107
GB Shaw
ELLIE
[
pulling him back]. You shall not. You are happy here,
aren’t you?
CAPTAIN SHOTOVER
. I tell you it’s dangerous to keep
me. I can’t keep awake and alert.
ELLIE
. What do you run away for? To sleep?
CAPTAIN SHOTOVER
. No. To get a glass of rum.
ELLIE
[
frightfully disillusioned]. Is that it? How disgusting!
Do you like being drunk?
CAPTAIN SHOTOVER
. No: I dread being drunk more
than anything in the world. To be drunk means to have
dreams;
to go soft; to be easily pleased and deceived; to fall
into the clutches of women. Drink does that for you when
you are young. But when you are old: very very old, like me,
the dreams come by themselves. You don’t know how ter-
rible that is: you are young: you sleep at night only, and sleep
soundly. But later on you will sleep in the afternoon. Later
still you will sleep even in the morning; and you will awake
tired, tired of life. You will never
be free from dozing and
dreams; the dreams will steal upon your work every ten min-
utes unless you can awaken yourself with rum. I drink now
to keep sober; but the dreams are conquering: rum is not
what it was: I have had ten glasses since you came; and it
might be so much water. Go get me another: Guinness knows
where it is. You had better see for yourself the horror of an
old man drinking.
ELLIE
. You shall not drink. Dream. I like you to dream. You
must never be in the real world when we talk together.
CAPTAIN SHOTOVER
.
I am too weary to resist, or too
weak. I am in my second childhood. I do not see you as you
really are. I can’t remember what I really am. I feel nothing
but the accursed happiness I have dreaded all my life long:
the happiness that comes as life goes, the happiness of yield-
ing and dreaming instead of resisting and doing, the sweet-
ness of the fruit that is going rotten.
ELLIE
. You dread it almost as much as I used to dread los-
ing my dreams and having to fight and do things. But that is
all over for me: my dreams are dashed to pieces. I should like
to
marry a very old, very rich man. I should like to marry
you. I had much rather marry you than marry Mangan. Are
you very rich?
CAPTAIN SHOTOVER
. No. Living from hand to mouth.
And I have a wife somewhere in Jamaica: a black one. My
first wife. Unless she’s dead.
ELLIE
. What a pity! I feel so happy with you. [
She takes his