Preview

George Bernard Shaw - Pygmalion

Powerful Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1104 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
George Bernard Shaw - Pygmalion
George Bernard Shaw
Pygmalion
Pygmalion is a play set in London at the beginning of the 20th century. The play is about Eliza Doolittle, an illiterate flower girl, who is taken off the street by Professor Higgins to become a lady. The story begins on a rainy night in Covent Garden where Mr. Higgins meets Colonel Pickering (both men are experts on linguistics) and also Eliza Doolittle. Higgins bets Pickering that he could transform this flower girl into a well spoken woman, one that could be passed off as a duchess at an ambassador´s reception.
The following day, Eliza comes to Mr. Higgins´ laboratory because she desires to speak genteel English so as to become a lady in a flower shop. Pickering starts to be interested in this experiment and says he will pay for the lessons. Higgins accepts Pickering´s offer and asks Mrs. Pearce, Higgins’s housekeeper, to burn all Eliza´s clothes and help Eliza bath.
The first lesson begins the next day and the young girl is enthusiastic and keen on learning. She improves very quickly even though Higgins keeps telling her she is not trying enough. After several weeks of the training, Higgins decides to try her out somewhere among people who will tell the difference if Eliza makes an accent mistake. Fortunately, she does not make one and so she can come to the ambassador´s reception, where she performs perfectly. Higgins wins his bet but still treats Eliza in an unfriendly way. Eliza realizes that she has only been a bet for Higgins and gets frustrated when they all come home from the reception. Consequently, she shouts at him and decides to leave him in order to stay at Higgins´s mother´s house. The next morning, Higgins and Pickering visit Higgins´s mother to search for Eliza. Finally, Eliza announces her plans to marry a guy named Freddy and to be independent on Higgins.
Eliza Doolittle – a young uneducated girl who sells flowers on the street
Professor Henry Higgins – a professor of phonetics, a forty-year-old bachelor

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    George Bernard Shaw Essay

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages

    In an excerpt taken from a letter by George Bernard Shaw, Shaw displays much lighthearted irony through his use of biblical allusions, merry diction, and varying syntax in order to mirror his ironic perception of death. In contrast to the public, death to Shaw does not signal an eternal end, but instead a glorious transition from life to an ethereal world. Throughout the excerpt, his admiration for his mother is also glorified, allowing Shaw’s readers to comprehend the close relations Shaw shared with his mother.…

    • 586 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    From the begging Eliza tells Lucy that even if she behaves coquettishly, “they proceed from and innocent heart” (Foster 844). We can see that Eliza knows about her coquettish tendencies and even Sanford immediately identifies her as a coquette (Foster 851). Her justification of such behaviors shows that she doesn’t see the harm in it even though she is warned many times by Lucy and Mrs. Richman. Mrs. Richman tells her that Sanford is a libertine who destroys families (Foster 852). “Beware of the delusions of fancy!” says Mrs. Richman (Foster 852). “Their evil propensities of their minds will invariably dominate.” Says Lucy (Foster 858). The warnings somewhat affects Eliza’s behavior but she keeps being a coquette even though Mrs. Richman warned her about exercising too much freedom will lead to bad things. “Though strowed with flowers… it is, after all, a slippery, thorny path.” Says Mrs. Richman (Foster 848). After losing Boyer for good, Eliza doesn’t follow Lucy’s advice of forgetting all former connections but instead starts seeing Sanford again (Foster 904). Second, it is Major Sanford’s fault for seducing Eliza even though he has no intention in marrying her (Foster 854). He wants to keep her around for his own satisfaction and he doesn’t want to see her with another man (Foster 861). He reminds Eliza how marrying Boyer will subject her to restrained and confined life (Foster 861). This made Eliza entertains the thought of finding…

    • 569 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Shaw creates his own version of the Pygmalion myth by translating this allegory to reflect society in Victorian England. In doing so, he exposes the inadequacy of myth and of romance in several ways. For one, he deliberately twists the myth so that the play does not conclude as euphorically or conveniently, hanging instead in unusual ambiguity. Throughout the play, Shaw portrays the characters belabored by the trivial details of life like napkins and neckties, and of how one is going to find a taxi on a rainy night. These details keep the story grounded and decidedly less romantic. Society in Victorian…

    • 1277 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Shaw notes the unrecognized weaknesses or threats that has the potential to impaire the leader's success as blind spots. He highly suggestes that most of leadership failures are due to "black swan events" that are outside of the leader's control. wherase some failures are the result of situational blindness.…

    • 165 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Haley searches for Eliza hopelessly, as she is drove on by fear of losing her child and reaches the river swiftly. Remarkably, Eliza crosses the river by jumping from one ice flow to the next. After reaching the shore in Ohio, Mr. Symmes, a man who has witnessed her brave act, listens to her story. Luckily, Symmes hates slave traders and accordingly takes Eliza and Harry to the house of Senator Bird, where they receive food and lodging. Ironically, Bird has just voted for a bill barring aid to runaway slaves, but the Senator is rather inspired by Eliza's story. He therefore changes his opinions and takes the fugitives to a Quaker settlement, where they stay with the Halliday family. As luck would have it, Eliza's husband has sought refuge in this same community, and the young family is reunited. The Quakers assist the family in boarding a ship for Canada before Haley's hired slave hunters, Loker and Marks, can apprehend them.…

    • 721 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eliza, Mrs. Shelby's personal maid servant is married to George Harris, a slave from the next plantation over. Together they have a son named Harry. On the Shelby plantation Eliza has always been…

    • 1047 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Victorian England, especially London had a severe problem with poverty. Many people in London lived in poverty. Eliza is one of these many people that lived in poverty during the Victorian era in London. In the play Pygmalion and musical My Fair Lady, the main character, Eliza, is shown to be poor and living in poverty. Both the play and musical show how she lived in poverty and how her poorness hindered her from attaining a job. Since she cannot speak well she can’t get a job as a lady in a flower shop. Because she could not get a job she had to resort to selling flowers on the street. Seeking help to learn how to speak properly, she goes to Henry Higgins, a phonetics professor. He teaches Eliza how to speak properly and how to act like a lady over the course of six months. After learning how to speak and act properly, this raises Eliza’s status because she no longer appears to be poor. Poverty during…

    • 1752 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Pygmalion Act 4

    • 382 Words
    • 1 Page

    become of me?” What are Eliza’s options, given by the setting of the play? What are…

    • 382 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Better Essays

    Eliza is so set on protecting her son that she doesn't eat or sleep. Her son asks her why she won't eat or sleep and she tells him that she can't do either until she knows he is safe. At one point, Eliza is hiding in a tavern with her son while he sleeps. Haley, Sam, and Andy are out looking for Eliza and her son. Sam sees Eliza looking outside as they're about to pass by the tavern. Sam makes it look like the wind blew his hat off and makes loud noises to get Eliza's attention and to distract Haley so that he doesn't see Eliza. Haley sees Eliza, so she grabs her son and runs out of the tavern, to the river, and ends up jumping across the icy river just so Haley couldn't get to her son. She ended up cutting her feet on the ice, which shows how far she'll go to protect her son. (Stowe 137, 146 – 149, 55 – 57,…

    • 1632 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    The play deals with an inspector, named Goole, who arrives by the Birling family, who is celebrating Sheila's engagement to Gerald Croft. He tells about Eva Smith's suicide. After lots of questions it turns out that they are all more or less responsible for this tragically death and after the inspector left they find out that he wasn't a real inspector and that no girl died.…

    • 1173 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Eliza Makepeace at a young age lost her mother to sickness and became the adult figure looking out for her mentally ill brother Sammy. Until after playing a game in the thick fogged, streets of London, Sammy was killed in an accident, soon after Eliza was taken to her uncle’s manor to live. It was here that she discovered Rose Mountrachet her cousin who became her one and only confidant. Rose was the only person she had in her life who cared for her. “For in the years since Eliza had been plucked from her lonely London life and transplanted to the grand and mysterious Blackhurst, Rose had become a soul mate.” Eliza lived at the Blackhurst Manor for years after that growing closer to Rose and becoming an individual. It is not until Rose leaves for a trip to America with her mother that Eliza starts to grow more reserved. She becomes more interested in exploring the maze and the secret garden at the end of it. She becomes fascinated by the secret garden and the cottage beside it. "It was a garden, a walled garden. Overgrown but with beautiful bones visible still. Someone had cared for this garden once. The remains of two paths snaked back and forth, intertwined like the lacing on an Irish dancing shoe. Fruit trees had been espaliered around the sides, and wires zigzagged from the top of one wall to the top of…

    • 1538 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Better Essays

    Higgins, boasting his skills in phonetics, tells Pickering that he can pass Eliza as a duchess just by teaching her proper speech. As Eliza hears this it sparks an interest in her to become more. Later Pickering makes a wager; if Eliza is passed off as a duchess at a garden party, he will cover all of the costs of the teachings.…

    • 1254 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    A Room with a View

    • 2692 Words
    • 11 Pages

    4. Plot Summary: Lucy Honeychurch and her cousin, Miss Bartlett, are on holiday in Florence. They meet Mr. Emerson and his son George, who offer them their rooms, which, unlike theirs, have a view. Lucy is torn between being conventional or freethinking, like the Emerson’s. Then, one day George kisses her passionately in a field of violets. Miss Bartlett sees this and she and Lucy leave Florence, promising to keep everything a secret. In England Lucy agrees to marry Cecil Vyse, a cultured but cool and passionless man. Lucy comes to realize that she longs for freedom and passion, which a conventional and prejudiced man like Cecil can never give her, and she breaks off her engagement. The novel ends with Mr. Emerson pleading with Lucy to follow her heart. She understands he is right and she marries George. They go back to the pension in Florence, to their room with a view. Her family and friends do not approve, but Lucy does not care. She has done…

    • 2692 Words
    • 11 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Henry is talking with two guys, who he is trying to sell his cattle to them for a good price. Elisa is in her garden tending to her chrysanthemums (her babies). After Henry and the two guys come to an agreement Henry comes up to the fence and comments about how nice her chrysanthemums look. Elisa then states that her mother also has the same gift with gardening. Henry then suggests they go out to dinner. Elisa agrees then Henry jokingly mentions going to the fights. Once Henry goes back to work on gathering up the cattle he just sold, as he dose tattered cover wagon driven by a tinker pulls up to the house. The tinker asks Elisa if there are any pots that need to be repair. She tells him no many times, and then the tinker notices and praises Elisa’s pride and joy, her chrysanthemums. At the praise she gets from him about her chrysanthemums her mood changes from slight irritation to delight. The tinker tells Elisa that there is a woman down his route that would love to have chrysanthemums like she has. So Elisa puts some sprouts she has in a red flower pot with damp sand. She tells him how to take care of them. Then she finds two saucepans for the tinker to fix before he goes on his way. With Elisa on a confidence bust she heads inside to get ready for her date with her husband. As they leave for dinner in their roadster, Elisa notices the chrysanthemum sprouts that she gave the tinker on the side of the road and ask her husband if they can…

    • 1181 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Pygmalion summery

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages

    We are introduced to Professor Henry Higgins’ house and his work. Eliza turns up at the door asking for phonetic lessons for her to become a lady. Mrs. Pearce is very skeptical, but Higgins and Pickering agree to do it as some kind of experiment to see if they really can pass her off as a duchess. Eliza’s father, Alfred Doolittle is now introduced and comes asking for money after his daughter. Eliza enters again already transformed and her father doesn’t even recognize her.…

    • 454 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays

Related Topics