Read Strife Online

Authors: John Galsworthy

Strife (9 page)

 

ENID. [Moving to the double-doors, and listening.] Do you know that man Roberts, Frost?

 

FROST. Yes, M'm; that's to say, not to speak to. But to look at 'im you can tell what he's like.

 

ENID. [Stopping.] Yes?

 

FROST. He's not one of these 'ere ordinary 'armless Socialists. 'E's violent; got a fire inside 'im. What I call "personal." A man may 'ave what opinions 'e likes, so long as 'e's not personal; when 'e's that 'e's not safe.

 

ENID. I think that's what my father feels about Roberts.

 

FROST. No doubt, M'm, Mr. Anthony has a feeling against him.

 

[ENID glances at him sharply, but finding him in perfect earnest, stands biting her lips, and looking at the double-doors.]

 

It 's, a regular right down struggle between the two. I've no patience with this Roberts, from what I 'ear he's just an ordinary workin' man like the rest of 'em. If he did invent a thing he's no worse off than 'undreds of others. My brother invented a new kind o' dumb-waiter—nobody gave him anything for it, an' there it is, bein' used all over the place.

 

[ENID moves closer to the double-doors.]

 

There's a kind o' man that never forgives the world, because 'e wasn't born a gentleman. What I say is—no man that's a gentleman looks down on another because 'e 'appens to be a class or two above 'im, no more than if 'e 'appens to be a class or two below.

 

ENID. [With slight impatience.] Yes, I know, Frost, of course. Will you please go in and ask if they'll have some tea; say I sent you.

 

FROST. Yes, M'm.

 

[He opens the doors gently and goes in. There is a momentary sound of earnest, gather angry talk.]

 

WILDER. I don't agree with you.

 

WANKLIN. We've had this over a dozen times.

 

EDGAR. [Impatiently.] Well, what's the proposition?

 

SCANTLEBURY. Yes, what does your father say? Tea? Not for me, not for me!

 

WANKLIN. What I understand the Chairman to say is this—

 

[FROST re-enters closing the door behind him.]

 

ENID. [Moving from the door.] Won't they have any tea, Frost?

 

[She goes to the little table, and remains motionless, looking at the baby's frock.] [A parlourmaid enters from the hall.]

 

PARLOURMAID. A Miss Thomas, M'm

 

ENID. [Raising her head.] Thomas? What Miss Thomas—d' you mean a—?

 

PARLOURMAID. Yes, M'm.

 

ENID. [Blankly.] Oh! Where is she?

 

PARLOURMAID. In the porch.

 

ENID. I don't want [She hesitates.]

 

FROST. Shall I dispose of her, M'm?

 

ENID. I'll come out. No, show her in here, Ellen.

 

[The PARLOUR MAID and FROST go out. ENID pursing her lips, sits at the little table, taking up the baby's frock. The PARLOURMAID ushers in MADGE THOMAS and goes out; MADGE stands by the door.]

 

ENID. Come in. What is it. What have you come for, please?

 

MADGE. Brought a message from Mrs. Roberts.

 

ENID. A message? Yes.

 

MADGE. She asks you to look after her mother.

 

ENID. I don't understand.

 

MADGE. [Sullenly.] That's the message.

 

ENID. But—what—why?

 

MADGE. Annie Roberts is dead.

 

[There is a silence.]

 

ENID. [Horrified.] But it's only a little more than an hour since I saw her.

 

MADGE. Of cold and hunger.

 

ENID. [Rising.] Oh! that's not true! the poor thing's heart—What makes you look at me like that? I tried to help her.

 

MADGE. [With suppressed savagery.] I thought you'd like to know.

 

ENID. [Passionately.] It's so unjust! Can't you see that I want to help you all?

 

MADGE. I never harmed any one that hadn't harmed me first.

 

ENID. [Coldly.] What harm have I done you? Why do you speak to me like that?

 

MADGE. [With the bitterest intensity.] You come out of your comfort to spy on us! A week of hunger, that's what you want!

 

ENID. [Standing her ground.] Don't talk nonsense!

 

MADGE. I saw her die; her hands were blue with the cold.

 

ENID. [With a movement of grief.] Oh! why wouldn't she let me help her? It's such senseless pride!

 

MADGE. Pride's better than nothing to keep your body warm.

 

ENID. [Passionately.] I won't talk to you! How can you tell what I feel? It's not my fault that I was born better off than you.

 

MADGE. We don't want your money.

 

ENID. You don't understand, and you don't want to; please to go away!

 

MADGE. [Balefully.] You've killed her, for all your soft words, you and your father!

 

ENID. [With rage and emotion.] That's wicked! My father is suffering himself through this wretched strike.

 

MADGE. [With sombre triumph.] Then tell him Mrs. Roberts is dead! That'll make him better.

 

ENID. Go away!

 

MADGE. When a person hurts us we get it back on them.

 

[She makes a sudden and swift movement towards ENID, fixing her eyes on the child's frock lying across the little table. ENID snatches the frock up, as though it were the child itself. They stand a yard apart, crossing glances.]

 

MADGE. [Pointing to the frock with a little smile.] Ah! You felt that! Lucky it's her mother—not her children—you've to look after, isn't it. She won't trouble you long!

 

ENID. Go away!

 

MADGE. I've given you the message.

 

[She turns and goes out into the hall. ENID, motionless till she has gone, sinks down at the table, bending her head over the frock, which she is still clutching to her. The double-doors are opened, and ANTHONY comes slowly in; he passes his daughter, and lowers himself into an arm-chair. He is very flushed.]

 

ENID. [Hiding her emotion-anxiously.] What is it, Dad?

 

[ANTHONY makes a gesture, but does not speak.]

 

Who was it?

 

[ANTHONY does not answer. ENID going to the double-doors meets EDGAR Coming in. They speak together in low tones.]

 

What is it, Ted?

 

EDGAR. That fellow Wilder! Taken to personalities! He was downright insulting.

 

ENID. What did he say?

 

EDGAR. Said, Father was too old and feeble to know what he was doing! The Dad's worth six of him!

 

ENID. Of course he is.

 

[They look at ANTHONY.] [The doors open wider, WANKLIN appears With SCANTLEBURY.]

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Sotto voce.] I don't like the look of this!

 

WANKLIN. [Going forward.] Come, Chairman! Wilder sends you his apologies. A man can't do more.

 

[WILDER, followed by TENCH, comes in, and goes to ANTHONY.]

 

WILDER. [Glumly.] I withdraw my words, sir. I'm sorry.

 

[ANTHONY nods to him.]

 

ENID. You haven't come to a decision, Mr. Wanklin?

 

[WANKLIN shakes his head.]

 

WANKLIN. We're all here, Chairman; what do you say? Shall we get on with the business, or shall we go back to the other room?

 

SCANTLEBURY. Yes, yes; let's get on. We must settle something.

 

[He turns from a small chair, and settles himself suddenly in the largest chair with a sigh of comfort.] [WILDER and WANKLIN also sit; and TENCH, drawing up a straight-backed chair close to his Chairman, sits on the edge of it with the minute-book and a stylographic pen.]

 

ENID. [Whispering.] I want to speak to you a minute, Ted.

 

[They go out through the double-doors.]

 

WANKLIN. Really, Chairman, it's no use soothing ourselves with a sense of false security. If this strike's not brought to an end before the General Meeting, the shareholders will certainly haul us over the coals.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Stirring.] What—what's that?

 

WANKLIN. I know it for a fact.

 

ANTHONY. Let them!

 

WILDER. And get turned out?

 

WANKLIN. [To ANTHONY.] I don't mind martyrdom for a policy in which I believe, but I object to being burnt for someone else's principles.

 

SCANTLEBURY. Very reasonable—you must see that, Chairman.

 

ANTHONY. We owe it to other employers to stand firm.

 

WANKLIN. There's a limit to that.

 

ANTHONY. You were all full of fight at the start.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [With a sort of groan.] We thought the men would give in, but they-have n't!

 

ANTHONY. They will!

 

WILDER. [Rising and pacing up and down.] I can't have my reputation as a man of business destroyed for the satisfaction of starving the men out. [Almost in tears.] I can't have it! How can we meet the shareholders with things in the state they are?

 

SCANTLEBURY. Hear, hear—hear, hear!

 

WILDER. [Lashing himself.] If any one expects me to say to them I've lost you fifty thousand pounds and sooner than put my pride in my pocket I'll lose you another. [Glancing at ANTHONY.] It's—it's unnatural! I don't want to go against you, sir.

 

WANKLIN. [Persuasively.] Come Chairman, we 're not free agents. We're part of a machine. Our only business is to see the Company earns as much profit as it safely can. If you blame me for want of principle: I say that we're Trustees. Reason tells us we shall never get back in the saving of wages what we shall lose if we continue this struggle—really, Chairman, we must bring it to an end, on the best terms we can make.

 

ANTHONY. No.

 

[There is a pause of general dismay.]

 

WILDER. It's a deadlock then. [Letting his hands drop with a sort of despair.] Now I shall never get off to Spain!

 

WANKLIN. [Retaining a trace of irony.] You hear the consequences of your victory, Chairman?

 

WILDER. [With a burst of feeling.] My wife's ill!

 

SCANTLEBURY. Dear, dear! You don't say so.

 

WILDER. If I don't get her out of this cold, I won't answer for the consequences.

 

[Through the double-doors EDGAR comes in looking very grave.]

 

EDGAR. [To his Father.] Have you heard this, sir? Mrs. Roberts is dead!

 

[Every one stages at him, as if trying to gauge the importance of this news.]

 

Enid saw her this afternoon, she had no coals, or food, or anything. It's enough!

 

[There is a silence, every one avoiding the other's eyes, except ANTHONY, who stares hard at his son.]

 

SCANTLEBURY. You don't suggest that we could have helped the poor thing?

 

WILDER. [Flustered.] The woman was in bad health. Nobody can say there's any responsibility on us. At least not on me.

 

EDGAR. [Hotly.] I say that we are responsible.

 

ANTHONY. War is war!

 

EDGAR. Not on women!

 

WANKLIN. It not infrequently happens that women are the greatest sufferers.

 

EDGAR. If we knew that, all the more responsibility rests on us.

 

ANTHONY. This is no matter for amateurs.

 

EDGAR. Call me what you like, sir. It's sickened me. We had no right to carry things to such a length.

 

WILDER. I don't like this business a bit—that Radical rag will twist it to their own ends; see if they don't! They'll get up some cock and bull story about the poor woman's dying from starvation. I wash my hands of it.

 

EDGAR. You can't. None of us can.

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Striking his fist on the arm of his chair.] But I protest against this!

 

EDGAR. Protest as you like, Mr. Scantlebury, it won't alter facts.

 

ANTHONY. That's enough.

 

EDGAR. [Facing him angrily.] No, sir. I tell you exactly what I think. If we pretend the men are not suffering, it's humbug; and if they're suffering, we know enough of human nature to know the women are suffering more, and as to the children, well, it's damnable!

 

[SCANTLEBURY rises from his chair.]

 

I don't say that we meant to be cruel, I don't say anything of the sort; but I do say it's criminal to shut our eyes to the facts. We employ these men, and we can't get out of it. I don't care so much about the men, but I'd sooner resign my position on the Board than go on starving women in this way.

 

[All except ANTHONY are now upon their feet, ANTHONY sits grasping the arms of his chair and staring at his son.]

 

SCANTLEBURY. I don't, I don't like the way you're putting it, young sir.

 

WANKLIN. You're rather overshooting the mark.

 

WILDER. I should think so indeed!

 

EDGAR. [Losing control.] It's no use blinking things! If you want to have the death of women on your hands—I don't!

 

SCANTLEBURY. Now, now, young man!

 

WILDER. On our hands? Not on mine, I won't have it!

 

EDGAR. We are five members of this Board; if we were four against it, why did we let it drift till it came to this? You know perfectly well why—because we hoped we should starve the men out. Well, all we've done is to starve one woman out!

 

SCANTLEBURY. [Almost hysterically.] I protest, I protest! I'm a humane man, we're all humane men!

 

EDGAR. [Scornfully.] There's nothing wrong with our humanity. It's our imaginations, Mr. Scantlebury.

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