Hahahahahaha
... her. Liza herself never wants to see him again. Yet, despite his faults, Doolittle is a likeable character. His paradoxical arguments are witty, original and entertaining. And he is so frank about his amorality and selfishness that the audience tends to laugh with him rather than at him. For instance, instead of working hard and saving money, his aim in life is to do as little work as possible and enjoy himself as much as he can. His name, "do little", expresses his laziness. He explains that he is one of the "undeserving" poor. Doolittle freely admits that he does not fit into this category because he never really tries to improve his life. Before she is transformed into a "duchess" Eliza is generally known as the flowergirl. When she first appears she is selling flowers late at night in London `s Covent Garden vegetable market. She is about eighteen, poorly dressed and rather dirty. When a young man bumps into her and knocks her basket out of her hands Liza feels that she is justified in asking his obviously wealthy mother for compensation. This demonstrates that she is not in awe of those with a higher social status. She seems to be a natural, direct sort of person. Liza is very distressed when she is told that a man ( Professor Higgins ) is writing down every word she says. She insists that she is respectable and has done nothing wrong. When she begs Pickering to buy a flower because "I`m short for my lodgings" Higgins realises t...