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GB Shaw
her elbows on the drawingboard and her chin on her hands, she
composes herself to listen with a combination of conscious curi-
osity with unconscious contempt which provokes him to more
and more unpleasantness, and an attempt at patronage of her
ignorance].
MANGAN
. Of course you don’t understand: what do you
know about business? You just listen and learn. Your father’s
business was a new business; and I don’t start new businesses:
I let other fellows start them. They put all their money and
their friends’ money into starting them. They wear out their
souls and bodies trying to make a success of them. They’re
what you call enthusiasts. But the first dead lift of the thing
is too much for them; and they haven’t enough financial ex-
perience. In a year or so they have either to let the whole
show go bust, or sell out to a new lot of fellows for a few
deferred ordinary shares: that is, if they’re lucky enough to
get anything at all. As likely as not the very same thing hap-
pens to the new lot. They put in more money and a couple
of years’ more work; and then perhaps they have to sell out
to a third lot. If it’s really a big thing the third lot will have to
sell out too, and leave their work and their money behind
them. And that’s where the real business man comes in: where
I come in. But I’m cleverer than some: I don’t mind drop-
ping a little money to start the process. I took your father’s
measure. I saw that he had a sound idea, and that he would
work himself silly for it if he got the chance. I saw that he
was a child in business, and was dead certain to outrun his
expenses and be in too great a hurry to wait for his market. I
knew that the surest way to ruin a man who doesn’t know
how to handle money is to give him some. I explained my
idea to some friends in the city, and they found the money;
for I take no risks in ideas, even when they’re my own. Your
father and the friends that ventured their money with him
were no more to me than a heap of squeezed lemons. You’ve
been wasting your gratitude: my kind heart is all rot. I’m
sick of it. When I see your father beaming at me with his
moist, grateful eyes, regularly wallowing in gratitude, I some-
times feel I must tell him the truth or burst. What stops me
is that I know he wouldn’t believe me. He’d think it was my
modesty, as you did just now. He’d think anything rather
than the truth, which is that he’s a blamed fool, and I am a
man that knows how to take care of himself. [
He throws him-
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