate of Hell.
MARCHBANKS (rising in wild scorn). No, you fool: if she had done that I should never have
   seen that I was in Heaven already. Repulsed me! You think that would have saved me—
   virtuous indignation! Oh, you are not worthy to live in the same world with her. (He
   turns away contemptuously to the other side of the room.)
MORELL (who has watched him quietly without changing his place). Do you think you make
   yourself more worthy by reviling me, Eugene?
MARCHBANKS. Here endeth the thousand and first lesson. Morell: I don't think much of
   your preaching after all: I believe I could do it better myself. The man I want to meet is
   the man that Candida married.
MARCHBANKS. I don't mean the Reverend James Mavor Morell, moralist and windbag. I
   mean the real man that the Reverend James must have hidden somewhere inside his
   black coat—the man that Candida loved. You can't make a woman like Candida love
   you by merely buttoning your collar at the back instead of in front.
MORELL (boldly and steadily). When Candida promised to marry me, I was the same moralist
   and windbag that you now see. I wore my black coat; and my collar was buttoned
   behind instead of in front. Do you think she would have loved me any the better for
   being insincere in my profession?
MARCHBANKS (on the sofa hugging his ankles). Oh, she forgave you, just as she forgives
   me for being a coward, and a weakling, and what you call a snivelling little whelp and
      all the rest of it. (Dreamily.) A woman like that has divine insight: she loves our souls,
      and not our follies and vanities and illusions, or our collars and coats, or any other of the
      rags and tatters we are rolled up in. (He reflects on this for an instant; then turns intently
      to question Morell.) What I want to know is how you got past the flaming sword that
      stopped me.
MORELL (meaningly). Perhaps because I was not interrupted at the end of ten minutes.
MORELL. Man can climb to the highest summits; but he cannot dwell there long.
MARCHBANKS. It's false: there can he dwell for ever and there only. It's in the other
   moments that he can find no rest, no sense of the silent glory of life. Where would you
   have me spend my moments, if not on the summits?
MORELL. Yes, that, too. It was there that I earned my golden moment, and the right, in that
   moment, to ask her to love me. I did not take the moment on credit; nor did I use it to
   steal another man's happiness.
MARCHBANKS (rather disgustedly, trotting back towards the fireplace). I have no doubt you
   conducted the transaction as honestly as if you were buying a pound of cheese. (He stops
   on the brink of the hearth-rug and adds, thoughtfully, to himself, with his back turned to
   Morell) I could only go to her as a beggar.
MARCHBANKS (turning, surprised). Thank you for touching up my poetry. Yes, if you like,
   a beggar dying of cold asking for her shawl.
MORELL (excitedly). And she refused. Shall I tell you why she refused? I CAN tell you, on
   her own authority. It was because of—
MORELL. Not!
MARCHBANKS. She offered me all I chose to ask for, her shawl, her wings, the wreath of
   stars on her head, the lilies in her hand, the crescent moon beneath her feet—
MORELL (seizing him). Out with the truth, man: my wife is my wife: I want no more of your
   poetic fripperies. I know well that if I have lost her love and you have gained it, no law
   will bind her.
MARCHBANKS (quaintly, without fear or resistance). Catch me by the shirt collar, Morell:
   she will arrange it for me afterwards as she did this morning. (With quiet rapture.) I shall
   feel her hands touch me.
MORELL. You young imp, do you know how dangerous it is to say that to me? Or (with a
   sudden misgiving) has something made you brave?
MARCHBANKS. I'm not afraid now. I disliked you before: that was why I shrank from your
   touch. But I saw to-day—when she tortured you—that you love her. Since then I have
   been your friend: you may strangle me if you like.
MORELL (releasing him). Eugene: if that is not a heartless lie—if you have a spark of human
   feeling left in you—will you tell me what has happened during my absence?
MARCHBANKS. Misery! I am the happiest of men. I desire nothing now but her happiness.
   (With dreamy enthusiasm.) Oh, Morell, let us both give her up. Why should she have to
   choose between a wretched little nervous disease like me, and a pig-headed parson like
   you? Let us go on a pilgrimage, you to the east and I to the west, in search of a worthy
   lover for her—some beautiful archangel with purple wings—
MORELL. Some fiddlestick. Oh, if she is mad enough to leave me for you, who will protect
   her? Who will help her? who will work for her? who will be a father to her children?
   (He sits down distractedly on the sofa, with his elbows on his knees and his head
   propped on his clenched fists.)
MARCHBANKS (snapping his fingers wildly). She does not ask those silly questions. It is she
   who wants somebody to protect, to help, to work for—somebody to give her children to
   protect, to help and to work for. Some grown up man who has become as a little child
   again. Oh, you fool, you fool, you triple fool! I am the man, Morell: I am the man. (He
   dances about excitedly, crying.) You don't understand what a woman is. Send for her,
   Morell: send for her and let her choose between—(The door opens and Candida enters.
   He stops as if petrified.)
CANDIDA (amazed, on the threshold). What on earth are you at, Eugene?
MARCHBANKS (oddly). James and I are having a preaching match; and he is getting the
   worst of it. (Candida looks quickly round at Morell. Seeing that he is distressed, she
   hurries down to him, greatly vexed, speaking with vigorous reproach to Marchbanks.)
CANDIDA. You have been annoying him. Now I won't have it, Eugene: do you hear? (Putting
    her hand on Morell's shoulder, and quite forgetting her wifely tact in her annoyance.)
    My boy shall not be worried: I will protect him.
CANDIDA (not heeding him—to Eugene). What have you been saying?
MORELL (indignantly, with an aggressive movement towards Eugene). Let me alone! You
   young—
CANDIDA (severely). Yes, I am—very angry. I have a great mind to pack you out of the
    house.
MORELL (taken aback by Candida's vigor, and by no means relishing the sense of being
   rescued by her from another man). Gently, Candida, gently. I am able to take care of
   myself.
CANDIDA (petting him). Yes, dear: of course you are. But you mustn't be annoyed and made
    miserable.
CANDIDA. Oh, you needn't go: I can't turn you out at this time of night. (Vehemently.) Shame
    on you! For shame!
CANDIDA. I know what you have done—as well as if I had been here all the time. Oh, it was
    unworthy! You are like a child: you cannot hold your tongue.
MARCHBANKS. I would die ten times over sooner than give you a moment's pain.
CANDIDA (with infinite contempt for this puerility). Much good your dying would do me!
MORELL. Candida, my dear: this altercation is hardly quite seemingly. It is a matter between
   two men; and I am the right person to settle it.
CANDIDA. Two MEN! Do you call that a man? (To Eugene.) You bad boy!
CANDIDA (losing confidence a little as her concern for Morell's dignity takes the alarm). That
    can't be true. (To Morell.) You didn't begin it, James, did you?
MORELL (to Eugene). YOU began it—this morning. (Candida, instantly connecting this with
   his mysterious allusion in the afternoon to something told him by Eugene in the
   morning, looks quickly at him, wrestling with the enigma. Morell proceeds with the
   emphasis of offended superiority.) But your other point is true. I am certainly the bigger
   of the two, and, I hope, the stronger, Candida. So you had better leave the matter in my
   hands.
CANDIDA (again soothing him). Yes, dear; but—(Troubled.) I don't understand about this
    morning.
CANDIDA. But, James, I—(The street bell rings.) Oh, bother! Here they all come. (She goes
    out to let them in.)
MARCHBANKS (running to Morell ). Oh, Morell, isn't it dreadful? She's angry with us: she
   hates me. What shall I do?
MORELL (with quaint desperation, clutching himself by the hair). Eugene: my head is
   spinning round. I shall begin to laugh presently. (He walks up and down the middle of
   the room.)
MARCHBANKS (following him anxiously). No, no: she'll think I've thrown you into
   hysterics. Don't laugh. (Boisterous voices and laughter are heard approaching. Lexy
   Mill, his eyes sparkling, and his bearing denoting unwonted elevation of spirit, enters
   with Burgess, who is greasy and self-complacent, but has all his wits about him. Miss
   Garnett, with her smartest hat and jacket on, follows them; but though her eyes are
      brighter than before, she is evidently a prey to misgiving. She places herself with her
      back to her typewriting table, with one hand on it to rest herself, passes the other across
      her forehead as if she were a little tired and giddy. Marchbanks relapses into shyness and
      edges away into the corner near the window, where Morell's books are.)
MILL (exhilaratedly). Morell: I MUST congratulate you. (Grasping his hand.) What a noble,
    splendid, inspired address you gave us! You surpassed yourself.
BURGESS. So you did, James. It fair kep' me awake to the last word. Didn't it, Miss Garnett?
PROSERPINE (worriedly). Oh, I wasn't minding you: I was trying to make notes. (She takes
    out her note-book, and looks at her stenography, which nearly makes her cry.)
PROSERPINE. Much too fast. You know I can't do more than a hundred words a minute. (She
    relieves her feelings by throwing her note-book angrily beside her machine, ready for
    use next morning.)
MORELL (soothingly). Oh, well, well, never mind, never mind, never mind. Have you all had
   supper?
LEXY. Mr. Burgess has been kind enough to give us a really splendid supper at the Belgrave.
BURGESS (with effusive magnanimity). Don't mention it, Mr. Mill. (Modestly.) You're 'arty
    welcome to my little treat.
MORELL (surprised). A champagne supper! That was very handsome. Was it my eloquence
   that produced all this extravagance?
MILL (rhetorically). Your eloquence, and Mr. Burgess's goodness of heart. (With a fresh burst
    of exhilaration.) And what a very fine fellow the chairman is, Morell! He came to supper
    with us.
MORELL (with long drawn significance, looking at Burgess). O-o-o-h, the chairman. NOW I
   understand.
MORELL. No use, dear. They've all had champagne. Pross has broken her pledge.
CANDIDA (to Proserpine). You don't mean to say you've been drinking champagne!
PROSERPINE (stubbornly). Yes, I do. I'm only a beer teetotaller, not a champagne teetotaller.
    I don't like beer. Are there any letters for me to answer, Mr. Morell?
LEXY (gallantly). Had I not better see you home, Miss Garnett?
PROSERPINE. No, thank you. I shan't trust myself with anybody to-night. I wish I hadn't
    taken any of that stuff. (She walks straight out.)
BURGESS (indignantly). Stuff, indeed! That gurl dunno wot champagne is! Pommery and
    Greeno at twelve and six a bottle. She took two glasses a'most straight hoff.
MORELL (a little anxious about her). Go and look after her, Lexy.
LEXY (alarmed). But if she should really be—Suppose she began to sing in the street, or
    anything of that sort.
MORELL. Just so: she may. That's why you'd better see her safely home.
CANDIDA. Do, Lexy: there's a good fellow. (She shakes his hand and pushes him gently to
    the door.)
LEXY. It's evidently my duty to go. I hope it may not be necessary. Good-night, Mrs. Morell.
    (To the rest.) Good-night. (He goes. Candida shuts the door.)
BURGESS. He was gushin' with hextra piety hisself arter two sips. People carn't drink like
    they huseter. (Dismissing the subject and bustling away from the hearth.) Well, James:
    it's time to lock up. Mr. Morchbanks: shall I 'ave the pleasure of your company for a bit
    of the way home?
MARCHBANKS (affrightedly). Yes: I'd better go. .(He hurries across to the door; but Candida
   places herself before it, barring his way.)
CANDIDA (with quiet authority). You sit down. You're not going yet.
MARCHBANKS (quailing). No: I—I didn't mean to. (He comes back into the room and sits
   down abjectly on the sofa.)
CANDIDA. Mr. Marchbanks will stay the night with us, papa.
BURGESS. Oh, well, I'll say good-night. So long, James. (He shakes hands with Morell and
    goes on to Eugene.) Make 'em give you a night light by your bed, Mr. Morchbanks: it'll
    comfort you if you wake up in the night with a touch of that complaint of yores. Good-
    night.
MARCHBANKS. Thank you: I will. Good-night, Mr. Burgess. (They shake hands and
   Burgess goes to the door.)
CANDIDA (intercepting Morell, who is following Burgess). Stay here, dear: I'll put on papa's
    coat for him. (She goes out with Burgess.)
MARCHBANKS. I never envied you your courage before. (He rises timidly and puts his hand
   appealingly on Morell's forearm.) Stand by me, won't you?
MORELL (casting him off gently, but resolutely). Each for himself, Eugene. She must choose
   between us now. (He goes to the other side of the room as Candida returns. Eugene sits
   down again on the sofa like a guilty schoolboy on his best behaviour.)
CANDIDA. Well, then, you are forgiven. Now go off to bed like a good little boy: I want to
    talk to James about you.
MARCHBANKS (rising in great consternation). Oh, I can't do that, Morell. I must be here. I'll
   not go away. Tell her.
CANDIDA (with quick suspicion). Tell me what? (His eyes avoid hers furtively. She turns and
    mutely transfers the question to Morell.)
MORELL (bracing himself for the catastrophe). I have nothing to tell her, except (here his
   voice deepens to a measured and mournful tenderness) that she is my greatest treasure
   on earth—if she is really mine.
CANDIDA (coldly, offended by his yielding to his orator's instinct and treating her as if she
    were the audience at the Guild of St. Matthew). I am sure Eugene can say no less, if that
    is all.
MORELL (with a quick touch of temper). There is nothing to laugh at. Are you laughing at us,
   Candida?
CANDIDA (with quiet anger). Eugene is very quick-witted, James. I hope I am going to laugh;
    but I am not sure that I am not going to be very angry. (She goes to the fireplace, and
    stands there leaning with her arm on the mantelpiece and her foot on the fender, whilst
    Eugene steals to Morell and plucks him by the sleeve.)
MORELL (pushing Eugene away without deigning to look at him). I hope you don't mean that
   as a threat, Candida.
CANDIDA (with emphatic warning). Take care, James. Eugene: I asked you to go. Are you
    going?
MORELL (putting his foot down). He shall not go. I wish him to remain.
MARCHBANKS. I'll go. I'll do whatever you want. (He turns to the door.)
CANDIDA. Stop! (He obeys.) Didn't you hear James say he wished you to stay? James is
    master here. Don't you know that?
MARCHBANKS (flushing with a young poet's rage against tyranny). By what right is he
   master?
MORELL (taken aback). My dear: I don't know of any right that makes me master. I assert no
   such right.
CANDIDA (with infinite reproach). You don't know! Oh, James, James! (To Eugene,
    musingly.) I wonder do you understand, Eugene! No: you're too young. Well, I give you
    leave to stay—to stay and learn. (She comes away from the hearth and places herself
    between them.) Now, James: what's the matter? Come: tell me.
CANDIDA. Yes, dear: I am sure you did. But never mind: I shan't misunderstand.
MORELL. Well—er—(He hesitates, unable to find the long explanation which he supposed to
   be available.)
CANDIDA. Well?
MORELL (baldly). Eugene declares that you are in love with him.
MARCHBANKS (frantically). No, no, no, no, never. I did not, Mrs. Morell: it's not true. I said
   I loved you, and that he didn't. I said that I understood you, and that he couldn't. And it
   was not after what passed there before the fire that I spoke: it was not, on my word. It
   was this morning.
MARCHBANKS. Yes. (He looks at her, pleading for credence, and then adds, simply) That
   was what was the matter with my collar.
CANDIDA (after a pause; for she does not take in his meaning at once). His collar! (She turns
    to Morell, shocked.) Oh, James: did you—(she stops)?
MORELL (ashamed). You know, Candida, that I have a temper to struggle with. And he said
   (shuddering) that you despised me in your heart.
CANDIDA (severely). Then James has just told me a falsehood. Is that what you mean?
MARCHBANKS. No, no: I—I— (blurting out the explanation desperately) —it was David's
   wife. And it wasn't at home: it was when she saw him dancing before all the people.
MORELL (taking the cue with a debater's adroitness). Dancing before all the people, Candida;
   and thinking he was moving their hearts by his mission when they were only suffering
   from—Prossy's complaint. (She is about to protest: he raises his hand to silence her,
   exclaiming) Don't try to look indignant, Candida:—
CANDIDA (remorsefully). Do you mind what is said by a foolish boy, because I said
    something like it again in jest?
MORELL. That foolish boy can speak with the inspiration of a child and the cunning of a
   serpent. He has claimed that you belong to him and not to me; and, rightly or wrongly, I
   have come to fear that it may be true. I will not go about tortured with doubts and
   suspicions. I will not live with you and keep a secret from you. I will not suffer the
   intolerable degradation of jealousy. We have agreed—he and I—that you shall choose
   between us now. I await your decision.
CANDIDA (slowly recoiling a step, her heart hardened by his rhetoric in spite of the sincere
    feeling behind it). Oh! I am to choose, am I? I suppose it is quite settled that I must
    belong to one or the other.
MARCHBANKS (anxiously). Morell: you don't understand. She means that she belongs to
   herself.
CANDIDA (turning on him). I mean that and a good deal more, Master Eugene, as you will
    both find out presently. And pray, my lords and masters, what have you to offer for my
    choice? I am up for auction, it seems. What do you bid, James?
MORELL (reproachfully). Cand— (He breaks down: his eyes and throat fill with tears: the
   orator becomes the wounded animal.) I can't speak—
MARCHBANKS (in wild alarm). Stop: it's not fair. You mustn't show her that you suffer,
   Morell. I am on the rack, too; but I am not crying.
MORELL (rallying all his forces). Yes: you are right. It is not for pity that I am bidding. (He
   disengages himself from Candida.)
CANDIDA (retreating, chilled). I beg your pardon, James; I did not mean to touch you. I am
    waiting to hear your bid.
MORELL (with proud humility). I have nothing to offer you but my strength for your defence,
   my honesty of purpose for your surety, my ability and industry for your livelihood, and
   my authority and position for your dignity. That is all it becomes a man to offer to a
   woman.
CANDIDA (quite quietly). And you, Eugene? What do you offer?
CANDIDA (impressed). That's a good bid, Eugene. Now I know how to make my choice.
MORELL (in a suffocated voice—the appeal bursting from the depths of his anguish).
   Candida!
              Eugene divines her meaning at once: his face whitens like steel
              in a furnace that cannot melt it.
MORELL (bowing his head with the calm of collapse). I accept your sentence, Candida.
MORELL (incredulously, raising his bead with prosaic abruptness). Do you mean, me,
   Candida?
CANDIDA (smiling a little). Let us sit and talk comfortably over it like three friends. (To
    Morell.) Sit down, dear. (Morell takes the chair from the fireside—the children's chair.)
    Bring me that chair, Eugene. (She indicates the easy chair. He fetches it silently, even
    with something like cold strength, and places it next Morell, a little behind him. She sits
    down. He goes to the sofa and sits there, still silent and inscrutable. When they are all
    settled she begins, throwing a spell of quietness on them by her calm, sane, tender tone.)
    You remember what you told me about yourself, Eugene: how nobody has cared for you
    since your old nurse died: how those clever, fashionable sisters and successful brothers
    of yours were your mother's and father's pets: how miserable you were at Eton: how
    your father is trying to starve you into returning to Oxford: how you have had to live
    without comfort or welcome or refuge, always lonely, and nearly always disliked and
    misunderstood, poor boy!
MARCHBANKS (faithful to the nobility of his lot). I had my books. I had Nature. And at last
   I met you.
CANDIDA. Never mind that just at present. Now I want you to look at this other boy here—
    MY boy—spoiled from his cradle. We go once a fortnight to see his parents. You should
    come with us, Eugene, and see the pictures of the hero of that household. James as a
    baby! the most wonderful of all babies. James holding his first school prize, won at the
    ripe age of eight! James as the captain of his eleven! James in his first frock coat! James
    under all sorts of glorious circumstances! You know how strong he is (I hope he didn't
    hurt you)—how clever he is—how happy! (With deepening gravity.) Ask James's
    mother and his three sisters what it cost to save James the trouble of doing anything but
    be strong and clever and happy. Ask ME what it costs to be James's mother and three
    sisters and wife and mother to his children all in one. Ask Prossy and Maria how
    troublesome the house is even when we have no visitors to help us to slice the onions.
    Ask the tradesmen who want to worry James and spoil his beautiful sermons who it is
    that puts them off. When there is money to give, he gives it: when there is money to
    refuse, I refuse it. I build a castle of comfort and indulgence and love for him, and stand
    sentinel always to keep little vulgar cares out. I make him master here, though he does
    not know it, and could not tell you a moment ago how it came to be so. (With sweet
    irony.) And when he thought I might go away with you, his only anxiety was what
    should become of ME! And to tempt me to stay he offered me (leaning forward to stroke
    his hair caressingly at each phrase) his strength for MY defence, his industry for my
    livelihood, his position for my dignity, his— (Relenting.) Ah, I am mixing up your
    beautiful sentences and spoiling them, am I not, darling? (She lays her cheek fondly
    against his.)
MORELL (quite overcome, kneeling beside her chair and embracing her with boyish
   ingenuousness). It's all true, every word. What I am you have made me with the labor of
   your hands and the love of your heart! You are my wife, my mother, my sisters: you are
   the sum of all loving care to me.
CANDIDA (in his arms, smiling, to Eugene). Am I YOUR mother and sisters to you, Eugene?
MARCHBANKS (rising with a fierce gesture of disgust). Ah, never. Out, then, into the night
   with me!
CANDIDA (rising quickly and intercepting him). You are not going like that, Eugene?
MARCHBANKS (with the ring of a man's voice—no longer a boy's—in the words). I know
   the hour when it strikes. I am impatient to do what must be done.
MORELL (rising from his knee, alarmed). Candida: don't let him do anything rash.
CANDIDA (confident, smiling at Eugene). Oh, there is no fear. He has learnt to live without
    happiness.
MARCHBANKS. I no longer desire happiness: life is nobler than that. Parson James: I give
   you my happiness with both hands: I love you because you have filled the heart of the
   woman I loved. Good-bye. (He goes towards the door.)
CANDIDA. One last word. (He stops, but without turning to her.) How old are you, Eugene?
CANDIDA (going to him, and standing behind him with one hand caressingly on his
    shoulder). Eighteen! Will you, for my sake, make a little poem out of the two sentences I
    am going to say to you? And will you promise to repeat it to yourself whenever you
    think of me?
CANDIDA. When I am thirty, she will be forty-five. When I am sixty, she will be seventy-
    five.
MARCHBANKS (turning to her). In a hundred years, we shall be the same age. But I have a
   better secret than that in my heart. Let me go now. The night outside grows impatient.
CANDIDA. Good-bye. (She takes his face in her hands; and as he divines her intention and
    bends his knee, she kisses his forehead. Then he flies out into the night. She turns to
    Morell, holding out her arms to him.) Ah, James! (They embrace. But they do not know
    the secret in the poet's heart.)