G. B Shaw
G. B Shaw
land, of English parentage. His father was a small oficial who habit-
ually got drunk and whose means was not enough to provide for the
family. His mother had a good voice and helped out in family finance
self at school, but was much interested in 1literature, music and art.
when be left school for good at 14, he was put into a job as clerk
lin tenements und mixed with the masses of poor peopłe and this
experience enabled him to sympathize with the miseries of the poorand provided material for his
first play, The Widowers' Houses".
Also, all the years of his childhood and eariy youth he spent in Ire-
land made Shaw understand thé suffetings of the Irish people under
the oppression of the English ruling classes,. and left in him vivid im-
pressions of the bard lot of the Irish which he was later to introduce
Then his family broke up and his mother weat to London to sing
20, Shaw resigneđ from his job and also went to London.
picking up an education for himself and only doing odd jobs for
to 1883 he wrote a total of ffve novels and he had a hard time get-
ting them publisbhed, and the first to be published was the last of the
till 1930, while the other three, "The Irrational Kngot" (about a poor
1885-87, 1885-88 and 1885.-86. All these novels have one thing
superiority, which were to last throughout the author's life and were
responsible for his love of paradoxes and witty remarks and for his
ed him to the Fabians who placed their hopes for the world in the
intellectual and intelligent few. Of these five novcls, the most im-
portant is The Unso cial Socialist", which was written after the
er, is shown at the opening of the book as having discovered the orj-gin of his wealth and of that of
all his class, And with this knowl-
edge the hero of the novel wishes to break every tie that binds him with
his class and he starts by leaving his wife whom he loves and going
kion" with socialism as its aim. Then his wife dies and he returns
to his former enviropment and begins to attack the men and women
dustry. But at the close of the story.the hero marries a girt who has
and this made a decp impression on Shaw and he began to take in-
Then, in 1884, he joined the Fabian Society shortly after its founding
levelled his attack on the plays with well-constructed plots but very
meagre contents which then filled the theatres, and he fought for the
staging of social dranas of Ibsen's. He delivered a number of lec-tures on "The Doll's House'",
Ghosts", and Ibsen's other plays,
is the first of the tbree "Unpłeasant Plays" which include also "The
which wil be dealt with more fully later. These were followed by four
tries to shatter the romantic halo that was thrown around war heroes
off the conident clergyman, the great preacher, the orator of won-
derful eioquence who does not even have enough time to speak to
all the organizations that invite him to speak. *You Never Can
Tell", the weakest of the four, touches on the problem of the disin-
plays, appearing ncar the cose of the 19th century under the title of
the titie of "Plays for Puritans" and attacked the English theatres
of the time which were then run on purely business basis and in which
vulgar plays as did the Puritans of the 17th century. In the plays
first play and Caesar and Cleopatra of ancient Reman history in thesecond are both given the feelings
and speeches and actions of mo-
isc a Fabian, and after the marriage Shaw went to no more str:et
man", *hich has as its sub-title "A Comedy and a Philosophy" and
anion." Here Shaw dropped his attacks on capitalisn and his preach-
ings of Lamarck and pointed out that this "Life Force" was
resr ans:'e for a: growth ín the natural worid and was the expiana-
the acts of the play, the lst, 2nd and 4th acts, which are separable
from the third act and are the only parts for actual staging, the story
tells particularly of the love and marriage of the hero and the hero-
ine and Shaw tries to explain that the woman is more an instrument
of the Life Force and therefore takes the active part in love and mar-
his potentialities in art and other activities in life. The third act is
set apart by itself, in which the bero, runring away from the hero-
ine and the Life Force, falls asleep on the way and dreams of being
in hell and conversing with the Devil. This act, though also contain-
ing an explanation of the Life Force and a sort of parody of the con-
ic remarks against mili tarism and the use of modern technołogy forthe purpose of destruction,
ledge of the miseries of the Irish peopłe gathered in his younger days
made him hate the terrible oppression and exploitation of the Irish
by the English ruling classes for so many centuries. The story is
ist, Larry Doyle, works out a scheme for a land syndicate, which
tries to lend more money to the small farmers than the latter can pay
the interest and then to foreclose the mortgages and take posses-
for Ireland. In the play all the tricks used by the English imperial-
ists for the attainment of their ends are exposed via the actions
Shaw's plays written between the Boer War of 1899--1902 and the be-
ginning of the First World War in 1914. It is significant for its search-
ing analysis of the capitalist society and for its sharp criticismi on
the hypocrisy and the Mammonism of the capitalists and wil! be dis-
The plays written after "Major Barbara" and before the begin-
ning of the First World War show a detinite decline in the sharpness
(1910) and "Fanny's First Play" (1910), is discussed chiefly the prob-
doctors, journalists and art critics and on the place of science in bour-
geois society. In "The Dark Lady of the Sonnets" (1919) the theme
is tbat of the nccessity of the creation of a national theatre in Eng-land, plus Shaw's attempt to show
Shakespeare as not a born đramat-
and later turns them to Use in his plays. In "Androces and the
Lion" (1912-13) Shaw makes use of the old story of a run-away
teligion.
of the play the external difference is pointed out betwoen the lan-
guage of the rich and the well-eđucated and tbat of the common people
of the streets and we are totd that *"correct speech" has been con-
cent, and after six months of training in "correct speech" the vulgar
ereá so by all the men and women of thc so-called "high" society of
gives the flower girI the external coat of "culture" by training her in
only have the pose of "culture'". At the end of the play when the
girl leaves his house, she indicates that the professor by treating her
like a cutured" woman has awakened in her the real culture she
has been born with: With. this Shaw undoubtedly tries to show
that the simple peopie have the real aulture in them which the nobie
es a beautifu! statue of a woman and then falls in love with herwhen she is turned into a real woman
of fiesh and biood by thc God-
dess of Love. However, by showing the heroine at the close of the
carefully pronouncing all her correct vowels, Shaw defeats his owa
purpose in trying to exalt the simple girl above the duchesses and
During the years of the First World War, Shaw was a paci-
the War", in which he showed his support of the war but pointed
out the responsibility the English policy for the outbreak of the
He even said:
were later collected and published under the titie of Playlets of the
the futility of heroism in the unjust war; "Augustus Does His Bit".
Fantasia in the Russian Manner on Engish Themes", and in itspreface Shaw acknowledges his
indebtedness to the great Russian
writer Chekhov. Disillusioned after the war, Shaw in this play at-
time.
five parts, equivalent to five piays, and the time of the action extends
from the time of Adam and Eve to the year 31920 A.D. Here Shaw
believes that the chief obstacle for man to achieve a life of reason
wisdom to live a really rationai and happy life. n the ifth and
last part of the long work, as mankiad is shown to have reachcd their
functions of marn are then reduced to the minimum and the men-
the Fabian who believes in the superman of high intellect here tries
again to utter his faith. The play also contains scenes where the
world of politics at the time of the First World War is satirically pre-
sented, and Lloyd George and Asquith, two prominent English politi-
bourgeois politics.
the stage. The story is that of Jeanne d'Arc who led the French
people to drive out the invading Engiish troops but who was finally
first three of the six scenes of the play we see the surge of a popular
rising, with Joan its bead, winning over the. waverers and carrying
them along with it, sweeping aside all thosc who say that France
can never be liberated, infecting the court and the king with its own
enthasiasm, inspiring the army and. making straight for the enenuy's
afism turns the confict into one between individuais, and Joan is nolonger shown as a leader of the
people but morely as an individual
fighting against her betrayers and her enemies. Then in the Epi-
logue to the play Joan becomes a lonely saint and the whole atmos-
Joan a truly great figure, and the great confict between the people
began to turn again to politiçal themes and voiced his sharp criti-
system that deals with à cabinet crişis and with the attempt of Amer
the play indicates, Shaw neans here to speak the bitter truth rather
lies and those who wish to live an upright life strive in vain for the
true path out of the contradictions of the society. Both the old
and the young generations of the intelligentsia have lost their ide-
despair in the words and views of many of the characters in the play.
Shaw scems himself to sce the inevitable doom of the British Em-
The Fabian view that only intellectuals and not the workers
can carry out the task of socialism is very vividly ilustrated in the
play "On the Rocks" (1933), where the leader of the workers' party
rejects the plan for socialist reforms in Engiand but the supporters
working class by the leaders of the British Labour Party like Mac-
Donakd, indeed in this play there are also other topical allusions
to events of the day such as the Fascist police and unemployed work-In the comedies that followed,
in "The Simpleton of the Un-
and "In Good King Charles's Gokden Days" (1939), Shaw continued
with his critícism on the bourgeois society and with bis paradox-
es, but his satires grew weaker and more ineffectual with time.
Political What's What" (1944) in which are summed up all his ob-
Here once again Shaw showed his aegative attitude toward capitalis:
art's sake. I will nọt even lift a finger to write artistic works in which
Possibly Shaw's three most powerful dramas are two plays from
fession", and "Major Barbara" from his middle period, for these
three Shaw's briliant satires were aimed at the capitalist system it-
seif and not simply at some of the vices or foibles of the bourgeois
ploitation as the foundation of all other sociaf evils including polit-ical oppression and all other kinds
of tyranny.
only had a run of two days before it was stifled by the press and the
lector and the theme is the intense exploitation via the renting of
income, he insists that Blanche refuses to take any of her old man's
money after their marriage and that they car live on his own small
great horror tbat his own money is also derived somehow from
still more money with those slums, when Lickcheese, now indepen-
by the time thesc slums are puiled down to make way for a new
sium districts that pay high returns, higher even than from big man-
sions. So, as Shaw himself writes the Preface to the play, "In
fatten on flth." Here Shaw tries to drive home his point of the
money on the table. Hardly a penny of that but there wąs a hungrychild crying for the bread it should
bave bougbt.'" And Lickcheese
the most fashionable district in London, and also how three womea
man who takes good care of his extravagant daughter and is ready 1ɔ
look after her and her husband upon their marriage, and only when
erations, do we see Shaw tearing the veil of hypocrisy off the ruling
that a strect will be buiit through this lot furtner adds to the territe
picture of all the dirtiest means of money-making possible in bour-
geois society, And Trench whọ at first seems to have moral comn-
and also how a man from the parasitic class of smali exploiters scts
as Trench very naturally joins forces with other and bigger explvit-
Crs.
satire on whạt was then popularly known as the Ibsenite new woman
plays, because the social satire here is the sharpest and the bitterest. The titular heroine of the
drama Mrs. Warren comes from
a very poor family and after working for some time as waitress and
Europe. The play opens as she comes back from abroad to visit
finds out about the real nature of her mother's so-called business.
But this secondary plot only serves to expose the promiscuous lives
The important confict in the drama is that between Vivie who is cley-
er and well-educated but does not know much of the world and the
own mother.
The theme of the play is the use of prostitution houses for pur-
not only sell thei good looks and their very bodies to maintain their
bar proprietors whiie working for them, but also, what is far more
terrible, how prostitution houses- are used as a means and a safe, one too for investment and
money-making, even by such respecțable aris-
tocrats like Sir George Crofts, Hert we see the resembiançe be-
tween thbis play and "Wiđowers Houses" in that both hit at the very
via the lowest and dirtiest mcans. And Crofts, like Sartorius, is
ness even: Why the devil shouldn't I invest my monėy that way? I
take the interest on my capital like other people. I hope you don't
think I dirty my own hands with the work." Here Shaw strikes
respectability is satirized for it is also the common thing with all in-
dirtying one's own band in the work. Crofts further voices Shaw's
teiling Vivie that all the most respectable and honourable. persGns
all get their money via the dirtiest ways of expioitation, and that,
from attacking one of the abuses in the capitalist world to the con-
tem, by pointing out how commonly and with what dirtiest means
Shaw exposes the extreme hypocrisy in that society for at the back
and ali that sort of gibberish uttered all the time by the ruling class-
es to cover thetmselves wițh bonour and glory, there are the dirtiest and the crueicst ways of
expioitation with which they make their
raoney and live their grand, civilized lives but which lead to untoid
this play is the fiercest of all, Shaw's attacks on capitalism, more vivid
ters, Mrs. Warren, Vivie and Crofts here are fuller portraits than
uphold her idealistic views against not only Crofts but also her moth-
by going to live on her "honest work", does not really find her way
out (though Shaw obviously intends that she does), for first of
the society untess one goes in for revołution to overthrow that socie-
ty, and then, after all, Vivie's "honest work" at "actuarial caicula-
cery Lanc is no "honest work" actually but rather dirtying one's own
hands" in slaving for the capitalists who are the ones to need such
"with one eye on the Stock Exchange" (in her speech with "dear old
the oppressed and exploited and later becoming herself one of the
ma and the result is that the author seems to have drawn a line be- tween Mrs. Warren and Crofts,
intending for the audience to con-
denn Crofts but sympathize with Mrs. Warren, while actuaily Mrs.
tore. The story evolves chiefy round the titular heroine Major Bar-
bara, her father and her fiancé. Andrew Undershaft, the girl's fa-
wishes to save the souls as well as the bodies of the poor people,
and Cusins her fiancé, a professor, shares her wish to help improve
that between Undershaft on the one hand and his daughter Barbara
and her fiancé Cusins on the other, and Undershaft wins the first
his money and that of the Whisky King, Bodger. Barbara quits
the Salvation Army but finally her fiancé inherits Undersbaft's prop-
erty and she goes to work in the factory for the saving of the poor
secms to be the hero and the well-meaning Barbara and Cusins seem
anism, especially since here again the workers are shown to be quite
als as Barbara and Cusins are needed .to fight the battle for them.
And the ending of the play is almost a sort of compromise with capi-
ry to work.
means
ty. In what Undershaft does and says are revealed the outstand- ing characteristics of capitalism and
capitalists. First of all, we çan
see that tricks are played by the capitalists in order to prevent a rev-
olution. Undershaft spends a large sum of moncy to buy over
useful in feeding the poor workers with bread and with salvation
and thus pacifying the workers and diverting them from revolu-
the Primrose League and shake hands with a duchess, and not to get
two most commonly useđ methods with which the capitalists all
over the world try to lead the workers away from any thought of rev-
arms to all men who offer an honest price for them, without respect
liceman, to black man and whitė man and yellow man, all sorts
and conditions, al nationalities, all faiths, all follies, all causes and
all crimes." And like Sartorius and Crofts he too says he is “un-
him. And with this cash he has great power, so much so that he
and the other big capitalists are actually the rulers of the whole world,
with all governments under their control and all the politicians as
es his son with his show of contempt for the government cabinets
arus? No, my friend: you will do what pays us. You wll
make war when it suits us, and keep peace when it doesn't.
You will find out that trade requires certain measures when
and the military. And in return you shall have the sup-
Ali this is a realistic picture not only of the first decade of the 20th
century when the play was staged and published, but also. of the
talişm holds its sway in Britain and in all other bourgeois nations.
parliarments who are invested with power to rule. And when tbe
are ready to pay for the weapons of war, to both sides of the bellig-
erents, to the enemies of their own countries even, and this we find
in the First World War and in the Second World War and in many
other small and local wars in đifferent parts of the globe through
ey and to gain power, and this expos& is presented with all the bit-
his entirejy unscrupulous ways for making moncy, on the other hand
by creating an aristocracy among the wOrkers and by supporting and buying over such seemingly
harmless and even spiritual institu-
pocrisy, used to suit the needs for direct gains of money and for in-
Bu
beyond this sharp satire on capitalism and its dirty tricks and its
shameless actions, Shaw seems to get confused and can only sug-
The Apple Cart" ushers in, as it were, a new type of đrama for the
which he was to write a goodly number in the last stage of his dra-
ery of the Labour Party and also hinting at the dependence of the
lists.
ing but the irrelevant but very exciting dialogue betwoen King Mag-
not only at the moral degeneracy of the king or thbe ruling clique
but also at the compicated situation of all sorts of dirty tricks and
body of the play contains two parts. In Act I a cabinet crisis is, de-
king to do whatever they ask him to do, but the king refuses to do
so by threatening to retire from the throne in favour of his son and then to compete with the party in
question in a government election
in power for they know too well that they have Iong lost the sup-
question of a struggle between the party in power and the king, for
the rea! power to rule rests with the big monopoly capitalists repre-
the play: "The conflict is not really one between royalty and đemoc-
racy, but between both and plutocracy. The plutocrats frst use de-
mocracy as pretext and openly shatter the king's power with vio-
money prints, money broadcasts, money reigns, and kings and La-
bour leaders alike have to register its decrees ;and even,by a staggering
ing class are actually no more than adroit old foxes tenaciously hold-
ing on to their warm snug jobs and receiving a fair share of the govern-
ed the workers. And all the other politicians besides the Labour-
for their oWn personal interests, and an extre mely ugly picture is
alist United States of America after the First World War and then
pf the threat of American imnperialism to swallow up Britain eco- nomically and politically and also
culturally. Here the American am-
to the British Empire. The king collapses upon hearing the news
for he considers this "the end of England"" and declares his intention
to fight for national independence to the last drop of his blood, but
ade Engiand and would also launch a boycott and "the two thou-
oyr books, our plays, our spirits, our Christian Science churches, our
osteopaths, our movies and talkies. But it is a smali parcel and say
our goods and our ideas.'" And this satire on the subordination of
"The Apple Cart" may be a topical play in the sense that it re-
fers pariiculariy to the. England of the late 1920s and to the Labour
Party and to the other political phenomena of that day, but it bas
its lasting signiicance for, so far as the bourgeois parliamentarian
Shaw has written so many plays and most of them have attained
which are the best of bis works, or which are the most represcnta-
as an effective weapon to atack not alone the various social evils in the bourgeois world. but also the
very foundations of monopoly caț-
an reformism.