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-男仆:Your name, please? Your name, miss?-Eliza :My name is of no concern to you whatsoever.-Mrs. Pearce:One moment, please.-Eliza :London is gettin so dirty these days.-Mrs. Pearce: Im Mrs. Pearce, the housekeeper. Can I help you?-Eliza :Good morning, missus. Id like to see the professor, please.-Mrs. Pearce:Could you tell me what its about?-Eliza :Its business of a personal nature.-Mrs. Pearce:One moment, please.-Mrs. Pearce:Mr. Higgins? -Mr. Higgins What is it, Mrs. Pearce?Theres a young woman who wants to see you, sir.A young woman?What does she want?Shes quite a common girl, sir. Very common indeed.I shouldve sent her away, only I thought.you wanted her to talk into your machine.-Has she an interesting accent? -Simply ghastly.-Professor Higgins:Good. Lets have her in. Show her in, Mrs. Pearce.This is rather a bit of luck. Ill show you how I make records.Well set her talking, then Ill take her down first in Bells Visible Speech.then in broad Romic. Then well get her on the phonograph.so you can turn her on when you want with the written transcript before you.This is the young woman, sir.Good mornin, my good man.Might I ave a word with you?Oh, no. This is the girl I jotted down last night.Shes no use. I got the records I want of the Lisson Grove lingo.I wont waste another cylinder on that.Be off with you. I dont want you.Dont be so saucy. You aint eard what I come for yet.Did you tell im I come in a taxi?Nonsense. Do you think a gentleman like Mr. Higgins cares.what you came in?Oh, we are proud.He aint above givin lessons, not im. I eard im say so.I aint come here to ask for any compliment.and if my moneys not good enough, I can go elsewhere.Good enough for what?Good enough for you.Now you know, dont ya? Im come to ave lessons.And to pay for em, too, make no mistake.Well!And what do you expect me to say?Well, if you was a gentleman, you might ask me to sit down, I think.Dont I tell you Im bringin you business?Should we ask this baggage to sit down.or shall we just throw her out of the window?I wont be called a baggage. Not when Ive offered to pay like any lady.What do you want, my girl?I want to be a lady in a flowr shop.stead of sellin at the corner of Tottenham Court Road.But they wont take me unless I can talk more genteel.He said e could teach me.Well, ere I am ready to pay im.Not asking any favor and he treats me as if I was dirt.I know what lessons cost as well as you do and Im ready to pay.How much?Now youre talkin.I thought youd come off it for a chance to get back.a bit of what you chucked at me last night.Youd had a drop in, adnt you?Sit down.-If youre goin t make a compliment of it- -Sit down!Sit down, girl. Do as youre told.Whats your name?Eliza Doolittle.Wont you sit down, Miss Doolittle?I dont mind if I do.How much do you propose to pay me for these lessons?Oh, I know whats right.My lady friend gets French lessons for 18 pence an hour.from a real French gentleman.You wouldnt have the face to ask me the same.for teachin me my own language as you would for French.I wont give more than a shillin. Take it or leave it.Do you know, Pickering, if you think of a shilling.not as a simple shilling, but as a percentage of this girls income.it works out as fully equivalent of.60 or 70 pounds from a millionaire.By George, its enormous. Its the biggest offer I ever had.Sixty pounds? What are you talkin about? Where would I get 60 pounds?-I never offered you 60 pounds! -Hold your tongue!But I aint got 60 pounds!Dont cry, silly girl. Sit down. Nobodys going to touch your money.Somebodyll touch you with a broomstick if you dont stop sniveling.Sit down!Anybodyd think you was my father!If I decide to teach you, Ill be worse than two fathers to you.Here.Whats this for?To wipe your eyes. To wipe any part of your face that feels moist.Remember, thats your handkerchief and thats your sleeve.Dont confuse one with the other, if you want to become a lady in a shop.Its no use to talk to her like that. She doesnt understand you.Give the andkerchief to me. He give it to me, not to you!Higgins, Im interested.What about your boast.you could pass her off as a duchess at the Embassy Ball?Ill say youre the greatest teacher alive if you do that.Ill bet you all the expenses of the experiment that you cant do it.Ill even pay for the lessons.Youre real good. Thank ye, Captn.Its almost irresistible.Shes so deliciously low.So horribly dirty.I aint dirty! I washed my face an hands before I come, I did.Ill take it. Ill make a duchess of this draggle-tailed guttersnipe.Well start today. This moment. Take her away and clean her.Sandpaper, if it wont come off. Is there a fire in the kitchen?Take her clothes off and burn them and order some new ones.Just wrap her in brown paper till they come.Youre no gentleman, youre not, to talk o such things.Im a good girl, I am.And I know what the likes of you are, I do.We want none of your slum prudery here, young woman.Youve got to learn to behave like a duchess.Take her away, Mrs. Pearce. If she gives you any trouble, wallop her.Ill call the police, I will.Ive got no place to put her.Well, put her in the dustbin.Come, Higgins, be reasonable.You must be reasonable, Mr. Higgins, you must.You cant walk over everybody like this.I?Walk over everybody?My dear Mrs. Pearce, my dear Pickering, I had no intention of walking over anybody.I merely suggested we should be kind to this poor girl.I didnt express myself clearly because I didnt wish to hurt her delicacy.or yours.But, sir, you cant take a girl up like that.as if you were picking up a pebble on the beach.Why not?Why not? But you dont know anything about her.What about her parents? She may be married.Garn!There. As the girl very properly says, garn! Whod marry me?By George, Eliza.the streets will be strewn with the bodies of men.shooting themselves for your sake before Im done with you.Im goin.Hes off his chump, he is. I dont want no balmies teachin me.Mad? All right, Mrs. Pearce, dont order those new clothes.-Throw her out. -Stop! I wont allow it.Go home to your parents, girl.I aint got no parents.She aint got no parents. Whats the fuss?Nobody wants her. Shes no use to anyone but me. Take her upstairs!Whats to become of her? ls she to be paid anything?Do be sensible, sir.Whatd she do with money? Shell have food and clothes.Shell drink if you give her money.You are a brute! Its a lie!Nobody ever saw the sign o liquor on me.Sir, youre a gentleman. Dont let im speak to me like that!Does it occur to you, Higgins, the girl has some feelings?No, I dont think so. No feelings we need worry about.Well, have you, Eliza?I got me feelings same as anyone else.Mr. Higgins, I must know on what terms the girl is to be here.Whatll become of her when youve finished teaching?You must look ahead a little, sir.Whatll become of her if we leave her in the gutter, Mrs. Pearce?Thats her own business, not yours, Mr. Higgins.When Im done, well throw her back.Then itll be her own business again. Thatll be all right, wont it?Youve no feelin eart in ya!You dont care for nothin but yourself.Ive ad enough of this. Im goin!You ought to be ashamed of yourself!Have some chocolates, Eliza.Ow do I know what might be in em?Ive eard of girls bein drugged by the likes o you.Pledge of good faith.Ill take one half.And you take the other.Youll have boxes of them, barrels of them every day.Youll live on them, eh?I wouldnt ve ate it, only Im too ladylike to take it out o me mouth.Think of it, Eliza. Think of chocolates, and taxis.and gold and diamonds.I dont want no gold and no diamonds. Im a good girl, I am.Higgins, I really must interfere. Mrs. Pearce is quite right.If this girl will put herself in your hands for six months.for an experiment in teaching, she must understand thoroughly what shes doing.You are to stay here for the next six months.learning how to speak beautifully like a lady in a florist shop.If youre good and do what youre told, youll sleep in a proper bedroom.have lots to eat, money to buy chocolates and take rides in taxis.But if you are naughty and idle.youll sleep in the kitchen amongst the black beetles.and be walloped by Mrs. Pearce with a broomstick.At the end of six months, you shall be taken to Buckingham Palace.in a

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