Gerald Croft - Act 3 Key Quotations Flashcards
Gerald attempts to argue that Goole was not a real Inspector - like the Birlings, he overlooks the true lesson behind the events of the evening, instead trying to avoid a scandal that could tarnish the reputation of the upper class family:
“That man wasn’t a police officer.”
Upper-class concern with reputation and public image:
Birling worries that Gerald told the real police inspectors about their involvement with Eva Smith, however he “passed it off by saying [he’d] been having an argument with somebody.”
Gerald aligns with the older generation in that he views the entire story as a joke or a trick, rather than interpreting the true message of social responsibility and morality:
“We’ve been had.”
Gerald agrees with Birling that the fact that the Inspector was not real “makes all the difference”:
“Of course!”
Gerald argues that the Inspector lied to them about their involvement:
“he bluffs us into confessing that we’ve all been mixed up in this girl’s life in one way or another”
Gerald then further attempts to protect their reputation and argue that they have not done anything wrong by suggesting that each of the Birlings interacted with different girls:
- “But how do you know it’s the same girl?”
- “We’ve no proof it was the same photograph and therefore no proof it was the same girl.”
Gerald agrees with Birling that there might not even have been a suicide:
“How do we know any girl killed herself today?”
MOST IMPORTANT: Gerald clearly has not learned anything by the end of the play, establishing a static character arc, depicting his aristocratic, self-centred attitudes towards society through his readiness to revert back to his old ways:
“What about this ring?”