Read Touch and Go Page 8

torn out of his greatcoat--then falls--disappears. Loud cries--

  "Hi!--hoi!--hoiee!"--all the while. The car shakes and presses

  uneasily.)

  VOICE. Stop the blazin' motor, somebody.

  VOICE. Here y' are!--hold a minute. (A man jumps in and stops the

  engine--he drops in the driver's seat.)

  COLLIER (outside the car). Step down, miss.

  ANABEL. I am Mrs. Barlow.

  COLLIER. Missis, then. (Laugh.) Step done--lead 'er forrard. Take

  'em forrard.

  JOB ARTHUR. Ay, make a road.

  GERALD. You're makin' a proper fool of yourself now, Freer.

  JOB ARTHUR. You've brought it on yourself. YOU'VE made fools of

  plenty of men.

  COLLIERS. Come on, now--come on! Whoa!--whoa!--he's a jibber--go

  pretty now, go pretty!

  VOICES (suddenly). Lay hold o' Houghton--nab 'im--seize 'im--rats!--

  rats!--bring 'im forrard!

  ANABEL (in a loud, clear voice). I never knew anything so RIDICULOUS.

  VOICES (falsetto). Ridiculous! Oh, ridiculous! Mind the step, dear!

  --I'm Mrs. Barlow!--Oh, are you?--Tweet--tweet!

  JOB ARTHUR. Make a space, boys, make a space, boys, make a space.

  (He stands with prisoners in a cleared space before the obelisk.)

  Now--now--quiet a minute--we want to ask a few questions of these

  gentlemen.

  VOICES. Quiet!--quiet!--Sh-h-h! Sh-h-h!--Answer pretty--answer

  pretty now!--Quiet!--Shh-h-h!

  JOB ARTHUR. We want to ask you, Mr. Gerald Barlow, why you have

  given occasion for this present trouble.

  GERALD. You are a fool.

  VOICES. Oh!--oh!--naughty Barlow!--naughty baa-lamb--answer pretty--

  be good baa-lamb--baa--baa!--answer pretty when gentleman asks you.

  JOB ARTHUR. Quiet a bit Sh-h-h!--We put this plain question to you,

  Mr. Barlow. Why did you refuse to give the clerks this just and fair

  advance, when you knew that by refusing you would throw three thousand

  men out of employment?

  GERALD. You are a fool, I say.

  VOICES. Oh!--oh!--won't do--won't do, Barlow--wrong answer--wrong

  answer--be good baa-lamb--naughty boy--naughty boy!

  JOB ARTHUR. Quiet a bit now!--If three thousand men ask you a just,

  straightforward question, do you consider they've no right to an

  answer?

  GERALD. I would answer you with my foot.

  VOICES (amid a threatening scuffle). Da-di-da! Hark ye--hark ye!

  Oh--whoa--whoa a bit!--won't do!--won't do!--naughty--naughty--say

  you're sorry--say you're sorry--kneel and say you're sorry--kneel

  and beg pardon!

  JOB ARTHUR. Hold on a bit--keep clear!

  VOICES. Make him kneel--make him kneel--on his knees with him!

  JOB ARTHUR. I think you'd better kneel down.

  (The crowd press on GERALD--he struggles--they hit him behind the

  knees, force him down.)

  OLIVER. This is shameful and unnecessary.

  VOICES. All of 'em--on your knees--all of' em--on their knees!

  (The seize OLIVER and WILLIE and ANABEL, hustling. ANABEL kneels

  quietly--the others struggle.)

  WILLIE. Well, of all the damned, dirty, cowardly---

  VOICES. Shut up, Houghton--shut him up--squeeze him!

  OLIVER. Get off me--let me alone--I'll kneel.

  VOICES. Good little doggies--nice doggies--kneel and beg pardon--

  yap-yap--answer--make him answer!

  JOB ARTHUR (holding up his hand for silence). It would be better if

  you answered straight off, Barlow. We want to know why you prevented

  that advance.

  VOICES (after a pause). Nip his neck! Make him yelp!

  OLIVER. Let me answer, then.--Because it's worse, perhaps, to be

  bullied by three thousand men than by one man.

  VOICES. Oh!--oh!--dog keeps barking--stuff his mouth--stop him up--

  here's a bit of paper--answer, Barlow--nip his neck--stuff his mug--

  make him yelp--cork the bottle!

  (They press a lump of newspaper into OLIVER'S mouth, and bear down on

  GERALD.)

  JOB ARTHUR. Quiet--quiet--quiet a minute, everybody. We give him a

  minute--we give him a minute to answer.

  VOICES. Give him a minute--a holy minute--say your prayers, Barlow--

  you've got a minute--tick-tick, says the clock--time him!

  JOB ARTHUR. Keep quiet.

  WILLIE. Of all the damned, cowardly---

  VOICES. Sh-h-h!--Squeeze him--throttle him! Silence is golden,

  Houghton.--Close the shutters, Willie's dead.--Dry up, wet whiskers!

  JOB ARTHUR. You've fifteen seconds.

  VOICES. There's a long, long trail a-winding---

  JOB ARTHUR. The minute's up.--We ask you again, Gerald Barlow, why

  you refused a just and fair demand, when you know it was against the

  wishes of three thousand men all as good as yourself.

  VOICES. And a sight better--I don't think--we're not all vermin--

  we're not all crawlers, living off the sweat of other folks--we're

  not all parish vermin--parish vermin.

  JOB ARTHUR. And on what grounds do you think you have no occasion to

  answer the straightforward question we put you here?

  ANABEL (after a pause). Answer them, Gerald. What's the use of

  prolonging this?

  GERALD. I've nothing to answer.

  VOICES. Nothing to answer--Gerald, darling--Gerald, duckie--oh,

  lovey-dovey--I've nothing to answer--no, by God--no, by God, he

  hasna--nowt to answer--ma'e him find summat, then--answer for him--

  gi'e him's answer--let him ha'e it--go on--mum--mum--lovey-dovey--

  rub his nose in it--kiss the dirt, ducky--bend him down--rub his

  nose in--he's saying something--oh, no, he isn't--sorry I spoke--

  bend him down!

  JOB ARTHUR. Quiet a bit--quiet everybody--he's got to answer--keep

  quiet.--Now--- (A silence.) Now then, Barlow, will you answer, or

  won't you? (Silence.)

  ANABEL. Answer them, Gerald--never mind.

  VOICES. Sh-h-h! Sh-h-h! (Silence.)

  JOB ARTHUR. You won't answer, Barlow?

  VOICE. Down the beggar!

  VOICES. Down him--put his nose down--flatten him!

  (The crowd surges and begins to howl--they sway dangerously--GERALD

  is spread-eagled on the floor, face down.)

  JOB ARTHUR. Back--back--back a minute--back--back! (They recoil.)

  WILLIE. I HOPE there's a God in heaven.

  VOICES. Put him down--flatten him!

  (WILLIE is flattened on the ground.)

  JOB ARTHUR. Now, then--now then--if you won't answer, Barlow, I

  can't stand here for you any more.--Take your feet off him, boys,

  and turn him over--let us look at him. Let us see if he CAN speak.

  (They turn him over, with another scuffle.) Now then, Barlow--you

  can see the sky above you. Now do you think you're going to play

  with three thousand men, with their lives and with their souls?--

  now do you think you're going to answer them with your foot?--do

  you--do you?

  (The crowd has begun to sway and heave dangerously, with a low,

  muffled roar, above which is heard JOB ARTHUR'S voice. As he

  ceases, the roar breaks into a yell--the crowd heaves.)

  VOICES. Down him--crack the vermin--on top of him--put your foot on

  the vermin!

  ANA
BEL (with a loud, piercing cry, suddenly starting up). Ah, no!

  Ah, no! Ah-h-h-h no-o-o-o! Ah-h-h-h no-o-o-o! Ah-h-h-h no-o-o-o!

  No-o-o-o! No-o-o-o! No-o! No-o-o!--Ah-h-h-h!--it's enough, it's

  enough, it's enough--he's a man as you are. He's a man as you are.

  He's a man as you are. (Weeps--a breath of silence.)

  OLIVER. Let us stop now--let us stop now. Let me stand up.

  (Silence.) I want to stand up. (A muffled noise.)

  VOICE. Let him get up. (OLIVER rises.)

  OLIVER. Be quiet. Be quiet.--Now--choose! Choose! Choose! Choose

  what you will do! Only choose! Choose!--it will be irrevocable. (A

  moment's pause.) Thank God we haven't gone too far.--Gerald, get up.

  (Men still hold him down.)

  JOB ARTHUR. Isn't he to answer us? Isn't he going to answer us?

  OLIVER. Yes, he shall answer you. He shall answer you. But let

  him stand up. No more of this. Let him stand up. He must stand

  up. (Men still hold GERALD down.) OLIVER takes hold of their

  hands and removes them.) Let go--let go now. Yes, let go--yes--I

  ask you to let go. (Slowly, sullenly, the men let go. GERALD is

  free, but he does not move.) There--get up, Gerald! Get up! You

  aren't hurt, are you? You must get up--it's no use. We're doing

  our best--you must do yours. When things are like this, we have

  to put up with what we get. (GERALD rises slowly and faces the

  mob. They roar dully.) You ask why the clerks didn't get this

  increase? Wait! Wait! Do you still wish for any answer, Mr.

  Freer?

  JOB ARTHUR. Yes, that's what we've been waiting for.

  OLIVER. Then answer, Gerald.

  GERALD. They've trodden on my face.

  OLIVER. No matter. Job Arthur will easily answer that you've

  trodden on their souls. Don't start an altercation. (The crowd is

  beginning to roar.)

  GERALD. You want to know why the clerks didn't get their rise?--

  Because you interfered and attempted to bully about it, do you see.

  That's why.

  VOICES. You want bullying.--You'll get bullying, you will.

  OLIVER. Can't you see it's no good, either side? It's no mortal

  use. We might as well all die to-morrow, or to-day, or this minute,

  as go on bullying one another, one side bullying the other side, and

  the other side bullying back. We'd BETTER all die.

  WILLIE. And a great deal better. I'm damned if I'll take sides

  with anybody against anything, after this. If I'm to die, I'll

  die by myself. As for living, it seems impossible.

  JOB ARTHUR. Have the men nothing to be said for their side?

  OLIVER. They have a great deal--but not EVERYTHING, you see.

  JOB ARTHUR. Haven't they been wronged? And AREN'T they wronged?

  OLIVER. They have--and they are. But haven't they been wrong

  themselves, too?--and aren't they wrong now?

  JOB ARTHUR. How?

  OLIVER. What about this affair? Do you call it right?

  JOB ARTHUR. Haven't we been driven to it?

  OLIVER. Partly. And haven't you driven the masters to it, as well?

  JOB ARTHUR. I don't see that.

  OLIVER. Can't you see that it takes two to make a quarrel? And as

  long as each party hangs on to its own end of the stick and struggles

  to get full hold of the stick, the quarrel will continue. It will

  continue till you've killed one another. And even then, what better

  shall you be? What better would you be, really, if you'd killed

  Gerald Barlow just now? You wouldn't, you know. We're all human

  beings, after all. And why can't we try really to leave off

  struggling against one another, and set up a new state of things?

  JOB ARTHUR. That's all very well, you see, while you've got the

  goods.

  OLIVER. I've got very little, I assure you.

  JOB ARTHUR. Well, if you haven't, those you mix with have. They've

  got the money, and the power, and they intend to keep it.

  OLIVER. As for power, somebody must have it, you know. It only rests

  with you to put it into the hands of the best men, the men you REALLY

  believe in.--And as for money, it's life, it's living that matters,

  not simply having money.

  JOB ARTHUR. You can't live without money.

  OLIVER. I know that. And therefore why can't we have the decency to

  agree simply about money--just agree to dispose of it so that all men

  could live their own lives.

  JOB ARTHUR. That's what we want to do. But the others, such as

  Gerald Barlow, they keep the money--AND the power.

  OLIVER. You see, if you wanted to arrage things so that money flowed

  more naturally, so that it flowed naturally to every man, according

  to his needs, I think we could all soon agree. But you don't. What

  you want is to take it away from one set and give it to another--or

  keep it yourselves.

  JOB ARTHUR. We want every man to have his proper share.

  OLIVER. I'm sure _I_ do. I want every man to be able to live and

  be free. But we shall never manage it by fighting over the money.

  If you want what is natural and good, I'm sure the owners would soon

  agree with you.

  JOB ARTHUR. What? Gerald Barlow agree with us?

  OLIVER. Why not? I believe so.

  JOB ARTHUR. You ask him.

  OLIVER. Do you think, Gerald, that if the men really wanted a whole,

  better way, you would agree with them?

  GERALD. I want a better way myself--but not their way.

  JOB ARTHUR. There, you see!

  VOICES. Ah-h! look you!--That's him--that's him all over.

  OLIVER. You want a better way,--but not his way: he wants a better

  way--but not your way. Why can't you both drop your buts, and simply

  say you want a better way, and believe yourselves and one another

  when you say it? Why can't you?

  GERALD. Look here! I'm quite as tired of my way of life as you are

  of yours. If you make me believe you want something better, then I

  assure you I do: I want what you want. But Job Arthur Freer's not

  the man to lead you to anything better. You can tell what people

  want by the leaders they choose, do you see? You choose leaders

  whom I respect, and I'll respect you, do you see? As it is, I don't.

  And now I'm going.

  VOICES. Who says?--Oh ay!--Who says goin'?

  GERALD. Yes, I'm going. About this affair here we'll cry quits; no

  more said about it. About a new way of life, a better way all round--

  I tell you I want it and need it as much as ever you do. I don't care

  about money really. But I'm never going to be bullied.

  VOICE. Who doesn't care about money?

  GERALD. I don't. I think we ought to be able to alter the whole

  system--but not by bullying, not because one lot wants what the other

  has got.

  VOICE. No, because you've got everything.

  GERALD. Where's my coat? Now then, step out of the way. (They move

  towards the car.)

  (Curtain.)

 


 

  D. H. Lawrence, Touch and Go

  (Series: # )

 

 


 

 
Thank you for reading books on BookFrom.Net


Share this book with friends