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George Bernard Shaw |

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George Bernard Shaw |
"Schools and schoolmasters, as we have them today, are not popular as places of education and teachers, but rather prisons and turnkeys in which children are kept to prevent them disturbing and chaperoning their parents."He epitomized this attitude in the prologue of Cashel Byron's Profession where young Byron's educational experience is a fictionalized description of Shaw's own formal schooling and underscored it later in his Treatise on Parents and Children.
"It is said that every people has the Government it deserves. It is more to the point that every Government has the electorate it deserves; for the orators of the front bench can edify or debauch an ignorant electorate at will. Thus our democracy moves in a vicious circle of reciprocal worthiness and unworthiness."Shaw had previously supported gradual democratic change toward socialism, but now he saw more hope in government by benign strong men. This sometimes made him oblivious to the dangers of dictatorships. Near his life's end that hope failed him too. In the preface of Buoyant Billions (1946-48), his last full-length play, he asks
"Why appeal to the mob when ninetyfive per cent of them do not understand politics, and can do nothing but mischief without leaders? And what sort of leaders do they vote for? For Titus Oates and Lord George Gordon with their Popish plots, for Hitlers who call on them to exterminate Jews, for Mussolinis who rally them to nationalist dreams of glory and empire in which all foreigners are enemies to be subjugated."
“I, as a Socialist, have had to preach, as much as anyone, the enormous power of the environment. We can change it; we must change it; there is absolutely no other sense in life than the task of changing it. What is the use of writing plays, what is the use of writing anything, if there is not a will which finally moulds chaos itself into a race of gods.”
The other connection says:
In 1919 she married Prince Antoine Bibesco, a Romanian diplomat stationed in London, a man twenty-two years her senior. It was the society wedding of the year, attended by everyone from the Queen to George Bernard Shaw. The wedding was filmed by the newly formed British Moving Pictures News organization. After the marriage, Prince and Princess Bibesco lived in Paris at the Bibesco townhouse at 45, Quai Bourbon at the tip of the Ile St Louis looking up the river toward Notre Dame cathedral...
Written in 1909, “The Fascinating Foundling: A Disgrace to the Author” by G.B. Shaw was finally published in 1926, at which time he credited the motivation for its composition as a request from Elizabeth Asquith for a play to perform with amateurs for charity. In “Selected Correspondence of Bernard Shaw”, Dan Lawrence states that Shaw may have misremembered the inspiration for the play. However, though Elizabeth was only nine at the time, we know that she was a precocious young lady and could easily have bearded the lion.
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