Mrs Birling Flashcards
Her snobbery
How is she like when she speaks about workers?
“First, the girl herself. … Secondly, I blame the young man who was the father of the child… He should be made an example of.”
Dramatic irony
Morality link: she basically says the morality of your actions depend on who you are. When she finds out it’s Eric, she doesn’t treat it as bad, hypocritical
She has no/inconsistent morals -> capitalists have no fixed morality
‘should’ is an imperative verb, forceful- emphasises her hypocrisy because she is going against her own words later (doesn’t make an example of Eric)
When you’re married, you’ll realise that men with important work to do sometimes have to spend all their time and energy on their business.”
Assumption she will get married, patriarchal views
Implies Sheila doesn’t understand yet- ironic since she understands but Mrs B doesn’t.
Is aware of her role in society, wants her daughter to do the same
Condescending, patronising her- saying she is too inexperienced to realise reality, elevating herself since she already knows.
Assuming she’s right- arrogant
Makes men sound more ‘important’ than women since they are the ones who have a big role
‘you’ll realise than men with important work to do sometimes have to spend nearly all their time and energy on their business, you’ll have to get used to, just as i had’ - mrs birling
- sets the clear patriarchal society + the internalised misogyny, and finishes with a sense of resignation
‘girls of that class’ - mrs birling
- the pronoun highlights her repulsion of the other classes + distances/separates herself from them, clear class prejudice. also shows + emphasises that all that matter to mrs birling is eva’s class, class defines your worth and value as human, the idea which priestley sought to challenge + subvert
‘i’m very sorry. but i think she only had herself to blame’ - mrs birling
- two sentences completely contradict each other highlighting mrs birling’s lack of emotion, arrogance + disregard of responsibility
‘i used my influence to have it refused. and in spite of what’s happened to the girl since, i consider i did my duty’ - mrs birling
- cruel perversion, actively sought to persuade others to reject eva’s appeal; similar to how sheila leveraged her power to have eva fired but sheila has some remorse
- whereas mrs birling doesn’t. also underlines how power wielded by wrong people leads to disastrous outcomes. lexical choice of ‘duty’ would have been jarring for a post-war audience (war connotations, ‘do your duty’), and it’s being used in a way that’d be galling as mrs birling has disregarded a poor girl in need of help
‘it wasn’t i who had her turned out of her employment […] in the circumstances i think i was justified’ - mrs birling
- refusing to take accountability + justifying her actions by putting the blame onto someone else, incredibly unempathetic
‘as if a girl of that sort would ever refuse money!’ - mrs birling
- dehumanising pronoun, exclamatory sentence, shows her strong view is tainted by class prejudice
‘i’m sorry she should have come to such a horrible end. but i accept no blame for it at all.’ - mrs birling
- another two contradictory sentences, repeated structure from before, highlights her complete disregard for social responsibility
‘he ought to be dealt with very seriously […] make sure that he’s compelled to confess in public his responsibility’ - mrs birling
- creating a larger hole for eric and the rest of the birling family as mrs birling is putting their reputation that they care so much about on the line
‘he certainly didn’t make me confess […] i thought i had done no more than my duty’ - mrs birling
- thinks she is superior to everybody else, reiterates the jarring lexical choice of ‘duty’ which highlights that mrs birling still hasn’t changed
“A piece of gross impertinence” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Mrs birlings reference to Eva’s honest tale of woe with the adjective “impertinence” reveals how she believes she is absolved of all responsibility as Eva’s claim to be “mrs Birling” was disrespectful.
“She had only herself to blame” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Mrs Birling takes the view that suicide is a conscious choice and therefore Eva can only blame herself for taking her own life.
- This is one of the most important quotes in the play and the very antithesis of what J.B. Priestley is attempting to expound via the play.
- Eva did not bring all of this upon herself. She was the victim of a society where she had to struggle to survive and suffered.
- Mrs Birling’s comments are cruel and reflect a lack of pity for Eva’s suffering and also do not take in to account the role of her family in Eva’s sad demise.
- The wealthy in society cannot exonerate themselves from the suffering of the poor and bear responsibility.
- This is the fundamental message of the play that Priestley is seeking to promote.
“I’ll tell you what I told her. Go and look for the father of the child. It’s his responsibility.” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Whilst trying to defend herself and her ‘honour’ she passes blame on to the father of Eva’s child.
- Little does she know that that father is in fact the person she called a ‘boy’, her son Eric. * If it is Eric’s responsibility then a man from a rich family bears part of the blame for Eva’s demise and ultimately by extension on a more fundamental level his parents for not being able to raise him in a manner that would prevent him from doing this.
- The Birlings are shown in the play as a very flawed family, and Priestley is trying to tell the wealthy upper classes in society that they are far from perfect.
“Oh, stop it, both of you. And please remember before you start accusing me of anything again that it wasn’t I who had her turned out of her employment - which probably began it all.” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- The pressure builds up to the point that the normally very deferential Mrs Birling has a go at her husband and even goes as far as to saying that him sacking Eva started all this.
- If we then consider that she is saying that the father of Eva’s child should have been responsible for the child and that Mr Birling’s dismissal of Eva from her job started all this, she is ironically condemning her own family for their actions and attributing blame to them.
- Mrs Birling lives in a world where she and her family are ‘good’ people and superior the lowly and inferior working class, so for her to perhaps in a moment of anger accept her family’s role in Eva’s demise means that she would have to ultimately accept they are not as wonderful as she might like to think they are.
“whatever it was, I know it made me finally lose all patience with her. She was giving herself ridiculous airs. She was claiming elaborate fine feelings and scruples that were simply absurd in a girl in her position.” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Another comment reflecting Mrs Birling’s very cold and insensitive attitude to Eva.
- Mrs Birling does not seem to understand that a working class person like Eva can have complex feelings and emotions and also have a certain standard of morality and dignity.
- This clearly views the working class, though not as criminal, as clearly inferior and lacking morality.
- Is Priestley highlighting this because this sort of attitude is all too common amongst the wealthy in English society at that time.
“she said that the father was only a youngster - silly and wild and drinking too much. There couldn’t be any question of marrying him - it would be wrong for them both. He had given her money but she didn’t want to take any more money from him.” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Again irony as the ‘father’ is Mrs Birling’s son, the person she referred to earlier as a ‘boy’ which would seem to reinforce notions that he is indeed a ‘youngster’.
- The other irony is that there would be no question of marriage between him and Eva because it would be the classist and unsympathetic Mrs Birling who would perhaps be the most opposed to such a marriage
” I did nothing I’m ashamed of” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Priestley demonstrates the true extent of mrs birlings cold nature as despite Eva’s death, mrs Birling does not regret her denial of aid to Eva.
“I did my duty” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Priestleys use of the noun “duty” is used to expose mrs birlings perception of duty as limited to a capitalist social duty of keeping the rich people rich and the poor people poor. In doing so, she neglects her moral duty to provide assistance to those most in need.
“First I blame the girl herself. Secondly, I blame the young man” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Priestley portrays mrs Birling as unable to accept any responsibility as she deflects blame onto Eric inadvertently. * Yet, her hypocrisy is further revealed when she realises, and states “i didn’t know,” implying that she would not have placed the blame on her son for the same action.
- Little does Mrs Birling know that the ‘young man’ she is referring to is in fact very ironically her son.
- She cannot later turn around and then absolve Eric of blame when she has already declared that the man responsible for fathering Eva’s child must shoulder blame for her fate.
- As mentioned before by extension she and her husband could also be blamed on a more fundamental level for poor parenting.
” he’d be entirely responsible. […] compelled to confess in public his responsibility” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Mrs Birlings double standards are laid bare by priestley when she discovers who the father is; the public confession of Eric would tarnish the reputation of the Birling family name.
- Mrs Birling is not consistent with her morals when it is her reputation at stake.
- This is said in response to the inspector saying what if Eva’s claims that the father of her child had indeed stolen money.
- What this shows us that contrary to Mrs Birling’s ignorant and prejudiced limited world view that the rich are inherently morally superior and the poor are morally inferior, in this case it is the other way round the man (Eric, her son) from the wealthy classes was in fact guilty of theft and the working class, Eva refused to accept stolen money.
- Priestley is showing morality is not the monopoly of the rich and the real world is a much more complex place than Mrs Birling might imagine where there is good and bad amongst all human beings regardless of their social status
” don’t contradict me like that” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Priestley presents mrs Birling as symbolic of conservatism and resistant to change.
- By contrast, sheila is representative of the younger generation who embrace radical change and the need for socialism.
“A trifle impertinent” - Mrs Birling, act 2
- Mrs Birling attempts to convey a demand of respect through her formal and complex vocabulary, evidenced by her accusing the inspector as being “ a trifle impertinent”