GEORGE SHAW - The Complete Works

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Musaicum Books presents to you this meticulously edited George Bernard Shaw collection:
Introduction:
Mr. Bernard Shaw (by G. K. Chesterton)
Novels:
Cashel Byron's Profession
An Unsocial Socialist
Love Among The Artists
The Irrational Knot
Plays:
Plays Unpleasant:
Widowers' Houses (1892)
The Philanderer (1898)
Mrs. Warren's Profession (1898)
Plays Pleasant:
Arms And The Man: An Anti-Romantic Comedy in Three Acts (1894)
Candida (1898)
You Never Can Tell (1897)
Three Plays for Puritans:
The Devil's Disciple
Caesar And Cleopatra
Captain Brassbound's Conversion
Other Plays:
The Man Of Destiny
The Gadfly Or The Son of the Cardinal
The Admirable Bashville Or Constancy Unrewarded
Man And Superman: A Comedy and A Philosophy
John Bull's Other Island
How He Lied To Her Husband
Major Barbara
Passion, Poison, And Petrifaction
The Doctor's Dilemma: A Tragedy
The Interlude At The Playhouse
Getting Married
The Shewing-Up Of Blanco Posnet
Press Cuttings
Misalliance
The Dark Lady Of The Sonnets
Fanny's First Play
Androcles And The Lion
Overruled: A Demonstration
Pygmalion
Great Catherine (Whom Glory Still Adores)
The Music Cure
Beauty's Duty (Unfinished)
O'Flaherty, V. C.
The Inca Of Perusalem: An Almost Historical Comedietta
Augustus Does His Bit
Skit For The Tiptaft Revue
Annajanska, The Bolshevik Empress
Heartbreak House
Back To Methuselah: A Metabiological Pentateuch
In the Beginning
The Gospel of the Brothers Barnabas
The Thing Happens
Tragedy of an Elderly Gentleman
As Far as Thought Can Reach
The War Indemnities (Unfinished)
Saint Joan
The Glimpse Of Reality: A Tragedietta
Fascinating Foundling: Disgrace To The Author
The Apple Cart: A Political Extravaganza
Too True to Be Good
Village Wooing: A Comedietta for Two Voices
On the Rocks: A Political Comedy
The Simpleton of the Unexpected Isles
The Six of Calais
Arthur and the Acetone
The Millionairess
Cymbeline Refinished: A Variation on Shakespeare's Ending
Geneva
"In Good King Charles' Golden Days"
Playlet on the British Party System
Buoyant Billions: A Comedy of No Manners
Shakes versus Shav
Farfetched Fables
Why She Would Not
Miscellaneous Works:
What do Men of Letters Say? – The New York Times Articles on War (1915):
"Common Sense About the War" by G. B. Shaw
"Shaw's Nonsense About Belgium" By Arnold Bennett
"Bennett States the German Case" by G. B. Shaw
Flaws in Shaw's Logic By Cunninghame Graham
Editorial Comment on Shaw By The New York World
Comment by Readers of Shaw To the Editor of The New York Times
Open Letter to President Wilson by G. B. Shaw
A German Letter to G. Bernard Shaw By Herbert Eulenberg
"Mr. G. Bernard Shaw on Socialism" (Speech)
The Miraculous Revenge
Quintessence Of Ibsenism
The Basis of Socialism Economic
The Transition to Social Democracy
The Impossibilities Of Anarchism
The Perfect Wagnerite, Commentary on the Niblung's Ring
Letter to Beatrice Webb
The Revolutionist's Handbook And Pocket Companion
Maxims For Revolutionists
The New Theology
How to Write A Popular Play: An Essay
A Treatise on Parents and Children: An Essay
Memories of Oscar Wilde
The Intelligent Women's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism: Excerpts
Women in the Labour Market
Socialism and Marriage
Socialism and Children
Letter to Frank Harris
How These Doctors Love One Another!
The Black Girl in Search of God
The Political Madhouse in America and Nearer Home
On Capital Punishment
Essays on Bernard Shaw:
George Bernard Shaw by G. K. Chesterton
The Quintessence of Shaw by James Huneker
Old and New Masters: Bernard Shaw by Robert Lynd
George Bernard Shaw: A Poem by Oliver Herford

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“I will speak to some of my friends about it,” said Herbert. “There is no hurry for a week or two, I suppose?”

“Oh, no, none whatever,” said Mr. Sutherland, ostentatiously serene after his outbreak: “there is no hurry certainly. But Charlie must not be allowed to contract habits of idleness; and if the matter cannot be settled to his liking, I shall exert my authority, and select a tutor myself. I cannot understand his objection to the man we saw at Archdeacon Downes’s. Can you, Mary?”

“I can understand that Charlie is too lazy to work,” said Mary. Then, as if tired of the subject, she turned to Herbert, and said, “You have not yet told us when we may come to your studio and see The Lady of Shalott. I am very anxious to see it. I shall not mind its being unfinished.”

“But I shall,” said Herbert, suddenly becoming self-conscious and nervous. “I fear the picture will disappoint you in any case; but at least I wish it to be as good as I can make it, before you see it. I must ask you to wait until Thursday.”

“Certainly, if you like,” said Mary earnestly. She was about to add something, when Mr. Sutherland, who had become somewhat restive when the conversation turned upon pictures, declared that he had sat long enough. So they rose to go; and Mary turned to get a last glimpse of the man. He was looking at them with a troubled expression; and his lips were white. She thought he was about to speak, and involuntarily retreated a step. But he said nothing: only she was struck, as he composed himself in his old attitude, by his extreme dejection.

“Did you notice that man sitting next you?” she whispered to Herbert, when they had gone a little distance.

“Not particularly.”

Do you think he is very poor?”

“He certainly does not appear to be very rich,” said Herbert, looking back.

“I saw a very odd look in his eyes. I hope he is not hungry.”

They stopped. Then Herbert walked slowly on. “I should think not so bad as that,” he said. “I don’t think his appearance would justify me in offering him—”

“Oh, dear, dear me!” said Mr Sutherland. “I am very stupid.”

“What is the matter now, papa?”

“I have lost my glasses. I must have left them on that seat. Just wait one moment whilst I go back for them. No, no, Herbert: I will go back myself. I recollect exactly where I laid them down. I shall be back in a moment.”

“Papa always takes the most exact notes of the places in which he puts things; and he always leaves them behind him after all,” said Mary. “There is that man in precisely the same position as when we first saw him.”

“No. He is saying something to your father, begging, I am afraid, or he would not stand up and lift his hat”

“How dreadful!”

Herbert laughed. “If, as you suspected, he is hungry, there is nothing very dreadful in it, poor fellow. It is natural enough.”

“I did not mean that. I meant that it was dreadful to think of his being forced to beg. Papa has not given him anything — I wish he would. He evidently wants to get rid of him, and, of course, does not know how to do it. Let us go back.”

“If you wish,” said Herbert, reluctantly. “But I warn you that London is full of begging impostors.”

Meanwhile Mr Sutherland, finding his spectacles where he had left them, took them up; wiped them with his handkerchief; and was turning away, when he found himself confronted by the strange man, who had risen.

“Sir,” said the man, raising his shabby hat, and speaking in a subdued voice of remarkable power: “I have been a tutor; and I am a musician. I can convince you that I am an honest and respectable man. I am in need of employment. Something I overheard just now leads me to hope that you can assist me. I will—” Here the man, though apparently self-possessed, stopped as if his breath had failed him.

Mr. Sutherland’s first impulse was to tell the stranger stiffly that he had no occasion for his services. But as there were no bystanders, and the man’s gaze was impressive, he became nervous, and said hastily, “Oh, thank you: I have not decided what I shall do as yet.” And he attempted to pass on.

The man immediately stepped aside, saying, “If you will favor me with your address, sir, I can send you testimonials which will prove that I have a right to seek such a place as you describe. If they do not satisfy you, I shall trouble you no further. Or if you will be so good as to accept my card, you can consider at your leisure whether to communicate with me or not.”

“Certainly, I will take your card,” said Mr. Sutherland, flurried and conciliatory. “Thank you. I can write to you, you, know, if I—”

“I am much obliged to you.” Here he produced an ordinary visiting card, with the name “Mr. Owen Jack” engraved, and an address at Church Street, Kensington, written in a crabbed but distinct hand in the corner. Whilst Mr. Sutherland was pretending to read it, his daughter came up, purse in hand, hurrying before Herbert, whose charity she wished to forestall. Mr. Owen Jack looked at her; and she hid her purse quickly. “I am sorry to have delayed you, sir,” he said. “Good morning.” He raised his hat again, and walked away.

“Good morning, sir,” said Mr Sutherland. “Lord bless me! that’s a cool fellow,” he added, recovering himself, and beginning to feel ashamed of having been so courteous to a poorly dressed stranger.

“What did he want, papa?”

“Indeed, my dear, he has shown me that we cannot be too careful of how we talk before strangers in London. By the purest accident — ,the merest chance, I happened, whilst we were sitting here five minutes ago, to mention that we wanted a tutor for Charlie. This man was listening to us; and now he has offered himself for the place. Just fancy the quickness of that. Here is his card.”

“Owen Jack!” said Mary. “What a name!”

“Did he overhear anything about the musical difficulty?” said Herbert. “Nature does not seem to have formed Mr Jack for the pursuit of a fine art.”

“Yes: he caught up even that. According to his own account, he understands music — , in fact he can do everything.”

Mary looked thoughtful. “After all,” she said slowly, “he might suit us. He is certainly not handsome; but he does not seem stupid; and he would probably not want a large salary. I think Archdeacon Downes’s man’s terms are perfectly ridiculous.”

“I am afraid it would be rather a dangerous experiment to give a responsible post to an individual whom we have chanced upon in a public park.” said Herbert.

“Oh! out of the question,” said Mr Sutherland. “I only took his card as the shortest way of getting rid of him. Perhaps I was wrong to do even that.”

“Of course we should have to make inquiries,” said Mary. “Somehow, I cannot get it out of my head that he is in very bad circumstances. He might be a gentleman. He does not look common.”

“I agree with you so far,” said Herbert. “And I am not sorry that such models are scarce. But of course you are quite right in desiring to assist this man, if he is unfortunate.”

“Engaging a tutor is a very commonplace affair,” said Mary; “but we may as well do some good by it if we can. Archdeacon Downes’s man is in no immediate want of a situation: he has dozens of offers to choose from. Why not give the place to whoever is in the greatest need of it?”

“Very well,” cried Mr. Sutherland. “Send after him and bring him home at once in a carriage and pair, since you have made up your mind not to hear to reason on the subject.”

“After all,” interposed Herbert, “it will do no harm to make a few inquiries. If you will allow me, I will take the matter in hand, so as to prevent all possibility of his calling on or disturbing you. Give me his card. I will write to him for his testimonials and references, and so forth; and if anything comes of it, I can then hand him over to you.”

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