Misalliance by George Bernard Shaw
page 83 of 143 (58%)
page 83 of 143 (58%)
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PERCIVAL. Miss Tarleton-- HYPATIA. _[caressingly]_ Hypatia, Joey. Patsy, if you like. PERCIVAL. Look here: this is no good. You want to do what you like? HYPATIA. Dont you? PERCIVAL. No. Ive been too well brought up. Ive argued all through this thing; and I tell you I'm not prepared to cast off the social bond. It's like a corset: it's a support to the figure even if it does squeeze and deform it a bit. I want to be free. HYPATIA. Well, I'm tempting you to be free. PERCIVAL. Not at all. Freedom, my good girl, means being able to count on how other people will behave. If every man who dislikes me is to throw a handful of mud in my face, and every woman who likes me is to behave like Potiphar's wife, then I shall be a slave: the slave of uncertainty: the slave of fear: the worst of all slaveries. How would you like it if every laborer you met in the road were to make love to you? No. Give me the blessed protection of a good stiff conventionality among thoroughly well-brought up ladies and gentlemen. HYPATIA. Another talker! Men like conventions because men made them. I didnt make them: I dont like them: I wont keep them. Now, what will you do? PERCIVAL. Bolt. _[He runs out through the pavilion]._ |
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