Complete Poems and Plays (101 page)

Read Complete Poems and Plays Online

Authors: T. S. Eliot

Tags: #Literature, #20th Century, #American Literature, #Poetry, #Drama, #v.5, #Amazon.com, #Retail

BOOK: Complete Poems and Plays
8.81Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

And he’s offered me a job which is just what I wanted.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
Yes, I see the advantage of a job created for you

By Señor Gomez …

M
ICHAEL
.
                     It’s not created for me.

Señor Gomez came to London to find a man to fill it,

And he thinks I’m just the man.

G
OMEZ
.
                                              Yes, wasn’t it extraordinary.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
Of course you’re just the man that Señor Gomez wants,

But in a different sense, and for different reasons

From what you think. Let me tell you about Gomez.

He’s unlikely to try to be custodian of your morals;

His real name is Culverwell …

G
OMEZ
.
                                           My dear Dick,

You’re wasting your time, rehearsing ancient history.

Michael knows it already. I’ve told him myself.

I thought he’d better learn the facts from me

Before he heard your distorted version.

But, Dick, I was nettled by that insinuation

About my not being custodian of Michael’s morals.

That is just what I should be! And most appropriate,

Isn’t it, Dick, when we recall

That you were once custodian of
my
morals:

Though of course you went a little
f
aster
than I did.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
On that point, Fred, you’re wasting
your
time:

My daughter and my future son-in-law

Understand that allusion. I have told them the story

In explanation of our … intimacy

Which they found puzzling.

M
RS.
C
ARGHILL
.
                       Oh,Richard!

Have you explained to them our intimacy too?

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
I have indeed.

M
RS.
C
ARGHILL
.
                           The romance of my life.

Your father was simply
irresistible

In those days. I melted the first time he looked at me!

Some day, Monica, I’ll tell you all about it.

M
ONICA.
I am satisfied with what I know already, Mrs. Carghill,

About you.

M
RS
. C
ARGHILL
.
But I was very lovely then.

G
OMEZ
.
We are sure of that! You’re so lovely now

That we can well imagine you at … what age were you?

M
RS
. C
ARGHILL
.
Just eighteen.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
                    Now, Michael,

Señior Gomez says he has told you his story.

Did he include the fact that he served a term in prison?

M
ICHAEL
.
He told me everything. It was his experience

With you, that made him so understanding

Of my predicament.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
         And made him invent

The position which he’d come to find the man for.

M
ICHAEL
.
I don’t care about that. He’s offered me the job

With a jolly good screw, and some pickings in commissions.

He’s made a fortune there. San Marco for me!

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
And what are your duties to be? Do you know?

M
ICHAEL
.
We didn’t go into details. There’s time for that later.

G
OMEZ
.
Much better to wait until we get there.

The nature of business in San Marco

Is easier explained in San Marco than in England.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
Perhaps you intend to change your name to Gomez?

G
OMEZ
.
Oh no, Dick, there are plenty of other good names.

M
ONICA
.
Michael, Michael, you can’t abandon your family

And your very self — it’s a kind of suicide.

C
HARLES
.
Michael, you think Señor Gomez is inspired by benevolence —

M
ICHAEL
.
I told you he’d come to London looking for a man

For an important post on his staff —

C
HARLES
.
A post the nature of which is left very vague

M
ICHAEL
.
It’s confidential, I tell you.

C
HARLES
.
                                                So I can imagine:

Highly confidential …

G
OMEZ
.
                             Be careful, Mr. Barrister.

You ought to know something about the law of slander.

Here’s Mrs. Carghill, a reliable witness.

C
HARLES
.
I know enough about the law of libel and slander

To know that you are hardly likely to invoke it.

And, Michael, here’s another point to think of:

Señor Gomez has offered you a post in San Marco,

Señor Gomez pays your passage …

M
ICHAEL
.
                                                And an advance of salary.

C
HARLES
.
Señor Gomez pays your passage …

G
OMEZ
.
                                                                 Just as many years ago

His father paid mine.

C
HARLES
.
                        This return of past kindness

No doubt gives you pleasure?

G
OMEZ
.
                                           Yes, it’s always pleasant

To repay an old debt. And better late than never.

C
HARLES
.
I see your point of view. Can you really feel confidence,

Michael, in a man who aims to gratify, through you,

His lifelong grievance against your father?

Remember, you put yourself completely in the power

Of a man you don’t know, of the nature of whose business

You know nothing. All you can be sure of

Is that he served a prison sentence for forgery.

G
OMEZ
.
Well, Michael, what do you say to all this?

M
ICHAEL
.
I’ll say that Hemington has plenty of cheek.

Señor Gomez and I have talked things over, Hemington …

G
OMEZ
.
As two men of the world, we discussed things very frankly;

And I can tell you, Michael’s head is well screwed on.

He’s got brains, he’s got flair. When he does come back

He’ll be able to buy you out many times over.

M
RS.
C
ARGHILL
.
Richard, I think it’s time
I
joined the conversation.

My late husband, Mr. Carghill, was a business man —

I wish you could have known him, Señor Gomez!

You’re very much alike in some ways —

So I understand business. Mr. Carghill told me so.

Now, Michael has great abilities for business.

I saw that, and so does Señor Gomez.

He’s simply been suffering, poor boy, from frustration.

He’s been waiting all this time for opportunity

To make use of his gifts; and now, opportunity —

Opportunity has come knocking at the door.

Richard, you must not bar his way. That would be shameful.

L
ORD
C
LAVERTON
.
I cannot bar his way, as you know very well.

Michael’s a free agent. So if he chooses

To place himself in your power, Fred Culverwell,

Of his own volition to contract his enslavement,

I cannot prevent him. I have something to say to you,

Michael, before you go. I shall never repudiate you

Though you repudiate me. I see now clearly

The many many mistakes I have made

My whole life through, mistake upon mistake,

The mistaken attempts to correct mistakes

By methods which proved to be equally mistaken.

I see that your mother and I, in our failure

To understand each other, both misunderstood you

In our divergent ways. When I think of your childhood,

When I think of the happy little boy who was Michael,

When I think of your boyhood and adolescence,

And see how all the efforts aimed at your good

Only succeeded in defeating each other,

How can I feel anything but sorrow and compunction?

M
ONICA
.
Oh Michael, remember, you’re my only brother

And I’m your only sister. You never took much notice of me.

When we were growing up we seldom had the same friends.

I took all that for granted. So I didn’t know till now

How much it means to me to have a brother.

M
ICHAEL
.
Why of course, Monica. You know I’m very fond of you

Though we never really seemed to have much in common.

I remember, when I came home for the holidays

How it used to get on my nerves, when I saw you

Always sitting there with your nose in a book.

And once, Mother snatched a book away from you

And tossed it into the fire. How I laughed!

You never seemed even to want a flirtation,

And my friends used to chaff me about my highbrow sister.

But all the same, I was fond of you, and always shall be.

We don’t meet often, but if we’re fond of each other,

That needn’t interfere with your life or mine.

M
ONICA
.
Oh Michael, you haven’t understood a single word

Other books

Club Justice by McBain, Mara
Role Play by Wright, Susan
The Zinn Reader by Zinn, Howard
Summer of Night by Dan Simmons
The Mind Readers by Lori Brighton
The Mortal Knife by D. J. McCune
Coast Guard Sweetheart by Lisa Carter