Monday 10 September 2012

The Boy Comes Home


                        THE BOY COMES HOME

                                               A. A. Milne

                                     


                                                                     Question# 1
                                                         Discuss the title of the play?

                     A. A. Milne, was a journalist, and became the editor of “Punch” at the age of twenty-four. On the outbreak of war in 1914 he entered the Army. In his leisure time he used to write lighthearted comic one-act plays.
                    The present one-act comedy is named “The Boy Comes Home”. The title refers to a boy who has come back to his home after some years. This boy happens to be a young British soldier called Philip, who has been fighting in France. He is a young promising boy with a strong and pleasant personality. He is twenty-three years old and has learnt a lot from his experience in the war. His personality has become mature and he is unruffled by any sort of situation. His reaction to different situations and characters is quite impressive and self- assured.

                     He comes home to find himself in a conflict with his guardian’s strict personality and his unbending rules at home. The whole action revolves around the way in which he handles the discussion with his uncle. Amusingly this discussion goes on as much in reality as in the dream of uncle James. Uncle James’s insecurity and sense of incapability before a young man compel him enough that he readily accedes to the demands of his nephew.

                                                                      Question# 2
                                                       Discuss the breakfast episode?

                                Philip gets up late in the morning because he has just come home the previous night. He calls the parlour maid Marry and asks her to bring breakfast for him. Marry tells him that the breakfast has been cleared away an hour before. Philip says that he knows it that’s why he has called her. He gives orders for two eggs and ham and coffee not tea… Marry hesitates and says she doesn’t know what Mrs. Higgins will say. Marry tells him that breakfast at sharp eight is still the rule of this home as it had been before he went to war. Philip smilingly says that he has been doing a lot of silly things before going to war. Marry goes and Aunt Emily comes in. She is a subdued lady who never asserts her self. She talks to Philip on general topics. Marry comes in again and says to aunt Emily that Mrs. Higgins wants to see her. Philip at once intervenes and asks Marry to tell Mrs. Higgins to come there. Aunt Emily hesitates and says, “I don’t know what Mrs. Higgins will say”. Philip pleasantly says that he wants to know once and for all, what will she say.
                    An extremely aggressive lady comes in and talks in a domineering style to Philip and tells him that she will not make any breakfast after 8 o’clock. Philip talks to her in an authoritative style and tells her to make breakfast. On that she demands that she should be given a notice for introduction of a new rule in the home.  Philip gives her wages to her instead of a notice and tells her that she may go at once. This proves a successful strategy and she is much intimidated. At last she says,” if it’s only a bit of breakfast, I don’t say but what I mightn’t get it, if asked decent.”
                 This episode sets the tone of the whole play because it indicates the strength of Philip’s personality. And it further shows that nobody will be able to make him agree to his or her wishes.

                                                           Question# 3
                                            Describe the dream of uncle James?

                     Philip comes back to his uncle’s home after a period of four years. There he is received by the strict practices of his uncle’s irrational rules. Philip’s father has died and Uncle James is his guardian. On the very first morning after his arrival uncle James wants to discuss Philip’s future with him.
                    Uncle is an old fashioned man and he holds orthodox views about treating young kids. He thinks that he can dictate Philip to do whatever he wants. He is a short statured man with an unimpressive physical appearance but he has closed himself in the cocoon of severity. His inner weakness collides with his outward severity and this conflict induces him to dream a strange thing. His unconscious fear and insecurity make him view Philip as a rude and bullying boy who tries to get his demands fulfilled on the point of gun. His dream is full of violence and threats. He sees himself completely subjugated before the terrorization and use of weapons by his insolent nephew. He dreams Philip as a headstrong and impertinent guy who can go to any limit.
              The dream is so forceful that uncle James is unable to know that it isn’t reality but only a dream. Uncle is badly influenced by the dream and when Philip talks to him in reality he behaves in very kind and considerate way to avoid the menacing situation of his dream. Uncle James’s conscious and unconscious blend together to constitute his dream and then it directs his consequent real attitude.

                                                                Question# 4
                                      What was the main conflict of the play?

                      The play revolves around the two main characters, uncle James and Philip. They represent different ages and different generations. Their ways of thinking and outlook about life are at cross-purposes. Their assessment and their motives are different.
                      The main conflict in the play is the future profession of the boy, Philip, who has recently left the army and is free now. The boy is energetic and is ready to do anything while uncle is orthodox and wants to lead the boy by nose. The boy and uncle both want to have their own will in this matter.    The boy wants to have a bold decision and wants to become an architect while his uncle likes to follow the same beaten path and offers him to join his business. Here starts a heated and violent dispute... The boy uses the power of weapon while uncle proposes to use the power of purse. The boy threatens and bluffs his uncle. He uses revolver and bombs to assert his point and finally he manages to make his uncle listen to his point of view too. Subsequently uncle assents to boy’s desire and the boy subscribes to his uncle’s wish.
                  The whole dream is infact a psychological study of a middle aged man who goes through a conflict in his own mind. His unconscious makes him have a dream that weakens him and he yields before the boy.


                                                           Question# 5         
                            What where the expectations of the uncle about boy?

                       Uncle James is the guardian of Philip and he tries to dictate him in his decision about his future. Uncle James is an old fashioned man and he does not let others to have their say. His servants and his wife all have completely given in to his commands. That’s why he expects Philip to behave in the same way. The boy is very strong and decisive person and he cannot be led by nose. So his uncle’s expectations about him are baseless.  This is the fact that he knows unconsciously because in his dream he sees Philip as a rude and violent boy but infact the boy is not like this. His uncle dreams him as a stubborn and haughty man but in reality he at once agrees to his uncle’s suggestion. So the expectations of uncle James are flimsy and baseless and they all prove to be wrong. All these expectations basically show his own mental tangles and frailties.  He bullies Philip to enter into his business and thinks that he will refuse. Then he dreams him to be a violent rogue. But infact Philip is not according to any of his anticipations and he proves to be a sensible boy with proper manners.

                                                                   Question# 6
                                                Draw the character sketches of:            
                                                            Uncle James
                                                                   Philip


UNCLE JAMES

                       Uncle James is a very successful businessman who has been making pots of money even in the wartime. He is not physically an impressive man. He has a straggly grey beard that doesn’t hide a chin of any great power; but he has a severity that passes for strength with the weak. He is orthodox and strict in his rules. He has decided times for meals even, and nobody can get anything to eat after the appointed times. Due to this rule Philip has to face a lot of trouble at his very first morning in his home.
                   Uncle James is irrational to some extent as he says that Philip should be punctual even in his home. He doesn’t give much credit to Philip for having fought a war for his country but in the same breath he says that he himself has done a lot for his country by suffering the shortage of potatoes. Moreover he takes the credit of giving his nephew to the nation. He criticizes the legislation that has imposed tax on excess profits in business. He further boasts that his jam business also has served the poor men in trenches though he isn’t ready to give any acknowledgment to the “poor man, Philip who has personally been in trenches”.
                  He very meanly proposes to use the power of purse to subdue his nephew. He doesn’t want to give free hand to his nephew in deciding upon his future career. He speaks to him in a haughty way and tries to assert his authority. In spite of his outward severity he is an insecure man inside. He unconsciously thinks that his time is over and the members of new generation can’t be stopped from having their own way.
            The dreams are a secret opening into the unconscious; they reveal the true worth of a man in terms of his aspirations, his fears and his strong points.  Uncle James dreams about his discussion with Philip and reveals his insecure feelings. He is afraid of being bullied physically and this is what he shows through his dreams. He experiences a strong sense of fear and is completely cowed down by this unconscious fear.
                   His attitude goes through a revolutionary change after the dream. He behaves in a very appropriate and considerate way to Philip. He asks him if wants to be an architect or anything of that sort but Philip isn’t interested. He doesn’t want to wear a uniform again and that’s it.
                So uncle James is a very amusing character that can be seen anywhere in modern society. He is an unforgettable figure who represents different shades of a man’s personality.


PHILIP

                       Philip is the hero of this play.  He has recently come back from the war front. He is a well built young man of twenty-three with a pleasant assertive personality. His parents have died and he lives with his uncle James. His relations with his uncle have always been problematic though.
                    He is a boy of pleasant manners; he treats Marry and his aunt in a polite way. He tells his aunt that she has always been his darling and he talks to her about his experiences in Army.
                      He has strong ability to take a decision in any crisis. When he is denied breakfast he quickly responds and handles the situation in a commanding way. He is not confused or worried. He simply decides to dismiss the cook who is not ready to work. He is not vindictive either because when Mrs. Higgins is ready to make the breakfast, he doesn’t create any problem and repeats his order of breakfast.

                        His personality has two facets; one is his real personality while the other has been concocted by his uncle’s imagination. In his uncle’s dream he appears to be an insolent boy who doesn’t recognize any authority. He breaks the rules and doesn’t care about his elders. He wants to be an architect and can defend his intension with many arguments. He compels his uncle forcefully to agree with his demands. He points a loaded revolver at his defenseless uncle and frightens him to an extent that uncle James goes on his knees, asking for mercy. He even produces a bomb out of his pocket and threatens to throw it on his uncle if he is not reasonable in his attitude. He settles the dispute through power. But this is not his true personality
                   In reality his uncle finds him much sensible. He only wants not to salute someone or wear a uniform otherwise he is ready to do any thing. The haughty and boorish Philip is only a bogey created by his uncle’s imagination. The reality is completely otherwise.
                   Overall Philip’s character is strong and convincing. It wins at the end because he represents the advancing time that always wins.

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