On The Face of It
Q1. Who is Mr Lamb? How does Derry get into his garden?
Ans. Mr Lamb is an old man with a tin leg. His real leg was blown
off years ago during the war. He lives alone in his house. There is a
garden near the house. It has ripe crab apples looking orange and golden in
colour.
Mr Lamb is sitting in his garden when Derry
climbs over the garden wall to get into his garden. Though the gate is open,
the boy does not use it.
Q2. Do you think all this will change Derry’s attitude towards Mr Lamb?
Ans. Mr Lamb learns from Derry that the latter does not like being
near people. They stare at his face and feel afraid of him as half of it has
been burnt by acid and looks very ugly. Mr Lamb offers him a new way bf
thinking. He tells him about a person who was afraid of everything and locked
himself in a room. A picture fell off the wall on his head and killed him.
Derry finds that the old man says peculiar things. He is further surprised to
learn about the old man’s habits. He loves to read book. His house has many
books. There aren’t any curtains at the windows. He likes the light and the
darkness. He keeps the windows open to hear the wind. Derry says that he too
likes to hear the sound of rain on the roof. But he also hears people talking
about him and his future. The old man tells him that he has all the God-given
organs. He will get on the way he wants, like the rest. He could even get on
better than them, if he made a firm decision. He tells Derry that hatred is
worse than acid because it can bum man from inside. He should not worry about
his burned face or what people say about it. All this brings a positive change
in Derry’s attitude towards Mr Lamb. He promises to come back after informing
his mother. He asks Mr Lamb about his life and friends and recognises his
loneliness and disappointment. He keeps his promise and returns only to find Mr
Lamb lying on the ground.
Q1.
What is it that draws Derry towards Mr Lamb in spite of himself?
Ans. Both Derry and Mr Lamb
suffer from physical impairment. Derry has one side of his face disfigured and
burnt by acid. The old man has a tin leg because his real leg got blown off
during the war. Apart from these physical disabilities, Derry finds signs of
loneliness and disappointment in Mr Lamb’s life. The old man tries to overcome
these feelings but the sense of alienation felt by him is more painful than the
pain caused by physical disability.
Derry tries to avoid meeting people because they consider his face frightful
and ugly. They avoid him as they are afraid of him. His parents seem worried
about him and talk about him and his future.
Mr Lamb provides him a new approach to things. He tells him to see, hear, feel
and think about things around him. He should not hate others. Hatred is worse
than acid because it bums the inside. He has all the God-given limbs. He must
take a firm decision and work towards it. He will succeed. He should not be
afraid of people and they will not be afraid of him. All these factors draw
Derry towards Mr Lamb.
Q2. In which section of the play does Mr Lamb
display signs of loneliness and disappointment? What are the ways in which Mr
Lamb tries to overcome these feelings?
Ans. It is in the
middle section of the first scene of the play that Mr Lamb displays signs of
loneliness and disappointment. He says that when it is a bit cooler, he will
get the ladder and a stick, and pull down those crab apples. He makes jelly.
Derry could help him. Then he says he is interested in anybody or anything that
God made. It may be a person, flower, fruit, grass, weeds or rubbish. There are
plenty of things to look at. Some of them are his crab apples or the weeds or a
spider climbing up a silken ladder or his tall sun-flowers. He also likes to
talk and have a company. He has a hive of bees. He hears them singing. He sits
in the sun and reads books. He likes the light and the darkness. He hears the
wind coming through open windows. There aren’t any curtains at the windows as
they either shut things out or shut things in. These are the ways in which Mr
Lamb tries to overcome his loneliness.
3. The actual pain or inconvenience caused by a physical impairment is
often much less than the sense of alienation felt by the person with
disabilities. What is the kind of behaviour that the person expects from
others?
Ans. The play ‘On The Face Of It’ focuses our
attention on the physical pain and mental anguish of the persons suffering from
some physical impairment. The playwright, Susan Hill, presents the two
leading‘characters—an old man and a small boy—having different sorts of physical
disabilities.
The old man has a tin leg. It did hurt him when
it came off. Then he got used to it. He feels pain now and then in wet weather.
He finds it inconvenient to run, to climb a tree or a ladder. He lives all
alone in a big house with a garden.
The boy has one side of his face badly burnt by
acid. He felt the physical pain then. After discharge from hospital, he feels
hurt at the attitude of the people. They regard his face as horrible and ugly,
show signs of being scared and avoid his presence. In short, he is disliked, if
not hated. He is not accepted as an ordinary member of society. So, he does not
like people to look at him.
It is clear that the sense of alienation that
these disabled persons feel causes them constant pain. Such persons expect kind
and considerate behaviour from others. They do not want tears, sympathy or
pity. They dislike being pointed at, nicknamed, mocked at or made a fun •: of.
They only demand a reasonable bahaviour from others, full of appreciation of
their difficulties.
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