Arms and the man
ARMS AND THE MAN BY BERNARD SHAW
ABOUT PLAY
One of Shaw's aims in this play is to debunk the
romantic heroics of war; he wanted to present a realistic account of war
and to remove all pretensions of nobility from war. It is not, however,
an anti-war play; instead, it is a satire on those attitudes which
would glorify war. To create this satire, Shaw chose as his title the
opening lines of Virgil's Aeneid, the Roman epic which glorifies war and the heroic feats of man in war, and which begins, "Of arms and the man I sing. . . ."
When the play opens, we hear about the glorious
exploits which were performed by Major Sergius Saranoff during his
daring and magnificent cavalry raid, an event that turned the war
against the Serbs toward victory for the Bulgarians. He thus becomes
Raina Petkoff's ideal hero; yet the more that we learn about this raid,
the more we realize that it was a futile, ridiculous gesture, one that
bordered on an utter suicidal escapade.
In contrast, Captain Bluntschli's actions in
Raina's bedroom strike us, at first, as being the actions of a coward.
(Bluntschli is a Swiss, a professional soldier fighting for the Serbs.)
He climbs up a water pipe and onto a balcony to escape capture, he
threatens a defenseless woman with his gun, he allows her to hide him
behind the curtains, and then he reveals that he carries chocolates
rather than cartridges in his cartridge box because chocolates are more
practical on the battlefield. Yet, as the play progresses, Bluntschli's
unheroic actions become reasonable when we see that he survives, whereas
had the war continued, Sergius' absurd heroic exploits would soon have
left him dead.
Throughout the play, Shaw arranged his material
so as to satirize the glories associated with war and to ultimately
suggest that aristocratic pretensions have no place in today's wars,
which are won by using business-like efficiency, such as the practical
matters of which Bluntschli is a master. For example, Bluntschli is able
to deal with the business of dispensing an army to another town with
ease, while this was a feat that left the aristocrats (Majors Petkoff
and Saranoff) completely baffled. This early play by Shaw, therefore,
cuts through the noble ideals of war and the "higher love" that Raina
and Sergius claim to share; Arms and the Man presents a world
where the practical man who lives with no illusions and no poetic views
about either love or war is shown to be the superior creature.
No comments:
Post a Comment