The Millionairess - George Bernard Shaw - Libros -  - 9798647643018 - 22 de mayo de 2020
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The Millionairess


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The Millionairess is a play written in 1936 by George Bernard Shaw. It tells the story of Epifania, a spoilt heiress, and her search for a suitor. Mr Julius Sagamore, a smart young solicitor, is in his office in Lincoln's Inn Fields. It is a fine morning in May. The room, an old panelled one, is so arranged that Mr Sagamore, whom we see sitting under the window in profile with his back to it and his left side presented to us, is fenced off by his writing table from excessive intimacy with emotional clients or possible assault by violent or insane ones. The door is on his right towards the farther end of the room. The faces of the clients are thus illuminated by the window whilst his own countenance is in shadow. The fireplace, of Adam design, is in the wall facing him. It is surmounted by a dingy portrait of a judge. In the wall on his right, near the corner farthest from him, is the door, with a cleft pediment enshrining a bust of some other judge. The rest of this wall is occupied by shelves of calf-bound law books. The wall behind Mr Sagamore has the big window as aforesaid, and beside it a stand of black tin boxes inscribed with clients' names. So far, the place proclaims the eighteenth century; but as the year is 1935, and Mr Sagamore has no taste for dust and mould, and requires a room which suggests opulence, and in which lady clients will look their best, everything is well dusted and polished; the green carpet is new, rich, and thick; and the half dozen chairs, four of which are ranged under the bookshelves, are Chippendales of the very latest fake. Of the other two one is occupied by himself, and the other stands half way between his table and the fireplace for the accommodation of his clients. The telephone, on the table at his elbow, rings. SAGAMORE [listening] Yes? ... [Impressed] Oh! Send her up at once. A tragic looking woman, athletically built and expensively dressed, storms into the room. He rises obsequiously. THE LADY. Are you Julius Sagamore, the worthless nephew of my late solicitor Pontifex Sagamore?SAGAMORE. I do not advertize myself as worthless; but Pontifex Sagamore was my uncle; and I have returned from Australia to succeed to as much of his business as I can persuade his clients to trust me with. THE LADY. I have heard him speak of you; and I naturally concluded that as you had been packed off to Australia you must be worthless. But it does not matter, as my business is very simple. I desire to make my will, leaving everything I possess to my husband. You can hardly go wrong about that, I suppose. SAGAMORE. I shall do my best. Pray sit down. THE LADY. No: I am restless. I shall sit down when I feel tired. SAGAMORE. As you please. Before I draw up the will it will be necessary for me to know who your husband is. THE LADY. My husband is a fool and a blackguard. You will state that fact in the will. You will add that it was his conduct that drove me to commit suicide. SAGAMORE. But you have not committed suicide. THE LADY. I shall have, when the will is signed. SAGAMORE. Of course, quite so: stupid of me. And his name?THE LADY. His name is Alastair Fitzfassenden. SAGAMORE. What! The amateur tennis champion and heavy weight boxer?

Medios de comunicación Libros     Paperback Book   (Libro con tapa blanda y lomo encolado)
Publicado 22 de mayo de 2020
ISBN13 9798647643018
Páginas 100
Dimensiones 152 × 229 × 5 mm   ·   145 g
Lengua Inglés  

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