Major Barbara by George Bernard Shaw (different e readers .TXT) 📕
Description
Major Barbara is a three-act play that premiered at the Court Theatre in 1905, and was subsequently published in 1907. It portrays idealist Barbara Undershaft, a Major in the Salvation Army, and her encounter with her long-estranged father who has made his fortune as a “dealer of death” in the munitions industry. Barbara doesn’t wish to be associated with her father’s ill-gotten wealth, but can’t prevent him from donating to the Salvation Army and eventually converting her family to his capitalist views on how best to help the poor.
In the preface, Shaw addresses his critics and explicates his actual attitudes towards the Salvation Army, versus the attitudes and fates portrayed by his characters and responded to by the critics. He continues on to discuss the issues of wealth and poverty, religion and science, and how they all fit into his views of society.
Major Barbara is one of the most controversial of Shaw’s work and was greeted with decidedly mixed reviews, yet it endures as one of his most famous plays.
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- Author: George Bernard Shaw
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Next day after lunch Lady Britomart is writing in the library in Wilton Crescent. Sarah is reading in the armchair near the window. Barbara, in ordinary dress, pale and brooding, is on the settee. Charley Lomax enters. Coming forward between the settee and the writing table, he starts on seeing Barbara fashionably attired and in low spirits.
Lomax You’ve left off your uniform! Barbara says nothing; but an expression of pain passes over her face. Lady Britomart Warning him in low tones to be careful. Charles! Lomax Much concerned, sitting down sympathetically on the settee beside Barbara. I’m awfully sorry, Barbara. You know I helped you all I could with the concertina and so forth. Momentously. Still, I have never shut my eyes to the fact that there is a certain amount of tosh about the Salvation Army. Now the claims of the Church of England— Lady Britomart That’s enough, Charles. Speak of something suited to your mental capacity. Lomax But surely the Church of England is suited to all our capacities. Barbara Pressing his hand. Thank you for your sympathy, Cholly. Now go and spoon with Sarah. Lomax Rising and going to Sarah. How is my ownest today? Sarah I wish you wouldn’t tell Cholly to do things, Barbara. He always comes straight and does them. Cholly: we’re going to the works at Perivale St. Andrews this afternoon. Lomax What works? Sarah The cannon works. Lomax What! Your governor’s shop! Sarah Yes. Lomax Oh I say! Cusins enters in poor condition. He also starts visibly when he sees Barbara without her uniform. Barbara I expected you this morning, Dolly. Didn’t you guess that? Cusins Sitting down beside her. I’m sorry. I have only just breakfasted. Sarah But we’ve just finished lunch. Barbara Have you had one of your bad nights? Cusins No: I had rather a good night: in fact, one of the most remarkable nights I have ever passed. Barbara The meeting? Cusins No: after the meeting. Lady Britomart You should have gone to bed after the meeting. What were you doing? Cusins Drinking. Lady Britomart Adolphus! Sarah Dolly! Barbara Dolly! Lomax Oh I say! Lady Britomart What were you drinking, may I ask? Cusins A most devilish kind of Spanish burgundy, warranted free from added alcohol: a Temperance burgundy in fact. Its richness in natural alcohol made any addition superfluous. Barbara Are you joking,
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