Read Online and Download Ebook The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett
Starting from visiting this website, you have tried to start nurturing reading a book The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett This is specialized site that sell hundreds compilations of books The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett from whole lots sources. So, you will not be tired any more to pick guide. Besides, if you additionally have no time to search the book The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett, merely sit when you remain in workplace and open up the web browser. You could find this The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett inn this web site by connecting to the internet.
The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett
Subsequent exactly what we will certainly use in this short article about The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett You understand really that this publication is coming as the very best vendor publication today. So, when you are actually a good viewers or you're followers of the author, it does will certainly be amusing if you do not have this book. It implies that you have to get this publication. For you who are beginning to learn about something brand-new as well as really feel curious concerning this publication, it's simple after that. Just get this publication and really feel just how this book will certainly give you much more interesting lessons.
This publication comes with the unique preference of the book composed. The expert author of this The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett has generally makes a great publication. However, that's not just around wonderful book. This is additionally the problem in which the book gives very fascinating materials to get over. When you actually intend to see just how this book is given and also provided, you can join a lot more with us. We will certainly give you the web link of this book soft data.
A brand-new experience could be acquired by checking out a publication The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett Even that is this The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett or various other publication compilations. We offer this publication since you could locate a lot more things to urge your skill and also expertise that will certainly make you better in your life. It will certainly be likewise beneficial for individuals around you. We suggest this soft file of the book here. To recognize ways to get this publication The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett, find out more below.
Now, when you have another concept to choose the book, just what you can do? It will be much better and also less complicated to discover The History Boys: A Play By Alan Bennett in this web site since we give you the direct connect to go to guide site. It will certainly be a lot easier and faster to get it. Below, soft file will actually help you to save and also read it every time you desire. Obviously, it will certainly not restrict you to review it in specific location.
Review
“Nothing could diminish the incendiary achievement of this subtle, deep-wrought and immensely funny play about the value and meaning of education . . . In short, a superb, life-enhancing play.” ―The Guardian
“Brilliantly funny . . . The History Boys is moving, disquieting: one follows it with a heart brimful . . . His finest work in decades.” ―Financial Times
About the Author
Alan Bennett is a renowned playwright and essayist whose screenplay for The Madness of King George was nominated for an Academy Award. He lives in London, England.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
The History Boys: A Play
Act OneIrwin is in a wheelchair, in his forties, addressing three or four unidentified MPs.IRWIN This is the tricky one.The effect of the bill will be to abolish trial by jury in at least half the cases that currently come before the courts and will to a significant extent abolish the presumption of innocence.Our strategy should therefore be to insist that the bill does not diminish the liberty of the subject but amplifies it; that the true liberty of the subject consists in the freedom to walk the streets unmolested etc., etc., secure in the knowledge that if a crime is committed it will be promptly and sufficiently punished and that far from circumscribing the liberty of the subject this will enlarge it.I would try not to be shrill or earnest. An amused tolerance always comes over best, particularly on television. Paradox works well and mists up the windows, which is handy. 'The loss of liberty is the price we pay for freedom' type thing.School. That's all it is. In my case anyway. Back to school.
Though the general setting is a sixth-form classroom in a boys' school in the eighties in the north of England, when Hector first comes in, a figure in motor-cycle leathers and helmet, the stage is empty.His sixth-formers, eight boys of seventeen or eighteen, come briskly on and take Hector out of his motor-cyclegear, each boy removing an item and as he does so presenting it to the audience with a flourish.LOCKWOOD (with gauntlets) Les gants.AKTHAR (with a scarf) L'écharpe.RUDGE Le blouson d'aviateur.Finally the helmet is removed.TIMMS Le casque.The taking-off of the helmet reveals Hector (which is both his surname and his nickname) as a schoolmaster of fifty or so.Dakin, a handsome boy, holds out a jacket.DAKIN Permettez-moi, monsieur.Hector puts on the jacket.HECTOR Bien fait, mes enfants. Bien fait.Hector is a man of studied eccentricity. He wears a bow tie.Classroom.Now fades the thunder of the youth of England clearing summer's obligatory hurdles.Felicitations to you all. Well done, Scripps! Bravo, Dakin! Crowther, congratulations. And Rudge, too. Remarkable. All, all deserve prizes. All, all have done that noble and necessary thing, you have satisfied the examiners of the Joint Matriculation Board, and now, proudly jingling your A Levels, those longed-for emblems of your conformity, you come before me once again to resume your education.
RUDGE What were A Levels, then?HECTOR Boys, boys, boys.A Levels, Rudge, are credentials, qualifications, the footings of your CV. Your Cheat's Visa. Time now for the bits in between. You will see from the timetable that our esteemed Headmaster has given these periods the euphemistic title --Posner looks up the word in the dictionary.-- of General Studies.POSNER 'Euphemism ... substitution of mild or vague or roundabout expression for a harsh or direct one.'HECTOR A verbal fig-leaf. The mild or vague expression being General Studies. The harsh or direct one, Useless Knowledge. The otiose -- (Points at Posner.) -- the trash, the department of why bother?POSNER 'Otiose: serving no practical purpose, without function.'HECTOR If, heaven forfend, I was ever entrusted with the timetable, I would call these lessons A Waste of Time.Nothing that happens here has anything to do with getting on, but remember, open quotation marks, 'All knowledge is precious whether or not it serves the slightest human use,' close quotation marks.Who said? Lockwood? Crowther? Timms? Akthar?Pause.'Loveliest of trees the cherry now.'AKTHAR A. E. Housman, sir.HECTOR 'A. E. Housman, sir.'TIMMS Wasn't he a nancy, sir?HECTOR Foul, festering grubby-minded little trollop. Do not use that word. (He hits him on the head with an exercise book.)TIMMS You use it, sir.HECTOR I do, sir, I know, but I am far gone in age and decrepitude.CROWTHER You're not supposed to hit us, sir.We could report you, sir.HECTOR (despair) I know, I know. (an elaborate pantomime, all this)DAKIN You should treat us with more respect. We're scholarship candidates now.We're all going in for Oxford and Cambridge.There is a silence and Hector sits down at his table, seemingly stunned.HECTOR 'Wash me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire.'I thought all that silliness was finished with.I thought that after last year we were settling for the less lustrous institutions ... Derby, Leicester, Nottingham. Even my own dear Sheffield. Scripps. You believe in God. Believe also in me: forget Oxford and Cambridge.Why do you want to go there?LOCKWOOD Old, sir. Tried and tested.HECTOR No, it's because other boys want to go there.It's the hot ticket, standing room only. So I'll thank you (hitting him) if nobody mentions Oxford (hit) or Cambridge (hit) in my lessons. There is a world elsewhere.DAKIN You're hitting us again, sir.HECTOR Child, I am your teacher.Whatever I do in this room is a token of my trust.I am in your hands.It is a pact. Bread eaten in secret.'I have put before you life and death, blessing and cursing; therefore choose life, that both thou and thy seed may live.' Oxford and Cambridge!He sits with his head on the desk, a parody of despair.POSNER (Edgar) 'Look up, My Lord.'TIMMS (Kent)'Vex not his ghost. O let him pass. He hates himThat would upon the rack of this tough worldStretch him out longer.'POSNER (Edgar)'O, he is gone indeed.'TIMMS (Kent)'The wonder is he hath endured so long.He but usurped this life.'Bell goes. Hector sits up.HECTOR'I have a journey, sir, shortly to go;My master calls me, I must not say no.'POSNER (Edgar)'The weight of this sad time we must obeySpeak what we feel, not what we ought to say.'TIMMS The hitting never hurt. It was a joke. None of us cared. We lapped it up.CROWTHER He goes mad.LOCKWOOD He hit me. He never hits me.RUDGE He hits you if he likes you. He never touches me.DAKIN (happily) I'm black and blue.SCRIPPS It's true what he said. I did believe in God.Nobody else does. Like stamp collecting, it seems to have gone out and I suspect even the vicar thinks I am a freak.But the big man is glad.'The Prayer Book. Hymns Ancient and Modern. Lucky boy!'Staff room.HEADMASTER Mrs Lintott, Dorothy.MRS LINTOTT Headmaster?HEADMASTER These Oxbridge boys. Your historians. Any special plans?MRS LINTOTT Their A Levels are very good.HEADMASTER Their A Levels are very good. And that is thanks to you, Dorothy. We've never had so many.Remarkable! But what now -- in teaching terms?MRS LINTOTT More of the same?HEADMASTER Oh. Do you think so?MRS LINTOTT It's what we've done before.HEADMASTER Quite. Without much success. No one last year. None the year before. When did we last have anyone in history at Oxford and Cambridge?MRS LINTOTT I tend not to distinguish.HEADMASTER Between Oxford and Cambridge?MRS LINTOTT Between centres of higher learning. Last year two at Bristol, one at York. The year before ...HEADMASTER Yes, yes. I know that, Dorothy. But I am thinking league tables. Open scholarships. Reports to the Governors. I want them to do themselves justice. I want them to do you justice. Factually tip-top as your boys always are, something more is required.MRS LINTOTT More?HEADMASTER Different.I would call it grooming did not that have overtones of the monkey house.'Presentation' might be the word.MRS LINTOTT They know their stuff. Plainly stated and properly organised facts need no presentation, surely.HEADMASTER Oh, Dorothy. I think they do.'The facts: serving suggestion.'MRS LINTOTT A sprig of parsley, you mean? Or an umbrella in the cocktail? Are dons so naive?HEADMASTER Naive, Dorothy? Or human?I am thinking of the boys. Clever, yes, remarkably so. Well taught, indubitably. But a little ... ordinaire?Think charm. Think polish. Think Renaissance Man.MRS LINTOTT Yes, Headmaster.HEADMASTER Hector.The Headmaster leaves as Hector comes in.HECTOR Headmaster.MRS LINTOTT Didn't you try for Cambridge?HECTOR Oxford.I was brought up in the West Riding. I wanted somewhere new. That is to say old. So long as it was old I didn't mind where I went.MRS LINTOTT Durham was good in that respect.HECTOR Sheffield wasn't.Cloisters, ancient libraries ... I was confusing learning with the smell of cold stone. If I had gone to Oxford I'd probably never have worked out the difference.MRS LINTOTT Durham was very good for history, it's where I had my first pizza. Other things, too, of course, but it's the pizza that stands out.And fog, would you believe, one morning inside the cathedral. I loved it.I wish some of them were trying to go there.
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett PDF
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett EPub
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett Doc
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett iBooks
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett rtf
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett Mobipocket
The History Boys: A Play
By Alan Bennett Kindle