Major Barbara
- APPROVED
- Year:
- 1941
- 121 min
- 353 Views
[Crowd Chattering]
The ancient Greeks
considered it unseemly...
- to give public praise to women
for their good looks... - ## [Band]
but apparently thought it
did no harm to young men.
Note that, unlike our own popular playwrights
in England and the United States...
the great Athenians scorned what we call " love
interest" and regarded sex appeal as indecent.
Strewth.
Listen to the words put into the
mouth of Aeschylus by Aristophanes.
He boasts of how he made the Greeks crave
like lions to dash at the face of the foe...
and leap to the call of the trumpet.
But no Stenoboea I have given you,
no. No Phaedra, no heroine strumpet.
[Exhales] It's no use. This
open-air experiment's no good.
Or else I haven't the knack
of attracting an audience.
## [Band Continues]
- I'm afraid I must have bored you terribly.
- No, no, sir. No, no.
You sounded a bit heathenish at first, almost
as if you believed in them queer old gods.
I talked to my missus about it.
You see, sir, she's keen on the Salvation
Army and likes good, serious talk.
But when you said last Sunday
that God was there all along...
whatever they called him,
I knew it was all right.
I never thought much of myself as a speaker,
but I've never lost my whole audience before.
Oh, not at all, sir. I've heard worse.
But there's two things that no
speaker can stand up against.
What are they, may I ask?
One's a band, the other's a fight.
Salvation Army knows that.
They always has a band.
Well, I'm off-duty now that
your meeting's over, sir.
- I'll, uh, take you across, if you like.
- Thank you.
There's a special
attraction this Sunday.
- There's, uh, Major Barbara.
- Major Barbara.
- How can a woman be a major?
- Oh, she can in the Army, sir.
Or a sergeant, or a
colonel, or even a general.
- Really?
- Yes.
If you want a tip or two on how
to gather a meeting and hold it...
you might do worse than hear
her take the Sunday service.
Mmm. I will. I've a fancy for
collecting religious experiences.
- Yeah.
- ## [Band Ends]
Amid all the poverty and
ugliness of our lives here...
the sin and the suffering...
the grime and the smoke,
the toil and the struggle...
you know, and I know...
that God is with us
always and everywhere.
We don't need a cathedral
to worship him in.
Here, beneath God's open sky,
we can draw nearer to him.
Some of you feel him
near you even now...
and feel, too, how much you need him.
Won't you let him come
into your life now, today...
as so many have done before?
You want his strength,
his guidance, his comfort.
And you'll need his
forgiveness and friendship.
Some of you turn away from him in
bitterness at the hardship of your lives...
saying that you do not want God.
You want happiness and beauty.
God will give you both.
There is no beauty like the
beauty of the newly saved...
who has found the
unspeakable happiness...
that only the consciousness of
God's presence and love can give.
We, in the Army, have our daily trials.
Most of us are as poor as you are.
But we all are happy, and the mark of
that happiness is on us all for you to see.
The rich are not happy.
The poor have only to reach out their
hands for God's happiness and take it.
Is there anyone here
who has courage enough...
to raise his hand as a sign that
he would like us to pray for him?
Make the decision now.
In your need and loneliness...
God can meet with you.
There must be someone here who feels
that he should raise his hand...
but it isn't easy.
It's the easiest thing
in the world to do.
You've done it often enough...
to beckon to your child
or to stop a trolley car.
You feel too shy perhaps.
Never mind. I will pray for him.
And God will give him
the courage of a lion.
Come. Do not keep God waiting.
Thousands have done it.
And if you can find me one who has
done it and been sorry afterwards...
I will put off this dear
uniform and never pray again.
Come. Come.
I know there is someone.
Ah. I found him.
Let the brave gentleman
come to the front.
Make room for him, please.
[Crowd Murmuring]
Give me your hand, dear brother.
Will you come with me to our
shelter where we'll pray together?
Friends, you will now sing...
"How Sweet the Name of Jesus Sounds."
# How sweet the name of Jesus sounds #
# In a believer's ear #
- Close the door, please.
- ## [Continues, Faint]
Won't you sit down?
Now, before we pray a little together...
may I tell you to forget
that we've never met before?
You mustn't be shy and distant with me.
I can see that all's well with you.
I can see in your face the new happiness
that has just come into your life.
You're a new man. You're
saved. You feel that, don't you?
Listen to me, Major Barbara.
I'm, uh... I'm here on false pretenses.
It is true that a new happiness
has come into my life...
a happiness which I
never quite believed in...
that, at any rate, I thought
would never come into my life.
- It has come.
- Thank God.
Take care. It hasn't
made me a better man.
It's made me an utterly
unscrupulous one.
- What do you mean?
- Look at me.
Look deep into my eyes.
Is the new happiness that you see there
the kind of happiness you're thinking of?
It must be. There's no
other happiness like it.
under God, I have brought it there.
Good.
Now, let me warn you that I
am a scholar and a gentleman.
I'm as poor as a church
mouse, like all scholars.
I'm no good for anything in
the way of worldly success.
But what does that matter?
We're all poor here.
We never think of money or success.
When all our money's
spent, we pray for more.
And it comes. It always comes.
Take your mind off such things.
And now...
shall we pray together?
I never pray. At least, not in your way.
The new thing that's come
to me is not that I'm saved.
I was saved when I was five years old,
when I first swallowed your religion.
Since then I've swallowed 20
religions. It's my life's work.
I'm interested in the
essence of all religions...
not in their catchwords or in yours.
Let us find it for you here. We can.
Nonsense. I have more to teach you
about religion than you can yet imagine.
You think so?
Then why have you come here with me?
Why did you hold up your hand?
Because I have impulses
that I cannot explain.
They come very seldom, but when
they come, nothing can stop me.
There's an end of my conscience,
of my prudence, of my reason.
Such an impulse seized
me the moment I saw you.
You may be poor. Our table
manners may be different.
Our relatives may not mix.
Probably everything is against our
associating with each other. No matter.
I'm going to join the Army. I will
put on a uniform and beat the drum.
In short, I am hopelessly and
forever in love with you...
and will follow you to the end
of the world until you marry me.
Is that plain?
Perfectly.
And now will you begin
by seeing me home?
I should like to put you through your
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