PYGMALION SUMMARY-SECOND YEAR FOUNDATION ENGLISH-600 WORDS
Higgins and Pickering are just resting from a full morning of discussion when Eliza Doolittle shows up at the door, to the tremendous doubt of the discerning housekeeper Mrs. Pearce, and the surprise of the two gentlemen. Prompted by his careless brag about making her into a duchess the night before, she has come to take lessons from Higgins, so that she may sound genteel enough to work in a flower shop rather than sell at the corner of Tottenham Court Road. As the conversation progresses, Higgins alternates between making fun of the poor girl and threatening her with a broomstick beating, which only causes her to howl and holler, upsetting Higgins' civilized company to a considerable degree. Pickering is much kinder and considerate of her feelings, even going so far as to call her "Miss Doolittle" and to offer her a seat. Pickering is piqued by the prospect of helping Eliza, and bets Higgins that if Higgins is able to pass Eliza off as a duchess at the Ambassador's garden party, then he, Pickering, will cover the expenses of the experiment.
This act is made up mostly of a long and animated three-(sometimes four-)way argument over the character and the potential of the indignant Eliza. At one point, incensed by Higgins' heartless insults, she threatens to leave, but the clever professor lures her back by stuffing her mouth with a chocolate, half of which he eats too to prove to her that it is not poisoned. It is agreed upon that Eliza will live with Higgins for six months, and be schooled in the speech and manners of a lady of high class. Things get started when Mrs. Pearce takes her upstairs for a bath.
COMMANTARY
Even though Higgins is immediately obvious as the Pygmalion figure in this
play, what this act reveals is that there is no way his phonetic magic could do
a complete job of changing Eliza on its own. What we see here is that Mrs.
Pearce and Colonel Pickering are also informal Pygmalions, and with much less
braggadocio (the alliteration of Pygmalion, Pearce, and Pickering would support
this notion). Only with Mrs. Pearce working on the girl's appearance and
manners, and with Pickering working, albeit unknowingly, on her self-respect
and dignity, will Eliza Doolittle become a whole duchess package, rather than
just a rough-mannered common flower girl who can parrot the speech of a
duchess. We learn in this scene, quite significantly, that while Higgins may be
a brilliant phonetician, Mrs. Pearce finds fault with his constant swearing,
forgetful manners, quarrelsome nature, and other unpleasant habits. His own
hold on polite respectability is tenuous at best, and it is only his
reputation, and his fundamental lack of malice that keeps him from being
disliked by others. If Higgins cannot be a Pygmalion on his own, and is such an
untidy, mannerless Pygmalion at that, then the obvious question posed to us is
if Pygmalion, the transformer of others, can himself be transformed. Implicit
in this question is another: whether it could be imperviousness to change,
rather than superior knowledge, which differentiates Pygmalion from Galatea.This act shows Higgins as an incorrigible scientist. He is not only "violently interested in everything that can be studied as a scientific subject," but interested in them only as subjects of scientific study. For that reason, when "quite a common girl" is said to at his door, Higgins thinks it is a lucky happenstance that will allow him to show Pickering the way he works. When he sees it is Eliza, he chases her away, for, having learned all he can about the Lisson Grove accent, he cannot see how she can be of any more use to him. Later, his mind seizes upon her as being "no use to anybody but me."
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