1.1 ::- :=Lexy: was scarlatina, do you think it wise -- 1.1 ::- :=Lexy: to understand you about Mrs Morell -- 1.2 ::- :=Morell: me, and talk about your daughter, and -- 1.2 ::- :=Burgess: No I didnt, James. I -- 1.2 ::- :=Morell: did you manage about the luggage? How -- 1.2 ::- :=Marchbanks: No -- I -- I -- 1.3 ::- :=Marchbanks: Thank you very much. But -- but -- 1.3 ::- :=Marchbanks: First -- 1.3 ::- :=Morell: Marchbanks: it is sometimes justifiable -- 2.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: give to be without fear, without shame -- 2.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: you could love anybody that offered -- 2.1 ::- :=Proserpine: I -- 2.2 ::- :=Proserpine: I -- 2.2 ::- :=Morell: But -- 2.3 ::- :=Lexy: doing. Of course, you know best; but -- 2.3 ::- :=Candida: But, James -- 2.3 ::- :=Candida: the matter, James? I cant understand -- 3.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: about leaving me here with Candida -- 3.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: it was, and how uncomfortable! Then -- 3.1 ::- :=Morell: The man that --? Do you mean me? 3.1 ::- :=Morell: her own authority. It was because of -- 3.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: the crescent moon beneath her feet -- 3.1 ::- :=Marchbanks: beautiful archangel with purple wings -- 3.2 ::- :=Marchbanks: Nothing. I -- 3.2 ::- :=Morell: Let me alone! You young -- 3.3 ::- :=Morell: Well -- er -- 3.3 ::- :=Candida: Your collar. Oh, James: did you --? 3.3 ::- :=Morell: Dont try to look indignant, Candida -- 3.3 ::- :=Morell: CandQ I cant speak -- 3.3 ::- :=Candida: Ah, dearest -- 3.1 ::-JALL :=Marchbanks: know belong to some attitude or other --Jall except one. 2.1 ::-JHE :=Burgess: is as sure as we're settin here now --Jhe sez "I'm a fool," he sez; "and yore 3.1 ::-JTHAT :=Marchbanks: I saw today -- when she tortured you --Jthat you love her. Since then I have been 1.1 ::-UESTION :=Lexy: Miss Prossy, there would be no Woman --uestion. 2.3 ::-UITE :=Marchbanks: --uite well, thanks. 3.1 ::-UITE :=Candida: feel a great grown-up wicked deceiver. --uite proud of yourself, arnt you? 3.3 ::-UITE :=Morell: --uite. You must choose definitely. 2.1 ::'ARE :=Marchbanks: Mad! RESP Burgess. Mad as a Morch 'are. You take notice on him and youll s 1.2 ::'AS :=Burgess: work is done by machinery. Not a man 'as less than sixpence a hour; and the skilled 1.2 ::'AS :=Burgess: Yes: times 'as changed mor'n I could a believed. Five 1.2 ::'AS :=Burgess: at all. Why, I know a clorgyman what 'as bin kep hout of his job for yorrs by 1.2 ::'IGH :=Burgess: that? Dont deceive me, Candy: it's a 'Igh Church picture; and James chose it 1.2 ::'IGH :=Burgess: that picture, Candy; but still it's a 'igh fust rate work of ort: I can see that. 1.2 ::'IS :=Burgess: Good mornin. When I pay a man, an' 'is living depens on me, I keep him in 'is 1.2 ::'IS :=Burgess: 'is living depens on me, I keep him in 'is place. 1.2 ::'IS :=Burgess: a fool, you know: it's ony becomin in 'is profession that he should. Anyhow, I 1.2 ::[PURE] :=Burgess: give you my word I come here in peeorr [pure] frenliness, not wishin to be hon bad 1.2 ::[YEAR] :=Burgess: mor'n I could a believed. Five yorr [year] ago, no sensible man would a thought 1.1 ::A :=Morell: not to know that they cant have a parson on Sunday! Tell them to come to 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: them you cant come. Theyre only half a dozen ignorant and conceited coster- mongers 1.1 ::A :=Morell: Come, Miss Proserpine: cant you find a date for the costers? what about the 25th. 1.1 ::A := supper before you eat it, for once in a way, as I do. Come! dont dawdle. You should 1.1 ::A :=Morell: myself from the Pycroft Street school. A parson is like a doctor, my boy: he must 1.1 ::A :=Morell: Street school. A parson is like a doctor, my boy: he must face infection 1.1 ::A :=Morell: my boy: he must face infection as a soldier must face bullets. Catch the measles 1.1 ::A :=Morell: can, Lexy: she'll nurse you; and what a piece of luck that will be for you! Eh 1.1 ::A :=Morell: Ah, my boy, get married: get married to a good woman; and then youll understand. 1.1 ::A :=Morell: and then youll understand. Thats a foretaste of what will be best in the Kingdom 1.1 ::A :=Morell: for every hour of happiness with a good spell of hard unselfish work to make 1.1 ::A :=Morell: wealth without producing it. Get a wife like my Candida; and youll always 1.1 ::A :=Lexy: Oh, wait a bit: I forgot. Your father-in-law is coming 1.1 ::A :=Lexy: What a good man! What a thorough loving soul he 1.1 ::A :=Lexy: What a good man! What a thorough loving soul he is! 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: Oh, a man ought to be able to be fond of his 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: to be fond of his wife without making a fool of himself about her. 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: anyone out of their senses to hear a woman raved about in that absurd manner 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: merely because she's got good hair and a tolerable figure. 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: Her eyes are not a bit better than mine: now! And you know 1.1 ::A :=Lexy: of any of God's creatures in such a way! 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: me? You think I'm jealous? Oh, what a knowledge of the human heart you have, 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: dont you? It must be so nice to be a man and have a fine penetrating intellect 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: must be so nice to be a man and have a fine penetrating intellect instead of mere 1.1 ::A :=Lexy: though they didnt appreciate it, I, a mere man, did. 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: they are, and not his. You never cut a poorer figure than when you are trying 1.1 ::A :=Proserpine: enough time for one morning. Here's a copy of the diary for today. 1.1 ::A :=Morell: and wrap your throat up. Theres a cold wind. Away with you. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: usu'l, James. Good mornin. When I pay a man, an' 'is living depens on me, I keep 1.2 ::A :=Morell: I think -- you said the same thing a little more frankly. Your exact words then 1.2 ::A :=Morell: exact words then were "Just as big a fool as ever, James!" 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: I did; but I meant no hoffence by it. A clorgyman is privileged to be a bit of 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: by it. A clorgyman is privileged to be a bit of a fool, you know: it's ony becomin 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: clorgyman is privileged to be a bit of a fool, you know: it's ony becomin in 'is 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: James: three years ago, you done me a hil turn. You done me hout of a contrac; 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: me a hil turn. You done me hout of a contrac; an when I gev you arsh words in 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: me. Well, Ive come to hact the part of a Kerischin. I forgive you, James. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Is that becomin language for a clorgyman, James? And you so particlar, 1.2 ::A :=Morell: sir: it is not becoming language for a clergyman. I used the wrong word. I should 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: James! heasy! heasy! Dont git hinto a fluster about nothink. Ive howned I was 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Ive turned a moddle hemployer. I dont hemploy no women 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: and the work is done by machinery. Not a man 'as less than sixpence a hour; and 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Not a man 'as less than sixpence a hour; and the skilled ands gits the Trade 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: unless I paid fair wages: curse em for a parcel o meddlin fools! 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: it gits you hinto the papers and makes a great man of you; but you never think of 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: it from people that might be makin a good huse on it. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: I'd better go. I didnt hexpect to find a hunforgivin spirit in you, James. We huseter 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: hown daughter's usban. Come, James: be a Kerischin, and shake ands. 1.2 ::A :=Morell: I'll tell you. You thought me a young fool then. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: you didnt, James. Now you do yourself a hinjustice. 1.2 ::A :=Morell: together. God made you what I call a scoundrel as He made me what you call a 1.2 ::A :=Morell: scoundrel as He made me what you call a fool. It was not for me to quarrel with 1.2 ::A :=Morell: So long as you come here honestly as a self- respecting, thorough, convinced scoundrel, 1.2 ::A :=Morell: have you here snivelling about being a model employer and a converted man when 1.2 ::A :=Morell: about being a model employer and a converted man when youre only an apostate 1.2 ::A :=Morell: with your coat turned for the sake of a County Council contract. No: I like a man 1.2 ::A :=Morell: a County Council contract. No: I like a man to be true to himself, even in wickedness. 1.2 ::A :=Morell: and go; or else sit down and give me a good scoundrelly reason for wanting to 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Well, you orr a queer bird, James, and no mistake. But 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: afore, of course one dont take hall a clorgyman says seriously, or the world 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: with one another, that I did think you a bit of a fool once; but I'm beginnin to 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: another, that I did think you a bit of a fool once; but I'm beginnin to think that 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: think that praps I was be'ind the time a bit. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Yes: times 'as changed mor'n I could a believed. Five yorr [year] ago, no sensible 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: yorr [year] ago, no sensible man would a thought o takin hup with your hidears. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: you was let preach at all. Why, I know a clorgyman what 'as bin kep hout of his 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: London, although the pore feller's not a bit more religious than you are. But today, 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: if hennyone was to horffer to bet me a thousan poun that youll hend by bein a 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: a thousan poun that youll hend by bein a bishop yourself, I dussent take the bet. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: is the payin line in the long run for a man o your sort. 1.2 ::A :=Morell: honestly. I dont think theyll make me a bishop; but if they do, I'll introduce 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: you, Candy? James and me is come to a nunnerstannin. A honorable unnerstannin. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: and me is come to a nunnerstannin. A honorable unnerstannin. Ain we, James? 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: wish youd come round and give the gurl a talkin to. Who's this Eugene thats come 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: that? Dont deceive me, Candy: it's a 'Igh Church picture; and James chose it 1.2 ::A :=Candida: Guess again. Eugene isnt a cab tout. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Then what is he? A nobleman, I spose. 1.2 ::A :=Candida: Yes. His uncle's a peer! A real live earl. 1.2 ::A :=Candida: Yes. His uncle's a peer! A real live earl. 1.2 ::A :=Candida: Yes. He had a seven day bill for 55 pounds in his pocket 1.2 ::A :=Candida: too shy to ask for credit. Oh, he's a dear boy! We are very fond of him. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Hm! I thort you wouldnt git a hearl's nevvy visitin in Victawriar Pawrk 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: in Victawriar Pawrk unless he were a bit of a flat. Of course I dont old with 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Pawrk unless he were a bit of a flat. Of course I dont old with that picture, 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: that picture, Candy; but still it's a 'igh fust rate work of ort: I can see that. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Vicatawriar Pawrk Station. Theres a city train at 12.25. 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: Down in Surrey! Har, har! thats not a bad one. Well, I never met a man as didnt 1.2 ::A :=Burgess: thats not a bad one. Well, I never met a man as didnt know Nortn Folgit afore. Goodbye, 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: I hardly know him yet. He seem to be a very nice old gentlemen. 1.3 ::A :=Candida: Do you know, you are a very nice boy, Eugene, with all your queerness. 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: with strangers; and I never can see a joke. I'm very sorry. 1.3 ::A :=Candida: ten shillings! ten shillings for a three minutes drive! Oh dear! 1.3 ::A :=Morell: Marchbanks. The overpaying instinct is a generous one: better than the underpaying 1.3 ::A :=Candida: present. I suppose you are too much of a poet to know the state a woman finds her 1.3 ::A :=Candida: too much of a poet to know the state a woman finds her house in when she's been 1.3 ::A :=Morell: stay, stay. If youre shy, go and take a turn in the park and write poetry until 1.3 ::A :=Morell: past one; and then come in and have a good feed. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: my suggestion that you should take a turn in the park meet the difficulty? 1.3 ::A :=Morell: put it in that way. My dear lad: in a happy marriage like ours, there is something 1.3 ::A :=Morell: the wife to her home. An old friend or a truly noble and sympathetic soul is not 1.3 ::A :=Morell: not in the way on such occasions; but a chance visitor is. Candida thought I would 1.3 ::A :=Morell: like you to see for yourself what a happy thing it is to be married as I a 1.3 ::A :=Morell: comfort of seeing through and through a thundering liar and rotten cynic like that 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: horror. You shall see whether this is a time for patience and kindness. Dont look 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: but I shall stagger you if you have a heart in your breast. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: I say, Eugene: do you think yours is a case to be talked about? Youre under twenty: 1.3 ::A :=Morell: thirty. Doesnt it look rather too like a case of calf love? 1.3 ::A :=Morell: you the indulgence I should shew to a child. Be a man. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: I should shew to a child. Be a man. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: well. Eugene, my boy: you are making a fool of yourself: a very great fool of 1.3 ::A :=Morell: you are making a fool of yourself: a very great fool of yourself. Theres a piece 1.3 ::A :=Morell: a very great fool of yourself. Theres a piece of wholesome plain speaking for 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: with me because you can see that I am a fool about your wife; just as no doubt 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: because he sees that you are a fool about it. Does that prove you wrong? 1.3 ::A :=Morell: is easy -- terribly easy -- to shake a man's faith in himself. To take advantage 1.3 ::A :=Morell: To take advantage of that to break a man's spirit is devil's work. Take care 1.3 ::A :=Morell: day, I hope and trust, you will be a happy man like me. You will be married; 1.3 ::A :=Morell: earth; and -- who knows? -- you may be a master builder where I am only a humble 1.3 ::A :=Morell: be a master builder where I am only a humble journeyman; for dont think, my boy, 1.3 ::A :=Morell: the heavy burthen and great gift of a poet may be laid upon you. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: you to believe that God has given us a world that nothing but our own folly keeps 1.3 ::A :=Morell: but our own folly keeps from being a paradise. I will help you to believe that 1.3 ::A :=Morell: we sit as if in camp, encompassed by a hostile army of doubts. Will you play the 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: Is it like this for her here always? A woman, with a great soul, craving for realty, 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: for her here always? A woman, with a great soul, craving for realty, truth, 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: mere rhetoric. Do you think a woman's soul can live on your talent for 1.3 ::A :=Morell: Go, before you frighten yourself into a fit. 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: with violence -- because I cant lift a heavy trunk down from the top of a cab 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: a heavy trunk down from the top of a cab like you -- because I cant fight you 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: I cant fight you for your wife as a drunk navvy would: all that makes you think 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: cowardice either: I'm not afraid of a clergyman's ideas. I'll fight your ideas. 1.3 ::A :=Morell: Wait a moment: I am not going to touch you: dont 1.3 ::A :=Morell: telling her that you have behaved like a blackguard. 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: explanation but the true one, you are a liar and a coward. Tell her what I said; 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: but the true one, you are a liar and a coward. Tell her what I said; and how you 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: were strong and manly, and shook me as a terrier shakes a rat; and how I shrank 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: and shook me as a terrier shakes a rat; and how I shrank and was terrified; 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: was terrified; and how you called me a sniveling little whelp and put me out of 1.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: Either the truth or a lie you must tell her, if I go. 1.3 ::A :=Candida: into the street in that state! You are a poet, certainly. Look at him, James! Look 1.3 ::A :=Candida: he stay, James, if he promises to be a good boy and help me to lay the table? 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: I didnt. I didnt indeed. I only turned a little wheel. It gave a sort of click. 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: I only turned a little wheel. It gave a sort of click. 2.1 ::A :=Proserpine: I suppose you thought it was a sort of barrel-organ. Nothing to do but 2.1 ::A :=Proserpine: turn the handle, and it would write a beautiful love letter for you straight 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: I suppose a machine could be made to write love letters. 2.1 ::A :=Proserpine: love affairs. How dare you say such a thing? The idea! 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: it. It must be asked for: it is like a ghost: it cannot speak unless it is first 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: the love of others: we cannot utter a word. You find that, dont you? 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: you take about indifferent things if a child were by, crying bitterly with hu 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: cry: doesnt it? It must, if you have a heart. 2.1 ::A :=Proserpine: my heart cries or not; but I have a mind to tell you, for all that. 2.1 ::A :=Proserpine: Mr Mill ! ! ! A fine man to break my heart about, 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: is it really and truly possible for a woman to love him? 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: and you know. Is it possible for a woman to love him? 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: to keep you company. James is receivin a deppitation in the dinin room; and Candy 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: and Candy is hupstairs heducating of a young stitcher gurl she's hinterested in. 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: Mr Morchbanks is a gentleman, and knows his place, which is 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: Ho! I'm a silly ole fatUead, am I? Ho, indeed! Hall 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: alone, Mr Morchbanks, let me give you a friendly int that I wouldnt give to heverybody. 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: dont know. I never can remember dates. A few months, perhaps. 2.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Mad! RESP Burgess. Mad as a Morch 'are. You take notice on him and 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: we're settin here now --Jhe sez "I'm a fool," he sez; "and yore a scounderl." 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: sez "I'm a fool," he sez; "and yore a scounderl." Me a scounderl, mind you! And 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: he sez; "and yore a scounderl." Me a scounderl, mind you! And then sook ands 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: see. I'm sorry, James, to ave to make a complaint to you. I dont want to do it; 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: to do it; but I feel I oughter, as a matter o right and dooty. 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: Mr Morchbanks will bear me hout: he was a witness. Yore young woman so far forgot 2.1 ::A :=Burgess: so far forgot herself as to call me a silly ole fatUead. 2.2 ::A :=Morell: Thats a question for the Church, not for the laity. 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: What did I tell you? Mad as a atter. When's dinner, James? 2.2 ::A :=Morell: Not for a couple of hours yet. 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: Gimme a nice book to read over the fire, will you, 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: over the fire, will you, James: thur's a good chap. 2.2 ::A :=Morell: What sort of book? A good one? 2.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: hands. I cant bear that, Morell: it's a shame. I'll go and fill them. 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: Dont you keep a servant now, James? 2.2 ::A :=Morell: Yes; but she isnt a slave; and the house looks as if I kept 2.2 ::A :=Morell: That means that everyone has to lend a hand. It's not a bad plan: Prossy and I 2.2 ::A :=Morell: everyone has to lend a hand. It's not a bad plan: Prossy and I can talk business 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: Har, har! Devil a better! Ad you there, James, straight. 2.2 ::A :=Candida: Wouldnt you like to present me with a nice new one, with an ivory back inlaid 2.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: No, not a scrubbing brush, but a boat: a tiny shallop 2.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: No, not a scrubbing brush, but a boat: a tiny shallop to sail away in, far 2.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: No, not a scrubbing brush, but a boat: a tiny shallop to sail away in, far from 2.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: beautiful green and purple carpets. Or a chariot! to carry us up into the sky, where 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: Candy didnt oughter andle a hearl's nevvy like that. It's goin too 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: He talks very pretty. I awlus had a turn for a bit of poetry. Candy takes arter 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: very pretty. I awlus had a turn for a bit of poetry. Candy takes arter me that-a-way. 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: tell er fairy stories when she was ony a little kiddy not that igh. 2.2 ::A :=Proserpine: warn you, since youve taken such a fancy to Mr Marchbanks. He's mad. 2.2 ::A :=Proserpine: Mad as a March hare. he did frighten me, I cant 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: into my ed once or twyst that he was a bit horff is chump! Well, this is a pretty 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: a bit horff is chump! Well, this is a pretty sort of asylum for a man to be in, 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: this is a pretty sort of asylum for a man to be in, with no one but you to take 2.2 ::A :=Proserpine: Yes, what a dreadful thing it would be if anything 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: that Ive gone into the gorden for a smoke. 2.2 ::A :=Burgess: Goin for a turn in the gording to smoke, James. 2.2 ::A :=Morell: come! come! Never mind, Pross: he is a silly old fathead, isnt he? 2.2 ::A :=Candida: and talking? I hardly have one evening a week with you. Of course what you say is 2.2 ::A :=Candida: want to forget all about it and have a rest on the seventh; so that they can to 2.2 ::A :=Candida: so splendidly that it's as good as a play for them. Why do you think the women 2.2 ::A :=Candida: all manner of ways for six shillings a week less than she used to get in a city 2.2 ::A :=Candida: a week less than she used to get in a city office? She's in love with you, James: 2.2 ::A :=Candida: Yes, I feel a little jealous sometimes. 2.2 ::A :=Candida: What a nasty uncomfortable thing to say to me! 2.2 ::A :=Candida: thing to say to me! Oh, you are a clergyman, James: a thorough clergyman 2.2 ::A :=Candida: to me! Oh, you are a clergyman, James: a thorough clergyman! 2.2 ::A :=Candida: Eugene's always right. He's a wonderful boy: I have grown fonder and 2.2 ::A :=Candida: Not a bit. Some day he will know: when he is 2.2 ::A :=Candida: If he learns it from a good woman, then it will be all right: 2.2 ::A :=Candida: But suppose he learns it from a bad woman, as so many men do, especially 2.2 ::A :=Candida: willingly as I would give my shawl to a beggar dying of cold, if there were nothing 2.2 ::A :=Morell: Candida I had rather you had plunged a grappling iron into my heart than given 2.3 ::A :=Morell: pardons: I was not conscious of making a fuss. Well, well, well, well! 2.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: is your cruelty. I hate cruelty. It is a horrible thing to see one person make another 2.3 ::A :=Lexy: large hall in Mare Street and spent a lot of money on posters. Morell's telegram 2.3 ::A :=Lexy: he couldnt come. It came on them like a thunderbolt. 2.3 ::A :=Morell: choose. These people forget that I am a man: they think I am a talking machine 2.3 ::A :=Morell: that I am a man: they think I am a talking machine to be turned on for their 2.3 ::A :=Burgess: comfortable. He wont need to be more'n a couple-o- hour away. 2.3 ::A :=Lexy: to me this morning. I'm afraid she's a little out of her mind sometimes. 2.3 ::A :=Burgess: Cawrse I'll come, James. Aint it awlus a pleasure to ear you! 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: ever lived has put that thought into a sonnet. He must: he cant help it. Havnt 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: uneasy too. It looked as if it were a weapon. If I were a hero of old I should 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: as if it were a weapon. If I were a hero of old I should have laid my drawn 3.1 ::A :=Candida: addled me. Why should there be a sword between us? 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: talk. I think I'll go out and take a walk in the park. 3.1 ::A :=Candida: Yes: I'm sure you feel a great grown-up wicked deceiver. --uite 3.1 ::A :=Candida: is your real self that speaks, and not a mere attitude: a gallant attitude, or a 3.1 ::A :=Candida: that speaks, and not a mere attitude: a gallant attitude, or a wicked attitude, 3.1 ::A :=Candida: mere attitude: a gallant attitude, or a wicked attitude, or even a poetic attitude. 3.1 ::A :=Candida: or a wicked attitude, or even a poetic attitude. I put you on your honor 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Nothing but to repeat your name a thousand times. Dont you feel that every 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Dont you feel that every time is a prayer to you? 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Only that I have been making a fool of myself here in private whilst you 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: in private whilst you have been making a fool of yourself in public. 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: disease from you. I swore not to say a word in your absence that I would not have 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: absence that I would not have said a month ago in your presence. 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: -- anybody's poems -- to stave off a conversation. I was standing outside the 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Then she became an angel; and there was a flaming sword that turned every way, so 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: man that Candida loved. You cant make a woman like Candida love you by merely buttoning 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: you, just as she forgives me for being a coward, and a weakling and what you call 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: forgives me for being a coward, and a weakling and what you call a sniveling 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: and a weakling and what you call a sniveling little whelp and all the rest 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: little whelp and all the rest of it. A woman like that has divine insight: she 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: as honestly as if you were buying a pound of cheese. I could only go to her 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: of cheese. I could only go to her as a beggar. 3.1 ::A :=Morell: A beggar dying of cold! asking for her s 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: up my poetry. Yes, if you like: a beggar dying of cold, asking for her s 3.1 ::A :=Morell: Eugene: if that is not a heartless lie -- if you have a spark of 3.1 ::A :=Morell: is not a heartless lie -- if you have a spark of human feeling left in you -- will 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: her up. Why should she choose between a wretched little nervous disease like me, 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: little nervous disease like me, and a pig-headed parson like you? Let us go on 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: parson like you? Let us go on a pilgrimage, you to the east and I to the 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: east and I to the west, in search of a worthy lover for her: some beautiful archangel 3.1 ::A :=Morell: who will work for her? who will be a father to her children? 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: Some grown up man who has become as a little child again. Oh, you fool, you fool, 3.1 ::A :=Marchbanks: I am the man. You dont understand what a woman is. Send for her, Morell: send for 3.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: James and I are having a preaching match; and he is getting the 3.2 ::A :=Candida: Yes I am: very angry. I have a good mind to pack you out of the house 3.2 ::A :=Candida: Oh, it was unworthy! You are like a child: you cannot hold your tongue. 3.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: ten times over sooner than give you a moment's pain. 3.2 ::A :=Morell: is hardly quite seemly. It is a matter between two men; and I am the right 3.2 ::A :=Candida: Two men! Do you call that a man? You bad boy! 3.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: If I am to be scolded like a boy, I must make a boy's excuse. He began 3.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: to be scolded like a boy, I must make a boy's excuse. He began it. And he's bigger 3.2 ::A :=Lexy: Morell, I must congratulate you. What a noble, splendid, inspired address you gave 3.2 ::A :=Proserpine: know I cant do more than ninety words a minutes. 3.2 ::A :=Lexy: has been kind enough to give us a really splendid supper at the Belgrave 3.2 ::A :=Morell: A champagne supper! That was very handsome. 3.2 ::A :=Lexy: Burgess's goodness of heart. And what a very fine fellow the chairman is, Morell! 3.2 ::A :=Proserpine: Yes I do. I'm only a beer teetotaller, not a champagne teetotaller. 3.2 ::A :=Proserpine: I do. I'm only a beer teetotaller, not a champagne teetotaller. I dont like beer. 3.2 ::A :=Burgess: Pommery and Greeno at twelve and six a bottle. She took two glasses amost straight 3.2 ::A :=Candida: Do, Lexy: theres a good fellow. 3.2 ::A :=Burgess: I ave the pleasure of your company for a bit o the way ome? 3.2 ::A :=Burgess: So long, James. Make em give you a nightlight by your bed, Mr Morchbanks: 3.2 ::A :=Burgess: you if you wake up in the night with a touch of that complaint of yores. Good 3.2 ::A :=Marchbanks: Morell: theres going to be a terrible scene. Arnt you afraid? 3.3 ::A :=Candida: are forgiven. Now go off to bed like a good little boy: I want to talk to James 3.3 ::A :=Morell: I hope you dont mean that as a threat, Candida. 3.3 ::A :=Candida: Then James has just told me a falsehood. Is that what you mean? 3.3 ::A :=Morell: Eugene was right. As you told me a few hours after, he is always right. He 3.3 ::A :=Candida: Do you mind what is said by a foolish boy, because I said something like 3.3 ::A :=Morell: boy can speak with the inspiration of a child and the cunning of a serpent. He 3.3 ::A :=Morell: of a child and the cunning of a serpent. He has claimed that you belong 3.3 ::A :=Morell: it may be true. I will not go about a tortured with doubts and suspicions. I 3.3 ::A :=Morell: I will not live with you and keep a secret from you. I will not suffer the 3.3 ::A :=Candida: I mean that, and a good deal more, Master Eugene, as you will 3.3 ::A :=Morell: your dignity. That is all it becomes a man to offer to a woman. 3.3 ::A :=Morell: is all it becomes a man to offer to a woman. 3.3 ::A :=Candida: Thats a good bid, Eugene. Now I know how to make 3.3 ::A :=Candida: spoiled from his cradle. We go once a fortnight to see his parents. You should 3.3 ::A :=Candida: the hero of that household. James as a baby! the most wonderful of all babies. 3.3 ::A :=Candida: money to refuse, I refuse it. I build a castle of comfort and indulgence and love 3.3 ::A :=Candida: not know it, and could not tell you a moment ago how it came to be so. And when 3.3 ::A :=Candida: Eighteen! Will you, for my sake, make a little poem out of the two sentences I 3.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: In a hundred years, we shall be the same age. 3.3 ::A :=Marchbanks: we shall be the same age. But I have a better secret than that in my heart. Let 2.1 ::A-TALKIN :=Burgess: No: youve done it now. No huse a-talkin to me. I'll let you know who I am. 2.2 ::ABANDONING :=Candida: me for not teaching him myself? For abandoning him to the bad women for the sake 2.2 ::ABASE :=Candida: things, and to peel the potatoes and abase herself in all manner of ways for six 3.3 ::ABILITY :=Morell: my honesty for your surety, my ability and industry for your livelihood, 1.1 ::ABLE :=Proserpine: Oh, a man ought to be able to be fond of his wife without making 3.1 ::ABLE :=Candida: Doesnt it make you happy to be able to pray? 3.2 ::ABLE :=Morell: Gently, Candida, gently. I am able to take care of myself. 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Morell: you find a date for the costers? what about the 25th. That was vacant the day before 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Lexy: It's so hard to understand you about Mrs Morell -- 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: wife without making a fool of himself about her. 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: of their senses to hear a woman raved about in that absurd manner merely because 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: think I dont know? Here! come and set about your work: weve wasted enough time 1.1 ::ABOUT :=Burgess: me detain you, Mr Mill. What I come about is private between me and Mr Morel 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Morell: When you last called -- it was about three years ago, I think -- you said 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Morell: here and offer to forgive me, and talk about your daughter, and -- 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Burgess: heasy! heasy! Dont git hinto a fluster about nothink. Ive howned I was wrong. 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Morell: But I wont have you here snivelling about being a model employer and a converted 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Morell: My poor love: how did you manage about the luggage? How -- 1.2 ::ABOUT :=Burgess: me to im, Candy. I can ony stay about two minutes. 1.3 ::ABOUT :=Morell: you think yours is a case to be talked about? Youre under twenty: she's over thirty. 1.3 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: things people make fools of themselves about are any less real and true than the 1.3 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: than the things they behave sensibly about? They are more true: they are the only 1.3 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: because you can see that I am a fool about your wife; just as no doubt that old 1.3 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: because he sees that you are a fool about it. Does that prove you wrong? Does 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: love affairs in the world. We all go about longing for love: it is the first need 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: Hush! I go about in search of love; and I find it in 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: you, Miss Garnett. What am I to talk about? 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: Talk about indifferent things. Talk about the 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: Talk about indifferent things. Talk about the weather. 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: Would you take about indifferent things if a child were 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: Well: I cant talk about indifferent things with my heart crying 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: Mr Mill ! ! ! A fine man to break my heart about, indeed! I'd rather 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Proserpine: I simply dont know what youre talking about. I dont understand you. 2.1 ::ABOUT :=Burgess: Ever notice hennythink queer about him? 2.2 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: you sit here comfortably preaching about it: everlasting preaching! preaching! 2.2 ::ABOUT :=Candida: clean them to-morrow for saying that about him. 2.2 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: Oh, dont talk about boots! Your feet should be beautiful 2.2 ::ABOUT :=Candida: Why do they come to hear you talking about Christianity every Sunday? Why, just 2.2 ::ABOUT :=Candida: six days that they want to forget all about it and have a rest on the seventh; 2.3 ::ABOUT :=Lexy: They are in the greatest consternation about your telegram. 2.3 ::ABOUT :=Candida: What did you telegraph about, James? 2.3 ::ABOUT :=Candida: Oh, James, you musnt mind what I said about that. And if you dont go youll have 2.3 ::ABOUT :=Burgess: Prossy's complaint! What are you talkin about, James? 3.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: I finished the poem about the angel quarter of an hour ago. Ive 3.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: like you. When you began your heroics about leaving me here with Candida -- 3.1 ::ABOUT :=Marchbanks: It kept itself somehow until about ten minutes ago. Up to that moment, 3.2 ::ABOUT :=Candida: Yes, dear; but -- I dont understand about this morning. 3.3 ::ABOUT :=Candida: little boy: I want to talk to James about you. 3.3 ::ABOUT :=Morell: that it may be true. I will not go about a tortured with doubts and suspicions. 3.3 ::ABOUT :=Candida: Eugene. You remember what you told me about yourself, Eugene: how nobody has cared 2.2 ::ABOVE :=Burgess: Oh, Hi dont mind. Hi'm above it. But is it right? thats what I want 3.1 ::ABSENCE :=Marchbanks: you. I swore not to say a word in your absence that I would not have said a month 3.1 ::ABSENCE :=Morell: tell me what has happened during my absence. 3.2 ::ABSTINENCE :=Candida: lemonade? You know our rules: total abstinence. 1.1 ::ABSURD :=Proserpine: to hear a woman raved about in that absurd manner merely because she's got good 3.3 ::ACCEPT :=Morell: I accept your sentence, Candida. 1.2 ::ACCEPTING :=Morell: I shamed the Guardians out of accepting your tender: I shamed the ratepayers 2.2 ::ACCUSTOMED :=Burgess: dont be vulgar. Mr Morchbanks aint accustomed to it. Youre givin him the orrors 1.3 ::ACROSS :=Candida: Give me my rug. Now hang my cloak across my arm. Now my hat. Now open the door 1.2 ::AD :=Burgess: if it's only to stop your mouth. You ad the right instinc arter all, James: the 2.2 ::AD :=Burgess: Har, har! Devil a better! Ad you there, James, straight. 1.1 ::ADD :=Lexy: Liberal Federation. Allow me to add that though they didnt appreciate it, 3.1 ::ADDLED :=Candida: Those sonnets of yours have perfectly addled me. Why should there be a sword between 1.1 ::ADDRESS :=Morell: The Hoxton Freedom Group want me to address them on Sunday morning. What are 3.2 ::ADDRESS :=Lexy: you. What a noble, splendid, inspired address you gave us! You surpassed yours 2.1 ::ADDRESSES :=Morell: Get all their names and addresses, Miss Garnett. 2.1 ::ADDRESSIN :=Burgess: Hi was not addressin myself to you, young woman, that 1.3 ::ADVANCE :=Marchbanks: gentleman your husband has anything to advance to the contrary. 1.3 ::ADVANTAGE :=Morell: a man's faith in himself. To take advantage of that to break a man's spirit 2.1 ::ADVANTAGE :=Proserpine: He'll be all right now that he has the advantage of your polished conversation: 2.1 ::AFFAIRS :=Marchbanks: of thing -- always had to have love affairs to keep them from going mad. 2.1 ::AFFAIRS :=Marchbanks: I shouldnt have alluded to your love affairs. 2.1 ::AFFAIRS :=Proserpine: I havnt any love affairs. How dare you say such a thing? The 2.1 ::AFFAIRS :=Marchbanks: is the reason there are so few love affairs in the world. We all go about longing 2.1 ::AFFECTION :=Marchbanks: things: foolish lies. And I see the affection I am longing for given to dogs 1.2 ::AFORE :=Burgess: elp likin you: besides, as I said afore, of course one dont take hall a clorgyman 1.2 ::AFORE :=Burgess: met a man as didnt know Nortn Folgit afore. Goodbye, Mr Morchbanks: I know yore 1.1 ::AFRAID :=Lexy: I'm afraid so. I wish I could get up in the 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: I'm not afraid of you: it's you who are afraid of 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: I'm not afraid of you: it's you who are afraid of me. 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: would: all that makes you think I'm afraid of you. But youre wrong. If I havnt 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: British cowardice either: I'm not afraid of a clergyman's ideas. I'll fight 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: between your ideas and mine. You are afraid to let me see her again. Let me alone, 1.3 ::AFRAID :=Morell: I am not going to touch you: dont be afraid. When my wife comes back she will 2.1 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: me: what use are they? Why are you afraid to be you real self with me? I am 2.3 ::AFRAID :=Candida: Dont be afraid. Theyll be too busy looking at James 2.3 ::AFRAID :=Lexy: very strangely to me this morning. I'm afraid she's a little out of her mind so 2.3 ::AFRAID :=Morell: I should be afraid to let myself go before Eugene: he 2.3 ::AFRAID :=Morell: so critical of sermons. He knows I am afraid of him: he told me as much this morning. 2.3 ::AFRAID :=Morell: Well, I shall shew him how much afraid I am by leaving him here in your custody, 3.1 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: I was afraid of making you uneasy too. It looked 3.1 ::AFRAID :=Candida: at all, no matter what it is. I am not afraid, so long as it is your real self that 3.1 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: Oh yes: Ive got that far. But dont be afraid. Heroics are infectious: I caught 3.1 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: I'm not afraid now. I disliked you before: that was 3.2 ::AFRAID :=Marchbanks: going to be a terrible scene. Arnt you afraid? 1.3 ::AFTER :=Candida: that I think youd better stay to lunch after all, though I told you you mustnt. 2.2 ::AFTER :=Morell: plan: Prossy and I can talk business after breakfast while we're washing up. Washing 2.2 ::AFTER :=Candida: first. James: youve not been looking after the house properly. 3.1 ::AFTER :=Marchbanks: I dont think much of your preaching after all: I believe I could do it better 3.2 ::AFTER :=Morell: Go and look after her, Lexy. 3.3 ::AFTER :=Marchbanks: and that he couldnt. And it was not after what passed there before the fire that 3.3 ::AFTER :=Morell: was right. As you told me a few hours after, he is always right. He said nothing 1.2 ::AFTERNOON :=Candida: you dont go at once. Come back in the afternoon and tell Mr Marchbanks where to 3.1 ::AFTERWARDS :=Marchbanks: Morell: she will arrange it for me afterwards as she did this morning. I shall 1.1 ::AGAIN :=Morell: of Freedom instead. Well, Lexy? Late again, as usual! 1.2 ::AGAIN :=Burgess: you turned my daughrter again me. Well, Ive come to hact the part 1.2 ::AGAIN :=Burgess: Dont say that to me again, James Mavor Morell. 1.2 ::AGAIN :=Candida: Guess again. Eugene isnt a cab tout. 1.2 ::AGAIN :=Burgess: Bye, bye, Candy. I'll look in again later on. So long, James. 1.3 ::AGAIN :=Marchbanks: mine. You are afraid to let me see her again. Let me alone, I say. I'm going. 1.3 ::AGAIN :=Morell: are never going to cross our threshold again, she will want to have that explained 2.1 ::AGAIN :=Proserpine: this letter! have to be done all over again. Oh, I cant contain myself: silly old 2.2 ::AGAIN :=Burgess: to it. Youre givin him the orrors again. I mean the poetic ones. 2.3 ::AGAIN :=Lexy: Mrs Morell? So glad to see you back again. 3.1 ::AGAIN :=Candida: Put that down again, Eugene. There are limits to my appetite 3.1 ::AGAIN :=Marchbanks: man who has become as a little child again. Oh, you fool, you fool, you triple 3.2 ::AGAIN :=Marchbanks: -- I -- I'm very sorry. I wont do it again: indeed I wont. I'll let him alone 1.1 ::AGAINST :=Lexy: I had no idea you had any feeling against Mrs Morell. 1.1 ::AGAINST :=Proserpine: I have no feeling against her. She's very nice, very good-hearted: 1.3 ::AGAINST :=Marchbanks: slavery to them. I'll pit my own ideas against them. You are driving me out of the 2.2 ::AGE :=Burgess: Mr Morchbanks! Oh, thats bad, at your age. You must leave it off grajally. 3.3 ::AGE :=Candida: first school prize, won at the ripe age of eight! James as the captain of his 3.3 ::AGE :=Marchbanks: a hundred years, we shall be the same age. But I have a better secret than that 2.3 ::AGNOSTIC :=Lexy: get nobody but the President of the Agnostic League. 1.1 ::AGO := been off on your rounds half an hour ago. 1.2 ::AGO :=Morell: called -- it was about three years ago, I think -- you said the same thing a 1.2 ::AGO :=Burgess: bygones be bygones. James: three years ago, you done me a hil turn. You done me 1.2 ::AGO :=Burgess: I could a believed. Five yorr [year] ago, no sensible man would a thought o takin 1.3 ::AGO :=Morell: So was I -- an hour ago. 3.1 ::AGO :=Marchbanks: about the angel quarter of an hour ago. Ive read you several things since. 3.1 ::AGO :=Candida: Nonsense: it's closed long ago. Come and sit down on the hearth-rug, 3.1 ::AGO :=Marchbanks: that I would not have said a month ago in your presence. 3.1 ::AGO :=Marchbanks: itself somehow until about ten minutes ago. Up to that moment, I went on desperately 3.3 ::AGO :=Candida: it, and could not tell you a moment ago how it came to be so. And when he thought 2.2 ::AGREE :=Candida: them one little bit. They think they agree with you; but whats the use of their 3.3 ::AGREED :=Morell: degradation of jealousy. We have agreed -- he and I -- that you shall choose 2.2 ::AGREEING :=Candida: with you; but whats the use of their agreeing with you if they go and do just 1.1 ::AH :=Morell: Ah; but you see theyre near relatives of 1.1 ::AH :=Morell: Ah, you dont believe it. Everybody says it: 1.1 ::AH :=Morell: Ah, my boy, get married: get married to a 1.1 ::AH :=Lexy: Ah, if you women only had the same clue to 2.1 ::AH :=Marchbanks: Ah, dont say those stupid things to me: they 2.1 ::AH :=Marchbanks: Ah! I understand now. 2.2 ::AH :=Morell: Ah, indeed. 2.2 ::AH :=Candida: of my purity, as you call it? Ah, James, how little you understand me, 2.3 ::AH :=Morell: Ah no: I cant talk. I can only preach. 2.3 ::AH :=Morell: Ah, I thought it was I who couldnt understand, 3.3 ::AH :=Candida: Ah, dearest -- 3.3 ::AH :=Candida: his dignity for my position! his -- ah, I am mixing up your beautiful cadences 3.3 ::AH :=Marchbanks: Ah, never. Out, then, into the night with 3.3 ::AH :=Candida: Goodbye. Ah, James! 1.2 ::AHA :=Morell: Aha! Youre finding that out at last, are 1.2 ::AIN :=Burgess: A honorable unnerstannin. Ain we, James? 2.3 ::AIN :=Burgess: Fust time in his life, I'll bet. Ain it, Candy? 1.2 ::AIN'T :=Burgess: James. Our quarrel's made up now, ain't it? 1.2 ::AINT :=Burgess: The ouse aint worth livin in since you left it, Candy. 1.2 ::AINT :=Burgess: you find yorself this weather? Ope you aint lettin James put foolish ideas into 2.2 ::AINT :=Burgess: Candy! dont be vulgar. Mr Morchbanks aint accustomed to it. Youre givin him the 2.3 ::AINT :=Burgess: it like that, James. It's ony that it aint Sunday, you know. 2.3 ::AINT :=Burgess: Cawrse I'll come, James. Aint it awlus a pleasure to ear you! 1.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: Oh, is that all? 1.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: Youve got to do all the work today. 1.1 ::ALL :=Morell: Dont I? I'm going to have this morning all to myself. My wife's coming back: she's 1.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: your amourous delusions is that we're all jealous of one another! 1.2 ::ALL :=Burgess: I dont hemploy no women now: theyre all sacked; and the work is done by machinery. 1.2 ::ALL :=Burgess: I spose I must since you notice it. At all events, I git my contrax assepted by 1.2 ::ALL :=Burgess: hused to wonder you was let preach at all. Why, I know a clorgyman what 'as bin 1.2 ::ALL :=Burgess: mouth. You ad the right instinc arter all, James: the line you took is the payin 1.2 ::ALL :=Morell: you can spare us quarter of an hour at all events. This is my father-in-law. Mr. 1.2 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: Not at all. 1.3 ::ALL :=Candida: you are a very nice boy, Eugene, with all your queerness. If you had laughed at 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: to deal with strange people. But it's all right. He beamed all over and touched 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: people. But it's all right. He beamed all over and touched his hat when Morell 1.3 ::ALL :=Morell: Oh, is that all? Wont my suggestion that you should take 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: Oh, let us put aside all that cant. It horrifies me when I think 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: doses of it she has had to endure in all the weary years during which you have 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: Oh, do you think I dont know all that? Do you think that the things people 1.3 ::ALL :=Morell: married; and you will be working with all your might and valor to make every spot 1.3 ::ALL :=Morell: happiness for the great harvest that all -- even the humblest -- shall one day 1.3 ::ALL :=Morrel: insofar as it has any real worth at all. It is the gift of finding words for 1.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: for your wife as a drunk navvy would: all that makes you think I'm afraid of you. 1.3 ::ALL :=Candida: think youd better stay to lunch after all, though I told you you mustnt. It will 2.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: be made to write love letters. Theyre all the same, arnt they? 2.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: so few love affairs in the world. We all go about longing for love: it is the 2.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: speak unless it is first spoken to. All the love in the world is longing to speak; 2.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: but I have a mind to tell you, for all that. 2.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: That is what all poets do: they talk to themselves out 2.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: He'll be all right now that he has the advantage of 2.1 ::ALL :=Proserpine: spoiled this letter! have to be done all over again. Oh, I cant contain myself: 2.1 ::ALL :=Morell: Get all their names and addresses, Miss Garn 2.2 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: on the condition that you hand over all the rough work to me. 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: Oh, James! how could you spoil it all? 2.2 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: hasnt every man desired that with all his soul for the woman he loves? Thats 2.2 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: my ideal: whats yours, and that of all the dreadful people who live in these 2.2 ::ALL :=Morell: Oh, all right, all right. Well, Miss Prossy, 2.2 ::ALL :=Morell: Oh, all right, all right. Well, Miss Prossy, why have you 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: with you. Of course what you say is all very true; but it does no good: they 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: for six days that they want to forget all about it and have a rest on the seventh; 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: only coming back to look at you. They all have Prossy's complaint. 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: Yes, Prossy, and all the other secretaries you ever had. Why 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: peel the potatoes and abase herself in all manner of ways for six shillings a week 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: you, James: thats the reason. They are all in love with you. And you are in love 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: it so beautifully. And you think it's all enthusiasm for the kingdom of Heaven 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: It seems unfair that all the love should go to you, and none to 2.2 ::ALL :=Morell: Not at all. You know that I have perfect confidence 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: I have grown fonder and fonder of him all the time I was away. Do you know, James, 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: it from a good woman, then it will be all right: he will forgive me. 2.2 ::ALL :=Candida: do, especially poetic men, who imagine all women are angels! Suppose he only discovers 2.3 ::ALL :=Candida: Oh, youre only shocked! Is that all? How conventional all you unconventional 2.3 ::ALL :=Candida: shocked! Is that all? How conventional all you unconventional people are! 2.3 ::ALL :=Morell: I suppose not. I beg all your pardons: I was not conscious of 2.3 ::ALL :=Burgess: Aw no, Candy. Ang it all! 2.3 ::ALL :=Lexy: you. But they have been telegraphing all over the place for another speaker; and 2.3 ::ALL :=Lexy: from Christianity. He will undo all the good we have been doing. Of course, 2.3 ::ALL :=Candida: Oh, do go, James. We'll all go. 2.3 ::ALL :=Candida: as comfortable at the meeting. We'll all sit on the platform and be great peo 2.3 ::ALL :=Candida: We're all coming, James. 3.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: Oh, Ive been so miserable all the evening, because I was doing right. 3.1 ::ALL :=Candida: you really and truly feel. Anything at all, no matter what it is. I am not afraid, 3.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: Oh, now I cant say anything: all the words I know belong to some attitude 3.1 ::ALL :=Candida: never have forgotten that. Where are all the others? 3.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: think much of your preaching after all: I believe I could do it better myself. 3.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: you call a sniveling little whelp and all the rest of it. A woman like that has 3.1 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: She offered me all I chose to ask for: her shawl, her wings, 3.2 ::ALL :=Candida: But James, I -- Oh bother! Here they all come. 3.2 ::ALL :=Morell: mind, never mind, never mind. Have you all had supper? 3.2 ::ALL :=Morell: Was it my eloquence that produced all this extravagance? 3.2 ::ALL :=Morell: No use, dear. Theyve all had champagne. Pross has broken her 3.3 ::ALL :=Candida: Eugene can say no less, if that is all. 3.3 ::ALL :=Marchbanks: it was when she saw him dancing before all the people. 3.3 ::ALL :=Morell: Dancing before all the people, Candida; and thinking he 3.3 ::ALL :=Morell: and position for your dignity. That is all it becomes a man to offer to a woman 3.3 ::ALL :=Candida: James as a baby! the most wonderful of all babies. James holding his first school 3.3 ::ALL :=Candida: in his first frock coat! James under all sorts of glorious circumstances! You 3.3 ::ALL :=Candida: and wife and mother to his children all in one. Ask Prossy and Maria how troublesome 3.3 ::ALL :=Morell: It's all true, every word. What I am you have 3.3 ::ALL :=Morell: and my sisters: you are the sum of all loving care to me. 1.1 ::ALLOW :=Lexy: of Women's Liberal Federation. Allow me to add that though they didnt appreciate 1.3 ::ALLOW :=Morell: But there are some things I wont allow. Dont force me to shew you the indulgence 2.1 ::ALLUDED :=Marchbanks: offended you. Perhaps I shouldnt have alluded to your love affairs. 1.2 ::ALONE :=Candida: There! there! there! I wasnt alone. Eugene has been down with us; and 1.3 ::ALONE :=Marchbanks: Let me alone. Dont touch me. Stop, Morell: if you 1.3 ::ALONE :=Marchbanks: afraid to let me see her again. Let me alone, I say. I'm going. 2.1 ::ALONE :=Burgess: Oh, we can spare you. Now we're alone, Mr Morchbanks, let me give you a friendly 3.2 ::ALONE :=Marchbanks: it again: indeed I wont. I'll let him alone. 3.2 ::ALONE :=Morell: Let me alone! You young -- 1.1 ::ALONG :=Proserpine: chin stuck out before you, hurrying along with that eager look in your eyes? 1.2 ::ALONG :=Morell: Come along: you can spare us quarter of an hour 1.3 ::ALONG :=Candida: Why were you so melancholy as we came along in the cab? 2.2 ::ALONG :=Candida: You shall help me to slice them. Come along. 3.1 ::ALONG :=Candida: Then come along. 1.1 ::ALREADY :=Lexy: Coming back already! with children? I thought they were 2.1 ::ALREADY :=Marchbanks: You neednt. I know already that it must. 2.2 ::ALREADY :=Candida: to. Now youre beginning to look better already. Why must you go out ever night lecturing 3.1 ::ALREADY :=Marchbanks: never have seen that I was in Heaven already. Repulsed me! You think that would 3.2 ::ALTERCATION :=Morell: Candida, my dear: this altercation is hardly quite seemly. It is 2.1 ::ALTERED :=Proserpine: Well, youve altered the spacing. 1.2 ::ALTHOUGH :=Burgess: job for yorrs by the Bishop o London, although the pore feller's not a bit more 2.2 ::ALTHOUGH :=Candida: should go to you, and none to him; although he needs it so much more than you 1.1 ::ALWAYS :=Morell: Get a wife like my Candida; and youll always be in arrear with your repayment. 1.1 ::ALWAYS :=Proserpine: say "knoaledge" in church, though you always say "knolledge" in private conversation! 1.2 ::ALWAYS :=Morell: I always keep my curates in their places as 1.3 ::ALWAYS :=Morell: Marchbanks: we need it greatly and always. There are so many things to make 1.3 ::ALWAYS :=Marchbanks: Is it like this for her here always? A woman, with a great soul, craving 2.1 ::ALWAYS :=Marchbanks: write letter and that sort of thing -- always had to have love affairs to keep them 2.1 ::ALWAYS :=Marchbanks: Yes: that is what it always comes to. We hold our tongues. Does 2.2 ::ALWAYS :=Candida: Eugene's always right. He's a wonderful boy: I have 2.2 ::ALWAYS :=Candida: He is always right. He understands you; he understands 2.3 ::ALWAYS :=Lexy: But he always insists so powerfully on the divorce 3.1 ::ALWAYS :=Marchbanks: never think or feel Mrs Morell: it is always Candida. 3.3 ::ALWAYS :=Morell: you told me a few hours after, he is always right. He said nothing that you did 3.3 ::ALWAYS :=Candida: without comfort or welcome or refuge: always lonely, and nearly always disliked 3.3 ::ALWAYS :=Candida: or refuge: always lonely, and nearly always disliked and misunderstood, poor 3.3 ::ALWAYS :=Candida: and love for him, and stand sentinel always to keep little vulgar cares out. I 1.1 ::AM :=Lexy: But how can I watch and pray when I am asleep? Isnt that so, Miss Prossy? RESP 1.1 ::AM :=Morell: Yes. I am going to dawdle today. 1.1 ::AM :=Lexy: Thats quite true. I am not ashamed of owing him that, as I owe 1.1 ::AM :=Lexy: I have no intention of intruding, I am sure, Mr Burgess. Good morning. 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: that he said something funny; but I am so ill at ease with strangers; and I never 1.3 ::AM :=Morell: a happy thing it is to be married as I am. 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: Oh, I am not forgetting myself: I am only full 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: Oh, I am not forgetting myself: I am only full of horror. You shall see whether 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: You think yourself stronger than I am; but I shall stagger you if you have a 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: with me because you can see that I am a fool about your wife; just as no doubt 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: superiority to me prove that I am wrong? 1.3 ::AM :=Morell: -- you may be a master builder where I am only a humble journeyman; for dont think, 1.3 ::AM :=Morell: the future, when you are as happy as I am, I will be your true brother in the faith. 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: do nothing but cry with rage when I am met with violence -- because I cant lift 1.3 ::AM :=Morell: Wait a moment: I am not going to touch you: dont be afraid. 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: to lay the truth at her feet as I am -- then you will know to the end of your 1.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: Come and lay the table. I am the happiest of mortals. 2.1 ::AM :=Proserpine: Certainly I am not shy. What do you mean? 2.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: afraid to be you real self with me? I am just like you. 2.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: lies. And I see the affection I am longing for given to dogs and cats and 2.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: understand you, Miss Garnett. What am I to talk about? 2.1 ::AM :=Burgess: Ho! I'm a silly ole fatUead, am I? Ho, indeed! Hall right, my gurl! Hall 2.1 ::AM :=Burgess: to me. I'll let you know who I am. Dont you take no notice of her, Mr Morchbanks. 2.2 ::AM :=Candida: more than you do. Whats the matter? Am I worrying you? 2.3 ::AM :=Morell: choose. These people forget that I am a man: they think I am a talking machine 2.3 ::AM :=Morell: forget that I am a man: they think I am a talking machine to be turned on for 2.3 ::AM :=Morell: to the Guild of St Matthew that I am coming. 2.3 ::AM :=Morell: is so critical of sermons. He knows I am afraid of him: he told me as much this 2.3 ::AM :=Morell: I shall shew him how much afraid I am by leaving him here in your custody, 3.1 ::AM :=Candida: at all, no matter what it is. I am not afraid, so long as it is your real 3.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: Misery! I am the happiest of men. I desire nothing 3.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: you fool, you fool, you triple fool! I am the man, Morell: I am the man. You dont 3.1 ::AM :=Marchbanks: triple fool! I am the man, Morell: I am the man. You dont understand what a woman 3.2 ::AM :=Candida: Yes I am: very angry. I have a good mind to pack 3.2 ::AM :=Morell: Gently, Candida, gently. I am able to take care of myself. 3.2 ::AM :=Morell: It is a matter between two men; and I am the right person to settle it. 3.2 ::AM :=Marchbanks: If I am to be scolded like a boy, I must make 3.2 ::AM :=Marchbanks: He began it. And he's bigger than I am. 3.2 ::AM :=Morell: But your other point is true. I am certainly the bigger of the two, and, 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: I am sure Eugene can say no less, if that is 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: is very quick-witted, James. I hope I am going to laugh; but I am not sure that 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: I hope I am going to laugh; but I am not sure that I am not going to be very 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: to laugh; but I am not sure that I am not going to be very angry. 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: Yes, dear: I am sure you did. But never mind: I shant 3.3 ::AM :=Morell: the poet, who sees everything; and I am the poor parson, who understands noth 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: Oh! I am to choose am I? I suppose it is quite 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: Oh! I am to choose am I? I suppose it is quite settled that 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: have you to offer for my choice? I am up for auction, it seems. What do you 3.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: shew her that you suffer, Morell. I am on the rack too; but I am not crying. 3.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: Morell. I am on the rack too; but I am not crying. 3.3 ::AM :=Morell: are right. It is not for pity that I am bidding. 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: James: I did not mean to touch you. I am waiting to hear your bid. 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: dignity for my position! his -- ah, I am mixing up your beautiful cadences and 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: beautiful cadences and spoiling them, am I not, darling. 3.3 ::AM :=Morell: It's all true, every word. What I am you have me with the labor of your hands 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: Am I your mother and sisters to you, Eug 3.3 ::AM :=Marchbanks: I know the hour when it strikes. I am impatient to do what must be done. 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: little poem out of the two sentences I am going to say to you? And will you promise 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: When I am thirty, she will be forty-five. When I 3.3 ::AM :=Candida: thirty, she will be forty-five. When I am sixty, she will be seventy-five. 3.2 ::AMOST :=Burgess: and six a bottle. She took two glasses amost straight horff. 1.1 ::AMOUROUS :=Proserpine: that the reason we dont share your amourous delusions is that we're all jealous 3.1 ::AMUSED :=Candida: as you usually do. I want to be amused. Dont you want to? 2.2 ::AMUSING :=Morell: why dont they try something more amusing? more self-indulgent? There must 1.1 ::AN := have been off on your rounds half an hour ago. 1.1 ::AN :=Morell: earth. That will cure you of dawdling. An honest man feels that he must pay Heaven 1.2 ::AN :=Burgess: turn. You done me hout of a contrac; an when I gev you arsh words in my natral 1.2 ::AN :=Morell: Yes, you did. And I thought you an old scoundrel. 1.2 ::AN :=Morell: and a converted man when youre only an apostate with your coat turned for the 1.2 ::AN :=Morell: Come along: you can spare us quarter of an hour at all events. This is my father-in-law. 1.3 ::AN :=Morell: in the return of the wife to her home. An old friend or a truly noble and sympathetic 1.3 ::AN :=Marchbanks: way of the love she inspires! It is an insult to her! 1.3 ::AN :=Marchbanks: and saw what fools they were. Oh, it's an old story: youll find it in the Bible. 1.3 ::AN :=Candida: you mustnt. It will be ready in half an hour. Dont be silly. 1.3 ::AN :=Morell: So was I -- an hour ago. 2.2 ::AN :=Candida: present me with a nice new one, with an ivory back inlaid with mother-of-pear 2.2 ::AN :=Candida: scullery under the tap. He will make an excellent cook if he can only get over 2.3 ::AN :=Candida: Given up an engagement to speak! 2.3 ::AN :=Lexy: They decided to send an urgent telegram to you asking whether 2.3 ::AN :=Candida: that. And if you dont go youll have an attack of bad conscience tomorrow. 2.3 ::AN :=Morell: Well, an excellent man. What better do they wa 3.1 ::AN :=Marchbanks: the poem about the angel quarter of an hour ago. Ive read you several things 3.1 ::AN :=Marchbanks: Then she became an angel; and there was a flaming sword that 1.2 ::AN' :=Burgess: James. Good mornin. When I pay a man, an' 'is living depens on me, I keep him in 1.1 ::ANARCHISTS :=Proserpine: Communist Anarchists, I think. 1.1 ::ANARCHISTS :=Morell: Just like Anarchists not to know that they cant have 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: them good. Say I can come on Mondays and Thursdays only. Have you the diary t 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: Theyre only half a dozen ignorant and conceited coster- mongers without five 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: Ha! ha! Watch and pray, Lexy: watch and pray. 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: Ha! ha! Watch and pray, Lexy: watch and pray. 1.1 ::AND :=Lexy: I know. But how can I watch and pray when I am asleep? Isnt that so, 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: to get some flannel things for Jimmy, and to see how we're getting on without 1.1 ::AND :=Lexy: But, my dear Morell, if what Jimmy and Fluffy had was scarlatina, do you think 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: if you can, Lexy: she'll nurse you; and what a piece of luck that will be for 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: married: get married to a good woman; and then youll understand. Thats a foretaste 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: it. Get a wife like my Candida; and youll always be in arrear with your 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: Candida here, and Candida there, and Candida everywhere! 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: Candida here, and Candida there, and Candida everywhere! It's enough to drive 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: merely because she's got good hair and a tolerable figure. 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: are not a bit better than mine: now! And you know very well you think me dowdy 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: you know very well you think me dowdy and second rate enough. 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: Thank you. Thats very nice and comforting. 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: good-hearted: I'm very fond of her, and can appreciate her real qualities far 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: you? It must be so nice to be a man and have a fine penetrating intellect instead 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: instead of mere emotions like us, and to know that the reason we dont share 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: me your own ideas, such as they are, and not his. You never cut a poorer figure 1.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: do you think I dont know? Here! come and set about your work: weve wasted enough 1.1 ::AND :=Burgess: I come about is private between me and Mr Morell. 1.1 ::AND :=Morell: Take my silk handkerchief and wrap your throat up. Theres a cold wind. 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: curates in their places as my helpers and comrades. If you get as much work out 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: get as much work out of your clerks and warehousemen as I do out of my curates, 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: language for a clorgyman, James? And you so particlar, too! 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: them to the streets to keep body and soul together. Those women were my parishioners. 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: but you. How dare you, sir, come here and offer to forgive me, and talk about your 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: come here and offer to forgive me, and talk about your daughter, and -- 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: me, and talk about your daughter, and -- 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: no women now: theyre all sacked; and the work is done by machinery. Not a 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: a man 'as less than sixpence a hour; and the skilled ands gits the Trade Union 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: beg your pardon for my hard thoughts. And now, dont you feel the better for the 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: do it? What does it lead to but drink and huppishness in workin men? It's hall 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: James: it gits you hinto the papers and makes a great man of you; but you never 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: men that they dunno ow to spend, and takin it from people that might be makin 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: Yes I ham: just family sentiment and nothink helse. 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: usban. Come, James: be a Kerischin, and shake ands. 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: Yes, you did. And I thought you an old scoundrel. 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: justifying your scoundrelism and proud of it, you are welcome. But I wont 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: about being a model employer and a converted man when youre only an apostate 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: Come now: either take your hat and go; or else sit down and give me a good 1.2 ::AND :=Morell: take your hat and go; or else sit down and give me a good scoundrelly reason for 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: Well, you orr a queer bird, James, and no mistake. But one carnt elp likin you: 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: yourself, I dussent take the bet. You and your crew are gittin hinfluential: I 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: How orr you, Candy? James and me is come to a nunnerstannin. A honorable 1.2 ::AND :=Candida: alone. Eugene has been down with us; and we traveled together. 1.2 ::AND :=Candida: at once; or he'll pay for the cab; and I dont want that. Well, papa: how are 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: left it, Candy. I wish youd come round and give the gurl a talkin to. Who's this 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: me, Candy: it's a 'Igh Church picture; and James chose it hisself. 1.2 ::AND :=Candida: for it until the seven days were up; and he was too shy to ask for credit. Oh, 1.2 ::AND :=Burgess: Candy. Some night, I ope, youll come and dine with me at my club, the Freeman 1.2 ::AND :=Candida: go at once. Come back in the afternoon and tell Mr Marchbanks where to find the 1.3 ::AND :=Candida: And youll go to the Freeman Founders to dine 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: I am so ill at ease with strangers; and I never can see a joke. I'm very sor 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: But it's all right. He beamed all over and touched his hat when Morell gave him 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: better than the underpaying instinct, and not so common. 1.3 ::AND :=Candida: Of course she is. And now I must leave you to James for the 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: like to stay, stay. If youre shy, go and take a turn in the park and write poetry 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: shy, go and take a turn in the park and write poetry until half past one; and 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: and write poetry until half past one; and then come in and have a good feed. 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: until half past one; and then come in and have a good feed. 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: home. An old friend or a truly noble and sympathetic soul is not in the way on 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: wrong. I'm very fond of you, my boy; and I should like you to see for yourself 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: know the comfort of seeing through and through a thundering liar and rotten 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: through and through a thundering liar and rotten cynic like that fellow. Ha! ha! 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: Ha! ha! Now, off with you to the park, and write your poem. Half past one, sharp, 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: you were. Come: sit down quietly; and tell me what it is. And remember: we 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: down quietly; and tell me what it is. And remember: we are friends, and need not 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: it is. And remember: we are friends, and need not fear that either of us will 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: of us will be anything but patient and kind to the other, whatever we may have 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: whether this is a time for patience and kindness. Dont look at me in that self- 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: years during which you have selfishly and blindly sacrificed her to minister to 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: of themselves about are any less real and true than the things they behave sensibly 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: that are true. You are very calm and sensible and moderate with me because 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: true. You are very calm and sensible and moderate with me because you can see 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: Eugene: Listen to me. Some day, I hope and trust, you will be a happy man like me. 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: man like me. You will be married; and you will be working with all your might 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: will be working with all your might and valor to make every spot on earth as 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: of the Kingdom of Heaven on earth; and -- who knows? -- you may be a master 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: to. I well know that it is in the poet and the holy spirit of man -- the god with 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: -- to think that the heavy burthen and great gift of a poet may be laid upon 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: the humblest -- shall one day reap. And last, but trust me, not least, I will 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: to believe that your wife loves you and is happy in her home. We need such help, 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: help, Marchbanks: we need it greatly and always. There are so many things to make 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: of doubts. Will you play the traitor and let them in on me? 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: craving for realty, truth, freedom; and being fed on metaphors, sermons, stale 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: It's the gift of the gab, nothing more and nothing less. What has your knack of 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Ive been to your political meetings; and Ive seen you do whats called rousing 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: behaved exactly as if they were drunk. And their wives looked on and saw what fools 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: were drunk. And their wives looked on and saw what fools they were. Oh, it's an 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: let her choose between your ideas and mine. You are afraid to let me see her 1.3 ::AND :=Morell: will want to know why you have gone. And when she finds that you are never going 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: but the true one, you are a liar and a coward. Tell her what I said; and how 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and a coward. Tell her what I said; and how you were strong and manly, and shook 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: what I said; and how you were strong and manly, and shook me as a terrier shakes 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and how you were strong and manly, and shook me as a terrier shakes a rat; and 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: shook me as a terrier shakes a rat; and how I shrank and was terrified; and how 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: terrier shakes a rat; and how I shrank and was terrified; and how you called me 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and how I shrank and was terrified; and how you called me a sniveling little 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: you called me a sniveling little whelp and put me out of the house. If you dont 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Because she will understand me, and know that I understand her. If you keep 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: days that she really belongs to me and not to you. Goodbye. 1.3 ::AND :=Candida: James, if he promises to be a good boy and help me to lay the table? 1.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Come and lay the table. I am the happiest of 2.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: with my typewriter, Mr Marchbanks; and theres not the least use in your trying 2.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: Nothing to do but turn the handle, and it would write a beautiful love letter 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: people -- people who can do business and write letter and that sort of thing -- 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: who can do business and write letter and that sort of thing -- always had to have 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Hush! I go about in search of love; and I find it in unmeasured stores in the 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: this horrible shyness strangles me; and I stand dumb, or worse than dumb, saying 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: meaningless things: foolish lies. And I see the affection I am longing for 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: I am longing for given to dogs and cats and pet birds because they come 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: am longing for given to dogs and cats and pet birds because they come and ask for 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: cats and pet birds because they come and ask for it. It must be asked for: it 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: none to give. But we, who have love, and long to mingle it with the love of others: 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Yes, I know. And so you havnt the courage to tell him 2.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: original conversation, youd better go and talk to yourself. 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: do: they talk to themselves out loud; and the world overhears them. But it's horribly 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Your secret. Tell me: is it really and truly possible for a woman to love h 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: You do understand; and you know. Is it possible for a woman 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: a deppitation in the dinin room; and Candy is hupstairs heducating of a young 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: Mr Morchbanks is a gentleman, and knows his place, which is more than some 2.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: It's well you and I are not ladies and gentleman: I'd talk 2.1 ::AND :=Proserpine: It's well you and I are not ladies and gentleman: I'd talk to you pretty straight 2.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: a Morch 'are. You take notice on him and youll see. 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: now --Jhe sez "I'm a fool," he sez; "and yore a scounderl." Me a scounderl, mind 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: scounderl." Me a scounderl, mind you! And then sook ands with me on it, as if it 2.1 ::AND :=Morell: Get all their names and addresses, Miss Garnett. 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: he is. Just you keep your heye on im and see. I'm sorry, James, to ave to make 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: I feel I oughter, as a matter o right and dooty. 2.1 ::AND :=Burgess: And do you hexpec me to put up with it from 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: that, Morell: it's a shame. I'll go and fill them. 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: Yes; but she isnt a slave; and the house looks as if I kept three. That 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: a hand. It's not a bad plan: Prossy and I can talk business after breakfast while 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: to be done, you just ring the bell and throw it onto somebody else, eh? 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: marble floors are washed by the rain and dried by the sun; where the south winds 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: south winds dusts the beautiful green and purple carpets. Or a chariot! to carry 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: the sky, where the lamps are stars, and dont need to be filled with paraffin 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: And where there is nothing to do but to be 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: nothing to do but to be idle, selfish, and useless. 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Yes, to be idle, selfish, and useless: that is, to be beautiful and 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and useless: that is, to be beautiful and free and happy: hasnt every man desired 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: that is, to be beautiful and free and happy: hasnt every man desired that with 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: he loves? Thats my ideal: whats yours, and that of all the dreadful people who live 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: these hideous rows of houses? Sermons and scrubbing brushes! With you to preach 2.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: brushes! With you to preach the sermon and your wife to scrub. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: He looks very pale, and grey, and wrinkled, and old. Here: youve 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: He looks very pale, and grey, and wrinkled, and old. Here: youve done enough 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: very pale, and grey, and wrinkled, and old. Here: youve done enough writing 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: today. Leave Prossy to finish it. Come and talk to me. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: must you go out ever night lecturing and talking? I hardly have one evening a 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: of their agreeing with you if they go and do just the opposite of what you tell 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: theyve been so full of business and money-making for six days that they want 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: that they want to forget all about it and have a rest on the seventh; so that they 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: so that they can to back fresh and make money harder than ever! You positively 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: I often blow them up soundly for that. And if there is nothing in their churchgoing 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: nothing in their churchgoing but rest and diversion, why dont they try something 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: Oh, the worse places arnt open; and even if they were, they darent be seen 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: boy: you think it's your Socialism and your religion; but if it were that, theyd 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: Yes, Prossy, and all the other secretaries you ever had. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: condescend to wash up the things, and to peel the potatoes and abase herself 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: the things, and to peel the potatoes and abase herself in all manner of ways for 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: reason. They are all in love with you. And you are in love with preaching because 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: because you do it so beautifully. And you think it's all enthusiasm for the 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: for the kingdom of Heaven on earth; and so do they. You dear silly! 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: You! Why, youre spoiled with love and worship: you get far more than is good 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: that all the love should go to you, and none to him; although he needs it so 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: a wonderful boy: I have grown fonder and fonder of him all the time I was away. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: day he will know: when he is grown up and experienced, like you. And he will know 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: is grown up and experienced, like you. And he will know that I must have known. 2.2 ::AND :=Morell: No evil, Candida. I hope and trust, no evil. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: of love when he has thrown it away and degrades himself in his ignorance! Will 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: talk of your confidence in my goodness and purity! I would give them both to poor 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: mere phrases that you cheat yourself and others with every day. 2.2 ::AND :=Candida: understands me; he understands Prossy; and you, darling, you understand nothing 2.3 ::AND :=Candida: James teaching me to think for myself, and never to hold back out of fear of what 2.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: of it. I shudder when you torture him and laugh. 2.3 ::AND :=Candida: Silly! Dont work any more, dear. Come and talk to us. 2.3 ::AND :=Candida: Well, come and preach. 2.3 ::AND :=Lexy: taken the large hall in Mare Street and spent a lot of money on posters. Morell's 2.3 ::AND :=Morell: have one night at home, with my wife, and my friends. 2.3 ::AND :=Candida: you musnt mind what I said about that. And if you dont go youll have an attack of 2.3 ::AND :=Lexy: over the place for another speaker; and they can get nobody but the President 2.3 ::AND :=Candida: meeting. We'll all sit on the platform and be great people. 2.3 ::AND :=Morell: Works Committee of the County Council, and has some influence in the matter of contracts. 2.3 ::AND :=Morell: No: you are not coming; and Eugene is not coming. You will stay here 2.3 ::AND :=Morell: is not coming. You will stay here and entertain him -- to celebrate your return 2.3 ::AND :=Morell: I insist. You do not want to come; and he does not want to come. Oh, dont concern 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: No: I mustnt talk. I think I'll go out and take a walk in the park. 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: Nonsense: it's closed long ago. Come and sit down on the hearth-rug, and talk 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: Come and sit down on the hearth-rug, and talk moonshine as you usually do. I want 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: was doing right. Now I'm doing wrong; and I'm happy. 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: No. But you may say anything you really and truly feel. Anything at all, no matter 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: as it is your real self that speaks, and not a mere attitude: a gallant attitude, 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: attitude. I put you on your honor and truth. Now say whatever you want to. 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: because you have put me on my honor and truth; and I never think or feel Mrs 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: you have put me on my honor and truth; and I never think or feel Mrs Morell: it 3.1 ::AND :=Candida: Of course. And what have you to say to Candida? 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Oh, you cant think how heroic it was, and how uncomfortable! Then -- 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: And you approached the gate of Heaven at 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Then she became an angel; and there was a flaming sword that turned 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Here endeth the thousand and first lesson. Morell. I dont think much 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: Reverend James Mavor Morell, moralist and windbag. I mean the real man that the 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: to marry me, I was the same moralist and windbag you now see. I wore my black 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: you now see. I wore my black coat; and my collar was buttoned behind instead 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: as she forgives me for being a coward, and a weakling and what you call a sniveling 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: me for being a coward, and a weakling and what you call a sniveling little whelp 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: what you call a sniveling little whelp and all the rest of it. A woman like that 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: divine insight: she loves our souls, and not our follies and vanities and illusions, 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: loves our souls, and not our follies and vanities and illusions, nor our collars 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and not our follies and vanities and illusions, nor our collars and coats, 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and illusions, nor our collars and coats, nor any other of the rags and 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and coats, nor any other of the rags and tatters we are rolled up in. What I want 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: false: there can he dwell for ever, and there only. It's in the other moments 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: In the scullery, slicing onions and filing lamps. 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: there that I earned my golden moment, and the right in that moment, to ask her 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: And she refused. Shall I tell you why she 3.1 ::AND :=Morell: know well that if I have lost her love and you have gained it, no law will bind 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: the happiness of being in such love. And before I had time to come down from the 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: little nervous disease like me, and a pig-headed parson like you? Let us 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: us go on a pilgrimage, you to the east and I to the west, in search of a worthy 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: give her children to protect, to help and to work for. Some grown up man who has 3.1 ::AND :=Marchbanks: is. Send for her, Morell: send for her and let her choose between Q 3.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: James and I are having a preaching match; and he 3.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: and I are having a preaching match; and he is getting the worst of it. 3.2 ::AND :=Candida: you are. But you musnt be annoyed and made miserable. 3.2 ::AND :=Morell: It is a matter between two men; and I am the right person to settle it. 3.2 ::AND :=Marchbanks: must make a boy's excuse. He began it. And he's bigger than I am. 3.2 ::AND :=Morell: I am certainly the bigger of the two, and, I hope, the stronger, Candida. So you 3.2 ::AND :=Lexy: Your eloquence, and Mr Burgess's goodness of heart. And what 3.2 ::AND :=Lexy: and Mr Burgess's goodness of heart. And what a very fine fellow the chairman 3.2 ::AND :=Burgess: gurl dunno what champagne is! Pommery and Greeno at twelve and six a bottle. She 3.2 ::AND :=Burgess: is! Pommery and Greeno at twelve and six a bottle. She took two glasses amost 3.2 ::AND :=Morell: Go and look after her, Lexy. 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: I give you leave to stay: to stay and learn. Now, James! whats the matter? 3.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: I loved you. I said I understood you, and that he couldnt. And it was not after 3.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: I understood you, and that he couldnt. And it was not after what passed there before 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: that I have temper to struggle with. And he said that you despised me in your 3.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: No, no: I -- I -- it was David's wife. And it wasnt at home: it was when she saw 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: Dancing before all the people, Candida; and thinking he was moving their hearts by 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: He is the poet, who sees everything; and I am the poor parson, who understands 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: speak with the inspiration of a child and the cunning of a serpent. He has claimed 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: He has claimed that you belong to him and not to me; and, rightly or wrongly, I 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: that you belong to him and not to me; and, rightly or wrongly, I have come to fear 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: not go about a tortured with doubts and suspicions. I will not live with you 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: suspicions. I will not live with you and keep a secret from you. I will not suffer 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: of jealousy. We have agreed -- he and I -- that you shall choose between us 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: I mean that, and a good deal more, Master Eugene, as you 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: as you will both find out presently. And pray, my lords and masters, what have 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: find out presently. And pray, my lords and masters, what have you to offer for my 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: my honesty for your surety, my ability and industry for your livelihood, and my 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: and industry for your livelihood, and my authority and position for your dignity. 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: for your livelihood, and my authority and position for your dignity. That is all 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: And you, Eugene? What do you offer? 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: Let us sit and talk comfortably over it like three friends. 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: how those clever fashionable sisters and successful brothers of yours were your 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: brothers of yours were your mother's and father's pets: how miserable you were 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: or welcome or refuge: always lonely, and nearly always disliked and misunderstood, 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: lonely, and nearly always disliked and misunderstood, poor boy! 3.3 ::AND :=Marchbanks: I had my books. I had nature. And at last I met you. 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: he is: how happy. Ask James's mother and his three sisters what it cost to save 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: of doing anything but be strong and clever and happy. Ask me what it costs 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: anything but be strong and clever and happy. Ask me what it costs to be James's 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: me what it costs to be James's mother and three sisters and wife and mother to 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: to be James's mother and three sisters and wife and mother to his children all in 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: mother and three sisters and wife and mother to his children all in one. Ask 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: to his children all in one. Ask Prossy and Maria how troublesome the house is even 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: the tradesmen who want to worry James and spoil his beautiful sermons who it is 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: refuse it. I build a castle of comfort and indulgence and love for him, and stand 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: a castle of comfort and indulgence and love for him, and stand sentinel always 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: and indulgence and love for him, and stand sentinel always to keep little 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: here, though he does not know it, and could not tell you a moment ago how it 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: you a moment ago how it came to be so. And when he thought I might go away with 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: was -- what should become of me! And to tempt me to stay he offered me his 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: I am mixing up your beautiful cadences and spoiling them, am I not, darling. 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: have me with the labor of your hands and the love of your heart. You are my wife, 3.3 ::AND :=Morell: heart. You are my wife, my mother, and my sisters: you are the sum of all loving 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: Am I your mother and sisters to you, Eugene? 3.3 ::AND :=Candida: sentences I am going to say to you? And will you promise me to repeat it to yourself 2.2 ::ANDLE :=Burgess: Candy didnt oughter andle a hearl's nevvy like that. It's goin 1.2 ::ANDS :=Burgess: than sixpence a hour; and the skilled ands gits the Trade Union rate. What ave 1.2 ::ANDS :=Burgess: Come, James: be a Kerischin, and shake ands. 2.1 ::ANDS :=Burgess: a scounderl, mind you! And then sook ands with me on it, as if it was to my credit! 2.3 ::ANG :=Burgess: Aw no, Candy. Ang it all! 3.1 ::ANGEL :=Candida: longing to hear what happens to the angel. 3.1 ::ANGEL :=Marchbanks: I finished the poem about the angel quarter of an hour ago. Ive read you 3.1 ::ANGEL :=Marchbanks: Then she became an angel; and there was a flaming sword that 2.2 ::ANGELS :=Candida: poetic men, who imagine all women are angels! Suppose he only discovers the value 3.2 ::ANGRY :=Marchbanks: Oh, youre not angry with me, are you? 3.2 ::ANGRY :=Candida: Yes I am: very angry. I have a good mind to pack you out 3.2 ::ANGRY :=Marchbanks: Oh, Morell, isn't it dreadful? She's angry with us: she hates me. What shall I 3.3 ::ANGRY :=Candida: sure that I am not going to be very angry. 3.2 ::ANNOYED :=Candida: of course you are. But you musnt be annoyed and made miserable. 3.2 ::ANNOYING :=Candida: You have been annoying him. Now I wont have it, Eugene: 1.1 ::ANNUAL :=Lexy: spiritual truths. He said it at the annual conference of Women's Liberal Federation. 1.1 ::ANOTHER :=Proserpine: Another lecture? 1.1 ::ANOTHER :=Morell: Hm! Time for him to take another look at Candida before she grows 1.1 ::ANOTHER :=Proserpine: is that we're all jealous of one another! 1.2 ::ANOTHER :=Burgess: your wish we should be free with one another, that I did think you a bit of a 2.3 ::ANOTHER :=Marchbanks: horrible thing to see one person make another suffer. 2.3 ::ANOTHER :=Lexy: telegraphing all over the place for another speaker; and they can get nobody 3.1 ::ANOTHER :=Morell: on credit; nor did I use it to steal another man's happiness. 2.1 ::ANSWER :=Marchbanks: No: answer me. I want to know: I must know. I 3.1 ::ANSWER :=Candida: Well, that happiness is the answer to your prayer. Do you want anything 3.2 ::ANSWER :=Proserpine: beer. Are there any letters for me to answer, Mr Morell? 2.3 ::ANSWERED :=Morell: Yes, I know. I answered it. I cant go. 2.1 ::ANSWERS :=Marchbanks: No use. You wont make me real answers: only those things that everybody 3.3 ::ANXIETY :=Candida: I might go away with you, his only anxiety was -- what should become of me! 1.1 ::ANY :=Morell: Have I any lecture on for next Monday? 1.1 ::ANY :=Lexy: Heaven forbid that I should think of any of God's creatures in such a way! 1.1 ::ANY :=Lexy: I had no idea you had any feeling against Mrs Morell. 1.1 ::ANY :=Proserpine: her real qualities far better than any man can. You dont believe me? You think 1.2 ::ANY :=Morell: your impudence: thats what St Paul or any honest priest would have said to you. 1.2 ::ANY :=Morell: because you paid worse wages than any other employer -- starvation wages -- 1.2 ::ANY :=Candida: Embankment. He thought he couldnt get any money for it until the seven days were 1.3 ::ANY :=Marchbanks: make fools of themselves about are any less real and true than the things they 1.3 ::ANY :=Morrel: talent is like yours insofar as it has any real worth at all. It is the gift of 1.3 ::ANY :=Marchbanks: of fine talking to do with the truth, any more than playing the organ has? Ive 1.3 ::ANY :=Marchbanks: You shall. You must. If you give any explanation but the true one, you are 2.1 ::ANY :=Proserpine: I havnt any love affairs. How dare you say such a 2.1 ::ANY :=Proserpine: be frightened: it's not you. It's not any one particular person. 2.2 ::ANY :=Morell: Pooh, nonsense! you cant take any notice of it. Never mind. 2.2 ::ANY :=Morell: not for the laity. Has it done you any harm? thats the question for you, eh? 2.3 ::ANY :=Candida: how you exaggerate! Silly! Dont work any more, dear. Come and talk to us. 3.1 ::ANY :=Marchbanks: Then she couldnt bear being read to any longer. 3.1 ::ANY :=Morell: Do you think she would have loved me any the better for being insincere in my 3.1 ::ANY :=Marchbanks: nor our collars and coats, nor any other of the rags and tatters we are 3.2 ::ANY :=Proserpine: I dont like beer. Are there any letters for me to answer, Mr Morell? 3.2 ::ANY :=Proserpine: anybody tonight. I wish I hadnt taken any of that stuff. 3.3 ::ANY :=Morell: My dear: I dont know of any right that makes me master. I assert 1.3 ::ANYBODY :=Morell: one, sharp, mind: we never wait for anybody. 2.1 ::ANYBODY :=Marchbanks: he is. The man you love. It might be anybody. The curate, Mr Mill, perhaps. 2.1 ::ANYBODY :=Marchbanks: I know. You feel that you could love anybody that offered -- 2.1 ::ANYBODY :=Proserpine: Anybody that offered! No, I do not. What 2.2 ::ANYBODY :=Candida: No, no, no, no. Not jealous of anybody. Jealous for somebody else, who is 3.2 ::ANYBODY :=Proserpine: No thank you. I shant trust myself with anybody tonight. I wish I hadnt taken any 3.1 ::ANYBODY'S :=Marchbanks: to her -- reading my own poems -- anybody's poems -- to stave off a conversation. 1.2 ::ANYHOW :=Burgess: in 'is profession that he should. Anyhow, I come here, not to rake up hold 2.1 ::ANYHOW :=Proserpine: conversation: thats one comfort, anyhow. 1.1 ::ANYONE :=Proserpine: everywhere! It's enough to drive anyone out of their senses to hear a woman 1.1 ::ANYONE :=Proserpine: of carrying it in your hand like anyone else? Why do you walk with your chin 1.3 ::ANYTHING :=Morell: not fear that either of us will be anything but patient and kind to the other, 1.3 ::ANYTHING :=Marchbanks: revere