Blanche has been drinking heavily after receiving the bus ticket from Stanley.
Mitch turns up to the house despite not accepting his
invitation to Blanche’s birthday meal and it
is obvious that he has been drinking too.
Blanche tries to pretend that she isn’t upset by Mitch’s
refusal and attempts to make conversation, however Mitch’s anger at Blanche’s deceit is apparent.
Mitch eventually rips the lantern off of the lightbulb and forces Blanche
into the light so he can see her clearly which greatly upsets Blanche and leads
to her confessing the truth about her past.
At the very end of the scene the Mexican Woman appears,
triggering flashbacks for Blanche, and Mitch attempts to physically control
Blanche but leaves when she threatens to scream fire.
Key Quotations
“Blanche is seated in a tense, hunched
position in a bedroom chair that she has recovered with diagonal green and
white stripes. She has on her scarlet satin robe. On the table beside the chair
is a bottle of liquor and a glass.”
This shows that Blanche is anxious and on-edge about
events that happened in Scene 8 and readers are reminded of Scene 1 where
Blanche sits in the same way. The recovering of a chair shows us that Blanche
is planning on staying at Stella and Stanley’s and so she has made the room how
she likes it. Also the action of covering something with fabric could be
representative of Blanche and her façade as she is covering something old (her
present self) with something that makes the object appear to be new (her
expensive clothes, her jewellery etc). Blanche is wearing her “scarlet satin
robe” which suggests connotations of danger and seduction. The bottle of liquor
beside her reinforces the idea that she uses alcohol as an escape and to numb
her pain.
“Why, you haven’t even shaven! The
unforgivable insult to a lady! But I forgive you. I forgive you because it’s
such a relief to see you.”
Here Blanche is declaring her forgiveness however the
crime Mitch has committed by not shaving is far less than Blanche’s continuous deceit.
By describing it as “the unforgivable insult to a lady” it gives the impression
that Blanche is superior to Mitch and that he should be asking for her
forgiveness. The use of the word “the” implies that visiting a lady unshaven is
the worst thing a gentleman could do. The anadiplosis of “I forgive you” shows
that Blanche is desperate for Mitch to know that she has forgiven him.
“I don’t want realism. I’ll tell you
what I want. Magic! Yes, yes, magic! I try to give that to people. I
misrepresent things to them. I don’t tell the truth, I tell what ought to be the truth.”
Here Blanche confesses that she cannot accept realism
and her present situation and self. She is so desperate for “magic” that she
has created fantasies to hide any signs of the real world and has now gotten to
the point where they have become her world. Blanche says that she tells what
ought to be the truth to herself and others in order to reinforce her fantasies
and to try and forget about her past. She strives for control over her life and
so in order to try and control events that have happened in her past, she
attempts to control her present and her future.
“Yes I had many intimacies with
strangers. After the death of Allan- the intimacies with strangers was all I
seemed able to fill my empty head with…”
Blanche refers to her promiscuous activities by using a
euphemism which she repeats. This again shows that she cannot accept the raw
truth and so by using an euphemism she is convincing herself that her actions
were not as bad as they actually were. Usually people say that they were trying
to fill their empty hearts so by Blanche saying that she was trying to fill her
“empty head”, it could be implying that she craved protection and a sense of
worth more than love. Blanche wasn’t looking for love after the death of Allan,
she was desperately trying to find someone who made her feel protected and
worth something even if it was only for a matter of hours.
“Well, I needed somebody, too. I
thanked God for you, because you seemed to be gentle- a cleft in the rock of
the world that I could hide in!”
The biblical reference here of “a cleft in the rock of the world that I could hide in” suggests
that Blanche saw Mitch as her form of
protection against the world. He was someone she found solace and comfort in
because she could easily fool him with her façade which enabled her to hide her
real self. Blanche says that Mitch “seemed” to be gentle which implies that she
either questions her judgement or no longer believes that he can be gentle
after the way he has treated her.
“Death- I used to sit here and she used
to sit over there and death was as close as you are… We didn’t dare even admit
we had ever heard of it! The opposite is desire.”
Here we assume that “she” is referring to Stella and
that Blanche is describing her childhood in Belle Reve where she lost her
family to death. She says “We didn’t dare even admit we had ever heard of it”
which suggests that Blanche and Stella were fearful that they would be the next
ones to be taken away by death. Blanche states that the opposite of death is
desire which shows that her views towards desire are negative as throughout her
life she has been led to believe that the only outcome of desire is death.
Blanche has never experienced anything where desire has led to a positive
outcome such as love which is why, at the beginning of the play, she is so
shocked to see that Stella and Stanley’s desire for each other has lead to
marriage and a baby.
The Mexican Woman
At the end of the scene a Mexican Woman appears, selling
flowers for the dead. There is speculation as to whether or not this woman is
real or whether she is merely a figment of Blanche’s imagination as Blanche is the only character in the
play to have any kind of communication with her. Real or not, the Mexican Woman
triggers a set of flashbacks for Blanche where she describes events and
conversations that we assume took place during her childhood at Belle Reve. This section in the
scene and in the play as a whole really highlights the extent to which Blanche’s mental stability has
declined.