Dear students,
Welcome to your study of "Arms and The man" a drama by George Bernard Shaw. It's a very entertaining play - and you can check with the class 12s if they find it so ! I hope you do !!!
Please have a separate note book for "Arms and The man" than you have for the Poems and Sort Stories.
It is important that you know the the plot - the way the story unfolds in the play - i.e. the sequence of events.
You need to know this accurately.
Learn the spellings of the names of the characters.
Please write the following Play Summary in your note books - writing is a means to learning - please think about what you are writing as you write !
I hope you like the story and the play !
Character List
Captain
Bluntschli A professional soldier from
Switzerland who is serving in the Serbian army. He is thirty-four years old,
and he is totally realistic about the stupidity of war.
Raina
Petkoff The romantic idealist of
twenty-three who views war in terms of noble and heroic deeds.
Sergius
Saranoff The extremely handsome young
Bulgarian officer who leads an attack against the Serbs which was an
overwhelming success.
Major
Petkoff The inept, fifty-year-old
father of Raina; he is wealthy by Bulgarian standards, but he is also unread,
uncouth, and incompetent.
Catherine
Petkoff Raina's mother; she looks like
and acts like a peasant, but she wears fashionable dressing gowns and tea gowns
all the time in an effort to appear to be a Viennese lady.
Louka The Petkoffs' female servant; she is young
and physically attractive, and she uses her appearance for ambitious
preferment.
Play Summary
The play begins in
the bedroom of Raina Petkoff in a Bulgarian town in 1885, during the Serbo-Bulgarian
War. As the play opens, Catherine
Petkoff and her daughter, Raina,
have just heard that the Bulgarians have scored a tremendous victory in a
cavalry charge led by Raina's fiancé, Major
Sergius Saranoff, who is in the same regiment as Raina's father, Major Paul Petkoff. Raina is so
impressed with the noble deeds of her fiancé that she fears that she might
never be able to live up to his nobility. At this very moment, the maid, Louka, rushes in with the news that the
Serbs are being chased through the streets and that it is necessary to lock up
the house and all of the windows. Raina promises to do so later, and Louka
leaves. But as Raina is reading in bed, shots are heard, there is a noise at
the balcony window, and a bedraggled enemy soldier
with a gun appears and threatens to kill her if she makes a sound. After the
soldier and Raina exchange some words, Louka calls from outside the door; she
says that several soldiers want to search the house and investigate a report
that an enemy Serbian soldier was seen climbing her balcony. When Raina hears
the news, she turns to the soldier. He says that he is prepared to die, but he
certainly plans to kill a few Bulgarian soldiers in her bedroom before he dies.
Thus, Raina impetuously decides to hide him. The soldiers investigate, find no
one, and leave. Raina then calls the man out from hiding; she nervously and
absentmindedly sits on his gun, but she learns that it is not loaded; the
soldier carries no cartridges. He explains that instead of carrying bullets, he
always carries chocolates into battle. Furthermore, he is not an enemy; he is a
Swiss, a professional soldier hired by Serbia. Raina gives him the last of her
chocolate creams, which he devours, maintaining that she has indeed saved his
life. Now that the Bulgarian soldiers are gone, Raina wants the "chocolate cream soldier" (as
she calls him) to climb back down the drainpipe, but he refuses to; whereas he
could climb up, he hasn't the strength to climb down. When Raina goes after her
mother to help, the "chocolate cream soldier" crawls into Raina's bed
and falls instantly asleep. In fact, when they re-enter, he is sleeping so
soundly that they cannot awaken him.
Act II begins four months later in
the garden of Major Petkoff's house. The middle-aged servant Nicola is lecturing Louka on the
importance of having proper respect for the upper class, but Louka has too
independent a soul to ever be a "proper" servant. She has higher
plans for herself than to marry someone like Nicola, who, she insists, has the
"soul of a servant." Major Petkoff arrives home from the war, and his
wife Catherine greets him with two bits of information: she suggests that
Bulgaria should have annexed Serbia, and she tells him that she has had an
electric bell installed in the library. Major Sergius Saranoff, Raina's fiancé
and leader of the successful cavalry charge, arrives, and in the course of
discussing the end of the war, he and Major Petkoff recount the now-famous
story of how a Swiss soldier escaped by climbing up a balcony and into the
bedroom of a noble Bulgarian woman. The women are shocked that such a crude
story would be told in front of them. When the Petkoffs go into the house,
Raina and Sergius discuss their love for one another, and Raina romantically
declares that the two of them have found a "higher love."
When Raina goes to get her hat so
that they can go for a walk, Louka comes in, and Sergius asks if she knows how
tiring it is to be involved with a "higher love." Then he immediately
tries to embrace the attractive maid. Since he is being so blatantly familiar,
Louka declares that Miss Raina is no better than she; Raina, she says, has been
having an affair while Sergius was away, but she refuses to tell Sergius who
Raina's lover is, even though Sergius accidently bruises Louka's arm while
trying to wrest a confession from her. When he apologizes, Louka insists that
he kiss her arm, but Sergius refuses and, at that moment, Raina re-enters.
Sergius is then called away, and Catherine enters. The two ladies discuss how incensed
they both are that Sergius related the tale about the escaping soldier. Raina,
however, doesn't care if Sergius hears about it; she is tired of his stiff
propriety. At that moment, Louka announces the presence of a Swiss officer with
a carpetbag, calling for the lady of the house. His name is Captain Bluntschli. Instantly, they
both know he is the "chocolate cream soldier" who is returning the
Major's old coat that they disguised him in. As they make rapid, desperate
plans to send him away, Major Petkoff hails Bluntschli and greets him warmly as
the person who aided them in the final negotiations of the war; the old Major
insists that Bluntschli must their houseguest until he has to return to
Switzerland.
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