The Omaha Sunday Bee Magazine Page The Crurade Agairtrt theLondonMuxicHallx 4 to 71 British Clergymen Warn Against Indecent Dances and Plays Which Bernard Shaw Defends 'r AmW Swggeetive LmmIm Mw4c Hall Dance That Met Objeeite. Bernard Shaw's Curious Plea r for Tolerance By Bernard Shaw At working playwright, I wise ts aamUsaa hmwiIh tka wMMw he kas pHMMd at the awto hall pertera o far ha ha hffd the ttl 1m H dealing; witk that 1m has M Mimed tht tlwci aw 1m m peaarMa dh. teres m among good cltlaeas concerning them. He mm u4 the wort "sagges tlTe" without any apparent sense of tha fact that the comma thaegsttoM ot H ay vulgar po4 has at4K intol erably otfeesrr. Aa4 ke the word "pb JectleaeMa" hKK were a teseral agree ment m t what la objectionable and wkat ta aot, ta ptt ot the fart that tke vary eatrtaianata in which ka himself ob Jet4 ka4 proved highly attractive to large neather of people who teste to entitled to tke aaaw eeasMeratlea aa kta own. ba the fe of It, tke Blahop ot Xtaatag. toa ta iewaadtag that tin plays that he happens ta Mke shall We tolerated aad these whtok ka happens at to Mice akall ka beaaed. Ha Sa aMlag that what ka apprevee of la rlgkt, aad what he dteep preves ot wroag. Now, I have sot en tka pertteater play wklch ka so saaefc 41 Hkaa; bat Mppeee I go to aea it ta-nlght aad writ a letter to you to-morrow to ay that I aser are et k, what will tka Slake hare to ear T He will have either to admit that hie epKhet ot ebjectleaable mesne simply gig. liked ky tke Btskop ot Kensington, or ka will kare to declare boldly that ke and I staad la tke relation of God and the Devil. And, kowerer bia courtesy and .his mod esty may recoil from this extremity, whea H la atated in plain EagUen, I think he aa got tkere witkout noticing It. At all events, ha ta clearly proceedlag oa tke assumption that hie conscience 1 mora eaiigkieaad tkaa that ot the people who S9 to the Palace Thoatre and enjoy what they aee there. It the Bishop may shut the Palace Theatre oa thla assumption, tken tka Koncomformlst patrons of tho Palace Theatre (aad It has many ot them) aaay skat tip tke Church of England by taraiag tke assumption Inside out. The aword ef persecution always has two By "aeegtiveM tke Bishop stews sug gestive of sexual emotion. Now, a Bishop wko goes Into a theatre and declares that tke performances there must aot suggest eexuel emotion la In the position ot a play wright flng Into a church and declaring that tka servleea there must not suggest raUgloae amotion. The suggestion, grntlacattoa and educatloa ot sexual emo ttea Sa eae ef tke mala uses and glories eC tk tkaatre. It share that function with all tfca as art. Tka, sculpture courts of tka Yfeteria aad Albert Museum in the Bishop's disease are crowded with naked agora ot sack extraordiaary beauty, re- A VIGOROUS campaign to suppress what they consider Indecent dis plays in the1 theatres and music halls la now being led by the Bishop of London, aided by tho Bishop of Kensing ton and ether prominent English clergy men. T The movement began with a protest to the Lord Chamberlain by the Bishop of Kensington against a dance at one of the larger London theatres. The Lord Cham berlaln, who has control of all theatre licenses, threatened to withdraw this par- ticular license unless the dance were modified. Protests against other theatres fol lowed, and immediately London became divided into rival camps, ono claiming the fullest liberty for the stage, the ether clamoring for a fuller censorship and re striction. Great fplk and little folk alike have taken part in tho discussion. Among tho former Is George Bernard Shaw, the dis tinguished playwright and essayist, who has unllmbcrcd his needle guns of satire and logic against tho Bishops. His inter esting explanation of his attitude Is printed upon this page. 1 i 8V 3t: fl A Pose of the Famous English Dancers Oy-ra and Phyllis Monkman in "Keep Smiling," Objected to as Offensive in Its 'Intimacy. And Below The "Hello, Honey" Scene from the Same Entertainment, Which Was Declared "Inde cent" by the Bishop of London. ' a mi st The "X-Ray Ballet" at the London Alhambra, the Largest London Music Hall. This Parody of a Freakish Fashion Has Been Denounced by tha Campaigners! Who Assert That the Display Is Most Indecent. aVK 4 1 'J 1 1 M. Tin The "Corsetiere Parade" These Girls, Attired as Shown Here, Marched Through the Audi ence of One of the English Theatres at Each Performance. The Feature Was Strong ly Objected to by the "Purity Campaigners" and Has Now Been Withdrawn. taaaMat and sxprss stea ot tke aigker hu man qualltle that our young people, contem plating them, will And fcaaer objects ot de sire repulsive. Ia the National Gallery body and soul are Impartially catered for; men "have worshipped- Venuses and fallen In love with virgins. There it a voluptuous side to religious ecstasy, and a religious side to voluptuous ecstasy, the notion that ono is leas sacred than tho other is the opportu nity ot the psyclatrlst who .seeks to dis credit tke saints by showing that the pas sion which exalted them was la Its asmse capable also of degrading sinners. Now let us turn to tho results ot cut ting off young peoplo not to mention old ones-r-from voluptuous art. We have fam ilies who bring up their children In tho belief that an undrnped statuo Is an abom ination; that a girl or a youth who looks at a picture by Paul Veronese is corrupted forever; that tho theatro in which "Tris tan and Isolde" or "Romeo and Juliet" Is performed is tho gato ot hell, and that the contemplation ot a figure attractively dressed or revealing more ot its outline, than a Chinaman's dress does Is an act ot the most profligate Indecency. Ot Chi- aee sax aorallty I moat note write la the pages ot a newspaper. Ot tho English and Scottish sex moral ity, that is produced by this starvation and blasphemous vilification qt vital emo tions, I will say only this; that It is so morbid and abomlnablo, so hatefully ob Bessed by the things that tempt it, so mer ciless in its persecution of all the dins grace which grows in the soil of our Bex Instincts when they are not deliberately purverted and poisoned, that if It could bo Imposed, as some people would Impose it If they could, on the whole community, for a single generation, the Bishop, even at the risk of martyrdom, would reopen the falace Theatre with "his episcopal bene diction, and implore the lady to whose performances he now objects to return to the stage even at the sacrifice of the laBt rag of her clothing. I venture to suggest that whea the Bishop heard that there was an objection able (to him) entertainment at the Palace Theatre the simple aad natural course tor him was aot to have gone there. That is how sensible people act And tke result Is that If a manager offers a widely ob jectionable eatertatasaent to the publlo he very sooa finds out his mistake and with draws it It is my owa custom as a playwright to make my plays "suggestive" of relig ious emotion. This makes them extremely objectionable to irreligious people. But they have tho remedy in their own hands. They stay away. Tho Bishop will bo glal to bear that there are not many of them, but It Is a significant fact that they fre quently express a wish that the censor would suppress religious plays tljat that ha occasionally complies. In short tho Bishop and his friends are not alone in proposing their own tastes and convictions at the measure of what Is per missible in the theatre. But If such lndi- John Armstrong Chaloner's Queer Sonnets M THE SLIT-SKIRT. Thls fashion la a nasty, shameless trick, Tis nothing less 'tis simply scandalous I Or eke a Turk-f urk i PachTdermatousf U ' 7 J?ak! Bhoat Ner yelp with trightl aSh 5L6 UmM "hatiea ot blackest Hell And once got back, shout out'Tve Been a sight That ta this company I'm. 'shamed to telll" The vilest days ot dark Imperial Rome. Tne most debauched epochs of the East Kept naked women closely hid at home In the Slave-Quarter, or, to grace a feast Twos left unto the present century To bare female beauty to tho passor-byl THE DEVILSHORSESHOE.' . A fecund sight for a philosopher , si Rich as Oolconda's mine in lessons rarer?-' That gein-bedlzen'd 'horse-shoe' at th' Opera,-" Replete with costly hags and matrons falrl His votaresses doth Mammon there array, His Anoaxonlan Phalanx dread to facel To Mammon there do they their homago pay. R. JOHN ARMSTRONG CHALONER, once the husband of Amelle Hives, the novelist, and who escaped from Bloomingdale Insane Asylum in New York, where he was confined as a lunatic, has published a book of curious sociological and satirical sonnets from which the four printed below are selected. 8pang'ld with Jewels, satins, silks and lace, Crones whose old bosoms In their corsets creak; Beldams whose slightest glance would fright a horse; Ghouls whon they speak one hears the grave-mole squeak Their escorts parvenus of feature coarse, A rich array of Luxury and VIcel But In Bplte of them, the music's very nice." THE "FEMALE FACE OF THE N. Y. l,4O0." . Hard's a "pelter'a" Is Its physiognomy! And Just about as bad as Spelter" some. At this somo critics may cry out "Oh! myl How can ho, 'The 400 so sore sural" To which I swift reply, "Not all, my friend. Are thus Intended to be limned by me, "-opyrlgbt ltlS, by the Star Company, Croat Britain Rights Ruervtd. Tho' some it truth be told must be so penned, Altho' the penning grlevo me grievously. Purse-proud conceit and coldness hearts of flint Mean-birth by fortune's wheel made sudden rich Are on their faces stamped by Nature's mint Whilst of charity show they less than wltchl The daughters ot the poor do stand aghast As o'er their doings their pure eyes are cast" A PRUDE-TERMAGANT. As thy smug features, Madam, we do scan Tlp-tllted nose and bony, horse-like Jaw We say, "Nature surely meant her for a man Here catch we Nature In a fatal flaw." But then think we: "No. Nature knoweth deep. Her ways pass finding out In many things. Such hags as these are built for husbands weak For whiffling, piffling, little mannlklns." Vour husband's weak as water in a ditch; Ask his opinion he will Bay "See Mayl" Bo Nature made thee. Madam, near-male-wltch Who, "Hubbya" part In politics might play. As spiteful and hard-hearted as you're rude History says "Part termagant Part nnid " vidual and sectarian standards were toler ated we should have no plays at all, for there never yet was a play that did not offend somebody's taste. I must remind the Bishop that If the taste for voluptuous entertainment is some times morbid, the taste for religious edi fication Is open to preclsoly the same ob jection. If I had a rneurotlo daughter I would much rather risk taking her to the Palaeo Theatre than to a revival meeting. Nobody has yet counted the homes and characters wrecked by Intemperance ln're llglouB emotion. When wo begin to keep such statistics tho chapel may find its attitude of moral superiority to the the atre, and even to tho publlo house, hard to maintain, and may learn a Ilttlo need ed charity. We all need to be reminded of the need for temperance and toleration in religious emotion and in political emotion, as well as In sexual emotion. But the Bishop must not conclude that I want to close up all places ot worship; on the contrary, I preaob in them. I do not even clamor for the sup pression of political party meetings, though nothing mora foolish and demoralizing ex ists in England to-day. I live and let live. As long as I am not compelled to attend revival meetings or party meetings, or the atres at which the sexual emotions are Ig nored or reviled, I am prepared to tolerate them on reciprocal terms; for, though I am unable to conceive any good coming to any human being aa a set-off to their hysterlo, their rancorous bigotry, and their dullness and falsehood, I Jcnow that those who like the mare equally unable to conceive any good coming of the sort ot assemblies I frequent; so I mind my own business and obey the old precept: "He that is unright eous let him do unrighteousness still; and he that Is filthy, let him be made filthy still;' and he that is righteous, let him do right eousness still; and he that is holy' let him be made holy stilt" For none of us can feel quite sure In which category the final Judgment may place us; and, In the meantime, the music hall is aa much entitled to the benefit ot the doubt as the Bishop ot Kenslng. ton.