Mrs Warren's Profession has
been performed at last, after a delay of only eight years; and I
have once more shared with Ibsen the triumphant amusement of
startling all but the strongest-headed of the London theatre
critics clean out of the practice of their profession. No author
who has ever known the exultation of sending the Press into an
hysterical tumult of protest, of moral panic, of involuntary and
frantic confession of sin, of a horror of conscience in which the
power of distinguishing between the work of art on the stage and
the real life of the spectator is confused and overwhelmed, will
ever care for the stereotyped compliments which every successful
farce or melodrama elicits from the newspapers. Give me that critic
who rushed from my play to declare furiously that Sir George Crofts
ought to be kicked. What a triumph for the actor, thus to reduce a
jaded London journalist to the condition of the simple sailor in
the Wapping gallery, who shouts execrations at Iago and warnings to
Othello not to believe him! But dearer still than such simplicity
is that sense of the sudden earthquake shock to the foundations of
morality which sends a pallid crowd of critics into the street
shrieking that the pillars of society are cracking and the ruin of
the State is at hand. Even the Ibsen champions of ten years ago
remonstrate with me just as the veterans of those brave days
remonstrated with them. Mr Grein, the hardy iconoclast who first
launched my plays on the stage alongside Ghosts and The Wild Duck,
exclaimed that I have shattered his ideals. Actually his ideals!
What would Dr Relling say? And Mr William Archer himself disowns me
because I "cannot touch pitch without wallowing in it". Truly my
play must be more needed than I knew; and yet I thought I knew how
little the others know.
Do not suppose, however, that the consternation of the Press
reflects any consternation among the general public. Anybody can
upset the theatre critics, in a turn of the wrist, by substituting
for the romantic commonplaces of the stage the moral commonplaces
of the pulpit, platform, or the library. Play Mrs Warren's
Profession to an audience of clerical members of the Christian
Social Union and of women well experienced in Rescue, Temperance,
and Girls' Club work, and no moral panic will arise; every man and
woman present will know that as long as poverty makes virtue
hideous and the spare pocket-money of rich bachelordom makes vice
dazzling, their daily hand-to-hand fight against prostitution with
prayer and persuasion, shelters and scanty alms, will be a losing
one. There was a time when they were able to urge that though "the
white-lead factory where Anne Jane was poisoned" may be a far more
terrible place than Mrs Warren's house, yet hell is still more
dreadful. Nowadays they no longer believe in hell; and the girls
among whom they are working know that they do not believe in it,
and would laugh at them if they did. So well have the rescuers
learnt that Mrs Warren's defence of herself and indictment of
society is the thing that most needs saying, that those who know me
personally reproach me, not for writing this play, but for wasting
my energies on "pleasant plays" for the amusement of frivolous
people, when I can build up such excellent stage sermons on their
own work. Mrs Warren's Profession is the one play of mine which I
could submit to a censorship without doubt of the result; only, it
must not be the censorship of the minor theatre critic, nor of an
innocent court official like the Lord Chamberlain's Examiner, much
less of people who consciously profit by Mrs Warren's profession,
or who personally make use of it, or who hold the widely whispered
view that it is an indispensable safety-valve for the protection of
domestic virtue, or, above all, who are smitten with a sentimental
affection for our fallen sister, and would "take her up tenderly,
lift her with care, fashioned so slenderly, young, and SO fair."
Nor am I prepared to accept the verdict of the medical gentlemen
who would compulsorily sanitate and register Mrs Warren, whilst
leaving Mrs Warren's patrons, especially her military patrons, free
to destroy her health and anybody else's without fear of reprisals.
But I should be quite content to have my play judged by, say, a
joint committee of the Central Vigilance Society and the Salvation
Army. And the sterner moralists the members of the committee were,
the better.
Some of the journalists I have shocked reason so unripely that
they will gather nothing from this but a confused notion that I am
accusing the National Vigilance Association and the Salvation Army
of complicity in my own scandalous immorality. It will seem to them
that people who would stand this play would stand anything. They
are quite mistaken. Such an audience as I have described would be
revolted by many of our fashionable plays. They would leave the
theatre convinced that the Plymouth Brother who still regards the
playhouse as one of the gates of hell is perhaps the safest adviser
on the subject of which he knows so little. If I do not draw the
same conclusion, it is not because I am one of those who claim that
art is exempt from moral obligations, and deny that the writing or
performance of a play is a moral act, to be treated on exactly the
same footing as theft or murder if it produces equally mischievous
consequences. I am convinced that fine art is the subtlest, the
most seductive, the most effective instrument of moral propaganda
in the world, excepting only the example of personal conduct; and I
waive even this exception in favor of the art of the stage, because
it works by exhibiting examples of personal conduct made
intelligible and moving to crowds of unobservant, unreflecting
people to whom real life means nothing. I have pointed out again
and again that the influence of the theatre in England is growing
so great that whilst private conduct, religion, law, science,
politics, and morals are becoming more and more theatrical, the
theatre itself remains impervious to common sense, religion,
science, politics, and morals. That is why I fight the theatre, not
with pamphlets and sermons and treatises, but with plays; and so
effective do I find the dramatic method that I have no doubt I
shall at last persuade even London to take its conscience and its
brains with it when it goes to the theatre, instead of leaving them
at home with its prayer-book as it does at present. Consequently, I
am the last man in the world to deny that if the net effect of
performing Mrs Warren's Profession were an increase in the number
of persons entering that profession, its performance should be
dealt with accordingly.
Now let us consider how such recruiting can be encouraged by the
theatre. Nothing is easier. Let the King's Reader of Plays, backed
by the Press, make an unwritten but perfectly well understood
regulation that members of Mrs Warren's profession shall be
tolerated on the stage only when they are beautiful, exquisitely
dressed, and sumptuously lodged and fed; also that they shall, at
the end of the play, die of consumption to the sympathetic tears of
the whole audience, or step into the next room to commit suicide,
or at least be turned out by their protectors and passed on to be
"redeemed" by old and faithful lovers who have adored them in spite
of their levities. Naturally, the poorer girls in the gallery will
believe in the beauty, in the exquisite dresses, and the luxurious
living, and will see that there is no real necessity for the
consumption, the suicide, or the ejectment: mere pious forms, all
of them, to save the Censor's face. Even if these purely official
catastrophes carried any conviction, the majority of English girls
remain so poor, so dependent, so well aware that the drudgeries of
such honest work as is within their reach are likely enough to lead
them eventually to lung disease, premature death, and domestic
desertion or brutality, that they would still see reason to prefer
the primrose path to the strait path of virtue, since both, vice at
worst and virtue at best, lead to the same end in poverty and
overwork. It is true that the Board School mistress will tell you
that only girls of a certain kind will reason in this way. But
alas! that certain kind turns out on inquiry to be simply the
pretty, dainty kind: that is, the only kind that gets the chance of
acting on such reasoning. Read the first report of the Commission
on the Housing of the Working Classes [Bluebook C 4402, 8d., 1889];
read the Report on Home Industries (sacred word, Home!) issued by
the Women's Industrial Council [Home Industries of Women in London,
1897, 1s., 12 Buckingham Street, W. C.]; and ask yourself whether,
if the lot in life therein described were your lot in life, you
would not prefer the lot of Cleopatra, of Theodora, of the Lady of
the Camellias, of Mrs Tanqueray, of Zaza, of Iris. If you can go
deep enough into things to be able to say no, how many ignorant
half-starved girls will believe you are speaking sincerely? To them
the lot of Iris is heavenly in comparison with their own. Yet our
King, like his predecessors, says to the dramatist, "Thus, and thus
only, shall you present Mrs Warren's profession on the stage, or
you shall starve. Witness Shaw, who told the untempting truth about
it, and whom We, by the Grace of God, accordingly disallow and
suppress, and do what in Us lies to silence." Fortunately, Shaw
cannot be silenced. "The harlot's cry from street to street" is
louder than the voices of all the kings. I am not dependent on the
theatre, and cannot be starved into making my play a standing
advertisement of the attractive side of Mrs Warren's business.
Here I must guard myself against a misunderstanding. It is not
the fault of their authors that the long string of wanton's
tragedies, from Antony and Cleopatra to Iris, are snares to poor
girls, and are objected to on that account by many earnest men and
women who consider Mrs Warren's Profession an excellent sermon. Mr
Pinero is in no way bound to suppress the fact that his Iris is a
person to be envied by millions of better women. If he made his
play false to life by inventing fictitious disadvantages for her,
he would be acting as unscrupulously as any tract writer. If
society chooses to provide for its Irises better than for its
working women, it must not expect honest playwrights to manufacture
spurious evidence to save its credit. The mischief lies in the
deliberate suppression of the other side of the case: the refusal
to allow Mrs Warren to expose the drudgery and repulsiveness of
plying for hire among coarse, tedious drunkards; the determination
not to let the Parisian girl in Brieux's Les Avaries come on the
stage and drive into people's minds what her diseases mean for her
and for themselves. All that, says the King's Reader in effect, is
horrifying, loathsome.
Precisely: what does he expect it to be? would he have us
represent it as beautiful and gratifying? The answer to this
question, I fear, must be a blunt Yes; for it seems impossible to
root out of an Englishman's mind the notion that vice is
delightful, and that abstention from it is privation. At all
events, as long as the tempting side of it is kept towards the
public, and softened by plenty of sentiment and sympathy, it is
welcomed by our Censor, whereas the slightest attempt to place it
in the light of the policeman's lantern or the Salvation Army
shelter is checkmated at once as not merely disgusting, but, if you
please, unnecessary.
Everybody will, I hope, admit that this state of things is
intolerable; that the subject of Mrs Warren's profession must be
either tapu altogether, or else exhibited with the warning side as
freely displayed as the tempting side. But many persons will vote
for a complete tapu, and an impartial sweep from the boards of Mrs
Warren and Gretchen and the rest; in short, for banishing the
sexual instincts from the stage altogether. Those who think this
impossible can hardly have considered the number and importance of
the subjects which are actually banished from the stage. Many
plays, among them Lear, Hamlet, Macbeth, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar,
have no sex complications: the thread of their action can be
followed by children who could not understand a single scene of Mrs
Warren's Profession or Iris. None of our plays rouse the sympathy
of the audience by an exhibition of the pains of maternity, as
Chinese plays constantly do. Each nation has its own particular set
of tapus in addition to the common human stock; and though each of
these tapus limits the scope of the dramatist, it does not make
drama impossible. If the Examiner were to refuse to license plays
with female characters in them, he would only be doing to the stage
what our tribal customs already do to the pulpit and the bar. I
have myself written a rather entertaining play with only one woman
in it, and she is quite heartwhole; and I could just as easily
write a play without a woman in it at all. I will even go so far as
to promise the Mr Redford my support if he will introduce this
limitation for part of the year, say during Lent, so as to make a
close season for that dullest of stock dramatic subjects, adultery,
and force our managers and authors to find out what all great
dramatists find out spontaneously: to wit, that people who
sacrifice every other consideration to love are as hopelessly
unheroic on the stage as lunatics or dipsomaniacs. Hector is the
world's hero; not Paris nor Antony.
But though I do not question the possibility of a drama in which
love should be as effectively ignored as cholera is at present,
there is not the slightest chance of that way out of the difficulty
being taken by the Mr Redford. If he attempted it there would be a
revolt in which he would be swept away in spite of my singlehanded
efforts to defend him. A complete tapu is politically impossible. A
complete toleration is equally impossible to Mr Redford, because
his occupation would be gone if there were no tapu to enforce. He
is therefore compelled to maintain the present compromise of a
partial tapu, applied, to the best of his judgement, with a careful
respect to persons and to public opinion. And a very sensible
English solution of the difficulty, too, most readers will say. I
should not dispute it if dramatic poets really were what English
public opinion generally assumes them to be during their lifetime:
that is, a licentiously irregular group to be kept in order in a
rough and ready way by a magistrate who will stand no nonsense from
them. But I cannot admit that the class represented by Eschylus,
Sophocles, Aristophanes, Euripides, Shakespear, Goethe, Ibsen, and
Tolstoy, not to mention our own contemporary playwrights, is as
much in place in Mr Redford's office as a pickpocket is in Bow
Street. Further, it is not true that the Censorship, though it
certainly suppresses Ibsen and Tolstoy, and would suppress
Shakespear but for the absurd rule that a play once licensed is
always licensed (so that Wycherly is permitted and Shelley
prohibited), also suppresses unscrupulous playwrights. I challenge
Mr Redford to mention any extremity of sexual misconduct which any
manager in his senses would risk presenting on the London stage
that has not been presented under his license and that of his
predecessor. The compromise, in fact, works out in practice in
favor of loose plays as against earnest ones.
To carry conviction on this point, I will take the extreme
course of narrating the plots of two plays witnessed within the
last ten years by myself at London West End theatres, one licensed
by the late Queen Victoria's Reader of Plays, the other by the
present Reader to the King. Both plots conform to the strictest
rules of the period when La Dame aux Camellias was still a
forbidden play, and when The Second Mrs Tanqueray would have been
tolerated only on condition that she carefully explained to the
audience that when she met Captain Ardale she sinned "but in
intention."
Play number one. A prince is compelled by his parents to marry
the daughter of a neighboring king, but loves another maiden. The
scene represents a hall in the king's palace at night. The wedding
has taken place that day; and the closed door of the nuptial
chamber is in view of the audience. Inside, the princess awaits her
bridegroom. A duenna is in attendance. The bridegroom enters. His
sole desire is to escape from a marriage which is hateful to him.
An idea strikes him. He will assault the duenna, and get
ignominiously expelled from the palace by his indignant
father-in-law. To his horror, when he proceeds to carry out this
stratagem, the duenna, far from raising an alarm, is flattered,
delighted, and compliant. The assaulter becomes the assaulted. He
flings her angrily to the ground, where she remains placidly. He
flies. The father enters; dismisses the duenna; and listens at the
keyhole of his daughter's nuptial chamber, uttering various
pleasantries, and declaring, with a shiver, that a sound of
kissing, which he supposes to proceed from within, makes him feel
young again.
In deprecation of the scandalized astonishment with which such a
story as this will be read, I can only say that it was not
presented on the stage until its propriety had been certified by
the chief officer of the Queen of England's household.
Story number two. A German officer finds himself in an inn with
a French lady who has wounded his national vanity. He resolves to
humble her by committing a rape upon her. He announces his purpose.
She remonstrates, implores, flies to the doors and finds them
locked, calls for help and finds none at hand, runs screaming from
side to side, and, after a harrowing scene, is overpowered and
faints. Nothing further being possible on the stage without actual
felony, the officer then relents and leaves her. When she recovers,
she believes that he has carried out his threat; and during the
rest of the play she is represented as vainly vowing vengeance upon
him, whilst she is really falling in love with him under the
influence of his imaginary crime against her. Finally she consents
to marry him; and the curtain falls on their happiness.
This story was certified by the present King's Reader, acting
for the Lord Chamberlain, as void in its general tendency of
"anything immoral or otherwise improper for the stage." But let
nobody conclude therefore that Mr Redford is a monster, whose
policy it is to deprave the theatre. As a matter of fact, both the
above stories are strictly in order from the official point of
view. The incidents of sex which they contain, though carried in
both to the extreme point at which another step would be dealt
with, not by the King's Reader, but by the police, do not involve
adultery, nor any allusion to Mrs Warren's profession, nor to the
fact that the children of any polyandrous group will, when they
grow up, inevitably be confronted, as those of Mrs Warren's group
are in my play, with the insoluble problem of their own possible
consanguinity. In short, by depending wholly on the coarse humors
and the physical fascination of sex, they comply with all the
formulable requirements of the Censorship, whereas plays in which
these humors and fascinations are discarded, and the social
problems created by sex seriously faced and dealt with, inevitably
ignore the official formula and are suppressed. If the old rule
against the exhibition of illicit sex relations on stage were
revived, and the subject absolutely barred, the only result would
be that Antony and Cleopatra, Othello (because of the Bianca
episode), Troilus and Cressida, Henry IV, Measure for Measure,
Timon of Athens, La Dame aux Camellias, The Profligate, The Second
Mrs Tanqueray, The Notorious Mrs Ebbsmith, The Gay Lord Quex, Mrs
Dane's Defence, and Iris would be swept from the stage, and placed
under the same ban as Tolstoy's Dominion of Darkness and Mrs
Warren's Profession, whilst such plays as the two described above
would have a monopoly of the theatre as far as sexual interest is
concerned.
What is more, the repulsiveness of the worst of the certified
plays would protect the Censorship against effective exposure and
criticism. Not long ago an American Review of high standing asked
me for an article on the Censorship of the English stage. I replied
that such an article would involve passages too disagreeable for
publication in a magazine for general family reading. The editor
persisted nevertheless; but not until he had declared his readiness
to face this, and had pledged himself to insert the article
unaltered (the particularity of the pledge extending even to a
specification of the exact number of words in the article) did I
consent to the proposal. What was the result?
The editor, confronted with the two stories given above, threw
his pledge to the winds, and, instead of returning the article,
printed it with the illustrative examples omitted, and nothing left
but the argument from political principles against the Censorship.
In doing this he fired my broadside after withdrawing the cannon
balls; for neither the Censor nor any other Englishman, except
perhaps Mr Leslie Stephen and a few other veterans of the dwindling
old guard of Benthamism, cares a dump about political principle.
The ordinary Briton thinks that if every other Briton is not kept
under some form of tutelage, the more childish the better, he will
abuse his freedom viciously. As far as its principle is concerned,
the Censorship is the most popular institution in England; and the
playwright who criticizes it is slighted as a blackguard agitating
for impunity. Consequently nothing can really shake the confidence
of the public in the Lord Chamberlain's department except a
remorseless and unbowdlerized narration of the licentious fictions
which slip through its net, and are hallmarked by it with the
approval of the Throne. But since these narrations cannot be made
public without great difficulty, owing to the obligation an editor
is under not to deal unexpectedly with matters that are not
virginibus puerisque, the chances are heavily in favor of
the Censor escaping all remonstrance. With the exception of such
comments as I was able to make in my own critical articles in The
World and The Saturday Review when the pieces I have described were
first produced, and a few ignorant protests by churchmen against
much better plays which they confessed they had not seen nor read,
nothing has been said in the press that could seriously disturb the
easygoing notion that the stage would be much worse than it
admittedly is but for the vigilance of the King's Reader. The truth
is, that no manager would dare produce on his own responsibility
the pieces he can now get royal certificates for at two guineas per
piece.
I hasten to add that I believe these evils to be inherent in the
nature of all censorship, and not merely a consequence of the form
the institution takes in London. No doubt there is a staggering
absurdity in appointing an ordinary clerk to see that the leaders
of European literature do not corrupt the morals of the nation, and
to restrain Sir Henry Irving, as a rogue and a vagabond, from
presuming to impersonate Samson or David on the stage, though any
other sort of artist may daub these scriptural figures on a
signboard or carve them on a tombstone without hindrance. If the
General Medical Council, the Royal College of Physicians, the Royal
Academy of Arts, the Incorporated Law Society, and Convocation were
abolished, and their functions handed over to the Mr Redford, the
Concert of Europe would presumably declare England mad, and treat
her accordingly. Yet, though neither medicine nor painting nor law
nor the Church moulds the character of the nation as potently as
the theatre does, nothing can come on the stage unless its
dimensions admit of its passing through Mr Redford's mind! Pray do
not think that I question Mr Redford's honesty. I am quite sure
that he sincerely thinks me a blackguard, and my play a grossly
improper one, because, like Tolstoy's Dominion of Darkness, it
produces, as they are both meant to produce, a very strong and very
painful impression of evil. I do not doubt for a moment that the
rapine play which I have described, and which he licensed, was
quite incapable in manuscript of producing any particular effect on
his mind at all, and that when he was once satisfied that the
ill-conducted hero was a German and not an English officer, he
passed the play without studying its moral tendencies. Even if he
had undertaken that study, there is no more reason to suppose that
he is a competent moralist than there is to suppose that I am a
competent mathematician. But truly it does not matter whether he is
a moralist or not. Let nobody dream for a moment that what is wrong
with the Censorship is the shortcoming of the gentleman who happens
at any moment to be acting as Censor. Replace him to-morrow by an
Academy of Letters and an Academy of Dramatic Poetry, and the new
and enlarged filter will still exclude original and epoch-making
work, whilst passing conventional, old-fashioned, and vulgar work
without question. The conclave which compiles the index of the
Roman Catholic Church is the most august, ancient, learned, famous,
and authoritative censorship in Europe. Is it more enlightened,
more liberal, more tolerant that the comparatively infinitesimal
office of the Lord Chamberlain? On the contrary, it has reduced
itself to a degree of absurdity which makes a Catholic university a
contradiction in terms. All censorships exist to prevent anyone
from challenging current conceptions and existing institutions. All
progress is initiated by challenging current concepts, and executed
by supplanting existing institutions. Consequently the first
condition of progress is the removal of censorships. There is the
whole case against censorships in a nutshell.
It will be asked whether theatrical managers are to be allowed
to produce what they like, without regard to the public interest.
But that is not the alternative. The managers of our London
music-halls are not subject to any censorship. They produce their
entertainments on their own responsibility, and have no two-guinea
certificates to plead if their houses are conducted viciously. They
know that if they lose their character, the County Council will
simply refuse to renew their license at the end of the year; and
nothing in the history of popular art is more amazing than the
improvement in music-halls that this simple arrangement has
produced within a few years. Place the theatres on the same
footing, and we shall promptly have a similar revolution: a whole
class of frankly blackguardly plays, in which unscrupulous low
comedians attract crowds to gaze at bevies of girls who have
nothing to exhibit but their prettiness, will vanish like the
obscene songs which were supposed to enliven the squalid dulness,
incredible to the younger generation, of the music-halls fifteen
years ago. On the other hand, plays which treat sex questions as
problems for thought instead of as aphrodisiacs will be freely
performed. Gentlemen of Mr Redford's way of thinking will have
plenty of opportunity of protesting against them in Council; but
the result will be that the Mr Redford will find his natural level;
Ibsen and Tolstoy theirs; so no harm will be done.
This question of the Censorship reminds me that I have to
apologize to those who went to the recent performance of Mrs
Warren's Profession expecting to find it what I have just called an
aphrodisiac. That was not my fault; it was Mr Redford's. After the
specimens I have given of the tolerance of his department, it was
natural enough for thoughtless people to infer that a play which
overstepped his indulgence must be a very exciting play indeed.
Accordingly, I find one critic so explicit as to the nature of his
disappointment as to say candidly that "such airy talk as there is
upon the matter is utterly unworthy of acceptance as being a
representation of what people with blood in them think or do on
such occasions." Thus am I crushed between the upper millstone of
the Mr Redford, who thinks me a libertine, and the nether popular
critic, who thinks me a prude. Critics of all grades and ages,
middle-aged fathers of families no less than ardent young
enthusiasts, are equally indignant with me. They revile me as
lacking in passion, in feeling, in manhood. Some of them even sum
the matter up by denying me any dramatic power: a melancholy
betrayal of what dramatic power has come to mean on our stage under
the Censorship! Can I be expected to refrain from laughing at the
spectacle of a number of respectable gentlemen lamenting because a
playwright lures them to the theatre by a promise to excite their
senses in a very special and sensational manner, and then, having
successfully trapped them in exceptional numbers, proceeds to
ignore their senses and ruthlessly improve their minds? But I
protest again that the lure was not mine. The play had been in
print for four years; and I have spared no pains to make known that
my plays are built to induce, not voluptuous reverie but
intellectual interest, not romantic rhapsody but humane concern.
Accordingly, I do not find those critics who are gifted with
intellectual appetite and political conscience complaining of want
of dramatic power. Rather do they protest, not altogether unjustly,
against a few relapses into staginess and caricature which betray
the young playwright and the old playgoer in this early work of
mine.
As to the voluptuaries, I can assure them that the playwright,
whether he be myself or another, will always disappoint them. The
drama can do little to delight the senses: all the apparent
instances to the contrary are instances of the personal fascination
of the performers. The drama of pure feeling is no longer in the
hands of the playwright: it has been conquered by the musician,
after whose enchantments all the verbal arts seem cold and tame.
Romeo and Juliet with the loveliest Juliet is dry, tedious, and
rhetorical in comparison with Wagner's Tristan, even though Isolde
be both fourteen stone and forty, as she often is in Germany.
Indeed, it needed no Wagner to convince the public of this. The
voluptuous sentimentality of Gounod's Faust and Bizet's Carmen has
captured the common playgoer; and there is, flatly, no future now
for any drama without music except the drama of thought. The
attempt to produce a genus of opera without music (and this
absurdity is what our fashionable theatres have been driving at for
a long time without knowing it) is far less hopeful than my own
determination to accept problem as the normal materiel of the
drama.
That this determination will throw me into a long conflict with
our theatre critics, and with the few playgoers who go to the
theatre as often as the critics, I well know; but I am too well
equipped for the strife to be deterred by it, or to bear malice
towards the losing side. In trying to produce the sensuous effects
of opera, the fashionable drama has become so flaccid in its
sentimentality, and the intellect of its frequenters so atrophied
by disuse, that the reintroduction of problem, with its remorseless
logic and iron framework of fact, inevitably produces at first an
overwhelming impression of coldness and inhuman rationalism. But
this will soon pass away. When the intellectual muscle and moral
nerve of the critics has been developed in the struggle with modern
problem plays, the pettish luxuriousness of the clever ones, and
the sulky sense of disadvantaged weakness in the sentimental ones,
will clear away; and it will be seen that only in the problem play
is there any real drama, because drama is no mere setting up of the
camera to nature: it is the presentation in parable of the conflict
between Man's will and his environment: in a word, of problem. The
vapidness of such drama as the pseudo-operatic plays contain lies
in the fact that in them animal passion, sentimentally diluted, is
shewn in conflict, not with real circumstances, but with a set of
conventions and assumptions half of which do not exist off the
stage, whilst the other half can either be evaded by a pretence of
compliance or defied with complete impunity by any reasonably
strong-minded person. Nobody can feel that such conventions are
really compulsory; and consequently nobody can believe in the stage
pathos that accepts them as an inexorable fate, or in the
genuineness of the people who indulge in such pathos. Sitting at
such plays, we do not believe: we make-believe. And the habit of
make-believe becomes at last so rooted that criticism of the
theatre insensibly ceases to be criticism at all, and becomes more
and more a chronicle of the fashionable enterprises of the only
realities left on the stage: that is, the performers in their own
persons. In this phase the playwright who attempts to revive
genuine drama produces the disagreeable impression of the pedant
who attempts to start a serious discussion at a fashionable
at-home. Later on, when he has driven the tea services out and made
the people who had come to use the theatre as a drawing-room
understand that it is they and not the dramatist who are the
intruders, he has to face the accusation that his plays ignore
human feeling, an illusion produced by that very resistance of fact
and law to human feeling which creates drama. It is the
deus ex machina who, by suspending that resistance, makes
the fall of the curtain an immediate necessity, since drama ends
exactly where resistance ends. Yet the introduction of this
resistance produces so strong an impression of heartlessness
nowadays that a distinguished critic has summed up the impression
made on him by Mrs Warren's Profession, by declaring that "the
difference between the spirit of Tolstoy and the spirit of Mr Shaw
is the difference between the spirit of Christ and the spirit of
Euclid." But the epigram would be as good if Tolstoy's name were
put in place of mine and D'Annunzio's in place of Tolstoy. At the
same time I accept the enormous compliment to my reasoning powers
with sincere complacency; and I promise my flatterer that when he
is sufficiently accustomed to and therefore undazzled by problem on
the stage to be able to attend to the familiar factor of humanity
in it as well as to the unfamiliar one of a real environment, he
will both see and feel that Mrs Warren's Profession is no mere
theorem, but a play of instincts and temperaments in conflict with
each other and with a flinty social problem that never yields an
inch to mere sentiment.
I go further than this. I declare that the real secret of the
cynicism and inhumanity of which shallower critics accuse me is the
unexpectedness with which my characters behave like human beings,
instead of conforming to the romantic logic of the stage. The
axioms and postulates of that dreary mimanthropometry are so well
known that it is almost impossible for its slaves to write
tolerable last acts to their plays, so conventionally do their
conclusions follow from their premises. Because I have thrown this
logic ruthlessly overboard, I am accused of ignoring, not stage
logic, but, of all things, human feeling. People with completely
theatrified imaginations tell me that no girl would treat her
mother as Vivie Warren does, meaning that no stage heroine would in
a popular sentimental play. They say this just as they might say
that no two straight lines would enclose a space. They do not see
how completely inverted their vision has become even when I throw
its preposterousness in their faces, as I repeatedly do in this
very play. Praed, the sentimental artist (fool that I was not to
make him a theatre critic instead of an architect!) burlesques them
by expecting all through the piece that the feelings of others will
be logically deducible from their family relationships and from his
"conventionally unconventional" social code. The sarcasm is lost on
the critics: they, saturated with the same logic, only think him
the sole sensible person on the stage. Thus it comes about that the
more completely the dramatist is emancipated from the illusion that
men and women are primarily reasonable beings, and the more
powerfully he insists on the ruthless indifference of their great
dramatic antagonist, the external world, to their whims and
emotions, the surer he is to be denounced as blind to the very
distinction on which his whole work is built. Far from ignoring
idiosyncrasy, will, passion, impulse, whim, as factors in human
action, I have placed them so nakedly on the stage that the elderly
citizen, accustomed to see them clothed with the veil of
manufactured logic about duty, and to disguise even his own
impulses from himself in this way, finds the picture as unnatural
as Carlyle's suggested painting of parliament sitting without its
clothes.
I now come to those critics who, intellectually baffled by the
problem in Mrs Warren's Profession, have made a virtue of running
away from it. I will illustrate their method by quotation from
Dickens, taken from the fifth chapter of Our Mutual Friend:
"Hem!" began Wegg. "This, Mr Boffin and Lady, is the first
chapter of the first wollume of the Decline and Fall off-" here he
looked hard at the book, and stopped.
"What's the matter, Wegg?"
"Why, it comes into my mind, do you know, sir," said Wegg with
an air of insinuating frankness (having first again looked hard at
the book), "that you made a little mistake this morning, which I
had meant to set you right in; only something put it out of my
head. I think you said Rooshan Empire, sir?"
"It is Rooshan; ain't it, Wegg?"
"No, sir. Roman. Roman."
"What's the difference, Wegg?"
"The difference, sir?" Mr Wegg was faltering and in danger of
breaking down, when a bright thought flashed upon him. "The
difference, sir? There you place me in a difficulty, Mr Boffin.
Suffice it to observe, that the difference is best postponed to
some other occasion when Mrs Boffin does not honor us with her
company. In Mrs Boffin's presence, sir, we had better drop it."
Mr Wegg thus came out of his disadvantage with quite a
chivalrous air, and not only that, but by dint of repeating with a
manly delicacy, "In Mrs Boffin's presence, sir, we had better drop
it!" turned the disadvantage on Boffin, who felt that he had
committed himself in a very painful manner.
I am willing to let Mr Wegg drop it on these terms, provided I
am allowed to mention here that Mrs Warren's Profession is a play
for women; that it was written for women; that it has been
performed and produced mainly through the determination of women
that it should be performed and produced; that the enthusiasm of
women made its first performance excitingly successful; and that
not one of these women had any inducement to support it except
their belief in the timeliness and the power of the lesson the play
teaches. Those who were "surprised to see ladies present" were men;
and when they proceeded to explain that the journals they
represented could not possibly demoralize the public by describing
such a play, their editors cruelly devoted the space saved by their
delicacy to an elaborate and respectful account of the progress of
a young lord's attempt to break the bank at Monte Carlo. A few days
sooner Mrs Warren would have been crowded out of their papers by an
exceptionally abominable police case. I do not suggest that the
police case should have been suppressed; but neither do I believe
that regard for public morality had anything to do with their
failure to grapple with the performance by the Stage Society. And,
after all, there was no need to fall back on Silas Wegg's
subterfuge. Several critics saved the faces of their papers easily
enough by the simple expedient of saying all they had to say in the
tone of a shocked governess lecturing a naughty child. To them I
might plead, in Mrs Warren's words, "Well, it's only good manners
to be ashamed, dearie;" but it surprises me, recollecting as I do
the effect produced by Miss Fanny Brough's delivery of that line,
that gentlemen who shivered like violets in a zephyr as it swept
through them, should so completely miss the full width of its
application as to go home and straightway make a public exhibition
of mock modesty.
My old Independent Theatre manager, Mr Grein, besides that
reproach to me for shattering his ideals, complains that Mrs Warren
is not wicked enough, and names several romancers who would have
clothed her black soul with all the terrors of tragedy. I have no
doubt they would; but if you please, my dear Grein, that is just
what I did not want to do. Nothing would please our sanctimonious
British public more than to throw the whole guilt of Mrs Warren's
profession on Mrs Warren herself. Now the whole aim of my play is
to throw that guilt on the British public itself. You may remember
that when you produced my first play, Widowers' Houses, exactly the
same misunderstanding arose. When the virtuous young gentleman rose
up in wrath against the slum landlord, the slum landlord very
effectively shewed him that slums are the product, not of
individual Harpagons, but of the indifference of virtuous young
gentlemen to the condition of the city they live in, provided they
live at the west end of it on money earned by someone else's labor.
The notion that prostitution is created by the wickedness of Mrs
Warren is as silly as the notion-prevalent, nevertheless, to some
extent in Temperance circles-that drunkenness is created by the
wickedness of the publican. Mrs Warren is not a whit a worse woman
than the reputable daughter who cannot endure her. Her indifference
to the ultimate social consequences of her means of making money,
and her discovery of that means by the ordinary method of taking
the line of least resistance to getting it, are too common in
English society to call for any special remark. Her vitality, her
thrift, her energy, her outspokenness, her wise care of her
daughter, and the managing capacity which has enabled her and her
sister to climb from the fried fish shop down by the Mint to the
establishments of which she boasts, are all high English social
virtues. Her defence of herself is so overwhelming that it provokes
the St James Gazette to declare that "the tendency of the play is
wholly evil" because "it contains one of the boldest and most
specious defences of an immoral life for poor women that has ever
been penned." Happily the St James Gazette here speaks in its
haste. Mrs Warren's defence of herself is not only bold and
specious, but valid and unanswerable. But it is no defence at all
of the vice which she organizes. It is no defence of an immoral
life to say that the alternative offered by society collectively to
poor women is a miserable life, starved, overworked, fetid, ailing,
ugly. Though it is quite natural and RIGHT for Mrs Warren to choose
what is, according to her lights, the least immoral alternative, it
is none the less infamous of society to offer such alternatives.
For the alternatives offered are not morality and immorality, but
two sorts of immorality. The man who cannot see that starvation,
overwork, dirt, and disease are as anti-social as prostitution-that
they are the vices and crimes of a nation, and not merely its
misfortunes-is (to put it as politely as possible) a hopelessly
Private Person.
The notion that Mrs Warren must be a fiend is only an example of
the violence and passion which the slightest reference to sex
arouses in undisciplined minds, and which makes it seem natural for
our lawgivers to punish silly and negligible indecencies with a
ferocity unknown in dealing with, for example, ruinous financial
swindling. Had my play been titled Mr Warren's Profession, and Mr
Warren been a bookmaker, nobody would have expected me to make him
a villain as well. Yet gambling is a vice, and bookmaking an
institution, for which there is absolutely nothing to be said. The
moral and economic evil done by trying to get other people's money
without working for it (and this is the essence of gambling) is not
only enormous but uncompensated. There are no two sides to the
question of gambling, no circumstances which force us to tolerate
it lest its suppression lead to worse things, no consensus of
opinion among responsible classes, such as magistrates and military
commanders, that it is a necessity, no Athenian records of gambling
made splendid by the talents of its professors, no contention that
instead of violating morals it only violates a legal institution
which is in many respects oppressive and unnatural, no possible
plea that the instinct on which it is founded is a vital one.
Prostitution can confuse the issue with all these excuses: gambling
has none of them. Consequently, if Mrs Warren must needs be a
demon, a bookmaker must be a cacodemon. Well, does anybody who
knows the sporting world really believe that bookmakers are worse
than their neighbors? On the contrary, they have to be a good deal
better; for in that world nearly everybody whose social rank does
not exclude such an occupation would be a bookmaker if he could;
but the strength of character for handling large sums of money and
for strict settlements and unflinching payment of losses is so rare
that successful bookmakers are rare too. It may seem that at least
public spirit cannot be one of a bookmaker's virtues; but I can
testify from personal experience that excellent public work is done
with money subscribed by bookmakers. It is true that there are
abysses in bookmaking: for example, welshing. Mr Grein hints that
there are abysses in Mrs Warren's profession also. So there are in
every profession: the error lies in supposing that every member of
them sounds these depths. I sit on a public body which prosecutes
Mrs Warren zealously; and I can assure Mr Grein that she is often
leniently dealt with because she has conducted her business
"respectably" and held herself above its vilest branches. The
degrees in infamy are as numerous and as scrupulously observed as
the degrees in the peerage: the moralist's notion that there are
depths at which the moral atmosphere ceases is as delusive as the
rich man's notion that there are no social jealousies or snobberies
among the very poor. No: had I drawn Mrs Warren as a fiend in human
form, the very people who now rebuke me for flattering her would
probably be the first to deride me for deducing her character
logically from occupation instead of observing it accurately in
society.
One critic is so enslaved by this sort of logic that he calls my
portraiture of the Reverend Samuel Gardner an attack on
religion.
According to this view Subaltern Iago is an attack on the army,
Sir John Falstaff an attack on knighthood, and King Claudius an
attack on royalty. Here again the clamor for naturalness and human
feeling, raised by so many critics when they are confronted by the
real thing on the stage, is really a clamor for the most mechanical
and superficial sort of logic. The dramatic reason for making the
clergyman what Mrs Warren calls "an old stick-in-the-mud," whose
son, in spite of much capacity and charm, is a cynically worthless
member of society, is to set up a mordant contrast between him and
the woman of infamous profession, with her well brought-up,
straightforward, hardworking daughter. The critics who have missed
the contrast have doubtless observed often enough that many
clergymen are in the Church through no genuine calling, but simply
because, in circles which can command preferment, it is the refuge
of "the fool of the family"; and that clergymen's sons are often
conspicuous reactionists against the restraints imposed on them in
childhood by their father's profession. These critics must know,
too, from history if not from experience, that women as
unscrupulous as Mrs Warren have distinguished themselves as
administrators and rulers, both commercially and politically. But
both observation and knowledge are left behind when journalists go
to the theatre. Once in their stalls, they assume that it is
"natural" for clergymen to be saintly, for soldiers to be heroic,
for lawyers to be hard-hearted, for sailors to be simple and
generous, for doctors to perform miracles with little bottles, and
for Mrs Warren to be a beast and a demon. All this is not only not
natural, but not dramatic. A man's profession only enters into the
drama of his life when it comes into conflict with his nature. The
result of this conflict is tragic in Mrs Warren's case, and comic
in the clergyman's case (at least we are savage enough to laugh at
it); but in both cases it is illogical, and in both cases natural.
I repeat, the critics who accuse me of sacrificing nature to logic
are so sophisticated by their profession that to them logic is
nature, and nature absurdity.
Many friendly critics are too little skilled in social questions
and moral discussions to be able to conceive that respectable
gentlemen like themselves, who would instantly call the police to
remove Mrs Warren if she ventured to canvass them personally, could
possibly be in any way responsible for her proceedings. They
remonstrate sincerely, asking me what good such painful exposures
can possibly do. They might as well ask what good Lord Shaftesbury
did by devoting his life to the exposure of evils (by no means yet
remedied) compared to which the worst things brought into view or
even into surmise by this play are trifles. The good of mentioning
them is that you make people so extremely uncomfortable about them
that they finally stop blaming "human nature" for them, and begin
to support measures for their reform.
Can anything be more absurd than the copy of The Echo which
contains a notice of the performance of my play? It is edited by a
gentleman who, having devoted his life to work of the Shaftesbury
type, exposes social evils and clamors for their reform in every
column except one; and that one is occupied by the declaration of
the paper's kindly theatre critic, that the performance left him
"wondering what useful purpose the play was intended to serve." The
balance has to be redressed by the more fashionable papers, which
usually combine capable art criticism with West-End solecism on
politics and sociology. It is very noteworthy, however, on
comparing the press explosion produced by Mrs Warren's Profession
in 1902 with that produced by Widowers' Houses about ten years
earlier, that whereas in 1892 the facts were frantically denied and
the persons of the drama flouted as monsters of wickedness, in 1902
the facts are admitted and the characters recognized, though it is
suggested that this is exactly why no gentleman should mention them
in public. Only one writer has ventured to imply this time that the
poverty mentioned by Mrs Warren has since been quietly relieved,
and need not have been dragged back to the footlights. I compliment
him on his splendid mendacity, in which he is unsupported, save by
a little plea in a theatrical paper which is innocent enough to
think that ten guineas a year with board and lodging is an
impossibly low wage for a barmaid. It goes on to cite Mr Charles
Booth as having testified that there are many laborers' wives who
are happy and contented on eighteen shillings a week. But I can go
further than that myself. I have seen an Oxford agricultural
laborer's wife looking cheerful on eight shillings a week; but that
does not console me for the fact that agriculture in England is a
ruined industry. If poverty does not matter as long as it is
contented, then crime does not matter as long as it is
unscrupulous. The truth is that it is only then that it does matter
most desperately. Many persons are more comfortable when they are
dirty than when they are clean; but that does not recommend dirt as
a national policy.
Here I must for the present break off my arduous work of
educating the Press. We shall resume our studies later on; but just
now I am tired of playing the preceptor; and the eager thirst of my
pupils for improvement does not console me for the slowness of
their progress. Besides, I must reserve space to gratify my own
vanity and do justice to the six artists who acted my play, by
placing on record the hitherto unchronicled success of the first
representation. It is not often that an author, after a couple of
hours of those rare alternations of excitement and intensely
attentive silence which only occur in the theatre when actors and
audience are reacting on one another to the utmost, is able to step
on the stage and apply the strong word genius to the representation
with the certainty of eliciting an instant and overwhelming assent
from the audience. That was my good fortune on the afternoon of
Sunday, the fifth of January last. I was certainly extremely
fortunate in my interpreters in the enterprise, and that not alone
in respect of their artistic talent; for had it not been for their
superhuman patience, their imperturbable good humor and good
fellowship, there could have been no performance. The terror of the
Censor's power gave us trouble enough to break up any ordinary
commercial enterprise. Managers promised and even engaged their
theatres to us after the most explicit warnings that the play was
unlicensed, and at the last moment suddenly realized that Mr
Redford had their livelihoods in the hollow of his hand, and backed
out. Over and over again the date and place were fixed and the
tickets printed, only to be canceled, until at last the desperate
and overworked manager of the Stage Society could only laugh, as
criminals broken on the wheel used to laugh at the second stroke.
We rehearsed under great difficulties. Christmas pieces and plays
for the new year were being produced in all directions; and my six
actor colleagues were busy people, with engagements in these pieces
in addition to their current professional work every night. On
several raw winter days stages for rehearsal were unattainable even
by the most distinguished applicants; and we shared corridors and
saloons with them whilst the stage was given over to children in
training for Boxing night. At last we had to rehearse at an hour at
which no actor or actress has been out of bed within the memory of
man; and we sardonically congratulated one another every morning on
our rosy matutinal looks and the improvement wrought by our early
rising in our health and characters. And all this, please observe,
for a society without treasury or commercial prestige, for a play
which was being denounced in advance as unmentionable, for an
author without influence at the fashionable theatres! I
victoriously challenge the West End managers to get as much done
for interested motives, if they can.
Three causes made the production the most notable that has
fallen to my lot. First, the veto of the Censor, which put the
supporters of the play on their mettle. Second, the chivalry of the
Stage Society, which, in spite of my urgent advice to the contrary,
and my demonstration of the difficulties, dangers, and expenses the
enterprise would cost, put my discouragements to shame and resolved
to give battle at all costs to the attempt of the Censorship to
suppress the play. Third, the artistic spirit of the actors, who
made the play their own and carried it through triumphantly in
spite of a series of disappointments and annoyances much more
trying to the dramatic temperament than mere difficulties.
The acting, too, required courage and character as well as skill
and intelligence. The veto of the Censor introduced quite a novel
element of moral responsibility into the undertaking. And the
characters were very unusual on the English stage. The younger
heroine is, like her mother, an Englishwoman to the backbone, and
not, like the heroines of our fashionable drama, a prima donna of
Italian origin. Consequently she was sure to be denounced as
unnatural and undramatic by the critics. The most vicious man in
the play is not in the least a stage villain; indeed, he regards
his own moral character with the sincere complacency of a hero of
melodrama. The amiable devotee of romance and beauty is shewn at an
age which brings out the futilization which these worships are apt
to produce if they are made the staple of life instead of the
sauce. The attitude of the clever young people to their elders is
faithfully represented as one of pitiless ridicule and
unsympathetic criticism, and forms a spectacle incredible to those
who, when young, were not cleverer than their nearest elders, and
painful to those sentimental parents who shrink from the cruelty of
youth, which pardons nothing because it knows nothing. In short,
the characters and their relations are of a kind that the routineer
critic has not yet learned to place; so that their misunderstanding
was a foregone conclusion. Nevertheless, there was no hesitation
behind the curtain. When it went up at last, a stage much too small
for the company was revealed to an auditorium much too small for
the audience. But the players, though it was impossible for them to
forget their own discomfort, at once made the spectators forget
theirs. It certainly was a model audience, responsive from the
first line to the last; and it got no less than it deserved in
return.
I grieve to add that the second performance, given for the
edification of the London Press and of those members of the Stage
Society who cannot attend the Sunday performances, was a less
inspiriting one than the first. A solid phalanx of theatre-weary
journalists in an afternoon humor, most of them committed to
irreconcilable disparagement of problem plays, and all of them
bound by etiquette to be as undemonstrative as possible, is not
exactly the sort of audience that rises at the performers and cures
them of the inevitable reaction after an excitingly successful
first night. The artist nature is a sensitive and therefore a
vindictive one; and masterful players have a way with recalcitrant
audiences of rubbing a play into them instead of delighting them
with it. I should describe the second performance of Mrs Warren's
Profession, especially as to its earlier stages, as decidedly a
rubbed-in one. The rubbing was no doubt salutary; but it must have
hurt some of the thinner skins. The charm of the lighter passages
fled; and the strong scenes, though they again carried everything
before them, yet discharged that duty in a grim fashion, doing
execution on the enemy rather than moving them to repentance and
confession. Still, to those who had not seen the first performance,
the effect was sufficiently impressive; and they had the advantage
of witnessing a fresh development in Mrs Warren, who, artistically
jealous, as I took it, of the overwhelming effect of the end of the
second act on the previous day, threw herself into the fourth act
in quite a new way, and achieved the apparently impossible feat of
surpassing herself. The compliments paid to Miss Fanny Brough by
the critics, eulogistic as they are, are the compliments of men
three-fourths duped as Partridge was duped by Garrick. By much of
her acting they were so completely taken in that they did not
recognize it as acting at all. Indeed, none of the six players
quite escaped this consequence of their own thoroughness. There was
a distinct tendency among the less experienced critics to complain
of their sentiments and behavior. Naturally, the author does not
share that grievance.
PICCARD'S COTTAGE, JANUARY 1902.