Johnny Tarleton, an ordinary
young business man of thirty or less, is taking his weekly Friday
to Tuesday in the house of his father, John Tarleton, who has made
a great deal of money out of Tarleton's Underwear. The house is in
Surrey, on the slope of Hindhead; and Johnny, reclining, novel in
hand, in a swinging chair with a little awning above it, is
enshrined in a spacious half hemisphere of glass which forms a
pavilion commanding the garden, and, beyond it, a barren but lovely
landscape of hill profile with fir trees, commons of bracken and
gorse, and wonderful cloud pictures.
The glass pavilion springs from a bridgelike arch in the wall
of the house, through which one comes into a big hall with tiled
flooring, which suggests that the proprietor's notion of domestic
luxury is founded on the lounges of week-end hotels. The arch is
not quite in the centre of the wall. There is more wall to its
right than to its left, and this space is occupied by a hat rack
and umbrella stand in which tennis rackets, white parasols, caps,
Panama hats, and other summery articles are bestowed. Just through
the arch at this corner stands a new portable Turkish bath,
recently unpacked, with its crate beside it, and on the crate the
drawn nails and the hammer used in unpacking. Near the crate are
open boxes of garden games: bowls and croquet. Nearly in the middle
of the glass wall of the pavilion is a door giving on the garden,
with a couple of steps to surmount the hot-water pipes which skirt
the glass. At intervals round the pavilion are marble pillars with
specimens of Viennese pottery on them, very flamboyant in colour
and florid in design. Between them are folded garden chairs flung
anyhow against the pipes. In the side walls are two doors: one near
the hat stand, leading to the interior of the house, the other on
the opposite side and at the other end, leading to the
vestibule.
There is no solid furniture except a sideboard which stands
against the wall between the vestibule door and the pavilion, a
small writing table with a blotter, a rack for telegram forms and
stationery, and a wastepaper basket, standing out in the hall near
the sideboard, and a lady's worktable, with two chairs at it,
towards the other side of the lounge. The writing table has also
two chairs at it. On the sideboard there is a tantalus, liqueur
bottles, a syphon, a glass jug of lemonade, tumblers, and every
convenience for casual drinking. Also a plate of sponge cakes, and
a highly ornate punchbowl in the same style as the keramic display
in the pavilion. Wicker chairs and little bamboo tables with ash
trays and boxes of matches on them are scattered in all directions.
In the pavilion, which is flooded with sunshine, is the elaborate
patent swing seat and awning in which Johnny reclines with his
novel. There are two wicker chairs right and left of him.
Bentley Summerhays, one of those smallish, thinskinned youths,
who from 17 to 70 retain unaltered the mental airs of the later and
the physical appearance of the earlier age, appears in the garden
and comes through the glass door into the pavilion. He is
unmistakably a grade above Johnny socially; and though he looks
sensitive enough, his assurance and his high voice are a little
exasperating.
JOHNNY. Hallo! Wheres your luggage?
BENTLEY. I left it at the station. Ive walked up
from Haslemere.
[He goes to the hat stand and hangs up his hat].
JOHNNY
[shortly] Oh! And who's to fetch it?
BENTLEY. Dont know. Dont care. Providence,
probably. If not, your mother will have it fetched.
JOHNNY. Not her business, exactly, is it?
BENTLEY.
[returning to the pavilion] Of course not. Thats why one
loves her for doing it. Look here: chuck away your silly week-end
novel, and talk to a chap. After a week in that filthy office my
brain is simply blue-mouldy. Lets argue about something
intellectual.
[He throws himself into the wicker chair on Johnny's
right].
JOHNNY.
[straightening up in the swing with a yell of protest] No.
Now seriously, Bunny, Ive come down here to have a pleasant
week-end; and I'm not going to stand your confounded arguments. If
you want to argue, get out of this and go over to the
Congregationalist minister's. He's a nailer at arguing. He likes
it.
BENTLEY. You cant argue with a person when his
livelihood depends on his not letting you convert him. And would
you mind not calling me Bunny. My name is Bentley Summerhays, which
you please.
JOHNNY. Whats the matter with Bunny?
BENTLEY. It puts me in a false position. Have you
ever considered the fact that I was an afterthought?
JOHNNY. An afterthought? What do you mean by
that?
BENTLEY. I-
JOHNNY. No, stop: I dont want to know. It's only a
dodge to start an argument.
BENTLEY. Dont be afraid: it wont overtax your
brain. My father was 44 when I was born. My mother was 41. There
was twelve years between me and the next eldest. I was unexpected.
I was probably unintentional. My brothers and sisters are not the
least like me. Theyre the regular thing that you always get in the
first batch from young parents: quite pleasant, ordinary,
do-the-regular-thing sort: all body and no brains, like you.
JOHNNY. Thank you.
BENTLEY. Dont mention it, old chap. Now I'm
different. By the time I was born, the old couple knew something.
So I came out all brains and no more body than is absolutely
necessary. I am really a good deal older than you, though you were
born ten years sooner. Everybody feels that when they hear us talk;
consequently, though it's quite natural to hear me calling you
Johnny, it sounds ridiculous and unbecoming for you to call me
Bunny.
[He rises].
JOHNNY. Does it, by George? You stop me doing it
if you can: thats all.
BENTLEY. If you go on doing it after Ive asked you
not, youll feel an awful swine.
[He strolls away carelessly to the sideboard with his eye on
the sponge cakes]. At least I should; but I suppose youre not
so particular.
JOHNNY
[rising vengefully and following Bentley, who is forced to turn
and listen] I'll tell you what it is, my boy: you want a good
talking to; and I'm going to give it to you. If you think that
because your father's a K.C.B., and you want to marry my sister,
you can make yourself as nasty as you please and say what you like,
youre mistaken. Let me tell you that except Hypatia, not one person
in this house is in favor of her marrying you; and I dont believe
shes happy about it herself. The match isnt settled yet: dont
forget that. Youre on trial in the office because the Governor isnt
giving his daughter money for an idle man to live on her. Youre on
trial here because my mother thinks a girl should know what a man
is like in the house before she marries him. Thats been going on
for two months now; and whats the result? Youve got yourself
thoroughly disliked in the office; and youre getting yourself
thoroughly disliked here, all through your bad manners and your
conceit, and the damned impudence you think clever.
BENTLEY.
[deeply wounded and trying hard to control himself] Thats
enough, thank you. You dont suppose, I hope, that I should have
come down if I had known that that was how you felt about me.
[He makes for the vestibule door].
JOHNNY.
[collaring him]. No: you dont run away. I'm going to have
this out with you. Sit down: d'y' hear?
[Bentley attempts to go with dignity. Johnny slings him into a
chair at the writing table, where he sits, bitterly humiliated, but
afraid to speak lest he should burst into tears]. Thats the
advantage of having more body than brains, you see: it enables me
to teach you manners; and I'm going to do it too. Youre a spoilt
young pup; and you need a jolly good licking. And if youre not
careful youll get it: I'll see to that next time you call me a
swine.
BENTLEY. I didnt call you a swine. But
[bursting into a fury of tears] you are a swine: youre a
beast: youre a brute: youre a cad: youre a liar: youre a bully: I
should like to wring your damned neck for you.
JOHNNY.
[with a derisive laugh] Try it, my son.
[Bentley gives an inarticulate sob of rage]. Fighting isnt
in your line. Youre too small and youre too childish. I always
suspected that your cleverness wouldnt come to very much when it
was brought up against something solid: some decent chap's fist,
for instance.
BENTLEY. I hope your beastly fist may come up
against a mad bull or a prizefighter's nose, or something solider
than me. I dont care about your fist; but if everybody here
dislikes me-
[he is checked by a sob]. Well, I dont care.
[Trying to recover himself] I'm sorry I intruded: I didnt
know.
[Breaking down again] Oh you beast! you pig! Swine, swine,
swine, swine, swine! Now!
JOHNNY. All right, my lad, all right. Sling your
mud as hard as you please: it wont stick to me. What I want to know
is this. How is it that your father, who I suppose is the strongest
man England has produced in our time-
BENTLEY. You got that out of your halfpenny paper.
A lot you know about him!
JOHNNY. I dont set up to be able to do anything
but admire him and appreciate him and be proud of him as an
Englishman. If it wasnt for my respect for him, I wouldnt have
stood your cheek for two days, let alone two months. But what I
cant understand is why he didnt lick it out of you when you were a
kid. For twenty-five years he kept a place twice as big as England
in order: a place full of seditious coffee-colored heathens and
pestilential white agitators in the middle of a lot of savage
tribes. And yet he couldnt keep you in order. I dont set up to be
half the man your father undoubtedly is; but, by George, it's lucky
for you you were not my son. I dont hold with my own father's views
about corporal punishment being wrong. It's necessary for some
people; and I'd have tried it on you until you first learnt to howl
and then to behave yourself.
BENTLEY.
[contemptuously] Yes: behavior wouldnt come naturally to
your son, would it?
JOHNNY.
[stung into sudden violence] Now you keep a civil tongue
in your head. I'll stand none of your snobbery. I'm just as proud
of Tarleton's Underwear as you are of your father's title and his
K.C.B., and all the rest of it. My father began in a little hole of
a shop in Leeds no bigger than our pantry down the passage there.
He-
BENTLEY. Oh yes: I know. Ive read it. "The Romance
of Business, or The Story of Tarleton's Underwear. Please Take
One!" I took one the day after I first met Hypatia. I went and
bought half a dozen unshrinkable vests for her sake.
JOHNNY. Well: did they shrink?
BENTLEY. Oh, dont be a fool.
JOHNNY. Never mind whether I'm a fool or not. Did
they shrink? Thats the point. Were they worth the money?
BENTLEY. I couldnt wear them: do you think my
skin's as thick as your customers' hides? I'd as soon have dressed
myself in a nutmeg grater.
JOHNNY. Pity your father didnt give your thin skin
a jolly good lacing with a cane-!
BENTLEY. Pity you havnt got more than one idea! If
you want to know, they did try that on me once, when I was a small
kid. A silly governess did it. I yelled fit to bring down the house
and went into convulsions and brain fever and that sort of thing
for three weeks. So the old girl got the sack; and serve her right!
After that, I was let do what I like. My father didnt want me to
grow up a broken-spirited spaniel, which is your idea of a man, I
suppose.
JOHNNY. Jolly good thing for you that my father
made you come into the office and shew what you were made of. And
it didnt come to much: let me tell you that. When the Governor
asked me where I thought we ought to put you, I said, "Make him the
Office Boy." The Governor said you were too green. And so you
were.
BENTLEY. I daresay. So would you be pretty green
if you were shoved into my father's set. I picked up your silly
business in a fortnight. Youve been at it ten years; and you havnt
picked it up yet.
JOHNNY. Dont talk rot, child. You know you simply
make me pity you.
BENTLEY. "Romance of Business" indeed! The real
romance of Tarleton's business is the story that you understand
anything about it. You never could explain any mortal thing about
it to me when I asked you. "See what was done the last time": that
was the beginning and the end of your wisdom. Youre nothing but a
turnspit.
JOHNNY. A what!
BENTLEY. A turnspit. If your father hadnt made a
roasting jack for you to turn, youd be earning twenty-four
shillings a week behind a counter.
JOHNNY. If you dont take that back and apologize
for your bad manners, I'll give you as good a hiding as ever-
BENTLEY. Help! Johnny's beating me! Oh! Murder!
[He throws himself on the ground, uttering piercing
yells].
JOHNNY. Dont be a fool. Stop that noise, will you.
I'm not going to touch you. Sh-sh-
Hypatia rushes in through the inner door, followed by Mrs
Tarleton, and throws herself on her knees by Bentley. Mrs Tarleton,
whose knees are stiffer, bends over him and tries to lift him. Mrs
Tarleton is a shrewd and motherly old lady who has been pretty in
her time, and is still very pleasant and likeable and unaffected.
Hypatia is a typical English girl of a sort never called typical:
that is, she has an opaque white skin, black hair, large dark eyes
with black brows and lashes, curved lips, swift glances and
movements that flash out of a waiting stillness, boundless energy
and audacity held in leash.
HYPATIA.
[pouncing on Bentley with no very gentle hand] Bentley:
whats the matter? Dont cry like that: whats the use? Whats
happened?
MRS TARLETON. Are you ill, child?
[They get him up. There, there, pet! It's all right: dont cry
[they put him into a chair]
: there! there! there! Johnny will go for the doctor; and he'll
give you something nice to make it well.
HYPATIA. What has happened, Johnny?
MRS TARLETON. Was it a wasp?
BENTLEY.
[impatiently] Wasp be dashed!
MRS TARLETON. Oh Bunny! that was a naughty
word.
BENTLEY. Yes, I know: I beg your pardon.
[He rises, and extricates himself from them] Thats all
right. Johnny frightened me. You know how easy it is to hurt me;
and I'm too small to defend myself against Johnny.
MRS TARLETON. Johnny: how often have I told you
that you must not bully the little ones. I thought youd outgrown
all that.
HYPATIA.
[angrily] I do declare, mamma, that Johnny's brutality
makes it impossible to live in the house with him.
JOHNNY.
[deeply hurt] It's twenty-seven years, mother, since you
had that row with me for licking Robert and giving Hypatia a black
eye because she bit me. I promised you then that I'd never raise my
hand to one of them again; and Ive never broken my word. And now
because this young whelp begins to cry out before he's hurt, you
treat me as if I were a brute and a savage.
MRS TARLETON. No dear, not a savage; but you know
you must not call our visitor naughty names.
BENTLEY. Oh, let him alone-
JOHNNY.
[fiercely] Dont you interfere between my mother and me:
d'y' hear?
HYPATIA. Johnny's lost his temper, mother. We'd
better go. Come, Bentley.
MRS TARLETON. Yes: that will be best.
[To Bentley] Johnny doesnt mean any harm, dear: he'll be
himself presently. Come.
The two ladies go out through the inner door with Bentley, who
turns at the door to grin at Johnny as he goes out.
Johnny, left alone, clenches his fists and grinds his teeth,
but can find no relief in that way for his rage. After choking and
stamping for a moment, he makes for the vestibule door. It opens
before he reaches it; and Lord Summerhays comes in. Johnny glares
at him, speechless. Lord Summerhays takes in the situation, and
quickly takes the punchbowl from the sideboard and offers it to
Johnny.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Smash it. Dont hesitate: it's an
ugly thing. Smash it: hard.
[Johnny, with a stifled yell, dashes it in pieces, and then
sits down and mops his brow]. Feel better now?
[Johnny nods]. I know only one person alive who could
drive me to the point of having either to break china or commit
murder; and that person is my son Bentley. Was it he?
[Johnny nods again, not yet able to speak]. As the car
stopped I heard a yell which is only too familiar to me. It
generally means that some infuriated person is trying to thrash
Bentley. Nobody has ever succeeded, though almost everybody has
tried.
[He seats himself comfortably close to the writing table, and
sets to work to collect the fragments of the punchbowl in the
wastepaper basket whilst Johnny, with diminishing difficulty,
collects himself]. Bentley is a problem which I confess I have
never been able to solve. He was born to be a great success at the
age of fifty. Most Englishmen of his class seem to be born to be
great successes at the age of twenty-four at most. The domestic
problem for me is how to endure Bentley until he is fifty. The
problem for the nation is how to get itself governed by men whose
growth is arrested when they are little more than college lads.
Bentley doesnt really mean to be offensive. You can always make him
cry by telling him you dont like him. Only, he cries so loud that
the experiment should be made in the open air: in the middle of
Salisbury Plain if possible. He has a hard and penetrating
intellect and a remarkable power of looking facts in the face; but
unfortunately, being very young, he has no idea of how very little
of that sort of thing most of us can stand. On the other hand, he
is frightfully sensitive and even affectionate; so that he probably
gets as much as he gives in the way of hurt feelings. Youll excuse
me rambling on like this about my son.
JOHNNY.
[who has pulled himself together] You did it on purpose. I
wasnt quite myself: I needed a moment to pull round: thank you.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all. Is your father at
home?
JOHNNY. No: he's opening one of his free
libraries. Thats another nice little penny gone. He's mad on
reading. He promised another free library last week. It's ruinous.
Itll hit you as well as me when Bunny marries Hypatia. When all
Hypatia's money is thrown away on libraries, where will Bunny come
in? Cant you stop him?
LORD SUMMERHAYS. I'm afraid not. Hes a perfect
whirlwind. Indefatigable at public work. Wonderful man, I
think.
JOHNNY. Oh, public work! He does too much of it.
It's really a sort of laziness, getting away from your own serious
business to amuse yourself with other people's. Mind: I dont say
there isnt another side to it. It has its value as an
advertisement. It makes useful acquaintances and leads to valuable
business connections. But it takes his mind off the main chance;
and he overdoes it.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. The danger of public business is
that it never ends. A man may kill himself at it.
JOHNNY. Or he can spend more on it than it brings
him in: thats how I look at it. What I say is that everybody's
business is nobody's business. I hope I'm not a hard man, nor a
narrow man, nor unwilling to pay reasonable taxes, and subscribe in
reason to deserving charities, and even serve on a jury in my turn;
and no man can say I ever refused to help a friend out of a
difficulty when he was worth helping. But when you ask me to go
beyond that, I tell you frankly I dont see it. I never did see it,
even when I was only a boy, and had to pretend to take in all the
ideas the Governor fed me up with. I didnt see it; and I dont see
it.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. There is certainly no business
reason why you should take more than your share of the world's
work.
JOHNNY. So I say. It's really a great
encouragement to me to find you agree with me. For of course if
nobody agrees with you, how are you to know that youre not a
fool?
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Quite so.
JOHNNY. I wish youd talk to him about it. It's no
use my saying anything: I'm a child to him still: I have no
influence. Besides, you know how to handle men. See how you handled
me when I was making a fool of myself about Bunny!
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all.
JOHNNY. Oh yes I was: I know I was. Well, if my
blessed father had come in he'd have told me to control myself. As
if I was losing my temper on purpose!
Bentley returns, newly washed. He beams when he sees his
father, and comes affectionately behind him and pats him on the
shoulders.
BENTLEY. Hel-lo, commander! have you come? Ive
been making a filthy silly ass of myself here. I'm awfully sorry,
Johnny, old chap: I beg your pardon. Why dont you kick me when I go
on like that?
LORD SUMMERHAYS. As we came through Godalming I
thought I heard some yelling-
BENTLEY. I should think you did. Johnny was rather
rough on me, though. He told me nobody here liked me; and I was
silly enough to believe him.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. And all the women have been
kissing you and pitying you ever since to stop your crying, I
suppose. Baby!
BENTLEY. I did cry. But I always feel good after
crying: it relieves my wretched nerves. I feel perfectly jolly
now.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Not at all ashamed of yourself,
for instance?
BENTLEY. If I started being ashamed of myself I
shouldnt have time for anything else all my life. I say: I feel
very fit and spry. Lets all go down and meet the Grand Cham.
[He goes to the hatstand and takes down his hat].
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Does Mr Tarleton like to be
called the Grand Cham, do you think, Bentley?
BENTLEY. Well, he thinks hes too modest for it. He
calls himself Plain John. But you cant call him that in his own
office: besides, it doesnt suit him: it's not flamboyant
enough.
JOHNNY. Flam what?
BENTLEY. Flamboyant. Lets go and meet him. Hes
telephoned from Guildford to say hes on the road. The dear old son
is always telephoning or telegraphing: he thinks hes hustling along
like anything when hes only sending unnecessary messages.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. Thank you: I should prefer a
quiet afternoon.
BENTLEY. Right O. I shant press Johnny: hes had
enough of me for one week-end.
[He goes out through the pavilion into the grounds].
JOHNNY. Not a bad idea, that.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. What?
JOHNNY. Going to meet the Governor. You know you
wouldnt think it; but the Governor likes Bunny rather. And Bunny is
cultivating it. I shouldnt be surprised if he thought he could
squeeze me out one of these days.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. You dont say so! Young rascal! I
want to consult you about him, if you dont mind. Shall we stroll
over to the Gibbet? Bentley is too fast for me as a walking
companion; but I should like a short turn.
JOHNNY.
[rising eagerly, highly flattered] Right you are. Thatll
suit me down to the ground.
[He takes a Panama and stick from the hat stand].
Mrs Tarleton and Hypatia come back just as the two men are
going out. Hypatia salutes Summerhays from a distance with an
enigmatic lift of her eyelids in his direction and a demure nod
before she sits down at the worktable and busies herself with her
needle. Mrs Tarleton, hospitably fussy, goes over to him.
MRS TARLETON. Oh, Lord Summerhays, I didnt know
you were here. Wont you have some tea?
LORD SUMMERHAYS. No, thank you: I'm not allowed
tea. And I'm ashamed to say Ive knocked over your beautiful
punch-bowl. You must let me replace it.
MRS TARLETON. Oh, it doesnt matter: I'm only too
glad to be rid of it. The shopman told me it was in the best taste;
but when my poor old nurse Martha got cataract, Bunny said it was a
merciful provision of Nature to prevent her seeing our china.
LORD SUMMERHAYS.
[gravely] That was exceedingly rude of Bentley, Mrs
Tarleton. I hope you told him so.
MRS TARLETON. Oh, bless you! I dont care what he
says; so long as he says it to me and not before visitors.
JOHNNY. We're going out for a stroll, mother.
MRS TARLETON. All right: dont let us keep you.
Never mind about that crock: I'll get the girl to come and take the
pieces away.
[Recollecting herself] There! Ive done it again!
JOHNNY. Done what?
MRS TARLETON. Called her the girl. You know, Lord
Summerhays, its a funny thing; but now I'm getting old, I'm
dropping back into all the ways John and I had when we had barely a
hundred a year. You should have known me when I was forty! I talked
like a duchess; and if Johnny or Hypatia let slip a word that was
like old times, I was down on them like anything. And now I'm
beginning to do it myself at every turn.
LORD SUMMERHAYS. There comes a time when all that
seems to matter so little. Even queens drop the mask when they
reach our time of life.
MRS TARLETON. Let you alone for giving a thing a
pretty turn! Youre a humbug, you know, Lord Summerhays. John doesnt
know it; and Johnny doesnt know it; but you and I know it, dont we?
Now thats something that even you cant answer; so be off with you
for your walk without another word.
Lord Summerhays smiles; bows; and goes out through the
vestibule door, followed by Johnny. Mrs Tarleton sits down at the
worktable and takes out her darning materials and one of her
husband's socks. Hypatia is at the other side of the table, on her
mother's right. They chat as they work.
HYPATIA. I wonder whether they laugh at us when
they are by themselves!
MRS TARLETON. Who?
HYPATIA. Bentley and his father and all the toffs
in their set.
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