Shaw’s Attitude to Marriage and Family Life as Revealed in You Never Can Tell
In You
Never Can Tell, Shaw displays his positive attitude to marriage, though
elsewhere he considers marriage as a ‘mistake’. According to Shaw, marriage and
family life should be based on mutual understanding, not on sentiment and
emotion.
In You
Never Can Tell, we find the conflict between two sorts of family life
-one is typified by Mrs. Clandon and the other is typified by Mr. Crampton.
When her children insist that they want to know who their father is, Mrs.
Clandon tells them about the ideals of family life. She says that there are two
sorts of family life one is based on mutual respect and the other is dominated
by husbands. Mrs. Clandon stands for the first kind of life which is based on
mutual respect. In this kind of life, every member of the family can enjoy his/
her rights to independence and privacy. In the second kind of life, the husband
becomes a domestic tyrant who denies his wife and children their rights. He is
suspicious of his wife and opens her letters and demands an explanation of
every expenditure of her money and time. Being victim of the tyranny of the
husband, the wife does the same to her children; she deprives her children of
their independence and privacy. Family life should be based on duty, affection,
morality and religion. But when a father or mother interferes with his/ her
children’s work, life becomes a round of tyranny, jealousy and suspicion on the
part of the parents and lying, rebellion and resentment on the part of the
children. Mr. Crampton stands for this second kind of life.
Mr. Crampton and his wife were a miserable married couple. Because of the disparity of taste and temperament, she seeks judicial separation. To protect her children from the tyranny of her husband, she left her husband and began to live in Madeira with her three children. She even changes her name from Mrs. Crampton to Mrs. Clandon. She also changes the names of her two daughters Sophronia to Gloria and Dorothea to Dolly, She teaches her children her own ideals. But after a long gap of eighteen years when she meets her husband, her character begins to change. Now she wants feelings from her husband. Mr. Crampton, on the other hand, has passed through a process of moral regeneration after his separation from his wife and children. So, at last they get reconciled. Through their reconciliation, Shaw shows that family life should not be dissolved and it must be based on wisdom and understanding, not emotion.
In You Never Can Tell, the waiter is the
mouthpiece of Shaw. He says, “Matrimony requires consideration and judgement,
but not emotion.” After Valentine’s engagement to Gloria, he tastes the
bitterness of a married man because he has no partner in the dance. The waiter
then encourages Valentine not to be depressed and delivers the message of the
drama. The message is that young men and women at the point of marrying regard
marriage as a source of dread but after all marriages are not so unhappy and
uncomfortable as they think. Marriages create a paradise on earth by producing
happiness and comfort to both the husband and the wife. It is only in a few
cases that marriages prove unhappy. But this does not mean that marriage should
be condemned indiscriminately.
thank you for sharing nice story.https://bit.ly/3znl6xv
ReplyDeleteIt was very straightforward easily understandable. I like it
ReplyDeletevery easy. thank you
ReplyDelete