Pygmalion - Page 40/72

HIGGINS [sulkily] Oh, well, if you say so, I suppose I don't always

talk like a bishop.

MRS. HIGGINS [quieting Henry with a touch] Colonel Pickering: will you

tell me what is the exact state of things in Wimpole Street?

PICKERING [cheerfully: as if this completely changed the subject] Well,

I have come to live there with Henry. We work together at my Indian

Dialects; and we think it more convenient--

MRS. HIGGINS. Quite so. I know all about that: it's an excellent

arrangement. But where does this girl live?

HIGGINS. With us, of course. Where would she live?

MRS. HIGGINS. But on what terms? Is she a servant? If not, what is she?

PICKERING [slowly] I think I know what you mean, Mrs. Higgins.

HIGGINS. Well, dash me if I do! I've had to work at the girl every day

for months to get her to her present pitch. Besides, she's useful. She

knows where my things are, and remembers my appointments and so forth.

MRS. HIGGINS. How does your housekeeper get on with her?

HIGGINS. Mrs. Pearce? Oh, she's jolly glad to get so much taken off her

hands; for before Eliza came, she had to have to find things and remind

me of my appointments. But she's got some silly bee in her bonnet about

Eliza. She keeps saying "You don't think, sir": doesn't she, Pick?

PICKERING. Yes: that's the formula. "You don't think, sir." That's the

end of every conversation about Eliza.

HIGGINS. As if I ever stop thinking about the girl and her confounded

vowels and consonants. I'm worn out, thinking about her, and watching

her lips and her teeth and her tongue, not to mention her soul, which

is the quaintest of the lot.

MRS. HIGGINS. You certainly are a pretty pair of babies, playing with

your live doll.

HIGGINS. Playing! The hardest job I ever tackled: make no mistake about

that, mother. But you have no idea how frightfully interesting it is to

take a human being and change her into a quite different human being by

creating a new speech for her. It's filling up the deepest gulf that

separates class from class and soul from soul.

PICKERING [drawing his chair closer to Mrs. Higgins and bending over to

her eagerly] Yes: it's enormously interesting. I assure you, Mrs.

Higgins, we take Eliza very seriously. Every week--every day

almost--there is some new change. [Closer again] We keep records of

every stage--dozens of gramophone disks and photographs--

HIGGINS [assailing her at the other ear] Yes, by George: it's the most

absorbing experiment I ever tackled. She regularly fills our lives up;

doesn't she, Pick?