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Max Beerbohm
Hosts and Guests
Question # 1
What
is the difference between hosts and guests?
Max Beerbohm was an eminent humourist,
author, critic and cartoonist. He was
regarded as the best essayist and parodist of his age. His satire was ruthless and creative due to
his highly cultivated intelligence.” Hosts and Guests" is also a superb
example of pleasant and light humour.
Hospitality is an old tradition of humanity. A man has to act as a host or a guest
according to the situation. This is an
outward action but the base of this act depends mainly on the nature of a
man. Some people are host by nature and
some are guests by nature. Writer
discusses this psychological feature of mankind in a very casual and lucid
style. He establishes his arguments
logically and describes two major types of people. Members of one type always remain at the giving
end and are called the hosts. Members of
the second class are always at the receiving end and are known as guest.
The hospitality is an ancient
tradition. There are many events in the
history that confirm its importance.
Many great people have proved themselves as great hosts. Similarly there have been some people who
maliciously betrayed their guests.
Writer gives examples from the lives of some great kings and warriors.
There are some people who are
instinctively hosts. They always bend on
favoring others. These favours may range
from mere food to the sacrifice of the host’s life to honours the tradition of
hospitality. Similarly some people
always remain guests. They get
advantages and accept invitations but they seldom give such offers themselves. These people enjoy being a guest and they
cannot adopt the role of a host even if they try. Such people have some specific graces as
being humble, complimentary and passive while the hosts have some other
qualities as being active, leading and sometimes being proud. The hosts love to give their things away to
others. This quality may have too many
motives. Some people become hosts for
some of their own vested interests. If
instinctive hosts try to become guests, they badly fail because they have
acquired the characteristics of leading others on dinner table as well as in
conversation. They soon expose their
host-like nature. Being a guest or host
doesn’t depend even on the financial status of a man. Neither all the guests are to be found among
needy nor all the hosts among the affluent.
The ability to be a host or a guest
is reserved only for the mankind.
Animals do not exhibit any tendency of this type. Even man has acquired it after many
centuries. The earliest people like
cavemen would have never been in the habit of giving and receiving
hospitality. The development of human
civilization has brought this trend in action and that’s why civilized men have
been divided into these two categories.
Writer has employed too many references from history to solidify his
thesis about the hosts and the guest.
Q. No. 2: What
historical references Max Beerbohm has given in this essay?
Max Beerbohm attempts to trace the
course of the developments of hospitality as a tradition and as a part of human
nature. He gives many references from
the primeval and medieval times.
His first example is based on
imagination. He thinks about the way in
which the first man may have acted as a host and invited someone to dinner. The caveman and his wife may have invited a
red-haired man to dinner who may have declined due to distrust and suspicion of
treachery. It shows that the instinct of
being a host existed before the instinct of being a guest.
The first historical reference is given about an Israelite called Jael.
She was the wife of Heber, the king of Kenite. She cold- bloodedly cheated her guest and
killed him. Then the writer turns to Greece where Odysseus killed all his
enemies when they were under his roof as guest.
Then Circe, a goddess has been mentioned as an example of a bad host.
Rome has been considered the most civilized region in the world. The famous Borgia family of Rome used a mild
poison in their drinks and meals and anyone who dined with them, was killed by
that poison. In this way they
exterminated all their enemies. Then the writer turns to Scotland. Shakespeare portrayed the characters of
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth as the worst example of a host and hostess in his
legendary dram "Macbeth". They murdered King Duncan who was a guest
in their home.
There is another literary allusion
to a character called old Wardle from the famous book, “The Pickwick Papers” by Charles Dickens. Old Wardle was a superb host. He invited people to his house called Dingley
Dell and generously offered everything to his guests but he possessed a strong
sense of pride and arrogance. He did
every thing to satisfy his ego and assert his importance.
All these examples show good or bad
hosts but the writer shocks us by giving the example of a bad guest. Dante, the famous Italian poet and
philosopher had been a guest to many people in the days of his exile. He repaid their hospitality by criticizing
their homes and food in his writings.
This wide range of references shows
the highly intellectual background and outlook of the writer. The references are given from the Bible,
mythology, history, art and literature.
He has masterfully used them to describe the history of hospitality with
its good and bad examples.
Q. No. 3: How
does the writer judge himself?
Max Beerbohm describes different
aspects of the tradition of hospitality.
After an exhaustive discussion, he judges himself and says that he
himself is a guest by nature. He has
always enjoyed receiving favours from others.
In the same way he proves himself as a very uneasy and clumsy host who
can never entertain his guests properly.
In this connection he cites an event
from his school days. Sometimes the boys
living in the hostel received the food baskets sent by their parents. They were ordered to share them with their
mess fellows, once the writer too received a box containing twelve sausage
rolls. Fortunately, nobody knew about
the arrival of this box, he ate up all the rolls himself and did not even
mention about them to his hostel friends.
Now he analyses this act and says that he did it because he is not a
host by nature and doesn’t want to get compliments and praise of other
people. The boys who received such food
baskets suddenly achieved too much importance among other boys. But the writer lacked the urge to be a leader
or the centre of everyone’s praise. It
proves that the writer was a guest by nature.
Then he describes about his days in
London, where he sometimes acted as a host and was always uneasy in this
capacity. He used to be worried about
the amount of bill and quality of food.
He was in fact a very confused and humble host. In such situations he felt that he should
have been seated at the place of a guest to be comfortable according to his
nature. In this way he dissects his own
psychology and invites us to do the same to know the truth about ourselves;
whether we are a guest or a host by nature.
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