10 - Chapter 4 The Good Person of Schwan PDF
10 - Chapter 4 The Good Person of Schwan PDF
10 - Chapter 4 The Good Person of Schwan PDF
CHAPTER-IV
The Good person of Szechwan is a parable play. The play is set in China.
‘Love is the Goods’, was the title of the play which Brecht was planning to write about
1930 and he recalled this play when he began working on The Good Person of
Szechwan. Brecht also adopted the play by ‘Tai Yang wakes up’ which was written
Piscator staged in 1932 in a simple didactic production that impressed him. This play
is an important marker in Brecht’s career as a playwright. This play stands out from
his more didactic and politically committed works, by being conceived as parables - a
description not previously used for his plays and having ethical problems as their main
concern.
Again by writing this play, he is not content with social satire with trenchant
observation. For this reason he took a lot of time in completing the play. In the
beginning he thought of writing the play about prostitution and deprivation in Berlin.
He could not come to terms with history. Finally he could complete the play in 1941
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establish what the relationship between food and morality, or more precisely money
Brecht in the play ‘The Good Person of Szechwan’, reveals ‘The human
comedy’ through the character of Shen Teh, He lays bare the contradiction between the
God’s world and human’s world. The dilemma of Shen Teh is, how to remain good in
spite of hostile circumstances. The ideals are ordained by the Gods to Shen Teh. The
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Gods discover Shen Teh after long search. Though Shen Teh is a prostitute, the Gods
take shelter in her house and decide to help her. Their help to Shen Teh gives them a
satisfaction that there is at least one good person in the world. The irony is that they
could not find any other person except Shen Teh till the end of the play.
Shen Teh is liked by all, when she is generous. This helping disposition leads
her to the brink of ruin. In order to save herself from the ruin, she disguises herself as
Shui Ta. As Shui Ta she becomes very aggressive and tries to retrieve the business of
Shen Teh. In this process Shui Ta dominates the happenings and Shen Teh is not to be
seen on the stage for a long time. So people in Szechwan gets the doubt over Shui
Ta’s attitude and draws him to the court, alleging that he murdered Shen Teh. Once
again the Gods appear as the Judges. But they could not find a proper solution for
Shen Teh’s dilemma and disappear by telling Shen Teh to be good. The human
comedy of how to be good, in spite of difficulties remains unsolved and the problem is
The play opens with a prologue. Three Gods in search of a good person enter
the city of Szechwan. The water seller, Wang, helps the Gods to find a shelter to the
Gods in the house of Shen Teh, a prostitute. The Gods find goodness in Shen Teh.
She complains to the Gods that she finds it difficult to follow up their commandments
as she is not financially sound. In order to give her a fillip, the Gods give her some
money and leave the place by giving a piece of advice that she should remain good.
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Shen Teh purchases a tobacco shop with the money given by the Gods. Soon,
she is surrounded by a family of eight, who take advantage of her goodness. She finds
to her horror that at night there is no room for her to sleep. So she disguises herself as
Shui Ta and politely asks the family of eight to leave the premises, she hands them
She Teh finds in the park a young man, Yang Sun, who is about to hang
himself. She saves him and finds out that he is an unemployed pilot who is unable to
raise five hundred dollars to get him pilot’s job in Peking. In the conversation that
ensues between the two, Shen Teh experiences the joy of man-woman relationships
unclouded by material interests. She falls in love with Yang Sun and promises to help
After sometime, Yang Sun asks Shen Teh that he needs five hundred dollars to
give it to the director of an air field in Peking. He tells her that he has no intention of
marrying her, but still Shen Teh loves him. The wedding between Shen Teh and Sun
will not take place. Because Shen Teh wants to give the money to the old couple and
Shen Teh comes to know that she is pregnant. Again her yard is filled with the
people. She once again disguises herself as Shui Ta and starts running factory. Shen
Teh can not be sighted by the people for a long time. This leads to a suspicion that
Shui Ta might have caused some harm to Shen Teh. Shui Ta is charged with the
explains to the Gods the circumstances that forced her to disguise herself as Shui Ta
and requests them to offer a solution so that she can survive without the mask.
But the Gods failed to give any solution to her problems and they leave the
place. They once again tell her that she should remain good. Inspite of difficulties.
The play comes to close as Brecht refers this dilemma to the audience in the theatre.
II
The treatment of the Gods by Brecht in this play is highly satirical. The
reference to Gods also occurs in the earlier series of pamphlets called ‘Experiments’ as
well as in some of his poems. For example in one of his poems, ‘Hymn to God’
You let the poor stay poor for year after year,
Feeling that their desires were sweeter than your paradise
Too bad they died before you had brought them light,
But they died in bliss all the same and rotted at once.
Many of us say you are not and a good thing to,
But how could that thing not be which can play such trick
If so much lives by you and could not die without you
Tell me how for does it matter that you don’t exist?3
The three Gods condescend to the level of human beings. The crisis in the
human society is reflected in the world of Gods. They have been looking for, without
success, a good person. They have received complaints that no one can stay on earth
They say that the heavens are deeply disturbed by the many
complaints that have going up. (3) (4)
There is lot of irony and satire in the above lines. As a Marxist Brecht is
suggesting that how people are trying to look up instead of searching for the solution
on the earth. As a materialist, he is satirising the concept of heaven by telling that how
even the ‘the heaven’ the abode of the Gods are disturbed by the human complaints.
The Gods identity is being questioned and threatened. They desire to testify to
the world that goodness still exists and good persons can be traced on the earth. They
The prologue in the play illustrates the ‘human comedy’ of the Gods. Wang,
the water seller, is awaiting the arrival of the Gods in the capital of Szechwan
province. His problem is identification of the Gods. He is very anxious to greet the
Gods first. Because Wang so far has not seen the Gods literally. He has only heard of
the Gods from different sources. So naturally he has become anxious. If he delays in
meeting the Gods, the Gods will be surrounded by the important people of the city.
Brecht satirically says that the Gods are always on the side of the rich and the
powerful.
Wang has the problem of identification of the Gods. He studies the people
It cannot be the men . . . They are coming away from work. Their
shoulders are bent by the burdens they have to carry. That fellow
is no good either, he has inky fingers. At most he may be some
kind of clerk in cement works. 1 would not take those gentlemen
two gentlemen walk past for gods even; they have the brutal faces
of men who beat people, and the Gods find that unnecessary. But
look at these three. They seem very different. They are well
nourished, how no evidence of employment and have dust on their
shoes, so they must have traveled far. It is them. Yours to
command Illustrious Ones! (3)
The above lines of Wang are fraught with irony and satire. Brecht exposes the
contradiction between the world of the Gods and the world of human beings. The
physical appearance of the Gods are contrasted with the appearance of proletarian
section of the society. The physiognamy of the proletriat is brutal when compared to
the Gods. The Gods are always well-nourished and always immaculate. They can be
immaculate because they do not do any physical work. So, to Wang they appear not to
The Gods are in search of a good person and they traveled to many other places
before coming to Szechwan. They wanted to take rest for the night and seek the help
of Wang to find a place. But, the Gods have been unable to get any proper place
because no one has been willing to take them in at night. Brecht treats the Gods as an
object of ridicule and shows how they have become irrelevant and ineffectual in the
modern world. It is ironical that Wang does not want to have any enmity with
powerful people in Szechwan, even though the Gods are said to be all powerful. When
the First God suggests that he can try out first house, Wang says :
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I only fear that, I may attract the enmity of the powerful, if 1 give
one of them preference4
It is also ironical that people in Szechwan who are aware of the fact that the
Gods have come to their doorsteps are not willing to give shelter to them. This is an
unexpected and irreconcilable situation to the Gods. The Second God says :
There is a good deal of irony in Brecht’s choosing of Three Gods who finally
find shelter in the house of Shen Teh, a prostitute who is usually considered an
outcaste in all the cultures. It is one of the oldest institutions in the world. It involves
A prostitute body is not only a site of violence but also a site for perpetrating
violence on her person, on her human dignity. But it is only in her the Gods have
found a good person. But Shen Teh denies saying : I am not good. I have been an
admission to make; when Wang asked me if I could shelter you I had hesitation (10)
His refusal to accept Shen Teh’s low estimate of herself seems to be less a
divine charity than an expedience. If they can claim that Shen Teh is a good person
they have been seeking for, they have an excuse for giving up their tiresome
The Gods hold the idealistic view of the concept of goodness. But, Shen Teh
govern the human relationship in the society. When the First God asks Shen Teh to be
good she replies : “But I am not certain of myself, Illustrious ones, How can I be good
In the play ‘The Three Penny Opera’ the lines uttered by Macheath bear
resemblance to Shen Teh’s words, when he says ‘Morality, in short can function
The Second God confesses that the Gods above are powerless as far as the
economic problems of people are concerned. He says: Alas, that is beyond our power,
However, they say that they can pay for the lodging. But again there is a
contradiction among themselves, with regard their help to Shen Teh. Finally, they
decide to help her, by giving some money as a rent for the lodging. But at the same
time not to be revealed it to any one because ‘it might be misinterpreted’ (11)
Brecht satirises the Gods when one of the God says that Shen Teh should not
tell others that the Gods had paid her. They fear that even though, they helped Shen
Teh with good intentions, people are circumspect about the whole matter. They might
discover a new relationship between the Gods and Shen Teh. Because Shen Teh is a
prostitute and the Gods with so called virtuous character, should not enter the house of
Shen Teh. In the capitalist society, the status of men or women decides their social
relationships. The Gods are very particular that no one should know that they have
paid her, because no one pays a prostitute without any gain. So even the Gods can not
avoid the stigma of meeting a prostitute. Brecht ridicules the Gods and suggests that
Shen Teh purchases a tobacco shop with the money given by the Gods from
Mrs. Shin, who continues to hang about the shop expecting her to give her handouts of
rice and cash. The good natured Shen Teh finds it impossible to refuse Mrs. Shin’s
demands. The husband and wife and their nephew soon arrive asking Shen Teh for
shelter. They remind her that they took her when she needed help. Actually, they
exploited and made her do lot of work in the tobacco shop which they owned earlier.
An unemployed man comes to Shen Teh’s shop and asks for a handout of
cigarettes. At this point Mrs. Shin and others warn Shen Teh that she must not allow
herself to be taken advantage of. If she finds it difficult to refuse those who ask for
charity, the husband advises that she should pretend that the shop belongs to relative
who refuses to let her give anything away : The Man: Say it isn’t yours. Say it belongs
to relation and he insists on strict accounts. Why not try it ? (14) These lines are
ironical because later circumstances forces her to disguise herself as Shui Ta, in order
A carpenter arrives to demand payment for the shelves he had already installed.
There is a parade of new arrivals to Shen Teh’s shop. Again the man and the woman
makes reference to Shen Teh’s cousin, forcing Shen Teh to invent a cousin. Finally
Shen Teh agrees to say that she has a cousin, when Mrs. Mitzu demands a reference
from Shen Teh, Shen Teh refers Mrs. Mitzu to her prosperous cousin, Shui Ta, who
lives in Shung. This satisfies Mrs. Mitzu for the time being. Eventually the husband,
wife, nephew, brother and sister-in-law are joined by the rest of the family bringing the
total to eight. They help themselves to Shen Teh’s cigarettes and wine. The family of
eight takes advantage of Shen Teh’s goodness. Shen Teh would like to give all her
possessions away to make every one happy since her nature thrives on giving. Her
relatives are liars, thieves and parasites, representing lumpen elements in the society.
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At the beginning of the play, Shen Teh is at the lower rung of the socio
economic order. Her body itself has been treated as commodity by the society. She has
no distinct, recognisable and respectable place in the society. The moment she gets
some wealth, many people surround her forgetting her past life. Because of her
financial growth she has been elevated to the upper rung of the society. This clearly
The Wang, water seller is given the responsibility by the Gods to keep a watch
on the fortunes of Shen Teh. Shen Teh’s excessive generosity got her into financial
doldrums. This forces her to invent a cousin and disguise herself as a man, Shui Ta.
The moment Shen Teh disguises herself as Shui Ta, she is compelled to be
calculating, mean and profit-minded, in order to save Shen Teh’s property. This has a
striking resemblance to R.L; Stevenson’s character in Dr. Jekyll who turns into the
Shen Teh argues with the carpenter over his bill for the shelves and by driving
harder bargain than the meek Shen Teh could have done, forces the carpenter to accept
for less than his original demands. Shui Ta’s final settlement is unreasonable meager.
She says : The unfortunate fact is that the poverty in this city is too much for any
individual to correct. Alas nothing has changed since a poet wrote. (25)
Shui Ta is well aware of the fact the alleviation of the poor is not to be
any changes in the conditions of the poor. The problem does not lie in the compassion
to be shown but in the political will of the ruling classes. Brecht may be suggesting
Shui Ta orders the family of eight to leave the shop. When they ignore his
orders, he summons a policeman. The policeman clearly states that as to why he has
come to the rescue of Shui Ta He says : Speaking for authorities we soon find out who
Through the character of policeman, Brecht draws our attention to the nexus
between the state, the police and the business men. The police is employed by the
state to maintain law order. The state time and again claims that all are equal before
law. But in a class society this not the fact. The law is always there to safeguard the
rich only. So when Shen Teh was a prostitute, it is the police who harassed her. But
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when Shen Teh becomes a business woman and disguises herself as Shui Ta, the police
man claims that business people are the friends of law and order.
Shui Ta succeeds in driving away the family of eight from the house with the
Shen Teh is now learning the art of survival. The human comedy is that one
must be cruel to be kind. They are two sides of the same coin. The goodness and the
generalised by Brecht. She Teh’s goodness is praised by the Gods and the people of
Szechwan. She has been praised by many as the ‘Angel of the slums’. But the
goodness or badness can be realised by the action of an individual. So, Shen Teh must
be calculative in order to be charitable. She ceases to be good, if she does not help any
The human comedy of love is presented in the play through the relationship
between Shen Teh and Yang Sun. Yang Sun, an unemployed pilot, is saved by Shen
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the future society, when Shen Teh says : “to give up hope is to give up kindness.” (35)
In spite of the difficulties to be faced men in the world, still there are people who can
There are still friendly people, for all over wretchedness. When 1
was little once, 1 was carrying a bundle of sticks and fell. An old
man helped me up and even gave me a penny. I have often
thought of it. Those who have least to eat give most gladly. I
suppose people just like showing what they are good at; and how
can they do it better then by being friendly. . Crossness is just a
way of being inefficient. Whenever some one is singing a song or
building a machine or planting rice it is really friendliness. You
are friendly too. (36)
Brecht is proposing that being friendly can reduce the misery in the world. But
a true friendship cannot be established between the rich and the poor. Brecht is hoping
that the proletariat can build a new world of friendliness by their productivity. People
from the proletariat section are always eager to help others even though they have less
means to meet with. This is because, they work with unselfish minds and not with the
Shen Teh falls in love with Yang Sun. She buys a glass of water, despite the
fact that it is raining. She does this to show her love towards Sun. The water she
purchases is more precious than the water that falls from the sky. She sings a song :
The song of the water seller in the rain clearly shows how men are alienated
from the nature. But in the capitalist society, natural resources like water and air will
be converted into commodities. Brecht wants to emphasise the fact that in the
capitalist system men will be alienated from the nature. As Walter Weideli observes :
Wang, the water seller, is not a good person by the standards of the Gods, who
discover a false bottom in his water mug. But, he is given responsibility by the Gods
to keep watch on the fortunes of Shen Teh. Wang is an instinctive moralist of natural
goodness. Wang says : “Do not too hard on us. O Illustrious Ones! Do not ask for
The contradiction between the world of Gods and world of humans is once
again exposed by Brecht when they meet Wang to inquire about Shen Teh's progress.
Wang reports that the carpenter talked ill of Shen The. The Gods support Shen Teh.
The Second God says : One can not afford the appearance to irregularity. The letter of
the law has first to be fulfilled; that is spirit. (40) These lines clearly explains that the
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Gods have totally failed to understand the purpose of the law in the human society and
their words indicate how the bourgeois will exploit the poor in the name of Law.
interests. For the first time in her life, she experiences love towards a man. Earlier her
relationship with men is only a passion of lust. She expresses her love towards Sun in
a more poetic manner. As she enters the city before the dawn she says:
‘With each step, I was becoming more joyous. 1 saw the paper
boys and the men watering down the streets and the ox-drawn
carts loaded with vegetable. People have always told me that
when you are in love walk in the clouds, but what is really
beautiful is to walk on the ground, on the asphalt. I tell you, you
may miss many things if you are not in love. (42)
Shu Fu, a wealthy barber, seeing Shen Teh in the rosy splendour of the
‘Shen Teh met Yang Sun while on her way to tete-a-tete with a
marriage prospect, one who could cough up the rent money. Here
and in the latter negotiations with Shu Fu, marriage is compared to
the whoring. Shen Te thought she could leave behind becoming a
business woman or business man. Indeed, as Shui Ta, Shen Te
serves her own pimp, becoming as Brecht notes put it; ‘both goods
and sales person’.11
Shu Fu, the barber, whose shop is next to Shen Teh, smashes the hand of
Wang, the water seller. Wang to his dismay realises that none of the witnesses are
prepared to testify against Shu Fu. Brecht through this incident calls our attention to
the fact that capitalism divides the society into so many fragments. This division of
society into so many fragments, alienates one group of individuals from another
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group of individuals. This results in disunity among the individuals in the society and
in the process individuals become insensitive to human suffering. This is the human
comedy of capitalist society. Wang finds out that helplessness is capitalist society is
‘This is one of the incidents in which the whole action of the play
is embedded. The Gods are by instinct are conservative but they
have the kind of commitment to ethics that keeps every
conservative government in touch with middle classes. Unless
they can find a good person, they will have to change the world.
They will have to that is to say, to recognise that goodness is
overwhelmed in the prevailing conditions of the society. Their
discovery of Shen Teh prevents a world revolution society. Shen
Teh discovers on the contrary, that goodness is the very thing that
demands world revolution. Her compassion for the common man
is not shared by the common man. If it were (or when it is) the
world must be changed.12
Shen Teh wants to commit perjury to give Wang his compensation. Shen Teh
is aware of the fact that she was not present when the incident took place. She is
outraged by the injustice done to Wang and she exclaims with horror how people in
this world are indifferent. She says : ‘What a city is this! What sort of man! .... your
brother is outraged before you, and you shut your eyes... When an injustice is done in
a city, there must be an uproar. It is better the city perish in flames, before night fall
(45)
The police man once again shows his allegiance to the rich, when Wang
demands compensation from Shu Fu. Shui Ta says that Shen Teh can not testify
against Shu Fu. The Police man warns Wang for his complaining against respectable
‘Yes tried your game on the wrong man, on a proper gentle man
that is you be a bit more careful with your complaints next time,
fellow. If Mr. Shu Fu does not choose to waive his legal rights.
You can still land in the cell for defamation. Get moving ! 56
Shen Teh carrying the mask of Shui Ta, sings a song of ‘The Defencelessness
of the Good and the Gods. When Shen Teh is singing the song, she puts on the mask of
Shui Ta. The moment she puts on the mask of Shui Ta, her attitude also undergoes a
change. Thus, the transformation from Shen to Shui Ta brings out the Marxist
principle that social being determines the thought and the character is a product of
She laments that the Good and the Gods are powerless. It is very difficult for
any one to be good, when the whole world is wicked. In the world of inequality, the
divine commandments will not be of much use against hunger. She questions that
when people are hungry, how can they even think. She wants that the Gods should
come down and distribute the wealth equally among the people. It is impossible to
help one person without hurting a dozen others at the same time. She sings:
Shen Teh’s belief in the people, brings her comfort, when she is in troubles.
When she has been thinking how to pay for the rent, without her expectation an old
couple voluntarily pays her 200 silver dollars to tide over the difficulties. But since
her character thrives in giving, she immediately accepts to pay to Mrs. Yang, the
Mother of Mr. Sun, to help Sun to get a pilot job. She tells Mrs. Yang : “For the man
without hope shall fly Mrs. Yang one of us at least shall be able to fly above all thus
Sun, the unemployed pilot, loves Shen Teh only for the sake of money which
he wants to get a pilot job in Peking. The director of the firm in Peking tells him that
he would get a job, if Sun gives him five hundred dollars. He will be employed by a
swindler who hires out to the highest bidder. He is caught in a set of contradictions.
He can only give himself upto love if he gives up his job. In spite of the fact that Sun
loves her money, Shen Teh still love him. She sings :
Shen Teh still believes that Sun is not wicked. She is still hopeful that she can
convince him, when she decides to help the old people who had helped her already
when she was in doldrums, Shen Teh dreams about marrying Sun which she could not
a sincere emotion. When Shui Ta affirms that Shen Teh is of independent thinking and
can distinguish between real love and false love. Sun dismisses his contention and
says that women will be always overtaken by the so called love of a man. He says :
In the capitalist society real love between man and woman is not possible. The
system also has the capacity to transform the feelings like love into a commodity. It
transforms everything into commodity. As Wang says ‘ The least good is most
fortunate’. (90) Every object is viewed from the utilitarian point of view. The play in
prostitute was blind to the emotion of love, feeling of love because, the relationship
between her and customers, has an exchange value. The capitalist system reduces
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Weideli says:
‘Love destroys the one who loves and yet it is the only chance for
freedom. Just the meeting of the two solitudes and two miserable
makes the world begin to brighten. During this moment of grace
all barriers that men set up against and between each other already
seen less absolute and necessary. 15
Shen Teh is not able to resist Sun and they want to marry. But the marriage
between the two does not take place. Sun tells that marriage will not take place till
Shui Ta arrives. Shen Teh knows that Shui Ta can not make his presence on the scene.
In the words of Alisa Solomon : “‘Shui Ta will never, can never, come at least not until
Shen Teh realises that Yang Sun will prevent her paying her debts in order to
When Shen Teh sees the carpenter’s child, who is abandoned by the carpenter
trying to eat something from fishing out of dust bin. She lifts the child and expresses
horror at the fate of the poor children. She also realises that she is pregnant now. She
proclaims:
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These lines reveal that Shen Teh’s pregnancy is teaching her lessons learnt
from Shui Ta’s experience. In a cruel and selfish world one must be cruel and selfish
to protect oneself and those are the laws. Keith A Dickson Observes :
‘As soon as she becomes pregnant her mother instinct, like that of
mother courage prompts her to obey the laws of the jungle. 18
In the beginning Shen Teh’s disguise as Shui Ta is for shorter period. As the
play progresses, the impersonation of Shen Teh as Shui Ta dominates the proceedings
in the play. Shen Teh’s pregnancy forces her to transform herself into Shui Ta. Her
dual personality serves to exertnalise an inner conflict between the altruistic moral self
and the competitive business self which is the inherent quality of the capitalism. Her
yard is again filled with people. As Shui Ta, she refuses to take care of the carpenter’s
Shui Ta starts a factory with stolen tobacco brought by the members of the
inevitable because Shen Teh’s difficulties become more acute and she should make a
‘The maintaining of the good half involves allowing the bad half
to come more and more to the fore, showing that giving is only
possible when profit has been achieved. The good half is affected
by this, because the bad half is out to separate her from those she
wants to help. .. The good person is isolated through the acts of
the bad ones. Shen The goodness become purely private as far
example her love for unborn child. The bad Shui Ta become more
and more public effacing good Shen The. 19
When the Gods visit Wang, they are unhappy about the wickedness of the
people. Wang asks them to relax their rules of judging the people Wang says : “For
instance, that only good will should be required instead of love, or fairness instead of
The ideals of the Gods are more utopian than human. They refuse to alter
Sun joins the factory run by Shui Ta, as a foreman. Shui Ta soon becomes a
Tobacco king, a successful capitalist paying starvation wages and over crowding the
living quarters of his workers. Beginning at the bottom, Sun works his way up in Shui
Ta’ factory until he is a manager. Shui Ta transforms him into a model citizen. There
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is a lot of irony in Mrs. Yang words, in appreciating Shui Ta’ harshness which made
The ruthlessness of the capitalist is not implemented with the help of muscle,
but with the help of brains. It means exploitation is done very so cleverly that the
exploited accept the exploitation without any protest. So, in the capitalist system the
exploiter requires a fair amount of ‘education’ to exploit the masses. Sun says :
‘I might point out that I have also got a fair education you know.
The overseer has the right ideals about the man, but being
uneducated he can not see what is good for the firm. Give me a
week’s trial, Mr. Shui Ta, and I think I can prove to you that my
brains are worth more to the firm than the mere strength of my
muscles. (90)
The irony in the above lines is that even education in the capitalist system
teaches how to exploit the people. The education teaches the ‘desirable qualities’ like
ruthlessness, harshness, the language’, so that one can become successful capitalist.
goodness in Shen The is thus shown to facilitate the rise of bourgeois. Shui Ta is at
an advantageous position by exploiting the poor. The answer to the question of the
Gods as to what has business to do with righteousness and worthy life, is that such a
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life in the present world is only available if one has good business. In the capitalism
In the final scene of the play Shui Ta is brought before a court of justice for the
alleged murder of his cousin Shen The.. In the trial scene Shui Ta’s character is
praised by the policeman, Shu Fu, and Mrs. Mitzu, who represent wealthy and
authority in the society. On the contrary he is criticised by the carpenter and others,
Three Gods act as Shui Ta’s judges. Shen Teh recognises them. Asking for the
court room to be cleared, she removes her mask and confesses her acts. She defends
The Gods are not angry. On the other hand, they are glad to find their good
human being again. They say that the acts of Shen Teh are not all wicked. Brecht
exposes contradiction among the Gods, The contradiction is between the Fist God and
the Second God, The second God seems to have understood the real problem of Shen
Teh when he says : ‘But how is she to go on living ?’(106) But the First God is not
prepared to admit the truth and says that the world can not be changed and the status
The decision of the God solves nothing. It is ironical that the omnipotent Gods
fail miserably in giving solution to Shen Teh’s problem. Their ideals of goodness can
not be implemented in the human world. The contradictions in the human society can
be solved only within the human society. The Gods are absurd in their ineptitude and
in their obstinate refusal to recognise the realities of the world in which men must live.
They have no real vision for the human society. As Walter H. Sokel rightly points
out:
Shen Teh is desperate. She is now worried about how she should go on living
and what will happen to her baby. When she protests that she can not survive without
Shui Ta, the Gods say that it may be permissible to use Shui Ta occasionally, once a
month. They once again ask her to be good and all will be well leaving troubled Shen
Teh alone, they ascend heavens on a pink cloud. Walter H. Sokel rightly points out:
So when the Gods fail to give a solution to Shen Teh’s problem, Brecht
represents the problem to the audience. At the end of the play in the Epilogue, an actor
The last line, nevertheless, shows Brecht’s strong urge to solve the dilemma
which splits man and divides human society. Brecht does not offer any solution to the
‘human comedy’ of how a good person can survive in a bad society. He does not
impose any decision on the audience. He makes the audience to think critically about
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this problem. He implicitly suggests the need to change the society. Alisa Solomon
observes:
‘ The play offers most profound lesson that the moral to which it is
usually reduced - in John Willets words ‘In a competitive society
goodness is often suicidal. Beyond that Good person teaches the
spectator what kind of engagement is required for considering this
simple sounding dilemma. It demands nothing less than a new
way of perceiving.’24
In a class ridden society, the values, ethics and terms for human relationships
are determined by the dominant class. How bourgeois society splits the individual into
public and private is also demonstrated by Brecht in his song ballet ‘ The Seven
Deadly Sins’. This is a story of two sisters, Anna I and Anna II. The two sisters on a
tour are on at our to raise money for a home for themselves and their family. Anna I
has beauty and talent, and merchandise which she has to sell. Her alter ego in the form
of her sister, Anna II warns her at every step not to give way natural desire for
The Seven Deadly Sins are pride, wrath, envy, lust, gluttony, avarice and sloth.
Brecht declares that these sins as virtues. They are sins only to the petty bourgeois
because under capitalist conditions he cannot afford to live a natural human life. Anna
I criticises her sister’s failure to meet the desire of the capitalist. There is a division
between those who toil to produce and those who consume them. The audience is
invited to acknowledge this split. The ballet is in the nature of parable. It comments
Brecht wants to show through this play that Shen Te’s dilemma cannot be
solved individually. Raymond Williams says that the play raises questions like ‘ Is not
sin against life to allow one self to be destroyed by cruelty, indifference and greed’ 25
The solution for human comedy of deciding what is good and what is bad lies
in the collective. As for Brecht, he is more concerned with good world rather than
with a good person. He sees ‘good’ and ‘bad’ not in terms of morality but in terms of
Brecht presents the human comedy of Shen Teh's dilemma with an open
demonstrating the puzzles of the world but not in solving it. He wants the spectators
As far as the technique of the play is concerned, Brecht makes use of Dialectics
as the principal tool of the epic narration in this play. The play is full of
contradictions. The main contradiction in the play is between the Gods and Shen Teh.
Throughout the play, Brecht exposes the contradiction between ideal world of Gods
and the capitalist world in which Shen Teh’s lives. Finally the contradiction is left
There is another contradiction between Shun Teh and Shui Ta, between
woman’s world and man’s world. The techniques he makes use of this play is
‘disguise’ as a tool to estrange the audience. Audiences are aware of the fact that it is
Shun Teh disguises who is playing the role of Shui Ta. Shen Teh disguises herself as a
161
Shui Ta in front of the audience. This technique leads the audience to question.
Raymond William says ‘Complex seeing’, he does through the dialectical relationship
between Shen Teh and Shui Ta. Shen Teh can not survive without Shui Ta.
The play is a parable. Because he himself said, parable is ‘far more artful’
than other forms. It allows him to subject the audience to pleasurable critique, by
making use of epic elements in the theatre. He can make familiar strange for example
the transformation Shen Teh, a prostitute, to a position of exploited Shui Ta is the best
example. Another example is Shen Teh loving ‘Sun’, in spite of the fact that Sun is not
faithful to her. Shen Teh’s character is believable but Shui Ta’s character is
unbelievable. The empathy shown by the audience towards Shen Teh, is balanced by
the tough mindedness of Shui Ta. The play demonstrate transformation in the
characters, i.e., exploiting into the exploited, of the tobacco shop into the factory, of
the unemployed flier into unrelenting foreman, the Gods into judges. But, is by
dialectical relationship between Shen Teh and Shui Ta, and the relationship with others
make the audience critical. The play’s emotional scenes are pricked by many songs
which make the audience alienated from the characters The scenes are episodic in
nature. The play ends with an appeal to the audience, to find an answer to the dilemma
REFERENCES
1. Bertolt Brecht Collected poem ed. John Willet and Ralph Manhesm
(London :Eyre Methuen, 1976) 235.
2. Ibid., 275
3. Ibid., 280
6. Walter Weideli Art of Bertolt Brecht (Tr) by Daniel Russel. (New York :
New York University Press, 1963) 91.
12. John Needle and Peter Thomson Brecht ‘In Search of a Theatre’ (Basil
Black Well: Oxford University Press, 1981) 185.
14. Walter H Sokel Brecht’s split characters and his sense of tragic in 20th
century views on Brecht ed by Peter Demetz (Engle Wood Cliff NJ
Prentice Hall, 1962) 130.
15. Walter Weideli. Art of Bertolt Brecht (Tr) by Daniel Russel. 92.
16. Alisa Solomon, ‘The Good Person of Szechwan Making Gender Strange’
Theatre Journal Vol. 25 No. 2 (94) 15.
22. Walter H. Sokel. Brecht’s split characters and his sense of tragic in 20th
Century of Views on Brecht ed by Peter Demetz 130.