| Henry Higgins: Look at her, a prisoner of the gutter,
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| Condemned by every syllable she utters
|
| By right she should be taken out and hung,
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| For the cold-blooded murder of the English tongue.
|
| Eliza Doolittle: Aaoooww!
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| Henry (imitating her): Aaoooww!
|
| Heavens! |
| What a sound!
|
| This is what the British population,
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| Calls an elementary education.
|
| Pickering: Oh Come sir, I think you picked a poor example.
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| Henry: Did I?
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| Hear them down in Soho Square,
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| Dropping «h's» everywhere.
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| Speaking English anyway they like.
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| You sir, did you go to school?
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| Man: Wadaya tike me for, a fool?
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| Henry: No one taught him 'take' instead of 'tike!
|
| Hear a Yorkshireman, or worse,
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| hear a Cornishman converse. |
| I’d rather hear a choir singing flat.
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| Chickens, cackling in a barn, just like this one (pointing to Eliza)
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| Eliza: Gaaarn
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| Henry (writing, imitating Eliza): Gaaarn.
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| I ask you Sir, what sort of word is that? |
| (to Pickering)
|
| It’s «aoow» and «gaarn» that keep her in her place
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| Not her wretched clothes and dirty face
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| Why can’t the English teach their children how to speak?
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| This verbal class distinction, by now,
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| Should be antique. |
| If you spoke as she does, sir,
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| Instead of the way you do,
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| Why, you might be selling flowers, too!
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| Pickering: I beg your pardon!
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| Henry: An Englishman’s way of speaking absolutely classifies him,
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| The moment he talks he makes some other
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| Englishman despise him.
|
| One common language I’m afraid we’ll never get.
|
| Oh, why can’t the English learn to
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| set a good example to people whose
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| English is painful to your ears?
|
| The Scotch and the Irish leave you close to tears.
|
| There even are places where English completely
|
| disappears.
|
| Well, in America, they haven’t used it for years!
|
| Why can’t the English teach their children how to speak?
|
| Norwegians learn Norwegian;
|
| the Greeks have taught their Greek. |
| In France every Frenchman knows
|
| his language from «A» to «Zed»
|
| The French never care what they do, actually,
|
| as long as they pronounce it properly.
|
| Arabians learn Arabian with the speed of summer lightning.
|
| And Hebrews learn it backwards,
|
| which is absolutely frightening.
|
| Use proper English you’re regarded as a freak.
|
| Why can’t the English,
|
| Why can’t the English learn to speak? |