WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
George Bernard Shaw, his life and works cover

George Bernard Shaw, his life and works

Chapter 14: CHAPTER X
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A critical biography traces the life and career of a prominent dramatist, combining a chronological narrative of personal and professional development with close readings of major plays. Drawing on extensive correspondence and contemporary press material, the author situates artistic output within wider intellectual and political currents — collectivist politics, Ibsen‑Nietzschean moral critique, reactions against materialist doctrines, Wagnerian musical influence, and the anti‑romantic turn in literature and art — and follows the subject's rise from early struggles to international recognition. Supplementary illustrations, facsimiles, and documentary extracts support the critical commentary and historical framing.

CHAPTER X

While resting from the over-exertions of the political campaign at the time of the General Election in 1892, Shaw came upon the manuscript of the partially finished play begun in 1885. “Tickled” by the play, and urged by Mr. Grein, Shaw began work upon it anew. “But for Mr. Grein and the Independent Theatre Society,” Shaw confessed, “it would have gone back to its drawer and lain there another seven years, if not for ever.”[134] With this play, Widowers' Houses, Shaw made his début upon the English stage as a problem dramatist with the avowed purpose of exposing existent evils in the prevailing social order. Widowers' Houses is the first native play of the New School in England consciously devoted to the exposure of the social guilt of the community.

In 1885, shortly after the completion of the novels of his nonage, Shaw began this play in collaboration with Mr. William Archer. After learning to know Shaw by sight in the British Museum reading-room, as a “young man of tawny complexion and attire,” studying alternately, if not simultaneously, Karl Marx's Das Kapital (in French), and an orchestral score of Tristan and Isolde, Mr. Archer finally met him at the house of a common acquaintance.