Pygmalion by George Bernard Shaw (pocket ebook reader .TXT) 📕
Description
Pygmalion is a 5-act play by George Bernard Shaw. It was written in 1912 and first produced in 1913. The plot revolves around Professor Henry Higgins’ bet with a colleague over whether he can transform a low-class flower girl, Liza Doolittle, into the equivalent of a Duchess in just 6 months. Pygmalion was a Greek mythological figure who fell in love with a sculpture he had carved and was a popular theme in Victorian drama.
Most people would be familiar with the characters Eliza Doolittle and Henry Higgins from the hit 1956 musical My Fair Lady, which was adapted from Pygmalion, though the plots differ in small but significant ways. In particular Shaw wanted to avoid any sense of a “happy ending” and, after viewing a performance of the play where an extra scene had been added, he wrote a sequel which definitively states what came after. The sequel was included in the published edition.
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- Author: George Bernard Shaw
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The Wimpole Street laboratory. Midnight. Nobody in the room. The clock on the mantelpiece strikes twelve. The fire is not alight: it is a summer night.
Presently Higgins and Pickering are heard on the stairs. Higgins Calling down to Pickering. I say, Pick: lock up, will you. I shan’t be going out again. Pickering Right. Can Mrs. Pearce go to bed? We don’t want anything more, do we? Higgins Lord, no! Eliza opens the door and is seen on the lighted landing in opera cloak, brilliant evening dress, and diamonds, with fan, flowers, and all accessories. She comes to the hearth, and switches on the electric lights there. She is tired: her pallor contrasts strongly with her dark eyes and hair; and her expression is almost tragic. She takes off her cloak; puts her fan and flowers on the piano; and sits down on the bench, brooding and silent. Higgins, in evening dress, with overcoat and hat, comes in, carrying a smoking jacket which he has picked up downstairs. He takes off the hat and overcoat; throws them carelessly on the newspaper stand; disposes of his coat in the same way; puts on the smoking jacket; and throws himself wearily into the easy-chair at the hearth. Pickering, similarly attired, comes in. He also takes off his hat and overcoat, and is about to throw them on Higgins’s when he hesitates. Pickering I say: Mrs. Pearce will row if we leave these things lying about in the drawing-room. Higgins Oh, chuck them over the bannisters into the hall. She’ll find them there in the morning and put them away all right. She’ll think we were drunk. Pickering We are, slightly. Are there any letters? Higgins I didn’t look. Pickering takes the overcoats and hats and goes downstairs. Higgins begins half singing, half yawning an air from La Fanciulla del Golden West. Suddenly he stops and exclaims. I wonder where the devil my slippers are! Eliza looks at him darkly; then leaves the room. Higgins yawns again, and resumes his song. Pickering returns, with the contents of the letter-box in his hand. Pickering Only circulars, and this coroneted billet-doux for you. He throws the circulars into the fender, and posts himself on the hearthrug, with his back to the grate. Higgins Glancing at the billet-doux. Moneylender. He throws the letter after the circulars. Eliza returns with a pair of large down-at-heel slippers. She places them on the carpet before Higgins, and sits as before without a word. Higgins Yawning again. Oh Lord! What an evening! What a crew! What a silly tomfoolery! He raises his shoe to unlace it, and catches sight of the slippers. He stops unlacing and looks at them as if they had appeared there of their own accord. Oh! they’re there, are they? Pickering Stretching himself. Well, I feel a bit tired. It’s been a long day. The garden party, a dinner party, and the opera! Rather too much of a good thing. But you’ve won your bet, Higgins. Eliza did the trick, and something to spare, eh? Higgins Fervently. Thank God it’s over! Eliza flinches violently; but they take no notice of her; and she recovers herself and sits stonily as before. Pickering Were you nervous at the garden party? I was. Eliza didn’t seem a bit nervous. Higgins Oh, she wasn’t nervous. I knew she’d be all right. No, it’s the strain of putting the job through all these months that has told on
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